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Chung
Kuo. The words mean "Middle Kingdom, "and since 221 B.C.,
when the first emperor, Ch'in Shih Huang Ti, unifieH the seven
Warring States, it is what the "black-haired people," the
Han, or Chinese, have called their great country. The Middle
Kingdom—for them it was the whole world; a world bounded by
great mountain chains to the north and west, by the sea to east and
south. Beyond was only desert and barbarism. So it was for two
thousand years and through sixteen great dynasties. Chung Kuo was
the Middle Kingdom, the very center of the human world, and its
emperor the "Son of Heaven," the "One Man." But
in the eighteenth century that world was invaded by the young and
aggressive Western powers with their superior weaponry and their
unshakable belief in progress. It was, to the surprise of the Han, an
unequal contest, and China's myth of supreme strength and
self-sufficiency was shattered. By the early twentieth century
China—Chung Kuo—was the sick old man of the East: "a
carefully preserved mummy in a hermetically sealed coffin," as
Karl Marx called it. But from the disastrous ravages of that century
grew a giant of a nation, capable of competing with the West and with
its own Eastern rivals, Japan and Korea, from a position of
incomparable strength. The twenty-first century, "the Pacific
Century," as it was known even before it began, saw China become
once more a world unto itself, but this time its only boundary was
space.
CHUNG
KUO
by
DAVID WINGROVE
BOOK
4: THE
STONE WITHIN
A
DELL TRADE PAPERBACK
A DELL TRADE PAPERBACK Published
by Dell Publishing a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. 1540
Broadway New York, New York 10036
If
you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this
book is stolen property. It was reported as "unsold and
destroyed" to the publisher and neither the author nor the
publisher has received any payment for this "stripped book."
Copyright
© 1993 by David Wingrove All
rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted
in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including
photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and
retrieval system, without the written permission of the Publisher,
except where permitted by law.
The
trademark Dell® is registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark
Office. Canadian
Cataloguing in Publication Data Wingrove,
David The stone within (Chung
kuo ; bk. 4) ISBN 0-385-29876-5 I.
Title. II. Series: Wingrove, David. Chung kuo ; bk. 4.
PR6073.153558 1993 823'.914 €93-094218-3 ISBN:
0-440-50569-0
Printed
in the United States of America Published
simultaneously in Canada September
1993 10 98765432 BVG
for brian and margaret aldiss, Whose
love of things Chinese and of the vast
worlds of the imagination set me upon this
path. With much love.
"For
every one of us it is the same. Worlds end or open as we go." Wasps and
ants have a mean fate: how could their power be enduring? —Turn
Wen ("Heavenly Questions") by Ch'u Yuan, from the Ch'u
Tz'u ("Songs of the South"), second century B.C. Can't teach a
true peach being a prisoner Skin all round and stone within —Jukka
Tolonen, Last Quarters, 1972
Acknowledgments
AS THE
BEAST GROWS longer and the shape of it clearer, the list of people I
ought to thank grows with it. Let's begin with my editors, Carolyn
Caughey, Brian DeFiore, and John Pearce, for sheer niceness and for
maintaining enthusiasm, and to Alyssa Diamond ("Hi, David!")
for always being cheerful and on the ball. To Nick Sayers, departing
editor, huge thanks for all you did (especially for arranging that
football match!), and good luck with the new job. We'll meet again,
and all that. . . In the
long, lonely business of writing, a man needs a break and a beer now
and then, so here's to my brother Ian Wingrove, John "Mad Dog"
Hindes, Andrew Muir, Tom Jones, Rob Holdstock, Ritchie Smith, Tony
Richards, Robert Allen, Simon (and Julie) Bergin, and Keith ("Teech")
Carabine for getting me away from the word processor. To
Mike "the Shark" Cobley ("Hi, Dave!"), fraternal
greetings. Get the book done, Mike! And to Andrew Sawyer, first-line
critic, thanks once again for the thoughtful read. To
friends new—Ronan, Mike, Niall, Tom, Paul, Laura and Sean,
Vikki Lee and Steve, Storm, Sue and Michelle, Mary Gentle, Geoff
Ryman, Iain Banks, Bob Shaw, Gill and John Alderman, and Roger
("Dave")—thanks hugely for the wondrous times in
Dublin. When shall we three hundred meet again . . . ? To
my old friend Robert Carter, thanks once more for the input on
Part Two and for keeping the science tight. Likewise, to Alex
"The Weatherman" Hill, Jean pei for checking my
meteorology homework! Special
thanks, as ever, must go to Brian Griffin, to whom I owe the usual
massive debt, for reading the beast at its crudest state and—
as ever—understanding it far better than me. May The
Awakening find the cult audience it deserves. Music
this time around was provided by the late, great Miles Davis, the
Cardiacs, Nirvana, Frank Zappa, and the boys from IQ. Bless you lads. To
Gerry Francis and the boys from the Bush, a big thank you for that
New Year's Day performance. See you on Saturday. To
Susan and the girls (Jessica, Amy, and Georgia) go the usual thanks
for keeping my priorities right and providing a healthy balance to my
life. What more could a megalomaniac need? And,
finally, to my biggest fan over there in North America, John Patrick
Kavanagh, cowriter of the Chung Kuo screenplay, Empire of Ice,
fraternal greetings! Here's another to take down to the Keys . .
. CONTENTS
B O O K 4 The
Stone Within PROLOG
U E Spring 2209— IN THE SPACE BETWEEN HEAVEN
AND EARTH PA
RT 1 Spring 2209—
MONSTERS OF THE DEEP Chapter
i: Earth Chapter 2:
In the World of Levels Chapter
3: Fathers and
Sons Chapter 4:
Waves Against the Sand Chapter 5:
The Chain of Being Chapter 6:,
Into Emptiness Chapter
7: Smoke Rings and Spiders'
Webs Chapter
8: Dynasties Chapter
9: Plucked Eyes
and Severed
Heads Chapter
i o: Monsters of
the Deep Chapter
11: Lost PART
I Summer 2209—
THE INTERPRETED WORLD Chapter
12: The Beginning of Terror Chapter 13:
Intruders Chapter 14: The Hole in the Dark Chapter
15: Nature Red in Tooth and Claw PART 3
Summer 2210— THE COAST OF DARKNESS Chapter 16:
Circles of Light Chapter 17:
Distant Thunder Chapter 18:
East Winds Chapter 19:
Weimar Chapter 20:
Total War Chapter 21:
Connections Chapter 22:
Circles of Dark Chapter 23:
The Stone Within EPI LOG U E Autumn 221
o— AFTER RAIN Author's Note A Glossary of Mandarin
Terms Acknowledgments In Times to Come . . . The
War of the Two Directions
it HAD
BEGUN with the assassination of the T'ang's Minister, Lwo K'ang, some
thirteen years earlier, the poor man blown into the next world along
with his Junior Ministers while basking in the imperial solarium. The
Seven—the great Lords and rulers of Chung Kuo— had hit
back at once, arresting one of the leading figures of the
Dispersionist faction responsible for the Minister's death. But it
was not to end there. Within days of the public execution, their
opponents had struck another deadly blow, killing Li Han Ch'in, son
of the T'ang, Li Shai Tung, and heir to City Europe, on the day of
his wedding to the beautiful Fei Yen. It
might have ended there, with the decision of the Seven to take no
action in reprisal for Prince Han's death—to adopt a policy of
peaceful nonaction, utuwei—but for one man such a course
could not be borne. Taking matters into his own hands, Li Shai Tung's
General, Knut Tolonen, had marched into the House of Representatives
in Weimar and killed the leader of the Dispersionists,
Under-Secretary Lehmann. It was an act almost guaranteed to tumble
Chung Kuo into a bloody civil war unless the anger of the
Dispersionists could be assuaged and concessions made. Concessions
were made, an uneasy peace maintained, but the divisions between
rulers and ruled remained, their conflicting desires—the Seven
for Stasis, the Dispersionists for Change— unresolved.
Among those concessions, the Seven had permitted the Dispersionists
to build a starship, The New Hope. As the ship approached
readiness, the Dispersionists pushed things even further at Weimar,
impeaching the tai—the Representatives of the Seven in
the House—and effectively declaring their independence. In
response the Seven destroyed The New Hope. War was declared. The
five-year War-that-wasn't-a-War left the Dispersionists broken, their
leaders killed, their Companies confiscated. The great push for
Change had been crushed and peace returned to Chung Kuo. Or so it
briefly seemed, for the War had woken older, far stronger currents of
dissent. In the depths of the City new movements began to arise,
seeking not merely to change the system, but to revolutionize it
altogether. One of these factions, the Ping Two, or "Levelers,"
wanted to pull down the great City of three hundred levels and
destroy the Empire of the Han. For a
while the status quo had been maintained, but three of the most
senior T'ang had died in the War, leaving the Council of the Seven
weaker and more inexperienced than they had been in all the long
years of their rule. When Wang Sau-leyan, the youngest son of Wang
Hsien, ruler of City Africa, became T'ang after his father's death,
things looked ominous, the young man seeking to create disharmony
among the Seven. But Li Yuan, inheriting from his father, formed
effective alliances with his fellow T'ang, Tsu Ma, Wu Shih, and Wei
Feng, to block Wang in Council, outvoting him four to three. But
now, looking beyond the immediate political situation, Li Yuan wants
permanent solutions to the problems of overpopulation and civil
unrest. To achieve the former, he is willing to make deals with his
enemies in the Above—to relax the Edict of Technological
Control that has kept Change at bay for so long, and to reopen the
House at Weimar, in return for population controls. As for civil
unrest, he has devised a somewhat darker scheme: to "wire up"
the whole population of Chung Kuo, so that they can be traced and
rigidly controlled. For
the first time in years, then, there is real hope that peace and
stability might be achieved and chaos staved off. But time is running
out. Chung Kuo is a society badly out of balance and close—very
close—to total breakdown. In Wu
Shih's great City of North America, the first signs of social unrest
have already manifested themselves in movements like the "Sons
of Benjamin Franklin," and in a growing desire among the Hung
Mao—the Europeans—for a new nationalism. But the
problems are not merely between the rulers and the ruled. Among the
ruled there are also divisions. Divisions that run deeper than race .
. . MAJOR
CHARACTERS
Ascher, Emily—Trained
as an economist, she was once a member of the Ping Tiao
revolutionary party. After its demise, she fled to North America
where, under the alias of Mary Jennings, she got a job with the giant
ImmVac Corporation, working for Old Man Lever and his son, Michael.
Ultimately, however, what she wants is change, and the downfall of
the corrupt social institutions that rule Chung Kuo. Lehmann, Stefan—Albino
son of the former Dispersionist leader, Pietr Lehmann, he was briefly
a lieutenant to DeVore. A cold, unnaturally dispassionate man, he
seems the very archetype of nihilism, his only aim to bring down the
Seven and their great earth-encompassing City. His move "down
level" into the "underground" world of long and
Triad marks a new stage of his campaign. Lever, Charles—Head
of the massive ImmVac pharmaceuticals corporation, "Old Man
Lever" is a passionate "American" and one of the
instigators of the Cutler Institute's Immortality project. A
bull-necked, stubborn old man, he will let nothing get between him
and what he wants. And what he wants is to live forever. Lever, Michael—Son
of Charles Lever, he was incarcerated by Wu Shih for his involvement
with the "Sons of Benjamin Franklin," a semirevolu-tionary
group formed by the sons of wealthy North American businessmen. Cast
from childhood in his father's mold, he has yet to break from his
upbringing and find his own direction. Li Yuan—T'ang
of Europe and one of the Seven, as second son of Li Shai Tung, he
inherited after the deaths of his brother and father. Considered old
before his time, he nonetheless has a passionate side to his nature,
as demonstrated in his brief marriage to his brother's wife, the
beautiful Fei Yen. Having remarried, he is determined to find
balance, both in his private life and in his role as T'ang. Shepherd, Ben—Son
of Hal Shepherd, and great-great-grandson of City Earth's architect,
Ben was brought up in the Domain, an idyllic valley in
the southwest of England where, deciding not to follow
in his father's footsteps and become advisor to Li Yuan, he pursues
instead his calling as an artist, developing a new art form, the
Shell, which will one day transform Chung Kuo's society. Tolonen, Jelka—Daughter
of Marshal Tolonen, Jelka has been brought up in a very masculine
environment, lacking a mother's love and influence. Despite a genuine
interest in martial arts and weaponry, she feels a strong need to
discover and express the more feminine side of her nature; a need
matched by a determination not to succumb to the gender demands of
her world. Tolonen, Knut—Former
Marshal of the Council of Generals and qnetime General to Li Yuan's
father, Tolonen is a rocklike supporter of the Seven and their
values, even in an age of increasing uncertainty. In his role as
father, however, this inflexibility in his nature brings him into
repeated conflict with his daughter, Jelka. Tsu Ma—T'ang of West
Asia and one of the Seven, the ruling Council of Chung Kuo, Tsu Ma
has thrown off a dissolute past to become Li Yuan's staunchest
supporter in Council. A strong, handsome man in his late thirties, he
has yet to marry, though his secret affair with Li Yuan's former
wife, Fei Yen, revealed a side of him that has not been fully
harnessed. Wang Sau-leyan—T'ang
of Africa. Since inheriting—after the suspicious deaths of his
father and elder brothers—Wang Sau-leyan has dedicated every
moment to bringing down Li Yuan and his allies in Council. A sharp
and cunning adversary with an abrasive, calculating manner, he is the
harbinger of Change within the Council of Seven. Ward, Kim—Born in
the Clay, that dark wasteland beneath the great City's foundations,
Kim has a quick and unusual bent of mind that has marked him as
potentially the greatest scientist on Chung Kuo. His vision of a
giant star-spanning web, formulated down in the darkness, drove him
up into the light of the Above. But, despite the patronage of Li Yuan
and the friendship of powerful men, life has proven to be far from
easy for Ward, either in business or in love. Wong Yi-sun—Big Boss
of the United Bamboo Triad, "Fat Wong"—a tiny,
birdlike man—has won the favor of Li Yuan. Yet his ambitions
reach beyond more patronage. He
wants to unite the lower levels of City Europe under his rule. Wu Shih—Middle-aged
T'ang of North America, he is one of the few remaining members of the
old generation. A staunch traditionalist, he nevertheless has found
himself allied in Council with Li Yuan and Tsu Ma against the odious
Wang Sau-leyan. Yet with the resurgence of American nationalism he
finds himself confronted by a problem none of his fellow T'ang have
to face; a problem he must find an urgent and lasting solution to. LIST
OF CHARACTERS
THE
SEVEN AND THE FAMILIES' Chi
Hsing—T'ang of the Australias. Fu Ti Chang—third wife of
Li Yuan. Hou Tung-po—T'ang of South America. Lai
Shi—second wife of Li Yuan. Li Kuei Jen—son of Li Yuan
and heir to City Europe. Li
Yuan—T'ang of Europe. Mien Shan—first wife of Li Yuan.
Tsu Ma—T'ang of West Asia. Wang Sau-leyan—T'ang of
Africa. Wei Chan Yin—first son of Wei Feng and heir to City
East Asia. Wei
Feng—T'ang of East Asia. Wei
Hsi Wang—second son of Wei Feng and Colonel in Security. Wei
Tseng-li—third son of Wei Feng. Wu
Shih—T'ang of North America. Yin Fei Yen—"Flying
Swallow"; Minor-Family Princess and divorced wife
of Li Yuan. Yin Han Ch'in—son of Yin Fei Yen. Yin
Tsu—head of the Yin Family (one of the "Twenty-Nine"
Minor Families) and father of Fei Yen. Yin Wu Tsai—Minor-Family
Princess and cousin of Fei Yen.
FRIENDS
AND RETAINERS OF THE SEVEN Bachman,
Lothar—Lieutenant in Security. Bright Moon—maid to Li
Yuan. Brock—security
guard in the Domain. Chan Teng—Master of the Inner Chambers at
Tbngjiang. Chang Shih-sen—personal secretary to Li Yuan. Ch'in
Tao Fan—Chancellor of East Asia.
' Chu
Shi-ch'e—Pi-shu c/iien, or Inspector of the Imperial Library at
'Tbngjiang. Coates—security
guard in the Domain. Cook—duty guard in the Domain. Fen
Cho-hsien — Chancellor of North America. Fragrant
Lotus — maid to Li Yuan.
; Franke,
Otto — Wei, or Captain of Security, for Zwickau Hsien.
Gerhardt, Paul — Major; Head of Tracking, Northern Hemisphere.
Gustavsson, Per — Captain of Chi Hsing's personal guard.
Gustavsson, Ute — wife of Captain Gustavsson. Hauser, Eva —
wife of Major Sven Hauser. Hauser, Gustav — private
secretary/equerry to Marshal Tblonen; son of Major Sven Hauser. Hauser,
Sven — Major; ex-Colonial Governor; father of Gustav Hauser.
Henssa, Eero — Captain of the Guard aboard the floating palace
Yang- Ho
Chang — valet to Wu Shih. Hung Yan — "Wiring"
surgeon to Li Yuan. Hung
Mien-lo — Chancellor of Africa.
•• Karr,
Gregor — Major in Security. K'ung Feng — Third Official
in the Ta Ssu Nung, the Superintendency of
Agriculture, for City Europe. Lofgren, Bertil — Lieutenant and
aide to Marshal Tolonen. Mo
Yu — Security Lieutenant in the Domain. Nan Ho —
Chancellor of Europe. Read, Helmut — Governor of the Saturn
system. Rheinhardt, Helmut — General of Security for Li Yuan. Shepherd,
Ben — son of the late Hal Shepherd; "Shell" artist.
Shepherd, Beth — widow of Hal Shepherd; mother of Ben and Meg
Shepherd. Shepherd,
Meg — sister of Ben Shepherd. Tolonen, Jelka — daughter
of Marshal Tolonen. Tolonen, Knut — ex-Marshal of Security;
Head of the GenSyn Hearings committee. Tu
Mai— security guard in the Domain. Virtanen, Per — Major
in Li Yuan's Security forces. Zdenek — bodyguard to Jelka
Tolonen. Hui
Tsin-—Red Pole (426, or Executioner) to the United Bamboo.
K'ang A-yin—gang boss of the Tu Sun tang. K'ang
Yeh-su—nephew of K'ang A-yin. Kant—runner for K'ang
A-yin. Li
Chin—"Li the Lidless"; Big Boss of the Wo Shih Wo. Li
Pai Shung—nephew of Li Chin; heir to the Wo Shih Wo. Ling
Wo—Chief Advisor to K'ang A-yin. Liu Tong—lieutenant to
Li Chin. Lo Han—tong boss. Lu Ming-shao—"Whiskers
Lu"; Big Boss of the Kuei Chuan. Man
Hsi—tong boss.
: Meng
Te—lieutenant to Lu Ming-shao. Ni Yueh—tong boss. Peck—lieutenant
to K'ang A-yin (a ying tzu, or "shadow"). Po Lao—Red
Pole (426, or Executioner) to the Kuei Chuan. Soucek, Jiri—lieutenant
to K'ang A-yin. Visak—lieutenant
to Lu Ming-shao. Wong
Yi-sun—"Fat Wong"; Big Boss of the United Bamboo. Yan
Yan—tong boss. Yao
Lu—lieutenant to Stefan Lehmann. Yue
Chun—Red Pole (426, or Executioner) to the Wo Shih Wo. Yun
Yueh-hui—"Dead Man Yun"; Big Boss of the Red Gang.
YU Anne—Yu
assassin. Donna—Yu assassin. Joan—<-Yu
assassin. Kriz—senior Yu operative. Mach, Jan—maintenance
official for the Ministry of Waste Recycling; former
Ping Two member and founder of the Yu. Vesa—Yu assassin. THE
TRIADS Chao—runner
for K'ang A-yin. Feng
Shang-pao—"General Feng"; Big Boss of the i4K. Feng
Wo—lieutenant to K'ang A-yin. Ho
Chin—"Three-Finger Ho"; Big Boss of the Yellow
Banners. Hua Shang—lieutenant to Wong Yi-sun. Huang
Jen—lieutenant to Po Lao. OTHER
CHARACTERS Ainsworth,
James—lawyer for Charles Lever. Ascher,
Emily—past member of the Ping Two terrorists. Barrett,
Edel—SimFic employee at Sohm Abyss. Becker, Hans—sidekick
of Stefan Lehmann. Bonner,
Alex—Chief Negotiator for the P'u Lan Finance Corporation.
Bonnot, Alex—Scientific Supervisor for SimFic at Sohm Abyss.
Campbell, William—Regional Controller of SimFic's North
Atlantic Cities. Carver,
Rex—Reformer candidate for Miami Hsien and friend of Charles
Lever. Chan Long—security guard, working for Lever and Kustow. Chang—guard
on the Chung estate. Chang Li—First Surgeon in the Boston
Medical Center. Chiang Su-li—Master of the House of the Ninth
Dragon Tea House. Chung, Gloria—heiress; daughter of the late
Representative Chung Yen. Curval, Andrew—leading geneticist;
employee of the ImmVac Corporation. Dann, Abraham—steward to
Charles Lever. Deio—Clayborn
friend of Kim Ward from "Rehabilitation." DeValerian,
Rachel—alias of Emily Ascher. DeVore,
Howard—ex-Major in Security, and Dispersionist. Dunn,
Richard—business rival of Old Man Lever. Feng
Lu-ma—lensman. Feng Wo-shen—protein designer and
scientific assistant for SitriFic at Sohm
Abyss. Fisher,
Carl—American; friend of Michael Lever. Fisher, James—financier
and friend of Charles Lever. Gratton, Edward—friend of Charles
Lever and Reformer candidate for Boston Hsien. Haller,
Wolf—sidekick of Stefan Lehmann. Harrison, James—employee
of Charles Lever. Hart, Alex—Representative at Weimar.
Hattmann, William—friend of Charles Lever and Reformer
candidate. Hay,
Joel—leader of the Evolutionist Party of North America. Henty,
Thomas—technician. Heydemeier,
Ernst—artist; leading exponent of Futur-Kunst, "Science-Art."
Hilbert, Eduard—Head of Cryobiology for SimFic at Sohm Abyss.
Ho Chao-tuan—Representative for Shenyang Hsien. Ho
Yang—reporter for the Wen Ming media channel. Hong
Chi—assistant to Kim Ward. Horton,
Feng—American; a "Son"; also known as "Meltdown."
Hsiang Tian—merchant; store owner. Jennings, Mary—alias
of Emily Ascher. Johnstone,
Edward—friend of Charles Lever; father of Louisa Johnstone.
Johnstone, Louisa—long-standing fiancee of Michael Lever. Kennedy,
Jean—wife of Joseph Kennedy. Kennedy, Joseph—American
lawyer, and founder of the New Republican Party. Kennedy,
Robert—eldest son of Joseph Kennedy. Kennedy, William—youngest
son of Joseph Kennedy. Koslevic, Anna—schoolgirl friend of
Jelka Tblonen. Kustow, Bryn—American; friend of Michael Lever. Lehmann,
Stefan—albino son of Under-Secretary Lehmann. Lever,
Charles—"Old Man Lever," Head of the Imm Vac
Pharmaceuticals company
of North America; father of Michael Lever. Lever, Michael—son
of Charles Lever; Head of the MemSys Corporation, a
subsidiary of Imm Vac. Li Min—"Brave Carp," an alias
of Stefan Lehmann. Luke—Claybom
friend of Kim Ward from "Rehabilitation." Mai
Li-wen—lensman Marley,
George—business associate of Charles Lever. May
Feng—Hung Mao Head of EduCol. Milne, Michael—private
investigator. Mitchell,
Bud—American; a "Son"; associate of Michael Lever.
Munroe,
Wendell—Representative at Weimar. Nong Yan—bookkeeper to
Kim Ward. Pai
Mei—stallholder. Parker,
Jack—American; friend of Michael Lever.
Ping
Hsiang—Representative for the Above in discussions for, the
reopening of Weimar.
Reiss,
Horst—Chief Executive of the SimFic Corporation. Richards—guard
at Kim Ward's Ch'i Chu company.
Robins—employee
of Charles Lever. Ross,
James—private investigator. Schram, Dieter—Administrator
for SimFic at Sohm Abyss. Snow—alias
of Stefan Lehmann. Spence, Graham—employee of Charles Lever.
Spence,
Leena—"Immortal" and onetime lover of Charles Lever.
Stevens, Carl—American; friend of Michael Lever. Stewart,
Greg—American; NREP candidate for Denver Hsien. Symons—SimFic
employee at Sohm Abyss. T'ai Cho—friend and former guardian of
Kim Ward. Tewl—"Darkness";
chief of the raft-people. Thorsson, Wulf—settler from lapetus
Colony in the Saturn system. Tong
Ye—young Han sailor; a "morph," created by Ben
Shepherd.
Tuan
Wen-ch'ang—SimFic employee at Sohm Abyss.
Underwood,
Harry—Representative at Weimar. Ward,
Kim—Clayborn orphan and scientist; head of the Ch'i Chu
company. Ward,
Rebecca—Commercial Advisor to SimFic at Sohm Abyss; Clay-born
friend of Kim Ward from "Rehabilitation." Weller, John—Head
of Internal Distribution for Imm Vac. Will—Claybom
friend of Kim Ward from "Rehabilitation."
Yellow
Tan—lensman.
Yi
Pang-chou—schoolgirl friend of Jelka Tolonen. Yueh
Pa—official in the United Bamboo heartland.
THE
DEAD Barrow,
Chao—Secretary of the House at Weimar.
Bercott,
Andrei—Representative at Weimar.
Berdichev,
Soren—Head of SimFic and, later, leader of the Dispersionist
faction.
Ch'in
Shih Huang Ti—the first emperor of China (ruled 221-210 B.C.). Chung
Hsin—"Loyalty"; bond servant to Li Shai Tung.
Cutler,,
Richard—leader of the "American" movement.
Ebert,
Klaus—head of the GenSyn Corporation.
Feng
Chung—Big Boss of the Kuei Chan (Black Dog) Triad.
Fest,
Edgar—Captain in Security. Gesell,
Bent—leader of the Ping Tiao terrorist organization.
Griffin,
James B.—last president of the American Empire. Han
Huan Ti—Han emperor (ruled A.D. 168-189), also known as Liu
Hung. Hou
Ti—T'ang of South America; father of Hou Tung Fb.
Hsiang
K'ai Fan—Minor-Family Prince. Hwa—master
"blood," or hand-to-hand fighter, below the Net.
Kao
Jyan—assassin; friend of Kao Chen. K'ung Fu Tzu—Confucius
(551—479 B.C.). Lehmann,
Pietr—Under-Secretary of the House of Representatives and first
leader of the Dispersionist faction; father of Stefan Lehmann.
Lever,
Margaret—wife of Charles Lever and mother of Michael Lever. Li
Ch'ing—T'ang of Europe; grandfather of Li Yuan.
Li
Han Ch'in—first son of Li Shai T'ung and once heir to City
Europe; brother of Li Yuan. Li
Hang Ch'i—T'ang of Europe; great-great-grandfather of Li Yuan.
Li
Kou-lung—T'ang of Europe; great-grandfather of Li Yuan.
Li
Shai Tung—T'ang of Europe; father of Li Yuan. Lin
Yua—first wife of Li Shai Tung. Mao
Tse Tung—first Ko Ming emperor (ruled a.d. 1948—1976).
Ming
Huang—sixth T'ang emperor (ruled a.d. 713-755).
Mu
Chua—Madam of the House of the Ninth Ecstasy.
Mu
Li—"Iron Mu," Boss of the Big Circle triad.
Shang—"Old Shang"; Master to Kao Chen when he was a
child. Shepherd, Amos—Great-great-great-great-grandfather (and
genetic "father") of Ben Shepherd. Shepherd,
Augustus—"Brother" of Ben Shepherd, b. A.D. 2106, d.
2122.
Shepherd,
Hal—Father (and genetic "brother") of Ben Shepherd. Shepherd,
Robert—Great-grandfather (and genetic "brother") of
Ben Shepherd, and father of Augustus Shepherd. TsaoCh'un—tyrannical
founder of Chung Kuo (ruled a.d. 2051-2087). Wang
Hsien—T'ang of Africa; father of Wang Sau-leyan. Wang
Ta-hung—third son of Wang Hsien; elder brother of Wang
Sau-leyan.
Wen
Ti—"First Ancestor" of City Earth/Chung Kuo (ruled
180-157 B.C.), also known as Liu Heng.
Wyatt,
Edmund—company head; father of Kim Ward. Ywe
Hao—Yu terrorist. Ywe
Kai-chang—father to Ywe Hao. PROLOGUE
SPRING 2209 In
the Space Between Heaven and Earth
Heaven
and earth are ruthless, and treat the myriad creatures
as straw dogs; the sage is ruthless, and treats
the people as straw dogs. Is
not the space between heaven and earth like a bellows? It is
empty without being exhausted: The
more it works the more comes out. Much
speech leads inevitably to silence. Better
to hold fast to the void. —LAD
TZU, Too Te Ching, sixth century b.c.
WU
SHIH , T'ang of North America, stood at the top of the ruined, pitted
steps, looking down at the men. Behind him, headless, the huge statue
sat, embedded in its chair of granite. Overhead, spotlights set into
the floor of the Above picked
out the figures at the foot of the broad white stairway. Five men.
Five old, gray-bearded men, well-dressed and senatorial. Company
Heads. Americans. Wu Shih studied them, his contempt barely
concealed. His left foot rested on the statue's fallen head, his
right hand on his hip. One of
the men, taller than the rest, stepped out in front of the others and
called up to him. "Where
are they? You said you'd bring them, Wu Shih. So where are they?" Dead,
he would have liked to have said. Your sons are dead, old men.
But it wasn't so. Wang Sau-leyan had saved their lives. There had
been an agreement in Council and the traitors were to go free,
unpunished, the price of their treachery unexacted. It was
foolishness, but it had been decided. "They
are here, Shih Lever. Close by. Unharmed." Wu
Shih paused and looked about the ruins of the old city. From where he
stood, high above it all, the floor of the Above was less than fifty
ch'i overhead, a dark and solid presence, stretching away to every
horizon. Facing him, beyond the darkly shadowed outline of a toppled
obelisk, could be glimpsed the wreckage of the Capitol
building, a huge, silvered pillar thrusting up through its ruined
dome—one of many that rose to meet the smooth, featureless
darkness of the City's underbelly. He had
brought them here deliberately, knowing the effect it would have on
the old men. Overhead, its presence vast and crushing, lay the City
that he ruled—a City that rose two Ii—almost a mile by
their ancient measure—into the air, stretching from the
Atlantic to the Pacific, from the coast of Labrador to the Gulf of
Mexico in the south. While here below . . . Wu
Shih smiled. Here, in the darkness beneath the City's piles, lay the
ruins of old America—of Washington, once capital of the
sixty-nine States of the American Empire. And these men—these
foolish, greedy old men—would have the Empire back; would break
a century of peace to have it back. Wu Shih snorted and looked down
at the massive granite head beneathrthe foot. "You
have signed the documents?" A
moment's silence greeted his words, then Lever answered him, the
irritation in his voice barely restrained. "It's done." Wu
Shih felt a ripple of anger pass through him. It was the second time
Old Man Lever had refused to address him properly. "All
of you?" he demanded. "All those on my list?" He
looked up from Lincoln's head and sought Lever's eyes. Lever was
staring at the fallen stone, his face suffused with anger, his
expression so eloquent that Wu Shih laughed and pressed down on the
heavy stone, forcing the nose firmly into the dust that lay
everywhere here. "You
haven't answered me." Wu
Shih's voice had changed, grown harder, its flattened tones filled
with threat. Lever looked at at him, surprised by the command in his
voice—unaccustomed, clearly, to another's rule. Again this
spoke volumes. These men were far gone in their dissent—had
grown fat and arrogant in the illusion of their power. Li Yuan had
been right to see them as a threat—right to act against them as
he had. There was no respect in them, no understanding of their true
relationship to things. The old man thought himself the equal of the
Seven— perhaps, even, their superior. It was a dangerous,
insolent delusion. Lever
turned his head away sharply, spitting the words out angrily. "WeVe
signed. Everyone on your list." He beckoned to another of his
party, who came forward and handed him the document. Wu
Shih watched, his eyes half-lidded, seeing how Lever turned back to
face him, hesitating, as if he expected Wu Shih to come down the
steps and take the paper from him. "Bring
it," he said, and put out his left hand casually, almost
languidly. Wang Sau-leyan may have forced the Council -to make this
deal with their enemies—this "concession," as he
called it—but he, Wu Shih, would show these men exactly where
they stood. He saw how Lever turned, uncertainty in his face, looking
toward the others as if for guidance, then turned back and began to
climb. Each step was a small humiliation. Each a belittling of the
man. Then, when he was only three steps from the top, Wu Shih raised
his hand, commanding him, by that gesture, to stay where he was. Lever
frowned, but did as he was bid. "Kneel,"
Wu Shih said, his voice soft, almost gentle now. Lever
turned his head slightly, as if he had not heard properly. "What?" "Kneel" Wu
Shih's voice had been no louder, no harder, but this time it was
command not reminder. Again
Lever hesitated, half turning, the muscles in his face twitching,
conscious of his fellows down below, watching him. Slowly, huffing as
he did, the old man knelt, his face raised, eyes glaring at Wu Shih.
This was a protocol he had clearly thought he could avoid. " But
Wu Shih was unrelenting. He was determined to have the form of
Lever's respect if not the actuality, knowing that in such forms lay
power. Real power. The bowing of one man before another: it
was a gesture as old as it was profound. And even if true respect
were not forthcoming here, he could still insist on one of its
components— obedience. Simple obedience. Leaning
forward, Wu Shih plucked the paper from Lever's outstretched hand and
opened it. Its original—verified by retinal print and scan—was
already on file. Yet there was more power in this—this written
paper, signed by the hand of each and given here at this place where
the dream of America had died—than in the purely legal form of
their agreement. It was little understood by them, but ritual was
more than empty show. It was power itself. Was what gave form
to the relationships of men. Wu
Shih folded the paper, grunting his satisfaction. Half turning, he
made a signal. At once, a brilliant light fell on a nearby building.
For a moment there was nothing, then a door opened in the plain white
face of the building and from the darkness within stepped a group of
young men. The Sons. Gaunter, less proud for their fifteen-month
incarceration. But dangerous. More dangerous than Wang Sau-leyan
would ever contemplate. Wu
Shih raised his hand, dismissing the old man. Lever
backed away, moving slowly down the steps, then, at the bottom,
turned and went among his fellows, making his way across the littered
wasteland toward the building where the young men stood. Wu Shih
watched a moment, then turned away. In his hand he held their
guarantee of good behavior—their pledge to govern themselves
better than they had. But he had seen the hate, the irreverence in
Lever's face. Was such a guarantee worth having in the face of such
open defiance? He
smiled. Yes, for it would give him the excuse to act, without the
intercession of that meddler Wang. As he
made his way from there he knew for a certainty that this was not the
end of this, only a temporary respite. There would come a time when
he would have to face these men again. "Americans
. . ." he said beneath his breath, then laughed softly, looking
back at the headless statue, silhouetted against the lights from
above. The Supernal, they called themselves. Dwellers in the
Heavens. Supremely great and excellent. Exalted. He
laughed. So they might believe, but if they so much as spat he'd make
it hell for them. * * * LEAF
shadow fell on the pale, slatted rocks on the far side of the pool.
Li Yuan, T'ang of Europe, stood on the low, humped bridge, listening
to the sounds coming from the rooms across the water. Low trees
obscured his view of the courtyards and the house, but the sounds
came clear to him: laughter, light-headed with relief; the
chatter of excited female voices; and beneath both,
unremitting, the bawling of a newborn child. He
stood there, in perfect stillness, looking down at his dark
reflection in the lotus-strewn water. It was a child. A son—of
course a son—there would not be laughter if it were otherwise.
He stood, unmoving, not knowing what to think, what feel at that
moment, the world—the tiny world of tree and stone and
water—suspended all about him. A son
... He shook his head, frowning. There should be more than this,
he thought. I should be glad. I too should laugh, for today
the chain is forged anew, the Family strengthened. But there was
nothing—only an empty space where feeling ought to have been. Across
from him one of the nurses stepped out onto the balcony of the birth
room and saw him. He looked up in time to see her turn hurriedly and
go back inside; heard her warning to them and the sudden silence that
followed, broken almost at once by the high-pitched cries of the
newborn. He stood there a moment longer, then moved on slowly, his
heart strangely heavy, for once totally unprepared for what lay
ahead. Mien
Shan lay there, a tiny figure in his grandmother's huge bed—
the same bed where his father, Li Shai Tung, had come into the world.
She was propped up on pillows, her dark hair tied back from her
sweat-beaded brow. Seeing him she smiled broadly and lifted the tiny
bundle in her arms, offering it to him. "Your
son, ChiehHsia." He
took the child from her, cradling it carefully, conscious of the
others in the room watching him. With one hand he drew back the
blanket and looked down at the child. Dark hair lay finely on its
long, pale scalp, glistening wetly in the overhead light. Its eyes
were screwed shut and its thin lips formed ugly, awkward shapes as it
yelled incessantly, one thin arm and tiny hand reaching blindly,
repetitively into the air. It struggled against him as he held it, as
if sensing his unease. Even so, he laughed, feeling how small, how
light it was. So fragile and yet so determined. His son. Once more he
laughed, and sensed the mood in the room change, growing more
relaxed. He
looked down at Mien Shan and smiled. "Good. You have done
well, my love." He glanced across, seeing how his other
wives, Lai Shi and Fu Ti Chang, blushed with Mien Shan at the
endearment, and felt an unexpected warmth. They were good, kind
women. Nan Ho had chosen well for him. He sat
beside Mien Shan on the bed and turned to face her, holding the child
in one arm. Behind her, on the wall above the bed, was a copy of the
Luoshu diagram—the "magic" numbers used as a
charm for easing childbirth. Normally the sight of such superstitious
nonsense would have angered him. But this was no moment for anger. "Was
it hard?" he asked, lifting her chin gently with one finger,
making her look at him. She hesitated, then gave the slightest nod,
remembered pain in her eyes. He
took a deep breath, trying to imagine it, then nodded, his lips and
eyes slowly forming a smile. "I honor you, sweet wife. And thank
you, both for my son and for myself." For a
moment he looked at her, an unusual tenderness in his features, then,
giving the slightest bow, he leaned forward and kissed the wetness of
her brow. He
turned, facing the others in the room. Besides wives, nurses, and
doctors, several of his Ministers were present—witnesses to the
birth. Li Yuan stood up, still cradling the child, and took a step
toward them. "You
will announce that the Families have a new heir. That Kuei Jen, first
son to Li Yuan, was born this morning of his wife, Mien Shan, in good
health and in a state of physical perfection." He
nodded vigorously, holding the child firmer, seeing how they all
smiled at that. "A strong child. Like his grandfather." There
was a murmur of agreement and a nodding of heads. But then Li Yuan
lowered his head in the sign of dismissal and, with bows of respect,
the others left, leaving Li Yuan alone with Mien Shan and the child.
The babe in his arms had settled and was no longer crying. Now it
looked up at him, open-eyed. Huge, dark eyes that peered out from the
mystery of birth. And, lowering his face gently, he kissed brow and
nose and chin with a tenderness that took him by surprise. "Kuei
Jen," he said, smiling down softly at the child. "Welcome,
my son. May the world be kind to you." And, looking up, he saw
that Mien Shan was watching him, tears trickling down her cheeks. THE
ROOM WAS DARK, ill-ventilated. The old man in the bed coughed, a dry,
hacking cough, then sniffed loudly. "Draw the curtains, Chan
Yin. 1 want to see you all." His
eldest son went to the far side of the room and drew the heavy silken
curtain back a fraction. Brilliant light spilled into the room,
cutting a broad swath through the shadow. "More,"
said the old man, leaning forward from his pillows. "And open
the doors. It's like a sweatbox in here." Chan
Yin hesitated and looked across at the doctors, but they simply
shrugged. Pulling the curtain back fully, he pushed open the bronze
and glass doors that led out onto the balcony, then stood there,
feeling the freshness of the breeze on his face and arms, looking out
across the gardens toward the distant mountains. After a moment he
turned back, facing his father. In the
sudden brightness Wei Feng was squinting at him, a faint smile on his
creased and ancient-looking face. "Better," he said, easing
himself back onto the pillows. "It's like a tomb. Each night
they tuck me up and bury me. And yet, when the morning comes, I am
still here." Chan
Yin looked at his father with concern and love. He hated seeing him
like this, so old and powerless. His memories rebelled against this
image of Wei Feng and would have had his father strong and vigorous
again. But those were childhood memories and he himself was older,
much older now. Forty this next birthday. He sighed, then crossed the
room to stand with his brothers at the bedside. Hsi
Wang stood there in his Colonel's uniform, ill at ease in this
situation, his usual good humor subdued. Since his father's stroke he
had been only half himself, his normally untroubled face overcast.
Tseng-li, the youngest, stood right beside his father, his hand
resting lightly on the old man's shoulder, his beautiful face looking
down into his father's. From time to time Wei Feng would turn
slightly and look up at him, smiling. The
stroke had almost killed Wei Feng. Only expert surgery had saved him.
But pneumonia had set in shortly afterward. Now, a month
from the first heart attack, he was much better, but the
experience had aged him greatly. The left side of his skull was
shaved bald and his right arm lay useless on the covers. There had
been a blood clot and certain areas of his brain had died, among them
those which controlled certain of his movements. Not even expert
prosthetics could bring back the use of his right arm. "My
sons," he saidjsmiling, looking from one to the other, the
simple words heavy with emotion. For a moment the coughing took him
again, and Tseng-li bent his huge, tall body, kneeling, holding the
old man's hand more tightly until the spasm passed. Then Wei Feng
spoke again, looking mainly at his heir, Chan Yin. "The
doctors tell me 1 shall live." He smiled sadly, then nodded.
"Even that seems strange now . . . the thought of living."
Retook a long, shuddering breath, then spoke again. "But being
such a friend to death these last few weeks, I have had the chance to
study him—to look him in the face and come to know him. Like an
enemy one comes to respect for his great skill and cunning." Hsi
Wang laughed shortly and Wei Feng looked up at him, smiling,
indulging his laughter. "It is good to hear you laugh, Hsi. I
have missed your laughter." He licked his lips slightly, then
carried on. "I have stood beside him, you see, and looked back.
Into the light. Looked back and seen the shape of things, here, in
this shadow world of ours." Chan
Yin narrowed his eyes, listening, watching his .father's face, and
saw how the old T'ang's eyes seemed to look out past Hsi, as if he
really could see something that was denied to their vision. "For
the first time I saw clearly. How things are. How they will be." Wei
Feng turned his head and looked at his eldest son once more. "Which
is why you are here. You especially, Chan Yin. But you also, Hsi and
Tseng. As witnesses. Custodians, if you like." They
waited while Wei Feng took his breath. From the open doors came the
sound of the wind in the trees and the buzzing of insects. A faint
breeze moved the curtains gently, cooling the air in the room. "There
is something I want from you, Chan Yin. Something no father ought to
ask of his eldest son. But I have«een what is to come. And,
because I love you, I want you to swear to me that you will do what I
ask of you." Chan
Yin shivered, seeing the strange intensity in his father's eyes, and
nodded. "Whatever you ask, Father." Wei
Feng was quiet a while, watching him; then he sighed and looked down
at his useless arm. "I want you to swear to me that you will
support Li Yuan. Support him in whatever he asks, and for whatever
reason he gives. Whatever he asks of you, do it." He
paused, a sudden ferocity in his face, as if he was seeing things
again from the side of death. Looking back at the world of shadows
and light. "Do
it, Chan Yin! You must! For upon Li Yuan's shoulders rests the fate
of us all. Deny him and the Seven will fall, as surely as I will
someday die and you inherit." For a
moment Chan Yin was silent, thoughtful, then he looked up and met his
father's eyes, smiling, understanding the full import of what was
being asked of him. "I
swear to do as my father wishes. To support Li Yuan, whatever he
asks." He bowed low, then turned, facing his brothers. "This
I swear as a sacred trust, which you, my brothers, bear witness to." Wei
Feng lay back again, relaxing, looking up at the three faces of his
sons. "You are good men. Good sons. A father could not ask for
better sons." Leaning
forward, Tseng-li kissed his father's brow. "It isn't chosen,
Father," he said softly, smiling at him once more. "It
simply is." LI
YUAN sat at his desk, beneath the portrait of his grandfather. Across
from him the face of Wu Shih, ten times its normal size, stared down
at him from the wall screen. "You
talk of troubles to come, Yuan, but things have been quiet for some
time now. The Lowers have not been so placid these past ten years." "Maybe
so, but things are happening down there, Wu Shih. I can feel it. We
are sitting on a powder keg." "And
more powder every day, neh?" Wu Shih moved back a fraction, his
features formed into a frown. "Then maybe it is time, Yuan. Time
to implement what we have already decided." Li
Yuan sat there a moment, then nodded slowly. The decision had
been made the day before, in Council, the terms for the "new
deal" agreed among the Seven. It remained only to put it before
the representatives of the Above. In
principle the package was fairly straightforward. Five changes to the
Edict of Technological Control, in specialized areas. Stricter
monitoring controls. Changes to the Personal Liberty Act. More money
to be spent on low-level health care and maintenance support. Minor
concessions concerning space travel. The reopening of the House of
Representatives at Weimar. And in return, the House would set up the
legal machinery for population controls. Wu
Shih sighed deeply and tugged at his plaited beard. "My
instincts cry out against giving those bastards anything. But as
youVe rightly argued, we have a problem and it will not go away. So
.1. ." He shrugged and raised his hands, as if in surrender. "We
go ahead then? We ratify the document?" Wu
Shih nodded. "I see no point in waiting, Yuan. Even our cousin
Wang is in agreement. Indeed, his amendments to the Edict changes
were most thoughtful. It is clear the problem worries him as much as
you or I." "Perhaps
. . ." Li Yuan looked away a moment, stony-faced, deep in
thought, then turned back, facing the giant image of Wu Shih, meeting
those platelike almond eyes. "We should have done this sixty
years ago. Now . . . Well, maybe it is already much too late. Maybe
we are only building walls of sand against the tide." "Yet
we must try, neh? We are Seven, after all." The
tone of irony in Wu Shih's voice did not escape the young T'ang. Li
Yuan laughed, then fell serious again. "These are uncertain
times, dear cousin. But whatever happens, remember that I count you
as my friend. As brother to my father." Wu
Shih stared back at him, his expression giving nothing away, then he
nodded. "You have my support, Li Yuan, in whatever you do. And
yes. I will be an uncle to you in all things." He smiled,
relaxing. "Well, so much for business. Now how is that child of
yours? How is Kuei Jen?" Li
Yuank face lit from within. "He is . . ." He hesitated,
seeking the correct word, then laughed, finding nothing better than
what had first come to mind.
"He is beautiful, Wu Shih. Simply the most beautiful thing I
have ever seen." michael
LEVER stood there on the balcony overlooking the ballroom of his
father's mansion, remembering the last time he had been there,
fifteen months before, at the great Thanksgiving Ball his father had
thrown for the Supernal. Outwardly, things seemed to have changed
very little; the pillars and balconies of the great hall were
festooned as before with red, white, and blue banners, while at the
far end of the hall, beside a full-size replica of the ancient
Liberty Bell, a twelve-piece band, dressed in the dark blue military
uniforms of the Revolution, played the battle tunes of the old
American Empire— forbidden tunes that spoke eloquently of
another age, when the Americans ruled their own land and the Han were
safe within their borders. Looking about him, it was easy to believe
that this evening and the last were somehow connected, and that the
fifteen months that had elapsed between were merely a dream, a dark
delusion. But there was no connection, and those days—four
hundred and sixty-three days, to be precise about it—had been
no dream. He
pushed back from the edge, a feeling of hollowness, a tiredness that
went beyond mere physical exhaustion, making him feel giddy for a
moment. There had been a breach. Whereas, before, he had looked at
this with casual, accepting eyes, now he saw it clear. It was
the same, and yet it was wholly, utterly different. Like
himself. Oh, he knew how he looked. He had stood there for a long
time, earlier that afternoon, staring at himself in the full-length
mirror. He was gaunter than he'd been back then, and there was a
haunted, slightly melancholy look about him that had not been there
before, yet otherwise he seemed the man he'd been. But he was not
that man. From
the beginning they had kept him—as they'd kept all the Sons—in
isolation. At first he had not been frightened, but had nursed his
anger in silence, expecting his release at any moment. Yet as the
days wore on, he had found his mood changing as no word came. For
several days he had bellowed at his guards and refused the food jhey
brought. Then, changing his tack, he had adopted a more civil air,
demanding firmly but politely to see whoever was in charge.
Unexpectedly, his request had been granted. He
could still remember how it had felt, kneeling before the man in that
tiny, awful cell. Even thinking of it made him feel cold,
apprehensive. Before that moment he had never felt fear, never had to
bow his head before another man. But now he knew. And that knowledge
had changed him. Had made him a different man. Now, when he looked at
things, he saw not a world that was his to make and shape, but a
world in thrall to power and desire, a world corrupted by the dark
currents of domination and submission. In the
light of which, his father's anger, earlier, at Wu Shih's treatment
of him had seemed childish, almost laughable. What, after all, had he
expected? Gratitude? Respect? No. For the relations of men were
flawed—deeply flawed—as if they could not exist without
the brutal mechanisms of power. And
now this. This celebration of his homecoming . . . He
shuddered, then turned, making his way down, knowing he had no
choice; that this evening had to be faced and overcome, if only for
his father's sake. Even so, he did not feel like celebrating. I have
been on my own too long, he thought, feeling a faint uneasiness
as the murmur of the crowd below grew louder. I'll have to learn
all this again. At the
turn of the stairs, he paused, trying out a brief, apologetic smile,
conscious of how awkward it felt, of the way the skin stretched
tightly across his face. Then, reluctantly, like a prisoner being
taken to the place of punishment, he moved on, down, into the body of
the hall. CHARLES
LEVER stared at his son, a broad grin splitting his face, then drew
him close, holding him in a bear hug for the dozenth time that
evening. All
about them, pressed close on every side, the pack of friends and
relations laughed delightedly and raised their glasses to toast the
two men, their joy unbounded. "Have
you told him yet, Charles?" one of them called out. "Not
yet," Lever called back, holding his son's head between his
hands and staring once more, as if he could not have enough of the
sight. "What's
this?" Michael asked quietly. "Later,"
the old man answered. "There's plenty of time." Much
had changed, but he knew that tone in his father's voice. It was the
tone he used when he wanted to avoid something awkward. Michael
pressed him, softly but insistent. "Tell me. I'd like to know." Lever
laughed. "Okay. I wanted to keep it a while, but I guess now's
as good a time as any." His smile broadened again. "I've
asked Ted Johnstone about Louisa. He's given his consent to bring
things forward. I thought we could announce it tonight—make it
a double celebration." Michael
felt himself go cold. Louisa Johnstone... He looked down, licking his
lips, then looked back at his father. "No," he said softly,
almost inaudibly. "What
did you say?" his father asked, leaning closer. "I
said no. I don't want that." "No?"
Old Man Lever laughed, as if at a good joke. "Hell, Michael, you
can't say no. YouVe been betrothed to the girl fifteen years now. All
I'm saying is that we bring the wedding forward." Michael
looked about him at the expectant, joyous faces, then looked back at
his. father. Charles Lever had grown more solid by the year. His head
rested like something carved upon a bull-like neck, the close trim of
his ash-white hair accentuating the robust power of his features. That
is how I will look, forty years from now, he thought. But do
I have to be like him as well? "Not
now," he said, wanting to let the matter drop; to save it for
some quieter, less public moment. But his father was insistent. He
slapped Michael's shoulder, as if encouraging a fighter. "No,
come on, Michael! It's a great time to announce it! It'll give
everyone something to look forward to. And it'll help us put this
thing behind us." Michael
stared at his father, then shook his head. "Please, Father. I'm
not ready for it. Let's talk about it tomorrow, neh?" Even
that, that attempt at the old, father-son tone, had been hard; had
stretched his resources to their limit. But it was as if Charles
Lever hadn't heard. He shook his massive head and gripped his son's
arm firmly. "Don't
be silly, Michael. I know how you feel, but this'll help you snap out
of it. A woman, that's what you need! And sons! Plenty of sons!" "Help
me?" The sharpness in Michael's voice made Lever jerk his
head back, surprised. Michael
glared at his father, something breaking in him. "Don't you
understand? Don't you fucking understand? I don't need help. I
need to be left alone. Sons . . . What use are fucking sons when I
feel like this?" The
great room had gone deathly silent. A hundred faces stared at him,
shocked and uncomprehending. "There's
no need . . ." Old Man Lever began, but Michael made a
dismissive gesture. "You
push me, Father. You always did. But I mean it. I'm not marrying the
girl. Not now, not ever, understand me?" "Michael/" But
suddenly he was beyond words. He turned away, pushing through the
crowd roughly, ignoring the shouting at his back; seeing only the
floor of the tiny cell, the guard above him, that ugly mouth leaning
close, shouting abuse, teaching him about how things really were.
PARTI
I SPRING 2209 Monsters
of the Deep
Humanity must
perforce prey on itself, Like monsters of the deep. —WILLIAM
SHAKESPEARE, King Lear, Act IV, Scene II
Go into
emptiness, strike voids, bypass what he defends, hit him where he
does not expect you. —TSAO
TSAO [a.d. 155-220], Commentary on Sun Tzu's The Art of War
CHAPTER ONE Earth IN
THE CLEAR, golden light of dawn the seven "gods of the soil and
grain" stood at their places on the huge earthen mound. Dressed
in dragon robes of imperial yellow, each held an ancient ceremonial
hand plow, the primitive wooden shaft curiously curved, the long
blade made of black roughcast iron. Here, at the Temple of Heaven, at
the very center of the universe, the New Year rites were about to be
enacted, the furrows plowed, the sacrifices made to Hou T'u, "He
Who Rules the Earth," and Hou Chi, "He Who Rules the
Millet," as they had been since the time of T'ang, the founder
of the Shang dynasty, three thousand seven hundred years before. For a
moment longer they stood there, while ten thousand blue-cloaked
servants waited silently about the foot of the mound, the seven
gold-clothed figures forming a single burnished eye at the center of
the dark circle of earth, and then it began, the pure tone of the
bell sounding in the silence, followed by the low, monotonous
chanting of the officials. As one
they bent, moving outward, pushing the plows before them, seven black
furrows forming in the earth like the spokes of a giant wheel. Turning,
Li Yuan looked across the circle of the mound, seeing his fellow
T'ang spread out along the rim, their dark, silhouetted figures like
pillars holding up Heaven itself, their yellow-gold silks fluttering
like banners in the early morning breeze. For a moment the
illusion was perfect. For the briefest moment he was back a thousand
years, at the very center of the ancient Middle Kingdom, the
offerings made, the harvest guaranteed. But then, raising his eyes,
he looked beyond his cousins, beyond the pleasant arbors and orchards
of the Temple grounds. The
veil fell from his eyes. There, like a vast glacier dominating the
skyline, lay the City, its pearl-white walls surrounding them on
every side, towering over the lush greenery of the ancient gardens.
For a moment he felt almost giddy. Then, checking himself, he stood
straighter, listening to the chant, to the ancient words that spoke
of the harmony between the ruler and the earth and of the balance of
forces that must be maintained if the Kingdom was not to fall. For a
moment he let himself be comforted by the ancient formula—by
the thought that they might yet keep that age-old bargain and
maintain the threefold link between Earth and Man and Heaven. But it
was hard to concentrate. His eyes kept returning to the whiteness. To
the giddying whiteness that encircled the tiny, earthen mound. It was
like death. Death on every side. And when, for the briefest moment,
he let his attention stray, he grew conscious of the lie that lay
behind their apparent unity. For in that moment of vertigo he had
seen the Great Wheel break and spin aimlessly, like a cartwheel
tumbling down a cliff face. He
shuddered and closed his eyes momentarily, wishing it were over, then
looked down, noting the earth that clung to his boots and stained the
hem of his silks. As on another day, eleven years before, when they
had laid his brother, Han Ch'in, in his tomb. Later,
in the sedan returning to the Chi Nien Tien, the Hall of
Prayer for Good Harvests, he thought of all that had happened since
that day. Of the War-that-wasn't-a-War, of his father's death, and of
the failure of his marriage to his dead brother's wife, Fei Yen. All
had left their scars. And yet he had come through; had endured all
that pain and suffering, to reach these calm heights from which he
might look back. This hilltop of contentment. Yes.
And that was the strangest thing of all. For there was no doubting
how he had felt these past few weeks. His child, his wives—
these, more than anything, had become his comfort, his delight. Outside
the small circle of his family the storm clouds were gathering. There
would be War again. Or worse. And yet he was happy. When he sat
there, bouncing Kuei Jen on his knee, or carrying him against his
shoulder, feeling his soft warmth and hearing the soft pattern of his
breathing close by his ear, he would feel his cares fall from him.
For a while there would be nothing but himself and the child, as if
all else were a dream. And even afterward, when he had to go out from
that magic circle and face the problems of his world, he* would carry
that warmth—that light—within him, like a charm against
the world's darkness. The
sedan swayed gently, tilting slowly backward as the carriers climbed
the broad, white marble ramp that led up to the great three-tiered
tower. Happy.
Yes, he was happy now. And yet it was not enough. Climbing
down, he looked about him, attending closely to all he saw, as if
this were the last time he would witness all of this. It was that
thought—that strange and frightening glimpse of finality—which
made him look away as Wu Shih came across. "What
is it, Yuan?" Wu Shih said softly, speaking to his ear. He
turned back, smiling, taking the older man's arm. "It's nothing,
cousin. Just a fleeting thought." Wu
Shih nodded, understanding. "Then come. Let us make our
sacrifices." The
Seven stood in line before the great altar, their offerings held out
before them. A bell sounded, high and pure in the silence, and then
the chanting began again. Candles flickered in the shadows. New
Confucian officials came forward, their saffron robes whispering
against the stone floor, and took the offerings from the T'ang,
turning back to lay them before the statue that crouched, thrice
life-size, on the altar. Shang
Ti, the Supreme Ancestor, looked down on his seven sons with blind,
impassive eyes. He was Yang, Male, the personification of
Heaven itself and the great arbiter of the weather. Appeased by
sacrifices, he would provide good harvests; would look after the
black-haired people. Neglected he would spurn them. Would bring
plague and desolation. And death. Or so
it was said. So the officials chanted. Li
Yuan, standing there, was conscious suddenly of the great line of
kings and emperors who had preceded him. Of that ghostly throng who
stood with him, in his person, before the altar. Had they felt as he
felt now? Or was he alone in doubting the efficacy of laying paper
offerings before a blank-eyed statue? It was
not the first time he had questioned his beliefs. Often, in the past,
he had looked squarely, critically at the rites and customs he, as
T'ang, was obliged to perform. Yet this morning the ritual seemed
more hollow than before, his actions sheer pretense. And though he
had questioned things before, he had never experienced so profound a
mistrust of his own words and actions. What,
after all, did they mean? What did any of it mean? Oh, he
could see the beauty in it. Could even feel some part of him stir,
responding to the powerful sense of tradition, to the great weight of
years that the rituals evoked. But beyond that—beyond that
simple, almost aesthetic thrill—there was nothing. Nothing at
all. He
watched it all happening, distanced from himself, and tried to fathom
why. These three things—the darkening clouds of circumstance,
the great, enduring chain of tradition, and the bright yet tiny
circle of his own, individual happiness—how did they come
together? Where did they meet and make sense? As
they bowed and backed away, he looked to either side of him, but on
the faces of Wu Shih and Tsu Ma, of Hou Tung-po and Chi Hsing, on the
broad moon face of Wang Sau-leyan and the Regent Wei Chan Yin, there
was nothing but a solemn certainty. Whatever they thought of this, it
was hidden from him behind the walls of their faces. They
descended the steps in silence, slowly, almost casually now that the
ritual was over, making for the great tent and the breakfast that had
been laid out by their host Wei Chan Yin's servants. It was there,
beneath the golden awning, that Wang Sau-leyan came across to Li
Yuan, addressing him for the first time since his son had been born. He
faced Li Yuan, smiling, seemingly at ease, a tumbler of ch'a
cradled in the palm of one hand. "Well, cousin, and how is
the child?" It
seemed an innocuous question—the kind of politeness one
might have expected from a fellow T'ang—yet it was as if
a shadow had fallen over Li Yuan. He felt a sudden tightening in his
chest and—briefly, absurdly—experienced a powerful,
overwhelming fear for his son. Then it passed. He was himself again.
He forced a smile, lowering his head the merest degree, acknowledging
his cousin's query. "Kuei
Jen is fine. He is a strong and healthy child. Heaven has blessed me,
Wang Sau-leyan." Wang
smiled, no sign of calculation in his face. "I am pleased for
you, cousin. A man should have sons, neh?" Li
Yuan stared back at the young T'ang of Africa, surprised by the
almost wistful tone in Wang's voice, thinking to see something in his
eyes, but there was nothing. Wang nodded and turned away, his
business done. And Li Yuan, left to watch his back, stood there a
moment, wondering, that small, hard nugget of fear returning, like a
stone within his flesh. MAIN
WAS packed. Thirty, maybe forty thousand people were crammed into the
broad two-Zi-long concourse, banners and streamers of bright red
er-silk waved energetically above their heads. At the northern end of
Main, before the bell tower, a raised podium had been constructed.
There the crowd pressed thickest, held back by a double line of
green-uniformed Security guards. As
ninth bell sounded from the tower, the lights dimmed, a hush falling
on the great gathering. A moment later, cloaked in a veil of
brilliant white laser light, the huge statue of the goddess descended
slowly onto its pedestal. As the
figure settled there was a strong murmur of approval. Kuan Yin,
Goddess of Mercy and Fecundity, sat Buddha-like on a giant lotus, a
newborn baby cradled lovingly in her arms. Her face in the brilliant
white light was benign, radiant with compassion. There
was a moment's silence, then, with a great popping of crackers on
every side and the creaking of rattles, the crowd began to celebrate.
The sick and lame, held back by the crush, now renewed their efforts
to get to the front, to receive the goddess's blessing. On the
podium nearby, separated from the crowd by a wide corridor
of armed guards, the dignitaries looked on, turning in their
high-backed chairs to talk among themselves. The guest of honor—the
man whose money had paid for the giant statue—was a squat,
balding Hung Mao named May Feng. His company, EduCol, had benefited
from GenSyn's relaxation of food patents and—developing one of
those patents—had increased food production significantly over
the last twelve months, perhaps by as much as four percent throughout
City Europe, winning the praise of both T'ang and people. After years
of ever-stricter rationing and growing discontent, it had reversed
the trend and brought new stability to these levels. But what most of
those gathered in Main to celebrate EduCol's generosity didn't know
was just how poor, nutritionally, the new product was, nor the amount
of profit the Company had made on their new soy-substitute; foB while
the new process cost only one sixth of the old, the product price was
roughly the same. To May
Feng's right sat a big, slightly corpulent Han named K'ang A-yin, a
local gang leader, operating this and the surrounding stacks under
the protection of the Kuei Chuan Triad. Behind K'ang stood two
of his henchmen, their eyes shifting uneasily in their faces as they
surveyed the massive crowd. K'ang himself was studying the merchant,
noting the fashionable cut of his silk pau, the absence of
rings on his fingers. K'ang looked away, tucking one hand under the
other in his lap. He, at least, knew how much profit EduCol was
making. Five hundred percent, if reports were true. And he could use
a cut of that, to buy himself more muscle and finance a few schemes.
But May Feng knew nothing of that yet. As far as he was concerned,
K'ang was simply a businessman. The man to deal with at these levels. K'ang
smiled and looked past May Feng at his friend, the local Wei, or
Commandant of Security, who was standing off to one side of the
podium. "Well, Captain Franke. It's almost time ..." Franke
bowed his head, then turned, calling down to his lieutenant. A moment
later the great curtain which was draped across the width of Main
behind the bell tower twitched, then began to draw back. From the
tunnel beyond, a procession of carts, heaped with the latest range of
EduCol products, began to make its way out into Main toward the
crowd. At the
far end of Main, on a balcony almost two li from where the
dignitaries were sitting, a tall, bearded Hung Mao lowered
the field glasses from his eyes and turned, making a curt hand
signal. At once the group of men and women gathered about him turned,
making their way down the steps and out into the crowd below. Mach
watched them a moment, seeing how they went among the crowd, handing
out the leaflets, their voices murmuring old slogans, the
catchphrases of ancient discontents. And after they'd moved on, he
saw how those who had glanced at the leaflets now held them out to
their neighbors, angered by what they'd read, their own voices
raised. He
smiled, then turned away again, moving out into the corridor. Two
guards were standing there, staring up at one of the public service
screens. "You'd
best get downstairs," he said, showing them his ID. "It
looks like trouble." They
looked at his badge, then nodded, moving past him quickly, the noise
from the crowd growing by the moment. Mach
stood there a moment longer, looking up at the screen. Li Yuan was
talking to his citizens, telling them about the committee that had
been set up to investigate the possibility of changes to the Edict
and the reopening of the House. Mach moved closer, spitting up into
the face of the young T'ang, then, drawing his gun, he turned,
following the guards down. On the
podium May Feng was standing now, concerned. The noise from the far
end of Main was growing all the while, -ising above the sound of the
firecrackers. People at the front were turning their heads, anxious,
conscious that something was happening back there. "What
is it, Shih K'ang?" the merchant asked, fingering his
girdle-pouch nervously. K'ang
frowned, trying to conceal his own concern. "I'm not sure. I..." His
words were drowned out as deck communications cut in, the voice harsh
and accusing. "Death
to all profiteers and thieving First Level bandits! Death to all
those who would steal the rice from your children's mouths! Death to
those who profit from the misery and need of others! Death . . ." The
litany went on, fanatical, endless, stirring up already excited
passions into a frenzy; turning fear into a sudden blinding
panic that spread among the masses like a brushfire. K'ang watched as
the thin line of green gave and the crowd spilled out toward the
podium and the giant statue. Without thought, he turned and, his
henchmen close behind, leapt from the back of the platform, making
for the safety of the tunnel. It was not a moment too soon, for the
front edge of the crowd, impelled by the pressure of bodies from
behind, broke like a wave against the podium, bringing its supporting
stanchions crashing down. For a
moment May Feng kept his balance, then he went down, his mouth formed
in a perfect O of surprise before he was lost to sight, trampled
beneath the stampeding crowd. There was a steady roar within the
great space now, like the sound of a great wind blowing from the
north. As if caught in the grip of that wind, the great statue
shuddered, then, with a slow, soundless motion, it fell, crushing
more than two dozen people beneath it. All
was chaos now. There was gunfire from the far end of Main and the
sound of small explosions, of falling ice. And over everything was
the voice, chanting its litany of death, death, death. there
were THREE of them, not counting the stallholder. Becker was standing
at the back of the partitioned room, browsing the shelves of
secondhand tapebooks that crowded the walls. Haller lounged in a
chair nearby, staring up at the overhead FacScreen, one hand lazily
holding a squeezetube of prawn-flavored protein paste. Lehmann
was talking to the owner, Pai Mei, his back to the doorway. "Don't
worry," he was saying. "Just get down behind the counter
when things start. And remember—no one will harm you. I
guarantee it." Pai
Mei, a thin-faced, hard-looking man, hesitated. K'ang A-yin was a
bastard, but who knew what this one was like? Yet if the albino
failed, K'ang might think that he, Pai Mei, had put him up to it. He
shuddered, then gave a reluctant nod. It was a no-win situation. Just
then the ragged curtain was tugged back and two men came in. One was
tall, going to fat, the other smaller, lither, but more
dangerous-looking altogether. His bare arms were heavily muscled
and his head was shaved, the skull painted in an intricate
pattern of red and green that indicated he was a chan shih, a
fighter. They were K'ang's men. The
fat man stopped and looked about him. Glancing sourly at Pai Mei, he
touched the chan shih's arm. "Move them. I want to speak
to Shih. Pai in private." The
small man tapped Haller on the shoulder, indicating that he should go
and quickly. Smiling, apologetic, Haller got up and went. Becker,
turning, saw how things stood and, shoving the tape back hastily,
scuttled out after Haller. Only Lehmann remained, his back to the
newcomers. "You,"
said the fat man, coming up behind him. "Out of here! IVe
business with Shih Pai." Lehmann
turned, facing them. The chan shih seemed easier now that there was
only Lehmann in the room. He relaxed, looking about the room, for
that brief moment inattentive. The fat man, meanwhile, was staring at
Lehmann curiously, as if he ought to know him. But even he, for that
instant, was off his guard. Lehmann
struck. With one quick movement he kicked the chan shih beneath the
chin, then turned to face the fat man. Panicking, K'ang's lieutenant
tugged at the gun in his pocket, trying to free it. He had just
leveled it when Lehmann punched it from his hand, breaking the man's
wrist with the downward blow. His second punch floored the man.
Lehmann stood over him, looking down, his fist raised, waiting to see
if he would try to get up. Haller
and Becker stood in the doorway, smiling. They had seen already how
Lehmann operated. Becker looked across at Pai Mei and laughed. The
stallholder had gone white. He was staring at Lehmann in
astonishment. "I
thought that all three of you. . ." Pai Mei left the sentence
unfinished. Becker
stepped into the room and knelt down beside the chan shih, feeling
for a pulse at the neck. The small man was dead. "Shame,"
Becker said darkly. "I would have liked to have seen his
expression when I slit his throat." Haller, coming up beside
him, laughed at that, but Lehmann was unmoved. He stood there over
his wheezing victim, tensed, perfectly still, making sure. "That's
it, you see," Becker said, looking up at the stallholder, then
drew a large, razor-sharp knife from beneath his tunic. "They
never expect trouble from a single man. That's how they think. And in
the moment that they least expect trouble, that's when they're at
their weakest." He smiled again and looked across at Lehmann, as
if to say, "Isn't that so, Shih Lehmann?" But
Lehmann ignored him. Becker looked down again, shrugging, then got to
work, cutting into the flesh at the neck, blood oozing out over the
bare, unswept floor. Pai
Mei looked away, feeling sick. He
looked across. Lehmann was crouching now, talking to the fat man.
K'ang's man was making hoarse, gasping noises, as if he'd damaged his
windpipe, but he was listening very carefully as the albino spelt out
what he was to tell his boss. At one point he laughed dismissively
and turned his head away, but Lehmann grasped his chin in one long,
pale hand and turned his head back savagely, forcing him to look up
into his face. The fat man shut up at once, fear returning to his
eyes. Becker
had finished now. He wrapped the head in a towel and dropped it into
a bag. Haller, in the doorway, was looking past him, his attention on
the FacScreen and the media speculation about what tomorrow's meeting
of the Seven might bring for the people of Chung Kuo. "Big
things are happening up there," he said at last, looking down at
Becker, ignoring the pool of blood that had formed about his feet.
"Big changes are coming." "As
above, so below," said Lehmann, pulling the fat man to his feet.
Then, taking the bag from Becker, he thrust it into the man's one
good hand. Watching
him, the two men laughed, enjoying the fat man's discomfort. But
Lehmann didn't smile. Lehmann never smiled. THE
tong BOSS, K'ang A-yin, sat back in his chair, drawing the back of
his hand across his mouth, then looked around him at the eight men
gathered in the room. The Zwickau riot had shocked and angered him,
but this latest news was too much. K'ang was trembling with rage.
Only with the greatest effort did he keep himself from shouting. "Okay.
What the fuck is going on ? Who the fuck's this Hung Mao ?" There
was an awkward silence from his men, then one of them— Soucek,
his lieutenant—spoke up. "We
don't know. I sent a runner to Pai Mei's. He only confirmed what Feng
Wo said. The pale Hung Mao killed the chan shih. The others
hacked his head off. Why, we don't know." "And
no one knows the bastard?" Soucek
shrugged. "You want I should do some asking?" K'ang
looked away a moment, considering, then shook his head. "No.
I've a better idea. Chao, Kant... I want you to find out where he's
staying and hit him. When the fucker's asleep. I want him dead, him
and his two sidekicks. And I want their heads, back here, on my desk,
by the morning." Soucek
made to say something, to insist, perhaps, that he be given the job
of killing the Hung Moo, but K'ang raised a hand. "No, J iri.
Not this time. I want you to go and see Whiskers Lu and find out all
you can about what happened earlier. If the Yu are active again, it
threatens us all. And if it's something else, I want to know,
understand?" Soucek
nodded. K'ang
stood, looking about him, more at ease now that he was taking the
initiative. "Good. Then let's get going. Let's sort these
fuckers out, neh? Then we can get on with making money." THEY
CAME two hours later. Lehmann was expecting them. Haller's bunk was
empty, Haller fifty ch'i down the corridor in the public
washroom. Becker's was occupied, but by a dummy, while Becker
crouched behind the false partition, gun in hand. Lehmann lay beneath
the thin blanket on the upper bunk, masked and waiting. He too was
armed. There
were no locks at these lowest levels, so it was easy for K'ang's man
to pull the slide-to back a fraction and roll in the gas grenade. It
exploded with a dull plop, followed instantly by the hiss of escaping
gas. Lehmann counted, knowing they would make certain before coming
through. Sure enough, on a count of thirty, the slide-to was heaved
aside and two men came into the room, machine-pistols raised. A third
waited outside. He
didn't give them a chance. Poking the muzzle of the rocket launcher
from the blanket, he squeezed the hair trigger and watched the far
wall explode. There was no sign of the two men. Wall, floor, and men
had gone. A great, gaping hole had opened up, revealing the level
below. Fractured cables sparked. There was screaming from below and
the sweet stink of superheated plastics hung in the air, stronger
than the gas. From
farther down the corridor two shots rang out. Haller had done his
job. He appeared a moment later, gun in hand, looking across the gap
into the room. "Messy," he said, grinning through his mask.
"Maybe K'ang will talk now." "We'll
see," Lehmann said, sitting up and wrapping the big gun in the
blanket. "Either way, he'll know now that we aren't so easy*
He'll be more careful in future." "That's
good," said Haller, slipping the gun back in his
shoulder-holster, "It was a bit too easy for my liking." Lehmann
said nothing. He simply looked at Haller and shook his head. They had
a lot to leam. FROM
WHERE IT soared, high above the wood, the hawk could see the figures
down below, among the trees. The leading group had stopped now in a
clearing, resting their mounts, their necks strained back, hands
shielding their eyes as they looked up at it. Farther back, part
hidden by foliage, a second group waited. These last were smaller but
more numerous, and in its dark, instinctive way, it knew these to be
men; knew they were on foot. It
circled patiently, its keen eyes searching for that sudden,
distinctive movement that would betray its prey. For a time there was
nothing, then, as the wind changed, there was a flutter of sound and
a brief blur, as a guinea fowl broke cover far below. With a
cry the hawk fell, turning, straining after its prey. For a moment it
seemed as if the other bird might yet regain its perch, then, with a
sickening thud, the hawk struck. A roar
of triumph erupted from the men below. In the
clearing the three men leaned forward, watching the hawk
spread its wings wide, slowing its fall, the fowl held tightly
in its talons, then settle on the ground among the trees to their
right. Tsu Ma
leaned down, patting the dark neck of his mount fondly, then turned
his head, looking across at his fellow T'ang. "Well, cousins,
what do you think?" Wu
Shih placed one hand carefully on the pommel of his saddle and turned
slightly, inclining his head. They were talking of their cousin, Wang
Sau-leyan, T'ang of Africa. "I don't trust him," he said.
"He has been too quiet these past six months. Too damned
polite." "He's
up to something," Li Yuan added, sitting straighter in his
saddle. "Something deep. Something we can't see yet." Wu
Shih nodded. "I agree. I am not certain about much in these
troubled times, but of this I can be sure . . . Wang Sau-leyan
has not changed his nature these past few months. He is still the
same devious little shit-eating insect he always was." Tsu Ma
looked past them momentarily, watching his falconer run across to
where the hawk had brought down its prey, his lure out, ready to draw
the hawk off, then looked back at Wu Shih. "I
think you are right," he said. "But exactly what it is ...
Well, it's very strange. My servants in his household have heard
nothing. Or almost nothing . . ." "Almost
nothing?" Wu Shih stared at him intently. "Just
that there is a woman in his life. Or so it seems. A Hung Moo. He has
her smuggled in. Late, when he thinks no one will see. I'm told he
even visits her." Li
Yuan looked away. "How strange. I would not have thought it. A
Hung Mao . . . And you think it is serious?" Tsu Ma
shrugged. "Maybe it is nothing. Or maybe this is why our cousin
has behaved himself so well recently. Perhaps he has been
distracted." "In
love, you mean?" Wu Shih roared with laughter. "The only
one that ingrate will ever love is his own reflection. Love!" He
shook his head, then reached down, slapping his horse's flank. "No
. . . that moon-faced bastard is up to something. I guarantee it!" "Chieh
Hsia..." A
servant stood at the edge of the clearing, his head bowed. "What
is it, Cheng Yi?" At Tsu
Ma's summons, the man came across, his body bent double, and took his
T'ang's foot, kissing it, before falling to his knees beside the
horse. "News
has come, Chieh Hsia. There have been riots in City Europe. Many have
died..." "Riots
. . ." Li Yuan urged his horse forward sharply. "What in
the gods' names has been happening?" The
servant bowed his head lower, answering as if his own T'ang had
spoken. "It began at Zwickau Hsien, Chieh Hsia, at the
dedication ceremony for the new statue, and spread quickly to
surrounding stacks." "And
many have died?"
* "That
is so, Chieh Hsia. A great number. Tens of thousands, some say. Among
them the merchant, May Feng." Li
Yuan looked across at Tsu Ma, alarmed. May Feng had been a leading
figure in the new peace. Had sat on committees to discuss the
proposed Edict changes and the reopening of the House. What's more,
he represented a whole class—of powerful First Level
merchants—who had been won back to the Seven and their cause.
And now he was dead. Li
Yuan leaned toward the man, anxious now. "What happened? How did
he die?" The
servant swallowed. "It is not clear how he died, Chieh Hsia. All
we know is that his body was returned to his widow shortly afterward.
He had been cut open, it seems, then stuffed with dirt like a sack
and sewn up again." Li
Yuan shuddered and sat back. "Do we know who was responsible?" "It
is too early yet to know for certain, Chieh Hsia. Early rumors
attributed it to the Yu, but General Rheinhardt believes that the Hun
Mun had a hand in this." Again,
Li Yuan felt a ripple of shock pass through him. The Hung Mun—the
Triads, or Secret Societies—had kept out of things before now.
But that was clearly changing. If they were involved . . . "I
must get back," he said, turning his horse, looking from Tsu Ma
to Wu Shih. "If the Hun Mun are involved, I must act." "No,
Yuan," Tsu Ma said, putting out a hand to him. "I would
counsel against acting too rashly. Take some measures to calm things
down, by all means, but consider before you take action against the
brotherhoods. Your father's scheme, for instance . . ." "Buy
them off, you mean?" Li Yuan sat back, shaking his head. "No,
Tsu Ma. I will not bow to them in my own City!" "Nor
am I asking you to, cousin. Pursue your father's scheme—offer
them funds, assistance, power of a kind—while all the time
undermining their position." Li
Yuan narrowed his eyes. "What do you mean?" "The
new force. Karr's shen t'se ..." Li
Yuan looked down, then he smiled. "You know of that?" Tsu Ma
nodded. "My cousin's business is my business. How can I know how
I might help him unless I know his needs, his plans?" Li
Yuan turned, looking to the older man. "And you, Wu Shih?" Wu
Shih shrugged. "You have a special force, I take it. Good. Then
use it. Do as our good cousin, Tsu Ma, says. Play a double game. Buy
time. For it's time we need right now, not another war. Not yet." Tsu Ma
nodded. "Wu Shih is right, Yuan. Fight a war against the
brotherhoods now and it would weaken us greatly. And who would
benefit?" "Wang
Sau-leyan." "Exactly.
So do not be goaded into a futile war." Tsu Ma smiled bleakly.
"Oh, the time will come—and not so long from now—when
we must take on the Hun Mun. But let us pick that time, neh? Let us
be prepared for it." "Besides,"
Wu Shih added, coming alongside him, "we have problems enough
already, neh? The Yu, the Younger Sons . . . Why add to them?" Li
Yuan was silent a moment, calming himself, then reached out, taking
Wu Shih's arm. "Thank you, cousin. And you, Tsu Ma. But we must
get back, neh? There is much to be done. Besides, watching the hawk
has whetted my appetite for other sport." Tsu Ma
stared at him a moment, then laughed. "For once, Yuan, your
meaning escapes me, but let it pass. You are right. There is much to
be done. Nonetheless, we must meet more often, neh? Just the three of
us." "It
shall be so," Wu Shih said, giving a brief, decisive nod. "We
shall be like the three brothers of the peach garden, neh?" Li
Yuan, watching the two older men, felt the darkness subside a little.
So it would be. So it had to be from now on. The Three, he
thought, trying the term out in his head for the first time, and
finding it not strange but strangely comforting. Yes, we shall be
The Three. There
was a sudden flutter of sound. Behind Li Yuan, on the far side of the
clearing, the hawk lifted, stretching its wings, then settled on its
kill once more, ignoring the lure. CHAPTER
TWO
In
the World of Levels Jelka
was stretched OUT on the sun bed, looking out across the brightly lit
expanse of tiles to where her two school friends splashed noisily in
the pool. Beside her on the chair lay the compact computer notepad
she had been using, its display screen lit. For a
moment she watched their antics thoughtlessly, enjoying the warmth on
her skin, the faint scent of jasmine and pine from the nearby rock
garden. Then, with a tiny shiver, she returned to the matter she had
been considering. Yesterday
had been the last day of school; the end of her childhood, of twelve
years preparing for her adult life. Ahead of her, tonight, lay the
ordeal of the College Graduation Ball, and beyond that the rest of
her life—fifty, sixty years of it, maybe, needing to be filled. But
how? She
turned over, lying on her back a moment, conscious of how it felt to
be herself, seventeen, in a young woman's body, the future open to
her. She
stretched her legs, flexing her toes, exercising the muscles of her
feet and calves and thighs, as if warming up for an exercise session,
then relaxed again. The Marshal's daughter. . . that was how she was
known. As if she had no separate identity of her own. Jelka
shook her head, exasperated, then turned onto her stomach again. The
Marshal's daughter... If she had been his son, her future
would have been mapped out long before today. Cadet school, a
commission, and then the service. Fifty years of service: of dodging
assassins' bullets and attending official functions; of investigating
murders and pandering to the whims of some old Minister; of
unearthing corruption scandals at First Level and tidying up after
riots beneath the Net. Such was her father's life, and there were far
worse ways of spending one's time, but it wasn't that. It was having
a say in her future. As a son to the Marshal she would have had no
say in things. Not
that being a daughter had made all that great a difference. Had it
not been for Hans Ebert's duplicity—for the betrayal of his
T'ang and the murder of his father—she would have been married
now, her future set, determined. And no way out, except, perhaps, to
kill herself. She
shuddered, recollecting her aversion for the young Major. That was
something her friends had never understood. Something which, when she
mentioned it, brought looks of incredulity. Hans Ebert. . . why, he
had been every schoolgirl's dream, surely? A prince among men. She
laughed sourly, remembering how often she had heard him called that.
Moreover, as heir to the richest Company in Chung Kuo, she could have
expected a life of idleness, of unremitting luxury. Yes,
but Hans Ebert was also cruel, and arrogant and devious. She
looked down, recalling her father's hurt when Hans had finally been
exposed; a hurt mingled with grief at the death of his brother and
his wife, and of his oldest friend, Klaus Ebert. She too had felt a
similar grief, but also relief that Hans was gone from her life; a
relief that was like a huge stone lifted from her chest. She sighed
and shook her head. Maybe that was why it was so important now to get
it right; to make sure that her life from here on was her own. It
seemed simple enough, but there was one small complication. She was a
woman. For her friends that seemed to pose no problems. Only five of
the sixty girls in her year were not yet betrothed, and of those,
three were actively pursuing a husband. Eight were already married
and two—her close friend Yi Pang-chou among them—had
already presented their husbands with a child. Against which, only
six of her year were going on to Oxford, and in each case it was not
so much to fulfill their own needs as to make them the perfect
companions for their high-flying husbands. But so
it was in this god-awful world of levels. To be a woman—an
intelligent, capable young woman—it was unthinkable! One had to
be a drudge, a whore, an ornament. . . "Jelka?" She
hesitated, then turned, lifting her head lazily, as if she had been
dozing. "Hi. . . What is it?" Anna
was crouched beside her, toweling her dripping hair. Beyond her stood
the stocky figure of Yi Pang-chou. She was grinning, a faint color in
her cheeks. "You
should have joined us, Mu-Lan. What have you been doing?" She
smiled at the use of her nickname, then sat up, stretching, conscious
of how her friends were watching her. "I
was thinking. And making lists." "Making
lists?" Anna laughed. "Lists of what? Men you'd like to
marry? Why, you could have any man you chose, Jelka Tolonen, and you
know it." Jelka
shrugged. "Maybe. But it wasn't that kind of list. I was jotting
down my options." "Jotting
down my options," Yi Pang-chou mimicked, then giggled. Jelka
smiled, good-humoredly. "I know how it sounds, but here,"
she handed the comset across to Anna. "Go on. Have a look. Tell
me what you think." Anna
studied the screen a moment, then turned, passing it up to Yi
Pang-chou. "I can't see the point," she said, looking at
Jelka with a slightly puzzled frown. "It's so much effort. Why
not simply enjoy yourself? Take a rich husband. It doesn't mean you
have to be in his pocket. These days a woman has much more freedom." Jelka
looked away. Freedom! As if Anna had any understanding of the word's
true meaning. What she meant was the freedom to go to countless
entertainments; to drink and play to excess and to take young
officers for lovers. Beyond that she had no idea. For her this world
of levels was enough. But then, she knew no different. She had not
seen how beautiful it was outside. Yi
Pang-chou had been studying her list. Now she looked back at Jelka,
puzzled. "This
entry for Security. I thought they didn't accept women in the
service." "They
don't. Or not yet. But I thought I'd apply. I'm as qualified as any
cadet, after all. And I can fight. So why not? I thought I'd apply
for the auxiliary forces, specializing in space operations." Anna
raked one hand through her long dark hair, then laughed. "You're
strange, Jelka. You know that? If you really want to meet young
officers, you should attend a few more parties. You don't have to
sign up for the service!" "And
youVe a one-track mind, Anna Koslevic!" Jelka laughed, then grew
serious again. "I know it's hard to understand, but I want to do
something with my life. I don't just want . . . well, I don't want to
waste it, that's all." "Like
us, you mean," Yi Pang-chou said, coming across and sitting
beside her on the edge of the sun bed. "No
... I didn't mean it like that. I..." Again she laughed, but
this time her laughter was tinged with a certain desperation. "Look,
I can talk to you two. I can say things without you being hurt by
them. So when I say that I want something more than what I'm being
offered, it's not to put you down. It's . . ." She shrugged. "I
don't know. Maybe I want something that I simply can't have, but why
not try for it?" She looked from one to the other. "Do you
understand?" "Sure,"
Anna said, nodding. "It's simple. You want to be a man. You want
to go out there and do things. You want to break skulls and ride
horses. Like your 'ex,' Hans." Jelka
shook her head. "No. I want only to be myself. But why should
that be so difficult? Why should I be denied that?" "Because
it's how things are," Yi Pang-chou said, stroking the back of
her hand. "There's us and there's them. Women and Men. Yin and
Yang. And it's a Yang world." She smiled sadly. "Don't
fight it, Mu-Lan. It'll only make you unhappy." She
looked down. Maybe so. But she would never be at peace unless she
tried. Besides, there was always Kim. He, if anyone, would
understand. Anna
leaned close, placing her hand on Jelka's knee. "Anyway. Let's
forget about all that for now. It's almost six and our escorts are
coming at eight, so we'd best get ready." "Escorts?"
Jelka looked up, eyeing her friend sharply. "You didn't say
anything about escorts!" "Didn't
I?" Anna laughed innocently. "I guess it must have slipped
my mind. Anyway, let's go through. I'll lend you one of my chi poo
. . . the blue and gray silk with the black edging. And then I'll
make you up. Maybe it'll take your mind off all this nonsense . . ." Jelka
sat there, looking from one to the other, then laughed. "All
right. Just this once. But I hope you haven't said anything.
Anything, well. . ." "Anything
true?" Anna put on an earnest face, mirroring Jelka's own, then
burst out laughing. She leaned across, kissing Jelka's brow. "Come.
Let's get ready. Before those big, hulking Yangs arrive!" THE
main building of the Bremen Academy for Young Women—a huge
yamen in the old northern style—dominated the open space
at the top of the stack. On the great terrace overlooking the lake,
it was hot, the music loud. On the dance floor the press of young,
well-dressed bodies filled the dimly lit darkness, the rich,
cloyingly sweet scents of the dancers tainting the air, their drunken
laughter echoing out across the water. It was
late now, almost midnight, and the Ball had reached a fever pitch of
intensity. For the young women, the days of hard work were behind
them, the long vacation ahead, while for the young men, cadets and
commissioned officers alike, there was a sense of temporary surcease
from the rigors of duty. Tonight was a night for celebration, for
high spirits and wild excess. Some lay in the corridors leading off
the terrace, slumped in drunken stupor, while others cavorted wildly
at the edges of the crowd, howling manically, their formal jackets
unbuttoned or cast aside. Most, however, had found partners and could
be found pressed close in that central darkness, washed over by a
heavy pulse of sound, willing victims of those old, insistent
currents. Jelka
stood there at the center of that great crush, cradling an empty
glass, alone at last and conscious, for the first time that evening,
just how awful it was. The heat was stifling, the noise oppressive,
while to every side the crowd pressed in on her relentlessly; a great
tide of bodies, male and female, jerking and swaying to the ancient
rhythms of the pipes and drums. For a
moment longer she stood there, hemmed in, wondering if she
should wait for her escort to return from the bar, then she
turned and began to make her way across. She was aware of the
unnatural excitement in the faces that she passed; of the feverish
brightness of their eyes, the sudden, excessive animation of their
features. There was something strange and frightening about it all, a
sense of primal urgency, almost of hysteria. Outside
it was cooler, quieter. Jelka stood there at the top of the steps,
gulping in the cold, refreshing air and staring about her, as if
waking from some dark and threatening dream. Overhead, a very
real-looking moon shone down on her from the artificial sky, casting
a painted light upon the distant mountains, while to her left a faint
breeze rippled the dark lake's surface, scattering petals on the
white stone arch of the bridge that led across to the island and the
great watchtower. Away,
she thought. I have to get away. She
set her glass down on the steps, then made her way down, out onto the
path that led to the bridge, half running now, as if pursued. Halfway
down, however, she stopped and turned, staring back at it all, her
mouth wide open, as if stupefied. Then, with a faint shudder, she
went on. At the
foot of the watchtower she stopped again, staring up at its brightly
lit face. It was two minutes to midnight. Twelve years she had been
here at the Academy; twelve years, not including the time she had
spent in exile with her father and that time she had been ill, after
the attack. And in all that time she had never—not once—felt
at home here. She had stood there earlier, listening to the other
girls say how much they'd miss the dear old place; had heard them
profess to a genuine love for its strange old ways and nonsensical
rules, but for herself she felt nothing; only a strange relief that
it was over. And a sense of emptiness—of something unfulfilled
in her. She
turned briefly, looking back, wondering if she had been missed yet,
then moved on quickly, climbing the broad yet shallow steps up to the
open doorway. Inside, in the shadows just inside the door, a couple
was leaning against the wall, kissing, her hand at his neck, his arm
about her lower back. She hesitated, watching them a moment, then
tiptoed by, making her way up to the first level and the little room
at the front of the tower, above the clock. She
closed the door behind her, then went across and sat on the box
beside the window, her elbows on the mock-stone of the window ledge,
looking back across the lake at the crowded terrace. From a distance
it seemed a kind of madness, a mass delirium. As if, for once, they
had glimpsed the hollowness of it all. Glimpsed it and turned away,
drowning themselves in this frenzy of thoughtless activity. She
rested her chin on her hands and sighed. Coming here tonight had been
a mistake. She should have trusted to instinct and stayed at home.
But now it was too late. Too
late? Too late for what! That
small, inner voice—that never-resting, ever-questioning part of
her—was what kept her at a distance from it all; was what made
her different from the others. At school she had always been
something of an outsider, right from the first. Not that she had been
unpopular; it was simply that she had never formed any of those close
relationships that the other girls seemed to need. Some had tried,
like Anna and Yi Pang-chou, but they could only get so close before
she clammed up on them. "It's because of the attacks," Anna
had said to her once. "It's only natural that you should
mistrust the world after what happened to you." And maybe th&t
was true to an extent. Maybe those experiences had shaped her.
But the explanation was somehow insufficient, for she had always felt
like this. From the cradle on. There had always been a space unfilled
in her. A lack. But tonight it was different . somehow. Tonight the
sheer intensity of what she felt was new to her. Looking
back at the dance floor, she saw not celebration and the joyous
blossoming of new life, but a mechanistic orgy of self-denial; of
deadness incarnate. It was pretense; pretense on a vast scale. It
began with the great City in which they lived and spread like a virus
to infect every pore, every cell of their individual beings. And now
there was nothing. Nothing but meaningless activity and a desperate
filling of the hours. A willful forgetting. She
turned her head, her eyes sweeping the familiar landscape of the
College grounds, taking it all in. The star-filled sky, the moon, the
distant mountains; it was false, every last tiny bit of it. The
arched stone bridge, the lake, the ancient building. Manufactured,
all of it; a substitute for life, conjured from nothingness. Too
late. She
shuddered. It was true. Never had she felt so alienated from it all.
Never so alone. I am
trapped, she thought. Trapped in the world of levels. On the
steps beside the dance floor there was movement. A young cadet
officer had stepped out onto the top step and now stood there,
looking about him, a glass in each hand. Jelka
shivered and drew her head back, into the shadows. He
looked down and spotted the empty glass, then turned back, craning to
see where she had gone. Then he came on, negotiating the steps
smartly, elegantly, his manner—the very way he walked—
assured and arrogant. Unquestioning. On he came, along the path and
up onto the gentle arch of the bridge. For a moment he stood there,
looking about him casually, as if taking in the view, then he walked
on, glancing up at the watchtower, as if he could see her, there in
the shadows beyond the window frame. She
moved back, then stood, looking about her. There was no way out. The
floor above was locked. But maybe he would go away. The couple. . . She
heard noises from below; an angry grunt and then a murmured, "Excuse
me, I. . . ," followed by the sound of booted feet ringing on
the stairs. She
turned, facing the doorway, watching as it slowly opened. "Ah,
there you are," he said softly, smiling at her. "I thought.
. ." He
held out her glass to her, as if she should take it, but she simply
stood there, staring at him. He frowned, not understanding, then,
stooping carefully, watching her all the while, he set the glasses
down. The
jacket of his dress uniform seemed to glow in the light from the
window. The rich scent he wore filled the tiny room. He
hesitated, then came closer. "You should have said," he
said gently. "I thought you liked the music." She
could feel his breath on her cheek now; could smell the sweetness of
the wine. As if in a dream she saw his right hand lift and press
gently against her left shoulder, as if they were about to dance. "Don't.
. ." "Just
one kiss," he whispered, his mouth close to her ear. "Just
one tiny, little kiss..." She
moved back, shrugging off his hand. "Phase ..." She
saw the movement in his face. The sudden anger, softening instantly. "One
kiss," he persisted. "You know you'd like to." She
laughed sourly. "You know that, do you?" He
laughed, the uncertainty in his eyes fading quickly. "Of course.
That's why we're here, isn't it? Young girls like to be kissed. It's
only natural. And you're a very beautiful young woman, Jelka Tolonen.
Very beautiful indeed." He
made to touch her once again, to lift her chin and kiss her, but she
pushed him back sharply, the palm of her hand thudding against his
chest. "No.
Understand me, Lieutenant? Other 'girls' might well like it, but I
don't wish to be kissed. I simply want to be left alone." He
looked down at where her hand had struck his chest, then back at her,
angry now. "You shouldn't have done that." Again
she laughed. Who was he to tell her what she should or shouldn't do?
She glared at him angrily, then made to push past him and go down,
but he grabbed her arm roughly and pulled her about. "You'll
kiss me, understand?" She
stared at him, for that brief instant seeing things clearly. Here it
was again. As in that moment when she had faced Hans Ebert in the
machine, the day they had been officially betrothed. Yes, and as in
that moment when the wall to the practice room had been ripped aside
and the three assassins had burst in. To possess her or to kill her,
there seemed no other choice for them, these half-men. Like the pure
Yang they were, they had either to dominate or destroy. Maybe
so. But she would not acquiesce in it. Would not permit it. She
lifted her chin challengingly. "Are you drunk, Lieutenant
Bachman, or just suicidal?" His
right hand was clasping her wrist. Slowly he increased the pressure
on it, drawing her closer, his eyes watching her all the while, his
smile brutal, unforgiving now. Slowly she moved closer, drawn in
toward him, until only a hand's breadth separated them. His
left hand reached up and held her shoulder, his fingers digging into
her flesh, holding her there. "Kiss
me and I'll break your neck," she warned, her voice cold now,
dangerous. He
laughed, unimpressed. "Oh, IVe heard the rumors, Jelka Tolonen.
I've heard how you fought off the assassins that time. You're a real
tigress, neh? A regular Mu-Lan. But you will kiss me. And
you'll not break my neck." There
was a moment's softness in his face, a moment's relaxation, and then
he tugged her toward him savagely, his face pushing out at hers, his
mouth straining to find hers. And
then he was gasping, doubled up, groaning where her knee had come up
hard into his stomach. Jelka stood back, breathing unevenly, looking
down at him, then she turned and went down the stairs hurriedly,
leaping the last four and barging unceremoniously past the couple in
the doorway. "Hey.
. ." Outside,
she almost ran into her friends. "Jelka
. . ." Anna said, holding her arms and looking up into her face.
"What is it?" She
drew herself up straight, then shook her head. "It's nothing...
Really." "Are
you sure?" Yi Pang-chou said, concerned. "You look
dreadful. Your face..." "I'm
okay," Jelka answered, rather too harshly. Then, relenting a
little. "Look, it's all right. I've sorted things out. Let's go
back now, okay?" Beyond
the two young women, their escorts looked on, not certain whether
amusement or concern was the right expression. "Where's that
randy bastard Lothar?" one of them called. "Don't tell me
youVe worn the young ram out!" "Enough!"
Anna said sharply, turning to them. "Can't you see something's
happened?" "Too
fucking true it has!" The
voice came from behind them. From the watchtower. Bach-man stood
there in the doorway, one hand to his stomach, his face distorted
with anger. "You
should ask the bitch what she's up to, leading me on and then kneeing
me in the fucking stomach!" Jelka
turned, a cold, hard anger transforming her. If he said another
word... "She
needs a fucking beating, that's what she needs, the spoiled little
brat! She needs someone to knock some manners into her. . ." "Lothar!"
one of the young officers hissed. "Remember who she is, for
fuck's sake! Her father . . ." "Fuck
her father!" Bachman snarled, then straightened up and pushed
himself away from the doorway. "I don't give a shit if she runs
and tells her father! That's the way of these bitches, neh? The least
sign of trouble and they run and hide behind their father's skirts!" If his
words were designed to provoke, they seemed to have little or no
effect. Jelka stood there, strangely relaxed, as if a weight had
suddenly lifted from her. "Lothar!" "Don't
worry," she said calmly, distanced from the words. "I fight
my own battles." "Jelka,
come on, this is just silly . . ." Yi Pang-chou tugged at her
sleeve, but Jelka shrugged her off. She
was half crouched now, facing him, watching him approach. He was
clearly not so sure now. His hurt anger had been enough until now,
but suddenly it was not so good an idea. Besides, a small crowd was
forming on the steps beside the dance floor. It wouldn't do to make a
scene . . . "Ah,
fuck it... she's just a girl." Jelka's
smile was like ice. "What's the matter, Lothar Bachman? Are you
scared you might be beaten?" Anger
flared in his eyes anew. Slowly, his fingers trembling, he unbuttoned
his jacket and threw it aside. "Okay,"
he said. "YouVe had your chance." "Why,
you pompous little powder monkey!" The
reference eluded him, but the tone, cold and mocking, had its effect.
With a bellow he charged at her, throwing himself forward in a kick
which, if it had connected, would have shattered her lower rib cage.
But she was too fast for him. As he fell, she turned, her whole body
describing an arc, and kicked, the satin of her dress ripping, the
hard edge of her foot smashing down into his shoulder. He cried out,
but she was far from done. Savagely she kicked and punched, a kick, a
punch, another kick... "JeBca/" She
moved back, crouched, her bent arms raised before her as if to fend
off another attack, her eyes flicking from side to side. "Gods.
. ." one of the young officers said, his face pale. "She's
killed him! She's fucking well killed him!" But
Bachman wasn't dead. Not yet. Not unless four broken limbs and two
shattered collarbones could kill a man. "Kuan
Yin!" Anna said, kneeling over the young man and looking back at
her. "What have you done, Jelka? What in the gods' names have
you done?" Nothing,
she thought, straightening up slowly. At least, nothing you
d understand. k'ano
a-yin, gang boss of the Tu Sun tong, looked about him, then nodded,
satisfied that all was well. His headquarters were four decks up from
the Net, on Level 50. A respectable height for a man who, not so long
ago, had had nothing but the strength of his hands and the wit he had
been born with. He had bought and converted one side of a corridor,
turning it into a suite of rooms, some of them interconnected
offices, the rest—by far the greater part—his personal
quarters. Between was one long room created out of three living
spaces, which was where he held his meetings and greeted his guests. It was
an oddly luxurious room for this low level. The floor was carpeted
and wall-hangings covered the bareness of the ice. A long sofa, made
of ersatz leather, took up the whole of the left-hand wall. Nearby
was a low table, and against the far wall stood a bar. To anyone born
into the Lowers, as K'ang had been, it was impressive, yet underlying
its apparent luxury was a basic shabbiness. The carpet was faded and
worn, the leather scuffed and shiny in places; the bottles lining the
glass frontage of the bar were genuine enough, but their sour
contents had been distilled in vats not far from where they now
rested. K'ang
A-yin, standing in the doorway, felt a profound satisfaction in what
he saw. The walls were free of graffiti, the floor swept clean. It
smelled good and in many ways it resembled those images of the Above
that filtered down through the medium of the MedFac soaps. As ever
when he expected someone new, he was looking forward to
that first look of surprise in their face. Rubbing his hands
together, he laughed throatily and turned to his lieutenant. "Well,
Soucek? What do you think the bastard wants?" K'ang's
lieutenant, Soucek, was an exercise in contrast to his boss. A tall,
almost spiderish man, he had a face designed for mourning: long and
bony, with slate-gray eyes that were like the eyes of a dead fish,
and lips that seemed drawn by the finest of needles t» a tight
slit. He was a man of few words. "A
deal. Maybe a partnership." "A
partnership . . ." K'ang laughed, but his eyes were cold,
calculating. He had lost four men to Lehmann already, and there was
the growing feeling among the rest that this new man was some kind of
power. He cut his laughter off abruptly and turned away, sniffing in
deeply. He had
toyed with the idea of bringing Lehmann here and killing him. That
would be simplest, easiest. But something stopped him. He had failed
once, and besides, maybe he could use him. Make him a
lieutenant, like Soucek. The idea attracted K'ang. With such a man in
harness who knew what he might achieve? He might even drive Lo Han
back in the north and gain access to the lucrative drug trade that
came down from Munich stack. And who knew what might come of that? K'ang
looked up again, meeting Soucek's eyes, a faint smile on his
well-fleshed face. -"Okay. Set things up. Let's meet the
bastard." k'ang
was sitting on the leather sofa, cradling a tumbler of wine in his
left hand, when Soucek came in. "He's
here." Soucek laughed; a strange sound coming from that
humorless face. "And he's alone. There's no sign of his two
henchmen." K'ang
took that in, then nodded. "Good. Bring him in. And make sure
there are three or four of our best men in here with us. I don't want
to take any chances. Is he armed?" "Maybe,"
said Soucek. "He said he'd kill the first man that tried to
frisk him." K'ang
laughed uncomfortably. Waving Soucek away, he got up
heavily and walked across to the bar. Refilling his glass, he
went through what he knew of Lehmann once more, looking for a handle.
The strangest thing was that Lehmann had no history. One moment he
hadn't been there; the next, there he was. His two associates, Haller
and Becker, were faces from the Munich underworld. They had worked
for Lo Han before they'd crossed him. Somehow Lehmann had bossed it
over them, then, without warning, had muscled in on his, K'ang's,
territory. And that was it. The sum total. Except that Lehmann was
trained. And, if the reports were accurate, he had heavy munitions.
The sort Security used. So was
he a plant? A Security infiltrator? The possibility had made K'ang
check through his contacts, costing him dearly for a simple "No."
But even before he'd had it confirmed, he had ruled it out. Why
should Security bother with the likes of him? They had bigger fish to
fry. And anyway, he paid his dues—not light ones either—to
keep their eyes turned aside. Whatever
he was, Lehmann didn't fit. And K'ang, who wanted some kind of peace
in those stacks and levels the Kuei Chuan Triad allowed him to
control, needed him to fit. A deal would be best, but if not a deal,
then he'd try again. And again, until Lehmann was a corpse. That
thought was in his mind as he turned to face the door. Soucek
was standing there, one thin-boned hand on the jamb, his body turned
away from K'ang, looking out into the corridor. From another door,
behind K'ang and to his right, came three of his best men. Killers.
Good men to have behind you in a situation like this. K'ang
sipped at his wine, then nodded to himself, knowing how he would play
it. As he watched, Soucek backed into the room slowly and stood to
the side. The shape of his gun showed clearly through the thin
material of his trousers, his hand hovering close by. K'ang smiled at
him, as if to say, "Leave this to me," then moved forward a
pace. At
that moment Lehmann came into the room. There
was a sudden, perceptible heightening of tension in the room. Two
things were evident at once. Lehmann was tall, taller even than the
gangly Soucek. And he was an albino. Skin and hair were a deathly
white—a pallor emphasized by the whiteness of his simple, armless
tunic and his close-fitting trousers. Even his gun, which he held
loosely in his left hand, the barrel pointed at the floor, was
painted white. White . . . the color of death. K'ang
heard the sharp indraw of breath of the men behind him. The muscle in
his right cheek twitched, but he controlled it and slowly raised a
hand in welcome, meeting the albino's eyes. He smiled, exuding
confidence, but at the pit of his stomach he was experiencing
something he hadn't felt in years. Fear. A plain, naked fear. AT
FIRST Lehmann let K'ang A-yin do all the talking, knowing that his
simple presence there, silent among them, the big gun resting in his
hand, was eloquent enough. He had seen at once how it was— saw
where the real power lay—and, behind the solemn mask of his
face, had smiled. "I
can use you," K'ang was saying for the third time. "With me
you could go far. I'd reward you well. Look after you." K'ang
was a big man, broad at the shoulders and well-muscled, but some of
that muscle had gone to fat and there were definite signs of a paunch
developing. K'ang had grown lazy, self-indulgent. Like most of these
low-level tong bosses he had grown accustomed to the small luxuries
that surrounded him. Moving up, he had cut himself off from the
immediacy of the Lowers; had forgotten what had given him his power.
Soucek, his deputy, was the real power here. Neither knew it, but the
time would have come when Soucek challenged him for control. Now
there was no need, for he, Lehmann, had preempted that struggle. He let
his eyes stray a moment, letting no sign of his distaste for the
drabness, the sheer ugliness of the room, register on his face. This
was the worst of it, he sometimes felt; not the claustrophobic
inwardness of everything here, nor the overcrowded poverty of
life in the Lowers, but the ugliness, the unmitigated absence of
anything that pleased the eye. More than that he missed the
mountains, the cold, sharp freshness of the air. Missed the purity of
the ice. "All
right," he said, the words so sudden, so out of context, that
K'ang's face wrinkled up, not understanding. "I
said all right," he repeated, tucking the gun into the
strengthened web holster inside the top of his trousers. "I join
you as lieutenant. Equal to Soucek here." He indicated the tall,
gangly man without looking at him. "My two men . . . they work
with me still, right?" He
could see that K'ang didn't like that. It meant divided loyalties.
For a moment K'ang hesitated, then he nodded and held out his hand to
make the bargain. It was a large, strong hand, but warm and
overfleshed. There were rings on three of the fingers. By contrast
Lehmann's hand was like steel, inflexible and cold. "One
further thing," Lehmann said, extending the handshake
unnaturally, seemingly oblivious of K'ang's unease. "Your man,
K'ang Yeh-su."
* K'ang
looked down at his hand, then back up at Lehmann. "What of him?" "Get
rid of him." "Why?" "Because
he warned me. Sold me information about you." There
was a movement in K'ang's face that betrayed not merely surprise but
shock. K'ang Yeh-su was his nephew. His sister's son. For a moment he
said nothing. Then, "Why do you tell me this?" "Because
he's weak. Corrupt. He would sell anyone for the same price."
Lehmann hesitated, then added, "And because I'm your man now,
aren't I?" For a
moment longer he held K'ang's hand, then, as if he had tired of the
game, released it. But K'ang hardly noticed. Freed, he turned away
and signaled to one of his men. "Bring Yeh-su. Say nothing to
him. Just bring him." "Jelka?
Is that you?" Jelka
turned, making her way back down the unlit corridor to her father's
study. "Yes,
Papa?" The
Marshal sat at his big oak desk, a stack of papers to one side, a
file open before him, his hands, one flesh, one golden metal, resting
on the page. He looked tired, but then he always looked tired these
days, and his smile at least was as strong as ever. "How
did it go?" ..••< She
hesitated. He would find out. He was sure to find out. But not yet.
Not before she'd had time to think things through. "I don't
know. . ." She shrugged and gave a little sigh. "It's not
my thing, really. I..." He
laughed softly. "You don't have to tell me, my love. I know that
feeling only too well. I used to think it was me, but I know better
now. We're not party people, we Tolonens. Our ancestors were made of
sterner stuff, neh? All that northern ice—some of it must have
got into our blood!" His
laughter was warm, wonderful, and for a moment she simply stood
there, basking in it. But in the morning he would be different—
when he discovered what she'd done. So maybe it was best. . . She
moved closer, until she stood there, facing him across the desk,
looking down at him. "I... I did something tonight, Papa. I...
hurt someone." "You
hurt someone?" He frowned, trying to understand, then gave a
short laugh. "What? You mean, you broke their heart?" She
shook her head. "No. One of the young officers, it was. My
escort for the evening. Lieutenant Bachman. He tried . . ." Tolonen
sat forward, his face changed; suddenly stem, implacable. "What?
What did he try?" She
looked away briefly, wondering how it had got to this point; why she
had let it get out of control. "He tried to kiss me, Papa.
Against my wishes. He . /. he was persistent." He sat
back, indignation and anger written large on his face. "Bachman,
you say? Colonel Bachman's son?" "Yes,
Papa. But please . . . listen. I hurt him, you see. Hurt him badly." "Badly?
How badly?" She
swallowed. "I think I nearly killed him. If Anna hadn't shouted
at me . . ." He
narrowed his eyes, then shook his head. "You mean, you nearly
killed a man, and all because he wanted to kiss you?" "It
wasn't like that, Papa. He ... he was awful. It was as if I didn't
exist. As if he had the right. . ." She shuddered and looked
down, realizing she had clenched both her fists. "Even so, in
the end I provoked him. I made
him fight me. I could have walked away, but I didn't. I don't
know why ... I..." She stopped, looking back at her father. "Do
you understand, Papa? Something snapped in me. Something . . ." He
stared back at her a moment, then nodded. His voice was soft now,
almost a whisper. "I understand, my love. It's how we are, neh?
Brittle. That time I killed Lehmann in the House. It was like that
then. As if I had no choice. As if I'd lost control." For a
moment they were silent, staring at each other. Then, with a tiny
shudder, Tolonen looked away, fixing his gaze on the file in front of
him. "He'll live, I take it?" "Yes." He
looked up again, a strange kind of pride in his face. "So what
did you do to him? Kick him in the balls? Break his nose?" "I
wish it were that simple. I..." She shook her head, suddenly
exasperated with herself. "It wasn't even as if I was angry at
that point. It was like . . . like it was just something I had to do.
I... well, you'll think this strange, but it was like it was Hans in
front of me. Hans Ebert. And I had to stop him coming after me.
That's why I broke both his legs, to stop him. And his arms." He
stared at her, astonished, then sniffed in deeply. "Aiya. . .
And were there any witnesses to this?" "Several
dozen . . ." For a
moment he sat there, deep in thought, then, remembering something
suddenly, he got up and went across to the other side of the room,
where a long worktop filled the alcove. "Something
was delivered about an hour back," he said, searching among the
papers there. "It wasn't marked urgent and I was busy, so I left
it. It's here somewhere." She
watched him, wondering what was going on in his mind at that moment.
Did he really understand why she had done it? Or was he only saying
that? He would stand by her, certainly, because that was his way, but
for once that was not enough. She needed him to understand. Because
if he didn't understand . . . "Here,"
he said, turning back to her and slitting open the package with his
thumbnail. "If it's as you said. If it was a fair fight. . ." He
fell silent, reading through the brief report. She watched him
come to the end of it, then read it once again. He nodded, as
if satisfied, then looked back at her. "We'll
sit down, tomorrow, first thing, and make a report. In your own
words, exactly as it happened. Then I'll go and see Bachman, sort
something out about his son's medical expenses. The rest. . . well, I
think it's straightforward enough. It'll teach the lad manners, neh?
And maybe wake a few of them up, into the bargain." He Booked
away, giving a tight bark of laughter. "They're growing soft,
these young men. Soft . . ." "Papa
. . . ?" He
looked back at her, seeing how she stood there, close— suddenly
very close—to tears, and came across, holding her to him
tightly. "It's
all right, my love. It's all over now." He looked down into her
face, then gently kissed her brow. "You
understand, then? You understand why I did it?" He
nodded, his grim smile fading into concern. "It's how we are, my
love. Brittle. Easily angered. But strong, too, neh? Stronger than
iron."
CHAPTER
THREE
Fathers
and Sons LI
YUAN stood inside the doorway, looking across to where the T'ang of
East Asia lay in a huge, canopied bed. The room was bright and
unexpectedly airy. A warm breeze blew in through the open doors that
led out onto the balcony, the scent of apple blossom strong in the
air. Yet underlying it was the faintest hint of corruption. Of
sickness and age. "Wei
Feng. . ." Yuan said softly, his heart torn from him at the
sight of his father's oldest friend. The
old man turned his head on the pillow, his voice faint, almost
inaudible. "Shai Tung? Is that you?" Li
Yuan swallowed and moved closer. "It is I, cousin Feng. Shai
Tung's son, Yuan." "Ahh
. . ." Blind eyes searched the darkness whence the voice had
come, looking past the young T'ang of Europe. The voice was stronger
now, more confident. "Forgive me, Yuan. I was dreaming. . . Your
father and I were walking in the meadow.- We stopped beneath a tree.
. ." Yuan
waited, but there was nothing more. "How are you, cousin?"
he said gently, fearing the old man had drifted back into sleep. "Ah
yes . . ." Wei Feng's laughter was weak; the merest shadow of
the great roar of delight Yuan remembered from his childhood. Yuan
felt his stomach muscles tighten with pain at the thought. Was it all
so quickly gone? "Where
are your sons?" Yuan asked, surprised to find himself alone with
the old man. "Should I summon them, Wei Feng?" The
old man's head came round, his blind eyes staring up into Yuan's
face. The hair had not grown back on the half of his skull that had
been shaven, and the flesh there was a pale ivory, mottled, almost
transparent. One could see the bone clearly. "No,
Yuan," the old man said determinedly. Old age and sickness had
robbed Wei Feng of much, but his mind seemed as sharp as ever. "It
is you I wished to see. I..." The
old man swallowed dryly, unable to continue. Li Yuan looked about
him, then saw the jug and the cup on the table behind him and went
across. He poured a little of the water into the cup, then brought it
back, supporting Wei Feng's head while he sipped; then, setting the
cup aside, he wiped his lips for him. "Thank
you, Yuan. You are your father's son." Once
again, it was painful to see the thin, watery smile the old man gave
and recall the strength of former days. It made him feel that this
ought not to be—that this great fall from health and potency
was a kind of sin against life itself. He looked away momentarily,
robbed of words. Why had he not felt this for his own father? There
was a moment's silence and then the old man reached out, his frail
hand searching for Li Yuan's. Yuan took it, clasping it in both of
his, holding it firmly yet tenderly, his fingers stroking its back. Wei
Feng's face looked up into his, the clouded eyes turned inward. It
was a drawn and ancient face, creased deeply by time and care, the
skin blotched and discolored like faded parchment. "I
am dying, Yuan. My surgeons tell me otherwise, but I know it is only
days now before my time here is done and I go to join my ancestors.
That does not distress me. Life has been good. I have been fortunate,
both in my friends and in my wives and sons. I look back and see much
happiness. But I am not sad to be leaving the world above, for I have
seen what is to come. Dark clouds are forming, Yuan. A great storm is
coming. A storm so dark, so fierce it will be like nothing ever
witnessed by the eyes of man." A
faint shudder passed through him. For a moment his face was pained,
then it cleared, a look of wonder filling those ancient features. "I
have been dreaming, Yuan. Strange, powerful dreams. Again and again I
have seen it..." "Seen
what, cousin Feng?" Wei
Feng laughed as if amused, but the amusement quickly faded from his
lips. His voice was a hoarse whisper. "An
egg it was, Yuan. A great egg nestled in the earth. They give painted
eggs to celebrate a marriage, neh? Or to invalids, to wish them a
speedy recovery. But this egg was different. It was like the great
egg itself—the hun tun—from which the ten thousand
things came forth. Moreover, it was purest white, like a great stone,
polished and shining in the light that came from nowhere. It lay
there, nestled in the dark earth, and the people came from all around
to see it. .It was huge, Yuan. The biggest man seemed as a child
beside it. I stood there, among the crowd, watching, waiting for the
egg to hatch. Across from me, behind the bloodred curtains of her
sedan, a bride sat waiting in a high-backed chair. I glanced at her,
studying her in silhouette, then looked back at the eg|. Between my
looking away and looking back it had changed. Now it was stippled
with tiny cracks that ran from base to tip. Slowly they darkened. A
bell sounded—a single, perfect note, pure and high. As if at a
signal, the shell shattered into a thousand tiny pieces. And now a
man stood there, clothed in darkness, his back to me. He was huge,
taller than any man I had ever seen." Wei
Feng paused, getting his breath, his thin, darkly blotched tongue
tracing the length of his lips. "Shall
I get you more water, cousin?" Li Yuan asked, but Wei Feng shook
his head. "Let
me finish." The old man swallowed dryly, then went on. "I
looked across again. The curtains of the sedan were drawn back now
and I could see the bride. She was smiling. The kind of smile that
lasts ten thousand years. Her wedding dress hung in tatters from her
bones. Nails of black iron secured her to the chair. I looked back.
The man was turning. Slowly, he turned. And as he turned, all those
who fell beneath his gaze dropped to the ground, writhing in agony,
as if smitten by some sudden, virulent plague." Slowly
the old man's grip on Yuan's hand had tightened. Now it relaxed, a
look of puzzlement coming into that ancient face. "And
the man, Wei Feng . . . did you see his face?" Wei
Feng frowned deeply, then gave the tiniest of nods. "It was him,
Yuan. It was DeVore. But changed somehow. Enlarged. Made somehow
greater than he was in life." The old man shuddered, then turned
his head away. "I have had this dream a dozen, twenty times and
each time I wake before he turns to face me fully. But I have no
doubt. It was him. That profile. I could not forget it. Yes, I
can see him even now, smiling, his hands outstretched, facing his
bride." Li
Yuan shivered. Dreams. Was this where the first signs
appeared—in dreams? And was all that followed merely a working
out of what was first glimpsed in dream? "What
time is it, Yuan?" Li
Yuan turned, looking out. "It is late, Wei Feng. The afternoon
is almost done." "Ahh
. . ." Wei Feng nodded. Then, unexpectedly, he drew Yuan's hand
to his lips and kissed the great iron ring—the ring of power Li
Yuan had inherited from his father and his father's father, the great
seal of the Ywe Lung, the wheel of seven dragons, imprinted in
its face. Li
Yuan frowned, disturbed by the old man's gesture. This was not
something done lightly, nor on whim; he could see that by the way Wei
Feng stared up at him, his sightless eyes imploring him to
understand. But he understood nothing; only that this dear, kind
man—this confidant and ally, this strong and friendly presence
from his childhood—would soon be gone from the world. Gone, as
if he'd never been. And
afterward, outside in the cold and silent corridors, he stopped and
looked down, noticing for the first time that there was earth on the
hem of his gown. Earth ... He lifted his hand, staring at the great
iron ring, then walked on, his movements stiff with regret, knowing
he would never see Wei Feng alive again. IT was
LATE afternoon before Li Yuan got back to Tongjiang. Stopping only to
shower and change, he went directly to his study and sat there at his
desk, his Chancellor, Nan Ho, before him, Chang Shih-sen, his
secretary, at his side. Outside, in the Eastern Garden, his three
wives sat beside the lotus pool, laughing and talking, their
maids in attendance. For a moment he looked out, watching
them, the shadow of his earlier meeting with Wei Feng forgotten, his
eyes drawn to the new maid—the wet nurse—seeing how she
attended to the hunger of his eight-week-old son, Kuei Jen. She was a
pretty young thing, well-formed and with a delicate, pouting mouth.
He felt his sex stir at the thought of what that mouth might do and
looked down, a faint thrill of anticipated pleasure rippling through
him. He
turned back, facing his Chancellor again, a faint smile on his lips. "You
wish me to arrange something, Chieh Hsia?" Li Yuan
laughed. "Am I so transparent, Master Nan?" "You are a
man, Chieh Hsia, with a man's appetites. Besides, your First
Wife, Mien Shan, suggested it to me only the other day. She too, it
seems, has noticed your interest." Li
Yuan studied Nan Ho a moment, then nodded. "Arrange it, Master
Nan. We have but one life, neh?" "It
is done, Chieh Hsia. Now ... if we might begin." It was
the kind of gentle admonishment Li Yuan had come to expect from his
Chancellor. Another might have viewed it as impertinence, but he knew
better. Master Nan had been with him sine/ his sixth year,
first as his body servant, then as his Master of the Inner Chambers.
Recognizing his qualities, Li Yuan had sidestepped the usual channels
when he had come to the dragon throne, eighteen months back, and
promoted the industrious Nan Ho—a man without family
connections—to his most senior administrative post. It had been
a bold and unexpected move and had caused ripples at the time, but he
had had no reason to regret his decision. Nan Ho had proved himself
the perfect statesman, attending to Li Yuan's business as if it were
his own. Indeed, there was no more loyal servant in Chung Kuo. Unless
it was Tolonen. Li
Yuan sat back, staring at the great stack of state papers that were
piled up to the right of his desk. This was his daily burden—the
great weight he had taken on at his father's death. Reports from his
Hsien Ling, commissioned studies on the effects of proposed
legislation, warrants to be signed or queried, petitions from senior
Abave citizens, preparatory drafts for Council, Security summaries,
and more. Endless, it all seemed. Enough to keep a room full of
clerks busy for a week. He
half turned, looking up at Chang Shih-sen. At this customary signal,
Chang handed him the first paper. For the next hour or so the great
pile slowly diminished, but they were far from done when Li Yuan sat
back and, with a laugh, gestured for Chang to take the rest away. He
turned, facing his Chancellor. "Look
at us, Master Nan, sitting here while the sun is shining outside! Let
us deal with these tomorrow, neh?" Nan Ho
made to comment, then changed his mind. He could see that Li Yuan was
determined not to work that day. Smiling, he bowed low. "As you
wish, Chieh Hsia. But I must remind you that you have dinner at your
cousin, Tsu Ma's, estate this evening. We must be there at nine. Wu
Shih has confirmed that he will be attending." "Good.
. . Good!" The young T'ang clapped his hands. "Then come.
Let us join my wives. It is a fine afternoon, neh?" They
went outside, Nan Ho sending a servant running to bring wine and
tumblers. The women were beside the pool, laughing, sharing some
secret joke. As the men came out, they turned, almost as one, their
laughter fading, then stood, bowing their heads, the maids kneeling
in their T'ang's presence. "Where
is my son?" Li Yuan asked, looking about him, surprised not to
see the wet nurse there among the group by the pool. "He
is here, Chieh Hsia," a voice said from just behind him. He
turned, smiling, remembering suddenly what he had agreed with Nan Ho
earlier. The girl handed the child to him, then knelt, the faintest
color in her cheeks. She knew. He could tell she knew. "Kuei
Jen . . ." he said softly, transferring his attention to the
child in his arms. "And how is my darling little boy?" The
child stared up at him, cooing softly, his dark eyes round with
curiosity, his face the tiny image of his mother's. Li Yuan looked
across, laughing, and saw how Mien Shan was watching him, her eyes
moist with happiness, and for the briefest moment he thought of Wei
Feng and what he had said to him on his sickbed. Life was good,
if one let it be. He
turned, facing the sun. Then, as if compelled, he lifted the child,
holding him up at arm's length, as if offering him up. And when he
turned back, the child cradled against him once more, he saw how they
looked at him, in awe, as at that moment when he had stepped
down from the Temple of Heaven, wearing the dragon robes for
the first time. "My
son," he said, looking about him, fiercely proud, seeing how his
words affected them, even the seemingly imperturbable Nan Ho. "My
son." ON THE
EAST COAST of North America it was dawn, and amid the low,
flower-strewn screens of the Tea House of the Ninth Dragon it was
busy. Maroon-cloaked waiters moved between the crowded tables, their
faces impassive, the heavily laden trays they bore swept effortlessly
above their patrons' heads. At the tables, wizen-faced graybeards sat
there in their stiff-collared jackets, smoking and playing Chou or
Siang Chi, ignoring the muted screens set high up on the pillars on
every side. From two big speakers set either side of the long ch'a
counter, the romantic strains of "Love at the Fair"
drifted across the teahouse, competing with the babble of the old
men. It was a timeless scene—a scene as old as history itself.
For three thousand years old men had gathered thus, to smoke and talk
and drink their bowls of ch'a. Kim
sat at a small table at the back of the tea house, up a level, on a
narrow veranda overlooking the main floor, a white- and maroon-glazed
chung of freshly brewed min hung—"Fukien Red"—in
front of him, a small bowl of soyprawn crackers by his elbow. He had
first come here three months back, to kill an hour before a meeting,
and had found himself still sitting there three hours later, his
appointment forgotten, the tiny notepad he carried filled with
jottings, his head bursting with new ideas. Now he came here most
mornings at this hour, to sit and sip ch'a, and think. Sometimes
he would go down among the tables and sit there for an hour or two,
listening to the homely wisdom of the old men, but mostly he would
sit here, looking out across the busy floor, and let his mind
freewheel. Today, however, was special, for earlier this
morning—after a tiring all-night session—he had put the
finishing touches to the first of the five new patents he had been
working on: patents he had first conceived here at the Ninth Dragon. He
smiled, wondering what the old men would have made of it had
he shared some of his ideas with them: whether they would have
thought him sage or madman. Whichever, there was no doubting that
they would have found them strange. His idea for a new kind of
protein machine that could operate in space, for instance: that had
been conceived here, at this table, while watching the old men blow
their smoke rings in the air. In one
sense the problem had been a simple one. For the past two hundred
years, most scientific engineering had been done at the microscopic
level, using two basic "tools," NPMs and NPAs. The standard
NPMs—natural protein machines—that companies like GenSyn
used to engineer their products, while extremely versatile, were
highly susceptible to heat variations, operating within a very
limited temperature range. NPAs—nonprotein assemblers—made
of harder, more predictable molecules, were stronger and more stable
than the NPMs and were therefore used wherever possible in the
manufacture of most technological hardware. However, when it came to
the more sensitive areas of genetic engineering, most Companies still
used NPMs. In
terms of cost it didn't matter which one used, under normal
conditions, but these days an increasing amount of manufacturing was
done in the great orbital factories, under sterile, zero-gravity
conditions. At
present the potentially much cheaper conditions of manufacture that
appertained in the orbital factories were applicable only to
nonliving processes: for the production of basic "hardware."
For all other processes—for food production, say, or
biotechnology, where NPMs had to be used—the savings
were partly offset by the need to maintain an atmosphere on board the
factory ships and to keep that atmosphere at an unfluctuating
and—relative to the surrounding cold of space— high
temperature. Cut out that need and the savings would be the same as
for those factories that used NPAs; that is, somewhere between
fifteen and twenty percent of the total manufacturing cost. It was
a huge saving, and the development company that could patent a
protein-based nanomachine that could operate in extreme cold and
under vacuum conditions was certain to enjoy vast profits. Kim
drew the chung toward him and raised it to his mouth. Lifting the
rounded lid he tilted it gently and took a sip of the sweet black
ch'a. It was
a problem he had set himself a long time back—long before Li
Yuan had given him the means to set up his own company—and for
a while he had thought it insoluble. How could one make a living
thing that operated in the absence of those very things that
sustained it—heat and air? The two processes seemed and surely
were inimical. Even so, he had persisted, and, sitting there,
watching the smoke rings curl from those ancient mouths and climb the
air, had glimpsed how it might be done. Now, three months on from
that insight, he had finally worked it out—down to the smallest
detail. He had only to write the process up and patent it. He set
the chungdown, smiling, the tiredness in his bones balanced against
the sense of achievement he was feeling. Not only was his solution
aesthetically pleasing, but it also kept well within the rigid
guidelines of the Edict. The principles he'd utilized were old and
well documented; it was merely the way he'd put them together that
was new. Smoke
rings. He laughed, and took a deep swig of the ch'a. It was
all so very simple, really . . . "Shih
Ward?" Kim
turned. The Head Waiter, Chiang Su-li, stood there, his head bowed, a
few paces from the table. "Yes,
Master Chiang?" Chiang
bobbed his head, then handed across a message tab. "Forgive me,
Shih Ward, but a messenger brought this a moment back. He said I was
to place it directly into your hands." "Thank
you, Master Chiang." Kim fished in the pocket of his jacket for
a five yuan coin, then held it out, offering it to Chiang. Chiang
made no move to take the coin. "I thank you, Shih Ward, but it
is enough that you honor us with your presence at our humble tea
house. If you will allow me, I will bring a fresh chung of the
min hung." Kim
stared at Chiang a moment, surprised, wondering what he had heard,
then smiled. "That would be most pleasant, Master Chiang. It is
a most excellent brew." Chiang
bowed, pleased by the compliment, then turned away, leaving Kim
alone. For a
moment Kim sat there, staring at the blank face of the message card,
tempted to throw it away unread. Old Man Lever had made over a dozen
"offers" this last year, each one more outrageous than the
last. It was five weeks since the latest and Kim had been expecting
something any day. So what was the old tyrant offering now? A
partnership? A half share in his empire? Whatever it was, it wasn't
enough. Nothing—not even the whole of ImmVac's vast
holdings—could persuade him to work for Lever. Kim
looked out across the smoke-wreathed floor and sighed. When would
Lever finally understand that he didn't want to work for him? Why
couldn't he just accept that and leave him alone? What drove the old
man that he kept on upping the terms, convinced that it was only a
question of finding the right price? Death,
Kim thought. The fear of death, that's what drives you. And
you think I can find an answer to that. You've convinced yourself
that 1 can succeed where a hundred generations of taoists and
alchemists have failed, and unlock that last great secret.
Andmaybeyou'reright. Maybe I could. Or at least some counterfeit of
immortality—a hundred years of youth, perhaps. Yes,
but the truth is that I wouldn't, even if I could. Not even if it
meant that I too could live forever. He
shuddered, the strength of his aversion for the old man surprising
him; then, curiosity overcoming his anger, he pressed his thumb
against the release pad. For a
moment a combination of tiredness and false expectation made him sit
there blankly, a look of incomprehension on his face. Then, with a
laugh, he understood. Michael. . . The message was from Michael
Lever, not his father. Even
so, it was fifteen months since he had last seen Michael Lever, that
night of the Thanksgiving Ball, and though they had been friends,
much had happened between times. He could not be certain that the man
he had known was the same as the one who wanted to see him now.
Indeed, if the rumors were true, he had changed a great deal. But for
good or ill? Besides
which, Michael wanted to meet him tonight; at ten o'clock. Normally
that wouldn't have been a problem, but after a night without sleep... Kim
smiled. There were pills he could take to keep him awake. Besides, it
would do him good to have an evening off to see an old friend. And
maybe Michael could give him some advice. He'd been out of
circulation, sure, but things hadn't changed that much while he'd
been away. What he knew about the market was still valid. So maybe. .
. Kim
set the card down, watching the message slowly fade, then looked
across. At the ch'a counter, Master Chiang was setting out his
tray with careful, precise little movements that were characteristic
of the man. Kim watched him a while, then looked down, smiling. Yes,
it would be good to see Michael again. Very good indeed. THE
DOOR WAS OPEN, the tiny reception room empty save for a dust-strewn
desk and an unpainted stool. Emily Ascher stood there in the doorway,
holding tight to the stack of files and boxes that was balanced
beneath her chin, wondering if she had come to the right place. For a
moment she thought of checking the note Michael had sent her, but
there was little point; she knew what was written there. Suite 225,
it read; East Corridor, Level 224, North Edison stack. Turning,
she nodded to her guide, dismissing him, then went inside, putting
the files down on the desk. She
straightened up and looked about her, noting the shabbiness of the
place. The walls were strewn with old posters, the floor bare,
unswept in months. It had the look of a repossession. "So
this is it, neh?" she said softly and smiled to herself. She had
expected something grander; something more in keeping with the
Michael Lever she had worked with before his arrest. But this . . . She
went across and closed the door, then turned, hearing voices from
beyond the inner door. Male voices, laughing. She
slid the door open and went through, into a big, open-plan office.
Michael was sitting on the edge of a long laboratory-style desk on
the far side of the room. Nearby, sprawled in a chair, sat a second
man; a short-haired athletic-looking man of about Michael's age.
Seeing Emily, the two men fell silent, looking across at her. "Mary.
. ." Michael said, pushing up from the desk and coming
across, clearly delighted that she was there. "You found
us all right, then?" She
smiled, barely conscious of the use of her adopted name. "It was
no trouble. IVe been down this way before ... on business." "I
see . . ." He stood there a moment, simply smiling at her, then
turned suddenly, as if he had forgotten, and put his arm out,
indicating the other man. "I'm sorry . . . look, IVe forgotten
hpw to do all this. This here is Bryn. . . Bryn Kustow. He's an old
friend. He was at College with me. And. . . well, other things. And
this, Bryn, is Mary Jennings." Emily
met the young man's eyes and gave a brief nod, understanding. By
"other things" Michael meant that Kustow had been arrested.
He too had been one of Wu Shih's "guests" these past
fifteen months. She could see it in his eyes. Could see how much the
experience had changed these young men. "It's
not much as yet," Michael went on, looking about him at the big,
unfurnished room, "but we're going to make it something."
He looked back at her. "That's if you're going to join us." She
narrowed her eyes. "Pardon?" He
took a step closer. "Look, I know how it is. It's a big
decision. And you might think that you don't want to risk making an
enemy of my father, but. . ." "Hold
on," she said, laughing. "You're not making sense. What
decision? And why should I be making an enemy of your father?" There
was a moment's puzzlement in his face, and then he laughed. "Shit...
I didn't say, did I?" "No.
You just told me to come here. Friday, first thing. And to bring what
I'd need to start work at once. I thought. . ." "You
thought this was just another of my father's Companies, neh? You
thought you'd still be on the payroll." He looked away,
embarrassed now. "Look, I'm sorry. I'll spell it out. Then, if
you don't like what you hear, you can just turn round and leave, and
no one will be the wiser, okay?" She
stared back at him a moment, then looked across at Kustow, seeing how
closely he was watching her; as if recruiting her for some secret
brotherhood. "You're
setting up on your own, aren't you?" she said, looking back at
Michael. "A partnership. You and Shih Kustow here. Is
that right?" He
nodded. "And
you want me to join, right? As what? Personal assistant to you both?" Kustow
sat forward. "At first, yes. But hopefully it won't stay that
way. We plan to run things differently. We'll match your present
salary, of course. But you'll also be on bonuses. A share of profits.
If things go well, you can buy in. Become a partner." "I
see. And all I have to do is break contract with ImmVac and make an
enemy of the most powerful businessman in City North America?" Michael
reached out and gently touched her arm. "Look, it's okay. You
can say no. And we won't blame you if you do. But just consider
things a moment. It's a whole new venture. Something that won't come
along twice in your career. To be in at the start of something like
this . . ." "And
my contract with ImmVac? There's a hefty breach clause, you realize?" "We've
budgeted for that," Kustow said, matter-of-factly. He stood up
and came across, standing next to Michael. "All you've got to do
is decide whether you want in or not." "And
just what is this venture?" Kustow
smiled for the first time. "Near-space technologies. The kind of
things our fathers wouldn't normally touch." She
laughed. "Too right. That field is sewn up tight." "Right
now it is," Michael agreed, "but change is coming. There
are rumors that the Seven want to make a deal with the Above. A deal
that'll mean a radical rewriting of the Edict of Technology. Things
are going to open up, and when they do, we plan to be there, at the
cutting edge." "I
see. And all I have to do is say yes." The
two men looked at each other, then back at her, nodding. She
was quiet a moment, considering. It was a big decision. If she took
this step there was no turning back. Old Man Lever would make damn
sure of that. No, she had seen how he'd reacted that night Michael
had said no to him; had been witness to the private scenes
afterward. You didn't cross swords with Charles Lever. Not
unless you wanted to make an enemy of him for life. Common sense,
therefore, told her to say no. To turn around and get out of there at
once. But for once common sense held no sway. After all, she hadn't
come to America to carve herself out a safe career. She'd come here
to do something positive; to change things. It was time, then, that
she stopped running; that she dug in and did something she, believed
in. She
looked back at them. They were watching her; somberly, expectantly.
How well she knew that look. How often she'd seen it, back in the old
days, in City Europe. "Okay," she said, smiling broadly.
"Count me in." "Great!"
Michael said, beaming, slapping Kustow on the back. "Bloody
great! All we need now is a research scientist and a patents man." "That
and a lot of money," Kustow said, grinning, his eyes meeting
Emily's briefly to thank her. "A huge pile of money!" OLD
MAN LEVER strode out onto the podium of the great lecture hall and
looked about him imperiously. His gaze swept across the empty tiers,
then returned to the two great screens that dominated the wall to the
right of where he stood. "I
like it," he said finally, his voice booming in that great
echoing space. "I like it a lot. It's exactly what I envisaged." Behind
him, the four-man design team looked among themselves with
expressions of relief and triumph. It had been hard going satisfying
the Old Man, but now it was done, the building finished to his
precise specifications. And not before time. In three weeks the hall
would be filled to bursting for the inauguration ceremgriy. Before
then there was much to do: laboratory equipment had to be installed,
personnel hired and trained, not to mention the countless items of
decor—Lever's "final touches"—that had to be
seen to between now and then. Even so, to have reached this stage at
all seemed a miracle of sorts. Six months back, when things had been
at their worst, not one of them had believed the project would ever
see completion, not because what was asked of them was impossible,
but because of Lever's constant meddling in their work—his
abrupt changes of mind and irritating
refusal to trust their judgment at any stage. The pay had been good,
true, but he had ridden them hard. Not
that their experience was unique. In every area Old Man Lever had not
only insisted that they hire the best in the field but that he be
allowed to sit in on their consultation sessions. More than once he
had overridden specialist advice, determined to stamp his own view on
things, only to return, each time after a long, frustrating delay, to
the very thing he'd first rejected, and with never a word that he'd
been in the wrong. But so
it was with Lever. It was as if the man were obsessed. As if this one
project, this single huge building and what it held, consumed him,
blinding him to all else. And now, standing there at the center of
his creation, he glowed with a satisfaction that seemed much more
than the sense of achievement one usually got from a job well done. "Where's
Curval?" he said, half turning toward them. "Has anyone
seen the man?" "I'll
bring him, Mister Lever," the Architect said, recognizing that
tone of impatience in the Old Man's voice. Fourteen
and a half billion it had cost. Twice the original estimate. But not
once had Lever balked about the cost. "Money's irrelevant,"
he had said at one point, to the astonishment of the Project
Accountant. And so it had proved. Never once had he skimped to cut
costs. No, the problem had been one of time. Of getting the thing
done in time for the ceremony. As if it were a race . . . Curval
arrived, making his way between them, the great geneticist
hesitating, glancing at them uncertainly before he walked out onto
the broad platform. "Good luck," one said softly, almost
inaudibly. "Poor bastard," another mouthed silently as they
turned to leave, bringing a knowing smile to his colleagues' faces.
So it was. Their dealings with Lever were, thank the gods, almost
over; CurvaPs, poor sod, were only just beginning. "Ah,
Andrew. . ." Lever said, turning, smiling at the man and
extending his hand. "I wanted to talk to you. To make sure
everything's going to plan." Curval
bowed his head and took Lever's hand, allowing his own to be pumped
and squeezed indelicately. "It
all goes well, Mister Lever. Very well indeed." "YouVe
signed the two men you mentioned last time we talked?" The
last time they had talked had been the day before, less than eighteen
hours earlier, in fact, but Curval let it pass. "I
got onto it at once, Mister Lever. The contracts were signed and
verified this morning. The men will be here tomorrow, first thing,
ready to get down to work." "Good."
Old Man Lever beamed his satisfaction. "That£ what I like
to hear. So you've got your team now? Everyone you need?" Curval
hesitated. He knew what the Old Man wanted to hear. He wanted to hear
a resounding yes; that they had the best team possible—a team
good enough to tackle the big questions and overcome them—but
both he and Lever knew that that wasn't so. "It's
as good as we'll get, Mister Lever. If we can't crack it with this
team, no one will." Lever
stared at him a full ten seconds, then gave a terse nod. "It's
the boy, neh? You still think we need the boy?" Curval
took a long breath, then nodded. "I've looked over some of the
things you showed me and there's no doubting it. You can't
counterfeit that kind of ability. You either have it or you don't." "And
he has it?" Curval
laughed. "In excess! Why, he's head and shoulders above anyone
in his field. He's quick of mind, and versatile, too. If anyone could
make a quick breakthrough, it'd be Ward." Again he hesitated.
"Look, don't mistake me, Mister Lever, the team we've got is
good. Exceptional, I'd say. If anyone can find an answer, they can.
But it'll take time. All I'm saying is that having Ward would give us
an edge. It would help speed things up considerably." "I
see." Lever looked about him thoughtfully, then turned back to
Curval, smiling. "Okay. I'll come and visit you tomorrow. It'll
be good to meet the team at last. I can give them a little pep talks
neh?" Curval
nodded, his face showing no sign of what he thought of the idea,
then, with a low bow, he backed slowly away. For a
while Lever stood there, as if in trance, a deep frown lining his
grizzled features. Then, abruptly, he turned about, marching off the
platform and out through the open door, his silks flapping out behind
him as he made his way through the maze of rooms and corridors to the
entrance hall. Beneath
the great twist of stairs—that huge, unraveled double helix
that filled the north end of the massive domed cavern that was the
entrance hall—Lever stopped, looking about him, as if coming to
himself again. Waving
away the two servants who had hurried across, he went over and stood
before the blank partition wall that rested in the center of the
floor between the stairway and the huge entrance doors. This, this
great screen, was the first thing that visitors to the Institute
would see on entering the building, and as yet he was still to find
something to fill it. But fill it he would. And with something quite
exceptional. Lever
lifted his chin, then turned away, feeling a sudden rush of pride at
the thought of what he'd accomplished here. Here it was, the first
stage of his Dream completed. He had brought it this far, by force of
will and brute determination, and he would take it even farther,
right to the shores of death itself. He smiled, all trace of the
uncertainty he had felt back in the lecture hall gone from him. He
had a right, surely, to feel proud of what he'd done? No Emperor or
President had ever done so much. He
looked about him, then nodded, suddenly determined. For some reason,
young Ward didn't want to work for him. A dozen times now he had
turned down his offers. But that didn't mean that he had to give up.
No. If anything it made him more determined. He was used to having
his own way, and he would have his way in this eventually. Because
this was too important not to give it his best shot. And if that best
shot meant getting Ward, he would get Ward. Whatever it took. Yes.
Because here, at this place he had specially created for the purpose,
they were ready to begin. In the days to come they would take on
Death himself. Would track him down and face him, eye to eye. Yes.
And stare him down. kim
pushed AWAY the empty starter plate and looked about him, noting how
busy the restaurant had suddenly become, then turned back, meeting
Michael Lever's eyes across the table. "It's
strange, isn't it?" Michael said, a faint smile on his lips.
"I'd never have thought that I'd feel awkward in a place like
this, but these days. . . well,
I see it with new eyes, I guess. The wastefulness of it all. The
excess. Being Wu Shih's guest made me realize how much I'd taken for
granted, how much I hadn't seen." Kim
frowned, concerned. "You should have said. Look, I'll cancel the
main course, if you want. We can go elsewhere." Michael
shook his head. "No. It's okay. Besides, I'll have to get used
to this again if I'm going into business on my own accoimt. I learned
that with my father. This is where the deals are made, in the
restaurants and private clubs, with a full mouth and a swollen belly,
over a plate of expensive delicacies and a tumbler of brandy." Kim
laughed softly, enjoying the new Michael Lever. There was a depth of
irony to him that hadn't been there before his imprisonment; a sharp,
self-deprecating humor that suited him perfectly. Before, he had been
his father's shadow, but now he was himself; leaner but also stronger
than before. "Do
you really hate it all that much?" Michael
looked down. "I don't know. It's like I said, it's hard to see
it now the way they do. Being locked up all day ... it gave me the
chance to do a lot of thinking. To look at our world afresh." He
met Kim's eyes again. "My father can't understand that. To him
it's as if I've been away at College or something. He can't see what
IVe been through. He thinks . . ." He huffed out, hurt and
exasperated. "Well, he thinks I'm just being awkward, willful,
but it's not like that." Kim
leaned toward him, covering his hand with his own. "I
understand," he said, thinking back to his own experiences of
confinement. "It changes you, doesn't it? Throws you back upon
yourself." Michael
nodded and looked up at him, smiling, grateful for his understanding. "I'm
sorry. This whole business with your father. It must be hard for
you." Michael
shrugged. "It hurts, sure, but I've known worse. Besides,"
he said, brightening, "youVe not told me what you're up
to. Have you made your first million yet?" Kim
laughed. "No, but it sure as hell feels as if IVe spent it
setting things up!" He sat back, relinquishing Michael's hand.
"You know how it is. Creatively we're strong, but financially. .
. Well, to be honest with you,
Michael, I could do with some outside investment, but it's a question
of finding someone I can trust. Someone who won't attach too many
strings." "Ahh
. . ." Michael looked away, thoughtful a moment. "You know,
Kim, I thought I knew everything there was to know about business, I
thought no one could teach me anything new, but I'm having to learn
it all again, from scratch. Without my father's money, without the
power that ImmVac represents, I'm just another face, fighting for my
share of a hostile market." "Hostile?" "My
father. He doesn't like the idea of me going it alone. He thinks I
should be back home, running errands for him." "You
mean he's actively trying to stop you?" "Actively,
no. Or at least, not as far as I know. But you know how it is. The
word's out that my father's angry with me, and it's a brave man
who'll risk offending Charles Lever for the sake of trading with his
son. I've been cut dead a dozen, twenty times these past two days
alone by so-called 'friends.' But there are ways around that. Bryn
and I have been working on making contacts in the East Asian
marketplace. It'll cost us, sure, but at least we can do business.
Here in North America things are dead as far as we're concerned." "I
see." Kim leaned back, letting the waiter who had appeared clear
the plates. "So how are you funding all this?" Michael
smiled. "IVe personal accounts. Money my mother left me. About
fifteen million in all. It's not enough, but it'll get us started." Kim
narrowed his eyes. "That sounds ambitious." "It
is. But tell me, Kim, how much do you need? A million? Two?" "One
and a half," Kim said, as the waiter returned, setting down a
plate of steaming hash before him. "One point two if we trim
back to basics." "And
that covers what? R and D? Production? Distribution?" "R
and D is covered. I do all that up here." Kim tapped his skull
and smiled. "No. My costing is for the initial production run,
manufacture to fitting, allowing for a three-month payment schedule.
We start fairly small, keep borrowing to a minimum, and finance
expansion from profits." Michael
leaned toward him, interested. "YouVe got something ready to go,
then?" "Pretty
well. IVe been working on a few things this last year. Some didn't
pan out, but two of them . . . Well, let's say that I'm hopeful." "These
are new inventions, I take it?" Kim
nodded. "And
you've patented them, I hope?"
. "Not
yet." Michael
whistled through his teeth. "But that's madness, Kim! What if
someone raided your offices? You'd lose it all." Kim
shook his head. "They could strip the place bare, but they'd get
nothing. As I said, it's all up here, in my head. When I'm ready I'll
set it all down and take it along to the Patents Office and register
it. But not before IVe sorted out the practical details." Michael
smiled, impressed by the young man. "It sounds good. Better than
good, in fact. Look, Kim, why don't we do business? You need
funding, we need a bit of specialist advice. Why can't we trade? I
mean, I'll have to talk to Bryn and get his agreement, but I don't
see why we can't help each other out, neh?" Kim
stared at him, confused. "Wait a minute. Have I got this right?
Are you offering to back me? To put up the funds?" "Why
not?" "But
I thought you needed that money for your own venture?" "We
need ten million to get us started, sure, but that leaves more than
enough for what you want. And no strings. Or at least, just the
one—that you look over our proposal and give us your technical
advice on what we propose." Kim
was smiling broadly now, his dinner quite forgotten. "That's
great. Really great. But just what is your proposal?" "Near-space
technologies," Michael answered him, looking past him
momentarily, as if seeing something clearly in the air. "It's
the coming thing, Kim. The coming thing ..." wei
feng LAY on the great oakwood bed, his eyes closed, his long, thin
face at rest. His hands lay one upon the other above the
sheets, the slender fingers stiff, paler than the white silk
of the coverings, a kind of darkness beneath their pallor. At the
foot of the bed stood his three sons, heads bowed, the white of their
clothes in sharp contrast to the rich colors of the room. The
long illness had wasted the old man. He was a thing of bone beneath
the frail white gown he wore. His right arm and shoulder had
atrophied, as if death had taken that part of him earlier than the
rest. His lidded eyes rested low in the pits of their sockets, and
his thin-lipped mouth was a mere pale gash in the emaciated wasteland
of his face. The hair on the left side of his face had not grown
back, and the scars of the operations showed blue against the ivory
of his skull. When Li Yuan entered the room his eyes were drawn to
the stark ugliness of Wei Feng's head in death. He shuddered
involuntarily, then turned to greet the eldest son, Chan Yin, with a
silent bow. Li
Yuan stood at the bedside a long time, looking down at his old
friend, recalling through misted eyes how this kind and lovely man
had once twirled him around in the air, his eyes alight with the joy
of what he was doing, and how he, Li Yuan, had squealed with delight
at it. He glanced down at the narrow bones of the hands, the wasted
muscles of the arms, and grimaced. Had it been so long ago? No . . .
He shook his head slowly. Fifteen years. It was barely an indrawn
breath in the long history of their race. He
turned away, leaving the tears on his cheeks, stepping back as if in
a dream, then reached out to embrace each of the dead man's sons;
holding Chan Yin longer than the others, feeling the faint trembling
of the man against him. Chan
Yin stood back, a sad smile on his face. "Thank you, Yuan." "He
was a good man," Yuan answered, matching his smile. "I
shall miss both his advice and his friendship. He was a second father
to me." The
forty-year-old nodded slightly, for a moment seeming younger than the
nineteen-year-old Li Yuan. Before this moment, power had reversed the
traditional status of age between them, but now they were both T'ang,
both equals. Even so, Chan Yin deferred. Li Yuan noted this and
frowned, not understanding. There was no sign in his cousin that he
had inherited. Only a puzzling humility and deference toward himself. "What
is it, Chan Yin?" Chan
Yin met his eyes. Beyond him his younger brothers looked on. "My
father entrusted me to give you this, Yuan." From
the white folds of his mourning cloak the new T'ang took a letter. It
was white silk, sealed with bloodred wax, the traditional instrument
of the Seven. Li Yuan took it and stared at it, then, reluctantly, he
prized the seal open with his fingernail. Chan
Yin reached out a hand to stop him. "Not here, Yuan. Later. When
you are alone. And then we shall meet. Just you and I." He
paused, and raised his voice as if to let it carry to his brothers.
"But remember, Li Yuan. I am my father's son. His death changes
nothing." Li
Yuan hesitated, then bowed his assent, his fingers pressing the
hardened wax back into place. Then, with a brief, questioning glance,
he turned and left the death chamber. CHAPTER
FOUR
Waves
Against the Sand IT
WAS LOW TIDE. In the deep shadow at the foot of the City's wall, a
flat-bottomed patrol boat made its way between the tiny,
grass-covered islands that dotted this side of the river, the tight
beam of its searchlight sweeping slowly from side to side across the
glistening shallows. Just here, at the great Loire's mouth, the river
was broad, almost three li wide. Downstream lay the Bay of
Biscay and the gray-green waters of the North Atlantic. In the
bright, mid-morning sunlight, one of the big mid-ocean vessels was
making its way in the deep water channel toward the port of Nantes.
On the far bank, beyond the perimeter fence and its regularly spaced
gun turrets, could be seen the needle towers and blast pits of the
spaceport, the pure white of the City's walls forming a glacial
backdrop far to the south. As the patrol boat slowed and turned,
making its way round the low hump of a mudbank, the water seemed to
shimmer. Almost imperceptibly the vibration took form in the air, a
low bass growl that grew and grew in strength. A moment later the sky
on the far side of the river was riven by a long, bright streak of
red. On
the roof of the City, two li above the river's surface, a
group of officers watched the rocket climb the sky to the southwest.
To their backs, close by, five craft were parked about an open
service hatch: a big, black-painted cruiser, three squat Security
gunships, and a slender four-man craft with the Ywe Lung and
the personal insignia of the T'ang
of Europe on its stubby wings. Uniformed guards of the T'ang's elite
squad stood by the ramps of each craft, heavy semiautomatics clutched
to their chests, looking about them conscientiously. For a
moment the small group of officers was still, their necks craned
back, following the arc of the rocket, then, as the echoing boom of
the engines faded from the sky, they turned back, resuming their
talk. Marshal
Tolonen stood at the center of the group, his aide close by,
clutching a small documents case. Facing Tolonen stood Li Yuan's new
General, the fifty-two-year-old Helmut Rheinhardt. He and most of his
senior staff had come out to Nantes to see the old man off. "I
admire your thoroughness, Knut," Rheinhardt said, picking up on
what they had been saying, "but forgive me if I say that I feel
you're taking on much more than you need. For myself I'd have let
other, younger eyes do the spadework and saved myself for the fine
sifting. From what you've said, there's plenty enough of that, neh?" Tolonen
laughed. "Maybe so. But it's a principle IVe stuck to all my
life. Not to trust what I'm told, but to look for myself. I've an
instinct for these things, Helmut. For that small betraying detail
that another wouldn't spot. From here things look fine with GenSyn's
North American operation, but IVe a hunch that they'll look a great
deal different from close up." "You
think something's amiss, then, Knut?" Tolonen
leaned closer. "I'm damn sure of it! I've been working through
the official records these past three months and things simply don't
add up. Oh, superficially things look all right. The numbers balance
and so forth, but. . ." He sniffed, then shook his head. "Look,
Klaus Ebert was a conscientious, honest man. He kept a tight rein on
GenSyn while he was in control. But things were different at the
end..." "Hans,
you mean?"
-, Tolonen
looked away, a shadow falling over his granite features. "It
looks like it, I'm afraid. Most of the North American operation and
its subsidiary companies were handed over to Hans for the eighteen
months before Klaus Ebert's death. And it's in that period that
almost all of the anomalies occur." "Anomalies?"
It was Li Yuan's Chancellor, Nan Ho, who made the query. He was
returning to the group after briefly visiting his craft to take an
urgent message. Rheinhardt and his officers bowed and moved back
slightly, letting Nan Ho reenter their circle. Tolonen
hesitated, then nodded. "Accounting irregularities. Forged
shipment details. Missing documents. That kind of thing." It was
a bland, almost evasive answer, but from the way Tolonen met Nan Ho's
eyes as he said it, the Chancellor knew that it was more serious than
that. Something else was missing. Something that, perhaps, couldn't
be mentioned, not even in company like this. "Besides,"
Tolonen went on, changing the subject, "it will be good to see
old friends again. My work has kept me in my study this past year.
And that's not healthy, neh? A man needs to get out in the world. To
do things and see things." Rheinhardt
laughed. "It sounds like you've been missing the service, Knut!
Maybe I should find you something to do once all this GenSyn business
is finished with. Or maybe you would like your old job back?" There
was laughter at that; a hearty, wholesome laughter that rolled out
across the roof of the City. Hearing it, Jelka Tolonen looked up from
where she was sitting on the steps of the nearest gunship and
frowned. How familiar such manly laughter was, and yet, suddenly, how
strange, how alien it sounded. She stood, looking out past her
father's men, toward the distant horizon. It was
a beautiful day. The sun was high and, to her back, the air fresh
with no trace of wind. Cloud lay to the west, high up, over the
shining ocean, a faint, wispy cirrus feathering the deep blue of the
sky. It was beautiful, simply beautiful, yet for once she felt no
connection to that beauty, no resonance within herself; as if some
part of her had died, or fallen fast asleep. A
week had passed since the incident at the Graduation Ball, but she
had still to come to terms with what had happened. When she thought
of it, it seemed strange, unreal, as if it had happened to someone
else, or in some other life. Yet what concerned her more was the
constant, nagging sense of unease she had felt these past few
weeks; that sense that things were wrong, seriously wrong,
with the balance of her life. As far
as Lieutenant Bachman was concerned, her father had smoothed things
over, just as he'd said he would. Even so, she had slept badly this
last week, haunted by dreams in which she was a machine, a dreadful
spinning thing with blades for arms, scything down whoever strayed
across her blind, erratic path. . And
where was her softer self in these dreams? Where was the girl she
knew existed beneath that hard metallic shell? Nowhere. There was no
sign of her; of the girl she felt she ought to have been. Or was it
true what her father had said that night? Was it simply that they
were made of sterner stuff? Of iron? Of all
this she had said nothing. At home, she had acted as though nothing
were happening deep within her. As if it were all done with and
forgotten. Yet she knew it was far from over, for she was undergoing
a change—a change as profound and as radical as any being
suffered by the greater world beyond her. And maybe there was even
some connection. Maybe the change in her mirrored that outer
change—was some strange kind of recognition of the reality of
events? She
looked down at herself, at the simple dark blue one-piece she was
wearing. It was what she always wore when she accompanied her father,
its neat, military cut fitting in with her surroundings. Yet today it
felt different. Today it felt wrong. ' "Jelka?" She
turned, surprised, facing her father. "I
didn't hear you ..." "No
. . ." He smiled and reached out, holding her upper arm gently
with his bright, golden hand. "You were miles away, weren't you?
What were you thinking of, my love?" She
looked down. "That I'll miss you," she said, hiding behind
the partial truth. "And
I you," he said, drawing her close and embracing her. "But
it won't be long. Ten days at most. Oh, and guess who I'll be
seeing?" She
shrugged, unable to guess. "Shih
Ward . . . you know, young Kim, the Claybom lad ... the scientist." "You're
seeing him?" He
held up a small white envelope. "I'm having lunch with him, it
seems. Li Yuan wants me to deliver this personally. The gods know
what it is, but it'll be nice to see the young fellow again." "I.
. ." She licked at her lips, wanting to say something, to give
him some message to pass on, then shook her head. "I'll miss
you," she said finally, hugging him tightly. "I'll miss you
a lot." He
grinned. "Now, now. You'll be all right, my boy." Then,
realizing what he'd said, he laughed. "Now, why did I say that,
eh?" "I
don't know," she said quietly, burying her head in his chest. "I
really don't know." THE
CANVAS filled the end wall of the studio, dominating the room. It was
not merely that it dwarfed the other paintings—for the new
piece was easily ten, maybe twenty times the size of the artist's
earlier work—it was the color, the richness, the sheer scale of
the composition that caught the eye and drew it in. To the
left of the canvas, what seemed at first glance to be a huge,
silver-white mountain resolved itself into a tangle of bodies, some
human, some mechanical, the metallic figures unexpectedly soft and
melting, those of flesh hard, almost brutal in their angularity.
Looking more closely, it could be seen that this great mound of
bodies was formed of two great chains, linked hand to hand, like a
gigantic coil of anchor rope, the whole thing spiraling upward into
the blue-black darkness of deep space at the top right of the canvas:
a huge double helix of men and machines, twisting about itself,
striving toward a single, brilliant point of light. In the
foreground, beneath the toppling mass of bodies, was the great ocean,
the Atlantic, incongruously calm, its surface shimmering in the
sunlight. Yet beneath its placid skin could be discerned the forms of
ancient ruins—of Han temples and pagodas, of stone dragons and
palaces and the skeletal framework of a rotting imperial junk. It was
shan shui—"mountains and water"—but shan
shui transformed. This was the new art. An art of symbiosis
and technological aspiration that was the cultural embodiment of the
old Dispersionist ideals: Futur-Kunst, or Science-Art, as it was
called. And Hey-demeier, the artist, was its leading exponent. Old
Man Lever stood before the painting, some twenty ch'i back,
his face creased into an intense frown. He had brought* Heydemeier
over from Europe six months back and installed him here, giving him
whatever he needed to pursue his art. And this—this immense
vision in oils—was the first fruit of that investment. He
turned to Heydemeier and nodded. "It's good. Very good indeed.
What is it called?" Heydemeier
drew at the thin black cigarette and gave a tight smile of
satisfaction. "I'm glad you like it, Shih Lever. I've
called it 'The New World.'" Lever
laughed briefly. "That's good. I like that. But why so big?" Heydemeier
moved past the old man, going right up to the canvas. For a while he
studied the fine detail of the picture, brushing the surface of it
lightly with the fingertips of one hand, then he turned back, facing
Lever. "To
be honest with you, Shih Lever, I wasn't sure it would work, coming
here to America. I thought it might be a step backward. But there's
something very different about this place. It's more alive here than
in Europe. You get the feeling that this is where the future is." Lever
was studying the young man hawkishly. "And that's where this
comes from?" "Partly."
Heydemeier drew on the cigarette again. "Now that it exists I
realize that this was what I was always striving for, even in the
smaller works. What was lacking was a sense of space—of
outwardness. Being here, away from the confinement of Europe, freed
that. Allowed it, if you like." "I
can see that." Heydemeier
half turned, indicating the great swirl of bodies. "So. There it
is, Shih Lever. Yours. As we agreed." Lever
smiled. "It's an important work, Shih Heydemeier. I don't
need experts or advisors to tell me that. I can see it with my
own eyes. It's a masterpiece. Maybe the start of something wholly
new, wouldn't you say?" Heydemeier
looked down, trying to conceal his pleasure at the old man's words,
but Lever could see that he had touched his weak point—his
vanity. He smiled inwardly and pressed on. "I
mentioned my advisors. Well, to be frank with you, Shih Heydemeier,
it was on their word that you came here. They said you were the best.
Without equal, and with your best work ahead of you. So it has
proved. And that's good. I can use that. I like working with the
best. In everything." Lever
went across, standing there face to.face with the artist. "You're
a clever man, Ernst Heydemeier. You understand how things are—how
they work. So you'll not take offense when I say that my interest in
you was strictly commercial. A Company like mine—like
ImmVac—needs its showpieces, its cultural totems, if you like.
And the more prestigious those totems, the better. They give a
Company great face. But this. . ." He reached out and gently
touched the surface of the painting, a look of genuine awe in his
face. "This goes beyond that. This transcends what I asked of
you." Heydemeier
turned, looking back at his work. "Maybe. But it makes you
wonder sometimes . . . Whether you'll ever create anything half as
good again. Whether you can ever make something more . . . original." He
turned back, meeting Lever's eyes. "But that's the challenge,
neh? To surprise oneself." Lever
watched him a moment, then nodded. "It's yours, Ernst. The
painting, I mean. Keep it." "Keep
it?" Heydemeier gave a laugh of surprise. "I don't
understand . . ." Lever
looked past him, enjoying the moment. "On one condition. That
you paint something for me." Heydemeier
looked down, then gave the tiniest shake of his head. His voice was
apologetic. "I thought you understood, Shih Lever. I thought
we'd discussed this already. I don't undertake commissions. This . .
." He looked up, meeting Lever's eyes unflinchingly. "This
was different. Was my rent, if you like. Repayment of your
hospitality. But what you're
talking of... that's different again. I have to be free to paint what
I want. It just doesn't work, otherwise." "I
understand. But look at that. Look at it again, Ernst Heydemeier.
That's a moment in your life—in your career—that you
won't repeat. Oh, you may paint things which are better technically,
but will you ever recapture that one moment of vision? Besides, I
could resell this tomorrow and make, what, five, maybe ten million
;yuan. As to what it'll be worth ten years from now . . ." He
paused, letting that sink in. "And what am I asking for in
exchange? Three, maybe four days of your time." Heydemeier
turned away, his discomfort and uncertainty evident in every muscle
of his long, gaunt body. "I
don't know, Shih Lever. I..." "Okay.
I won't force the issue. Keep it anyway. Let it be my gift to you.
But let me tell you what it was I wanted. Just hear me out, okay?" Heydemeier
turned, facing the old man again. Whatever he had expected from this
meeting, it had not been this. He stood there, bemused, his earlier
composure shattered. "All right," he said resignedly. "I'll
listen, but that's all. . ." "Of
course." Lever smiled, relaxing now he had brought him this far.
"It's a simple little thing really . . ." Twenty
minutes later, as Lever was climbing into his sedan, a messenger
came. He tore the envelope open impatiently, knowing even before he
glanced at it who it was from. This was the second time in the last
twenty-four hours that his son, Michael, had written to him about the
freezing of his accounts. "Damn
the boy!" he said, angry at being chased up in this manner. "Who
the hell does he think he is! He can damn well wait. . ." He
held the letter out stiffly, waiting for his secretary to take it,
then, changing his mind, he drew it back. "No.
Give me brush and ink. I'll give him his answer now." "There,"
he said, a moment later. "Maybe that will teach him manners!" He
stepped up into the sedan again, letting the servant draw the
curtains about him, but the satisfaction he had felt only moments
before had gone, replaced by a blinding fury at his son. Well,
Michael would learn just how
decisive he could be when pushed to it. It was about time he
understood how things really were. He
shuddered and sat back, reminding himself of the days successes—of
the unexpected thrill of the auction that morning, the pleasant and
productive lunch with Representative Hartmann, and his "negotiations"
with Heydemeier. But this last—this final matter with his
son—had taken the bloom off his day. "Damn
the boy!" he said again, turning the heavy ring on his left-hand
index finger, unconscious that he was doing so. "Damn him to
hell!" JELKA
CRUMPLED UP the note and threw it down, angry with herself. Angry
that she couldn't find the words to express what she had been feeling
that night. Or
maybe it wasn't that at all. Maybe it was simply that she had wanted
to hurt the young lieutenant; that, in a funny way, she'd needed
to. But if that was true, what kind of creature did that make
her? She
sat back, taking a long breath, trying to calm herself, but there was
so much darkness in her; so much unexpressed violence. Why, she
couldn't even write a simple letter of apology without wanting to hit
out at something! She
stood, looking about her at the chaos of her room. Sketches of
uniforms and weaponry, of machines and fighting soldiers, cluttered
the facing wall, while to her left a number of old campaign maps
covered the face of her wardrobe. A combat robe hung over the back of
the chair beside her unmade bed, while nearby, in a box in the
corner, a selection of flails and staffs and practice swords reminded
her of how long she had spent perfecting her skills with each. Above
the box, high up on the wall, was a brightly colored poster of
Mu-Lan, dressed in full military armor. Mu-Lan, the warrior princess,
famed throughout history for her bravery and skill. Mu-Lan
. . . the name her girlfriends called her. She
swallowed, her anger turned to bitterness. He had made her this. Year
by year he had trimmed and shaped her. Year by year he had molded
her, until she was this thing of steel and sinew. Or was
that fair? Was her father really to blame? Wasn't it true what he had
said that night? Wasn't it simply that she was of his blood, Tolonen,
with the nature of their kind? Hadn't she glimpsed something of that
on the island that time? Hadn't she seen her own reflection in the
rocks and icy waters of that northern place? So maybe it was true.
Maybe he wasn't to blame. Even so, if she had had a mother... She
caught her breath. Slowly she sat again. If
she had had a mother. . . What then? Would it all have been
different? Would she have turned out normal? She
laughed; a strange, bleak sound. What, after all, was normal? Was
"normal" what the others were? For if that was so,
then she didn't wish to be normal. But to be as she was, that was
dreadful, horrible. Unbearable. She
went through to the kitchen and took a refuse sack from the strip
beside the freezer, then returned to her room. She stood there,
looking about her numbly, wondering where to start. Mu-Lan,
perhaps . . . She
went across and ripped the poster from the wall, stuffing it down
into the sack. Then, in a frenzy, she worked her way around the
walls, tearing down the pictures and sketches, the posters and the
maps, thrusting them all down into the sack, grunting with the
effort. Finally she emptied the weapons box into the sack and tied
the neck. She
stood back, looking about her at the bare walls. It was as if she had
been dreaming all these years; sleepwalking her way through the days.
Oh, there had been moments when she had woken—like the time she
had defied him over the marriage to Hans Ebert—but for the most
part she had colluded in her fate. But now all that must change. From
here on she must be mistress of her own destiny. Lifting
the sack she went back through, into the kitchen. Waving the serving
girl away, she stood there, over the portable incinerator, half in
trance, thinking of her mother. In
some other world, perhaps, it was different. There, beneath an open
sky, she was herself, complete. For an instant she pictured it;
imagined the log house on the hill beside the forest, the stream
below; turned
and saw, as if in memory, her father standing in the doorway, her
mother—the image of herself—beside him, his arm about her
shoulder. Felt herself turn, her skirts swirling out about her naked
legs, her bare feet running on the sunlit grass . . . She
closed her eyes, the pain of longing almost overwhelming her. In some
other world ... The
click of the incinerator brought her back. She looked about her, as
if coming to from the depths of sleep, then shuddered, the tension in
her unabated. What wouldn't she give to be able to live like that. To
be like that, open and whole. Maybe
so. But that was only dreams. This here was the world she inhabited.
This massive, brutal world of levels. This Yang world, heavy with the
breath of men. And what were her dreams against the weight of that
reality? Nothing. And
yet she would become herself. She would. For to be like
them—to be "normal" in the way that they were
normal—would be a living death for her. A slow and painful
suffocation. And she would rather die than suffer that. She
had been running from it. All her life she had been running from it.
But now, suddenly, she was awake. That moment at the Graduation Ball
. . . she understood it now. That—that awful moment when she
had turned and goaded him—had been the moment when she had
stopped running. The moment of awakening, when she had turned, quite
literally, to confront the very thing she hated. "I'm
sorry." she said softly. "It wasn't you, it was . .
." She
shivered, understanding finally what had happened to her that
evening. It wasn't Lieutenant Lothar Bachman she had meant to hurt.
It was what he represented. He ... well, he had been like . . . She
looked about her, her eyes coming to rest on the figure of the
kitchen god, squatting on the shelf above the cooking utensils, and
nodded to herself. Yes.
It was as if she had been confronted by the clay figurine of an evil
demon; a figure that she had had to smash to be free of its
enchantment. And
was she free? „ Jelka
looked down at her long, slender hands, seeing them clearly, as if
she had never seen them before. No, not free. Not yet. But she would
be. For she was awake now. At long last, she was awake. "Mary?
Have you got the file of old MemSys contacts?" Emily
looked up from behind the desk screen and met Michael Lever's eyes,
conscious of the slight edge in his voice. This business with his
father was getting to him, especially since the Old Man had frozen
the accounts. "It's
here," she said, reaching into her top left-hand drawer and
taking out the bulky folder. "Not that it'll do you any good.
None of them will talk to us, let alone contemplate trading with us.
They're all scared as hell of taking on your father, Michael. You'd
be better off trashing this and starting anew." "Maybe."
He hesitated, then came across and took the folder from her. "Even
so, I'm going to try each one of them again. Someone's got to give." "Why?"
There was a strange hardness in her eyes. "Your father holds all
the cards. Every last one of them. And you've got nothing." "Maybe,"
he said again, not challenging what she'd said. "But I've got to
keep trying. I can't go back. Not now." "No."
She said it softly, sympathetically, knowing how much pressure he'd
been under these past few weeks, and how well he'd coped with it. The
old Michael Lever wouldn't have coped, not one tenth as well. "As
for the other matter. . . I'll let you know if we hear anything,
okay?" He
smiled uncertainly. "Okay. I'll get to it." When
he was gone, she sat back, combing her fingers through her short
blond hair. The other matter—the freezing of the accounts—
was what lay behind his current tenseness. If the Old Man refused . .
. She took a deep breath, trying to see ahead. What would she do if
Michael gave up and went back to his father? She'd be out of a job,
for a start. Worse than that, Old Man Lever would make sure she'd
never work again. Not in North America, anyway. And maybe other
places too. Wherever his long arm reached. But
strangely enough her own fate didn't concern her half so much as the
prospect of Michael giving up. Of him succumbing after coming this
far. She'd survive. She always did. But Michael... If he gave up now
it would destroy him—cripple him emotionally. If he gave up now
he would be tied—tied forever to his father's will, whether his
father lived or not. She
shuddered and looked about her at the room in which she sat. In three
short weeks they had built this thing from scratch. And though it was
as nothing compared to MemSys and the great ImmVac Corporation, it
was at least something. New growth, not an expansion of the old. Yes,
and left alone it would have grown and grown. Michael and Btyn were a
good team. Innovative, capable, resourceful. As good as any she had
worked for these past three years. The Company would have been big.
As it was, it was likely it would be dead, and probably within the
hour. "NuShih
Jennings?" She
looked up again. It was Chan, the guard. He'd slid back the outer
door and was looking in at her. "What
is it, Chan Long?" "There's
a messenger here," he said quietly, ominously. "From
ImmVac. I think it's an answer." She
nodded. Chan knew as well as anyone what was going on. That was his
business. And like her, he knew what it was likely to mean. She
smiled tightly, feeling sorry for the man. "Okay.
Search him and show him through. But show the man respect. It's not
his fault." Chan
gave a small bow and slid the door closed again. A minute or so later
the door slid fully back and Chan came through, ushering in a tall,
dark-haired Hung Moo in the bright red uniform of ImmVac's messenger
service. From the way he glanced at Chan as he passed, it was clear
he had not welcomed being body-searched, but Emily was taking no
chances. She
stood, coming around the desk. "You have a message, I
understand? From Shih Lever." He
hesitated, then gave the slightest nod of his head. Inwardly
Emily smiled ironically. If she had been a man, his bow would
have been low, to the waist, perhaps, but as she was merely a woman .
. . "I
have a note," the man answered, looking away from her, as if he
had dismissed her. "It is to be given directly into the hands of
young Master Lever." She
took a long, deep breath. Young Master Lever. How clearly
those words revealed Old Man Lever's attitude toward his son. How
subtly and damagingly they placed Michael. She
moved closer, until her face was almost pressed against the man's. "I
will tell Shih Lever that you are here. If you would be seated,"
she pointed past him, indicating the chair on the far side of the
reception room. "He is a very busy man, but he will see you when
he can." As she
turned away, she could see it in her mind. The thing to do was to
keep the messenger waiting—an hour, two hours, maybe even to
the close of business. That way the message would get back to Old Man
Lever that his son was not to be treated like a troublesome infant,
but respected as a man. That was what she would have done, anyway.
But she was not Michael. Michael wanted an answer. Wanted an end to
the tension and misery of not knowing. She
hesitated, then slid back the door. Inside she closed it behind her,
then went across. Kustow was sitting to the left behind his desk,
Michael to the right. They watched her cross the floor, their eyes
filled with a tense expectation. "It's
here," she said simply. She
saw how the color drained from Michael's face. He closed the MemSys
folder, then turned in his chair, looking across at Kustow. "Well,
Bryn, what do you think?" Kustow
sat back, eyeing his partner somberly. "I think he's given you
the finger, Michael. That's what I think." "But
he can't," Michael said quietly. "Surely he can't? I mean,
it's my money. Legally my money. If I took the matter to court. . ." Kustow
shrugged fatalistically. "You'd win, certainly, but not for
several years. You, better than anyone, should know how expert your
father's lawyers are at drawing things out. And in the meantime youVe
got nothing. Not even this . . ."
,, "Maybe,
but . . . ach . . .what gives him the right, Bryn? What gives him the
rucking right?" For a
moment all of the anger and frustration he was feeling was there in
Michael Lever's face. Then, with a shudder, he took hold of himself
again and looked across at Emily. "Okay.
Show him in. Let's hear the worst." She
went back and brought the messenger through, watching as Michael took
the envelope from him and slit it open. He read it through, then, his
hand trembling, passed it to Kustow at his side. "Okay,"
he said, meeting the messenger's eyes, his whole manner suddenly
harder, more dignified. "Tell my father that I note what he says
and that I thank him for his generosity." "Is
that it?" the man asked, staring back at him. "You
may go," Michael said, letting nothing of what he was feeling
enter his voice. "YouVe done what was asked of you." When
the messenger had gone, Michael turned, facing Kustow, his shoulders
hunched suddenly, his eyes miserable, the pretense of dignified
defiance cast off. "That's it, then. The end of things. . ." Kustow
studied the note a moment, then looked back at him. "Is that
what you want?" "No.
But what are our options? There was seventeen million in those four
accounts. Without it. . ." "Without
it we start again. Trim things down. Reassess our priorities. Work
out what we can do. WeVe still got my money." "Two
million. Where will that get us?" "It'll
get us started, that's what. As for the rest, we'll come up with
something. We can borrow from the East Asian markets, maybe. Or from
his major business rivals." "But
you said you didn't want to borrow. You said that that would make us
vulnerable." Kustow
smiled. "True. But I said that before your father turned nasty
on us." He handed Michael back the note, then put his arm about
his shoulders. "Look at it this way, Michael. Your money would
have given us a cushion—might have made the ride a little less
bumpy—but it was never the main component of our strategy.
Talent, ability,
innovative ideas, that's what this Company was going to be based on,
and it still can be. But I can't do it alone, Michael. I need you.
And you need me." "But
what about our plans . . . ?" "As
I said. We scale things down. Put a rein on our ambitions for a
time." He shrugged. "Look, this'll set us back, I don't
deny it, but it doesn't have to put an end to things, not unless you
want it to. So what about it, Michael? Are you going to crawl back to
him, your tail between your legs, after all weVe done and said, or
are you going to spit in his eye and carry on?" Michael
glanced at Emily, then turned back, studying Kustow closely, his eyes
recalling all they had been through those past few years. Gripping
Kustow's arms firmly, he nodded. "Okay,"
he said quietly. "We'll do it your way. If it fails we're no
worse off, neh?" "Not
the tiniest bit. . ." Again
he nodded, a smile slowly returning to his lips. "Okay. Then
let's do it. Let's spit in his eye." IT was
A DARK-LIT, shabby place that stank of cheap perfumes and sour
liquor. The carpet underfoot was threadbare, the walls covered with
inexpensive erotoprints. The girls, lined up against one of the
walls, were in character; they too were cheap and worn, their faces
overpainted, their bodies mere parodies of desire. "Well?"
said K'ang, turning to face Lehmann, a grin splitting his big face.
"What do you want? It's my treat. I always bring my boys here,
once a month. Gives them a break. A bit of fun." Lehmann
looked about him, letting no sign of the disgust he felt show in his
face. "No," he said simply. "Come
on . . ." K'ang made to take him by the arm, then remembered how
he felt about that and backed off. "You're sure ? I mean, if
it's not your thing. If. . ." The
look on Lehmann's face warned him not to say what he was thinking.
K'ang shrugged and turned back to the others. "I'll
have the fat one," said Ling Wo, K'ang's chief advisor. "Which
one?" said the Madam, coming across to him and winking. She
herself was grossly fat and, like her girls, wore little or nothing
about her genitals, as if such crude display could make her more
desirable. Ling Wo let her fondle him and leaned close to whisper in
her ear. "Have
them both!" she said and laughed raucously, slapping his
shoulder. "Shih K'ang here will pay, won't you, dear?" K'ang
laughed loudly and said, "Of course. Have both, Ling Wo!"
But his eyes said something different, and Ling Wo chose between the
girls. Lehmann,
watching, saw the Madam look from one man to the other, then turn to
her girls and make a face. One by
one the others made their choices, K'ang's three advisors first, then
Peck, the new man from the south who had joined, them only a week
back. Peck
was an old acquaintance of Soucek's and had worked for K'ang A-yin
years before. Now he was back, after some trouble with Security. He
had come in as Lieutenant, to strengthen the tong. Or so the story
went. To Lehmann it read otherwise. Peck had been brought in to
counter him. To bring the odds back in K'ang's favor. Not that it
mattered. Then
it was Soucek's turn. "I'll
pass this time, Shih K'ang." K'ang
laughed. "What do you mean, pass? Since when did you ever pass?
You gone off girls or something?" Soucek
lifted his big, long head and met K'ang's eyes. "I'll pass,
that's all." K'ang
went quiet. He looked from Soucek to Lehmann, then looked down at the
floor. When he looked up again he was smiling, but his eyes, as ever,
were cold. "You don't like the way I treat you, Jiri, is that
it?" Soucek
shook his head. "You treat me fine, K'ang A-yin, but I just
don't want it this time. Next time okay. But now . . ." His face
was hard, expressionless. K'ang
looked across at the remaining girls, including the one he always
had—the best of them, though it said little for her—and
then smiled. "Okay. You sit here with Lehmann and chat, neh?"
And at that he laughed. He turned to Lehmann. "Mind you, Stefan,
you'd be better off fucking
your brains out than trying to get a decent conversation out of Jiri
there." Then,
laughing, the Madam on one arm, the girl on the other, he followed
the others inside. Lehmann
waited a moment, then turned, looking across at Soucek. "Why
didn't you go in?" Soucek
met Lehmann's eyes. "I was watching you. Seeing how you saw it."
• "And?" "You
don't like all this, do you?" "What
does it matter what I like? You're K'ang's man." "That's
not forever." "Nothing's
forever. But that isn't what you meant, is it?"
;, Soucek
was about to answer when the Madam came bursting in again. "You
boys want anything? Drinks?" Lehmann
looked at her blankly, then, "Yes. Wine will do." Soucek
half-lidded his eyes, curious. He had never seen Lehmann touch
alcohol before. The Madam left the room, then returned with two
drinks, setting them down on a small table at the far end of the
room. "There.
You'll be comfy over here." Lehmann
looked at her again, such hostility behind the blankness of his face
that the Madam's smile faded momentarily, then came back stronger, as
if to cover up the unease she felt in his presence. "If there's
anything else you^need, just call." They
waited until she went, then sat, Lehmann with his back to the wall,
Soucek facing him. The two drinks rested on the low table between
them. "Tell
me about Peck," Lehmann said. "Peck?"
Soucek laughed coldly. "Peck is ying tzu." Lehmann
lowered his head slightly. He had heard of ying tzu—
shadows—and their services. They were trained specialists,
contracted out to gangland bosses. Like the chan shih they were a
staple of the underworld here, though far more rare. "That
costs." Soucek
nodded and reached out to take his glass, but Lehmann put out a hand,
stopping him. "Why are you telling me?" "A
warning." Lehmann
studied him carefully, his gaze penetrating. "Just that?" Soucek
smiled again, his thin-lipped mouth an ugly, lifeless thing. "No."
He hesitated and then looked down. "Because you're strong." "And
K'ang isn't?" Soucek
looked up. "He's strong. In some ways. But you. . ." He
shook his head. Lehmann
was silent a long time after that. Then he picked up his glass and
sniffed at it. "I'm K'ang's man now." Soucek
watched him; saw him put the glass down untouched. "Now?" Lehmann's
eyes seemed to soften marginally, as if he was pleased that Soucek
had understood him, but still he didn't smile. Soucek looked down at
his glass and nodded to himself. In this as in all else from now on
he would copy Lehmann. If Lehmann shunned women, he too would shun
women. If Lehmann touched no drink, he too would do the same. For
there was a secret in all this, he saw. A kind of strength. Macht,
the others called it, in the old slang of these parts. Power. "What
do you want?" Lehmann's
question surprised him. To be like you, he thought, but what
he said was different. "I don't want to be here forever. I..." He
stopped and turned in his chair. Six men had come into the room. Two
of them had been talking when they came in, but on seeing Lehmann and
Soucek there they had fallen silent. As Soucek watched, the Madam
came out and, with a glance across at Lehmann and himself, leaned
close to one of the newcomers and whispered something to him. Then,
with a broad, false smile, she came across again. "Well,
we are busy tonight!" she said with an excessive gaiety that
struck Soucek as rather odd. Then, looking at their glasses, her
smile widened again. "You want fill-ups?" Soucek
turned and looked down at the glasses. They were empty. He looked up
at Lehmann, surprised, but the albino's face was blank. "Why
not?" said Lehmann tonelessly, lifting the glasses and handing
them to her. Soucek
watched Lehmann a moment longer, then turned in time to see the Madam
usher the men out through a door she hadn't used before. She was the
last to go through and as she did, she turned, taking an almost
furtive glance back at them. As
soon as she was gone, Lehmann was on his feet and crossing the room
toward the exit. "What's
happening?" began Soucek, jumping up. « Lehmann
turned suddenly, like an acrobat, his balance perfect. "Just sit
there," he said softly. "Pretend nothing's happening. If
she asks, tell her I've gone for a piss. And whatever you do, don't
touch the drink. It's drugged." at the
door Lehmann paused, slipping to one side as it irised open. No one.
He went through quickly, using the far wall of the corridor to stop
and turn himself, his gun out and searching, then relaxed. The
corridor was empty. Crouching,
he set the gun down, then took off his wristband and turned it inside
out. Quickly he tapped out the contact code. At once the tiny screen
came alight, bloodred. There was a moment's vague activity, then the
screen's color changed and a miniature of Haller's face stared back
at him. "What
the hell time . . . ?" Haller began, then saw it wasn't Becker.
His manner changed at once. "What is it?" Lehmann
spelt out the situation, gave the location, and told him what was
needed. "You've got eight minutes maximum. Bring Becker. Go in
at the front. And remember, no noise." He cut
contact, put the wristband back on, and picked up the gun. Then,
pausing only to look back along the corridor, he began to run. There
would be a back entrance. Sealed maybe. Guarded probably. But he
would face that when he got there. It was
a narrow side alley with three ceiling lamps. He stood in part
shadow, looking down. There was one man, his back to him, expecting
nothing yet. Unhesitant, Lehmann moved quickly between the distinct
pools of light and came behind the man silently, wrapping the fine,
hard wire about his neck with a graceful looping of his hands. The
man's cry of surprise and pain was cut off sharply, almost before it
fonned. Lehmann let the lifeless body fall, the wire embedded
deep in the flesh. He
tested the door's frame for weaknesses, pushing at it, then leaning
hard against it. Moving back from it, he took a breath, then kicked
twice, in two separate places. The door fell inward, the crude
latches snapped off. Quickly
he moved through the dust cloud, conscious of the noise he'd had to
make. Almost at once he was facing one of the Madam's girls who had
come out of her room to see what was happening. He grabbed her, one
hand about her mouth, then pushed her back into the room, looking
about him. She was alone. With a quick, strong movement, he snapped
her neck and lay her down. Then, shutting the door behind him, he
went back for the dead man. He had
been lucky so far. No one else had heard, and no one had seen the
corpse lying there in the shadows by the door. Quickly, grunting with
the effort, he dragged it inside, then set the door back in place
behind him. Would
they be missing him yet? Getting suspicious? It was almost five
minutes now since he'd gone for that piss. Was Soucek all right? He put
the dead man in with the corpse of the whore, then came out again.
For a moment he stood there, listening. Things seemed okay. He
took a breath, then went on, half running down the long, dark
passageway, following it around. There was a door to the left. He
paused, lifting the flap. Peck was inside, naked, on his back, a
busty blonde riding him vigorously. Lehmann dropped the flap silently
and went on. At the
door to the reception area he stopped again, listening. He could hear
Soucek's voice, and the Madam's. All seemed fine. He went through. He saw
the relief on the Madam's face, and knew at once what she'd been
thinking. "IVe changed my mind," he said, before she could
say anything. "There's a girl down the end there, I..." He saw
her smile widen and again could read her thoughts. You like to watch.
He looked away, as if he had been caught out, and stood back as
she pushed past. Soucek had stood up. Lehmann nodded and signaled for
him to come. As she
opened the door Lehmann came behind her and put his hand over her
mouth so that she couldn't cry out. He felt her tense, could feel the
sudden fear in every muscle of her body. She was staring at the two
corpses wide-eyed. "You
can join them or you can help me," Lehmann said quietly. She
nodded and he released his grip. She was breathing heavily, trying to
control herself. "Just
do what you were going to do. Give us three minutes, then send them
in." She
turned, surprised. Her mouth worked silently, its hideous rouge
making ugly shapes, then she nodded. She made to step past him, but
he reached out and held her. "Remember," he said, drawing
her up with one hand until her face was just beneath his. "Say a
thing and you're dead. Those others, they're dead anyway. My men are
coming here now. But you . . . you can live. If you do what you're
told." She
swallowed, then found her voice. "Okay. I'll do what you say." He
pushed her away, disgusted by the foulness of her breath, the painted
corruption of her face. He would kill her when it was done. When
she was gone, Soucek turned to him. "What do you want me to do?"
he said quietly. He had drawn his gun. Lehmann
reached out and took the gun. "No noise. Use your knife. Or
this." He handed Soucek a garrote with short matt-black handles.
"Or best of all, use your hands." Soucek
stared at him. "Are you serious?" "Yes.
Now no noise. Understand?" "Why?" Lehmann
glared at him. "Just do it. Right?" Soucek
nodded, chastened by Lehmann's look. They
went out and down the passageway. At the turn, Lehmann stopped and
pointed over to the right. "There," he whispered. "In
that doorway. They'll not see you when they come around." He
turned and pointed back a little way. "I'll be there, ahead of
them. When they're past, you come up behind them. You should be able
to take two of them at least." Soucek's
eyes widened, then, remembering what his informer, Mas-son, had said
about Lehmann's ferocity, nodded and got into place in the doorway.
He had only moments to wait. One of
them came through on his own and stood there, listening. Distinct
sounds of sexual pleasure were coming from several of the rooms now.
Soucek, from his hiding place, saw the man hesitate, then turn back
to the door, beckoning the others through. They
moved quickly, as though this had all been planned and rehearsed. But
as they turned the corner Lehmann came at them. One went down at
once, a knife in his throat. A second followed a moment later as
Lehmann kicked high and shattered his nose. From behind them Soucek
moved quickly, thrusting with his knife, then swinging his blade
high, catching the one who was turning back on him in the chest. There
was the faintest groan from one of the men, but otherwise it was a
strangely silent struggle, a violent, desperate conflict, fought in
the deep shadow of the passageway, as if in the blackest of
nightmares. In less than a minute it was over. Soucek
stood there, panting, his arms shaking, and looked across at Lehmann,
amazed. "Mutes,"
Lehmann said, as if it explained everything. Soucek
laughed softly. "But they were talking. I heard them . . ." "That
one . . ." said Lehmann, pointing to the one who lay there, the
big throwing knife deeply embedded in his throat. "And that one
over there." The man he indicated was face down, a garrote wound
tightly about his neck. "The rest had been operated on." Soucek
bent down and looked. It was true. Four of the dead men had had their
larynxes surgically removed. "Why?" he asked, looking up. "It's
an old trick. I saw it at once." From
the nearest room the sounds of pleasure grew louder briefly, then
died away. Then, from the end door, stepped two more figures. Soucek
tensed, reaching for his knife, but it was only Haller and Becker. "Just
in time, I see," said Haller, grinning. "Keep
your voice down," said Lehmann in a fierce whisper. "YouVe
brought the bags?" Haller
half turned. "Becker has them." "Good.
Then let's get these bodies through to the end room and tidy up." They
worked quickly, taking the corpses down and piling them onto the bed
beside the whore and the house guard. Then, while Haller cleaned up
in the corridor, Becker got to work. Soucek
looked away from the grisly work and stared at Lehmann. "I don't
understand. What's going on?" Lehmann
watched Becker a moment, then turned to face Soucek. "Who did
this, do you think? Who would set K'ang up this way?" Soucek
thought a moment. "Lo Han?" "Exactly.
It had to be Lo Han. K'ang A-yin threatens no one else. And Lo Han
would have heard that both I and Peck had joined up with him. He'd be
worried by that. He'd think there was a reason for it." "Maybe.
But why this? Why the silence? The secrecy?" Lehmann
looked down at Becker again. "You could say that I didn't want
to inconvenience S/iih K'ang, or interrupt his pleasure, but the
truth is I want to meet Lo Han. To find out a bit more about him." Soucek
made to speak, then stopped. Lehmann turned, looking at what he'd
seen. It was the Madam. She stood in the doorway, her mouth open in
horror, watching Becker. . "How did he pay you?" Lehmann
asked, looking at her coldly. For a
moment she seemed not to have heard him, then her eyes jerked away
from what Becker was doing and looked back at Lehmann. "What?" "What
did Lo Han give you to set this up?" "I
... I..." she stammered, then, turning aside, she began to
heave. Lehmann
looked away, disgusted. "Never mind. You can tell Shih Soucek
here." He looked back at Soucek. "We'll be gone in a while.
Tell K'ang that I got tired of waiting. Tell him I've gone looking
for other sport." "And
if he asks what?" "Tell
him it's drugs. Tell him IVe gone to get some drugs." THE
RESTAURANT had been cleared, guards posted at every entrance. Beneath
the broad slatted steps, elite marksmen lay behind low, makeshift
barriers, their high-powered rifles covering the approach corridors,
while in the busy kitchens Wu Shih's own personal taster sampled each
dish as it was presented to him, sending them through only when he
was completely satisfied. At the
center of the dark, tiled surface Marshal Tolonen sat facing Kim
across a table crowded with silver trays of delicacies. Briefly the
old man turned away, talking quietly to his ensign, then he turned
back, facing Kim again. "I'm
sorry about all this, Kim, but Wu Shih is determined that nothing
happens to me while I'm in his City. It might seem a little much, but
such measures are necessary these days. We live in difficult times." "Difficult
but interesting, neh?" Tolonen
laughed. "So some might say. For myself I'd prefer things a
little duller and a little safer." "And
is that why you're here, Marshal Tblonen? To make things a little
safer?" "Call
me Knut, boy," he said, leaning forward and beginning to fill
his plate with various bits and pieces. "But yes, you might say
I'm here to make things safer. Between you and me, I'm not quite sure
what it is I'm looking for, but I know the smell of rottenness when I
catch a whiff of it, and there's something rotten buried in these
levels, you can be sure." "Is
there any way I can help?" Kim asked, reaching for a plate. Tolonen
looked back at him. "It's nice of you to ask, but until I know
what exactlyis been going on here, it's hard to say what I'll need.
I'll bear it in mind, though, boy. And very kind of you too. Oh, and
by the way . . ." The old man felt in his jacket pocket with the
fingers of his golden hand, then passed a sealed note across the
table to him. "Li Yuan asked me to hand this to you personally." Kim
took the note and, setting down his plate, turned it between his
fingers, studying the great seal a moment. He glanced across, noting
how the Marshal was busy filling his plate, then looked down again,
slitting the envelope open with a fingernail. Inside
was a single sheet, handwritten in Mandarin; the message brief and
familiar. Dear
Kim, You
have been much in my thoughts of late. Working on the proposed
amendments to the Edict, I have often stopped and thought how helpful
it might have been to have had you at my shoulder, advising me. But
before you mistake me, this is no appeal for help, but a heartfelt
thank you for all you have done in the past. I merely wished you to
know that should you ever need help, in any way, you have only to
ask. I hope all goes well for you. With
respect, Li
Yuan He looked up. Tolonen was
watching him, smiling faintly. "So . . . how's it all going?" "Things
are fine, though there's not much to report, really. IVe been holding
fire on the business front, while IVe been working on some new
patents." "Patents,
eh?" Tolonen narrowed his eyes, as if he thought the whole thing
slightly dubious. Kim
laughed. "Nothing illegal, I assure you. In fact, to be honest
with you, I was surprised to learn what could actually be done within
the existing guidelines. IVe spent a long time recently, checking out
what was already on file . . ." Tolonen
interrupted him. "I'm sorry, boy, I don't understand . . ." "At
the Central Patents Office," Kim explained quickly. "It was
hard work sifting through all that stuff, but worth it in the end.
Originally, all I wanted was to check whether existing patents had
been registered in any of the areas I was working in." "And
were there?" "One
or two, but nothing even vaguely like what I proposed. However, in
looking through the register, I noticed that there were whole
areas—areas permitted under the Edict—which had
essentially gone undeveloped these last one hundred and twenty
years." Tolonen
eyed him curiously. "Whole areas? You mean, like whole fields of
research?" Kim
shook his head. "In the context of what's there—and we're
talking about several billion patents on file—you'd probably
consider these 'gaps' quite small, but in terms of the research
possibilities, they're vast. I could have spent months there, simply
locating more such 'gaps.'" "I
see." Tolonen took a mouthful of tender pork and chewed for a
moment, considering. "Have you ever thought of speeding the
process up?" "How
do you mean?" Tolonen
turned his head slightly, indicating the access slot just beneath his
right ear. "One of these. I'd have thought it would make your
job a whole lot easier." "A
wire?" Kim looked away, suddenly uncomfortable. "I don't
know. . ." The
old man leaned toward Kim. "Looking at things from the outside,
it strikes me that more than half your work involves what you might
crudely call 'processing' information. Now, if you were to find a way
of speeding that up, you'd get a lot more done, surely?" "Maybe." Tolonen
laughed gruffly. "The only thing that surprises me is that you
hadn't thought of it yourself. You're usually way ahead of me. Way
ahead!" Kim
looked down, busying himself for a moment filling his plate. When he
looked up again, Tolonen was still watching him. "So
what is it, lad? Are you afraid? Is that it?" "I.
. ." Kim hesitated, not wanting to say what it was. How often
had he thought this one through. How often, sitting there in the
Patents Office, had he yearned for a faster way of doing things, and
come to the same conclusion. Yet against the logic of the thing was a
deep ingrained fear of being wired—of somehow being controlled. "The
operation's simple," Tolonen said. "And I'm certain, if you
wanted it done, Li Yuan's own surgeon would perform the task. Surgeon
Hung is the best there is. And so he should be. He learned his skills
from his father, who did this. Fifty years I've had this. Fifty
years! And it's been a godsend, especially these past six months,
what with all this GenSyn business." "I
don't know," Kim said, meeting his eyes again. "It would
make things easier. There's no doubting that. I just wonder ..." "What?
That it might impair some other part of you?" Tolonen laughed,
and reached across, holding Kim's shoulder briefly with his human
hand. "I've never had your kind of talent, so maybe I'm not the
one to comment on such things, but I've found my own wire nothing but
a help all these years. All I know is that I couldn's have coped
without it. Seriously." Kim
gave a tiny nod. "Maybe." But he still seemed unconvinced. "Well,"
Tolonen said, leaning back again, the pearl-white chopsticks gleaming
in his golden hand, "you think about it, boy. And if you want it
done, I'll arrange everything for you. It's the least I can do." later,
alone in his office, Kim sat there at his desk, toying with the
graphics display on his comset and thinking about what Tolonen had
said. Maybe he should get wired. Maybe he was just being silly about
the whole thing. After all, it wouldn't hurt to be able to process
things a little faster. No, nor was there any evidence that the
procedure impaired creative thought. Quite the opposite, if reports
were true. In fact, there wasn't a single reason not to be wired,
nothing but his own irrational fear. Even so, he held back, unable,
finally, to commit himself. So
what was it? What was he really afraid of? Control,
he thought, unwilling even to utter the word, however softly. I'm
afraid of losing control again. And
maybe that was paranoia, but he wasn't quite convinced. After all,
hadn't he been the one called in by Li Yuan to look at the
feasibility of wiring up the whole population? Hadn't he seen for
himself how easy it would be to take that first simple step? And if
he took that first step by himself? It
isn't the same, he told himself for the hundredth time. The
two things are completely different. And so they were. The kind
of .wiring Tolonen had in mind was nothing like the process Li Yuan
was looking into, yet his mind refused the distinction, preferring to
connect them. Wires in the head. They were a means of control. And if
he took the first step, who was to say that someone else might
not take the next, making him their beast? Nonsense,
a part of him replied: you're talking fearful nonsense
notv, Kim Ward. But
was he? Or was his instinct sound in this? He
huffed, exasperated with himself, then turned, startled, hearing the
faintest rustle of silk behind him. A
young Han stood there, head bowed, a small tray held out before him.
"Forgive me, Master. I have brought ch'a." Kim
relaxed. It was only his bookkeeper, Nong Yan. "I'm
sorry, Yan. I thought I was the only one here," Nong
placed the tray down beside him, then turned, smiling. "And so
you were, Master. I came in half an hour ago and saw that you were
working, so I thought it best not to disturb you." "Ah
. . ." Kim nodded, yet he was surprised. Had he been that deep
in his thoughts, then, that he hadn't heard the door? He set the
comset down and reached across, lifting the chung and pouring two
bowls of the steaming ch'a. Looking up, he offered one to the
young bookkeeper. "So
how are our finances, Yan? Are we in desperate straits yet?" Nong
took the bowl with a terse nod, then squatted on the edge of the
desk, beside the comset. "You know how things are, Master Kim.
All bills are paid, all commitments met. Even so, the underlying
problem remains as before. We are undercapitalized. If we are to
expand. . ." ".
. . we must get new funding," Kim finished for him, studying the
details of the diagram he had sketched out on the comset's screen. "I
hear what you say, Yan, but until I hear from young Shih Lever, we
must struggle on as we are." He took a sip from his bowl, then
looked up at the young man again. "You're happy, I take it,
Yan?" "Happy,
Master?" Nong Yan laughed, his softly rounded face lighting up
briefly. "I have a fine wife and a good Master. Why should I not
be happy?" Kim
smiled. "Good. Then have patience with me, Yan, and we shall all
be rich men." He tapped the surface of the comset's screen with
a fingernail, indicating the faintly webbed smoke-ring shape
there. "Once the patent has been registered things will
begin in earnest. Until then, we hang fire. You know how it is in
this business, Yan. The least said in public the better." "So
it is, Master." "Good."
Kim reached across, clearing the screen, then looked back at Nong
Yan. In the few moments he had been distracted by the young
bookkeeper, he had come to a decision. Taking Toloneji's card from
his wallet, he studied it, memorizing the contact number, then tucked
it back into the top pocket of his jacket. Setting
the ch'a bowl down, he leaned forward, tapping out the number
on the comset's pad, then turned, looking up at Nong Yan. "Thank
you, Yan. If you would leave me now . . ." As the
ensign's face appeared on the screen, Kim turned back, and, with a
confidence he did not wholly feel, asked to be put through to the
Marshal. The
doubts remained. Even so, he would have it done. Besides, it would be
good to visit Tolonen; to sit and talk to him at length. Yes, and to
see his daughter, Jelka, once again. There
was a moment's delay and then Tolonen's face appeared. "Kim! It
was good to see you earlier! Very good indeed!'" Kim
gave the slightest bow. "I felt I ought to thank you for the
meal, Marshal. It was quite excellent." The
old man laughed heartily. "It was, wasn't it!" "As
for the other matter ..." "YouVe
thought it through, I take it?" Kim
nodded. "And?"
Tolonen asked eagerly. "And
I'd like to accept your kind invitation, if I might." Tolonen
leaned back, delighted. "So you're going to have it done, eh?
Good! Excellent! I'll arrange everything. Just let Hauser here know
when you want to come over and we'll organize it all. You won't
regret it, Kim, believe me, you really won't!" "No,"
he said, smiling, reassured somewhat by the old man's genuine
delight. Yet when the screen went dead once more, he felt the
tightness return and wondered briefly if he had acted for the good. Too
late, he thought. And even if that wasn't entirely true, he knew
that he had taken a vital step toward it. Ten
days. He would have it done ten days from now. And as he framed the
thought, an image came to mind: the image of a young woman, tall and
straight and elegant, with hair the color of the sun and eyes the
deep blue of a summer's sky. Kim
frowned, wondering if she would remember him. Whether, in the long
months that had passed since they'd met, she had ever once thought of
him. He leaned forward, tapping out his personal code, summoning up
the diagram again, but his mind was no longer on the patent. Does
she remember me1, he thought, a sudden longing to see
her face overwhelming him. Does she7. And if
she did? What then? He
looked down at his hands where they rested in his lap—tiny,
childlike hands, scarred and stunted by his experience in the Clay—
and wondered what she had made of him that time, remembering how her
eyes had met his own. Had he been wrong, or had something passed
between them in that instant? For a
moment he sat there, undecided, then, angry at himself, at the doubts
that constantly assailed him, he stood and, clearing the screen once
more, hurried out, calling farewell to Nong Yan as he went. THE
white SILK envelope lay open, empty on the desktop. The chair behind
the great desk was unoccupied, the portrait of Li Kou-lung,
great-grandfather to Li Yuan, looking down imperiously on a room
where nothing stirred. An ornate dragon lamp cast a pool of yellowed
light about the desk, throwing heavy shadows on the tiled, mosaic
floor. On the desk beside the lamp, a faint wisp of steam still
drifting up from its untouched surface, rested a shallow bowl of
soup, the long, straight silver handle of the spoon jutting out
horizontally, the dark line of its shadow dissecting the jaundiced
whiteness of the silk. Li
Yuan stood in darkness beside the carp pool, Wei Feng's letter held
loosely in his left hand as he stared outward, into the shadows. He had
dismissed the servants and ordered that no one should disturb him, no
matter how urgent the need. And now he stood there, unmoving, deep in
thought, trying to see, in that utter, impenetrable darkness, his way
through to clarity: to formulate a decision—a degree of
certainty—from the sudden chaos of his thoughts. Once
before he had stood where he stood now, both figuratively and
literally, facing this same matter. Back then anger and
frustration—and a feeling of betrayal—had formed the
thought in him, "Why Seven?" and then, as now, he had
passed through the anger to a feeling of peace and to the realization
that he had survived the worst his enemies could throw at him. Yet
there was a difference, for now he understood that such peace, such
respite, was temporary. Whatever he did, however he acted, his
enemies would multiply. Cut off one head and two more would grow in
its place, like that in the legend. But now, with Wei Feng's letter,
something new had entered the calculations of power. Now that
thought—"Why Seven?"—was given more than a
tentative expression. Li
Yuan sighed. The old man had seen how things stood; had seen the
divisions that lay ahead if things remained as they were, and had
said to him directly, unequivocally, "Take power, Li Yuan. Grasp
it now, before all Seven go down into the darkness." Those, his
words, had been mirrored in his son's, Chan Yin's, face. He
understood now; knew what that look of deference and humility had
meant. And Chan's words, "I am my father's son," they too
took on a new significance. At
first he had-not believed what he had read. Slowly, one finger
tracing the words, he had mouthed them to himself, then had sat back,
oblivious of the servant who had brought his evening soup, trying to
take in the profound significance of Wei Feng's final message to him.
How would he, in Chan Yin's position, have behaved? Would he, like
Chan, have submitted to his father's wishes? He
frowned, realizing he did not know himself as well as that. To give
away his birthright. To bow before another when there was no need. He
shook his head. No, even filial duty broke before such demands. Chan
Yin would have been within his rights to ignore his father's dying
wishes; to have dismissed them as the addled ravings of a sick and
disappointed man. But he had not. Beyond
this question of duty and birthright lay a second, more
complex one: the matter of acting upon Wei Feng's wishes, and
the likely political repercussions. Ignoring the morality of it a
moment, he could not, even in practical terms, accept what Wei Feng
had offered him. He could not be the new T'ang of Eastern Asia
in Chan Yin's place. While the letter stated this as Wei Feng's wish,
and though Chan Yin and his brothers might agree to and accept the
terms of this document—two factors which might make his
inheritance incontestable in law—there was not the slightest
possibility that the other five T'ang would allow it. Even Tsu Ma
would act to prevent it if he knew. No, if he even so much as
mentioned the possibility, it would have the effect of isolating him
in Council and achieve in an instant what Wang Sau-leyan had long
striven to do. Chan
Yin would inherit. The chain would remain unbroken. But in the dark
something else had come to the young T'ang of Europe. Some deeper
scheme that might build upon what Wei Feng had freed him to
contemplate. A scheme whereby the Seven might become both simpler and
more effective. Might become—he dared to whisper it aloud—"Just
three of us. Tsu Ma. Wu Shih. And I..." And,
once uttered, the idea took root in the depths of him, became a
growing seed that he might now begin to nurture with the water of
thought and the sunlight of action. Returning
to his study he stood there in the doorway, looking across at the
portrait of his great-grandfather, a man he had never known,
wondering how he would have viewed such things and whether he, in
similar circumstances, would have thought or acted differently. He
could ask, of course, consult the old man's hologram, yet he sensed
it would do little good. Li Kou-lung's responses had been programmed
in a different age; an age of solid certainties when even to think of
such matters would have been considered a sign of frailty. Sighing
deeply, he crossed the room and pulled at the bell rope, summoning
Chang Shih-sen, his secretary. He
stood there, waiting, staring down at the shallow bowl, then reached
out and, with one finger, gently breached the cold, congealed
surface, thinking to himself, Three. Just Three, before
raising the finger to his mouth. Li
Yuan turned from the desk, drawing himself up straight, as Chang
Shih-sen entered. "Call
Wei Chan Yin for me," he said, all signs of tiredness gone from
him, replaced by a strange excitement. "Ask him if he will come
here. At once. He will be expecting my message." Chang
Shih-sen bowed and turned to go, but Li Yuan reached out and held his
arm a moment. "And Shih-sen ... ask him to bring Tseng-li, the
youngest. I have a use for him. Then rest. I will not need you for a
while." CHAPTER
FIVE
The
Chain of Being IN
THE FORMAL GARDENS surrounding the great House at Weimar, songbirds
were singing in the cypress trees, greeting the dawn. The great House
itself was empty, as it had been these past eight years, since Wang
Hsien, father of the present T'ang of Africa, read the Seven's Edict
of Dis-bandment, but in the pavilion to the east of the vast,
zigguratlike mass of the assembly building, a conference was taking
place. There, in the shadow of the nearby City, fourteen men—the
seven Chancellors of the Seven and seven graybeards,
ex-Representatives of the House— sat around a huge circular
table, discussing the future of Chung Kuo. On the ceiling directly
overhead was a huge chart of Chung Kuo, with the boundaries of the
new Hsien, the administrative districts, marked in red against the
background white, like capillaries on the surface of a clouded eye.
For eleven hours now they had talked, with only two short breaks for
refreshments, but now it was almost done. Nan
Ho, seated at the table, looked up frpm the silk-bound folder in
front of him and smiled, meeting the eyes of the pigtailed old Han
facing him. "You
are a stubborn man, Ping Hsiang, but not unreasonable. What you ask
for is far from what my Masters would have wished. But, as I have
said many times this night, we are not here to impose. No. We must
come to some new compact between Seven and Above. For the sake of
all." There
was a murmur of agreement about the table and from Ping Hsiang a taut
smile and a single nod of the head. "Good.
Then let us agree on this final point. Let us delay the
implementation of the package of measures agreed earlier until ten
months after the House has passed the proposal. That way no one can
say we have not been fair and open." "And
the draft of these proposals?" Ping Hsiang asked, looking to
either side of him as he spoke. "A
document is being prepared, even as we speak, and will be ready for
the signature of all before we leave. You will all be given copies to
take with you, naturally." Nan Ho
saw the grins of pleasure at that news and smiled inwardly. He had
brought them a long way this night, from open hostility and mistrust
of the Seven and their motives, to a new respect, and maybe even a
grudging admiration for the men who ruled them. On the way he had
gained all that his masters had entrusted him, as spokesman of their
negotiating committee, to gain, and had given no more—less, in
fact—than they had empowered him to give. All in all, then, it
had been a successful round of negotiations, and the irony was that,
now that it was done, the men who sat facing him positively glowed
with satisfaction, as if they had put one over on him. But
then, that was the art of negotiation, surely? From the simplest
marketplace haggling to the subtle art of statecraft, the principle
behind it was the same: one had to forget the value of the thing one
wanted, and begin negotiations from a point beyond. To over or
undervalue, that was the basis of it, the one and only secret. But to
do that one had also to know, with pinpoint accuracy, just what the
thing desired was truly worth. So it had been today. He had spent
long months establishing clearly in his mind just what it was the two
sides wanted from this meeting. And
now it was done. Nan Ho
stood, looking about him, then clapped his hands together sharply,
summoning the pavilion's servants. At once, two dozen shaven-headed
young men entered, heads bowed respectfully, bearing trays of food
and wine. He watched them move about the table, offering
refreshments, then turned away, going across to the long window that
curved away to either side. Out
there a new day was beginning, sunlight glittering off the upper
windows of the House, stretching down the smooth, pearled flanks of
the great building toward the deep shadow at its foot. Yesterday,
before the meeting, Nan Ho had had the great doors unlocked and had
gone into the House, pacing its empty corridors and lobbies until he
came out into the echoing vastness of the central debating chamber.
There, surrounded by tier upon tier of empty seats, he had imagined
it, a year from now, filled with the elected representatives of the
Above—ten thousand voices clamoring to be heard above the
din—and for a moment had found himself beset by doubts. Yet he
knew that there was no stepping back from this course, no real
alternative to this compact between Seven and Above. It was as Li
Yuan argued: it was this or nothing. And so he had shrugged off his
doubts and gone to the negotiating table with a clear, hard mind,
softening his stance only when it was clear to those who sat opposite
him that he was bargaining from a position of strength, not weakness.
Only then had he relaxed, bowing like the reed before the wind,
making unexpected concessions. The Seven's demand for a maximum of
two children per married couple was softened to three. A provocative
"retrospective action" clause, never intended to be part of
the final package, was fought for and then abandoned. A proposal to
extend the voting franchise from the top fifty to the top one hundred
levels—a measure as abhorrent to the Seven as it was to the
seven graybeards facing Nan Ho—was pressed and then dropped.
And so it went on, false bargains being made, while real concessions
were gained. There
were footsteps just behind him. Nan Ho half turned, then formed his
features into a tight, polite smile. It was Hung Mien-lo, the
Chancellor of City Africa, Wang Sau-leyan's man. "Well,
Chancellor Nan," Hung said softly, his voice not carrying beyond
their circle, "we have what we came for, neh?" Nan Ho
looked beyond Hung Mien-lo at the graybeards gathered on the far side
of the table. "So it seems," he said, mistrustful of the
man. "But it is not the power we give them that worries me—for
that is little enough—as that which they might yet take for
themselves. There is no stepping back from this course. To close the
House a second time . . . Well, it is inconceivable, neh?" Hung
Mien-lo smiled. "Maybe. And yet stranger things have happened." Nan Ho
shook his head, disturbed by the thought. "No. To close the
House again is unthinkable. Our task henceforth is a simple one. We
must find ways of harnessing that power." "Like
'Pockets' you mean?" Nan Ho
narrowed his eyes, trying to gauge what the odier meant by his
comment. "Pockets"—tai—were Representatives who
had been bought by the Seven, and who had, in the past, exerted
considerable influence over the House. But in the period leading up
to the War-that-wasn't-a-War the Seven had tried to swamp the House
with "Pockets" and the institution had fallen into
disrepute. The impeachment and arrest of the tai in the Spring of
2201 had, in effect, been a declaration of independence by the House
from the Seven, and had led directly to the War. Nan Ho
shrugged. "In this, as in all else, the past shows us the way to
the future." "The
past. . ." Hung Mien-lo laughed softly and leaned closer. "And
when the future finally comes? What then, Master Nan? How do we block
the future? How harness it? For it is coming. You and I know that,
even if our masters don't." Nan Ho
stared back at Hung Mien-lo a moment, his face impassive, then,
seeing that the scribes were finished, the document prepared, moved
past his fellow Chancellor, leaving the questions unanswered. THE
TWO bodyguards looked about them nervously as the sedan was set down,
unused to being so far down the levels, but Michael Lever, stepping
down from the carriage, seemed not to notice their unease. He looked
about him, noting the stark neatness of his surroundings, then
crossed the narrow hallway. There
was no entrance hall, no suite of offices isolating the inner
workings of the Company from the outside world, merely a big double
door, decorated, like many Company premises, with the Company logo.
Lever smiled, amused by the simplicity of it all. He reached out to
touch the delicate, shimmering web, then drew his
fingers back sharply, surprised to find the strands warm, the
background deathly cold. He
took a step back, studying the design. At the center of the web was a
tiny, smiling spider, while above it was the Company name, Ch't
Chu—Spider—written in English and Mandarin. This
was the first time he had visited Kim at his facility and, despite
all Kim had said, he was surprised to find it all so low-key. Why,
there wasn't even a camera over the doorway . . . The
doors shuddered, then, unexpectedly, melted away, leaving only the
logo, hovering in the empty darkness. One of the guards made to come
past him, but Michael raised a hand. Then, a faint smile of amusement
on his lips, he stepped through. There
was the faintest crackle of static, the feeling of having.passed
through the flimsiest of barriers, and then he was inside. A tall,
slightly balding Han stood before him, his head lowered, his hands
folded before him respectfully. "Welcome,
Shih Lever. We were expecting you." Michael
laughed. "I see you were." He turned, watching the door
shimmer back into existence. "Two
holograms," the Han explained, straightening up. "One for
the door, one for the logo. And behind them a security force field.
It was Kim's idea." Michael
nodded. "It's clever. But I prefer more solid things." "Perhaps
so. But solidity is a relative thing, Shih Lever. If the field had
been turned on, you would have found it hard enough to walk through,
hologram or no. But forgive me, let me introduce myself. My name is
T'ai Cho." Michael
lowered his head. "T'ai Cho ... I am delighted to meet you. Kim
has spoken often of you. He is fortunate to have such a good friend
and guardian." The
Han bowed, but his face remained expressionless. "The good
fortune has been mine alone, Shih Lever. The honor of serving so fine
and talented a young man falls to few in this life. I would have
counted my life as having had little meaning had I not met Shih
Ward." Michael
nodded, impressed by the Han's words. Yet if what Kim had told him
were true, he owed T'ai Cho not merely his chance in life, but life
itself. When Kim had come out of the Clay, it was T'ai
Cho who—as his tutor in the Reclamation Project—had
not merely recognized and fostered Kim's talent, but had interceded
at a crucial moment to prevent his death. "But
let us not stand here talking, Shih Lever. Let me take you through.
Kim is working just now—finishing something he began last
night—but he will not be long. Maybe you would like to watch.
If you would follow me..." "Thank
you, T'ai Cho. It will be a real pleasure." * He
followed T'ai Cho through. There were two small offices off to the
left of the corridor, but the main work space was a big L-shaped room
at the end. There he found Kim, sitting with his back to the door,
crouched forward, facing an experimental environment—the
vacuum-sealed transparent box five ch'i to a side. The top half of
Kim's head was hidden within a bulky headwrap, a dozen or more wires
trailing off into a console to one side, while his arms were inside
the box, enclosed in skintight armatures as he operated the nano-fine
waldoes. Two lab-coated technicians sat on the edge of the desk
nearby, so engrossed in what Kim was doing that they didn't even look
up as Michael came into the room. Michael
went across and stood behind them. As far as he could see nothing was
happening. Or—and the thought struck him as strangely
amusing—as if Kim were only pretending to do something. The
delicate appendages seemed to cut and mold the air, drawing out fine
lines of nothingness, the tips of the waldoes sparking and
flickering, but it was all to no apparent purpose. He felt a vague
twinge of disappointment. There seemed no point to what Kim was
doing; no discernible result. Michael squinted, trying to make out
something he had missed, but it was no good. There really did seem to
be nothing there. He
turned, looking about him. There were benches, cabinets, various
items of machinery, most of them inexpensive, older models, all of it
so unexpectedly shabby that he found himself making unwarranted
comparisons: setting all of this against the state-of-the-art
efficiency of his father's labs. It all seemed wrong somehow; too
small, too cobbled-together. How could anything worthwhile be
produced in conditions like this? For
the briefest moment he wondered whether he might not be
mistaken in his plans to work with Ward, but then he
remembered his father's interest and what he had heard from his
European contacts. And then there was what he himself knew about the
boy's abilities. The
boy . . . He turned, studying Ward in profile, then looked away,
conscious of how his thoughts had betrayed him. Appearances. With
Ward it wasn't possible to judge things on appearances, for he was
not what he seemed. Nineteen now, Ward seemed little more than a
child, a boy of twelve, thirteen at most, his diminutive stature the
result of his childhood in the Clay. That experience, down there in
the darkness beneath the City's foundations, had shaped him, inwardly
and out, making him—at a glance—different from those he
went among. Michael smiled. Compared to the tall, well-fed citizens
of First Level, Kim seemed but the unfleshed suggestion of humanity—a
throwback to an earlier evolutionary stage. Physically, Kim had so
little substance. But appearances were deceptive, for there was a
fire in his eyes, a strength even in his smallest movement that
belied that first impression. And one further thing. For Ward was
reputedly the finest theoretical scientist in the whole of Chung Kuo. He
looked back. Kim was watching him, his dark eyes curious. "Michael.
. ." he said softly, greeting him. "One moment and I'm
done." He
watched. Where there had been nothing, a fine point of pure white
light blossomed, a fine web of threads spreading out like buds from
the radiant hub, then turning back on themselves until they formed a
tiny, spherical net, the whole thing taking on detail and complexity
until it seemed to glow with an intense energy. It began to turn,
slowly at first, then faster, the glow fading and returning until it
formed a regular pulse. Michael
shook his head, astonished. It was beautiful. He glanced at Kim and
saw how he was leaning forward now, his lips parted, his breathing
shallow. Michael shivered, then looked back, his eyes drawn to the
spinning helix of light. It
spun, faster and faster, and as it spun brief, brilliant pulses of
light flashed from its glowing heart, each pulse striking one of the
tiny studlike targets that dotted the inside walls of the chamber.
Slowly the light intensified until he had to half-lid his eyes, then
turn aside, his eyes squeezed shut, one hand shielding his face. But
even then he could still see it
through the flesh of his eyelids, spinning at the center of the void,
like a tiny, burning star, flashing magnificently. For a
moment longer it maintained its perfect equilibrium at the center of
the vacuum, then, with a noisy crackle of static, the light abruptly
died. Michael
turned, blinking, staring into the darkness of the chamber, then
looked across. For a moment Kim sat there, perfectly still, then,
with a tiny shudder, he sat back, pulling his arms from the waldoes. "Kuan
Yin!" Michael said softly, shaking his head. Kim
turned his head and looked at him, a faint, almost apologetic smile
on his lips, then, tugging off the headwrap, he came across, taking
Lever's hands. "Michael. . . It's good to see you. How are
things?" Michael
smiled. "I'm fine. But what was that?" Kim
half glanced back at the empty chamber, then shrugged. "It's
something long-term, that's all. A problem I've set myself. I thought
I had a solution, but, well, let's just say that it's not stable." Michael
laughed. "Yes . . . but what was it? It looked beautiful." Kim
moved past him, then turned back, a rough sketch in one hand.
"Basically, it's a switching device. It's meant to transmit
energy at a molecular level. The trouble is, it has to be able to
maintain its form and turn at phenomenal speeds—at the speed of
molecular reactions themselves, to be accurate. At present, however,
it's very fragile. The least molecular interference from outside and
it breaks up. As you saw. Add to that the fact that it's far too big
for practical use, and you can see just how far I am from solving
things." Michael
glanced at the paper Kim had given him, but the equations meant
nothing to him. They might just as well have been written in Shang
dynasty Mandarin. "Maybe, but it's certainly impressive." Kim
laughed. "You think so? Well, maybe, but sometimes it feels like
I'm grasping at nothingness itself. That I reach out and close my
hand and . . . there's nothing there. And I ask myself, what if I'm
wrong? Good as I am, what if I'm wrong? What if all the talent I have
isn't enough? What if the universe is different from how I
conceive it? What if it won't conform to the pattern in my head?" "Then
you change the pattern, surely?" Kim
studied Michael a moment, then looked away. "But what if I am
the pattern?" For a moment Kim stood there, perfectly still,
staring into the empty chamber, then, as if remembering suddenly
where he was, he looked back, smiling. "Well, how did it go? Is
it still on?" It was
Michael's turn to look away. "I'm sorry, Kim. The Old Man
wouldn't budge. And without those funds . . ." Kim
reached out and touched his arm. "I understand. And it's all
right. We can make do as we are for a while longer. But you . . . you
needed that money, didn't you?" Michael
met his eyes and nodded. "So?
What will you do?" Michael
smiled stoically. "I've a scheme or two. The Old Man won't put
bit and brace on me that easily." Kim
nodded, but he could see how disappointed—and, beneath that,
how angry—Michael was at his father for freezing his accounts. "It
was such a small amount," Michael said quietly. "Less than
he spends on some of the old memorabilia he buys. But that's how it
is. We have to live with it, neh?" He reached inside his jacket
and took out a letter. "Here. I thought this might help." Kim
took the envelope without looking at it. "What is it?" "A
letter of introduction, to the Hang Su Credit Agency." "Credit?"
Kim laughed, recalling the difficulties he had faced in going to the
Credit Agencies when he had first set up Ch'i Chu. The message had
been the same everywhere he'd turned. Find a major sponsor or forget
it. That was how things worked here. Big fish and little fish. But he
had been determined to keep his independence. He had struggled on,
slowly using up the funds Li Yuan had given him, cutting corners and
making do, trusting that his talent would be enough to pull him
through. But now it was make-or-break time. He had to sell some of
his ideas—to generate enough money to allow Ch'i Chu to live
another year or two. He
shrugged. "I'm not averse to the idea, but who in their right
mind would give me credit?" Michael
smiled. "Don't worry. IVe made discreet inquiries and it
seems that the Brothers Hang are willing to do business with
you. IVe arranged an interview for tomorrow at two." Kim
laughed, genuinely surprised. "Okay. But what do I put up for
security? IVe sunk everything I have into this place. And now that
your father has tightened the reins . . ." Michael
was still smiling. "What about the patents? They're worth
something, aren't they?" "Maybe.
Once theyVe been developed." "Then
use them. You plan to register them tomorrow, right? Good. Then go
and see the Brothers straight afterward. Put the patents up as
security. You'll have your funding by six tomorrow evening, I
guarantee." Kim
studied the envelope a moment, then, smiling, looked back up at
Michael. "Okay. I'll do as you say. And thank you, Michael.
Thank you for everything." "Oh,
and one last thing. How busy are you?" Kim
laughed. "I'm always busy. But what do you mean?" "Tonight,
I mean. Could you free some time?" "I
guess so. Everything's prepared for tomorrow. What is it?" Michael
smiled, a broad, warm smile of enjoyment, undiminished by his
troubles with his father. "It's a ball, Kim. A coming-of-age
ball for a good friend of mine." He reached into his pocket and
took out a card, handing it across. "Here. Your invitation. It's
fancy dress." "Fancy
dress?" Lever
laughed, beginning to leave. "Ask T'ai Cho. And if you've any
trouble rustling up a costume, contact my secretary, Mary. She'll
sort something out for you." Kim
studied the gilt lettering of the invitation and nodded, recalling
the last time he had been to a ball—the evening the younger
sons had been arrested—and felt a tiny, unexpected thrill of
anticipation ripple down his spine. "Sweetheart?" Jelka
stood there before the giant image of her father's face, smiling
broadly. "Daddy! How are you? When are you coming home?" The
great wall of the Marshal's face restructured itself, the muscles of
the mouth and cheeks rearranging themselves, the broad smile becoming
a look of dour resignation. "Something's
come up, I'm afraid. A development in the GenSyn case. It's
important—something I have to follow up personally—so I
might be here another three or four days. Is that all right?" She
smiled determinedly. "Of course, Papa. You do what you have to
do. I'll be okay." "Good."
He stared at her proudly a moment, his eyes great orbs of steel amjd
the craggy cliff-face of his features. "So
how was lunch?" "Lunch?"
He frowned, then, realizing what she meant, gave a broad grin. "Lunch
was fine. Young Ward sends his regards. It seems he'll be coming over
to Europe quite soon, to be wired." "Wired?"
She looked up into her father's face uncertainly. "You
know . . ." He touched the access slot beneath his right ear
uneasily, knowing how she felt about it. "The standard thing. A
direct-processing link. He says it'll help with his work. Make things
easier. Anyway . . ." he cleared his throat and put on a
determinedly cheerful expression, "you can talk to him directly
about it when he's over. IVe invited him to dinner." She
nodded, pretending a polite interest, but beneath it she felt her
chest tighten, her pulse begin to quicken. "That's good. It'll
be nice to see him again." For a
moment the old man's face beamed down at his daughter, drinking
in the sight of her, then, with a deep sniff, he sat back slightly,
his expression suddenly more businesslike. "Well,
my girl. I must get on. There's much to do here, and I'd like to get
it done with as soon as possible." "Of
course. And take care, all right?" He
nodded, the movement exaggerated by the screen. "And you, my
love." Then he was gone, the screen blank. She
went across and sat at her father's desk, swiveling the big chair
back and forth, staring out across the room thoughtfully. So the
boy was coming here... She
frowned, then gave a small, strange laugh. The boy was not a child
these days. In fact, if she remembered rightly, Kim was almost a
year older than her. It was just that she still thought of him
like that. After all, he was so small. So tiny and graceful. So
delicately formed. . . She
shivered, then stood, disturbed suddenly by the thought of him coming
there. ,But why should that be? He was just a boy, after all. A
friend and colleague of her father's. It wasn't as if... She
shook her head, then turned, facing the screen once more, staring at
the perfect whiteness. It was just that his eyes had burned so
brightly that time. As if they saw things differently. For
the briefest instant she saw once more the tiny fox, there in the
cave on the island, staring back at her with its dark and feral eyes,
the memory so vivid it was as if she stood there, watching it once
more. And then it was gone, leaving only the plain white screen, and
the memory of some wild, dark thing that did not belong in the world
of levels. NAN HO
was flying east, over the heart of Asia, the sun behind him now, the
Altai Mountains beneath. Ahead lay the great desert, beyond it,
ancient China and, in the shadow of the Ta Pa Shan in Sichuan
Province, the estate at Tongjiang. He had sent ahead that he was
coming, but, in the wake of Wei Feng's death—announced on the
media an hour into his flight—he was not certain what state
things would be in. Wei
Feng had been the oldest, the last of that generation. Even Wu Shih,
the eldest of them now, was but a .young man by comparison. The
thought troubled Nan Ho as he sat in his padded chair, sorting
through his papers. The new T'ang, Wei Chan Yin, was a good man and a
sound administrator, who had proved himself already as Regent in his
father's stead, but Wei Feng's death had robbed the Council of its
last real vestige of experience. Without the old man, they seemed
less dignified, robbed somehow of authority. It would not be said,
not openly, but it was certain to be thought—to be whispered
ear to ear. And, though no outward change would be evident, the Seven
would be weaker. For power was something manifested not merely in its
exercise, but also in how the people perceived those who ruled them. For
the third time in as many years, the Seven were diminished: first by
the murder of Wang Hsien, then by Li Shai Tung's sudden
demise, and now this. It was fortunate, perhaps, that they had
made their "deal" with the Above before the news had
broken. Or maybe not. Maybe this news—to be announced this very
evening—would be seen as further weakness. As a further erosion
of power. And
when power failed altogether? Nan Ho
shuddered, then pushed the papers aside, angry with himself,
conscious that Hung Mien-lo's words had got to him. Yet even as he
settled back in his chair, a new determination formed in him.
Whatever happened from now on, he would be prepared for it. For he
was warned now. It would be no one's fault but his if they faltered
in the years ahead. And he, Nan Ho, son of Nan Ho-tse, would do his
utmost to ensure that that did not happen. He would make it his sole
concern—his life's work. Even
if death were the only payment for his pains. LI
YUAN was waiting for Nan Ho in his study when he arrived, the young
T'ang dressed in the traditional clothes of mourning, as if it were
his father who had just died. The great desk in front of him was
unusually clear, only a small white envelope set to one side. Nan Ho
glanced at it as he bowed, then looked again, surprised to find Wei
Feng's distinctive seal set firmly in the bloodred wax. "You
have done well, Master Nan," Li Yuan said without preliminaries.
"I have spoken to Wu Shih and Tsu Ma and they are pleased with
the terms you have drawn up. I thought we might have had to give much
more." Nan Ho
lowered his head again, but the mystery of the envelope distracted
him. What message had the dead T'ang left? And was it to Li Yuan
alone, or did all seven have similar envelopes? "Now
that the matter is settled, there is something else I would like you
to take on, Master Nan." Nan Ho
met the young T'ang's eyes, for that brief moment bridging the great
gulf in rank that lay between them. "Chieh Hsia?" "I
have had news from Tolonen in America. It seems he is on to something
out there." "Did
he say what, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan shook his head. "Don't you find it odd, Master Nan? I
mean, it is most unlike the Marshal to keep things to himself.
If he has a fault it is usually that he keeps us far too well
informed." Nan Ho
laughed. "That is so, Chieh Hsia. But this is his old
friend Klaus Ebert's business. Tolonen saw the man as a brother, and
he goes about this business as a brother would." "True
enough," Li Yuan said thoughtfully. "I have noticed that
already. He sees this as a debt of honor, neh?"
t- "That
is so, Chieh Hsia. He did say one thing to me, however. At Nantes,
before he left." "Yes?
And what was that?" "He
mentioned some anomalies in the GenSyn records for their North
American operation. When I questioned him about it, he spoke of
accounting irregularities, forged shipment details, missing
documents, and the like. It was a bland, evasive answer. A safe
answer. Yet when he met my eyes I knew he meant something else.
Something is missing, Chieh Hsia, and Tolonen has gone to find it." Li
Yuan sighed. "I do not like it, Master Nan, but for once I shall
have to put up with it. The Marshal is a stubborn old man, but an
honest one. We shall find out when he is ready to tell us, I suppose.
But in the meantime, I want you to find out what you can. I do not
want us caught wholly unprepared." Nan Ho
bowed low. As ever he was already onto the matter. "As you wish,
Chieh Hsia." After
the Chancellor had gone, Li Yuan leaned across, drawing the envelope
toward him. In five hours Wei Chan Yin would be here. He
raised the letter to his nose and sniffed, then, setting it down
again, shook his head. What had he expected? The smell of death? Of
fear and darkness? Whatever, there was nothing. Nothing but the
neutral scents of wax and ink and paper. Even so, he had felt a kind
of fear—an almost primal dread—of what lay within that
slender pocket of whiteness. It was fate, written in the dark,
spidery hand of a dead man. Li Yuan shivered, thinking of it, and
pushed it from him. In
five hours... OLD
MAN lever stood on the podium at the center of the crowd, a full
whiskey tumbler held in one big, square-knuckled hand, a
red, white, and blue silk folder in the other. Behind
him, a huge stars and stripes banner was draped over the far end of
the vestibule, concealing the entrance to the deck. Lever smiled and
looked about him, lifting his glass in greeting. They were all
gathered here today— all of the original investors—fifty
of the most important men in the North American Above,
multibillionaires every one of them. But it had been his idea and his
drive which had brought this into being. And now, at the inauguration
ceremony, it would be he, Charles Lever, who would take the lion's
share of the praise. "Gentlemen.
. . Friends. . . Welcome." Lever combed a lock of steel-gray
hair back from his eyes and beamed, showing strong, slightly
yellowing teeth. "You all know why we're here and what we're
here for, so let's skip the formalities and go right on in. I'm sure
you're all as anxious as I am to see how the money has been spent. .
." There
was a roar of approval, and as Lever stepped down from the podium and
made his way across, the small crowd followed, talking among
themselves. It was
not often that they met, and to all it seemed particularly auspicious
that it was on such a day, when news of Wei Feng's death and of the
triumph at Weimar coincided. The normally placid old men fairly
buzzed with the news. It was all linked in, they said; part of the
new tide, turning in their favor. From the low ebb of their
humiliation on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial they had rebuilt.
And now their time was coming. The negotiations at Weimar had been
the first step; the elections were the next. And each step would
bring them closer to their aim—of a strong and independent
America, free of the rule of the Seven, taking its rightful place in
the world once more. Not an empire, maybe, but a nation. And who knew
what might come of that? Maybe they would take up where they had left
off and reach out for the stars, the eagle stretching its wings . . . Beneath
the huge stars and stripes banner Lever turned, facing them again. "I
realize that you gentlemen have been champing at the bit, wanting to
know what's been going on here, but when you see what has been
achieved in the past ten months, I'm sure you'll agree that it was
money well spent." He
lifted a hand. At the signal, the banner drew slowly to one side, revealing
a huge entrance tunnel, the walls and ceiling of which had been made
to seem like marble. Over the entrance was a massive memorial stone,
an inscription cut into the stone in a bold, classical face: THE
RICHARD CUTLER FOUNDATION FOR
GENETIC RESEARCH
Opened
this Seventh day of March, a.d. Two Thousand Two Hundred and Nine, by
Charles Alexander Lever, Head of the ImmVeip Corporation of North
America. Through
the archway could be glimpsed a bright space, landscaped like a great
park, and in its midst something huge, like the plinth of a giant
statue. They
went through, coming out into a wooded glade from which could be seen
the full extent of the Foundation and its grounds. Lever
had had the top three decks "knocked into one" as he called
it, so that the ceiling—a huge screen, programmed to seem like
a summer sky—was a good two hundred ch'i overhead. But that was
not what first caught the eye. In the center of the landscaped
gardens was an immense building; a structure which was as familiar to
the old men standing there as the stars and stripes of the Sixty-Nine
States. The Empire State Building. For a
moment there was stunned silence and then an uproar as the old men
clapped and yelped their approval. "It's
wonderful, Charles," his friend, the financier, James Fisher,
said, slapping Levers shoulder enthusiastically. "The architect
is to be congratulated. He's caught the spirit of the old building to
perfection." Lever
beamed, conscious of congratulations from all sides. "Yes, he
has, hasn't he. I gave him the basic idea and he came up with the
rest. He had to modify, of course, but the general effect is just
what I wanted. The labs and most of the research facilities are
beneath this floor, of course—the whole thing stretches down
another five decks— but this is the showpiece. The reception
area, the main wards, and the lecture halls are all within the main
building." He smiled and looked about him once more, "As
you'll see." In
front of the huge studded entrance doors Lever turned and raised his
hands. "Gentlemen! One last thing before we go in. I am proud to
say that only yesterday I received delivery of the latest masterpiece
by the greatest painter of our age, Ernst Heydemeier." There
was a low murmur of surprise. Lever looked about him, savoring the
moment, then added, "Furthermore, let me add that I have donated
this specially commissioned painting to the Institute in
commemoration of this inauguration ceremony. If you would follow me.
. ." As
Lever turned, the doors began slowly to ease back, revealing the
facing wall-screen and Heydemeier's painting. There was a gasp of
surprise and then, as more and more of the giant canvas came into
view, a mounting tide of applause. At the
center of the painting the giant figure of a youth, his muscular
chest naked, stood atop a mountain's rugged crest, looking toward the
west, the shaft of a huge banner clasped firmly in one hand. His
tautly sculpted and beautiful features glowed with a visionary
fervor. Behind the youth and the wind-furled flag, a company of
youths—young gods, they seemed—climbed toward the summit,
their faces gleaming, looking toward the sun that bathed the whole
picture in its glorious golden light. "Gods
. . ." one of the old men murmured, staring up at the huge
canvas, his mouth agape. Nor was he alone. All about Lever the old
men had fallen silent as the full scope of the massive painting came
into view. There was a moment's hesitation, then, slowly, with a
growing sense of awe, they began to approach the screen. Old
Man Lever stood there, looking about him, knowing what they were
feeling at that moment. It was what he himself had felt only
yesterday when he had first seen the painting. It was astonishing.
Once more Heydemeier had taken his idea and transformed it. And now
that he had seen it for himself, he knew. This was the Dream. This
was what had driven him these past few years. This vision of
perfection, glimpsed in the golden light of a new dawn. He
shivered. If it could be done, it would be done here. And this, this
masterpiece of visionary painting, was the perfect statement of
intent. To be a god and live forever—what was wrong with
wanting that? "It's
astonishing," someone said close by, real awe in his voice. "Youre
right, Charles," another added softly. "It's a masterpiece.
IVe never seen its like!" He
looked about him, smiling, accepting the words of praise that came
from all sides. Then, raising his voice once more, he beckoned them
on. "Come, gentlemen. Let's not stand here gawping. Let's go
through. There are wonders enough within." TWO
HOURS later they were standing in the central lecture hall, beneath a
massive reproduction of Martin Waldeseemuller's spectacular
"Universalis Cosmographia," the ancient world map, dated
1507, which filled one whole end of the theater. The original
woodcut, the first map to give the New World the name of America,
hung in Old Man Lever's study in Philadelphia. They
had seen it all now, and had been impressed. There was no doubt that
if a solution to the aging process could be found, it would be found
here, for they had bought the finest state-of-the-art equipment and
hired the very best men in every field. Expert after expert had met
them as they'd toured the facility, giving a brief speech of
explanation before they moved on, each one impressive in their own
right, each building upon the general impression of competence. It
looked good. Very good indeed. All that was needed was time and money
. . . and a little luck. Or so Lever had claimed. Already the
research had begun; each of the eight departments looking into their
own highly specialized area. Everything had been thought out
carefully beforehand, every base covered. Or so it seemed. The
tour completed, Lever went among the old men, talking with them,
gauging their response, modestly accepting their praise. But all the
while something nagged at him. It looked good. Indeed, it was
good—the best money could buy. But it wasn't "the best."
Nor would it be until he had Ward working for him. He had
looked about him as they toured the establishment, trying to see it
all as they saw it, with fresh eyes, but all the time he was
conscious that it was just a shell—a delightful piece of
technological trickery, manned not by geniuses but by lesser men,
schooled in old and rigid ways of thought. And he knew—because
he had made it his business to
know—that it all meant nothing—nothing at all—
without that final tiny piece; that spark that would bring this
great, magnificent engine of research to life. It all
came back to Ward. He had to have Ward. And if the man could not be
bought, maybe he could be hassled into the job. Bullied and
threatened and ultimately forced into taking on the task. Because, if
his advisors were correct, there was no one else who could take on
the task. No one brilliant enough to see through the obvious and come
up with a wholly new solution to the problem. Lever
took another glass of whiskey and drained it at a shot. No, if Ward
would not come willingly, he would come out of need: because there
was nowhere else to go, no one else to turn to. And that would
happen. He would make sure it would happen. Because the alternative .
. . Lever
stood there, staring up at the ancient map, conscious suddenly of the
billions of men and women who had lived and died since this chart had
been drawn. Of all those countless souls gone to dust and
nothingness. Then, drawing a long shuddering breath, he turned,
smiling, and went among the crowd of old men once again, letting
nothing of his unease show on the surface of his well-lined face. michael
was silent for some time after Kustow had gone, studying the papers
Mary had set before him, then he turned in his chair, looking across
at her. When
he had hired her, three weeks back, he had not been sure how things
would work out. Her record, working in middle management for MemSys,
the biggest of his Companies, had been good— first rate, in
fact—but she had had little experience of working as a personal
assistant. Nor would he have hired her had any of the four men he had
wanted been available. But they were not. Whether his father had
frightened them off or simply bought them out was irrelevant. He had
been left with no choice. It was Mary Jennings or no one. And maybe
he had only got her because his father had thought it beneath him to
buy off a mere woman. But Mary had been better— far better—than
either he or his father had anticipated. She was sharp, efficient,
and resourceful. Moreover, she worked well under
pressure—an invaluable trait at present, when the
pressure was unrelenting. In many ways she was the best assistant he
had ever worked with. He sat
back, lacing his fingers together. "Em . . . ?" She
looked up, startled. "I. . ." Then she saw the look of
surprise on his face and looked away. "Why
did you call me that?" "Call
you what. . . ? Oh. Em, you mean?" He held up a copy of one of
her reports. "It's how you sign yourself. The letter M. I guess
IVe seen it so often now IVe come to think of you simply as Em." She
looked down, her mind still reeling. Of course. M for Mary. Mary
Jennings. How strongly she had come to associate herself with that
name these past twenty-one months; yet at the slightest reminder it
had been dislodged, her real name brought back to her. Em for Emily.
Emily Ascher . . . She
shivered, articulating it clearly in her head. Emily Ascher, late of
City Europe and member of the Council of Five of the now defunct Ping
Tiao—the infamous "Levelers"—who had
brought chaos to the levels and then, foolishly, she thought, had
fire-bombed Bremen stack, killing over eleven thousand innocent
people. It was twenty-one months now since DeVore had given her false
papers and bundled her off onto an inter-City rocket to a new life.
Months in which she had maintained a low profile, keeping herself to
herself, building up the solid foundations of her life, all the while
waiting, biding her time. For
the time would come. And when it did ... "You
know, I think you're right." She
looked across; saw how he was watching her. "Pardon?" He
tapped the report. "About Dunn. I don't think we can trust him.
He may have been my father's enemy for a long time now, but that
doesn't necessarily make him my friend." He smiled. "I know
how my father thinks. How he operates. He's a rich man, not averse to
buying whatever he needs. And money can make a man—even a
Dunn—take stranger bedfellows than his lifelong enemy, neh,
Em?" She
had it on her tongue to correct him, to ask him not to call her that
again, but something in the way he said it touched her. It was like
that moment when he had asked her to take over as his assistant. She
could have said no. Indeed, the sensible thing would have been
to say no. But there had been something in the way he'd asked
her—some hint, perhaps, of that vulnerability she had witnessed
in him—that had made her agree. And so now. She
smiled. "It's been my experience that one should trust least
those who claim alliance purely on the basis of a shared hatred.
There's always a falling out." So it
was. She had seen the Ping TiOo destroyed for that very
reason, when Gesell had allied himself with the odious DeVore. But
never again. When it came to making alliances, she would set her own
terms in future. Michael
was looking at her strangely. "By the way, what are you doing
tonight?" She
laughed, the question catching her totally off guard. "I'm
sorry..." He
looked away, as if flustered—as if he had overstepped some
mark, then sat back, laughing. "Look, if youVe something on,
forget it, but I thought, if you hadn't. . . well, perhaps you'd like
to accompany me to a ball." "A
ball? You mean, like on the trivees?" He
shook his head. "No. This is real. An old friend of mine. She's
celebrating her twenty-fifth, her Coming-of-Age. Her parents died
some years back and her estate's been in trust all this time, but now
it's all hers and she's throwing a huge party at the family home. I
just thought. . ." She
sat back, staring at him. "Why me?" she asked, after a
moment. "I'm sure there must be a dozen beautiful women out
there who'd be . . ." "I
thought it might be fun," he said, interrupting her. "YouVe
worked hard for me and, well, I thought you might enjoy it. I was . .
." He laughed. "Well, I wasn't sure how you'd react. I
thought you might mistake my motives. You know, a boss and his
assistant. . ." "Especially
when the assistant's a woman..." He
narrowed his eyes, staring at her, then nodded, a faint smile of
amusement on his lips. "Well? Would you like to see how the
Supernal let their hair down?" Did
she? Did she really want to mix at this level? For a moment
longer she hesitated, and then she smiled; a beautiful,
radiant smile. "I'd like that, SMi Lever. I'd like that
very much." "Good.
But it's Michael. . ." he said, returning her smile. "Tonight
you must call me Michael." "Is
that it?" Wei
Chan Yin looked up from where he sat in Li Yuan's chair and met the
young T'ang's eyes. There was nothing in his face to show what he was
feeling, nor had he hesitated once in drafting the document. He had
sat there, handwriting it to Li Yuan's dictation, not glancing up,
nor aside to where his brother, Tseng-li, stood. More like a servant
than an equal. Yet Li Yuan knew, better than anyone, the strengths,
the qualities of this man. He had often talked with him when they had
both been Princes and when, in the final period of his father's
illness, Chan Yin had acted as his father's Regent on the Council. "Sign
it at the bottom," Li Yuan said. "Then have Tseng-li put
his name to it as witness. I will sign last." Chan
Yin smiled and nodded. His hand moved across the thick parchment,
signing his name with a flourish of the brush. That done, Tseng-li
moved up beside him and, leaning over the desk, inked his brush and
signed beside his brother's name. Chan
Yin looked up and, turning the paper about, offered it to Li Yuan.
Tseng-li held out the brush. Li Yuan took the brush and signed,
taking a deep breath as he straightened up. "You
understand why this must be?" he said, smiling sadly at Chan
Yin. Chan
Yin paused, then shook his head. "Not yet, Yuan. Not ever,
perhaps. But it was my father's dying wish." His mouth formed a
faint smile. "You understand?" Li
Yuan laughed. "Maybe. Maybe not. But I am grateful, cousin." Chan
Yin gave a slight bow. Beside him, Tseng-li was looking down at his
elder brother, that same restraint—product of the goodness that
was in them all—shaping his features. Seeing the two men thus,
Li Yuan felt deeply moved. To have such sons as these. A man might
die satisfied, knowing he had bred so straight and true. He sighed,
the determination forming in
him that he would use this document only if he must. "Tseng-li,"
he said softly. "There is something else I want from
you." The
youngest looked up, his dark eyes looking out from his beautiful face
with a directness and openness that Li Yuan had rarely met. "What
is it, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan smiled at the honorific. "I would like your service,
Tseng-li." He paused, then, "I want you to replace Chang
Shih-sen and be my secretary." Chan
Yin looked up at him, for the first time a look of surprise on his
face. But Tseng-li merely nodded. "As you wish, Chieh Hsia." "Good."
Li Yuan smiled, more at ease now that it was all concluded. "Then
we might set the day for your coronation, Wei Chan Yin. It is time
you too were T'ang." CHAPTER
SIX
Into
Emptiness KIM
stepped down from the hired sedan and looked about him, astonished. A
red-painted wall ten ch'i in height enclosed the First Level mansion,
a gateway, topped by an ancient bell tower, providing the only way
into the grounds. The huge double doors were of burnished bronze,
studded with iron, the whole thing flanked by massive dragon pillars,
painted a vivid emerald green. It was brutal. Like something from the
fifteenth century. A Ming frontier fort, complete with watchtowers.
The last thing one expected to find here at the top of the City. All
around him sedans were setting down, their occupants climbing out and
making their way across what seemed some kind of horse track to the
gateway. The variety and richness of their costumes were fascinating.
They had come dressed as gods and goddesses, emperors and concubines,
notorious villains and revered sages. All of history had been
pillaged for this one night. By comparison his own spider costume was
somewhat dour and unimaginative. He had not realized how much time
and effort these people would put into something so ...
insignificant. He
went across, then stopped, staring up at the great stone lintel
that supported the bell tower. At its center, a single Han
pictogram had been carved into
the stone: the character Chung, meaning "The
Arbitrator"—the name of the family who owned this
great Mansion. He
frowned, conscious that his expectations had once again been
turned upsidedown. He had thought it would be like that
evening at the Lever Mansion, when the Young Sons had been arrested.
To be honest, he had not expected any Han to be present. He turned,
looking about him, watching the people filing past him. They formed a
queue beneath the bell tower, waiting to enter, their invitation
cards held out for inspection by two huge, bare-chested Han, who
stood before the open doors, barring the way. Kim
joined the queue, catching the air of excitement that was on every
side. Reaching the front, he expected the guard to take his card and
pass him through, as he had all those before, but the man blocked his
way, putting a hand on his chest, restraining him. "Wait
there," the guard ordered gruffly, then turned his head.
"Chang!" he called, summoning the second guard. "Get
the Captain over. That missing invitation—I think we might have
found it!" Kim
looked down, containing his anger. He had met this before. Not often,
but enough to recognize it for what it was. To them he was not
another human being, he was Clay, the lowest of the low. His large
eyes and diminutive stature gave that away at a glance. And some—like
the guard—hated the Clay and all those who came from there with
a bitter and totally irrational hatred. He
waited, his eyes lowered, listening as the guard and the Captain
talked between themselves in Mandarin. Their assumption that a mere
Clayborn couldn't understand the tongue was typical of their kind. "You!
Raise your head!" The
Captain's barked command surprised Kim. He jerked his head up,
meeting the man's eyes. The Captain studied him a moment, then made a
coarse remark in Mandarin. Behind him the guards laughed. "Well?"
he said, thrusting the invitation at him. "Where did you get
this? You're not on the guest list, and one of the invitations was
reported missing. It can only be assumed . . ." "What
can only be assumed?" The
voice came from behind the guards. They stepped back, revealing the
tall figure of Michael Lever, dressed in the bright blue and white
costume of an American general of the late eighteenth century. "Shih
Lever . . ." the Captain said, bowing low, as if acknowledging
both the real and illusory gulf in rank between them. "Forgive
me, but this man was trying to gain admission to the grounds. There
was a report this afternoon
that one of the invitations had gone missing and..." "Be
quiet, you imbecile! Shih Ward is my honored guest. He is a great
man. A ch'un tzu. You will bow low before him and apologize .
. ." Embarrassed,
Kim spoke up. "Michael, please, there's really no need. The
Captain was mistaken, that's all. Besides, he^was right to be
cautious. These are troubled times and this is a great house. Its
doors should be protected." Michael
stared at Kim a moment, then shrugged. "If that's what you want.
But I think you're mistaken. I think this shit knew exactly what
he was doing." Almost
certainly, Kim thought, butl'tt not be a party to such
pettiness. Not while I've a choice in it. They
went through, into a huge open space—a garden landscaped in the
Han fashion. At the far side, beyond a pair of gently arching white
stone bridges, a large two-story Mansion in the southern style rested
amid tree and rock. Already, it seemed, the great house was full to
overflowing. Guests crowded the veranda, talking and drinking, while
from within came the muted sound of pipes and strings. Kim
turned, looking up at his friend. "I thought it would be
different. I thought. . ." "You
thought it would be like last time, neh? And you're confused, because
this is Han. Well, let me explain things, before we meet our
hostess." He
drew Kim aside, moving toward a quiet arbor. There they sat, facing
each other across a low table of sculpted stone, Michael's tricorn
hat laid to one side. "Back
when the House was still open, Gloria's father was a Senior
Representative—an important man, spokesman for his tong, the On
Leong." Kim
frowned. The five major tong of City America shared an ancestry with
the Triads of Europe and Asia, but their recent history was very
different. When things had collapsed over here, after President
Griffin's assassination, it was the five tong who had helped hold.
things together on the East Coast and in enclaves in California and
the Midwest. And when the City was built across the continent,
they had taken a major role in the social reconstruction program.
Their reward was a legitimization of their organizations. They had
become political parties. "I
see," Kim said, "but I still don't understand. I'd have
thought that the long would be your natural political adversaries." Michael
sat back, smiling. "They are. But Gloria is very different from
her father. She wants what we want—an independent and
outward-looking America. And she's not alone. There are many Han who
think like her. Most of them—the influential ones, that is—are
here tonight." Kim
looked down. "And there I was, thinking . . ." "That
I hated the Han?" Michael shook his head. "No. Only our
masters. Only those who try to keep us from our natural destiny. The
rest. . . well, there are good and bad, neh? What has race to do with
that?" "Bryn?
Can I have a word?" Bryn
Kustow excused himself from the group with which he was standing,
then came away, following Michael Lever down the broad corridor and
into one of the empty side rooms. With
the door firmly closed behind them, Michael turned, confronting him. "Well,
Michael? What is it?" Michael
reached out and held his arm. "I've just had news. The bankers
have called in the loan." "Ahh.
. ." Kustow considered that a moment, then shrugged. "Then
that's it, I guess. The game's over for the boys." "Is
that what you want?" Kustow
looked up. "No. But what's left to us? WeVe allocated most of my
capital, and yours is frozen." Michael
hesitated, then. "What if I could get the money somewhere else?" Kustow
laughed. "Where? Your father has the money market tied up
tighter than a fly's ass." "That's
what he thinks. But IVe been checking out a few tips." "And?" "And
weVe a meeting, tomorrow afternoon at two, with the Clear Heart
Credit Agency of Cleveland." "And
they'll lend us what we need?" Michael
hesitated. "I don't know. What with this latest development
we'll need to reassess things carefully. Work out what we need to pay
off the loan and fund new development. The rates are^high, but it's
that or go under." "I
see." Kustow looked away a moment, then turned back, a faint
smile on his lips. "There is one other option. I mean, if we do
have to seek alternative employment, there is one sphere we could go
into." Michael
laughed. "I don't follow you, Bryn. What are you going on
about?" "IVe
been busy, too, Michael. Making calls. And IVe set up a meeting. Just
you and me and an old school friend of ours. Two days from now, out
at his place." "An
old school friend?" Kustow
put a hand on Michael's shoulder. "Trust me. Meanwhile, let's
enjoy ourselves, neh? And smile, damnit. The night's young and youVe
a pretty woman waiting for you out there!" a fan
fluttered in the pearled light. There was the scent of rich perfumes,
the swish of ancient ballgowns, the rustle of silks and satins, the
low murmur of conversation, interspersed with bursts of drunken
laughter. Emily Ascher stood at the head of the steps, looking down
into the Hall of Ultimate Benevolence, amazed by the sight that met
her eyes. The great hall was a riot of red, white, and blue,
decorated with all manner of Americana. Faded flags and ancient
banners hung from the surrounding balconies and across the great
ceiling, interspersed with huge, carved wooden eagles. At the far end
a huge cracked bell rested on a raised platform—the Liberty
Bell. Behind it hung a wall-size map of the American Empire at its
height, most of South America shaded blue, each of the Sixty-Nine
States marked with a blazing golden star. In the space between, two
or three thousand garishly dressed young men and women milled about,
talking and drinking. Emily
turned, wide-eyed, to her companion. Michael was watching her, a
smile on his lips. "Impressed?" She
nodded. "1 didn't expect. . ." But what had she
expected? She laughed softly. "Are these occasions always like
this?" "Not
always. But then, most hostesses don't have Gloria's style. She's
done us proud, don't you think?" "Us?" "The
Sons . . ." "But
I thought this was a coming-of-age party." "And
so it is." He smiled enigmatically, then offered her his arm.
"Here, let's go down. There are some friends I'd like you to
meet." Two
hours later she found herself among a group of young men gathered at
the far end of the hall, about the Liberty Bell. There were nine of
them in all: Michael Lever, three of his close friends, and five
other "Sons" who had shared the long months of
incarceration at Wu Shih's hands. Like Lever, all were dressed in the
style of the early republic—authentic blue and white uniforms
that had been purchased at great expense. With their short-cropped
blond hair and knee-length boots they brought a strangely somber note
to the occasion, making a striking contrast against the other
partygoers. At
first their talk had ranged widely, embracing all manner of things:
from the planned reopening of the House and new research into space
technologies to developments in the GenSyn inheritance case and the
latest round of inter-City trade agreements. But as the evening drew
on, their mood had grown darker, their talk focusing in upon the
tyranny of the Seven and the corresponding failings of their
fathers. Lever's
close friend Carl Stevens was talking, gesturing animatedly as he
spoke. "Our fathers talk of changing things, of a return to
Empire. That's something we'd all like to see, but when it comes down
to it there's really not much between them and the Seven. Whichever
ruled, the Seven or our fathers, we would remain as we are.
Dispossessed. As powerless then as we are now." Beside
him, Bryn Kustow nodded. "Carl's right. If anything, our
position would be much worse than it is now. If the Seven fell and
our fathers came to power what
would happen? Would they embrace us as their natural partners in the
venture? No. Not for a second. We know how they think. We've all had
a taste of their treatment these past years. They see us as a threat.
As potential usurpers. It's sad to say, but in effect we have become
our fathers' enemies." There
was a murmur of reluctant agreement, heavy with unease. "But
what can be done?" one of the others, Mitchell, asked. "They
have all the power—the real power. All we get is the
scraps from their tables. And what can we do with scraps?" The
bitterness in Mitchell's voice was mirrored in every face. Kustow
looked across at Michael, then looked down, shrugging. "Nothing.
. ." he answered quietly. But there was something about his
manner that suggested otherwise. Standing
there at Michael's side, Emily let her eyes move from face to face,
conscious of the sudden tension in the circle. Despite what was being
said, something about this whole elaborate charade of "Empire"
made her stiffen inwardly against them. They talked of changing the
balance of power—of "liberation"—when all they
really meant was grabbing it for themselves. In that they were no
better than their fathers. No. Even after their experience of
incarceration, they didn't understand. To them it was still
essentially a game. Something to fill the hours and stave off the
specter of boredom. Even
so, it was good to see this—to understand how they thought, how
they acted—for in some strange way it made her stronger, more
determined. For a
moment she abstracted herself from their talk, looking inward,
focusing on the ideal she had worked for all these years. The ideal
of Change—real change—free of the old power
structures. Something pure and clean and utterly new. That was what
she had struggled to achieve all those years in the Ping Tiao. A
new world, free of hierarchies, where men and women could breathe new
air and live new dreams. Yes, and that was what Mach and Gesell had
really betrayed when they had chosen to work with DeVore. She
shivered, then looked aside. Michael was watching her, concerned.
"What is it, Em?" She
stared back at him a moment, not recognizing him for that
instant, surprised to find herself there in the midst of that
gathering, among those she would, without a moment's thought, have
destroyed. And then, as realization struck her, she laughed. And he,
watching her, smiled, his smile broadening, not understanding, yet
liking what he saw in that austere and sculpted face. And as he
looked, a strange new determination formed in him, as if from
nowhere, making his nerve ends tingle. "Well,
Michael? Have you enjoyed your evening?" Michael
Lever turned, embracing his hostess, holding her a moment and kissing
her cheek before he stepped back. Gloria Chung was a tall, strikingly
elegant young woman with the classic features of the Han aristocracy.
It was said her ancestors had been related to the great Ming dynasty,
and, looking at her, it was not difficult to believe. She had dressed
tonight as the famous Empress Wu in sweeping robes of midnight blue
embroidered with a thousand tiny golden suns. They
were alone on the broad upper balcony. Below them the last of the
guests were making their unsteady way back through the winding
pathways to their sedans. She moved past him, standing there at the
rail, looking out over the dim, lamp-lit garden. "I've
had a good time," he said quietly, taking his place beside her
at the rail. "It's been nice to think of something other than
the troubles with my father." "And
the girl?" "The
girl?" He looked blank for a moment, then he laughed. "Oh,
you mean Mary?" She
turned her head, studying him, as if she could see right through him,
then she smiled. "I was watching you, Michael. Watching how you
were together. It was . . . interesting." He
turned his head. "What do you mean?" "I
do believe you're half in love with her." "Nonsense,"
he said, shocked by the suggestion; yet even as he said it, he saw
the truth in it. He stood there a moment, looking at her, then pushed
away from the rail, masking his slip with a laugh. "And what if
I were?" She
reached out, holding his upper arm, then leaned close, kissing him.
"Don't get me wrong. I'm not disapproving. If it makes you
happy. . ." She moved back slightly, her eyes searching his.
"She'd be good for you, Michael. I can see that. She's strong." "Yes,
but. . ." He sighed. No, it was impossible. His father would
never approve. "YouVe
taken the first step. Why not the next?" "What
do you mean?"
» "I
mean, get out of your father's shadow for good. Show him you're your
own man. Marry her." He
laughed, astonished. "Marry her?" He looked down, troubled,
then turned away. "No. I couldn't. He'd cut me off. . ." "He'd
not dare. But even if he did, how could things be any worse than they
are? What else could he do?" "No.
. ." "No?
Think about it, Michael. The Old Man's backed you into a corner. He's
cut off your finances and tried every which way to prevent you from
making a go of it on your own. As things are, you're going to have to
make a choice, and soon—either to go back to him and beg
forgiveness; to go down on your knees before the Old Man and agree to
his terms; or to assert yourself. So why not do it now? Right now,
when he least expects it." He
faced her again. "No. Not while there are still other options." She
shivered. "You mean, like the Clear Heart Credit Agency?" He
stared at her. "How did you know that?" "Because
I make it my business to know. And if I know, you can be sure your
father knows. In fact, I'm certain of it." "How?" "Because
he's the owner of the Clear Heart Credit Agency. As of this morning." He
closed his eyes. "So
what are you going to do?" "Do?
What can I do?" "You
could do what I said. Marry her. Be your own man. As for the money,
I'll give you that. It's two million, neh? Good. I'll have a draft
ready for you in the morning. My wedding gift." He
stared at her, astonished, then shook his head. "But why? I
don't understand you, Gloria Chung. Why should you want to do this
for me?" She
smiled and leaned close, kissing him again. "Because I believe
in you, Michael Lever. And because I want to see you strong. Strong
and independent. For all our sakes." twelve
tiny HOMUNCULi —hologram figures no more than six t'sun in
height—were gathered in a half-circle on the desk's surface,
blinking and flickering in the faint light from a nearby float-globe.
In a tall-backed chair, facing them, Old Man Lever looked down at his
Departmental Heads and growled. "So
what's the problem? Why can't we use someone else? Someone cheaper
than ProFax? Someone more reliable?" Several
of the figures shimmered, as if about to speak, but it was one of the
central holograms—the tiny form of Lever's Head of Internal
Distribution Services, Weller, who answered Lever, his image
hardening, glowing stronger than before, standing out from the images
to either side. The
figure bowed its head. "Forgive me, Master, but we have had a
good record of trading with ProFax. Our association with them goes
back over twenty years. In our experience, there is no one more
reliable." Lever
huffed irritably. "If that were true, we wouldn't be having this
discussion, would we?" He sat forward, looming over them. "So
let me ask you once again, what is the problem? I could understand it
if ProFax owned the patent to this process, but they don't. And they
certainly don't have a monopoly of the market. So why can't we buy
the stuff elsewhere? And why can't we cut the rates we pay for it
into the bargain? It strikes me that this is the perfect
opportunity." He sat
back, steepling his hands. "Okay. This is how we do it. We get
our legal boys to send ProFax a writ, letting them know that they're
in breach of contract, then we withhold all payments for products
already shipped, and send out a request for tenders to all of
ProFax's major competitors. And we do all this right now, understand
me, gentlemen? Right now!" As he
uttered the final words, Lever slammed his right hand down on the
"cancel" button and hauled himself up out of his chair,
even as the images faded from the air. At
that very moment, right across the City, his major Departmental Heads
would be being woken up and told of the decision. Yes, and cursing
me silently, no doubt, Lever thought, smiling savagely. But
that's how it was in this world: one didn't look back, one got on
with things. If something made sense, there was no good reason for
delay. Nor was there room for sentiment. Both were weaknesses. Fatal
weaknesses, if one let them be. He
went across to the drinks cabinet on the far side of the study and
pulled down a bottle of his favorite malt whiskey, pouring himself a
large glass, then turned, looking about him. It was
a big, ranch-style study with heavy wooden uprights and low rails
dividing the room up into "stalls." To his left, beyond one
of the rails, stood a mechanical horse, beneath a portrait of himself
as a twenty-year-old, bare-chested in buckskins and shiny leather
boots. It was
some while—months, if not years—since he had tried
himself against the horse, nor had he even thought of it, but now,
for some reason, he went across and, ducking beneath the rail, stood
next to it, letting his left hand rest on the smooth, cool leather of
the saddle while he sniffed in the heavy animal musk of the thing. Across
from him, behind the desk, set back against the far wall, was a big,
glass-fronted cabinet, filled with sporting trophies: mementos of an
athletic youth. Beside it, lit softly from above, was a head and
shoulder portrait of his wife, her fine golden hair set like a halo
about her soft, angelic face. Earlier,
he had sat in his private viewing chamber, enclosed in the darkness
there, watching a hologram of his son Michael, wrestling with him
beside the pool while his young wife, Margaret, looked on. It was an
old film, taken shortly before Margaret had died. Michael had been
eight then, he fifty-four. He
shivered, thinking of the years between. Twenty years this autumn.
Long years in which he'd tried hard to forget; to steel himself
against all the hurt and injustice he had felt at her death. At the
suddenness of it all. He had buried himself in his work,
throwing everything into the task of making his Company, ImmVac, the
number one economic force in North America. But it had cost him. He
had never grieved for her properly and inside he was hurting still.
Even now, after all these years, he could not look at her without
feeling his stomach fall away, a dryness come to his mouth. It had
been hard, bringing up the boy without her, but he had done it. And
for a time it had worked. For a time . . . Lever
turned his head aside, a sudden bitterness making him grimace. After
all he had been through—after all he had done for the boy—how
could Michael have turned on him like that? And in public too! The
arrogance of the boy! The ingratitude . . . He
shuddered, then slapped the horse's rump, angry with himself. Angry,
not because of what he felt, but for the weakness, the sentiment he
had allowed to sway him. Ducking
beneath the rail he went across and took the envelope from the table
by the door, tearing it open angrily. Inside was the letter he had
written earlier: the brief note of reconciliation, forgiving Michael
and asking him to come back. For a moment Lever stood there, the
letter held in one trembling hand. Then, with a spasm of anger, he
ripped the thing in half, then in half again, his face distorted with
anger and pain. "No,"
he said softly, looking about him, bewildered, frightened suddenly by
the strength, the violence of his feelings. "Not now, and maybe
not ever. No. Not until you come crawling back, begging my
forgiveness." And
would that be enough? Would that repair what had been broken between
them? No. And yet without it there was nothing. Less than nothing, in
fact, for this bitterness, this anger ate at him, day by day, hour by
hour, giving him no rest. Like death, he thought, and shivered again,
wondering how it was all connected. Like death. in
THREE DAYS Lehmann had brought the local tongboss, Lo Han, to the
conference table. Fourteen of his men were dead and six more had
joined K'ang A-yin, under Lehmann's lieutenantship. Now Lo
Han sat there, three of his henchmen behind him, facing K'ang
across the table, making a deal. "It's
too high. Far too high," Lo Han said, spitting out the end of
the cigar he had been chewing on. "Fifteen
percent or the deal is off," answered K'ang, turning in his seat
to smile at Lehmann, as if to say, "You can fight, but when it
comes to making deals, just watch an expert." Lehmann
said nothing, knowing that what K'ang was asking for was ridiculously
low. The figures Lo Han was showing in his books were rigged. Even at
a conservative estimate he must be raking in four or five times as
much. And a sixth of twenty percent wasn't much, seeing as he had
been soundly beaten on four occasions now. But it didn't matter.
Whatever K'ang agreed to, he, Lehmann, would tear up when the time
came, for he wanted a pure one hundred percent of Lo Han's drug
trade. In his
six weeks down here Lehmann had learned much about the Lowers. He had
watched carefully and listened to Soucek attentively. He knew now how
they thought and what they wanted. He knew what motivated them and
how far they would go to get what they wanted. He knew their
strengths and their weaknesses—particularly the latter—and
had come to see just how he could use both to attain his ends. And
what were those ends? When
he had returned to the City from off the mountainside, he had wanted
nothing less than total vengeance against the Seven. He had seen
himself as a lone figure, slipping between the levels like a shadow,
bringing death to the Families and all who supported them. But that
was just a dream. As a single man he could not hope to change things,
yet by his very nature he was singular: he could not parcel out his
thoughts, his hatreds, and share them. Even so, there was a middle
way. Singular
he might be, but not necessarily alone. Already he was forming a
solid corps of men about him, Soucek chief among them. Men loyal to
him alone, however it appeared on the surface. Consulting no one,
letting no one into his thoughts, he went about his business, winning
allies by the strength of his actions, the single- mindedness
inherent in his nature. He did not have to ask; men followed him,
recognizing in him something they had longed for, maybe dreamed of.
Men confided in him, seeking nothing in return. Trusting him. Willing
to be used by him. Wanting to be used. Respect
and fear. Loyalty and a deep-rooted uncertainty. It was this mixed
response to him—there in all who came to know him—that
eventually defined for him the means by which he would come to attain
that impossible, dreamlike end which was the very source, the
fountainhead, of his singularity. He
would use their respect and fear, channel their loyalty and
uncertainty, knowing that both aspects were necessary and, in their
combination, powerful. But at the heart of things would be his own
singular desire, deadly and uncompromising, shaping things, molding
those who were both attracted to and appalled by him into a body—a
weapon—through which his will would be done. He
held the thought in mind a moment longer, then frowned. At the table
the small men were still haggling and bargaining over nothings—Lo
Han's crude arrogance matched by K'ang's petty greed. He looked past
them and saw how the eyes of Lo Han's henchmen had strayed to him,
troubled by his changed expression. Turning away, he went to the door
and tugged it open, ignoring the looks of query from K'ang and Lo
Han. Outside he nodded to Soucek and walked on, conscious of his
questioning glance. Soucek
caught up with him at the corridor's end. "What is it, Stefan?"
he whispered, concerned. Lehmann
turned, facing the tall, cadaverous man, taking his upper arms in his
hands, but for a moment he said nothing. He
knew that they had their rules, their limitations, even here where
there seemed to be no rules at all, only brute force. All human life
set limits to its actions. There was always a point beyond which they
would not go. But he, who valued nothing, had no such rules, no
limits. He was beyond good and evil. For him nothing mattered but the
accomplishment of his will—the fulfillment of his singular
desire. And if
that were so, why then should he wait? Why did he not act at once,
not fearing the consequences? Knowing that the consequences were
likely to favor him. It was this that he had been
thinking as he stood there behind K'ang—this that had
made him frown. He squeezed Soucek's arms and stared into his pale
green eyes. "Are
you with me, Jiri?" Soucek
nodded, seeming to grasp at once what was happening. "Right
now?" he asked. "Why
not? The two together. They might suspect treachery from each other,
but not from us. They'll think we fear an,all-out war between the
long. But with the two of them dead . . ." He let
go of Soucek's arms. The
tall man smiled. It was clear that the idea appealed to him strongly;
that the thought of killing K'ang scratched a long unsatisfied itch.
He drew his gun. "Okay. I'll take Lo Han's henchmen." It was
both clever and sensitive of him. In effect he was saying, You,
Lehmann, are the leader. To you goes the honor of killing K'ang and
Lo Han. Lehmann
nodded slowly and pulled the huge pearl-white gun from its webbing
holster. "Yes,"
he said, his voice cold, brittle like ice. "Let's do it now." lehmann
STOOD there in the Oven Man's doorway, a tall, unnaturally gaunt
figure dressed in white. At his feet lay the corpses of three of the
runners who had attacked them. Two more lay dead inside the room. The
rest had fled, throwing down their hatchets, as if it were Yang Wen,
the God of Hell himself, that faced them. The
killing of Lo Han and K'ang A-yin had shocked the local tong
bosses. But shock had quickly led to the realization that there
was a power vacuum. A vacuum that needed to be filled, and quickly.
Within the hour, two of them met and decided to act. A messenger had
been sent to Lehmann to set up a meeting to arrange a truce, but the
meeting was merely a pretext. The bosses had decided to deal with
Lehmann before he became a problem. Lehmann
had known that. In fact, he had counted on it. He had turned up with
three men, unarmed, knowing how the tang bosses would try to
play it. Fifteen runners, armed with silver hatchets. These would
administer the "death of a thousand cuts"—a warning
to all other potential usurpers. But
Lehmann had had no intention of dying. He had other lessons in mind. An
hour before the meeting he had set up small groups of men in the
approach corridors, making sure they understood that they were not to
intercede in any way, merely show themselves when the tong runners
beat their retreat. Then, when the runners had shown up—
hard-faced, arrogant little shits, dangerously overconfident—
Lehmann had set his men behind him and faced them alone, taunting
them, belittling them, until, one by one, they had come at him. Soucek
stared at him now, remembering. Lehmann
had straight-fisted the first runner before the man had even known
the blow was on its way, the force of the punch sending the man
staggering back. He was dead before he fell. The
second runner had been more cautious, but Lehmann had taken the
hatchets from him as if he were a child, then had lifted him
one-handed and snapped his neck. He had stepped over the corpse and
made a beckoning gesture with his left hand. Come
on... Three
more had tried, the last with a kind of fateful resignation, as if
mesmerized by the power of the man who stood before him. If man it
was. And then, as one, they had broken, running from the figure in
white, whose thin, emaciated limbs were paler than ice, and whose
eyes were like tiny windows into hell. He had
heard the catcalls of the men in the approach corridors; the jeers
and mocking laughter as they goaded the fleeing runners. And then had
watched them return, to find Lehmann as he was now, framed in the
doorway to the Oven Man's room. Soucek
looked about him, finding his own awe reflected in every face, there
in the wide, admiring eyes of every man. He turned, facing Lehmann
again, then knelt, abasing himself, laying down his neck before the
man, not quite knowing why he did so, only that this was what he
ought to do. And, all about him, the others did the same, letting
Lehmann move between them, pressing his foot against each exposed
neck. Marking them. Making them his men. His absolutely. Even unto
death. Just as Li Yuan had done on the day of his coronation. And
when Soucek stood again, it was with a sense of Tightness, of
utter certainty. There was no going back from this. From here
on there would be no half measures. It was Lehmann or nothing. And
with that sense of Tightness came another—a sense of destiny.
Of things beginning. It was like being in a dream, or at the
beginning of a myth. From this time on they walked a special path.
And wherever it took them—to Heaven or down into the very
depths of Hell—he would walk it behind the man. For that was
how it was from this moment, for all of them gathered there. It had
begun. IT WAS
AFTER FOUR when Emily got back. She kicked off her shoes and went
through to the bathroom, humming softly to herself. Reaching up, she
placed her hand against the side of the shower unit. Good. It was
hot. That meant the servant had remembered to come in earlier. She
pulled the dress up over her head and let it fall onto the chair at
her side, then slipped out of her chemise. It had
been a memorable evening, and an unexpectedly enjoyable one. She
stepped into the shower, casting her mind back over the evening's
events as she soaped herself beneath the steady fall of water. Michael
Lever really wasn't so bad, now she had come to know him better. Not
that she had always felt that way. When she had first joined MemSys
she had viewed the Levers with a distant loathing, not distinguishing
much between father and son, seeing only the rapa-ciousness of the
parent Company, ImmVac, and the unheeding damage it did in its
eternal quest for profit. But now . . . Well, the past six weeks had
taught her much. Systems were systems and they ought to be opposed,
but it was not so easy with people. You had to take each person as
you found them. And in many respects Michael Lever was a good
man—honest, reliable, capable of instilling a fierce
protective-ness and loyalty in those about him. Was it his fault that
he'd been bom heir to ImmVac? Before
now she hadn't been sure. She had wondered whether there really was
any difference between father and son, but tonight, listening to him
talk about what he wanted for the future, she had seen another side
of him—one she had never guessed existed. That desire for
change—that burning need in him to do something for the
ordinary people of America . . . was that real or was it
merely rhetoric? Despite the warmth of the water, she shivered, just
thinking about it. His passion—that fierce, uncompromising fire
she had glimpsed when he'd turned to her briefly—had seemed
real enough. But how far would he go along that road? As far as she
was willing to go, or would his courage fail him in the face of
genuine change? Would he shy away from taking that ultimate step? She
cut the flow and stepped out, squeezing her hair, then wrapped it up
in a towel. For a moment she stood there, staring sightlessly at the
steamed mirror as she dried herself, then turned and went through
into the bedroom. The
bedroom was dark. Only the light from the bathroom spilled into the
opening. Even so, she saw him before she crossed the
doorway. He was
sitting on her bed, a gun in his hand, covering her. A tall,
unbearded Han with close-cropped dark hair and a face she had never
seen in her life. She
made to step back, but he lifted the gun slightly, clicking off the
safety. The signal was unmistakable. She froze, letting her hands
rest at her sides, fingers apart, the gesture meant to reassure him.
She was naked, the light behind her. "What
do you want?" She
said the words calmly, showing no sign of the fear she felt. He could
kill her in a second. Two bullets through the heart. It was what she
had been expecting every day since she had come from Europe. And now,
finally, they had caught up with her. He
stood, then crossed the room, the gun covering her all the while, his
eyes never leaving her. He lifted something from the dressing table
and threw it across to her. It was her robe. With the barest nod of
thanks, she pulled it on. "Who
sent you?" she asked, trying another tack. The
smile he gave was strange, almost familiar. And his build. She
frowned, trying to place the memory. And then he spoke. "How
are things, Emily?" She
narrowed her eyes, uncertain, then laughed, astonished. "Jan . .
. ? Is that you?" The
smile broadened. Slowly the gun came down. It was Mach— Jan
Mach—she could see that now, despite the change of face. There
was something about the way he stood there—about the way he
used the muscles of his face—that could not be disguised. "What
happened?" He
took a breath. "They were onto me. We were attacked, eleven days
back, at third bell. They killed more than twenty agents and took
maybe thirty more, six of our cell leaders among them—comrades
who knew me personally. Who could identify me." "Karr?" He
nodded. "It must have been. I'd heard rumors he was creating a
new force, but I didn't think they were ready yet." He shrugged,
his features momentarily formed into a grimace as he recalled what
had happened. "This . . ." he touched his face tenderly, "I
had done eight days ago. It still hurts. I should have rested—should
have left the bandages on a while longer—but things were too
hot in Europe. I had to get out." "Do
you want to stay here?" Mach
looked at her a moment, then nodded. "It won't be long. Two days
at most." "And
then?" He
looked down at the gun in his hand, then threw it down onto the bed.
"IVe got to go back. There's some unfinished business. An old
score to settle. IVe set it up, but I've got to be there to make sure
it all runs smoothly." Mach looked back at her, smiling. "And
you? What are you up to over here?" She
was about to answer him when there was a knock on the door. She
turned, anxious, then looked back at him. "In the bathroom. Hide
in the shower unit. Take the gun. I'll try and put them off, whoever
it is." He
nodded, then did as she said. Only when he was inside, the door
pulled over, did she go down the hallway. "Who
is it?" "Delivery!
For Nu shi Jennings."
„ She
put her tongue to her top teeth. Delivery? At four seventeen in the
morning? She reached out, turning the lock, drawing the door
back a fraction and staring out through the thumbnail gap. A
small Han was standing there, head bowed, half-hidden behind the huge
basket of flowers he was carrying. She
gave a small laugh, still suspicious. Then she saw the note and at
once recognized Michael Lever's neatly rounded hand. She pulled the
door back. "Gods..." He
handed her the basket, then stood back, bowing deeply. She turned,
reading the note as she pulled the door closed behind her, then
returned to the bedroom. "Well.
. . ?" Mach began, coming out from the bathroom, then stopped,
seeing the flowers. "A friend?" he asked, curious. "Yes,"
she said hesitantly, closing her hand over the note, for some reason
not wanting him to see what was written there. "A very dear
friend." They
were orchids. Perfect, exotic orchids, worth a thousand yuan
apiece, and there had to be—what?—thirty or more of
them here. She frowned, disturbed by the gift, then drew the basket
to her face, sniffing at them, drawing in their delicate, wonderful
scent. "A
lover?" Mach asked, blunt as ever. "No,"
she answered. But even as she said it, she could see him again,
smiling, turning to share a joke with her; and afterward, his dark
eyes burning, talking of the great changes to come. "No,"
she said again. "Just a friend. A very good friend." CHAPTER
SEVEN
Smoke
Rings and Spiders' Webs YOU'VE
CHECKED EVERYTHING?" Soucek
nodded, a feral grin splitting his narrow face. "Not so much as
a cockroach could get out of there unless we willed it." "Good."
Lehmann drew a long breath, then nodded. "All right. Let's go
meet them." They
passed through the cordon, some of the men familiar, others
strangers, all of them wary, nervous, but under strict orders to
start nothing. If things went wrong today there would be war such as
the Lowers hadn't seen in decades. A war that was certain to draw in
the Triads. The
deck had been cleared for the meeting, and only the tong were
present. The big men—all nine of his rival gangleaders in the
Kuei Chuan's territory—were waiting for Lehmann in Main,
standing out in the broad open space. They formed two groups, one of
five men, one of four. Lehmann paused, taking in every detail, then
walked on, Soucek at his side. He
could see in their faces that word had gone before him. His height,
his deathly pallor, the whiteness of his clothes, his holstered gun.
Some of them feigned indifference, but there was no mistaking what
their eyes told him. They were afraid of him. They had only come here
today because they were afraid. Like K'ang and Lo Han before them
they had tried other means of dealing with him. Now
they were forced to come to terms. Or risk a protracted
guerrilla war that would waste their resources and distract them from
the business of making money. He
raised his empty hands as if holding a large bowl, the fingers spread
unnaturally wide, like long, fine needles of ice. The gesture seemed
to stress his alienness; his long, thin arms held awkwardly, his
whole body crouched slightly, like a fighter's. The pose was half
challenge, half greeting. It distinguished him from the relaxed,
almost slovenly postures of the men facing him. "Gentlemen?" He let
the archaic word hang in the air between them, its irony unexplained,
and saw them frown and look among themselves. And though it amused
him, he let nothing show in his face, only an intense watchfulness—an
almost machinelike attentiveness. "What
do you want?" one of them asked. It
was the first question, the primary question one man asked of
another, openly or otherwise. Lehmann turned slightly to face the
man, taking in at a glance the fact that they had chosen for their
spokesman one who seemed stronger, more aggressive than the rest; a
fierce-eyed, bearded man of bull-like stature. Unlike the rest he
dressed simply, his fingers free of the heavy rings that seemed a
mark of status down here. Lehmann raised his chin slightly, then
answered. "I
want what you want. Peace. A truce. Concessions." The
bearded man smiled, showing strong white teeth. His name was Ni Yueh
and Lehmann knew all there was to know about him. All that could
be known without entering Ni Yueh's head. It was a surprise to
him, however, that they had chosen Ni Yueh. He had expected to have
to deal with Yan Yan or Man Hsi, one of the talkers. It made him
reassess things and change his tactics. Ni Yueh was a bullyboy. An
intimidator. It was obvious that this was the way they thought they
could deal with him. Well, he would show them otherwise. Before Ni
Yueh could say another word, Lehmann turned away from him and,
changing his stance, relaxing the muscles of his face, took a step
toward Yan Yan, offering his hand. "There
have been misunderstandings," he said. "Bad rumors. We need
to clear the air." Reluctantly,
looking to Ni Yueh then back to Lehmann, Yan Yan took the offered
hand. Lehmann
smiled. It was a charming, almost innocent smile. A disarming smile.
Slowly, Yan Yan's lips formed a mirror to it, but his eyes still
showed uncertainty. Lehmann closed a second hand about Yan Yan's,
keeping the handshake warm and unthreatening. "There's
no need for enmity," he said reassuringly. "There's enough
for all, neh? More than enough." Yan
Yan looked down at the long, pale hands that held his own, then up
into Lehmann's face again, puzzled. But it was Ni Yueh who spoke. "You
say that, but why should we trust you? What's to stop you doing to us
what you did to K'ang A-yin and Lo Han?" Lehmann
lowered his head slightly, his expression seeming to say, "Oh
dear, that again . . ."He released Yan Yan's hand and half
turned, looking across at Ni Yueh. "I've
heard the stories. Heard the tales men whisper to each other, and let
me assure you, they are simply not true." There was an
earnestness, a sincerity in his voice as he said it that half
convinced them. A plea for belief. The very look of a wronged man.
His eyes seemed pained by the misunderstanding. Regretful. "I
didn't want to kill K'ang A-yin. He was a friend. A benefactor. But
he made a deal with Lo Han, and my death was part of that deal.
Soucek here can vouch for that, can't you, Jiri?" Soucek
nodded and stepped forward, saying the words Lehmann had had him
rehearse. "It
was halfway through the meeting. Lehmann and I had gone out to check
that everything was secure in the corridors. When we came back, K'ang
had moved back against the far wall and Lo Han was sitting there with
his big snub-nosed gun in one hand, laughing. It seems that K'ang had
given his permission to kill Lehmann. He told me to leave the room.
Told me it was simply business. But I stayed." "How
loyal," said Ni Yueh in an undertone that suggested he didn't
believe a word of it. But Soucek turned on him angrily. "Maybe.
But I saw it like this. A boss looks after his men. He sells one he
sells them all, right? So I made a choice." There
were nods from the other big men. Soucek's outburst had impressed
them. If it was as Soucek said, then Lo Han and K'ang had clearly
broken the code. It was not done to betray one's own so casually,
even for the sake of peace. "So,"
Ni Yueh said, stepping between the two men and confronting Lehmann
face to face, "there was Lo Han, sitting behind the desk with
his gun out. How is it he didn't kill you?" Lehmann
held Ni Yueh's eyes. "Because I was better than him. Quicker.
And now he's dead, and I'm alive. It's simple, really." "Too
fucking simple!" Ni Yueh turned to face the others. "I
don't believe a word of this. I trust this bastard about as much as
I'd trust shit to taste good." There
was laughter, but it was short-lived. Lehmann had split them. The
three who had been standing with Ni Yueh were still glaring at him,
but the others—Yan Yan and Man Hsi among them— were not
happy with Ni Yueh's words. Man Hsi spoke up. "I
don't see what proof you have, Ni Yueh. We all know how things get
distorted. I say we should forget the past and make things good for
the future. That's why we're here, right? Not to bicker and fight.
WeVe done too much of that already and it's got us nowhere. No. WeVe
got to make deals. Patch things up. For all our sakes." Ni
Yueh was scowling. For a moment he seemed about to answer, then,
abruptly, he shook his head and turned away, as if he'd washed his
hands of it. Turning to Lehmann, Man Hsi spoke again, his voice
growing softer, more conciliatory. "So
what deal have you got for us, Shih Lehmann? What can you
offer us to make the peace?" Lehmann
looked past Man Hsi at the others, knowing how things stood. If they
had wanted—if they had really wanted—they could
have wiped him out. It would have cost them dearly, but it had been
possible. They could have done it. But now? Inside—deep
inside—he laughed. Now it was too late. Simply in agreeing to
come here and meet him they had made their greatest concession. Had
admitted to him their lack of will. Even Ni Yueh, for all his
hostility. Turning
to Soucek, he nodded, then waited while his lieutenant brought the
documents. As arranged, others brought a long, six- legged
table and a stack of chairs and set them down close to where the big
men stood. Then, documents in hand, Lehmann put out a hand, inviting
them to sit. There
were ten copies of the treaty; one for each of the signatories. He
watched as they first frowned, then, with greater interest, began to
read the fifteen terms that would bring peace to the Lowers of
north-central Europe. A treaty that divided the Kuei Chuan's
territory into ten equal parts. That provided the detailed
conditions by which they dealt with one another. Lehmann had modeled
it on the commercial treaties he had found among his dead father's
effects, but the terms were specific to the tang. Man
Hsi looked up, met Yan Yan's eyes, and smiled. As Lehmann had
expected, they were impressed. They had never seen the like of this
before and it pleased them greatly. It gave their activities the seal
of legality. It made them feel like businessmen. Like Company
executives. Lehmann watched each of them straighten up as they
finished reading and seemed to puff out, bigger than they'd been only
moments before. Kings. If only of the Lowers. "Well?"
he said, looking to Man Hsi. Man
Hsi looked across at Ni Yueh, who nodded grudgingly, not looking at
Lehmann. After that it was a formality. Soucek handed out brushes and
they signed, Yan Yan with a flourish that strayed over the signatures
of three of his fellow bosses. Slowly the documents were passed
around the table until each of the copies bore ten signatures at its
foot. That done, Lehmann stood, raising his hand for silence. "By
this document—a copy of which will be held by each of us—
we have peace in our part of the great City." He smiled
pleasantly, and nodded. "Yes, peace and prosperity. But. . ."
his face changed, all friendliness draining from it, ". . .
should anyone break this treaty, then all the other parties
must and will unite to bring the transgressor to account."
He paused dramatically and looked at each of them in turn. When he
spoke again his voice was fierce, insistent. "It is only if each
one of us knows this and fears it that the agreement will
work. You understand?" There
was a moment's hesitation, then nods and a murmur of agreement. "We
understand," Ni Yueh said, his voice heavy with sarcasm. But his
eyes showed something different now. The treaty had affected him; had
made him question what he had earlier believed. And though the
bantering tone remained, deep down he was far less certain. Lehmann
had impressed him despite all. "Good,"
said Lehmann, releasing Ni Yueh's eyes. "Then our business here
is done." the
CORRIDOR was packed. People had been gathering for the last thirty
minutes outside the offices of the Ch'i Chu corporation,
curious to see who had ordered such a grand sedan. Old men and
children, young wives and idle youths, Han and Hung Mao alike,
all stood there, gawping and chattering. Some busied themselves
examining the sedan, feeling the thickness and quality of the green
er-silk coverings or peeking inside at the big, luxuriantly cushioned
chair. There were jokes about how big a man the chair might carry,
and then sudden laughter as one of the young boys acted out a mime,
pretending to be a fat official, his pomposity matched only by his
grossness as he waddled across to take his place in the chair.
Others, meanwhile, had formed a crowd about the squatting pole-men,
trying to strike up a conversation, but long experience had made the
carriers taciturn. The four men waited patiently, saying nothing,
their eyes downcast, conscious of the runners who stood nearby. There
was a murmur of surprise as Kim appeared, dressed simply, a slender
folder tucked beneath his arm. Many looked beyond him, waiting to see
who else was to come, but there was no one, only the employees of
Ch'i Chu, who came out and stood there under the arch of the
entrance. Many
in the crowd had seen the boy, either in the tea house, or walking
the corridors late at night. Few, however, understood who he was, or
what his role in the strangely named Ch'i Chu corporation was. They
had thought him just a boy. A messenger, perhaps, or the nephew of a
rich man. But now they looked at him anew, redefining him. Or trying
to. Kim
stopped, glancing about him uncertainly, then turned back, a smile
coming to his face. Bright red good-fortune banners had been
draped over the doorway to the offices. Beneath them, all six
of his staff had formed up, to say good-bye and wish him luck. "Here,"
T'ai Cho said, coming forward and handing him a small, sealed box.
"You'll need this." "What
is it?" "Lunch,"
T'ai Cho explained, smiling broadly. "From what I'm told, it
will be a good few hours before they process the patent, and I know
you. You would forget to eat." Thanks,
Kim mouthed, touching his arm briefly, then looked back at the
others. The two middle-aged Thais he had hired as researchers were
grinning broadly now and waving, excited as children. Beside them, to
their right, his assistant, a fresh-faced, young Han named Hong Chi,
was looking about him, wide-eyed, clearly enjoying it all. Seeing Kim
watching him, Hong smiled, then lowered his head, blushing. Kim's
guard, a stocky young Hung Mao named Richards, met his eyes
proudly and shouted a gruff "Good luck!" while Nong Yan,
his bookkeeper, called out, "Go now! Make us all rich!"
which brought a huge shout of laughter from the rest. "I
shall," Kim said softly, feeling warmed by the smiling faces
that surrounded him on every side. "Be sure I shall." With a
bow to them all, Kim turned, climbing up into the sedan. As the
pole-men lifted the heavy chair, he leaned out, waving goodbye, his
voice drowned by the cheering of the crowd and the shouts of the two
runners as they cleared the path ahead. Sitting
back, Kim felt a shiver of anticipation ripple through him. So this
was it. He looked down at the folder in his lap and gave a little
laugh of surprise. Some days he would simply sit there, staring at
his hands, astonished that he had survived the darkness of the Clay
to come to this. And he would count himself blessed that it was so,
in spite of all that had happened in between. Even so, today was
special, for today it all came together at last. "Smoke
rings . . ." he said quietly, then laughed again, feeling the
sedan sway and bob beneath him. "Smoke rings and spiders' webs." EMILY
TURNED quickly, the narrow beam of the overhead light picking out the
false image in the mirror, then flipped backward, ignoring
the hologram that appeared suddenly to her right, facing the shadowed
figure by the door, the knife held out before her. The blade flashed,
sank deep into the upper rib cage, then jerked back. She took a step
back, breathing deeply, then sheathed the knife, satisfied. "Cut,"
she said quietly. At once the lights came up, the apartment's
computer registering her command. Shuddering,
Emily wiped the back of her hand across her forehead. It had been a
hard workout. For the first time in a long while she had forced
herself to the very limit. She
looked about the room—at the bloodied figure of the mannequin;
at the darted targets she had set up on the walls; at the
ceiling-mounted projectors; at the mats and traps and trip wires—and
realized she had missed the excitement of all this. It was time she
did something. Time she started organizing once again. Quickly
she went about the room, tidying up, stashing the equipment in the
storage box at the far end of the room and covering it all over with
a pile of sheets and old clothes. Then she went through to the
shower, standing there under the flow until the water ran out,
considering the way ahead. Mach was out, meeting contacts and making
deals: doing what he was good at. She had barely seen him for more
than twenty minutes since he'd arrived that night. As for herself, it
was two days now since she had been in to the office. She
had called in sick. A brief message on Michael Lever's personal
comset. He had called back, less than a minute later, asking if she
needed anything; saying that he'd call if she wanted him to. But she
had sent back that it was all right. It was just a virus. Nothing
serious. Just one of the new forty-eight-hour things that had been
sweeping the levels recently. She would keep to her bed and come in
when she felt better. His second message was brief, almost
businesslike, except for the way he'd signed it. "Love Michael." So
where did that leave her? She walked about the apartment, toweling
herself, recalling how Michael had looked at her the other evening at
the ball, and how she'd felt, watching him as he talked, conscious of
a growing admiration for him. In the hallway she stopped, standing
before the flowers he had sent, and lifted one of the perfect pink
and white orchids to her nose. The blooms were still fresh, their
scents rich. With the faintest shiver she turned away, returning
to the bedroom. There, she stood before the wardrobe, wondering what
to wear. She was going down level, so it would have to be something
basic. The kind of thing her alias, Rachel De Valerian, might wear. She
looked across. The false ID was on the bed, where she'd left it
earlier. A permit card. Employment details. False retinas. Everything
she'd need if she were to be stopped and questioned by Security.
DeVore had thought it all through. Had made sure to do a fine job for
her. But why? Because he knew she would eventually begin again,
agitating, causing trouble for the Seven? Was it simply that? Or was
it something else? Had he some other purpose that was as yet hidden
from her? Whatever,
it was time to take a few risks. Time to make good on the promises
she had made herself. She
had changed and dried her hair when a knock came on the door. Three
raps, a pause, a single rap, a pause, and then a further three. Mach.
He was back. She
studied herself in the mirror a moment, composing herself, then went
through, slipping the bolt from the door, then pressing the key-open.
As the door began to slide back, Mach came through, barely looking at
her, making straight for the bathroom. "Hey!"
she called after him. "What's the hurry?" She
followed him along, then stood there in the doorway watching as he
undid his jacket and took out three high-powered Security automatics,
each handgun wrapped in sheet ice, and placed them in the now empty
water-cabinet above the shower. That
done, he turned, grinning at her, his new face still a shock to her
each time she saw it. "That's
good," he said, noting at once how she was dressed, his careful
eyes not missing that her eye color had changed, but registering it
by the movement of a finger to one of his own eyes. "Who
arranged that for you? DeVore?" She
stared at him, something of her old hostility returning. "Well
it wasn't you, was it, Jan? You wanted me dead." Mach
laughed strangely. "Did he tell you that?" He shrugged. "He
told me you'd slipped the net. That he'd tried for you, but that
you'd been too good for him." She
shivered, thinking back. No, it hadn't been like that. DeVore had
found her easily enough, and—if he'd wanted to—he could
have killed her. But he hadn't. And here she was, two years on, ready
to begin again. "They
killed him, you know," Mach said, moving past her, heading for
her bedroom. "I tried, at Nantes Spaceport, but his man—that
red-eyed albino bastard, Lehmann—buggered things up for me.
Killed three of my best men. But then the T'ang's man—that big
man from the Net, Karr—finally got him. Smashed his head open
with a rifle butt, so IVe heard." Again
she followed him through, watching as he took his things from the
bottom of the wardrobe and placed them quickly but carefully into a
holdall. "I
didn't know," she said. Then, "What are you doing?" He
turned, still half crouched, looking back at her. "I'm moving
on, Em. Fresh fields. New ventures. You know . . ." She
shook her head. "You surprise me, Jan. You always did. You're so
resourceful. So flexible." He
stood, then laughed softly. "Do I detect a note of disapproval
in that last comment, Emily Ascher?" She
met his eyes clearly, trying to see him through the mask of new
flesh, then nodded. "We want different things, you and 1. We
always did, only it took me a long while to see that." He
studied her a moment, then looked away, pressing the lips of the
holdall together and hoisting it up over his shoulder. "No, Em.
It isn't what we want, it's what we're prepared to do to get it.
That's what makes you and me different. But now we can go our own
paths, neh? Now weVe the opportunity to see whose way is best."
He met her eyes again. "I'll not lie to you, Em. If you'd stood
in my way, I'd not have hesitated to have had you killed. But you
didn't. And I don't think you ever would. If I did, I'd never have
turned up at your door two nights back. So, whether you believe me or
not, let me tell you that what DeVore said simply wasn't true. I
didn't want you dead. Nor do I now. And if there's anything you
need—if there's any way I can help, then just call me. I owe
you one, right?" She
stared at him, then shook her head. "So where are you going?
Back to Europe? Or do you plan to move down-level here?" His
smile stretched the new skin about his mouth tight in what seemed
almost a parody of a smile. "Neither, Em, my dear. I'm going to
be a house guest. That's where I'm off to right now. I'm staying with
Old Man Lever down in Richmond." OLD
MAN LEVER was standing beside the pool, drying himself, as the two
men were led in to see him. He turned, relaxed, watching them
approach him around the pool's edge, then threw the towel down,
stretching out a hand to greet them. "Milne
. . . Ross . . . It's good to see you again. You'll have a drink, I
hope?" The
two men hesitated, looking to each other, then nodded. "Good."
Lever turned, snapping his fingers. At once the Steward went across
and busied himself, preparing drinks. Lever took a light silk jacket
from the back of a chair and threw it across his broad shoulders,
then turned, facing them again. "Well?
What have you got for me?" "Nothing
much, I'm afraid," Ross said, one hand going up to draw a thin
wisp of strawlike hair across his balding pate. "She's a regular
Miss Goody-two-shoes from what we can make out. Good at school. A
clean College record. And not a mention of her ever appearing, even
as witness, before a deck judicial hearing. In short, the public
record backs up the Company file. Nu Shjh Jennings is what she says
she is. It's all there, except..." He
hesitated, looking down. "Except
what?" "Except
that it doesn't make sense," Milne finished in his quick, nervy
fashion. "It's all too pat. Too neatly structured. Like someone
made it all up. It's . . ." He squirmed, his shoulders moving as
if he had something up the back of his jacket. "Well, it's
lacking anything distinctive. You know, the kind of things that shape
a life. That give it its flavor." "Hmmm,"
Old Man Lever nodded to himself. "But it all fits?" "On
the surface," Ross answered, lifting a hand slightly, signaling
the dark-haired Milne to keep quiet. "But we could dig a little
deeper, if you want. We could go back to Atlanta Canton. Speak to a
few people who knew her before
she moved out. Find out what she was really like." Lever
was silent for a time. Then, taking a long swig from his glass, he
shook his head. "What reason could there be for those records
being wrong?" Ross
looked at his companion, then shrugged. "No reason. Just that it
feels wrong. WeVe been doing this job near on twenty years, Mister
Lever, and you get to know the smell of wrongness. And this. . .
well, this just stinks of wrongness." Beside
him, Milne nodded emphatically. "Okay,"
Lever said, setting his glass down. "Let's assume the records
have been doctored. Let's say that someone's done a number on
her official files. Fine. But let me ask you just two questions. Who
did it? And why?" "I
don't know," Ross said, meeting the old man's piercing gaze. "I
just know that someone has. As Milne says, it's just too neat." But
Lever was shaking his head. "No. It makes no sense. It takes a
lot of clout to change those records. A lot of clout." He
laughed, then, leaning closer, added softly, "And who should
know better than me, neh?" He
moved between them. "No, gentlemen. Thanks, but let's leave it
at that. I was hoping you might dig up something I could use against
the woman—a string of ex-lovers or something—but it looks
like I'm just going to have to plain invent something." He
laughed. "Hell, maybe I should just have done that in the first
place!" "And
our file?" Ross asked tensely. "I'll
keep that," Lever said, meeting his eyes again. "You'll be
paid well, Shih Ross. Very well indeed. But this thing is closed now,
understand me? Closed." WHEN
THEY WERE GONE, Lever turned, looking up at the balcony overlooking
the pool. From behind the cover of a vine, a man emerged and leaned
against the rail, looking down at him. Lever called up to him. "Well,
Mach? What do you think?" Mach smiled. "It's as you said,
Mister Lever. It makes no sense. If
this Jennings woman were a sleeper, put in by some rival of
yours, she'd have stayed on where she could have done most harm, not
gone to Michael." Lever
nodded. Those were his thoughts exactly. Even so, Ross's conviction
had shaken him. He'd used Ross and Milne often these past ten years,
and their instinct was generally sound. So what if... ? For a
moment he entertained the thought, trying to think of a reason—any
reason—why her records might have been doctored, then shook his
head, dismissing it again. No. It made no sense. No sense at all. "Well,
that's it, then," Milne said, cradling his ch'a bowl and
squinting at his partner across the table of the low-level tea house.
"Another file closed." "Maybe,"
Ross said, his eyes following the progress of one of the serving
women. "And maybe not." Milne
watched his face, waiting, knowing that Ross was chewing something
over. "IVe
been thinking," Ross began in a lazy drawl, turning his
attention back to Milne. "Thinking that we could do with a
holiday. And with what Mister Lever's paid us, I reckon we could have
ourselves a hell of a fun time in Atlanta." "Atlanta
. . . ?" Milne stared back at him blankly a moment, then
laughed, understanding dawning on him. "Atlanta! Hell,
sure. Atlanta." "Good,"
Ross said, sitting back and nodding, a smile of satisfaction
splitting his face. "And maybe we can do a little digging while
we're there. I mean . . . what harm can it do?" LI y u
AN was at the far end of the gallery, standing beneath one of the
five huge portraits that filled the midnight-blue walls. As the great
doors opened, the young T'ang turned, looking toward them, then
smiled, beckoning Tolonen across. "Knut,"
he said, offering the ring finger of his right hand for the old man
to kiss. "You are well, I hope." Tolonen
came to attention, his head bowed, his close-cropped steel-gray hair
presented to his T'ang. "I am fine, Chieh Hsia. I..." He
stopped, conscious of something odd in Li Yuan's manner. Of a strange
thoughtfulness in that young, unbearded face, an unnatural stillness
to his bearing, that reminded him suddenly of the boy's father, Li
Shai Tung. So the old man had been at times, as if something had
lodged in his thoughts, like a rock in the middle of a stream. Tolonen
turned, looking up at the portrait Li Yuan had been studying and gave
a small smile of recognition. It was Ch'in Shih Huang Ti, the First
Emperor. The unifier of ancient China. The tyrant, so-called. In the
portrait he was standing on the shoreline of Shandong, staring out
toward the east—to P'eng Lai, the Isle of the Immortals. Tall,
bearded, and arrogant, the peach of immortality clutched in his left
hand. "I
have been thinking," Li Yuan said, moving past Tolonen to stand
beneath the portrait once again. "Trying to see some pattern in
the flow of time." "A
pattern, Chieh Hsia?" "Of
what men are, and what they do, and why they never learn." Tolonen
looked down. "Do you really think that's so, my Lord?" Li
Yuan nodded. "I do, Knut. Take our friend here. In many ways he
was a great man. A military genius and a visionary administrator,
whose actions shaped our land for two thousand years. And yet, as a
man, he was ultimately flawed, for he wanted more than life could
give him. He wanted to live forever, and that destroyed him. All the
good he had done was undone by that. His great empire lasted but a
year or so beyond his death." The
young T'ang moved on, his booted footsteps echoing on the tiled
floor, until he stood beneath the second of the portraits. Of the
five, this was the most famous, for copies of it hung in every deck,
at every level of the great earth-spanning City. "Wen
Ti. . ." Li Yuan turned, looking back at Tolonen, a strange, sad
smile on his lips. "How many times have you heard old men and
schoolboys praise him for his virtue? How many times has his name
been used like a charm to castigate an errant child or a poor
official? In the history books he is portrayed as a rock, a mountain
of a man, as just as he was compassionate, as fair as he was stem,
and yet, under his rule, the Middle Kingdom almost faltered.
Incursions by the northern barbarians, the Hsiung Nu, twice forced
him to make accommodations—to cede land and make huge tributary
payments. Why, his capital, Ch'ang-An, almost fell to them! And like
Ch'in Shih Huang Ti, only a year or so after his death the empire was
in chaos, rebellions sweeping the provinces." "He
did his best, Chieh Hsia . . ." "Maybe
so, Knut, but it gives one pause for thought, neh? Ch'in Shih Huang
Ti was a tyrant, yet beneath him the empire thrived. Wen Ti was a
good man, yet beneath him the empire suffered. Which, then, should I
model myself upon?" "Is
the choice that simple, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan smiled, then moved on to the next painting, looking up at the
image of an elegant-looking middle-aged man in golden silks. "No,
Knut. It is never that simple. Take the case of Ming Huang here,
sixth of the great T'ang emperors. He was a great man. A wise ruler
and a powerful warrior. His reign was a golden age, it is said. The
great poets and painters of our history—Li Po, Tu Fu, Wang
Wei—such men thrived under his rule. It was a time of great
culture, of prosperity and peace, and yet all that was destroyed, the
empire torn apart by rebellions, and why? Because of his weakness.
Because of his infatuation for a woman." Tolonen
looked down, uncomfortable with this sudden turn. "So it was,
Chieh Hsia. So history tells us, anyway. But what is your point?" The
young T'ang turned. "My point? Why, that emperors are men, not
figureheads or abstract forces, and that what they are shapes the
destiny of those they rule. They stretch out a hand and the shadow
falls across a continent. So it is. So it has always been. And I,
Knut. In what way am I different?" He
turned back, staring up at the handsome features of Ming Huang a
moment longer, then, with a small shake of his head, went across to
the fourth of the portraits. "Mao
Tse Tung," he said quietly, his eyes taking in the familiar
icon. "First of the great Ko Ming emperors. The Great
Helmsman himself. Like Ch'in
Shih Huang Ti—his idol—Mao could be ruthless and
tyrannical. Beneath him, the Middle Kingdom was unified again, all
invaders cast out. And yet, like Wen Ti—whose values he tried
to overthrow—Mao tried hard in his early years to give the
people peace and prosperity, to end corruption and reform the
bureaucracy. To make the Middle Kingdom strong and healthy after
decades of suffering and neglect. In many ways he seems the perfect
balance between the two men. And yet he too was flawed. Flawed by a
belief in his own infallibility. In his Great Leap Forward, tens of
millions died, Knut. And for what? Simply to prove him wrong." Tolonen
looked down, frowning. "But you are not any of these men, Chieh
Hsia. You are yourself. Surely you can learn from their
mistakes and be what they were not?" Li
Yuan glanced at the old man questioningly, then turned, making his
way across to the last of the five great canvases. For a moment he
stood there, staring up at the powerful image of the man his own
ancestors had overthrown. Tsao Ch'un. The Tyrant. Founder of the
City. Of Chung Kuo itself. "Coming
here, seeing these men, their faces, it makes me wonder. Can I learn
from their mistakes? Or am I doomed to take the same path? To go down
in history as a weak and foolish man? Or as a
tyrant?" Tolonen
went across and stood beside him. "Does it worry you, Yuan?" "Worry
me?" Li Yuan laughed, then turned, facing his father's General
once again. "Yes, Knut. It worries me. But not as others might
think. It worries me that my weakness might prove the death of
millions. Or that some excess of desire or pride, arrogance or
cold-heartedness might turn my face to tyranny. I look at these
faces, these giant figures from our past, and I ask myself. Am I
strong enough? Wise enough? You said of Wen Ti just now, 'He did his
best.' Well, will my best be good enough? Have I, within me,
what it takes to mold and shape a world and all its people? Or will
ignorance and desire destroy me, as they have destroyed so many in
the past? I am determined, yes. But what if determination fails,
Knut? What then?" The
old man sniffed deeply, then shrugged, clearly disturbed by the young
T'ang's words. "Never
mind. . ." Li Yuan looked down, unclenching his fists and
staring at them a moment, as if to comprehend them. Then, as if
coming to once more, he looked back up at the old man, his dark,
hazel eyes less intense than a moment earlier. "So tell me,
Knut. What did you find in my cousin's City?" "Something
strange," Tolonen answered, his voice suddenly clear and
resonant. "Something strange and horrible." IN
WHAT HAD ONCE BEEN K'ang A-yin's offices, Soucek stood at ease,
waiting to be acknowledged. The place had been redecorated since
K'ang's death, a simple elegance replacing K'ang's cheap ostentation.
A minute passed, then, finally, Lehmann looked up from the screen on
his desk, noted the two men his lieutenant had brought back with him,
and nodded. "Good.
Did it go well?" Soucek
sniffed. "I don't think they like us much. But as for our money
. . . well, that's a different matter, neh? Money is money, Above as
Below." Lehmann
switched off the screen, then came around the table. Ignoring his
lieutenant, he studied the two newcomers carefully, reaching out to
check the tight, flickering bands about the neck of each. Satisfied,
he stepped back. "Welcome,"
he said simply. "My name is Stefan Lehmann, and you'll be
working for me." Soucek
could see the fear and uncertainty in their faces, just as earlier he
had noted their clear disgust at their new surroundings. Lehmann too
must have noticed it, for he seemed quick to reassure the men. "I
understand how you're feeling just now. You weren't expecting to come
down here, were you?" They
nodded. "No.
Well, I know that what youVe seen so far is pretty bad, but I've had
special quarters prepared. Something more like what you're used to." Soucek
narrowed his eyes, fitting another piece into the puzzle. Lehmann
hadn't told them yet what he was up to. The first Soucek
had known about this was when Lehmann had handed him a special
clearance pass and sent him up to Level 180 to meet with a Company
Broker. All the documents and payment certifications had been in a
sealed package. Soucek had only to ensure that the broker handed over
the two men; Lehmann could do all the rest from his newly installed
desk console. But Soucek had glimpsed the figure the broker had
tapped into his comset and had whistled to himself. Why, they had
paid more than two months' profits for a year's contract on each man! "There's
a lot to do here," Lehmann was saying, "but I want you to
familiarize yourself with the details of our operation before you get
down to things. And 1 want your input, understand? If you see that a
thing can be done better, I want to know how, okay?" The
strangers, still more intimidated than reassured by the look of the
tall albino, nodded hastily. "And
understand this . . . I've added an extra clause to your contracts."
Lehmann paused, looking from one to the other. "It's very
simple. You do well for me and I look after you. You help me increase
my profits and you get a cut. A small one, but significant. And it's
nondeductible against your lessee's contract." Soucek
saw how that changed things. The two men glanced at one another, then
looked back at Lehmann, smiling. "Good,"
Lehmann said, turning away, retreating behind his desk. "Now get
some rest. We'll start tomorrow. My lieutenant here will show you
your quarters. He'll get you anything you want." Lehmann
sat, leaning forward to touch the screen, bringing it alive. The
audience was over. Soucek ushered the men out. Walking
back to the special area, one of them, a fair-haired man in his early
twenties, turned to Soucek and asked him who Lehmann was. Soucek
shrugged. "He runs things down here." "You
mean he's a Deck Magistrate?" "No.
Judges he can buy by the dozen." He saw
how thoughtful they were. How their initial disgust had turned to
puzzlement and to a new kind of respect. Yes,
thought Soucek. After all, he had the clout to bring you
two down here. Why, 1 don't yet know. But I shall soon. "And
what are you, ch'un tzul" It was
their turn to laugh. "You mean you don't know?" the
blond-haired one said, stopping. "I thought you understood.
We're commodity slaves." He touched the flickering band at his
neck. "That's what this means. Your boss has bought our services
for a year." Soucek
drew in a breath. He didn't like to be thought ignorant. "I know
that," he said, brazening it out. "I meant, what do you
do?" "Whatever
he wants us to do. But our specialties are computers and drugs
synthesis. I'm the computer man." Ah,
thought Soucek, so that's it. But why does he want specialists?
What is he planning? They
walked on, coming to the special area. Guards let them into corridors
that had been newly carpeted at great expense. The walls were freshly
painted, the two suites furnished with pieces brought down from the
Above. It was all in stark contrast to the corridors and rooms
through which they had passed. Here it was cool and quiet. No crowds
of people crushed against each other. No ragged urchins tugged at
you, their dirty faces pleading for a coin, or for something to eat.
Now that he had seen it for himself, Soucek saw how like the Above
this was. Ordered. Elegant in its simplicity. And Lehmann had known
that. Had known what K'ang had only guessed at. As if he had
experienced it himself. Later,
alone in his room, stretched out on his bunk, he thought things over.
He had known Lehmann only weeks now, but in that brief time he had
had the opportunity to study him better than he'd studied anyone
before. Even so, Lehmann remained something of an enigma, forever
hidden behind those glassy, blood-pink eyes. At times he felt like
asking him right out, "What are you thinking?" but knew how
it would be. Lehmann would turn and look at him, then look away,
saying nothing. As if to say, "What business is it of yours?"
And yet, for all that, he respected Lehmann more than he respected
any man. Maybe even loved him in some strange way. But what was
Lehmann? Who was he? He had
not seen it at first. Only slowly, gradually, had he begun to notice
all the things that were different about him. Not the immediate,
obvious things—his height and gauntness, the color of his skin,
his eyes—but other, less readily discernible things. Things
seen in contrast only. His
scorn for luxuries. His innate austerity. Things that contrasted
sharply with the other tong Bosses. Unlike them he had never even
considered moving up the levels. He had laughed contemptuously when
Soucek had suggested it. "They'll pay for their softness,"
was all he'd said. But Soucek had thought long and hard about the
meaning of those words and had heeded them. Copying Lehmann, he had
given up alcohol, drugs, and meat, and had begun to spend more time
in the practice rooms, honing his fighting skills. After
the meeting with the other nine Bosses, Lehmann had sent him up to
see Ni Yueh alone, with gifts and letters of friendship. He recalled
sitting in Ni Yueh's plush offices and seeing it all with Lehmann's
eyes, noting the waste—the "fat" as Lehmann called
it. And he had looked at Ni Yueh anew—perhaps even as Lehmann
saw him—seeing not merely his strength and brutality, but also
the softness, the small signs of weakness. "Desire is a chain,"
Lehmann had said. "Only will and discipline can break it."
Well, he had looked at Ni Yueh now and seen a man in whom desire was
stronger than will. And had said nothing. That too he had learned
from Lehmann. The weak man babbled his thoughts to any that would
listen. The strong man kept his silence. Ni
Yueh had liked the gifts, the letters, and he, Soucek, had returned
with other gifts and written promises. But Lehmann had scorned the
presents and pushed them aside, more concerned with Soucek's view of
things. He had listened attentively, then turned away suddenly,
nodding to himself. "We'll bait him," he had said. "Hook
him and draw him in." And though Soucek had not understood the
exact meaning, he got the drift of it. "How far can you trust
him?" he had asked, and saw how Lehmann turned, studying him
closely. "Trust?" he'd answered. "I trust no man,
Jiri. Not even you. If it were a matter of life and death, a question
of choice—of my life or yours— could I trust you? Could I
redly trust you?" He had
wanted to say yes, but with Lehmann's eyes upon him he had not wished
to answer glibly, insincerely. He had hesitated, then bowed his head.
"I don't know... I..." But Lehmann had only shaken his head
and taken his arm, as if to console him. "Have no illusions,
Jiri. Strip what you feel bare. Look hard at yourself. All else means
nothing." It was
the closest he had come to Lehmann, and the moment had seared itself
into his memory, but it was the closeness of utter strangers. Even at
that moment, he had sensed the utter cold of the vacuum that
surrounded Lehmann and kept them separate. Where there were no
illusions there could be no warmth. And love, even love, became a
thing of ice. WHISKERS
lu's face filled the big overhead screen, his left eye staring down
blankly from the pink, crab-mottled rawness of his melted face, his
narrow, lipless mouth formed into a fierce grin. "Wong
Yi-sun! Welcome! Come inside! We are all here now." Fat
Wong hesitated, then, with a nod to his bodyguards, passed beneath
the great lintel of the House of the Ninth Ecstasy, entering Lu
Ming-shao's territory. Inside, he looked about him, surprised by the
understated elegance of the place. When he had first heard that the
meeting of the Council was to be held in a singsong house he had been
outraged, wondering whether this were some subtle insult on Whiskers
Lu's part, but his advisors had reassured him that this was where Lu
Ming-shao did most of his business from these days, and so he had
accepted the invitation. Now, seeing it for himself, he understood.
Lu's First Level contacts would feel at home in a place like this. It
was a good place to do business. Even so, it was of a piece with Lu
Ming-shao that he should run the Black Dog Triad from a whorehouse. There
was the faint rustle of a curtain to his left. Fat Wong turned,
facing it, one hand on the knife at his belt, then he relaxed. A
scantily dressed young woman stood there, her head bowed. "Might
I take your cloak, Wong Yi-sun?" Fat
Wong studied the girl, noting how delicately she was formed,
wondering briefly whether that delicacy were a product of chance or
of human manufacture, then he nodded, letting her take the silk from
his shoulders. As he turned back, Whiskers Lu appeared on the far
side of the room, coming across to embrace him. "Yi-sun
. . ." he said, holding Fat Wong at arm's length, as if he had
not seen him in a long while. Then, with a flourish of his arm, he
turned, inviting Wong to go through. Again
Wong hesitated, the habit of suspicion shaping his response, then let
himself be led through. In a room at the center of the House the
other four Bosses were waiting, sitting about in huge, comfortable
chairs, drinks and trays of sweetmeats on low tables at their sides.
As he entered, they called out, greeting him, as if they were old
friends and this a chance to drink and eat and talk of women and past
times, whereas the truth was that what they were to discuss today was
of the utmost importance, heralding a new phase in their relationship
with the Above. Fat
Wong smiled, letting himself fall into the role, accepting the
tumbler of wine Whiskers Lu held out to him, knowing that his stomach
implant would neutralize its effects. He sat, looking about him,
conscious yet again of the refinement of the decor. He had had his
advisors dig back into the history of this place and had learned what
had happened here with the old Madam, Mu Chua, and the Minor-Family
Prince, Hsiang K'ai Fan. It was Mu Chua who had built this place and
established its reputation, running the House for more than thirty
years. Her death—her throat slit by Hsiang K'ai Fan even as he
was fucking her—might easily have been a disaster for Whiskers
Lu, but the intercession of Li Yuan's General, Hans Ebert, had saved
Lu's skin. In a secret deal negotiated by Ebert, the Hsiang family
had agreed to pay Lu Ming-shao twenty-five million yuan in
compensation, provided he took no retributive action. With those
funds Whiskers Lu had rebuilt the House of the Ninth Ecstasy and
installed a new Madam. He had also imported one or two "oddities,"
things accepted from the Hsiang family in lieu of cash. Among those
oddities were one of the GenSyn ox-men and five of GenSyn's famous
"Imperial Courtesan" line—the model with the two
additional orifices. Such "treasures" had won a new
clientele to the House and things were almost as they were. Whiskers
Lu came close, leaning over Wong, his voice lowered to a whisper. "If
there is anything you would like to try while you're here, Yi-sun,
you are most welcome." Fat
Wong smiled, as if pleased by the offer, but it was yet another
instance of Lu Ming-shao's poor breeding. Or his naivete. He studied
Whiskers Lu a moment, noting the changes that this last year had
brought. Gone was the ragged fur he had once sported about his
shoulders; gone too the wild-barbarian look. Lately he had
taken to wearing his hair slicked back, his mustache trimmed and
waxed. Lu thought it made him look more refined, but the truth was
otherwise; it only made his masklike face look more artificial, more
foolish. Wong smiled inwardly, then looked past Lu. There, in the
comer of the room, was a u«i chi board, set up as if midway
through a game. He had heard that Lu Ming-shao had recently taken up
the game and this seemed to confirm it. Rumor had it, however, that
Whiskers Lu was very bad at the game and had killed two opponents in
fits of temper. If so, it was but another thing against him. The time
was coming fast when Lu Ming-shao would prove too great an
embarrassment to the Hung Mun, and when that day came he, Wong
Yi-sun, would be the first to act. It was
another hour before they came to business. Between times there was
the usual sparring—the sounding-out of positions before the
hard bargaining began. This once, however, there was little to debate
and they came quickly to agreement. The matter was a simple one. In a
year's time the House at Weimar would be reopened. Before then,
candidates had to be selected, elections held. It was an ideal
opportunity for the Hung Mun to buy their way in. Rumor had it that
the new House would have real power, real influence. If so, it was to
the advantage of them all to gain a foothold. The only question was
how big a foothold and how much that would cost. Li the
Lidless was speaking, reading from a special report he had had his
advisors draw up. ".
. . it is also felt that any attempt to spread our net too wide might
not only prove a strain upon current resources but might also result
in a diminishment of effective influence. It is suggested, therefore,
that each of the six brotherhoods concentrate on acquiring the
friendship of five Representatives. The resultant pressure group
within the House—funded centrally and with the capacity to
'extend' its influence on certain matters within the House; that is,
to buy the votes of responsive members—ought to provide a solid
foundation for our continued expansion up the levels." Li
Chin sat back, looking about the circle of his fellow 4895. "Long
years we have waited in the darkness down below. Now our time has
come. We must climb. Up, into the light." Fat
Wong leaned forward, conscious of the receptive mood Li's words had
created. "Then we are agreed? Thirty Representatives, to be
controlled directly by this Council. Policy and funding to be as
outlined in Li Chin's report." He
looked about the circle, seeing how enthusiastically they nodded; how
willingly they embraced this next step. For once the potential
benefits for all outweighed the petty needs of individual Triads. But
how long would that last? How long would it be before one or the
other of them tried to win a greater share of influence than their
fellows? Once already he had had to deal with such divisions,
enlisting Li Yuan's aid to crush his rival, Iron Mu. But next time
would be more difficult. Next time he might have to fight them all.
Which was why it was important to pacify them just now, to seem to be
working with them closely, hand-in-hand, so that he might build up
his strength. Because
ultimately he did not want what Li Chin wanted. No. He wanted it all. Fat
Wong turned, looking across at Whiskers Lu once more, and, smiling,
his manner deceptively casual, said what had been on his mind all
along. "I
hear there has been trouble among your tong, Lu Ming-shao. They say
there is a new man, cutting in. I wondered . . ." He saw
the agitated movement of Lu's good eye, the sense of turmoil beneath
the glassy mask of his face, and knew he had touched a nerve. But
when Whiskers Lu spoke, it was in the same almost-bantering tone he
always used. "It
is so, Wong Yi-sun, but when is there not trouble among the lower
orders? Besides, the matter is already settled, a new balance found.
One must let the little men fight their battles, neh?" They
were good words, and Fat Wong bowed his head, acknowledging them, but
all there were aware of the significance of the exchange, for while
the rest of them had worked their way up the levels of their
respective brotherhoods, Whiskers Lu alone had won his post by
conquest. He had not entered the brotherhood as a child, nor was he
steeped in the ancient rituals of the Hung Mun. No. Like the "new
man" Wong had mentioned, Whiskers Lu was an outsider, a usurper, and
had bullied his way into a position of power. The reminder was thus
unwelcome. "Well,
brothers," Whiskers Lu said, standing, his whole manner
suggesting that he had already forgotten what had just been said,
"now that we are agreed, let us retire to the next room. I have
arranged an entertainment. Something rather special. Something
...different." His
lipless mouth grinned broadly, but as he turned away, Wong noted how
Lu's left hand was clenched, the tendons showing at the wrist, as if
all of his anger—anger that could not be expressed on the
masklike nullity of his face—had been channeled down into that
hard, bunched node of flesh and bone. And, seeing it, Fat Wong
smiled. Yes.
Step by step he would undermine them, even as he seemed to be working
with them. Step by step, until he was ready. And then there would be
war. War such as the lowers had never seen. WHISKERS
LU let the door close, the last of his guests departed, then turned,
his thin smile fading, and glared at the three men who remained in
the room. "How
dare the fucker discuss my private business in my House!" Lu
Ming-shao kicked out, sending one of the low tables flying, tumblers
and bowls of food scattered across the carpet. "The
toad! The fucking insect! What the fuck does he think he's playing
at?" The
three men looked to each other but said nothing. When Whiskers Lu was
like this, it was best to keep one's head low and wait for the storm
to pass. Lu
Ming-shao shuddered, his one good eye burning in his glassy face. "If
it had been any other man, I'd have slit his fucking throat! But I'll
have him. See if I don't!" He
turned, anger making his movements jerky, angular. "Po Lao . . .
Why was I not told what was going on? What the fuck are you up to,
keeping me in the dark?" Po
Lao, Whisker's Lu's "Red Pole," his second-in-command,
bowed his head, accepting the
criticism, but inside he was fuming. Lu Ming-shao had been
told about the new man, and not once but several times, but he had
been too busy preparing for the Council meeting— closeted with
designers and entertainers—to pay any attention. "It's
not fucking good enough," Lu went on, standing close to Po Lao,
the pink, crab-mottled flesh of his melted face pressed right up
against Po's. "I want you to go down there, personally, and
see to the matter. To sort things out for good and all, because I
don't want any more trouble, understand me? And I particularly don't
want any word of what's happening in our territories getting out to
that cunt Fat Wong." Po Lao
felt his face burning beneath its rigid exterior. For a moment he was
giddy with suppressed anger. Then, with a curt bow, he turned away.
But at the door Whiskers Lu called him back again. "And
Po Lao. No fuck-ups. I want it settled. Right?" Po Lao
turned back, meeting Lu Ming-shao's good eye, letting nothing of what
he was feeling show. "1 understand, Master Lu." "Good.
Now go. I want to hear from you tonight." "Shih
Ward?" Kim
looked up, beginning to smile, then checked himself, realizing that
it was not the young official he had been dealing with earlier, but
the Supervisor of the section. Beyond the stoop-backed old graybeard
stood two departmental guards, their side arms held across their
chests. "What
is it?" he asked, standing, puzzled by the look of stern anger
on the elderly Han's face. In
answer the man thrust a folder at Kim—the same folder he had
submitted only four hours back at the counter on the far side of the
waiting room. "It's
all done, then?" he asked, staring down at it, wondering
momentarily where the completed patent certificate was. "Are
these your documents, Shih Ward?" the Supervisor asked, ignoring
Kim's comment. Kim
glanced at the folder again. "Yes. Of course. Why? Is there a
problem?" The
man's smile was cold, ironical. "You might say that. But first
let me confirm two things."
He reached across and opened the folder, drawing out the slender,
microns-thick official form. "Is this your signature at the
bottom of this patents application form?" "Yes." "And
you understand that this form is to be used only for new patents
originated by the signatory?" Kim
nodded, concerned now; not understanding why the man should need to
ask, nor why he should feel the need to have guards present. "Then
I am afraid to say that this form is invalid, being in breach of
Section 761 [D] of the Patents Protection Laws. Moreover, Shih Ward,
it is my duty to arrest you for making a fraudulent application,
infringing a patent already registered at this office." Kim
laughed, but it was the laughter of disbelief, not amusement. "It
isn't possible. I checked. A week ago. Here at this very office.
There was nothing. Nothing even vaguely like it!" The
official smiled, clearly enjoying his role, then produced a copy of a
patent protection form. He let Kim study it a moment, watching as the
young man's face drained, then took it back from him. Kim
stood there, his hands shaking, his mouth agape. "Someone stole
it," he said quietly. "They must have." The
official turned, handing the folder to one of the guards, then turned
back, puffing out his chest, as if to display the big, square badge
of office there. "Your comments have been noted, Shih Ward, and,
along with the recording of this interview, will be submitted to the
Hearing in two days' time. Until then, I am afraid you will have to
be detained." "Detained
. . . ?" Kim shook his head, disbelief tilting over into a kind
of stupor. He felt sick and dizzy and hardly heard what the man said
next, but then, suddenly, his hands were being pulled behind him. He
felt the restraint-lock click into place about his wrists, then he
was being pulled backward out of the room. "You
must send word!" Kim called out, trying to make the official
listen. "You must tell T'ai Cho!" But the Supervisor had
already turned away and was talking to the other guard. And then the
door slammed shut in front of him and he felt a sharp, sudden blow on
the back of his head. And then nothing. CHAPTER
EIGHT
Dynasties THE
GIRL WAS ASLEEP, her long, auburn hair fanned out across her naked
back, the thin sheet draped across her buttocks like a shroud. For a
moment Old Man Lever studied her, conscious of the contrast between
them. Her flesh was so smooth, so new, like silk over the taut
frame of bone and muscle, no sign of age marring its perfection. He
sighed, then pulled himself up heavily, stretching the tiredness from
his bones. Suddenly he felt old. Very old. He looked about him, at
the simple luxury of the room, a luxury to which he had been born,
and shook his head, as if he didn't understand whence all this had
come, then looked down at himself again, at thinning legs and a
stomach gone to paunch, a chest to flab—at the changes and
distortions time had brought to the landscape of his flesh. All these
years he had kept himself trim, had fought Time itself, fleeing from
it, like a swimmer in dangerous waters, but Time, patient as a shark,
had waited in the depths, staring up at him with cold, impersonal
eyes, biding its time, knowing there was no escape. He
shuddered, then padded across to the armchair in the corner of the
room and pulled on the dark blue silk dressing gown he had thrown
there earlier. The girl had been good—very good indeed—
and she had finally brought him off, but it had been a long, uphill
struggle, and he had almost sent her away at one point, ashamed of
his failure. 180 It had
happened before, of course, and he had blamed it on tiredness or an
excess of wine, but it was neither—he knew that now. He was
simply getting old. He
drew the sash tight about his waist, then went across, standing there
at the mirror, looking at himself clearly in the light from the
overhead lamp. In four weeks' time he would be seventy-four. One year
older than Tolonen. An old man. Powerful, as old men went, but old
all the same. He
turned away, angry with himself. Only an hour ago he had been full of
life, buoyant after the news from the Patents Office, standing there,
whooping at the screen. Yes, just an hour ago he had felt as though
he could run ten Zi and then take on a pair of serving girls, one
after the other, as he'd done in his youth. But now he knew. It was
only the adrenaline rush. Only the ragged tide of feeling through an
old man's head. Going
across to the room's comset, he tapped out a code irritably. "Get
me Curval on the line," he said, even before the picture had
properly formed. "And get him now, whatever he's doing." He
looked across at the girl again. She had turned and was lying on her
side, one breast exposed above the sheet. Lever shivered. No, it
wasn't her fault. She had tried. Had tried her damnedest to be sweet
to him. Besides, the girl was mute. So maybe he would keep her. Maybe
he would have her assigned here, to his private rooms. He turned back
as Curval's voice came through. "Curval... I want you to come
here at once. I've a job for you. I want you to go up to Boston for
me and see the boy again. I'll brief you when you get here."
' Curval
made to answer, but Lever had already cut him off. Turning away, he
crossed the room quickly and stood over the girl, shaking her until
she came awake. "Quick
now," he said, pulling her up. "You must help me dress. IVe
things to do." And
as she busied herself about him, he began to feel better; began to
shrug off his earlier mood. No, it was no good skulking and sulking.
One had to do something. First he'd draft a note—an
answer to the T'ang of Africa—to be sent by way of Mach,
agreeing to his offer. Then he would arrange a meeting of the major
shareholders to the Institute
and force them to agree to an increase in funding. Last, but not
least, he would see Curval, and brief him. For Curval would be his
key. He
smiled, letting the girl fuss about him, wondering why he had not
thought of it before. At present Curval was Head of the Institute,
his reputation as the leading experimental geneticist of his age
unchallenged. But Curval, good as he was, wasn't good enough, not
when it was a question of squaring-up to death. He had as much as
admitted to Lever's face that he considered the problem unsolvable.
Even so, he might be the means by which Ward could be wooed back to
the fold. Yes, where money and threats had failed, maybe a play at
Ward's natural scientific curiosity might succeed. If Curval could
show him how wonderful a challenge it was. If he could fire him with
a new enthusiasm. Especially
now, when the boy was down and vulnerable. Lever
looked down. The girl had stopped, staring at the fierce erection he
now sported. He laughed, then drew her close, forcing her head down
onto him. Yes,
he would be young again. He would, be young. TWO
hundred LI to the north, in the boardroom of a small company, four
men sat about a long oak table, talking. Michael
Lever had been silent for some while, listening, but now he leaned
forward, interrupting the stream of talk. "Forgive
me, Bryn, but the point isn't whether it can be done, but
whether it ought to be done. I don't know about you, but I don't want
to live forever. It's bad enough thinking of being fifty, let alone
being fifty forever." Bryn
Kustow was hunched forward at the far end of the table, facing
Michael, his elbows pressed against the polished surface, his long
forearms stretched out along the wood, meeting in a handclasp. His
ash'blond hair was cut aggressively short, but the style suited him.
He looked like a soldier, sitting there. "Fifty,
no, but what if you could be twenty-five for the rest of time?
Wouldn't that tempt you?" Michael
shook his head. "I know how I feel. Besides, I want sons of
my own, and I want those sons to love and respect me. I don't
want to be a barrier in their way." Kustow
nodded and leaned back in the big wheel-back chair. Between him and
Michael, to either side of the table, sat their friends and longtime
companions, Jack Parker and Carl Stevens. They were dressed simply
and sported the same aggressive hairstyle as Kustow. It gave them a
kind of uniformity. One look was enough to place them. Sons, they
were. Part of the new movement. "It
sounds like you hate him," Stevens said, leaning toward him.
"Has it really got that bad?" "No.
It's not as simple as that. For all he's done to me these past few
weeks, I still don't hate him. But this obsession of his with
immortality. Well, it's gone too far. All his energies seem to be
channeled into the search for a new serum or for some new way of
switching off the aging process." He looked across at Kustow,
his face filled with hurt. "I've seen it grow in him these past
few years, like a sickness. And I don't want to be that way. Not
ever. I don't want to be old in the way he's getting old. Hanging on
like a beggar. There's no dignity in that." "My
father's the same," said Parker, looking about him at the circle
of his friends. "He's got no time for anything else, these days.
The day-to-day stuff he delegates, then goes off to jaw with the old
gang." He paused and shook his head. "And you know what
they're talking about? They're talking about spending a further
fifteen billion on the Institute. Fifteen billion! And who loses
out?" "Sure.
So what do we do about it?" They
stared at Kustow, as if he'd said something that was difficult to
grasp. "Do?"
Stevens asked, shaking his dark, cropped head and laughing. "What
can we do? It's like Mitchell said the other night at
Gloria's. TheyVe got all the money, all the real power. All we have
is the vague promise of inheritance." "Vaguer
by the day," said Parker, nudging him and laughing. But
Kustow and Lever weren't laughing. They were watching each other.
Kustow narrowed his eyes in a question, and Michael nodded. "Okay
. . . we'll come clean," said Kustow, standing up and walking
around the table until he stood behind Michael. "The paperwork, earlier
. . . that was a front. Michael and I called you over today for a
special reason. Not to make deals, or anything like that, but to work
on this thing that's bugging us all. To see if we can do something." "We're
listening," Parker said, leaning back, assuming an air of
businesslike attentiveness. Across from him, Stevens nodded. It was
Michael who spoke. "Essentially,
you're right, Carl. They have got all the real power. But let's not
underestimate ourselves. What have we got? Let's look at it.
Let's see what we"can rustle up between us." He
separated his hands and sat back, using his right hand to count the
fingers of his left. "One, we've got our personal allowances.
Not inconsiderable. There's many a small company who would welcome
the same figure in turnover. Don't be offended, but Bryn and I have
been checking up. Between the four of us we could count on a figure
of some one and three quarter million yuan." Parker
laughed. "And where would that get us? Your accounts are frozen,
Michael, or had you forgotten?" "Hold
on," said Kustow. "Michael's not finished yet." Michael
smiled, his handsome face showing patience and determination. "Two,
there's what we could divert from those funds we control on behalf of
our fathers' companies." Parker
frowned. "I don't like the sound of that. It sounds vaguely
criminal." "It
is. But let's face that when we have to. From such funds we could
probably command upward of twenty million yuan." Stevens
whistled. Personally he was in charge of three small production
companies that serviced his father's near-space development
corporation, but they were minnows—sops his father had given
him to keep him quiet; more a hobby than a job. He was an engineering
graduate and the eldest of them at twenty-eight, but in himself he
felt like a boy still, playing when he should have been acting in the
world. "Three,
there are Trusts we could borrow against. Even at the most
pessimistic rate we could expect to raise something like fifteen
million yuan." Parker
interrupted him. "They'd know." He laughed briefly, then
shook his head. "Don't you see? If we set about realizing all of
this they'd know at once that we were up to something." Lever
smiled. "Good. Then you're thinking about it seriously?" The
young man sat back, chewing on some imaginary straw, then nodded. But
there was a hesitancy in what he said next. "I think I see what
you're getting at. We have the money, so that's not it. That's not
our key, right? Because we can't use money against them. TheyVe got
it tightly bottled up as far as money's concerned." Kustow
came forward and leaned over the table, facing him. "That's
right. But the very fact that we have the money gives us an
edge. The fact that if we wanted to, we could call on some forty to
fifty million between us, that gives us power." Stevens
took his hand from his mouth. "I don't see it, Bryn. How? If we
can't use it, how does it help us?" Kustow
half turned and looked at Lever. Again, Lever nodded. Slowly, Kustow
straightened up, then, without another word, he left the room. "What's
going on?" Parker asked, laughing uncertainly. "What is
this, Michael? Some kind of revolutionary cell we're forming here?" Lever
looked at him calmly and nodded. "That's just what it is, Jack.
But we're joining, not forming it." Stevens
had tilted back his head and was scratching beneath his neck. For a
moment he said nothing, then, slowly, he began to laugh, his laughter
getting stronger. "Well, I'll be. . . ." Kustow
was standing in the doorway again. "Gentlemen, I want you to
meet an old school friend of mine. A man who, we hope, will someday
make America great again." He stood back, letting a tall,
dark-haired man step past him, into the room. Stevens
had stopped laughing. Parker, beside him, gasped and half rose from
his seat. "Hello,"
said Joseph Kennedy, smiling and putting out his hand. "It's
good to meet you. Bryn's told me a lot about you two." kennedy
leaned BACK in his chair and stretched out his arms, yawning and
laughing at the same time. The table in front of him was cluttered
with half-filled glasses and empty wine bottles. Around the table the
young men joined in his laughter, pausing to suck on their cigars or
drain a glass, the air dense with cigar smoke. They
had all known Kennedy, of course. You could hardly grow up in the
North American Above and not know the Kennedys. Even after the fall
of the Empire, a Kennedy had overseen the period of transitional
government and, through his influence and skill, had prevented the
great tragedy from becoming a debilitating catastrophe. This was that
man's great-great-grandson, a figure familiar from the elite MedFac
channels. When his father had died, eight years back, he had
inherited one of the biggest legal firms on the East Coast and had
not hesitated to step into his father's shoes at once. Now, however,
it seemed he was tired of the legal game. He wanted something bigger
to take on. Which
was why he was there, speaking to them. Joseph
Kennedy was a big, good-humored man, handsome in the way that all the
Kennedys were handsome, but with something else behind the good
looks; something that made people look at him with respect, perhaps
even with a degree of awe. He was powerful and charismatic, like an
animal in some ways, but supremely intelligent with it. His mind
missed nothing, while his eyes seemed to take in more than the
surface of things. Though
he was a good six years older than the men he had come to meet, there
was a youthfulness about him that made him seem one of them. He had
made them at ease quickly and with a skill that was as much inherited
as his vast personal fortune. But he did not play upon his charm. In
fact, the opposite was true. When he spelled out what it was he
wanted from them, he made certain that they knew the cost of their
involvement. It would be bad, he told them. In all likelihood they
would be disinherited before the year was out, estranged from their
families. At worst there was the possibility that they would be dead.
The stakes were high, and only a fool went blindly into such a
game. That
said, however, he reminded them of their breeding, and of
what there was to gain. "Freedom,"
he said. "Not just for you, but for all men. Freedom from the
old men who chain you, but also freedom from the Seven." "We
will make deals," he said. "At first our enemies will think
us friends, or, at worst, accomplices. But in time they will come to
know us as we really are. And
then they'll find us worse than in their darkest dreams." And
when he said that he paused and looked at them, each in turn,
measuring how each one faced him and then, as if satisfied, nodded to
himself. There
was more, much more, but in essence they knew what he wanted of them.
Loyalty. Obedience when the time came. Support— covert at
first, but then, when he asked it of them, out in the open. When the
time was right they would mobilize all their resources; four out of
hundreds across the great continent who would rise up and change the
face of North American politics for all time. Behind
them were discussions about the Edict, about the immortality
treatments and the latest terrorist attacks in Europe. Now, at the
tail end of the evening, they were talking of other things. Of women
and ball games and mutual friends. Kennedy had been telling them an
anecdote about a certain Representative and the daughter of a Minor
Family. It was scandalous and close to the knuckle, but their
laughter showed no fear. They were as one now; wedded to the cause.
And when, finally, Kennedy left, they each shook his hand and bowed
their heads, mock solemn, like soldiers, but also like friends. "Was
he always like that?" Stevens asked Kustow when he had gone. "I
mean, was he like that at College, when you knew him?" Kustow
stubbed out his cigar and nodded. "Always. If we had a problem
we went to him, not to one of the teachers or the Head. And he would
always sort it out." He smiled, reminiscing. "We idolized
him. But then, in my second year, he left, and everything changed." There
was a moment's silence, an exchange of glances. "Does
anyone fancy a meal?" Parker said, breaking the silence. "I
don't know about you guys, but I'm starving." "Sure,"
Kustow said, looking to Stevens, who nodded. "And you, Michael?" Michael
hesitated, then shook his head. "Another time, maybe. Right now
IVe got to sort something out." "Mary?" He
looked back at Kustow, wondering how he knew, then laughed. "I
spoke to her earlier. Said I'd see her sometime this afternoon. I..." There
was a hammering at the outer door. "What
the hell?" Kustow said, turning to face the sound. "Do
you think. . . ?" Stevens began, looking to Michael. "No,"
Michael said quietly as the hammering came again. "But whoever
it is, they sure as hell want to see someone in a hurry." He
went across quickly and slid the door back, then strode out across
the plush expanse of carpet in the reception room. The three men
followed him, standing in the doorway, watching as he slid back the
bolt and stood back, pulling the double doors open. Outside,
in the dimly lit corridor, stood a Han. A tall Han in plain green
silks with mussed hair and a distraught expression. "T'ai
Cho!" Michael said, surprised. "What in the gods' names are
you doing here?" "It's
Kim!" T'ai Cho said breathlessly, grasping Michael's arm. "He's
been arrested!" "Arrested?
For what?" "At
the Patents Office! They say he stole the patent he was trying to
register! You have to do something, Shih Lever! You must!" "What
is this, Michael?" Parker asked, but Kustow touched his arm and
gave him a look, as if to say "leave it." "I'll
come," he said, looking across at Kustow. "Bryn, will you
get word to Mary. Tell her that I've been delayed. I..." He
turned back. "T'ai Cho ... has Kim got legal help?" "No
... no, he .. ." "Okay."
He patted T'ai Cho's arm, as if to reassure him, then looked back at
Kustow. "Do you know where Kennedy was off to, Bryn?" "Just
home, I think." "Good.
Then contact him. Tell him I need him. Tell him . . . tell him a good
friend of mine is in trouble and that I'd appreciate his advice and
help." Kustow
smiled and nodded. "And
Bryn . . . tell Mary that I'll see her when I can." "So
what happened?" Kim
had been standing at the far end of the bare detention room, facing
away from where Michael Lever was sitting on a narrow, pull- down
bench, but at Michael's words he turned and came across, kneeling
beside the taller man. "It
was my bookkeeper, Nong Yan," he said, looking up into Michael's
face. "It had to be." "How
do you know?" Kim
shrugged. "No one else saw it. No one else had even the vaguest
idea what I was working on. Even so, I don't know how he did it. He
could only have had the briefest glimpse of it. I. . ." Again
his eyes drifted off, as they had once or twice already; as if this
were a scientific puzzle, to be analyzed and solved. Not that it
really mattered now. In
less than three hours it had all come apart. The patent was
gone—stolen—and with it any chance of securing terms from
the Hang Yu Credit Agency. Indeed, news had reached the bankers fast,
for a handwritten message had reached Kim an hour back, expressing
the regretful apologies of the Brothers Hang. But that was not all.
Acting on the news, Kim's present bankers had recalled their
development loan and taken immediate action to recover the debt,
stripping the facility of all its equipment. At the same time, news
had come that a third party had bought up all of the surrounding
units—units Kim had made offers for only days before—at
four times the normal rental, effectively preventing any physical
expansion of Kim's operation. Not that it made any difference now. "I
should have realized. . ." he said, after a moment. "Realized
what I was up against." "My
father, you mean?" Kim
nodded. "He's toyed with us both, neh? And for what? In my case,
so that he might use me to pursue some addlebrained notion of
postponing the inevitable. Even though I couldn't do it." "He
thinks you could. He thinks you could find a way of prolonging life.
Of extending it, three, four hundred years. Maybe indefinitely." Kim
took a long breath, then looked up again, his expression suddenly
intense, his eyes burning. "Technically,
perhaps. But that's not what I mean. I couldn't do it because I
couldn't do it. I wouldn't let myself. The consequences are
unthinkable. Once in my life already IVe meddled in things that
should have been left well alone, but this time I have a choice. So
no. The
dream of living forever must remain just that. A dream. I mean, just
think of it! Unlink the great chain of being, and what would follow?
It would be a curse, Michael. Nothing but a curse!" Michael
shuddered, then looked away, disturbed by this sudden glimpse of the
young man's potency; by the dark, intense power locked away in his
taut, diminutive form. "So
what will you do now?" Kim
smiled. "It depends on what your friend Kennedy can arrange. I
was going to go to Europe next week, but what's the point? Whatever I
do, your father blocks me. He's obsessed." "You
should go," Michael said quietly. "Really, Kim. You can't
let him beat you. This . . ."He shivered, then stood, beginning
to pace the room. "He's been like this all his life. If he
wanted something, he'd get it, no matter what. If someone stood in
his way, he'd crush them. And no thought for the consequences. Once .
. . not long ago, really ... I thought that that was how things were.
That it was normal to behave that way. But now . . ." He
stopped, turning to look back at Kim. "Look, Kim. If I could
help you, I would. You know that. Whatever you needed. But he's
fucked me too. Boxed me in. It's how he works. Destroy and control.
There's no subtlety to him. No compromise, either. But he doesn't
have to win. Not unless we let him." Kim
smiled. "Okay. I'll go to Europe. Just as soon as all the legal
stuff's sorted out. But I'm finished here. Look . . ." He
took the four handwritten letters from his pocket and handed them
across. Michael studied them a moment, then looked up again, his eyes
pained. The stamped timings on the resignation letters showed they
had come within an hour of his arrest. Kim took them back from
Michael, staring at them a moment, as if they were a mystery he
couldn't solve, then pocketed them again. "I
keep trying to tell myself that it's understandable. That I'd do the
same. But it's not true. I..." He looked away, close, suddenly,
to breaking down. "What's happening, Michael? What in the gods'
names is happening?" "It's
this world," Michael answered softly. "That's why we have
to change it. You in your way, me in mine. WeVe got to fight the old
men who want to keep things as
they are. Every step of the way. Because if we don't. . ." There
was a knocking on the door. A moment later a lock drew back and the
door swung inward. It was Kennedy. Behind him two men stood to
attention, like an honor guard. "Michael
. . . Kim . . ." Kennedy stepped into the room, tall and
imperious, offering his hand for Kim to take. "Okay. It's all
dealt with. I've filed bail for fifty thousand yuan, so you're
free to go. However, the hearing has been brought forward, to eleven
tomorrow morning. Which means we'll have to get our act together,
fast." "So
what do we do?" Kennedy
smiled broadly. "We produce files. Experimental notes and the
like. Things that'll prove beyond all doubt that the patent's your
development." Kim
shook his head. "They don't exist. It was all up here, in my
head." "All.
. ." Kennedy gave a small laugh, then looked to Michael. "I
guess you were right, Michael. He is different." "Even
so," Kim said, as Kennedy returned his attention to him. "I
doubt that theyVe got anything either. In fact, I'd guarantee that
they don't even understand yet what theyVe got, let alone how it
works." "I
see. But how do we use that? The burden of proof is on us, not them.
They registered first. We're the ones in default." "Unless
we counterclaim? Sue them for false registration?" Kennedy
smiled, the smile growing broader by the moment. "Hey, now
that's a good idea. A very, very good idea." But
Michael was shaking his head. "It's not on, Joe. I mean, Kim's
broke. How can he sue when he's broke?" "Maybe,"
Kennedy answered. "But I'm not. And I'm sure as hell not letting
your father get away with this one, Michael. Unless youVe any
personal objections?" Michael
looked down, then looked back at the two men, smiling. "No. None
at all, as it happens." "Good.
Then let's go and get something to eat and talk this through.
Somewhere where your father will get to hear of it. The Kitchen,
maybe." Kim
stared at Kennedy a moment, then nodded. "Yes," he said
quietly, remembering the first time he had visited Archimedes
Kitchen, and Old Man Lever's joke about the shark meat they had
eaten. Well, now he knew. Finally he understood what the Old Man had
meant that evening. They had stripped him bare. Down to the bone.
Even so, he had lost nothing. Nothing of substance, anyway. So maybe
this was a good thing. To be taught this lesson. To progress from it
and build anew. And maybe having the wiring implant put in—maybe
that too was serendipitous. Maybe that too was meant. He
gave a little shudder. Just for now he was beaten. Things here were
finished for him. But now was not forever. He turned, looking about
him at the bareness of the room, remembering all the times he'd been
incarcerated, then, smiling, put out a hand, touching Michael's arm. "Okay.
Let's go and be seen." SOUCEK
STOOD in the mouth of the cave, watching while Lehmann moved among
the deep shadows within, gathering together his belongings. Out here
he was afraid—possibly more afraid than he had ever been—but
he showed nothing, conscious that Lehmann was watching him. To his
back was the slope, that awful uneven surface, shrouded in
treacherous whiteness, that in places fell sheer a thousand ch'i
to the rocks and icy water below. He would not look there, not
now, lest his courage fail him. No, the warm darkness of the cave was
more to his liking—to the habit of his being. He had never,
until two hours back, set forth beyond the City's walls. Had never
suspected that such a place as this existed. But now he knew. This
was where Lehmann had come from. This place of cold and ice and
fearful openness. Lehmann
moved quickly, almost effortlessly about the interior of the cave,
taking things from ledges and from small niches hacked into the rock
face. Weapons and clothing, tools and food, and, most surprising of
all, a complex communications system—unlike anything Soucek had
ever seen—in an all-weather case, the logo of SimFic impressed
into the hard plastic in the bottom right-hand corner. "That's
it," Lehmann said, coming out into the brightness once again.
"I'll destroy the rest, then we can get out of here." Soucek
moved back, taking care with his footing, recalling how unpleasant it
had been to fall, then watched as Lehmann set the timer on a small
device and gently lobbed it into the cave. He turned at once, as if
unconcerned, and began trudging back up the mountainside, following
the ragged line of deep indentations they had made in the snow coming
down. Soucek followed, glancing back once and then a second time.
They were thirty ch'i up the slope when it blew, the sound
startlingly loud, echoing back and forth between the great peaks,
rock fragments scattered far into the valley below. Soucek stopped,
looking about him anxiously, his fear getting the better of him
momentarily. Across from him, half a U distant on the facing
slope, a huge spoon-shaped wedge of snow slid, slowly, as if a giant,
invisible hand were scooping it up, then settled, throwing up a fine
cloud of whiteness, the snow packed high against the tree line. Soucek
turned, looking up the slope at Lehmann. The albino stood there,
perfectly at ease, gazing about him, an expression of awe—
something Soucek had never expected to see on that narrow, unsmiling
face—transforming his features, making him almost handsome. And
Soucek, seeing that, understood. Here was Lehmann's home. This his
element. Yes, it was this, this fearful emptiness, that had formed
him; that was reflected in the icy mirror of his being. It was from
here that he drew his strength, and it was this—this place of
stone and ice and sky—that made him singular; made him utterly
different from the rest. Soucek
turned back, forcing himself to look around, fighting down the fear
that threatened to engulf him, trying—wilting himself—to
see it as Lehmann saw it. And for a moment, for a single, fleeting
moment, he saw the beauty, the sheer inhuman beauty of it all. "Look!"
Lehmann said, his voice strangely excited. "There, Jiri! There,
above that peak to the far left of us." Soucek
turned, looking, shielding his eyes against the brightness of the
sky. For a moment he saw nothing, nothing but the empty peaks, the
pale blue sky, and then he spotted it—saw the dark speck
circling high above the point of rock. "It's
an eagle, Jiri. A T'ang among birds! Look how magnificent
it is." But
Soucek had turned, and was watching Lehmann, seeing only him; seeing
only how powerful the man seemed, here in his natural element. "Yes,"
he answered. "Magnificent." whiskers
lu's "red pole," Po Lao, had left ten minutes back, having
shouted at Lehmann for the best part of an hour. Now Lehmann sat
there, at his desk, silent, staring at his hands. Soucek, standing in
the doorway, could feel the tension in the room. They were all
there—all of his lieutenants—and all had witnessed the
dressing-down Po Lao had given him. He had expected Lehmann to act—to
answer Po Lao with a knife or a gun, perhaps—but he had done
nothing, merely stared incuriously at the man as he ranted, letting
him spend his fury in words. And
there was no doubting that Po Lao had been furious. He had
been waiting for them on their return, sat in Lehmann's chair, his
feet up on Lehmann's desk, his runners scattered about the corridors,
making sure Lehmann's men made no move against him. And for once the
legendary patience of Po Lao had given way to temper, and to an
outburst of anger that was a clear sign that Whiskers Lu had been
riding him hard. Lehmann
had opposed nothing Po Lao had said, yet there had been a stillness
to him—a rocklike imperviousness—that had impressed even
Po Lao in the end. Soucek had seen it with his own eyes. He noted how
the Red Pole's eyes went time and again to Lehmann's face, conscious
after a while that here was a man he could not intimidate. And with
that realization he had lowered his voice and become more reasonable,
more conciliatory, until, at the end, it had seemed almost as though
he and Lehmann had come to some strange, unspoken agreement between
them. For a
moment longer Lehmann sat there, deep in thought, then, with a
strange, almost lazy motion, he drew a sheet of hardprint toward him
and, taking the ink brush from the pot, drew the schematic outline of
a running dog on the back of the paper, the figure
starkly black against the white. He looked up, his eyes moving
from face to face, as if measuring each of them, then, taking his
knife from his belt, he nicked the top of his right index finger, so
that a bead of blood appeared. Slowly, applying the gentlest pressure
to the cut, he placed the tip of his finger against the paper,
drawing a bright red circle about the figure of the dog. Soucek,
watching, looked about him, seeing the understanding, the sudden
excitement in every face and felt his heart begin to hammer in his
chest. OLD
MAN LEVER turned from the screen, speechless with fury, then hurled
his goblet into the old stone fireplace. As a
servant scrambled to clear up the shattered glass, the old man paced
the room like a wounded cat, cursing, his eyes blazing, oblivious, it
seemed, of the men who stood in the shadows to either side, watching. "How
could he?" Lever said, stopping before the screen once more.
"How dare he!" He clenched a fist and raised it,
looking about him, as if searching for something to hit out at. "And
Kennedy . . . what's Kennedy's involvement in this?" There
were blank expressions on all sides, shrugs and apologetic bows. But
no one knew. This had come as a surprise to them all. Lever
raised his voice. "Does no one know anything?" "There
are rumors that Kennedy plans to move into politics," Curval
answered, stepping out from beside one of the pillars. Lever
fixed him with one eye. "Politics?" "They
say he wants to form his own party. To challenge the old guard when
the House reopens." Lever
studied the geneticist a moment, then began to laugh; a scornful,
dismissive laughter that was like the braying of a wild beast. In an
instant the big room was filled with laughter as Lever's men joined
in, sharing his joke. But beneath the laughter was relief that the
old man's rage had been defused, his anger deflected. For the time
being. "Politics!"
the old man exclaimed, wheezing with amusement. "Who would have
believed it? And my son?" He turned back, facing
Curval again, his eyes suddenly much colder. "Is my son
involved in this?" Curval
shrugged. "I wouldn't have said it was Michael's thing. But if
Kennedy stood bail for Ward, maybe there's something in it. I mean,
why else should he get involved?" Lever
stared at him a moment longer, then went across and sat down behind
his desk. For a while he simply sat there, deep in thought, then,
looking up, he set to work. "Okay.
Harrison... I want you to find out all you can about young Kennedy
and his plans. James ... I want a team posted to cover my son's
activities. I want to know where he is and what he's doing every hour
of the day from now on, understand? Robins ... I want you to compile
a list of all Kennedy's contacts—business and personal—
along with their financial strengths and weaknesses. Spence ... I
want you to take over the winding up of Ward's business affairs. I
don't want any last-minute hitches, okay? Good. And you, Cook, I want
you to find out a bit more about this trip to Europe our young friend
is apparently making. I want to know if he has any plans to set up
over there. If he has, 1 want to know who he meets and what's
agreed." Curval
stepped forward, catching Lever's eye. "And my meeting with the
boy? Is that still on?" Lever
shook his head. "Not now. Later perhaps. When things are better
known. Right now it might prove . . . counterproductive, let's say.
Ward has ridden this one. He's survived. Right now he has friends,
supporting him, buoying him up. But that won't last. Besides, there's
nowhere for him to go now. No one to turn to after this. We have only
to isolate him once more. To harry him, like dogs at his heels, until
he tires and falls. And then . . ." Lever smiled, broadly,
savagely, like some wild thing scenting victory. "And then we'll
have him." , SOUCEK
STOOD THERE over the cot, rocking it gently, cooing to the
now-sleeping child. Across from him, Lehmann was tidying the room.
The woman lay face down on the bed, as if asleep, the single stiletto
wound to the back of the neck hidden beneath her long black hair. Lehmann
had explained nothing, simply told him to come. As on
the last occasion, when they had gone outside, Lehmann had
taken him into the service shafts, this time climbing the pipes
fifty, maybe a hundred levels, until Soucek had begun to wonder
whether they were going up to the roof itself. But then Lehmann had
turned off, following the map in his head, finding his footing
easily, confidently. They had come out thirty ch'i from here,
in a maintenance corridor. There Lehmann had handed him a uniform
from his pack, then put one on himself. The orange of deck
maintenance. ID in hand, he had come directly to this door, as if
he'd done it several times before, and knocked. There had been the
sound of a baby crying, a woman's spoken query, and then they were
inside, Lehmann talking to the woman, reassuring her. A moment later
she was dead. Soucek
had watched as Lehmann turned the woman over. He had taken a thin
sheet of printout from his pocket—a sheet with her picture on
it—and checked it against her. Then, satisfied, he had lifted
her and placed her facedown on the bed. When the baby began to cry
halfheartedly, Lehmann had turned, looking directly at Soucek, and
made a rocking gesture. What
are we doing here? Soucek wondered, looking about him. It was a
normal Mid-Level apartment, modestly furnished. And the woman. She
was simply a wife, a mother. So what the fuck was Lehmann up to? What
did he want here? His
answer came a moment later. There were footsteps outside in the
corridor, then a brisk knocking and a cheerful call. "Sweetheart!
It's me! I'm home!" Lehmann
signaled for Soucek to go out into the kitchen, then went across.
Moving to one side of the door, he pressed the lock. As it hissed
back and the man came into the room, Lehmann moved between him and
the door, his knife drawn. He was
a tall, almost cadaverously thin man, with dark, short-cut hair and
of roughly the same height and build as Lehmann. "Becky?"
he asked, confused, seeing the woman on the bed, apparently asleep.
Then, understanding that someone else must have operated the door
lock, he jerked around. Soucek,
watching from the kitchen, saw, in the mirror on the far side of the
room, the look of horror in the man's face; saw Lehmann glance at a
second paper. Then, letting the paper fall from his hand, he
leaned in toward the man, as if embracing him. A moment later, the
man fell back, the smallest sound of surprise escaping his lips. As
Lehmann knelt over the body, Soucek stepped out into the room again. "Who
is he?" "There,"
Lehmann said, concentrating on what he was doing. "The paper on
the floor." Soucek
went across and picked it up. It was a printout giving brief personal
details of the man. Thomas Henty. Hung Moo. Married. One child. Age
thirty. A technician. Soucek turned back, looking across, then
grimaced. Lehmann was using a narrow scalpel now, and was carefully
cutting the man's eyes from his head. As Soucek watched, he severed
the optical nerve and gently dropped the eyeball into a special
tubelike carrier he had taken from his pack. There was the faintest
hiss as the soft eye slid into the cold compartment, then the lid
clicked over. Moments later the other eye joined its companion in the
narrow box. Eyes.
He was stealing the man's eyes. "What
about the child?" Lehmann
leaned back, looking across at Soucek. "Forget the child. He's
dead. They're all dead now." And, as if in explanation, Lehmann
took a small device from his pack—an incendiary—and,
setting the timer for sixty seconds, placed it between the two
corpses on the bed. "Quick
now," he said, going across to the door. "We've another
call to make and only forty minutes to get there." But
Soucek paused at the door, looking back into the room. The sight of
the dead couple on the bed and the soft snuffling of the sleeping
child tore unexpectedly at his feelings. For the briefest moment, he
stood there, as if paralyzed, wondering what special torments the
demons of hell would have in store for him when his life above the
Yellow Springs was done. Then, with a tiny shudder, he turned away,
following Lehmann out into the corridor. THAT
NIGHT the dream came once again. Again,
as once before, she stood alone upon that tilted, shattered land,
trapped beneath a low, impenetrable sky of steel. It was dark, an
oppressive, elemental darkness lit now and then by sudden
flashes of light. All about her the storm raged violently, growling
and shrieking at her with a voice of primal evil. Before, she had
felt only fear; a gut-wrenching fear that had rooted her to the spot.
This time, however, it was not fear she felt but excitement. Excitement,
and a sense of expectation. Beneath
her the tower slowly climbed the slope, its wooden, spi-derish limbs
folding and stretching inexorably, its dark mouth grunting and
wheezing as it came on. With each searing flash of light she saw it
gain on her, its shattered, glasslike eyes glittering malevolently,
its jagged, toothless maw crammed with splintered bone. Closer
it came, and closer yet, and as its foul breath rolled up the hill
toward her, she cried out, her voice high and clear above the noise
of the storm. There was a moment's silence, a moment's utter
stillness, and then, as once before, the earth between her and the
tower cracked and split. She
shivered, watching, knowing what would come. Knowing and yet fearful
in case, this time, it would be different. Slowly,
like a shadow forming from the dark mouth of the earth, he emerged: a
stooped little creature with short, strong limbs and eyes that burned
like coals. Turning, he looked at her, his wet, dark skin glowing
with an inner light. She
smiled, greeting him, recognizing him for the first time. It was Kim. For a
moment he was still, watching her, his dark yet fiery eyes seeming to
pierce her to the bone. And then, slowly, his lips parted in a smile,
like a pocket opening in the blackness of his face, light—a
brilliant, burning light—spilling out, falling like molten gold
from the mouth of a furnace. He
smiled, and then, with an agility that surprised her, he spun about,
facing the tower, his arms held up before him, as if to ward it off. "Avodya!"
he said clearly. "Avodya!" Slowly
the tower heaved itself up, creaking beneath its own bloated weight,
a furious whispering and muttering coming from within its hideous
maw. Then, with a rush, it came up the slope at him, its cracked eyes
glinting, its thin legs straining, a low moan rising to a screech as
it ran. "Avodya!" On it
came and on, rushing at him through the half-dark. On, like some
vast, unstoppable machine, until, with a fearsome cry, it threw
itself at him. And as
it fell, the darkness seemed to explode. Where the small, dark
creature stood was now a web of brilliant, coruscating light that
pulsed between the fingers of his outstretched arms. Slowly,
ever so slowly, the tower fell, tumbling, shrieking, into the fierce,
pure fire of the web. And where it touched it sparked and vanished,
flickering into nothingness. For a
moment longer, its shrieks echoed across the shattered land, flapping
like bats against the ceiling of the sky. Then, as they faded, a
pure, high ringing tone grew, until it filled the sudden stillness. She
blinked and looked, but he was gone. Slowly, fearfully, she went
across. The earth whence he'd come no longer gaped, but was smooth
and seamless. And beyond it, there where he'd stood—there,
where the tower had tumbled shrieking into the fiery web—was
nothing. Nothing but a huge circle of ash. Jelka
shuddered and then woke, remembering. Kalevala and the storm. And the
morning after—the circle of darkness in the woods and the seven
charred tree stumps. And Kim. All of it linked somehow. All of it
tied in to the future. But how or why she did not know. Not yet. CHAPTER
NINE
Plucked
Eyes and Severed Heads Tolonen
was stripped to the waist, exercising, when Kim came into the room.
He turned, nodding to Kim, then continued with his routine, bending
to touch his toes, then throwing his arms up above his head, twisting
his torso once, twice to either side, before ducking down again. It
was a vigorous, impressive routine that even a much younger man would
have found strenuous, but at seventy-five the old man made it look
easy. He was in fine physical condition and, but for the bright,
golden sheen of his artificial arm, he seemed in perfect health. Kim
waited, watching respectfully, in silence. Only when the old man had
finished and was standing there, toweling himself down, did he cross
the room and stand by the broad oak desk that dominated the study. "Hello
there," Tolonen said, coming across. "How are you, boy?" He
reached out with his good hand and held Kim's hand a moment, meeting
his eyes squarely, challengingly, as he always did. "I'm
fine," Kim answered, taking the seat the Marshal offered him. "I
wasn't sure you'd have time to see me." Tolonen
smiled, making his way around to the other side of the desk.
"Nonsense. You're always welcome here." Kim
bowed. "Thank you. But I wouldn't dream of keeping you from your
business." The
old man laughed. "There's no chance of that, my boy. I’ve
got to be off in twenty
minutes. Li Yuan himself has summoned me. I'll have to shower and
change before then, but we've time for a chat, neh?" Tolonen
turned, taking a tunic from the back of the big, leather-backed
chair, then pulled it on in one swift motion. To Kim, watching
wide-eyed from his chair, he seemed like a god, there was so much
power and authority in every movement. He
turned back, facing Kim again, and sat, leaning toward Kim across the
broad expanse of the desk's surface. "So how's business? Did you
finally get around to registering those patents?" Kim
hesitated, not wishing to burden the old man with his problems.
"There were difficulties," he said, after a moment.
"Complications with the patent. . ." "Complications?"
Tolonen sat back slightly. "You mean the thing didn't work,
after all? But you were so confident." "No
. . ." Again Kim held back, loath to discuss the matter. But
Tblonen was staring at him now, curious. "The device works.
That's not the problem. The problem is that someone beat me to it.
They registered a day before me." "I
didn't think anyone was working on the same lines. I thought you
said. . ." Tolonen stopped, his face changing, suddenly
realizing what Kim was actually saying. "But that's outrageous!
Does Li Yuan know of this?" "Not
yet." "Then
maybe he ought. We should do something . . ." Kim
looked down, shaking his head. "Forgive me, Marshal, but I would
rather the T'ang knew nothing of this. He has much on his mind as it
is. Besides, the problem is mine, not his, and I shall find ways and
means to solve it." Tolonen
stared back at the young man a moment, taking in his words, then gave
an emphatic nod. "All right. But if this should happen again . .
." "I'll
let you know . . ." Kim smiled. "But enough of my troubles.
How did your investigations go?" Tolonen
gave a small sigh and put his hands together, metal and flesh
interlaced. "They say that those who look shall find, neh? I can
say very little just now, I'm afraid. I..." He stopped, studying
Kim's face a moment, then
reached into the drawer to his left and took out a slender computer
file, placing it on the desk between them. "Can
I trust you to be discreet, Kim?" Kim
narrowed his eyes. "This has to do with what you found?" "It
has. At present only three people know what is in that file. With
yourself and the T'ang, it'll make five. And so it must remain, for
the time being. You understand me?" "I
understand." "Good.
Then take the file and read it. And let me know what you think. In
return I shall have a special team investigate this matter of the
patent." He lifted a hand to still Kim's objections. "I
heard what you said, my boy, and I respect you for it, but sometimes
it does not hurt to have a little outside help, neh? All I ask is
that you keep the information in that folder to yourself and return
it once you have had time to consider its significance." Kim
leaned toward the old man, about to ask him about the file, when the
door to his right swung open and Jelka came hurrying into the room.
She was talking, already three or four steps into the room, when she
stopped and fell silent, realizing that her father was not alone. She
bowed her head. "Forgive me, Father. I didn't realize you had
company." Jelka
turned, looking across at Kim. He was sitting there, like a
large-eyed child in the big, tall-backed chair, the very smallness of
him making her frown involuntarily, then look back at her father. Kim
smiled, amused, not hurt by her reaction. Across from him, Tolonen
stood, turning to his daughter with a kindly, indulgent smile. "This
is Kim," he said. "Kim Ward. A valued servant of Li Yuan.
And this, Kim, is my daughter, Jelka." Kim
stood, offering his hand, seeing how she had to bend slightly to take
it. Her hand was warm, its pressure firm against his own, enclosing
his, her eyes friendly, welcoming. "I
know who Kim is, Daddy," she said, releasing Kim's hand. "He
was on the Project." Kim's
eyes widened, surprised that she remembered. But Tolonen merely
laughed. "Of
course! I'm forgetting, aren't I?" He came around, putting an
arm about his daughter's shoulders. "Why, you might
almost say that she found you, Kim, after the attack. We had given up
any hope of finding survivors, but Jelka insisted that you'd escaped.
She made us search the vent for signs that you'd got out that way.
And you know what? She was right!" Kim
stared, his mouth open. He hadn't known. He
looked down, suddenly abashed. That first time he had seen her—when
she had come with her father to visit the Wiring Project—he had
stared at her in awe, thinking her some kind of goddess. Never, even
in his wildest imaginings, had he thought she would remember him. But
she had. More than that, she had made them look for him. Kim
looked down at his hand. He could still feel the gentle warmth, the
firm but pleasant pressure of her hand enclosing his, and shivered,
surprised once more by the strength of what he felt. And when he
looked up, it was to find her watching him still, a strange intensity
in her vividly blue eyes. The
file lay on the desk beside him. For a brief moment both men had
forgotten it, but now Tolonen reminded Kim, pointing to it. "Take
it with you, Kim. And look at it closely. You don't have to answer at
once. The end of the week will be soon enough." Kim
stared at the file a moment, then, impulsively, answered the old man.
"I don't need that long. I'll give you my answer tomorrow."
He smiled. "Whatever Li Yuan wants, I'll do. If lean. . ." At
that Tolonen laughed, and, as if letting his daughter in on a joke,
began to explain. "Kim here is a physicist. Our experts say he's
the best, despite his years. Maybe the best weVe ever had." He
could see how she glanced at him, then back at her father, as if she
couldn't quite take it in. Indeed, to Kim, sitting there watching
her, nothing seemed more implausible than the fact that men like
Tolonen and Li Yuan should need him, seeing in him something that
they could not match, and using words like "the best." To
the part of him that was Claybom—that had come up from the
darkness beneath the City—it seemed absurd. And when this girl,
so tall and beautiful that she seemed somehow unreal, narrowed her
eyes and asked him if it were true, if he was the best, he
could only laugh at her and nod, watching
her face change slowly until it mirrored his own delight at the
absurdity of things. "If
I can. . ." Tolonen murmured, echoing Kim's words, then laughed.
But Kim didn't hear. He was still staring at the girl, seeing how she
looked away from him, then back, something strange happening in her
face even as he watched. He
looked down at the unopened file and nodded to himself. But the
gesture had nothing to do with what was in the folder. Had nothing to
do with physics, or projects, or Li Yuan's needs. It was the girl. In
an instant he had decided something, irrevocably and without further
doubt. He would not rest. Not until he had married her. IN THE
IMPERIAL SHOWER ROOM of Tongjiang, the maids of the inner household,
Fragrant Lotus and Bright Moon, were preparing to wash the young
T'ang's hair. Taking soft woolen towels from the big cupboards above
the sinks, they laid them out beside the glazed bowls of unguents and
shampoos, the silver combs and brushes, the trays of brightly colored
beads and silken thread; then, returning to the sinks, they opened
the great dragon mouths of the taps and sprinkled a fine, nut-brown,
aromatic powder into the steaming crystal fall. As
they worked, Li Yuan watched them from his chair, at the center of
the great tiled floor, enjoying the sight of the two young women, the
sound of the ancient songs they hummed as they busied themselves
about him, the sweet scent of their softly veiled bodies as they
brushed past. He
sighed, for once not merely content but happy. For a long time he had
denied himself such things as this, attempting to harden himself
against the world, but now he understood. This too was part of it.
Without these moments of soft luxury—of surrender to the
senses—there was no balance to life, no joy. And without joy
there could be no real understanding of the flow of things. No
wisdom. For a
long time he had struggled to be what he was not. To be some purer,
finer creature. But it was all in vain. From the day of his betrothal
to Fei Yen, the balance of his life had been lost. Casting off his
maids, he had cast off that part of him that needed warmth and
comfort, a mother's touch. He had tried to shape himself, as a
tailor cuts cloth to make a gown, but the gown he'd made had been too
tight. It had stifled and disfigured him. He
looked down, remembering those times. To have one single, perfect
love; that had been the dream. To have a woman who was all to him,
just as he was all to her—like Yin and Yang, or night and
day—that had been the dream. But the world was not a dream. The
world was harsh and true to itself alone. In it there was falseness
and betrayal, sickness and hatred, cruelty and loss. Loss beyond the
strength of hearts to bear. And
yet there was this. This simple light of joy to set against the
darkness of the times. The joy of a woman's touch, a child's embrace,
the laughter of a loving friend. These simple things, weightless as
they seemed in the great scale of things, were the equal of a hundred
deaths, a thousand cruel blows. Feathers and iron. Joy and grief.
Balanced. Li
Yuan laughed softly, then looked up, conscious suddenly that the
maids had finished and were standing there before him, watching him. "Chieh
Hsia. . ." they said as one and bowed low, their smiles
betraying how much they too enjoyed these moments alone with him. "Here,"
he said, standing and putting out his arms to them. "Hsiang He.
Ywe Hui. Come here, my little blossoms. Come here and tend to me." TOLONEN
WAS WAITING for him in his study, standing by the door to the eastern
garden, his golden hand glinting in the sunlight as he turned to face
his master. "Chieh
Hsia," the old man said, bowing low. "Forgive me if I came
too early." Li
Yuan shook his head and laughed. "Not at all, old friend. The
fault is mine. I spent too long in the shower this morning and now
everything is running late." "Then
I will be brief, Chieh Hsia, and come directly to the point.
You asked me to have my discovery checked out and analyzed. Well, I
now have the preliminary findings and they are most disturbing. Most
disturbing indeed." Li
Yuan looked across and saw the folder on the edge of his desk. "Is
this it here, Knut?" "That
is it, Chieh Hsia. Li
Yuan stared at the Marshal a moment, then went around his desk and
sat. Drawing the thickly padded folder toward him, he flipped it
open. On top of the pile was a picture of the thing he had seen last
time Tolonen had visited him. The thing he'd brought back with him
from North America. In the picture it looked like a giant walnut, the
size of a young child's hand. Just looking at it, Li Yuan could
recall the scent of the original, the dry spicy mustiness of it. A
brain it was. An artificial brain. Smaller and less complex than a
human brain, but a marvel all the same. In many ways it looked like
the brains GenSyn produced for many of their top-range models, but
this was different. GenSyn brains were limited things, grown from
existent genetic material—painstakingly nurtured in baths of
nutrients over a period of years. But this brain had been made.
Designed and built, like a machine. A living machine. When
he had seen it first, a week ago, he had been unimpressed. The thing
was long dead—the only one of five to have remained in its
storage case. But the experimental notes—a small library of
computer records—had been saved intact. Using them, Tolonen had
spent the last week piecing together what had happened. Now, reading
through his summary, Li Yuan felt himself go cold. "Kuan
Yin!" he said, looking up at Tolonen. "What put you onto
this?" The
old man bowed stiffly. "Gaps in the record, Chieh Hsia. Things
that didn't make sense. There was too much wastage of basic
materials, for instance. The percentages were far higher than in
previous years, so I did some digging, found out where the "waste"
was being shipped, and followed the trail. As I suspected, it was
being sold off cheaply, the funds being used to finance a small R and
D establishment in the far south. That's where I found it all.
Untouched. The room sealed up." "A
mistake, do you think?" Tolonen
shook his head. "I think we were just lucky. My guess is that
whatever this was, it was almost ready to go. And the only reason it
didn't is because we hit them first." Li
Yuan frowned. "What do you mean?" "Look
at the dates on the final research entries. They're all late autumn
2007. That's significant. That means this thing was coming to
fruition at the same time that we dealt with Hans Ebert and DeVore.
If I'm right, we settled with them before they could get this under
way. Before they could use one of these things." "I
see. So you think this was Hans Ebert's doing?" Tolonen
sniffed deeply. "I'm certain of it. Not only are his initials on
a number of the documents, but the whole thing has the twisted feel
of one of his schemes. That said, I think he was making these things
up for DeVore. Maybe even to DeVore's specifications. From the
shipping documents we've found, they were going to be shipped to
Mars." "Mars?"
Li Yuan stood, then walked slowly across to the window. "Why
Mars?" Tolonen
turned, watching the young T'ang. "I'm not sure, Chieh Hsia,
but I feel sure it has something to do with those copies that
came in from Mars that time." "But
my father's investigations drew a blank." "Maybe
so. But perhaps we should look again. More thoroughly this time. Send
Karr perhaps." Li
Yuan glanced at him, then looked back out at the sunlit garden.
"Perhaps." Tolonen
hesitated a moment, then spoke again. "There is one other thing,
Chieh Hsia. Something which isn't in the summary. Something
we're still working on." "And
what's that?" "The
brain. It wasn't like anything else GenSyn ever produced. For a
start, it wasn't connected to any kind of spinal cord. Nor did it
have to be sited in a skull. Moreover, it's a lot more compact than a
normal human brain, as if it was designed for something else. It
makes me think that this was only a single component and that the
rest was being made up elsewhere, maybe at sites all over Chung Kuo." "To
be sent to Mars for assembly, you think?" "Maybe."
The old man frowned and shook his head. "Maybe I'm just being
paranoid about this, Chieh Hsia. Maybe it's all dead and gone, like
the brain itself. Maybe we killed it when we killed DeVore. But
I'm not so sure. The fact that this could be built in the first place
worries me immensely. If you were to put a number of these inside Hei
bodies, for instance, you could do a lot of damage. No one would
be safe. Not if those performance statistics are correct." "So
what do you suggest?" "That
you meet with Wu Shih and Tsu Ma and let them know of this at once." "And
the rest of the Council?" Tolonen
shook his head. "For once I think you need to keep things tight.
Master Nan will need to know about this, certainly. But if Wang
Sau-leyan were to find out, who knows what he would do? If this thing
was built once, it could be built again. And in our cousin's hands,
who knows what evil might result?" "That
is so," Li Yuan said quietly. "Yet why not simply destroy
all record of it? That would be simplest, surely?" "Maybe
it would, Chieh Hsia. But can we take the risk? Can we be
certain that these are the only records of the experiments, or are
there copies elsewhere? On Mars, perhaps? Or somewhere else, hidden
away?" Li
Yuan looked down. "So we must live with this?" "It
seems so, Chieh Hsia. At least, until we can be sure." "Sure?"
Li Yuan laughed bleakly, recalling with surprise his earlier mood of
joy. When could they ever be sure? old
MAN LEVER turned, the dark, curly-haired head held firmly between his
broad, square-fingered hands, and smiled. "Well,
what do you think?" Lever
held out the severed head, as if offering it to the three men who
stood before him, but they merely grimaced, their fans fluttering
agitatedly before their faces. "Really,
Charles," one of them, a tall, morose-looking man named Marley,
answered. "It's grotesque. What is it? GenSyn?" Lever
shook his head, but the smile remained in his eyes. He was enjoying
their discomfort. "Not at all. It's real. Or was. As far as I
know there are only three such heads in existence, but this is the
best. Look at it. Look how well preserved it is." As he
thrust the head out toward them, there was a sharp movement back; a
look of revulsion in their faces so profound it was almost comical. Lever
shrugged, then turned the head in his hands, staring down into the
dark, broad features. Lifting it slightly, he sniffed the black,
leathery skin. "It's
beautiful, neh? Slaves they were. Negroes, they called them. They
were brought over to America from Africa four, five centuries ago.
Our forefathers used them like machines, to toil in their fields and
serve in their mansions. They say there were once thousands of them.
Subhuman, of course. You can see that at a glance. But men, all the
same. Bred, not made." Marley
shuddered and turned away, looking about him. The room was cluttered
with packing cases from a dozen different auction rooms, most of them
unopened. But those that were open displayed treasures beyond
imagining. Clothing and furniture, machines and books, statues and
paintings and silverware. Things from the old times none of them had
dreamed still existed. He
turned back. Old Man Lever's eyes were on him again, as if studying
him, gauging his reaction to all this. "I
thought we might have a special exhibition suite at the Institute,
George. What do you think? Something to boost morale. To give us a
renewed sense of our heritage. As Americans." Marley
shot worried glances at his fellows, then looked back at Lever, a
faint quiver in his voice. "An exhibition? Of this?" Lever
nodded. "But
wouldn't that be ... dangerous? I mean. . ." Marleys fan
fluttered nervously. "Word would get out. The Seven would hear
of it. They would see it as a kind of challenge, surely?" Lever
laughed dismissively. "No more than the Waldeseemuller map that
already hangs there. No, and certainly no more of a challenge than
the Kitchen. Besides, what would our friend Wu Shih do if he knew?
What could he do?" Marley
averted his eyes before the fierce, challenging gaze of the other,
but his discomfort was evident. And maybe that was why Lever had
invited them this morning—not to show off his most recent
acquisitions but to sound out their reaction to his scheme. The
ancient map of the world that hung in the great hall of the
Institute, that was one thing, and Archimedes Kitchen and its
anti-Han excesses, that was another. But this—this scheme for
an exhibition, a museum of ancient Americana—was
something else entirely. Was an act of defiance so gross that to
ignore it would be tantamount to condoning it. And Wu
Shih could not afford to condone it. So
why? Why did Lever want to bring things to a head? Why did he want a
confrontation with Wu Shih? Was he still burning at the humiliation
he had suffered on the steps of the ancient Lincoln Memorial, or was
this something else? In setting up this exhibition was he, perhaps,
attempting to create some kind of bargaining counter? Something he
might trade off for some other, more worthwhile concession? Or was
that too subtle a reading of this? Mightn't the old fool simply be
ignorant of the likely result of his proposed action? Marley stared
at the severed Negro head in Old Man Lever's hands and shuddered
inwardly. It would not do to offend Lever, but the alternative for
once seemed just as bad. He met
Lever's eyes firmly, steeling himself to ask the question. "What
do you want, Charles? What do you really want?" Lever
looked down at the head, then back at Marley. "I want us to be
proud again, that's all, George. Proud. We've bowed before these
bastards all our lives. Been their creatures. Done what they
said. But times are changing. We're entering a new phase of
things. And afterward . . ." he lowered his voice, smiling now,
"well, maybe they'll find occasion to bow their heads to us,
neh?" Yes,
Marley thought, or have ours cut from our necks . . . He was
about to speak, about to ask something more of the Old Man, when
there was a banging on the door at the far end of the room. Lever set
the head down carefully, then, with a tight smile that revealed he
was loath to be interrupted, moved past them. While
Lever stood there at the door speaking to his First Steward, Marley
looked to his two companions—like himself, major contributors
to the Institute's funds—and saw his own deep reluctance
mirrored there. But how articulate that? How convey their feelings
without alienating Lever? He
turned, looking back at Lever, and caught his breath, surprised by
the look of unbridled anger in the old man's face. "Send
him up!" Lever barked, dismissing the servant with a curt
gesture. Then, composing himself as well as he could, he turned back,
facing them again. "Forgive
me, ch'un t^u, but my son is here, it seems. I forbade him to come
without my express permission, but he is here nonetheless." "Ah.
. ." Marley looked down, understanding. The rift between Old Man
Lever and his son was common knowledge, but until now he had not
known the depth of their division. Things were bad indeed if Lever
had barred his son from the family home. "Should
we leave, Charles? This matter of the exhibition ... we might speak
of it another time. Over dinner, perhaps?" He had
hoped it would be enough to extricate them from a potentially
embarrassing situation and buy some time to discuss the matter
privately among themselves, but Lever was shaking his head. "No,
George. If the boy has the impertinence to disturb me while I am in
conference with my friends, he is hardly to be rewarded for it with a
private audience, neh?" Marley
bowed his head slightly, the bitterness and determination in Lever's
voice warning him against pursuing the matter. A moment later the son
himself was there in the doorway; a tall, athletic-looking young man
so like his father that they might easily have been taken for
brothers. "Father,"
the young man said, bowing his head dutifully, waiting to be asked
into the room. But Old Man Lever gave no word, made no gesture of
admittance. He merely stood there, stone-faced and implacable. "I
asked you not to come. So why are you here, Michael? What do you
want?" Michael
Lever looked to the three men, then back to his father, as if
expecting something of him. Then, understanding how things were, he
lowered his head again. "I
had to see you, Father. To speak to you. This thing between us . . ."
He hesitated, finding it hard to say the words, then looked up,
meeting his father's eyes. "I wish to be reconciled with you,
Father." Old
Man Lever stood there a moment, unmoving, silent, as if
carved in granite, then, turning away abruptly, he gave a
tight little laugh. A derisory, dismissive laugh. "Then
you will marry Louisa Johnstone, after all?" "Marry
her. . . ?" The younger man faltered, at a loss. He glanced
uncertainly at the others, then took a step toward his father. "But
that's behind us, surely, Father? I'm talking of the future. Of being
your son again, your hands . . ." "My
hands!" Old Man Lever whirled around, his face ugly now, one
angry look from him enough to make his son step back beyond the
room's threshold again. "And if my hands will not do as I ask
them?" He shook his head contemptuously and waved the young man
away. "Pah . . . Go and play with your dreamer friends, boy. Go
sleep with your low-level whores. I'll have nothing to do with you,
boy. Nothing at all!" For a
moment the young man said nothing. Then, with one final, precise
bow—a bow that showed immense self-control—he withdrew.
"So be it, then," he said softly, turning away. "So be
it." But
Marley, standing there, had seen that initial look of angry
bewilderment on the young man's face and knew he had been witness to
a final breach. Whatever the rights and wrongs of this—and
Lever was certainly right to insist that his son obey him—there
was no doubting that the old man had set out to deliberately
humiliate his son, speaking thus to him before those who were not of
his kin. He turned, looking at Lever, expecting to see that stern and
unrelenting expression maintained on his features, and found, to his
surprise, not anger but regret and—underlying all—a hurt
so profound, so all-embracing, that it threatened momentarily to
engulf the old man. For
the briefest unguarded moment it was so, and then, as if a steel door
had slammed down over it, it was gone. "Well,
ch'un tot," Lever said, clearing his throat, "as I
was saying . ,." WHILE
MILNE STOOD at the counter, asking questions of the clerk, Ross
looked about him at the walls and furnishings of the Records Office,
as if they might give some kind of clue. It was
a dirty, shabby place, empty drink-bulbs and crumpled paper
forms littering the spittle-stained floor, while on the walls
of the public space were torn and faded posters, overpainted with
slogans and graffiti, one symbol—a simple black
palmprint—dominating all others. "Who's
this?" Ross asked, leaning over an old Han seated on the bench.
"Are they popular here in Atlanta?" But the ancient stared
straight through him, as if he weren't there. "Terrorists,
I guess," Ross murmured, straightening up and looking about him
once more. Not that there was much to know about places like this.
They were all much of a muchness these days. He
went back across, standing beside Milne at the counter. A young Han
clerk was talking animatedly to Milne in Mandarin, running his finger
along the open page of one of the big official Records books. "So
what have we got?" Ross whispered. "Anything good?" The
clerk glanced at Ross, then, removing his finger, slammed the book
shut. "That's it," he said, in halting English. "That's
all there is." "Shit,"
said Milne quietly. "Just our luck." "What's
the problem?" Milne
looked away nervously. "There was a deck fire, three years back.
All of the local records were destroyed. Backups, too, in a separate
fire. The deck itself was cleared. Reseeded with new settlers. TheyVe
been rebuilding the files ever since, but there's not much. Only what
we've seen already." Ross
looked down. "Hmm. Bit of a coincidence, neh? I mean, when was
the last time you heard of something like that? Two fires?" "It's
not impossible. Fires happen." "Maybe.
But it's all too neat, don't you think? I mean, if you wanted to put
in a sleeper, what better way?" "And
you think that's what happened? You think Mary Jennings is a sleeper
for one of Lever's enemies?" "And
you don't?" Milne
hesitated, then gave a reluctant nod. "Right.
So what we do is this. We find out where the survivors of the fire
were moved to, and then we go and speak to some of them. Find out
what they remember about our friend Mary Jennings. That is, if
they remember anything." Ross turned back, facing the counter
again, a fifty-yuan bill held out between his thumb and
forefinger. "And
then?" Ross
looked back at his partner and smiled. "And then we do something
we should have done right at the start. We make a facial check on our
friend. Not just here in North America, but right across the seven
Cities." He laughed. "It's time we found out just who Mary
Jennings really is." emily
SAT before the mirror in her room, brushing out the long dark tresses
of the wig. It was a tight fit, but that was good. Unlike the other
she had bought, this one looked natural. As well it might, for it
reminded her of how she had once looked, twelve years ago, when she
was seventeen. Seventeen.
It was not long as the world measured things, and yet it seemed
another lifetime. Back then things had seemed so simple. So black and
white. She had known then where she stood in the world and what she
wanted. Meeting Bent Gesell, she had become his woman, faithful to
him alone, sharing his ideals; that vision of a better, purer world.
A world without levels, free of hatred and corruption. For eight
years that vision had sustained her. Had driven her on. But then
Gesell had been seduced: won over by the dream of power DeVore had
seeded in his head. The
vision had died. And yet DeVore had saved her. After the debacle at
Bremen, it had been DeVore who had come to her, offering her a new
identity and a passport to a new life—that same life she had
led these past twenty-one months. Yes,
but what had she done in that time? What achieved? Nothing,
came the answer. For almost two years now she had sat on her hands,
serving her natural enemies, doing nothing for the cause she'd once
believed in. So
maybe it was time to begin anew. To go down the levels and organize
again. She
stood, looking about her at the tiny room. Her bag was packed, her
jacket laid neatly across it. Beside it on the bed rested the second
of the two IDs DeVore had given her. Stooping, she picked it
up and studied the tiny image within. Rachel DeValerian, it
read. Maintenance Engineer. She
smiled. Even Mach knew nothing of this. Only DeVore. And he, if Mach
could be believed, was dead now, his skull smashed into tiny pieces
by the T'ang's man, Karr. Only
she didn't believe that. From what she knew of the man, she couldn't
believe he would have let himself be caught so easily. No. He was out
there somewhere. Waiting. Biding his time. And
Michael? She
sighed. The note had gone by messenger more than three hours back. He
would surely have read it by now. In fact, she had been expecting him
to call these last few hours. But nothing. It was as she'd thought—as
she'd said in the letter—he was too preoccupied with other
things to see what he had done to her. Too bound up in his father's
business. For a while she had thought him cured of all that, changed,
free to pursue his own straight path through life, but she had been
mistaken. Kennedy's visit had opened her eyes to that. Yes,
and the news that he had gone to see his father—to beg
forgiveness and become his "son" again—had hit her
hard. Had woken her to the reality of her life. She
had delayed too long. Had let herself be blinded by her love for him.
Well, now she knew. It was no good waiting for Michael Lever. No use
relying on any man. Surely she had learned that lesson once already
in her life, with Gesell? Even
so, some instinct kept her here, waiting for him to call, to knock on
the door and tell her it was all a mistake. That what he'd said to
her was true. That he had changed. That
he loved her. "Ten
minutes," she said softly to herself, glancing at the timer on
her wrist. Ten more minutes, and then she would go. She
tucked the ID into the inner pocket of the jacket, then went across
and stood before the mirror once again, carefully removing the wig
and replacing it in the carrier. She
had booked her flight already, under the name of Mary Jennings,
taking the rocket to the West Coast and then a fast-track
south. There, in the teeming lowers of old Mexico, she would
switch identities. To begin again. As Rachel De Valerian. She
looked about her nervously, going through all she had done these past
few hours. All bills were paid three months ahead, all commitments
met. Only Michael would miss her. And then maybe not. She
closed her eyes, wishing, hoping against all reason, that he would
call, at this late hour, and put things right between them. That he
would simply walk through the door and take her in his arms and. . . There
was a banging on the outer door, so sudden that it made her jump. Michael... She
went across and stood there, trying to calm herself, but her pulse
was racing, her heart pounding in her chest. As the hammering came
again, she called out, her voice tiny, barely in control. "Who
is it?" "It's
me! It's Bryn!" Bryn.7
And then she understood. It was Bryn Kustow, Michael's partner. Thumbing
the lock, she stood back, letting him in. "YouVe
got to help me," he said breathlessly. "Michael's gone. He
went to see his old man and they had a big bust up. I got a call. I
don't know who it was. One of the old man's cronies, I suspect.
Marley, maybe. But it seems that Michael was very upset. The Old Man
really gave it to him. Making demands. Insisting that he marry the
John-stone girl. Humiliating him in front of strangers. I tried
Michael's apartment but he wasn't there. No one's seen him for
hours!" Taking
his arm, she made him sit on the edge of the bed, then stood over
him, her mind in a whirl, trying to take in what had happened. "Okay.
Slow down. Let's think this through. You say you went to his
apartment. Had he been there?" "I
think so. I mean yes. Yes, he had. The manservant said he'd called
in. Very unlike himself. Very distressed." "And
did he take the note?" "The
note?" "I
sent him a note. It's important. It might explain things." Kustow
shrugged. "I don't know. I... Yes. Hang on. The man said
something about. . . about a special messenger coming." "Shit."
She shuddered, knowing now that she had got it wrong. Whatever
Michael had been doing, going back to see his father, it had had
nothing to do with her. And that was Kennedys fault. Kennedy who had
misled her. "Look,"
she said, "he won't have gone far. I know what he's like. He
won't want to face anyone he knows. Not now. I reckon he's gone down.
Down to the lowers. If I were you, I'd check the bars in all the
local stacks. Somewhere dark and anonymous, where he's not likely to
be known. That's where you'll find him." "Michael?
Down there?" Kustow laughed, but then he saw how she was looking
at him and his laughter died. "You think so?" She
nodded. "Yes. And when you find him, tell him this. That the
note was a mistake. I didn't understand. I thought. . ." She
shrugged. "Look, just tell him that I'll wait for him. If he
wants me, he knows where I am. And Bryn . . ." "Yes?" "Tell
him that I love him. And that I need him, even if his father doesn't.
Tell him that, neh?" kim
was standing with his back to her when she came into the room, his
dark head tilted forward as he looked down at something in his hands.
She set the tray she was carrying down noiselessly, then, quietly,
knowing he had not heard her, went across and stood there, behind and
slightly to the side of him, looking down at the object he was
holding. It was
a globe of yellowed ivory, carved with intricate towers and
ornamental bridges, crowded with tiny figures, yet small enough for
him to cup in one of his tiny, childlike hands. She watched him set
it back carefully, then half turn, realizing suddenly that she was
there. "I'm
sorry, I..." She
smiled and shook her head. "No, don't apologize. Handle them if
you want." He
looked at her strangely, his lips parted, the pupils of his eyes
forming large dark circles that surprised her with their intensity.
There was a wild, untamed quality about him that both frightened and
attracted her. His eyes seemed to fix and hold her with a power she
didn't quite understand, yet when she found her voice again all that
she said was, "YouVe nice eyes. They're so dark ..." "They're
green," he said, laughing, looking up at her. "No
. . . not their color. . ." She
hesitated. She had been about to say that they were like the surface
of the northern sea; that their greenness seemed to mask an
unfathomed depth of darkness. But he knew nothing of seas and so she
kept silent, watching him, knowing only that she had met no one like
him before. His dark hair was cut neat against his large but not
unattractive head, and his skin had the pale smoothness of a child's.
He was dressed simply, so simply that in that single respect alone he
was distinct from anyone she knew. Even her father's young soldiers
wore jewelery and made up their faces. Yes, even the austere and
distant Axel Haavikko. But Kim wore nothing special, added nothing to
his natural self. He
looked past her at the tray. "Is that ch'al" "Yes."
She laughed, feeling a sudden warmth come to her cheeks. She had
forgotten. For that brief moment she had forgotten everything. "There
are some sweetmeats too. But you'll stay for dinner, I hope. My
father should be back . . ." He
nodded, then moved around her, bending down to take one of the
sweetmeats from the tray. She
turned, watching him. In some indefinable way he was beautiful. Quite
beautiful. Nor was it the kind of beauty she was accustomed to. He
was not tall, nor broad, nor handsome in the classical Above sense of
that word. Even so, something shone out from him. Some quality that
was more sensed than seen. Some powerful, uncompromising thing that
simply wasn't there in other people. She felt that he was somehow...
in touch. Was that it? In touch. But in touch with what? She
shook her head, watching him bend to take another of the sweetmeats,
his smallest movement different, somehow connected. She
watched, frowning with the intensity of her watchfulness, but she
could say no more than that. He
turned, looking back at her, smiling. "Won't you join me?" "I
. . ." She laughed, embarrassed, realizing how awkward, how
gawky she must have appeared at that moment, but he seemed not to
notice. He merely stood there, smiling, one hand raised to her in
invitation, waiting for her to come to him. She
crossed the room and took his hand, the movement so easy, so natural,
that it seemed to her that she had somehow always done it. But the
feel of his palm against her own stirred her so deeply that she
shivered and glanced down to where their fingers met and interlaced.
When she looked up again he was watching her. She
frowned, suddenly conscious of how frail, how small he was beside
her, how her hand enveloped his, her strong, slender fingers thicker,
longer than his. Like a mother with her child. His
face was serious, unsmiling now, his eyes still questioning her.
Then, unexpectedly, he lifted her hand to his lips and kissed it,
brushing it with his lips gently before releasing it. Again she
shivered, then turned away quickly, a sweet but painful sensation
filling her, physical in its intensity. And as she turned, the memory
of her dream came back to her, so that she saw it vividly—saw
again that small, dark creature, whose eyes burned like coals and
whose wet, dark skin shone with an inner light. She saw it climb from
the darkness of the cracked and scarred earth and lift the mirror at
the tower. Saw it and gave a small cry, as if in pain. But it was
recognition. She
turned back. He was watching her, concerned, not understanding why
she had made the sound. "Are
you all right?" She
made to speak, but at that moment there were noises in the hallway
outside. Kim was still watching her, confused, unable to comprehend
the pain, the sudden intentness of her glances at him. "I . . ."
she began, but it was all she could say. It was him. Now, the dream
returned to her, she saw it. Saw how his eyes saw through her to the
bone and the darkness underneath. Saw it and knew—even as her
maid came into the room—that this was her fate. This childlike
man. This fierce and gentle creature. "Jelka?"
He was looking at her strangely now. "Are you all right?" She
took a breath and nodded. "I... I'm fine." But she felt
faint, felt both ice cold and fiery hot, as if a sudden fever had
taken her. Forcing
herself to be calm, she looked across at her maid and smiled, as if
to reassure the girl. "You'll
stay for dinner, Shih Ward?" "If
you want me to." She
nodded. "I... I must go now," she said, looking down. "But
please, make yourself at home. My maid. . . my maid will see to you."
Then, with one final glance at him, she turned and left the room. And
after, as she lay on her bed, thinking back on what had happened, she
saw him differently: saw not the man nor the creature of her dreams,
but the two transposed, inextricably mixed. And knew, with a sudden
certainty that surprised her, that she wanted him. THREE
HOURS had passed and now Kim sat there in the Marshal's study,
listening to her talk. Jelka was standing on the far side of the
room, beside the huge window wall, staring out into the artificial
depths of the past and re-created country of Kalevala, a wistfulness
in her face that seemed to mirror the light in the other land. And as
she talked, he leaned in toward her, entranced, hanging on her every
word. "You
can't help yourself, that's the worst of it. It's like a constant
betrayal of yourself. You feel nothing, and yet you go on smiling,
talking, laughing, all to fill the vacuum, to mask the nothingness
you're feeling all the time." She glanced at him. "At
least, that's how it was." She laughed, showing her perfect
teeth, her chin slightly raised. Kim,
watching her, caught his breath, pained by the beauty of that one
small movement. She was like something from a dream; so tall and
straight and lovely. Her hair was like a screen of golden silk, her
eyes the blue of the sky in the land beyond her. And her mouth . . . "As
for the rest of them, they don't even seem to notice how things are.
It's as if they're dead to it all. I mean, perhaps they really can't
tell the difference between this and real life. I don't know . . ."
She shrugged, her eyes suddenly pained, "But it seems to me that
there's a falseness, an intrinsic flaw in them. It's as if the
City's swallowed them. Eaten them up, souls and all. And yet they
seem happy with that. It's as if they really don't need anything
more." She
turned, facing him, a fierce determination in her eyes. "That's
how it is here, Kim. Like a living death. Yet when I saw you I knew
at once that you were different." She shivered, the intensity of
her words forcing her face into a grimace of pain. "Do you
understand what I'm saying? It's not your size. It's not even what
you do—that talent that my father values so highly. It's you.
You're different from the rest of them. And I want that. I want
it so much that it hurts me to think that I might not have it. . ." She
looked away, her eyes releasing him. But her words had seared him. He
looked down at his trembling hands, then answered her. "You
have it," he said, meeting her eyes. "All of it." He
laughed strangely. "I think I wanted you from the first moment I
saw you. Your eyes . . ." She
turned, surprised. "Then it wasn't just me? You felt that too?" "Yes
. . ." He was silent a moment, then, quietly, "I love you,
Jelka Tolonen. I have done from the first." "You
love me?" She laughed, surprised. "You know, I thought all
that was done with. That nothing would ever touch me again. I
thought. . ." Again
she shivered, but this time she came across and knelt beside him,
taking his hands. "You
see, I wasn't expecting anything. I didn't think that anything more
could happen to me. There was the engagement to Hans Ebert, of
course, but, well, it was as if I was living inside a kind of shell,
in a magic theater where things only seemed to happen, and nothing
real ever took place. I thought that that was all there was ever
going to be. And then I saw you . . ." He
turned his face, meeting her eyes. It was like looking into the
sky. He could sense the depths of blackness beyond the blue
and remembered suddenly his
vision—of that great web of brightness
spinning out through the surface of her eyes into the darkness
beyond. "And
your father?" Her
eyes moved away, then came back again. "Papa . . . ?" She
shook her head, real anguish behind the tiny movement. "He's a
darling really. I just can't tell you . . ." He
nodded. He had seen for himself how Tblonen doted on his daughter.
"And yet?" "Well,
it's just that he can't see that there's a difference. To him it's
all politics. Deals. Who's in and who's out. And death underpinning
everything. I love him, but. . ." He saw
just how much that "but" had cost her and touched a finger
to her lips to prevent her from saying more. She smiled, grateful to
him, and gently, tenderly kissed his fingers. It was the prelude to a
proper kiss. Their first. He broke from it, surprised, his eyes wide,
seeing his own astonishment mirrored in the perfect blue-black of her
pupils. "You're
beautiful," she said, her fingers touching his cheek. "So
dark and perfect." He
laughed softly. "And you're mad. Utterly mad." She
nodded, but her eyes were filled with that same fierce determination
he had witnessed earlier. "Maybe. But I'd fight the whole Above
to have you." THE
TWO MEN stood before the unmarked door, waiting to be admitted.
Soucek turned, reading the plaque on the wall nearby. LEVEL ONE
HUNDRED AND EIGHTY-SIX it read; NORTH 2 STACK, CANTON OF DUSSELDORF.
He looked about him, trying to get some clue as to what they were
doing, why they were here, but there was nothing. This far up the
levels the Seven were still firmly in control. Things were neat and
tidy. As if the chaos of the lowers were a dream and nothing else but
this existed. For a
moment Soucek stared past his feet, trying to picture the levels
stacked up beneath him, layer above layer; to imagine all those
people—young and old, Han and Hung Moo—eking out their
lives in the packed and degenerating strata of the City. Narrow,
blighted, desperate lives. He had not really thought of it before,
not until he had begun to travel between the levels on Lehmann's
business, but now he could not shake it from his mind. He had seen
the City from outside; had gone up the levels and seen what existed
up Above, and knew—with a certainty he had never had
before—that it was wrong. There had to be a better way. He
looked back at Lehman, seeing how patiently he waited; how he held
the flask loosely in one hand, as if it contained nothing of value. And
yet three men had died, not counting the woman and her child, to get
what it held. Soucek
shuddered, remembering. But just then the door hissed back, and a
tiny, boyish-looking Han in a black, er-silk pau stepped
through. He smiled, offering both hands in greeting to Lehmann. Tiny
golden hands that were like the hands of a mechanical toy. His head
was shaven, a faint purselike scar just behind and beneath his right
ear revealing that he had been wired. He wore a sweet, aromatic
perfume, but beneath it one could discern the strong scent of
chemicals. "Feng
Lu-ma," Lehmann said, acknowledging the man, but he ignored the
offered hands. The
Han shrugged, then moved past them, looking up and down the corridor
before he ushered them inside. "You're
early," Feng said, toying nervously with the tiny lenses that
hung like a necklace of delicate glass pendants about his neck and
shoulders. "I didn't expect you until four." He led
them down a narrow, unlit passageway and out into a bright, crowded
workshop. The walls were covered with row upon row of tiny
translucent box files, while the nearby work tops were cluttered with
dissecting instruments and culture dishes, stacks of slender
ice-covered folders, and strange, spiderish-looking machines. Four
young Han—thin-faced, malnourished-looking youths—glanced
up from behind their high desks on the far side of the room as they
entered, then quickly returned to their work, delicate, silvered
instruments flashing between their fingers. There was the sharp,
almost tart odor of chemicals, the original of the scent that lay
beneath Feng's perfume. Moreover, it was cold; surprisingly so after
the warmth of the corridors outside, but that was to be expected.
Soucek looked about him, taking it all in, surprised to find this
here. Before now he had only been guessing, but now he knew. It was a
lens shop. He
turned, looking at Lehmann, seeking something more—some final
piece to the puzzle. On the surface of things it made no sense coming
all the way up here to a lens shop. No, if Lehmann had wanted a lens
shop there were plenty beneath the Net who would do as good a job and
ask only a tenth of what they charged at this level, so why come
here? But even as he asked himself he began to understand. It was
of a piece with the murders. Lehmann had gone to inordinate lengths
in selecting his victims. He had read the files Lehmann had handed
him. Besides the physical match, Lehmann had gone out of his way to
ensure that all of them, even the married technician, had been
without complicating family connections. That meant, of course, that
there was no one to mourn their deaths. No one to ask awkward
questions. After which, it had been simplicity itself to bribe an
official and falsify the public record—to make it seem as
though the men were still alive. Which,
of course, was necessary if Lehmann were to use their eyes. For no
matter how good a copy might be made of their retinas, no one—no,
not even a Plantation Guard—would pass a dead man through a
checkpoint. Anonymity,
that was what Lehmann sought. That was why he had chosen his victims
so carefully; why he had come here rather than trust to the dubious
"confidence" of one of the Net shops. Yes, he had heard
tales of how certain long bosses had bought information about
their rivals, then had had them tracked and trapped. But
Lehmann was too clever to have that happen. That was why the official
at the public record office had subsequently had his throat cut; why
his colleagues had been pacified by an anonymous "sweetener." He
watched as Lehmann haggled with the man, then handed over four large
denomination credit chips and the flask. The Han took the flask
around to the other side of the nearest work top and sat, unscrewing
the lid and tipping the frozen eyes out into a sterilized cold dish.
He poked at them delicately with his tiny golden fingers, lifting
each in turn and studying it beneath the light. Then, satisfied, he
looked back at Lehmann. "These
are fine. There's two, three percent damage at most. Certainly
nothing I can't repair. You haven't, by any chance, the original
retinal mappings?" Lehmann
took the copy files from the inner pocket of his tunic and handed
them across. All references to names and whereabouts had been
removed. Again, Lehmann had taken great care not to let the lehsman
know any more than he had to. Soucek
saw how the man's eyes narrowed, scanning the files, noting the
erasures, then returned to Lehmann. "I should charge you more." Lehmann
stared at him impassively. "I can take them elsewhere if you
wish, Feng Lu-ma. To Yellow Tan, perhaps. Or your friend, Mai Li-wen.
Maybe I should . . ." The
Han studied Lehmann a moment longer, then looked down. "When do
you need them by?" "Tomorrow." There
was a moment's pause, then. "All right. You'll come yourself?" "No.
My man here will come." "But
you ought. . ." Lehmann
leaned across the work top threateningly. "I know what I ought
to do, Shih Feng, but I'm a busy man. Besides, I've worn lenses
before. I don't need your help to fit them. You just do your job and
everything will be fine, neh?" The
Han stared at him thoughtfully, then nodded. "Tomorrow, then.
After ten." But
Soucek, watching him, could feel the weight of curiosity at the back
of the man's words and knew—without needing to be told—that
he would have to kill the man. bryn
kustow stood there in the doorway of the crowded club, looking about
him anxiously as customers elbowed past. It was dangerous this far
down the levels and normally he wouldn't have come here alone, but
just now things weren't normal. Michael was down here somewhere. Kustow
squinted, trying to make out faces in that long, ill-lit room, but it
was hard. The Blinded Eye was packed tonight, the noise from the big
speakers in the corners deafening. Ta, it was—"beat";
a stripped-down form of Han folk music, amplified heavily; the music
of these parts. Kustow stood there, grimacing against the sound,
searching the crowded tables for a face he knew, but they were mainly
Han here. Ugly little bastards too. Tong runners and minor criminals,
for sure. As he craned his neck, a big, pug-nosed Han planted himself
directly in front of him. "What
you want, fuck face?" "A
friend," he shouted back, keeping his tone measured. "I'm
looking for a friend. A big guy. Short blond hair." The
man glared at him a moment, then turned, pointing across the room. On
the far side of the bar a light flickered fitfully. Beneath it, at a
packed gaming table, a tall Hung Moo was slumped across the table,
face down. To either side of him, eager Han faces watched the dice
fall and tumble across the baize, ignoring him. Kustow
felt his stomach tighten. Was it Michael? And if it was, was he all
right? He reached in his pocket and took out a ten-yuan chip,
pressing it into the big man's hand, not certain it was the right
thing to do down here. But it seemed it was. With a glance at the ten
piece, the man stood back, letting him pass. "Over
there," he said again, as if Kustow hadn't taken it in first
time. "Take the fucker home, neh? Before he gets his throat
cut." Kustow
made a tiny bow, then, pushing through the crowd, made his way
across. As he came out in front of the table, another Han, smaller
yet more vicious-looking than the last, barred his way. "What
you want?" he shouted against the wall of sound. Behind
the thin-featured Han the gaming had stopped. A dozen Han faces were
watching Kustow coldly. "My
friend," Kustow shouted back, indicating the slumped figure of
Michael Lever. "IVe come to take him home." The
Han shook his head. "Your friend owe money. Five hundred yuan.
You pay or he stay." Kustow
looked about him, trying to read the situation. Was it true? Had
Michael lost that much to them? Or was the Han trying it on? "You
have his paper?" he yelled back, meeting the Han's eyes once
again. The
Han sneered. "What fucking paper? He owe me money. You pay or
you fuck off!" Kustow
took a long breath. Five hundred. He had it on him. Twice that, in
fact. But it wouldn't do to let them know that. He felt in his
pocket, separating out three of the big fifties and three tens. "I
can give you one-eighty. It's all I have. But I can give you my note
for the rest, if that's okay?" The
Han hesitated, eyeing him suspiciously, then nodded. "Okay. But
get him out of here right now. And don't come back. Not if you know
what good for you!" FORTY
MINUTES LATER and a hundred levels up, Kustow held Michael Lever
steady as he leaned over the sink, heaving. Michael's hair was wet
where Kustow had held his head beneath the flow, but the two tablets
he'd forced down his throat were beginning to take effect. Michael
turned his head slightly, looking back at his friend. "I'm
sorry, Bryn. I..." Kustow
shook his head. "It doesn't matter. Really it doesn't. But what
the fuck were you doing down there? You could have been killed." Michael
turned back, staring down into the bowl again. "Maybe that would
have been for the best." "Don't
say that. It's not true." "No?"
There was a strange movement in Michael's mouth and then his whole
face creased in pain. "It's finished, Bryn! It's all gone
fucking wrong!" "No,
Michael. No. There's the Movement, remember? And there's Mary. . ." Michael
shook his head. "She's gone. I got her note." "No,
Michael. You're wrong. She wants you. She told me so. The note... it
was a mistake. She didn't understand what had happened." Michael
snorted. "She understands all right! I'm washed up! A failure!
And my father hates me!" He shuddered violently. "There's
nothing, Bryn! Nothing!" Kustow
gripped his shoulders firmly. "You're wrong, Michael. You don't
know how wrong. She needs you, even if the old man doesn't. And I
need you, too, you silly bastard. Don't you understand that?" Michael
turned, looking up at him uncertainly. "She needs me? Are
you sure about that? What did she say?" "She
loves you, Michael. Don't you understand that? She loves you. So stop
all this bellyaching and go to her. And for fuck's sake do it before
you end up dead in some clapped-out, five-piece drinking den!" Michael
stared at him. "Do what?" Kustow
stared back at him a moment, then laughed, surprised at his naivete.
"Why, marry her, of course. Marry her. Now, before it's too
late." "Marry
her?" Michael laughed sourly and shook his head. He shivered,
then, straightening up, pushed away from the sink. Kustow tried to
stop him, but, breaking free of his friend's grip, Michael stumbled
toward the door. For a moment he stood there, his forehead pressed
against the door's surface, then he turned back, swaying unsteadily,
meeting Kustow's eyes. "Look,
I know you mean well, but just leave me alone, Bryn, understand? Just
fucking leave me alone!" CHAPTER
TEN
Monsters
of the Deep THE
SWEEPER PAUSED, leaning on his broom, staring across at the scene
outside Hsiang Tian's Golden Emporium. Black dog banners were
everywhere one looked, the triangular silks fluttering gently in the
false wind generated by the big fans sited above the storefront.
There was a low buzz of expectation and then the crowd began to move
back, Triad runners pushing them back from the front of the store.
There was a moment's angry jostling and then the crowd settled again,
watching as Whiskers Lu strode out, his stylishly cut black silks
glistening in the bright overhead lights. Lu
Ming-shao was a big, exceedingly ugly man, with a melted, misshapen
face and an air of uncouth brutality. He spat, then turned, summoning
Hsiang Tian from within. Hsiang came, his head lowered, ingratiating
himself, yet uncomfortable all the same. "Bring
them out," Lu Ming-shao ordered, his rough voice booming. "The
four I liked best. I want to see them out here, in the light."
Hsiang turned, snapping his fingers. At once there was hurried
movement within. A moment later the first of the sedans emerged, a
long, sleek model with delicate satin coverings, carved dragon-head
lamps, and a high-backed "wooden" chair, designed to seat
two; a tien feng, or "Heaven's Wind." It was carried
by six of the Emporium's runners, their dark mauve one-pieces
emblazoned front and back with the bright red pictogram, a box within
a box, hsiang, and their status
number. Setting the sedan down close to Whiskers Lu, they
knelt, heads bowed, waiting patiently while he mounted the chair and
settled his huge bulk across both seats. Then, at Hsiang's signal,
they lifted slowly, taking the sedan in a slow, smooth circle. Whipped
up by the Triad runners, the crowd yelled and cheered, genuinely
enjoying the sight, but when Whiskers Lu stepped down, it was with a
curt shake of his head. "Next!"
he barked, turning his back on Hsiang. There was a further commotion
inside, and then the second sedan appeared. This was a bigger,
seemingly more substantial model, an eight-man yu Jco, or
"Jade Barge." It was broader and squatter than the previous
model, and Lu Ming-shao looked less out of place in its huge,
thronelike chair. What's more, the extended canopy, with its bloodred
er-silk covering, gave the whole thing a slightly regal appearance,
reminiscent of the state carriages of the Minor Families. Even so,
when Whiskers Lu stepped down again, it was with an expression of
distaste. Seeing
that look, Hsiang turned quickly, summoning the next sedan. As it
came out under the bright exterior lights, the sweeper made his way
across and, pushing his way through the fringes of the crowd, stood
near the front of the press, close to the line of runners, watching
as Lu Ming-shao mounted the sedan. He had
heard many tales of Whiskers Lu, of his legendary fearlessness, of
his heartlessness and casual brutality, but his eyes saw something
else. Whatever Whiskers Lu might once have been, he was no longer the
man of legend. Sharpness had given way to self-indulgence,
brutishness to a kind of uncultured hedonism. Oh, there was no
doubting that Lu Ming-shao was a big, fearsome-looking monster of a
man, and not one to casually make an enemy of, yet those special
qualities that had made him a 489—that had allowed him to wrest
power from the hands of his deadliest rivals—were phantoms now.
He saw how Whiskers Lu looked about him, aware not of the possible
danger from the crowd—the ever-present danger of assassination—
but of the impression he was making on them. He noted the big
expensive rings the man wore, the elegant First Level fashions and
understood. Three years of unopposed leadership had changed Lu
Ming-shao. Had made him soft. Worse, they had made him vain. As
he watched, Whiskers Lu climbed up into the wide, deeply cushioned
seat and settled back among the padded silk. Yes, only a fool paraded
himself this way before the hsiao jen, the "little men."
Only a fool closed his eyes, relaxing, when an assassin's bullet lay
only a fraction of a second from his heart. Lehmann
turned, then made his way back through the throng, satisfied. He had
seen enough. It would be easy to take Whiskers Lu. Easier than he'd
anticipated. But it was best not to be too cocksure. Best to plan it
properly and make sure the odds were wholly in his favor. Returning
to his cart, Lehmann folded down the handle of his broom and fixed it
to the two clips on the side. Then, for all the world like a common
sweeper going off shift, he swung his cart in a sharp half-circle and
began to push slowly toward the side corridor, making for the down
transit. the
nurse handed Jelka back her pass and came around the desk. Behind
her, in the glass-fronted booth that overlooked the spacious
reception area, the clinic's security guard relaxed, returning to his
game of chess. "Is
he expecting you?" Jelka
smiled. "No. But I think he'll be pleased to see me." "Well,
follow me. He's awake, but he may be working." "Working?" The
nurse laughed. "He never stops. The morning after the operation
he was sitting up, looking at files. But we've kept him from using
the input as yet. It takes a while for the implant to take, even with
the latest drugs." Jelka
gave a vague nod, frowning. It sounded horrible. Behind her, her
bodyguard, Zdenek, looked about him, ill at ease without his gun.
Only Jelka's strongest pleas had made him agree to come in here. "Were
there any problems?" "No.
It's a standard enough operation, these days. More than three million
last year, they reckon. But he has to rest. Otherwise he'll be back
in here with an embolism. And that would be very serious." "Ah
. . ." But Jelka was far from reassured. "He's
a friend of yours?" It was
none of her business, but Jelka answered her anyway, aware that
Zdenek was listening, and that whatever the bodyguard heard would be
reported back to her father. "He works for my father. And for Li
Yuan." The
nurse glanced at her, her eyes widening, then nodded. "Ah, so
that's why he's here." She laughed. "I thought it was
strange." They
came to the end of the corridor and turned left. At the second door
the nurse stopped and tapped out a code on the panel beside the door.
A screen lit up at once, showing an overhead image of a patient in a
bed. It was Kim. Leaning forward slightly, the nurse spoke into the
grill. "Shih
Ward, you have a visitor. Jelka Tolonen. Will you see her?" Kim
smiled broadly, looking up at the camera. "Of course. Please . .
. show her in." As the
door slid back, the nurse stood aside, letting Jelka go inside.
Zdenek made to follow, but Jelka turned, facing him. "Please,
Zdenek, stay here. I'll be ten minutes, that's all." He
hesitated, then shook his head. "I'm sorry, Nu Shih Tolonen, but
your father would have me court-martialed if I did. My orders are
never to leave you alone." He paused, clearly embarrassed at
having to be so heavy-handed. "You understand why ..." She
was quiet a moment, then turned to the nurse again. "Have you an
audio unit? Just the earphones." The
nurse hesitated, then nodded. "You want me to get a pair?" Jelka
nodded, then turned back, smiling at Kim. "I'm sorry. This won't
take a moment." He
smiled, drinking in the sight of her. "That's all right. It's
really nice to see you. How did you know I was here?" She
glanced at Zdenek, then smiled broadly. "I'll tell you ... in a
moment." The
nurse returned, handing Jelka the headphones and a small tape
machine, an under-ear sling. Jelka handed it to Zdenek. "Will
you wear this for me?" The
big man looked at the earphones and laughed, relenting. "Okay.
But when your father asks me I want to be able to tell him something.
All right?" She
smiled and leaned forward, pecking his cheek. "I'll make
something up. Okay?" Zdenek
nodded, then went to sit in the far corner, the earphones balanced
awkwardly on his large, close-shaven head. Satisfied, Jelka went
across. She pulled out a chair, sitting beside the bed, her back to
the guard. Kim
was sitting up in bed. The comset he'd been working on was pushed
aside on top of the bedclothes. He leaned forward, intending to kiss
her, but she made the smallest movement of her head. "What's
the matter?" he asked quietly, then looked past her at the
guard. "Is this your father's idea?" "He
thinks it's necessary when I travel." "And
you?" She
nodded. "They've made three attempts on my life already. It's
unlikely they'll stop now. They can get at him through me. That's why
it's best to take no chances." "I
see." But it was clear that he hadn't realized before just how
tightly circumscribed her life was. She
smiled, her mood brightening. "Anyway. How are you?" He
looked past her briefly, then met her eyes again, smiling. "I'm
fine. It's still sore, and the headaches are bad, especially at
night, but they say it's healing well." She
leaned closer, looking at the silvered stud that jutted from the
flesh beneath his ear. The skin surrounding it was red and chafed,
but the single, thread-thin scar above it looked good. Even so, the
thought of the implant made her feel queasy. She had never been happy
about her father's, and though he had had it long before she was bom,
it still seemed unnatural. More so than his artificial arm. "Well?"
he asked softly. She
drew back her head and looked at him. The uncertainty in his voice
was clear. He hadn't been sure how she would take it. After all, he
hadn't even told her he was going to have it done. "You
need this?" He
looked at her intently a moment, then nodded. "It'll make my
work much easier." She
looked at the silvered stud again. "It's a neat job." "The
best. Li Yuan's own surgeon." "Then
I'm glad. Really I am." She hesitated, then looked down. "Your
work ... it means a lot to you, doesn't it?" He was
quiet, watching her. "No
... I mean, I know it does. My father said. But more than that, I can
see it in you. It's what you are. You can't separate yourself off
from it." He let
out a long breath. "And you don't mind?" She
looked up, meeting his eyes. "No. Why should I mind? It's what
you are. It's what makes you what you are. I can see that." "Can
you?" He watched her a moment, then nodded. "Yes. I can see
that." They
were silent a moment, then she reached out and took his hand. "I
understand. I..." She lifted her shoulders slightly, looking
away from him, then met his eyes again. "It's like my father, I
suppose. He loves me, fiercely, almost possessively, but there's more
to him than that. He has to do what he does. When he was exiled—when
he couldn't be General anymore—it was like he was dead. Or like
a shell, paper-thin, the mere pretense of a man. Seeing him like that
made me understand. Like you, he is what he does. The two things are
inseparable. Without it ... well, maybe he would be less of a man
than he is. And maybe I'd love him less than I do." "Maybe,"
he answered, his eyes watching her carefully, a strange tenderness in
their depths. "And you?" She
laughed and sat back, cradling his hand now in both of hers. "Me?" "Yes,
you. Isn't there something you want to do? Some part of
you that needs something more?" She
shook her head slowly, squeezing his hand between her own, her face
suddenly more serious. "No. There's nothing I want to do." "Nothing?" She
smiled. "No. IVe already found what I want." from
his SEAT in the corner Zdenek watched everything. Jelka had her back
to him so he could see nothing of what passed on her
face, but he could see the Clayborn Ward clearly. He saw how
the child-man smiled, and looked down, disturbed, knowing he would
have to tell what he had seen. And
then? He
felt sorry for Jelka. This would hurt her. Badly, perhaps. But it was
necessary. Her father would end this thing, for there was no way she
could marry Ward, and a mistake here might spoil her chance of
marrying well elsewhere. Besides, Ward was Clayborn, and Clay was
Clay, it could not be raised. And
Jelka? He watched the back of her head, seeing how the overhead light
caught in the golden strands of her hair. For a moment he was
distracted by it, then, smiling, he looked down at his big, ugly
hands. Jelka Tolonen was something special. Something high and fine
and . . . well, above Ward, anyway. Far, far above him. "Well?
What should we do?" Tsu Ma
turned, facing his cousins, his broad, manly figure framed in the
moon door. Beyond him, through the broad circle of the entrance, the
sun lit up the western garden. "To be frank with you, Yuan, I
think we should dig much deeper. Find out where the brain came from,
and who designed it. What Tolonen says makes sense. We should send
Karr out to Mars again. Have him turn the Colony inside out until he
finds what's going on out there. This . . ." he shook his head,
"this frightens me, Yuan. The fakes that came in to kill your
brother, they were bad enough, but these!" "I
agree," said Wu Shih. "Toloneris findings are the most
significant thing to have come to our notice these past twelve
months. To think that they were so close to developing and using
these things. It only goes to prove how right our forefathers were in
clamping down on research into these areas. Indeed, it makes me have
second thoughts about our plans. We must be careful how we change the
Edict. Careful what we permit within our Cities." Li
Yuan looked from one to the other, then nodded. "Then we are
agreed. We will keep this to ourselves. As for Karr, I will think the
matter through. Just now he is doing important work for me, keeping
an eye on what is happening down below. But that may have to wait. As you
say, cousin Ma, we must find out where these things came from, and it
may well be that Karr alone can do that for us." They
walked on slowly, following the path toward the lake. "And
this evening?" Wu Shih asked quietly. "Shall we still go
ahead, as planned?" Tsu Ma
looked up, meeting his eyes. "Our path is set. The announcement
must be made. Even this cannot alter that." "Maybe
so," said Li Yuan somberly, "but I have slept badly since
learning of these things. It is as if we are being warned." He
sighed, then stopped, turning to face his fellow T'ang, the great
expanse of the lake behind him. "Our ancestors argued that there
can be no compromise with Change. So we were taught to believe, from
the cradle on. Yet now we seek to make a deal with Change. To let it
run, like a fish on a line. But what if the line breaks? What if we
lose control?" "There
is no option," Tsu Ma answered bluntly. "You/know that,
Yuan. If we falter now we are lost. A deal must be made. Something
given, something taken back. No one has said it will be easy. But
that is why we are T'ang. To make such decisions and carry them
through. And to face the problems as they arise. It is our great
task, and I, for one, will not shirk from it." Wu
Shih reached out, touching his arm. "We did not say you would,
cousin. I am merely thinking that perhaps we ought to delay a
while—to give us time to find out more about this other matter—
before we announce the reopening of the House." "And
if we did?" Tsu Ma shook his head. "No, cousin. Too many
people know of this already. Ministers and their assistants.
Representatives and leading businessmen. To delay would have them
question our determination. It would cause more problems than it
would solve. No. Our path is set. We must grasp the reins and hold on
for dear life!" "So
it is," Li Yuan said, acknowledging the truth of what Tsu Ma had
said. Yet in the last day his reluctance had taken on a clear and
solid form. It was as he'd said. Tolonen's discovery was like a
warning. A sign of things to come. The step they were about to
take—the changes to the Edict and the reopening of the
House—were irrevocable. And while they might think they knew
what would transpire, there was nothing in past experience to say for
certain what would happen. From
here on the future was unknowable, like a page from an unread book. Once
before the world had fallen into chaos. Once before . . . He
shuddered and turned away, staring out across the ancient lake toward
the orchard. And as he looked, the image of a sprig of white blossom
snagged in the darkness of his memory, then blew away, turning,
turning in the wind. "And
that's all you heard?" When
Zdenek nodded, Tolonen sat back, his left hand placed flat against
the desk, his right rubbing at his neck, metal against flesh. There
was no doubt that Zdenek's report had disturbed him, but the old
man's response was not quite what the bodyguard had anticipated. For
a while he simply sat there, his granitelike face clouded, uncertain.
Then, sniffing deeply, he shook his head. "I
don't know. I simply don't know." There
was a kind of precedent, of course. Once before Tolonen had
interfered directly in his daughter's life. Then he had tried to
marry her—against her will—to Klaus Ebert's son, the
traitor, Hans. The old man had been wrong, and he knew it, but was
that what was affecting him now? Or did he hesitate for another
reason? After all, it seemed he rather liked the young man, Clayborn
or no. Admired him—for as much as he could admire someone who
wasn't a soldier. But was that important when the question was one of
marriage to his daughter? "You
will keep this to yourself."
. It was
command, not question. Zdenek bowed his head curtly, coming to
attention again. "Shall
I continue to watch them, sir?" Again
Tolonen seemed in two minds. A bodyguard was necessary in these
troubled times, but he had not foreseen the need for a chaperon.
Zdenek had his own thoughts on the matter, but kept them to himself.
It would have been impertinent of him to say more than he had
already. Tolonen
was frowning, his top teeth pulling at his lower lip. Then, as if the
indecision were too much for him, he stood and came around
the desk, stopping an arm's length from where Zdenek stood,
looking at him steadily. "You
will do as you have done in the past and no more. Understand?" Zdenek
parted his lips, as if to speak, then gave a curt nod. Tolonen was
silent a moment, then spoke again, his voice softer than before. "I'll
admit that what you say makes me . . . uneasy. If her aunt were
living still. . ." Tolonen's
voice trailed off. He turned away abruptly, going back around his
desk. Seated again, he looked up at Zdenek. "All
right. That's all. And Zdenek . . . thank you." ALONE
AGAIN, Tolonen went and stood by the viewing wall, thinking things
through. For a while he stared sightlessly away through the
artificial landscape of trees and mountains, then turned and went
back to his desk, his decision made. This time he would be subtler.
Yes, he would let time be the cure of this. Leaning
forward, he spoke into the intercom, summoning his private secretary.
The young equerry came into the room a moment later, coming to
attention in the doorway, his head bowed. "General?" "Come
in, lad. Close the door and come over. I want to ask you something." The
young soldier hesitated, then did as he was told, surprised by the
unusually personal tone in the General's voice. "Sir?" Tolonen
smiled, indicating that he should take a chair. "At ease, lad. I
need to pick your brains." The
equerry drew up a chair and sat. It was the first time in eight
months' service with Tblonen that he had done so, and he sat up
straight, as if at attention, his head held rigid. "You
come from a good family, Hauser," Tolonen began, smiling warmly
at the young soldier. "Your uncle was a Major, was he not?" The
equerry nodded, then found his voice. "In the colonies, sir. And
the mining satellites." "And
your eldest brother . . . he's there now, isn't he?" "Yes,
sir. On a five-year tour of duty." "And
does he like it out there?" The
young soldier smiled for the first time, relaxing. "He loves it,
sir. Says it's beautiful out there." Tolonen
sat back, studying his equerry with some care. The young man sat up
even stiffer than before, conscious of the Marshal's eyes on him. "Have
you ever thought of a colonies posting?" The
equerry looked down, his tongue touching his top teeth momentarily; a
gesture Tolonen had noticed before. "Well,
lad?" he coaxed, more gently than before. The
young soldier met his eyes. "I do what is asked of me, sir. But.
. . well, yes, I would welcome such a posting if the opportunity
arose." "And
if it arose now?" The
young man allowed himself a smile. "Now, sir?" Tolonen
laughed. "Let me explain . . ." IT WAS
cold in the Dissecting Room, colder than Maryland in January, yet Old
Man Lever stood there, bareheaded and without a jacket, staring down
at the row of corpses laid out on the long slab. Nearby, Curval, the
Chief Geneticist, stood watching him. The two men were alone in the
room, the investigation team dismissed for the moment while the Old
Man saw things for himself. "What
went wrong?" he asked, turning, meeting Curval's eyes. "We're
not sure," Curval answered, looking past Lever at the eleven
shaven-headed bodies. "It seems like some kind of virus, but
we're not certain." Lever
licked dryly at his lips. "Why not?" Curval
shifted awkwardly. "Because it might not be that. All of the
corpses show traces of the thing, but the virus itself doesn't seem
harmful. My personal belief is that it's a long-term side effect of
the drug treatment. But we'll know that for sure as soon as weVe
tested a few of the living immortals." Immortafs
. . . Old Man Lever shuddered and turned back, staring down into the
blank face of one of the dead. There had been deaths
before, of course, mainly from accidents, but nothing on the
scale of this. No. Once this got out... "Does
anybody know? I mean, apart from the staff here?" Curval
nodded. "I'm afraid so. The clause in the original contracts
allowed us to bring all the bodies back here—for tests—but
there's been trouble with some of the relatives. I got a team onto it
at once, but it looks like a group of them are going to go public,
tonight at ten." Curval
waited, tensed inside, for the Old Man to explode with anger, but
there was nothing. Lever simply stood there, as if in shock, staring
down at the nearest corpse. "There's
no choice, then," he said, after a moment. "We have to go
public before they do." "Is
that wise? I mean, what will we say?" "That
the treatment is a failure. And that we're working on something new.
Something better. Something that weVe just invested a further ten
billion yuan into." Curval
blinked. "WeVe got new sponsors?" Lever
shook his head. "No. The money will come direct from ImmVac. At
the same time we'll be making substantial payments to all those on
the present program to ensure that they receive the best medical
treatment possible in the coming days." Curval
bowed his head. "I see." So the
rumor was true: some of the major sponsors had pulled out. If
news of that broke at the same time as this, then the Project was as
good as dead. And even if it survived, it would be the object of
wide-scale public derision. Faced with that possibility, Old Man
Lever was willing to double the stakes and risk all on a further
throw of the dice. To make a brave face of it and ride out the
present storm, hoping to limit the damage. And
who knew?—it might even work. Curval
looked up again, meeting the Old Man's eyes. "So what do you
want me to do?" "I
want some kind of research outline. Something that'll sound
impressive. And I want some visuals of our best men at work in the
labs. You know the kind of thing." Curval
nodded. "And the boy? Ward?" Lever
stared back at him, eyes narrowed. "Offer him what he wants.
Whatever he wants. But get him." WHEN
CURVAL HAD GONE, Lever walked slowly up the line, then back, stopping
beside the last of the corpses, that of a fifty-seven-year-old woman. For a
long time he stared down at her, at the cold, pale shape of her,
unable to take in what had happened. Her name was Leena Spence and
she had been one of the first of his "immortals." He had
slept with her once or twice, before she'd had the treatment, but
lately, tied up in the business of the Institute, he had seen little
of her. And
now it was too late. He
shivered, the cold beginning to get to him at last. So this was
death. This. He swallowed, then leaned closer, studying the fine blue
tracery of lines that covered the pale, smooth flesh of her skull
like the hand-drawn pictograms in an old Han notebook. He
reached out, running his fingers over the faint blue lines, as if to
gauge the mystery of it, but it was like a map he could not read of a
country he did not know. Queequeg's back, Curval had called it once,
for some reason, and that came back to Lever now, making him frown,
then shake his head, as if to deny what had happened here. But they
were dead. His immortals were dead. Eight yesterday, a further five
today, like machines being switched off one by one. A
virus, Curval had said. But what kind of virus? Something harmless.
Harmless and yet deadly. If that was what had done this. Old
Man Lever drew his hand back, shuddering, then turned and walked
swiftly away, rehearsing words and phrases in his head, beginning at
once upon the task that lay ahead. ROSS
LAY on the narrow bed, reading, files scattered all about him.
Nearby, at the table, Milne was hunched over his comset, working
through the transcripts of the interviews they had done that morning.
The stay-over was a small, spartanly furnished room that had cost
them ten yuan for the week. Not that they planned to stay a
week. No.
For with what they'd got that morning, they could probably wrap
things up that evening. They
had tracked down more than thirty of the former inhabitants of Mary
Jennings's "birth-deck," including a midwife who had worked
there more than forty years. Not one of them had any knowledge of the
girl. That, in itself, might not have been conclusive. There were
between five and ten thousand people in an average deck, and it was
possible—just possible—that their sample was
insufficient. But the results of the facial identification check had
confirmed what they had suspected all along. Mary Jennings was a
fake. In reality she was Emily Ascher. A European. "Listen
to this," Ross said, sitting up, then turning to face his
partner. "It seems that her father was involved in some kind of
scandal. He was an official in the Hu Pu, the Finance Ministry. It
looks like he made some kind of mistake on the interest rates. There
was a Hearing and he was kicked out. The family fell. One hundred and
twenty levels. Six months on, the father was dead. The mother had to
cope with the child on her own." Milne
looked down. "How old was she?" "Nine,
I think." "Then
maybe that's why." Ross
frowned. "Why what? I don't follow you." "Why
she became a terrorist." Ross
laughed. "Are you serious, Mike? I mean, what evidence have we
got?" "Instinct,"
Milne said, glancing at him nervously. "I've been thinking about
it. She's not your usual kind of sleeper. I mean, she's a woman for a
start. And most industrial espionage is short-term. The sleeper gets
in, does his job, and gets out—as quick as possible. They're in
a year at most. I've not known one to be in there as long as her. And
then there's the background. Maintenance and economics. The
combination fits the profile. Remember that report we read about the
makeup of the Ping Tioo. I reckon that's what she was. Ping Tioo. The
timing fits too. She vanished only weeks after Bremen. And then here
she is, over here, in the Levers' employ. There has to be a reason
for that." "Coincidence,"
Ross said, putting his feet down onto the floor. "For
a start the Ping Tioo had no foothold over here.
Besides, it would take real clout to destroy a deck and all its
records." Milne
shook his head. "1 think the fire was genuine. An accident. But
someone took advantage of it. Someone with Security training,
perhaps. And a lot of influence." Ross's
eyes slowly widened. "DeVore? You mean DeVore, don't you?" Milne
nodded. "They say he was working with them at the end. So why
not this? It's the kind of thing he was good at." "But
why? What's his motive?" "I
don't know. Just that it all fits. Her background. The timing. The
nature of the deception. And it makes sense, too, of the spare ID of
Rachel De Valerian. I think she was put in as a terrorist sleeper.
Biding her time. Waiting to set up over here, when the time was
right." Ross
was quiet a moment, considering things, then he nodded. "It
would certainly make sense of why she left Old Man Lever to join up
with the son. That was bothering me. But if DeVore put her in over
here . . ." He laughed. "Hey. Maybe you're onto something." "Then
maybe we should get it all written up and get back to Richmond
straight away." Ross
looked down. "You think we should take this to Lever, then?" "Why,
who were you thinking of?" "Wu
Shih, perhaps?" Milne
laughed uneasily, but before he could answer there was a faint
rapping at the door. Ross
looked at Milne tensely, then stood. Drawing his gun he crossed to
the door. "Who
is it?" "Room
service!" Ross
glanced at his partner. Did you order room service7, he
mouthed. Milne
shook his head, then stood, drawing his own gun. Ready7.
Ross mouthed. Milne nodded. Moving to the side, Ross reached out
and thumbed the door lock. As the door irised back, a tall Han
stepped into the room, carrying a fully laden tray, covered in a
cloth. "Compliments
of the management," he said, setting the tray down on the
bedside table, then turned, a look of surprise and shock coming into
his eyes as he saw the drawn guns. "Ch'un tzu?" Ross
looked to Milne then back at the Han. Only then did he lower his gun
and, with a faint, embarrassed laugh, went across and lifted the
cloth from the tray. There were six bowls of steaming food. "I'm
sorry," he said, turning back and meeting the Han's eyes. "You
can't be too careful. I thought. . ." The
movement of the Han's arm was deceptively fast. Ross felt himself
being lifted and turned, something hard and acid-hot slicing deep
into his back. There was the sound of a gun's detonation, followed
instantly, it seemed, by the searing pain of a bullet smashing into
his collarbone. Then he was falling toward Milne, the darkness
enfolding him like a tide. M ACH
LOOKED about him at the room, then, setting the detonator on the
incendiary, stepped back. He had what he'd come for. The rest could
burn. For a
moment he paused, smiling, pleased with himself. His instinct was
still good, despite what had happened in Europe. If he had not
followed these two, the game would have been up for Emily. And for
him too, perhaps. As it was, he knew now what had happened that time
with DeVore. Yes.
Milne had been right. A clever man, Milne, but no good with a gun. As
for Emily, what he'd found out today might one day prove invaluable. "Rachel
De Valerian," he said softly, noting how closely the surname
mimicked the form of DeVore's own. He laughed and tapped the file
against his side, then, turning away, he thumbed the door lock and
stepped out into the corridor. Richmond was two hours away. the
place stank. But this was not the normal stink of the Lowers, this
was a powerful, strongly animal stench that seemed to fill and
thicken the close, warm air, pressing like a foul cloth against the
mouth and nostrils. Soucek had gagged at first and turned to
look questioningly at Lehmann, but the albino had showed no reaction. "Gods,
what is this place?" Lehmann
glanced at him. "It used to be a pen." He indicated cages,
the silvered snouts of the feeding tubes, retracted now into the
walls. "Some friends of mine have emptied it for a while." Soucek
nodded, understanding. He had never seen one of the great meat
animals—the jou tung wu, as they were called—but
he had seen pictures. He looked about him, imagining the huge,
brainless creatures, one on each side of the central walkway, the
vast pink bulk of each crammed tight into the rectangular mesh, the
dozens of tiny, eyeless heads guzzling at the trough. He made a noise
of disgust. No wonder the place stank. He was
about to say something more when he saw the figures at the far end of
the pen; three of them, each of them holding a hand up to his mouth.
He almost laughed, but checked himself, letting nothing show on the
blank of his face. It was a sign of how much he had changed since
knowing Lehmann. Show nothing, he thought, recalling what Lehmann had
said. The man who shows what he's thinking is weak. He allows
his opponent an advantage. And never more so than when the
stakes were as high as they were today. There
was a moment's hesitation as the three men looked among themselves,
then they came forward. They were big men, their bare arms heavily
muscled. Together they seemed to form a type, but no one knew better
than Soucek how different from each other these three were. The
three stopped a body's length from where Lehmann and he stood.
Everything about them was wary. They had committed themselves heavily
simply by coming. If Whiskers Lu found out, they were dead. But that
didn't mean they were won over. Far from it. "You've
chosen a sweet place for our meeting, Shih Lehmann." The
speaker was Huang Jen. As lieutenant to Po Lao, Red Pole of the Kuei
Chuan, he was the most senior of the three. It was not surprising
that they had chosen him as their spokesman. But the bovine look of
him was misleading, for he was a clever, subtle man— though not
entirely. He had a reputation for sadism. To his left stood Meng Te,
a big Han with a large, shaven head who had joined the
Kuei Chuan from one of the northern long a year
back. Making up the three was a sullen-faced Hung Moo named Visak. "Sweet
enough," Lehmann answered, stepping forward, taking each of them
in turn by the hands. "Like what we do here, neh?" Lehmann
was holding the hands of Visak as he said this, and Soucek, watching,
saw how the man's eyes widened marginally, trying to fathom the
albino. Visak was the most interesting of the three. It was
rare—almost unique—for a Hung Moo to rise in the ranks of
the Triads and said much for his ruthlessness and ability. Though
beneath Huang Jen and Meng Te in the Triad hierarchy, he was, without
doubt, the most dangerous of the three. Before Lehmann had asked him
to sound the man out, Soucek would have considered him the most loyal
of Whiskers Lu's henchmen. Fiercely loyal. But here he was. Security-trained,
Visak's prowess in hand-to-hand fighting was legendary throughout the
Lowers. In stature he was one of the few men Soucek had met who were
as tall as Lehmann, and seeing the two of them together, he noted how
big Visak really was, for the sheer breadth of his chest and
shoulders made the albino seem frail. But Lehmann appeared undaunted.
He met the other's gaze unflinchingly. "You
understand the need for secrecy?" Huang
Jen lifted his chin disdainfully. "Your man promises much, if I
take his vague inferences to mean anything. Will you spell it out for
us? Make it clear?" Soucek
glanced at Lehmann uneasily. What if this were a trap? What if
Whiskers Lu knew about their meeting? It would mean war, surely, for
all Lehmann said of Lu's softness, his lack of will. But Lehmann
seemed contemptuous of such fears. "I
am the coming force," he said, looking from one to the other.
"The very fact that you are here means that you understand this.
That you know where the future lies." He
stood there imperiously, relaxed but commanding, as if every word he
said were incontestable fact. And though Soucek had seen this side of
him before, he felt his nerve ends tingle with a strange excitement
as he listened. At these moments it was like hearing the voice of
some dark, unnatural power. It both terrified and awed him. "In
time it will all be mine. From the north to the south. From west
to east. Every last corridor. You know this. You hear what is
whispered among your men. Even now they see it clearly. Lehmann, they
say. Lehmann's the one. And they're right. You know they're right." Visak
glanced at the others, then laughed. But Soucek could see that even
he was awed. "I
want proof," he said. "Something more than words." The
words seemed strange, rehearsed, and Soucek, watching, narrowed his
eyes suspiciously. Was Whiskers Lu behind this? Was he listening even
now? But Lehmann was shaking his head slowly. "No,
Visak. No sideshows. No games. What we do we do in the utmost
seriousness. You are here because you have already chosen. Children
want proof. Children and old men. But men such as you and I... we
work in certainties, neh?" Visak
raised his chin challengingly, then relented, giving a grudging nod.
Huang Jen, who had been watching him, looked back at Lehmann. "You
are right, Shih Lehmann. There are whispers. But you have still not
answered me. What do we get out of this? And what do you want
from us?" Lehmann
was silent a moment, his pink eyes seeming to hold and judge each one
of them in turn. Then, satisfied, he answered. "I
want you to swear loyalty to me. Here. Right now. I want each one of
you to be my man. To serve me. And, in the time that is to come, to
do what I ask of you." "And
in return?" "You
live. You rule with me." Huang
Jen smiled. "And that's all?" But the smile quickly faded. "The
choice is simple," Lehmann said coldly. "All or nothing.
Which is it to be?" For a
moment there was silence, stillness. Then, hesitantly, Meng Te went
down onto his knees and bowed his head. Slowly, and with one final
questioning look at the albino, Huang Jen also knelt. For a
time it seemed that Visak would choose against, but then, with a
suddenness that was strange, he too knelt and lowered his head. Only
then did Lehmann go down the line, offering his foot for them to
kiss, speaking the words he would have them offer him in token of
their loyalty. He
moved back, calling on them to stand. "I
want you to prepare yourselves. To gather about you those loyal to
you and put aside those who might waver. When things are ready, I'll
send and tell you what to do." Soucek
shivered, understanding how they were feeling at that moment. He too
had knelt and sworn his loyalty. Yes, he thought, watching
them bow and turn away, I understand this better now. It was
not simple force or cunning they responded to, but something
stronger, deeper than those; something so different from what they
were used to that to encounter it was to be changed, as he, Jiri
Soucek, had been changed. To be in Lehmann's presence was to cast off
all masks, all illusions. It was to grasp the raw essence of things.
It was like . . . like pressing through the flesh and touching bone! All
... or nothing. It was so potent an offer that to refuse it was
almost impossible for men such as they. Even so, he wondered whether
it were enough. Whether they were bound to Lehmann as he himself was
bound. He
turned, looking at Lehmann. The albino was staring at the tunnel's
mouth, concentrating, his features fixed, like" a mask. Then he
turned, looking at Soucek. "That will make Whiskers Lu think,
neh? He'll try to kill me, I warrant." It was
so unexpected that Soucek laughed. "Then Visak was act-ing?" Lehmann
shook his head. "Not all the time." He sniffed loudly, then
cleared his throat. "Still, times are sad when such hsiao jen
are legend. You'll watch him, neh?" Soucek
nodded, but he was thinking through what had happened, trying to see
it all anew. Lehmann
turned, starting toward the tunnel's mouth. "Come, Jiri. Let's
go. It stinks here." Soucek
looked up, his eyes widening, surprised that Lehmann had even
noticed. TO the
SOUND of martial music, the golden curtains swept back, revealing the
dragon throne, mounted on a platform of seven broad steps. To each
side, vast pillars rose up into depths of darkness, while
in the great chair itself Wu Shih, T'ang of North America and
spokesman for the Seven, sat cloaked in silks of imperial yellow. As
the camera panned in, his face grew until it filled the screen, its
stem authority staring out at the watching billions. "People
of Chung Kuo," he began, his dark eyes clear and certain. "Today
I have great news to tell you. An announcement of the utmost
importance to everyone in the seven Cities. For the first time since
the dark cloud of war fell over our great civilization, there is
peace in the levels. Both high and low can look forward to a future
of safety and prosperity, of growth and stability. But to ensure that
stability, certain measures must be taken." Wu
Shih paused, his lined and bearded face emanating a strength, a calm
assurance that was impressive. Rocklike and yet fair he seemed at
that moment. A father to his people. "First
of all, the State of Emergency which has been in place these past
nine years is immediately revoked. From this day on, the law will be
as it was before the troubles began. Furthermore, all political
prisoners will have their cases reviewed by civil tribunals, these
matters to be concluded, at the latest, six months from now." There
was a faint softening to the features, the merest hint of a smile.
"Secondly, the House of Representatives at Weimar will be
reopened one year from now, elections to be held in three stages in
the six months prior to that. Further announcements regarding the
dates of such elections and of franchise rights will be posted
throughout the Cities in the days to come." He
paused once more, letting that sink in, then continued, his eyes
staring out unblinking at the gathered masses, commanding their
attention. "Thirdly,
and perhaps most significantly, we have decided upon a package of
revisions to the present Edict of Technological Control. In five
important areas we shall be allowing new developments. Developments
which, it is hoped, will be of benefit to everyone living within our
great society. Changes." Throughout
Chung Kuo there was a murmur of surprise. Changes. Never had
they thought to hear the word from the lips of a T'ang. But Wu Shih
was not finished. "Finally,
there is one last great matter we must face as a people. One
challenge which we must let unite us in the years to come. For many
years now we have chosen not to speak of it. To ignore it, as if by
itself it would go away. But it will not go away. And so, finally, we
must tackle the great question of our time. Are we to be a single
people, free and safe and prosperous? Or are we to see ourselves
riven by division, our great Cities destroyed, our institutions
falling into anarchy and chaos?" There
was a slight upward movement of the great T'ang's head. His eyes
burned now with a fierce challenge. "We
cannot let that be. We cannot let our children suffer. Therefore we
must confront the fact that has stared us in the face too long. Our
numbers are too great. Chung Kuo groans beneath the burden of that
weight. That is why, in the years to come, we must work together,
People and Seven, to find a solution to this last great problem that
confronts us. This is a new beginning. A new chance for us to set
things right. People and Seven. Our chance to be strong again. To
ensure stability and a good life for all." As the
final words echoed out across the great world of levels, the camera
panned back, revealing once more the dragon throne, the pillars, and
the steps. Slowly the golden curtains closed. Wu
Shih rose from his seat and, coming slowly down the steps, made his
way through the kneeling technicians and out into the hospitality
suite at the back of the studio. Guards opened the doors before him,
their heads bowed low. He went through. Inside, his fellow T'ang, Tsu
Ma and Li Yuan, were sitting on the far side of the room, facing a
giant screen. They turned as he entered, standing up to greet him. "That
was good," Tsu Ma said, coming across and holding Wu Shih's arm
briefly. "Yes,"
added Li Yuan, smiling. "The people will sleep soundly tonight,
knowing what is to come." "Maybe
so," Wu Shih answered, taking a seat between them, "and yet
for once the words felt hollow even as I uttered them. All that talk
of a new age. Of peace and stability and of working together, People
and Seven. I would that it were so, that we could call on them and
they'd respond, yet I fear we must face dark days before things get
any better." Tsu Ma
looked down thoughtfully. "Maybe. And yet to say as much would
only bring it that much quicker. No, you spoke well tonight, cousin.
For once we must pray that what we say will come about, even as we
prepare ourselves for the worst." "Prayers,
cousin Ma?" Li Yuan laughed gently. "Has it come to that?" Tsu Ma
met his eyes somberly. "Maybe that's the answer, Yuan. Prayers
and chanting, bells, icons and incense ... as in the old days." Wu
Shih, watching him, frowned. "Are you serious, Tsu Ma?" Tsu Ma
turned, smiling bleakly. "No, my dear friend. I would sooner
allow our cousin Wang to cut my throat than have us return to those
dreadful times. Yet from recent reports it seems that such thinking
is rife, even as high up as the Mids. There is a need among them.
Something that the City does not satisfy." Li
Yuan nodded. "I too have heard such things. Of new cults, new
movements in the lowers. My forces try the best they can to uproot
such growths, yet the garden is long untended, the weeds many. I fear
the day will come when we must relinquish such regions to the
darkness." Wu
Shih sighed. "I confess that is how I also feel. I tell myself
that we must prevail, yet in my heart of hearts 1 am uncertain." Tsu Ma
nodded. "We must face the truth, cousins. It is as Wang said,
that day at Astrakhan when we first saw how things were to be among
us. We live in new times. There are new ways of thinking and
behaving. It is said that in my great-grandfather's day everything
under Heaven, yes, even the wan wu, the ten thousand things
themselves, would bow before the sound of his voice, the solemn glare
of his eye. But now?" He laughed sourly. "Well, our eyes
have lost their fierce glow, our voices their terrifying power. Or so
it would seem, neh? And our Cities . . . our Cities are filled with
the shadows of fear and ignorance and hatred. And how can one fight
such shadows?" "And
yet we must." "Yes,
cousin Yuan. And we must also guard against these other, inner
shadows—the shades of fear and despair. For we who rule are not
as other men. If we fall, who will stand in our place? If we fall,
all is lost." A
heavy, brooding silence fell, and then, unexpectedly, the screen
behind them lit up once more. "Cousins..." It was
Wang Sau-leyan. His moon-shaped face filled the great screen,
smiling, as if he saw them. "Wu
Shih . . . you spoke well tonight. Indeed, you spoke for us all when
you said that this was a new beginning, a new chance to make things
right. So it is, cousin. So it is. But time alone will show just how
important this moment is. It is a joyous moment, a truly great moment
for the Seven and for the people of Chung Kuo. Let us go forward from
this moment and build upon that vision of a new age. I, for one, will
not hesitate to strive toward that goal. You can be assured of my
continued support in Council for all measures designed to bring that
aim about." The
smile broadened momentarily, like a fracture in that pallid expanse
of flesh, and then, unexpectedly, Wang bowed his head. "And
so I bid you good night, cousin Wu. Likewise to my cousins, Tsu Ma
and Li Yuan. May the gods protect you and your loved ones." The
screen blanked. Below it the three T'ang sat in stunned silence,
staring at each other. At last Tsu Ma broke the spell. "Now
what in the gods' names was that about? What is that calculating
bastard up to now?" "Whatever
it is," Wu Shih said irritably, "you can be certain of one
thing—that our effusive cousin means not a single word of what
he said." "Maybe
not," said Li Yuan thoughtfully, "but now, at least, we are
forewarned." "True,"
said Tsu Ma, leaning back in his chair, a sudden twinkle in his eye.
"And there's one, at least, who casts a shadow large enough to
fight." THERE
WAS A SUDDEN , violent banging at the door. Emily woke, groping for
the gun she always kept at her bedside, her heart hammering. For a
moment she thought herself back in her tiny apartment in Munich
Hsien, then she realized where she was—America—and sat
up, suddenly alert. There
was no gun, only the bedside timer. It was after four and the
apartment was in total darkness. For a moment she sat there,
breathing shallowly, listening, wondering if she had imagined it, and
then it came again. Mach.
It had to be. Security wouldn't have bothered knocking. She
hissed out her anger, then got up quickly and threw on a robe. He had
better have a good excuse for waking her at this hour. A fucking
beauty of an excuse. She
stabbed the view button angrily, studying herself briefly in the
wall-length mirror beside the door, then looked back at the screen. "Michael..." Michael
was leaning against the wall beside the door, his closely cropped
head lowered, his body slumped forward, as if he were ill. As she
watched he swayed back slightly and looked up at the camera, bleary
eyed. No,
not ill. Drunk. She
studied herself in the wall-length mirror, wondering what he wanted
of her, then, with a tiny shudder, slammed her hand over the
door-release pad. He
stood there unsteadily, simply looking at her. She made to chastise
him, then stopped, catching her breath. "Michael.
. ." she said, pained by the sight of him. "What is it?" He
looked away, then looked back at her, tears welling in his eyes. She
had never seen him like this. Never seen him anything but strong,
resourceful, positive, even when things had seemed hopeless. But that
look in his eyes had been dreadful. She had never seen such misery,
such a vast, despairing sense of loss. "Come
on," she said gently, putting her shoulder under his arm to
support him. She drew him inside and closed the door behind them.
"Let's have some ch'a. You can tell me all about it." "It's
finished," he said, shuddering, his face screwed up in sudden
torment. "There's no going back. It's ended between us." She
stared at the side of his face, wondering what he meant. "Who
. . . ?" she began, then understood. "He
pissed on me, Em. The old fucker pissed on me." The
words were angry, accusing. But the anger of the woros was underlaid
with a raw hurt that genuinely surprised her. She
sat him down in the kitchen in one of the big chairs, then began to
prepare the ch'a, her mind racing. "It
was Kennedy," he said, telling her what she already knew. "It
was his idea. He thought it would help things. Take the pressure off.
Give us some breathing space in which to raise some funds and develop
our campaign. It seemed like a good thing to do at the time. But I
didn't. . ." Again
his voice broke, betraying him. He closed his eyes, squeezing the
lids tightly shut, but still the tears came, defying his every effort
to hold them back. "I
didn't know," she said softly, sympathetically. "I thought
you hated him." "Hated
him?" He laughed and opened his eyes again, staring at her
almost soberly. "I could never hate him, Em. Never. He's my
father. He's. . ." Again
he could not go on. "So
what happened?" she asked, coaxing him gently. "What did
he say?" He
took a deep, shuddering breath, then shook his head. "It wasn't
what he said, it was how he did it. He had his cronies there. You
know, that crowd he's roped in to fund his immortality project. I
wanted to speak to him alone, but he wouldn't have it. He wouldn't
even let me into the room. And then. . ." He licked his lips,
then carried on. "Well, it was hopeless. He doesn't want to
know." He looked up at her forlornly. "He wants me to be a
slave to him—to do everything he says. And I can't do that, Em,
I can't! He asks too much. He always has." "I
see . . ." But she didn't. Not yet. This was something specific.
Something he was holding back from her. She
turned away, busying herself a moment, pouring the ch'a. When
she turned back it was to find him leaning forward in the chair,
watching her strangely. "What
is it?" she said, setting the bowl down on the table beside him.
"What aren't you telling me?" He
laughed, but it was a strangely forlorn sound. "You're a good
woman, Em. And not just good at your job. There's something about
you. Some quality . . ." He shrugged and sat back slightly, his
movements awkward, slightly exaggerated, as if he were trying hard to
control himself. "I saw it from the first. Even before
you started working for me. I noticed you. Did you know that? 1 used
to look out for you in my father's offices. I..." He
looked down at his hands, as if it were suddenly hard to say what he
was about to say, then looked back at her again, his whole manner
suddenly changed. "Gloria
Chung . . . remember her, Em? The hostess at that party we went to.
She told me something that night. Something I should have known for
myself but hadn't really seen until then. Well, tonight, facing my
father, what she said came back to me. You see, I had to make a
choice. Oh, I don't think the Old Man was even aware of it. Anything
else he'd have asked of me I would have done. Anything. But that..." Emily
shook her head, suddenly exasperated with him. "What, for the
gods' sakes? What the hell are you talking about, Michael?" "It
was you," he said, his gaze suddenly piercing her. "That's
what it was all about. He wanted me to marry the Johnstone girl and I
refused. As before, only I didn't know it back then. But tonight I
was certain of it. Anything else, and I'd have agreed. Anything. But
to lose you, Em ... No. I couldn't do that. Not that." He
stood unsteadily, taking her hands. "Don't you understand it
yet? I want to marry you, Em. To spend my life with you." The
words surprised her; caught her totally off guard. She was silent a
moment, then recollecting herself, she shook her head. "But what
about your father? You love him, Michael. You need him. If you marry
me, he'll cut you off for good." He
shuddered, the full weight of his hurt there briefly in his eyes.
"Maybe. But it's done already, Em. It's finished between us.
Really. There's no going back. So now it's just you and I. That's if
you'll have me. That's if you feel even the tiniest bit the way I
feel toward you." She
laughed, but beneath her laughter was a kind of numbed
surprise—almost awe—that he had done this for her; that
he had cast it all off simply to have her. "I'll
have you, Michael Lever," she said quietly, surprised by the
strength of what she felt for him at that moment. "Just you and
I. For life. And no going back, neh? No going back." CHAPTER
ELEVEN
Lost IT
HAD BEEN a long time since they had entertained, and I Jelka felt
awkward, unpracticed in her role as hostess. I Their guests, the
Hausers, were friends of her father's from years back, the husband
ex-Security and a onetime Colonial Governor, the wife a soldier's
wife, silent and dutiful in all things. Their son, Gustav, had come
to work for the Marshal as his equerry and was shortly to be
reposted. Jelka often saw him about the house, though he kept much to
himself. He seemed a pleasant enough young man, though, like all of
them, bred with a certain stiffness to him. At the
table she busied herself, turning to have a word with the servants,
making sure things went smoothly, then turning back to ensure that
the conversation kept flowing. Not that there was any real problem
with that, for the two men monopolized the talk. First it was pure
reminiscence, then, after their wineglasses had been topped up and
the dessert was out of the way, they moved on to that perennial topic
among the old: How things had changed. "It
was far simpler back then," Hauser began, nodding and looking to
his wife. "Values were stronger. Positions were much clearer cut
than now." He sipped and leaned forward, giving Jelka the
benefit of his gaze. "There was no question of divided
loyalties. A man was what he said he was." She
wanted to question that. It struck her that men had always
been as they were now—a mixed bunch, and some more mixed
than others—but she kept her silence, smiling, as if she
agreed. Hauser
smiled back at her, pleased by her acquiescence. "Our job was
simple, back then. We rounded up a few malcontents. Made sure things
ran smoothly in the levels. None of this 'Who's my friend? Who's my
enemy?" business." Tolonen
sighed and wiped at his lips with his napkin. "That's true,
Sven. Why, if I could but tell you . . ." He shook his head
sadly and reached for his glass. "Honor is not a thing you can
buy. It must be bred. Must be there from birth in the immediate
environment of a man. And if it's not. . ." He drank deeply,
then set his glass down again, pursing his lips. Jelka,
watching him, thought of Kim. Was it true, what her father said? Was
honor simply a thing to be bred into a man? Couldn't a man be
naturally honorable? "Unfortunately,"
continued her father, "we live in an age where such standards
are vanishing fast. Young men like your son are rare, Sven." She
looked down once more, keeping the smile from her face. The old
Governor had pushed out his chin at her father's remark and nodded
sternly, the gesture so like a character in a trivee historical that
she had it on her lips to remark about it. But there were rules here,
and she would obey them, dislike them as she might. She said nothing,
merely looked past the governor's wife to the waiter, indicating that
he should fill the woman's glass again. "You
must be excited." Jelka
looked back at the ex-Governor and realized he had been talking to
her. "I beg your pardon, Major Hauser?" "About
the trip. It must be wonderful. Seeing all that so young. I was in my
late forties before I first went out." She
still wasn't following him. Confused, she looked to her father for
explanation, but the Marshal was staring fixedly down at the table,
as if deep in thought. "Yes,"
went on the Governor, "I can remember it clearly, even now.
Seeing the moons of Jupiter for the first time." She
laughed. "I'm sorry. I'm afraid you must be mistaken." It was
the old man's turn to look confused and turn to her father. "What's
this, Knut? I thought you'd settled things?" There
was a slight color to Tolonen's cheeks. He met his old friend's eyes
firmly, but his voice was quieter than usual. "I haven't told
her, Sven. Please..." "Ah
. . ." There was a moment's clear embarrassment, then the old
man turned and looked back at Jelka. "Well, as it's out, I guess
you might as well know. I suppose your father wanted to surprise you,
neh?" Jelka
had gone cold. She was looking at her father steadily. What had he
done now? "A trip?" she asked, ignoring their guests
momentarily. "I
would have told you," Tolonen said, still not looking at her.
"Tonight. When our friends here had gone." There
was a slight emphasis on the word friends that was meant to
remind her of her duty as hostess, but she ignored it. "You're
doing it again, aren't you?" She
could sense how both their guests had stiffened in their seats. Her
father, however, had turned to face her. "Doing
what?" "Interfering.
. ." She said it softly, but the impact of the word couldn't be
softened. She was thinking of Hans Ebert and her father's pressure on
her to marry him. He had been wrong then, and he was wrong now. She
loved Kim. And she would not be separated from him. Not for
some soldier! She
shivered, realizing the point to which her thoughts had brought her.
Did she really hate all this talk of duty and breeding? Hate all this
soldiering? "Jelka.
. ." her father said softly. "You must listen to me. In
this I know best. Really . . ." She
folded up her napkin and threw it down on the table, then stood.
Turning to the Governor and his wife, she gave a small bow and a
faint smile of apology. "I'm sorry. I really don't feel well. If
you'll excuse me . . ." She
made to turn away, but her father called her back. "Where
do you think you're going, girl?" She
took a deep breath, then turned to face him. He was angry with her.
Furiously angry. She had never seen him quite like this. But the
sight merely steeled her to what she was doing. She faced him out,
for the first time in her life openly defying him. "What
is it?" He
waved a hand at her, indicating that she should sit. But she remained
as she was, standing away from the table, the chair pushed out behind
her. He saw this and narrowed his eyes. "You'll
sit down, and you'll apologize to our guests for your behavior." She
opened her mouth, astonished by him. Slowly, she shook her head. "No.
I'll not go." "Sit
down!" There
was real menace in his voice this time. She sat, slightly away from
the table, making no effort to draw her chair up. "I'll not go,"
she said again, as if he had not heard her the first time. Hauser
was silent, looking from her to her father. But his face was the
mirror of her father's. "You'll
go because I tell you to. Understand?" She
went very still. Then, looking up at him again, she shook her head. This
time he stood and yelled at her. "You'll go, dammit! Even if my
men have to bind you and carry you on board. Understand? You're still
my daughter, and until you're of age, you do what I say!" She
shuddered, looking away from him. He was so ugly like this. So... Not
meaning to, she laughed. It
went very quiet. She could feel the chill of the atmosphere about
her. She looked up at him again. He was looking at her strangely,
almost as if he didn't recognize her. "What
are you afraid of?" she asked. "What?"
He didn't seem to understand. "Afraid?" "Kim,"
she said. "Why are you so afraid of him? Why would it be so
wrong if I married him?" She
had said nothing before now, but this was the nub of it. The reason
for all this heavy-handedness. Her
father laughed oddly. "You'll not marry him. Not him." She
met his eyes and saw that he was determined in this. But he had
reckoned without her opposition. Like before, he had thought she
would bow meekly to his wishes. "I
have your blood," she said softly. "If needs be, I'll fight
you on this." "You'll
go," he said, with an air of finality. For a
moment longer she hesitated, then nodded. "I'll go," she
said, "because you make me go. But it will change nothing. I'll
marry him, see if I don't." His
eyes widened and his mouth opened as if he were going to argue more
with her, but then he nodded, and sat down. He had her agreement.
That, for now, was enough for him. The rest would take its course.
Why fight tomorrow's battles before they came? "Now
may I go?" she asked, still sitting there. He
looked back at her again, then across at his guests. The ex-Governor
gave a tight little nod and a half-smile. Beside him, his wife sat
stiffly, looking down at her hands, as if in shock. "Go
on, then," Tolonen said softly, and stood for her, as if nothing
had happened. But, watching her go, he knew that something had broken
between them. Some last link of childish trust. He shivered, then
turned back to his guests. "I'm
sorry, Sven," he said. "I should have warned you . . ." THE
BOARD ROOM was tense, silent, as Old Man Lever, at the head of the
table, read through the figures on the loan document. To his left
along the great oak table sat the financiers, eight in all, to the
right his team of advisors. All eyes were focused on the Old Man as
he turned the page and, looking up, tapped the document in front of
him. "The
top-up's too high. I thought we'd agreed on two point six." "Two
point eight, Mister Lever," Bonner, the Chief Negotiator,
answered quietly. "I have it minuted." Lever
stared at him a moment, as if Bonner had taken leave of his senses,
then, taking his ink brush from the stand beside him, he put a line
through the figure and wrote the new figure beside it, initialing the
change. There
was the briefest exchange of glances to his left, a small shrug
of acceptance from Bonner. The matter was decided. As ever,
Lever had gotten his way. "And
what about this matter of extended term insurance?" Lever added
casually. "I think we should share the expense, fifty-fifty.
What do you think?" Bonner
looked down. "It's unusual, Mister Lever. The borrower usually
bears the cost of any loan insurances, but if that's what you want."
He looked back up at Lever and smiled. "Besides, I'm sure the
project will come in on time." Lever
smiled, then reached out to pat Bonner's arm. "Good. Then we'll
get this signed and witnessed, neh?" Bonner
let out a breath, the tension draining from him. The two points on
the top-up would cost them over fifty thousand, and the insurance
might add up to one hundred and fifty thousand more, but in terms of
the total deal that was nothing. Eight
billion yuanl Bonner's mind reeled at the thought of it. It
was the biggest loan his Finance House had ever set up. And even at
the fine rates Lever had insisted on, it would bring handsome
profits. Personally, as Chief Negotiator, his own share was a quarter
point, but a quarter point on eight billion was nothing to sneer at. And
every last fen secured by prime ImmVac stock, the best on the
market. Bonner stood, bowing to the old man. Behind him, in a line,
his team did the same, keeping their heads lowered as Bonner walked
around the table to append his signature to the bottom of the
agreement, then flicked back, initialing the two changes. A second
copy of the document would be retinally imprinted and registered
later in the day, but for now their business was concluded, the deal
done. Old
Man Lever turned and, looking across at his Chief Steward, clicked
his fingers. At once, the Steward turned and pulled open the doors.
Waiting there in the corridor beyond were six servants, bearing trays
of wine and delicacies. Quickly they went about the table. "Come,"
said Old Man Lever, looking about him with a broad smile, "let's
celebrate! For today the Cutler Institute for Genetic Research is
mine. Lock, stock, and barrel, as my grandfather used to say." He
laughed, then nodded to himself. Standing, he took a wine cup from
the nearest servant and raised-it. "This is a great moment, and
nothing . . . nothing, can spoil it!" AH
about the table, Cups were lifted, voices raised in the
traditional toast. "Kanpei!"
> "Mister
Lever..." The
Steward stood at Lever's shoulder, leaning close, his voice a
whisper, low but insistent. Lever
turned a fraction. "Yes?" "News
has come, Master. Moments back. It's Michael, Mister Lever. He's
married. Married the Jennings woman." MACH
AND CURVAL were standing in the anteroom when Lever came storming
out, his eyes bulging with anger. They had heard the tray go crashing
down, and Lever's angry shout, but the sight of him, his face set
into a fierce grimace, his fists bunched tight, surprised them both. "What
is it?" Mach said, catching up with the old man. "What in
hell's name has happened?" Lever
stopped abruptly and turned, facing Mach. "It's Michael. He's
betrayed me." "Betrayed
you?" Lever
shuddered. "He's married her. The bastard's gone and married
her!" Mach
stared at him, shocked. Emily, he meant. Michael had married Emily
Ascher. "It's
not possible," he said, after a moment. "She wouldn't. I
mean. . ." He shook his head, unable to explain it. "Are
you certain?" "Not
certain, no, but fairly sure. I'd put a trace on him, you see. I..."
Again Lever shuddered. "He's betrayed me, Jan. Pissed on me!
First with the Ward boy, and now this!" "Maybe
theyVe got it wrong. Maybe . . ." "No.
This time he's really done it. Done it to spite me. To piss on me. My
son. . ." "Charles.
. ." "No.
This is my fault. I should have expected this. Should have known he'd
do this." He shivered, lowering his voice. "I should have
had her killed." Mach
glanced at Curval, then shook his head. "No, Charles. It would
have solved nothing. You have to live with this. To show him it means
nothing to you." "Nothing?"
Lever closed his eyes, the sudden pain in his face something
awful to see. "That boy meant everything to me. Everything.
And now..." "You
must show him he means nothing," Mach said, insistent now. "It's
the only answer, Charles. The only answer." whiskers
Lu, Big Boss of the Kuei Chuan, stood, letting out a great
roar. Fat Wong's handwritten note lay on the desk before him, its
curt, six-word summons the reason for his anger. "How
dare that jumped-up little cocksucker tell me what to do! How
dare he summon me like one of his runners!" Lu's
men kept their heads lowered, their eyes averted. They had been
poring over a plan of the lowers, discussing the recent incursions by
the i4K in the eastern stacks and the movements up-level of the Red
Gang to their north, trying to work out countermoves, but this had
pushed all that from Lu Ming-shao's mind. For ten minutes now he had
raged, taxing the limits of his invention with the names he had
called the United Bamboo's 489. And yet everyone there knew that
Whiskers Lu would go. He had to. For Fat Wong was currently strong,
his alliances in Council secure, whereas the last year had seen the
decline of the Kuei Chuaris fortunes, the erosion of their
once firm links with their neighboring Triads. Yes,
and that too had been Fat Wong's doing, no doubt. Lu Ming-shao had no
proof of it, but how else could it have happened? Why else would the
i4K have dared encroach on Kuei Chuan territory unless Fat
Wong had given his tacit agreement? And now this. "Why
not kill him?" Visak said suddenly, speaking into the stillness
between Lu's rages. Whiskers
Lu laughed humorlessly and fixed Visak with his one good eye. "Kill
him? Kill Fat Wong?" He laughed again, this time in disbelief.
"How?" "An
assassin," Visak said, meeting Lu's ferocious stare. "I
know a man. He's special." "Special?"
Whiskers Lu leaned forward, holding the edge of the table, and
laughed. "He'd have to be a ghost and walk through walls to get
Fat Wong." Visak
lowered his head. "With great respect, Master Lu, this man is
special. He could get Wong Yi-sun. Wong and all his top men." Whiskers
Lu was breathing shallowly now, his hands gripping the table's edge.
His mottled, masklike face twitched violently. Then, relaxing, he
pushed back again, composing himself, drawing his silks tightly about
him. He turned, making a show of studying the glass cases on the wall
behind his desk—the cases that contained the heads of his three
great rivals—then nodded. Lu
Ming-shao took one of the heads down, studying it a moment, a brief
smile flitting across his glasslike features as he recalled the
moment he had killed this one—that look of dumb incomprehension
in the man's eyes as he had choked the breath out of him, and the
great surge of satisfaction he had felt afterward. Unconsciously he
smoothed the tip of his thumb across the surface of the blinded eye,
then reached up again, setting the head back in its place. "All
right. But it has to be tonight. Understand? I'll be fucked if I'll
let that bastard live to see another day. Not after the way he's
insulted me. Contact your man at once. Offer him whatever he needs.
Then bring him here, understand? I want to see this ghost. An hour
from now if possible, but tonight, at any rate. Before the meeting." He
turned, meeting his lieutenant's eyes. "Oh, and Visak. You will
make sure of your friend, won't you? Very sure." Visak
nodded, then, bowing low, turned away. Whiskers Lu watched him go,
then sat, thoughtful now, his rage spent. For a moment he was silent,
staring at the handwritten note, then, reaching out, he crumpled the
note into a tiny ball, popped it into his mouth, and swallowed. For a
moment there was nothing. Then, as if all the tension in the room had
been suddenly dispelled, Whiskers Lu began to laugh, his laughter
echoed back at him. LU
MING-SHAO pushed the young girl aside unceremoniously, then eased his
huge bulk up off the bed. He pulled on the robe his man was
holding and tied the sash tightly about his waist, eyeing his
lieutenant. "So
he's here, then?" Visak
lowered his head. "In the audience room, Master." "Unarmed,
I hope." "Yes,
Master. And under guard." "And
the task I want of him. He Understands what it entails?" "He
does, Master." "Good.
How did he react?" Visak
hesitated, his eyes straying briefly to the young Han girl on the
bed, who lay there, naked, watching the exchange, her eyes, curious.
He looked back at Lu Ming-shao, meeting his one good eye. "Our
friend is rather a cold fish. He is not one to ... react." Whiskers
Lu stared at him a moment, then laughed delightedly. "Good! I
warm to him already." They
went through, Visak leading the way, Whiskers Lu's runners kneeling,
bowing low before him as he approached. The door to the audience room
was barred by two of his best men, Meng Te and Huang Jen. "Okay,"
Lu said, looking about him and smiling. "Let's meet our special
friend." Inside,
the unexpected. A tall man dressed totally in white, his back to
them, his head tilted slightly, looking down, as if he was cradling
something. As he turned, they saw what it was. A baby. Whiskers
Lu glared at Visak, angry that he'd not been prepared. "What is
this?" The
tall man looked down at the baby, then, looking back at Whiskers Lu,
threw it at him. Lu
Ming-shao, taken totally by surprise, raised his arms in reflex,
catching the child. As he did, the man drew his gun and fired twice.
Whiskers Lu heard the choked cries and felt the floor shake as the
bodies fell either side of him, but he himself still stood there,
untouched. The
stranger put the gun away. "The unexpected is a powerful tool,
don't you think, Lu Ming-shao?" Lu
Ming-shao swallowed, his anger something cold and hard. "What
the fuck do you think youVe doing, friend?" "Those
two were traitors," the tall man answered calmly. "They
made deals behind your back. They sold you to another." Lu
Ming-shao turned, looking down at the fallen bodies of Meng Te and
Huang Jen. Was it possible? Yet even as he asked the question he knew
that it was perfectly possible. After all, he was the outsider here.
There were no blood ties as existed between the other 4893 and their
men. They were his men through force alone, not loyalty. He
looked down at the child that rested, strangely silent in his arms. A
Hung Moo, it was. An ugly little brat, weeks old at most. He lifted
it slightly, as if to test its weight, then threw it back at the
stranger. The
tall man stepped back, letting the child fall, screeching, to the
floor. He had a knife in his hand now. A huge, wicked-looking thing
with a white pearl handle. Whiskers
Lu drew his own knife and, bellowing loudly, lunged at the other man,
knowing now that he had been set up. But he had taken only two steps
before he sank down onto his knees, his breath hissing painfully from
him, Visak's knife buried to the hilt in his upper back, Visak's
weight bearing him down. The
baby was silent now. It lay beneath Lu Ming-shao, crushed by the
weight of the two men. Visak
got up and moved away, leaving the knife embedded in his former
Master's back, his eyes going to the tall man. The
stranger moved closer, standing above Whiskers Lu, listening to the
pained wheezing of his final breaths, the soft gurgle of the blood in
his pierced and damaged lung. Then, with the sole of his left boot,
he forced Lu's head down brutally into the floor, turning his foot,
the heel gouging into the melted, masklike face of the dying man,
cracking open the brittle mottled plastic of his flesh, as if he were
crushing an insect. Lehmann
looked up past the dying man, meeting Visak's eyes. "Summon the
Red Pole, Po Lao. Bring him here at once. And if he asks, tell him
only that things have changed. That he has a new Master." MAIN
HAD BEEN EMPTIED. Beneath the clock tower, the decapitated bodies of
those who had opposed Lehmann were laid in rows, more
than three hundred in all, their severed heads stacked in a huge pile
close by. Lehmann
stood there, gaunt yet imperious, looking about him at the heartland
of his new territory, his face betraying nothing at that moment of
triumph. Twenty ch'i away, in the shadow of the tower, stood Soucek,
Visak at his side. The two men had fought hard these last few hours,
quelling the last pockets of resistance; making sure no news of this
got out before its time. Now it was done, Lehmann's rule made
certain. At a signal from the albino, Visak bowed and went across,
calling the men in from the main corridor. The
runners crossed the great floor slowly in a great tide, approaching
the tower timidly, their eyes wide, staring at the rows of headless
corpses, the gruesome stack of bloodied skulls nearby. Then, at
Visak's shouted command, they went down onto their knees, lowering
their foreheads to the floor. More than four thousand men in all.
Kuei Chuan, every one. Lehmann
stood there a moment, looking out across their lowered backs, then
went among them, lifting this man's chin and staring into his face,
and then another's, moving between them'all the while, fearless and
magisterial, like a T'ang, his every movement emphasizing his
command. For
long minutes there was silence; a silence in which, it seemed, they
dare not even breathe, then, coming out from their midst, Lehmann
went over to the stack of heads and, taking one in each hand, turned
to face the watching mass. "These
were my enemies," he said, his voice calm and cold and measured.
"And this will be the fate of all my enemies, from this day on.
But you . . . you have the chance to be my friends. My men." He set
the heads down and took a step toward them. "There
is a price for disloyalty. So it is. So it has always been among our
kind. But loyalty . . . how do you earn that? What is its price?"
Lehmann turned his head slowly, his pale pink eyes encompassing them
all. "I understand your shock, your confusion over what has
happened. But I know that many among you were unhappy with how things
were under Lu Ming-shao. That many of you welcome change. As for me
... well, you do not know me yet. Only, perhaps, by reputation. That,
too, I understand. You might fear me right now, but
there is no reason for you—any of you—to owe me
any loyalty. Not yet. But in the months to come I shall ask much of
you. Things Whiskers Lu never dreamed to ask. And in return?" Lehmann
paused and nodded slowly, thoughtfully, as if in reverie; yet when he
spoke again, his voice was suddenly powerful, echoing across the
great open space. "In return I will give you everything.
Everything you ever dreamed of." kim
removed the jack from the face of the terminal, letting the wire coil
back into the stud beneath his ear, then sat back, breathing
shallowly. "It's good. Very good. And easy to use. I thought it
would take a while to get used to." The
surgeon smiled. "Everyone thinks that. And there's a degree of
truth to it. What you've just experienced—that's just the
beginning. You see, while it uses the same skills you've always
had—you can't, after all, slow down the speed that messages
travel at in the nervous system—you're used to limiting your
thought processes to the speed at which you can read or speak
language. Once those limitations are removed, the brain can process
raw data at phenomenal speeds. Anything up to a thousand times as
fast as it could unaided. But it takes a while to adapt." Kim
nodded, his eyes looking inward. He was remembering how it had felt:
the power of that feeling. Information had flashed into his
head at an almost frightening speed. He had had a feeling of
exultation, of tightness—of utter clarity. He had felt himself
grow by the moment, achieving a degree of sharpness he had never
experienced before. Sparks of pure insight had flickered between
points in his head, like electrical discharges, and he had struggled
to hold on to them as others filled his head. He
looked at the surgeon again. "You should do this yourself. It
would help you, surely?" The
surgeon laughed. "They all say that. We call it conversion
syndrome. Those who haven't got it, fear it; those who have, have a
proselytizing urge to make others have the operation. But I don't
have it because I can't." "Why?"
Kim's fingers traced the shape of the stud unconsciously. It
was a gesture that betrayed the newness of the implant. The
surgeon saw it and smiled. "For
you there are no drawbacks. You're a theoretician, not a
practitioner. But experiment has found that there's a slight decay of
motor control. A loss of sharpness in that area. As if the increased
use of the memory draws upon other sections of the brain and weakens
their functions. A sort of compensatory effect, if you like. As a
surgeon I can't risk that. My work is with my hands as much as with
my knowledge of the mind's workings. I can't afford to impair my
motor responses. Besides, they'd not allow me to." Kim
nodded, considering. "There would be other difficulties, too,
wouldn't there?" The
surgeon smiled. "Interfacing," he explained quickly.
"That's the term we have for it. From old computer jargon.
Interfacing is the difficulty you experienced moving from one state
to another. Why you couldn't say anything for the first few seconds.
The mind has grown accustomed to responding at what is, for it, a
more natural speed. Dropping down from that it stumbles and finds
great difficulty in adjusting. The effect lasts only five to ten
seconds, but it would be utterly debilitating for a surgeon. "You
only get that effect when you cut out, and there seems no way of
preventing it. When you plug in, the mind speeds up gradually. It's
almost two seconds before it reaches its full operating speed.
Cutting out, there's no gradual assimilation. The change of state is
immediate and, to an extent, shocking." "Harmful?" The
surgeon shook his head. "The mind's a resilient machine. It
defends itself against damage. That's what the interfacing effect
is—a defense mechanism. Without it there would be
damage." There
was a knock on the door. A moment later an orderly entered and, after
bowing to the surgeon, handed Kim a "sealed" notecard, the
tiny slip of plastic winking blankly in the overhead light. "Excuse
me a moment," Kim said, getting up from the chair and moving
away from the terminal. "Of
course," the surgeon answered. "I'll make my other calls,
then come back later, if you like." Alone
again, Kim placed his thumb to the seal and activated the
release. At once a message appeared on the blank plastic card.
He read it slowly, moving his lips to form each word, realizing, even
as the message sank in, how painfully slow this normal way of doing
things was. Then that was forgotten. He read it through again,
astonished, his mind struggling to understand what had happened. "He
can't. . ." he said, turning sharply to face the door, his whole
stance suddenly changed; his body tensed now, crouched like a
fighter's. "No . . ." The
message was brief and to the point, signed with Tolonen's personal
code. SWiWard, You
are not to see my daughter, nor should you try to see her. There is
no future for the two of you, and certainly no possibility of a
match. You will keep away from my living quarters and deal with me
only through my office in future. Finally, let me warn you. If you
persist in this matter, I shall do all in my power to break you. —Knut
Tolonen. The
hairs on his neck bristled as he read the note again. He threw it
down and went to the terminal. Sitting there, he tapped in the
"Reach" code she had given him. Her private code, known
only to her and him. He waited, anger and fear and something
else—something he knew but could not put a name to—churning
in his stomach. For a long time there was nothing. The screen
remained blank, the delay pulse the only sign that the machine was
attempting to connect them. Then, almost imperceptibly, the screen
changed, showing not her face, as he'd hoped, but a message. Briefer
than Tolonen's and less personal, but something: a sign for him that
she had no part in this. Nanking.
South Port 3. Meridian. Nanking
was the great spaceport that served the colonies. South Port 3 must
be the departure point, the Meridian the ship. But why had she
given him these details? Unless . . . He
went cold. Quickly he signed off, then summoned up details of
departures from Nanking, South Port 3, and found the Meridian listed
on the second page. He shivered. Seven hours. Less than seven
hours, in fact. That was all the time he had to get to her and . . . And
what? He sat back, his heart hammering in his chest, his hands
trembling. He could do nothing. Tolonen would make certain of that.
Even now, perhaps, he was being watched. But he would have to try. He
would never forgive himself unless he tried. He
stood up slowly, feeling weak. Turning, looking down at the tiny slip
of card where it lay on the floor across the room from him, he
recognized at last what the feeling was he had failed to put a name
to. It was dark and vast and empty like a pit; a feeling so
dreadful and debilitating that it seemed to drain him even as he
stood there; making him feel hollow and close to death. It was loss.
He had lost her. But
even as it swept over him, another feeling grew—of anger, and
determination. No. He would try. He would go after her, Tolonen's
threats notwithstanding. He would try. Because nothing else mattered
to him as much as Jelka. Nothing in the whole vast universe. SOUCEK
WAS WALKING beside the sedan, Po Lao and Visak several paces in front
of him at the front of the procession as they approached the end of
the corridor and the rendezvous point beyond. Lehmann had handpicked
the tiny force that marched along beneath the black dog banners, yet
there were only two dozen of them, including the pole men, and Soucek
felt uneasy, hideously exposed, here in Red Gang territory. The
meeting had been rearranged at short notice. The note sent to Fat
Wong had stated bluntly that the Big Boss of the Kuei Ckuon would
meet him on Red Gang territory or not at all. It had specified a time
and a place, and had informed Wong Yi-sun that copies of the note
were being delivered simultaneously to each of the other four Bosses.
That last was an elementary precaution, yet if Fat Wong was
contemplating a move against the Kuei Chuan, this seemed
as good a place as any to make it. If what Visak had said were true,
the last six months had seen Fat Wong's United Bamboo Triad grow very
close to Dead Man Yun's Red Gang. Why, they had even gone so far as
to support Red Gang encroachments on Kuei Chuan territory. To
Soucek, then, this seemed a strange thing to do—tantamount
to putting one's head in the tiger's mouth. But Lehmann had ordered
it. They
slowed, Soucek not alone in counting the guards on the barrier up
ahead and noting the great array of banners beyond. They were all
here—i4K and Yellow Banners, United Bamboo, Red Gang, and Wo
Shih Wo—and here in some force too. The Kuei Chuan, a
meager two dozen fighting men, were clearly the last to arrive. He
felt his pulse quicken, his chest tighten at the thought of the
encounter ahead. For once he felt a slight uncertainty about what
Lehmann was doing. This was a different league. A different league
entirely. It was one thing to kill a Big Boss, another to establish
oneself in his place. And yet Po Lao, like Visak, had bowed to
Lehmann, accepting the inevitable. So maybe . . . A
figure appeared at the barrier. A smalt, dapper-looking Han in
cream-and-lilac silks. Behind him four other middle-aged Han waited,
watching the sedan come on. "That's
Fat Wong at the front," Visak said quietly, talking from the
comer of his mouth. "The bald one to his left is Dead Man Yun,
our host. The pop-eyed one next to him is Li Chin, Boss of the Wo
Shih Wo—Li the Lidless as he's known. The starchy old man is
General Feng, Boss of the i4K. Beside him—the tall one with the
crippled hand—is Three-Finger Ho, Boss of the Yellow Banners." Soucek
narrowed his eyes, taking it all in. He had never thought to see
these men, not separately, let alone together like this, but here
they were, gathered at his Master's summons. His fear now was a solid
thing at the pit of his stomach and part of him wondered if he would
ever see another morning, but the thought of letting Lehmann down
made him keep his fear in check; made him look about him with cold,
clear eyes. They
were powerful men, there was no doubting it. He could see it in their
stance, in the calm aura of superiority that hung about them as they
waited, and in the cold, passionless depths of their eyes. Men died
at their slightest whim, at their smallest gesture. And yet they were
men, for all that. They could be killed. As Whiskers Lu had been
killed. And Lehmann? He too could be killed, for he was simply a man
when it came down to it. And yet the thought of someone bettering
Lehmann seemed wrong somehow—almost an impossibility—and
that sense of wrongness gave Soucek new confidence, for at bottom he
believed in Lehmann. They
stopped ten paces from the waiting group. Slowly the sedan set down.
Soucek tensed, seeing how Fat Wong's hands were clenched, how his
eyes were hard and cold. Lehmann's counter-summons—that terse,
unsigned message—must have angered Wong Yi-sun greatly. Coming
here was, in itself, a kind of loss of face. And yet he had come. There
was the rustle of heavy silks as the plain black curtain was lifted
by the two attending pole men, and then Lehmann stepped out from the
darkness within, straightening up slowly, his tall, emaciated figure
ghostlike in the glare of the overhead lights. As ever he was dressed
from head to toe in white. White,
the color of death. A
great gasp went up from the men manning the barriers. A gasp of fear
as much as surprise. In front of them Fat Wong, his mouth fallen
open, shook his head slowly in disbelief. For a moment he was at a
loss, then he turned, looking to the Red Pole of the Kuei Chuan
for an explanation. "What
in the gods' names is going on, Po Lao? Where is your Master? And who
the fuck is this?" But Po
Lao held his tongue. He merely turned, his head bowed low, facing his
new Master, his whole manner subservient. "Our
good friend, Whiskers Lu, is dead," Lehmann said, stepping
forward, Wong's slur seemingly ignored. "So let me introduce
myself. My name is Stefan Lehmann and, as of two hours ago, I became
the new Big Boss of the Kuei Chuan brotherhood." He
turned slightly, meeting Fat Wong's eyes from no more than an arm's
length away, his voice soft, his face unsmiling. "Fat Wong . . .
it's good to meet you at last." His eyes held Wong's a moment
longer, then he looked past him at the others gathered there. "And
you, ch'un t%u. It's good to meet you all. IVe heard so much
abo^it you . . ." Moving
past Wong Yi-suh, Lehmann joined the circle of the 4895, looking
about him coldly, imperiously, defying them to contradict his claim
to power. And Soucek, looking on, saw how they stared back at
him, impressed despite themselves, maybe even awed—even
the great Wong Yi-sun. In a few moments he had won through sheer
audacity what no force of arms could ever have achieved: their
respect. Soucek
shivered. It was done. Lehmann, the Hung Moo—the usurper—was
one of the Six now. A Boss. A 489. One of the great lords of the
underworld. And in
time he would be more. Yes, Soucek burned now with the certainty of
it. In time he would be more. THE
BARRIERS were down, the ship sealed. Kim stood there, staring up at
the departures board, the figures on the clock, his stomach falling
away as he realized that he was too late. Then, forcing himself to go
on, to carry things through to the very end, he crossed the big
lounge quickly, making for the Security desk in the corner. The
young guard looked up at him as he approached and frowned. "What
do you want?" Kim
held out his all-levels pass. "IVe got to get a message
through!" he said breathlessly. "It's vitally important." "What
ship is it?" the guard asked, studying the pass a moment, then
looking back at Kim, eyeing him curiously; clearly recognizing him
for a Clayborn. "The
Meridian. South Port 3." The
guard smiled and sadly shook his head. "I'm sorry, Shih Ward,
but it's too late. The Meridian is already sealed." "I
know," Kim said, impatient now. "But I have to get a
message through. It's terribly important." "I'm
sorry," the guard began again, all politeness, "but that's
simply not possible. Not until the ship is in orbit." Kim
looked away, wondering what he could do, what say, to persuade the
guard to help him, then turned back, leaning across the barrier,
deciding to confide in the young officer. "The
truth is that the girl I love is on board the Meridian. Her father
wants to prevent us from getting married, so he's sending her off to
the Colonies. I only heard about it a few hours back, so I must speak
to her before she goes. I simply muct-" The
young guard sat back slightly. His chest patch showed that he was a
lieutenant, but from his manner Kim could tell he was not long out of
cadet school. "I'd
like to help you, Shih Ward, really I would, but I can't. The
communications of the Meridian are locked into the launch
sequence now. Even the great T'ang himself couldn't communicate with
the Meridian right now—not unless he wished the
countdown canceled." "I
see." Kim turned away, a sense of futility sweeping over him. It was
loss. He had lost her. "Shih
Ward. . ." Kim
turned back, staring at the guard, hardly recognizing him. "Yes?" The
young man came from behind the barrier, his eyes sorter than before,
strangely sympathetic. "I'm off duty here in five minutes. If
you want, I can take you up into the viewing tower. You can watch the
ship go up from there. As for your message, well, maybe I can pass
something on for you. Among the technical stuff. Fifty words maximum,
mind you, and I can't guarantee it'll get through, but it's the best
I can do." Kim
shivered, then bowed his head, a feeling of immense gratitude
flooding through him. "Thank you . . ." Twenty
minutes later, watching the tiny point of flame disappear into the
upper atmosphere, Kim shivered and looked away, touching his top
teeth with his tongue thoughtfully. Seven years. Seven years he'd
have to wait until she could be his. Yet even as he thought it, he
knew what he would do. Knew just how he would fill those seven long
years of waiting. They would be hard, but he would get through them.
And then she would be his, meddling old men or no. His. PART
2 SUMMER 2209 The
Interpreted World
Who, if I cried, would
hear me among the angelic orders? And even if one of
them suddenly pressed me against his heart, I should fade in the strength of his stronger existence. For
Beauty's nothing but beginning of Terror we're still just able to
bear, and why we adore it so is because it serenely disdains to
destroy us. Every angel is terrible. And so I repress myself, and
swallow the call-note of depth-dark sobbing. Alas, who is there we
can make use of? Not angels, not men; and even the noticing beasts
are aware that we don't feel very securely at home in this
interpreted world. —Rainer Maria Rilke,
Dw.no Elegies; First Elegy
CHAPTER TWELVE The
Beginning of Terror 0N
THE QUAY SIDE of the old town two knots of men stand before the Blind
Dragon Inn, drinking and laughing, a space of twenty ch'i separating
them, their voices carrying in the still early evening air. Out in
the center of the broad estuary three large junks are moored, their
quilted sails furled, their familiarly rounded shapes bobbing gently
in the strong tidal current. Downriver, two hundred ch'i out from the
enclosed square of the fishing harbor, a large three-masted Hung Mao
merchantman rests, heavily laden, its long hull low in the water. For a
moment the sea breeze drops. There is an instant's perfect stillness;
a stillness filled with the sun's late warmth. Then, as the wind
picks up again, the high, tormented calls of seabirds rend the air,
echoing across the old stone houses of the town. At
the edge of the farther group, a young Han turns, shielding his eyes,
looking out past the party of Hung Moo sailors crowding the
nearby quayside, his gaze traveling across the cobbled square toward
the streets that climb the hillside, searching out the pale-cream
facade of one particular house: a small, terraced cottage with a
tiny, enclosed garden in which the moonlight dances in his memory and
the smell of jasmine is strong. "What're
you staring at, chink?" The
Hung Moo is a big, barrel-chested man, the muscles of his arms like
the thickly corded ropes that secure a ship at anchor. He stands
over Tong Ye menacingly, his bearded face dark with mockery
and loathing. Behind
Tong Ye there is a low murmur. Wine cups are set down hastily. There
is the rustle of cloth and cheap silk as weapons are drawn from
hidden places. All other talk is forgotten. There is a tension in the
air now, like the moment before a storm finally breaks, and at the
eye of that storm is Tong Ye, his eyes staring back
uncom-prehendingly at the big man, his mind still half in reverie. "Beg
pardon?" The
tar, gap-toothed and pugilistically ugly, his red hair tied in a
pigtail at his unwashed neck, leans forward, placing a calloused hand
firmly on the young Han's shoulder. "You
know fucking well what I mean, you slanty-eyed little scumbag. WeVe
seen you, sneaking about after dark. And we know who you've been
calling on. But you're going to stop that, understand me, boy? You're
going to keep to your fucking ship from now on, or you'll be missing
the means to piss on your boots." The
young Han swallows, then moves back a pace, shrugging off the hand.
He is frightened—shaken by the revelation that his visits to
his lover have been observed. Even so, he brazens it out, facing the
big man unflinchingly. "Forgive
me, ch'un tzu, but there is no law against it, surely? And the
young lady ... if she does not object to my calling on her . . . ?" The
tar turns his head and hawks a fat gobbet of phlegm onto the cobbles.
His head comes round, his eyes half-lidded now, his body tensed. One
fist is already clenched, the other feels among the padded cloth of
his jacket for the spike concealed there. "Maybe
not, but I do. The very thought of one of our own being touched by
one of you . . . a/i-ni-mak." The
word is barely out, its rounded, nasal tones, heavy with a lifetime's
stored resentment, still lingering in the air, as the first Han
sailor throws himself at the big man, a thick stem of bamboo making
an arc in the air toward the big man's head. A moment later, all hell
has broken out. On
the cobbles before the inn, a single group of men are locked in
struggle, their angry voices carrying in the still evening air. Out
in the estuary the lookouts on the junks have paused in their task of
lighting the mooring lamps and
stare out across the water anxiously. On the merchantman there is
frantic activity as a boat is prepared for lowering. A tall, dark
figure sporting a tricorn hat stands briefly at the prow of the
merchantman, a telescope raised to his eye, then he turns, making
hurriedly for the boat. On
shore, the young Han is down, a steel spike embedded deeply in his
guts. Beside him lies the red-haired tar, his skull split like an
eggshell. Others lie on the cobbles as the fight continues, its
viciousness unabated, long centuries of hatred fueling every blow.
With a piercing shriek one of the Han falls backward from the quay
and tumbles, slowly it seems, into the glassy water. There
is the blur of arms, fingers clenching and unclenching, the steady
grunt and moan of blows given and received. And then there is a
moment's stillness as the Han break off and, one after another,
launch themselves from the high stone wall of the quay and into the
water. And as they clamber aboard the shoreboats, they stare back at
their adversaries, wide-eyed with shock and excitement, their hatred
mixed with a strange, inexplicable longing. There
is a moment's silence, a moment's utter stillness as the android
mannequins go limp, their programs ended, and then, from behind the
barrier, applause. From
where he stood, half hidden behind the bank of monitors on the roof
of the Inn, Ben Shepherd turned in the bulky VR harness, the faintest
hint of a smile on his lips, and gave a small bow of acknowledgment
to the four soldiers seated just beyond. It was the best take yet.
Those last few adjustments—that tiny change of emphasis and the
decision to focus on the single red-haired sailor—had made all
the difference. Beside
him, his sister, Meg, looked up from the replay monitors. "Well?"
he asked, "did we get it all?" She
nodded, but he could see that she was still unhappy. She wanted Tong
Ye to live. Wanted a happy ending, the lovers reunited. Whereas he... "Maybe
she can nurse him," she said quietly. He
shook his head. "No. We have to experience all that built-up
anger and resentment. To feel it in our blood and understand exactly
what it means—what all of this results in. If Tong Ye lived it
would take the edge off things.
We would have no sense of tragedy. As it is..." "As
it is, I feel angry. Denied something." He
stared at her a moment, then gave a single nod. "Good. We'll
build on that. Feed that tiny spark until it's a roaring flame. We'll
start tonight, after dark, while we're in the mood." She
watched him as he struggled out of the silvered harness. Ben had
filled out this last year; had gained weight to match his height,
shrugging off the last vestiges of childhood. Now he was a man,
sun-bronzed and tall, his movements easy, confident. Even so, he
still lacked something. Was still somehow less than his dead father.
But what was it? In what did that crucial difference lie? Ben
hung the exoskeleton on the rack, then turned back. There, stacked on
their sides in a long, reinforced metal frame, were his
notebooks—thirty huge, square-shaped, leather-bound volumes
that he called his "roughs." Embossed into the spines, as
in the center of each cover, was a single word in an ancient gothic
script, Heimlich, followed by a number. Unerringly, he reached out
for the volume numbered fourteen and lifted it from the rack, his
artificial hand coping effortlessly with the book's weight. They
had worked hard these past six weeks, taking advantage of the long
days, the perfect light. Most of the "internals"—the
sensory matrices that constituted the major part of Ben's Shell
experience— had been completed long before. These
"externals"—brief, carefully choreographed scenes
which owed much to the ancient cinematic art—were the final
stage, providing a backdrop to the rich, sensory data flow. When the
two were paired the work would be complete. That was, if Ben was
satisfied. It was
a big if. "Here,"
he said, setting the book down beside the storyboard he had been
working from and opening it up. "I reckon we can simplify
things." Meg
moved closer, leaning over him to see. The
open pages of the rough were covered in a jumble of brilliantly
colored lines and symbols, Ben's neat, tiny handwriting boxed-in in
places where he had made subtle changes to his scheme. She
smiled, realizing how familiar all of this had become. Until a
year back he had not let her share this, but now she was his
constant helper, there at his elbow at every stage of the work. She
studied the rough. Eighty-one lines crossed the page, each
representing one of the eighty-one input nodes in the brain and body
of the ultimate recipient of this artificial reality "experience." "The
experiencing viewpoint is predetermined," he said, tapping the
page. "We can't change that without restructuring the whole of
the internal for this section. But we can cut things to the nub when
it comes to the external. Have one man set the fires, not three.
Likewise, we can cut the number of guards. It'll save time setting
up. We'll only have the seven morphs to program, not twelve." She
nodded. "I agree. It'll make things tighter, more direct. And
why not make Tong Ye's friend our focus—the fire-setter?" Ben
looked up. "Yes. I like that. Maybe we can add something
earlier. A small moment between the two just to emphasize things." "And
the girl?" Ben
shook his head. "I know what you think, Meg, but what happens to
her has to happen. Without that. . ." He shrugged, staring away
across the twilit estuary, touching the black pearl that hung on a
golden chain about his neck, then looked back at her, his green eyes
dark, thoughtful. "Just wait, my love. You'll understand. I
promise you. You'll see why I did it like this. Why it had to
be like this." STILLNESS.
Silence. Moonlight on velvet blackness. And then the surface
breached. A head, its fine dark hair slicked back. The inverted image
of flame in a bright, black-centered eye. And gone. The surface dark,
still. Footsteps on stone cobbles. Booted feet in movement, patterns
of light and shadow on the folds of leather, gold and midnight black.
The flutter of naked flame in a metal brazier. Shadows dance,
revealing the whorled grain of ancient oak. Silence, then the creak
and slow groan of a heavy door opening. A sudden spill of light,
golden and warm. Laughter. A chapped and pudgy hand, the flesh pale,
blotchy, plain silver ring on the index finger, wiped against a
beer-stained apron. The scent of jasmine. Darkness. A head surfacing,
fish-mouth gasping for air. And gone. The slosh of water against
the stone steps of the quay. Booted feet turning. The brief
flash of lamplight on a musket stock. And laughter. Uneasy, guilty
laughter. The
camera eye draws back. The
landlord stands there a moment, hands on his ample hips, half in
shadow, watching the woman leave, her long skirts rustling,
whispering in the early morning silence. He turns, looking out across
the water toward the distant hills. Out in the center of the estuary
the junks rest silently, their mooring lamps reflected in the
darkness of the water. Downriver, the merchantman is quiet, the shape
of a guard silhouetted against a bulkhead lantern. He
yawns, stretches his arms. Behind him the brightness of the doorway
darkens with a second presence. The constable leans languidly against
the solid oak beam of the doorpost and points out toward the junks,
his words a low, indistinguishable murmur, heavy with insinuation.
The landlord laughs quietly and nods, then turns away, returning
inside, pulling the heavy door closed behind him. There is darkness,
the click of a latch being lowered, then silence. A moment later
footsteps sound on the cobbles. The moon is high. It is an hour
before the guard will be relieved. The
camera angle changes, giving a view of darkness. Slowly the dark
resolves itself. A young Han crouches on the smooth, worn stone of
the Pilgrims' Steps, his slender form concealed from the guard by the
stone lip of the quay. Behind him lies the still, black surface of
the water. For a moment he seems frozen, carved from the darkness,
then, as the footsteps recede, he draws the oilskin bag from about
his neck and unseals the pouch. Something small and bright gleams
briefly in the moonlight, then is gone inside the sodden cloth of his
shirt. The
camera draws slowly back, revealing the steps, the nearby inn, the
pacing guard. A patch of quartered light reveals an unshuttered
window in the narrow alleyway beside the inn. All is stillness, then,
to the left of the picture, a shadow slips over the stone lip of the
quay wall and melts into the darkness beyond. Farther along, the
guard has stopped and stands at the edge of the quay, staring out
across the water at the junks. The
remote tide drifts slowly in. There is the flicker of light on a
musket stock, a glimpse of wide, curious eyes, a smoothly shaven
cheek, and then it is past, skirting the wood-and-plaster frontage of
the inn. The
alleyway seems empty: a narrow length of blackness framing a
rectangle of yellow light. But then the darkness grows, sheds a form.
A head bobs into the light beneath the sill. There is the glimpse of
dark, sodden cloth, of slightly built shoulders and the sleek curve
of a back. The
camera eye moves inward, taking a line into the darkness, then turns,
looking past the crouching figure into the lamplit room. Six
pale, naked bodies lie on a trestle table. The constable, his back to
the window, quaffs deeply from an ale pot. Beyond him sits the
landlord, talking, one plump, pasty hand resting on the thigh of the
dead Tong Ye. It is
time. There
is a click, the brief flare of a tinder. Inside, the constable half
turns, disturbed by the noise. Then, from the quayside, comes a
shout. The
landlord starts up, spilling his beer. "What in the gods' names
is that?" "Fuck
knows! We'd best go see, neh?" And, setting down his mug, the
constable follows the landlord through the open door. The
room is empty now. From beneath the sill comes a gentle, crackling
hiss as the oil-soaked cloth ignites. And then the crash and tinkle
of breaking glass, the sudden flare of oil as the bottle shatters on
the stone flags inside the room. At once the legs of the trestle
table catch. Flames lick the frayed edge of grease-spattered
curtains, gnaw hungrily at the dry timber of the door frame. In a
moment the room is ablaze, the pale skin of the corpses gleaming
brightly in the garish, unnatural light. As the camera closes in, the
flesh of the nearest begins to sweat and bubble. The
camera moves back, clearing the blackening sill, then climbs the
outer wall, up into darkness. Here, in the upper rooms, more than
forty men are sleeping; half the crew of the merchantman, spending
their last night ashore. The
camera moves out, over the smoldering inn. Farther along the quay the
guard has turned, facing the innkeeper and the constable. "The
junks!" he cries. "The junks are leaving!" Out in
the center of the estuary the three Han vessels have doused their
mooring lights and are moving slowly toward the mouth of the
river. There is the noise of oars being pulled through the
water, the sound of singsong Han voices calling encouragement to the
rowers. For a
moment the three stand there, staring outward, then, as one, they
rum, conscious of the growing light at their backs, the sharp hiss
and pop and crackle of burning. The heat. The sudden stench . . . The
landlord, his mouth agape, takes a step toward the burgeoning light.
As he does, a figure dashes past him, black cloak flapping, a spill
of golden hair gleaming, flashing in the infernal light. "No!"
he cries. "For the gods' sakes, woman, don't! The bugger's dead.
. ." He
takes two faltering steps toward the heat, then stops. It is too
late. For an instant the black of her cloak is framed against the
brightness of the opening, then she is gone. Thick
smoke drifts across the water. The whole of the inn is on fire now,
flames leaping from the timbers of the roof, piercing the restful
dark above the town. There are screams—high-pitched, agonized
cries—and then nothing. Nothing but the furnace-roar of air and
flame, of cracking beams and the splintering of glass. In the
alleyway, a tall, silvered figure moves slowly through the haze, like
something glimpsed in dream, its smooth, high-domed head gleaming
like a mottled egg, its torso smooth, sexless, veined like polished
marble. And its face... its face is featureless save for two tiny
button eyes that gleam amid the swirl of smoke and light. At the
charred window it stops, leaning across the sill to stare through
layers of thick, choking smoke into the fire-blackened room, then
climbs inside, bare feet sizzling on the red-hot flags. A moment
later it returns, a limp, dark figure in its arms. At the
front of the inn a crowd has gathered. As the figure emerges from the
alley a great gasp goes up. Of surprise, and disbelief, and awe. It
is the crippled man. John Newcott's boy. The loner. They watch him
come on, stumbling now, close to collapse, his clothes smoldering,
the limp form of the woman cradled in his arms. As he
reaches the edge of the crowd, two men come forward, taking his
burden from him. The
camera eye moves closer. A man's lined and bearded face winces,
pained by what he sees. He looks up, tears in his eyes, meeting his
fellow's gaze, then shakes his head. The camera turns, looks
down into the ruined face of the woman. Slowly it moves inward, until
the charred and blistered surface of her flesh fills the screen. And
then darkness. ON THE
FAR SIDE of the estuary a lone figure crouched in the deep shadow
beneath the trees, staring across at the happenings on the
waterfront. For a moment he was still, concealed amid leaf and long
grass, then, with a strangely decisive movement, he started down the
steep slope, making his way between the trees to the water's edge. There
he paused, staring out again, his large, dark eyes filled with the
light of the distant fire. Then, with the faintest shudder, he
reached down, untying the rope that secured his boat, and stepped
into the hollowed trunk, pushing out from the bank with a quick,
practiced motion. For a
moment he did nothing, letting the boat glide out into the current,
his head turned, his eyes drawn to the distant blaze, a mixture of
fear and fascination making him crouch there like a frightened
animal, the short wooden paddle clutched defensively against his
chest; then, stirring himself, he dug the paddle into the flow and
turned the boat, steering a course parallel to the bank. This
changed things. Up ahead of him, out in the central darkness of the
river, the junks were leaving. What's more, the merchantman was
making no attempt to pursue them. It was still there, at anchor in
the offing, its load untouched. The
man grinned crookedly. His scarred fingers scratched at his neck,
then combed long, lank hair back from his face. Satisfied, hedug the
paddle deep into the flow, once and then again, switching from side
to side, hastening his strokes, knowing that it was urgent now. IT was
LATE. Ben stood there at the water's edge, looking out across the
bay, the satisfaction of a solid day's work like a physical presence
in his blood. He closed his eyes, relaxing. For a moment it was
perfect. For one brief yet timeless moment he lapsed out of himself,
melting into the eternal blackness of the night. Then, with a
tiny shudder, he returned to himself, conscious of something
lost. Of something denied him. He
turned, looking back at the low, familiar outline of the cottage,
embedded in the hillside. A light was on upstairs, in Meg's room.
From where he stood he could see her, moving about inside, brushing
out her dark long hair, then turning to study herself in the mirror.
He smiled, then let his gaze move upward, over the thatched roof of
the cottage, following the narrow road that climbed the hillside.
Beyond the line of cottages—dark now; sensed more than properly
seen—the land climbed steeply. At its summit, silhouetted
against the paleness beyond, was the old church of St. George's.
Beyond that, less than half a Zi distant, the City began again, a
huge wall of whiteness, vast and monumental. Ben shivered, then
turned full circle, aware suddenly of its presence, there on every
side of him, encircling and containing the valley—containing
him—like the walls of a giant box. Reducing
cottage, town and trees, roads, walls and human figures. Reducing all
to toys. Toys in a giant playbox. The
moon had sunk beneath the edge of the wall. For a moment his eyes
traced the silvered line where the whiteness of the wall met the
black of the sky, then he turned back, facing the bay. Out on
the river it was dark, the surface smooth, like a mirror; a huge
lens, reflecting the vastness of the star-filled night. What
was it like, that immensity? What did it feel like? Was it
just a simple nothingness, a lapsing out? Or was there something
beyond that brief moment he had experienced just now? Something more
to be had? He
turned from the water, climbing the hill, making his way across the
lower meadow, away from the cottage, toward the sapling oak that
marked his father's grave. Today
he had felt close to it. Had felt at moments almost as if he could
reach out and touch it. Standing there among the figures on the
waterfront, he had caught the briefest, most transient glimpse of it,
there in the raging fire's heart. And for a moment the unnameable
thing had been there, on his lips, almost articulate, like a scent.
But when he had opened his mouth to utter it, it had flown, ineffable
as ever, evading all attempts of his to bring it back. Ben
sat, the young tree at his back, looking out across the bay to the
river beyond. It had gone well today. For the first time in weeks his
inner doubts had been silenced, his imagination caught up in the play
of images. This was his tenth month working on the Shell, his two
hundred and ninety-seventh day spent struggling with the material,
and finally he felt close to capturing what he had first envisaged,
all those months back. He
smiled, remembering where this had begun, back there in those few
months before his father, Hal, had died. Hal had wanted to create
something for his wife—something she could remember him by. Ben
had proposed a "sense-diary"—a "within the skin"
kind of thing— but Hal had wanted more. "No.
She has to see me too. From the outside. She'll need that, Ben. It'll
comfort her." And so
he had broken with habit, switching from intense sensory
fugues—moments which captured the experience of what it felt
like to be Hal Shepherd—to colder, sense-distanced extemals,
using older, more conventional techniques. He had
expected to be bored by it, at most disappointed, yet from the first
it had been different, unexpectedly challenging. Exciting. In the
three months he had worked with his father on the Shell— months
in which he had seen Hal transformed, hollowed out by the cancer that
had been planted in him by Berdichev's assassin—he had learned
more about his craft than in the previous three years. He had
had to make compromises, of course. Had had to let go of his vision
of making it all realer-than-real. The cuts, for instance, between
the internals and the externals—those mind-jolting leaps of
perception he had termed the "discontinuity effect"—had,
until then, always been a stumbling block. Before then, he had always
argued that by drawing the viewer's attention to the artificiality of
the medium, one destroyed the power of the illusion. Forced by his
father to confront the problem, he had discovered otherwise; had
evolved all manner of ingenious and subtle ways of using that moment
to make the illusion stronger, more powerful than before. It had
surprised him. He had always thought that jolt—that moment when
one went outside one's body and turned, looking back;— destructive.
And so it was if one thought in pure terms. Yet if one cheated—if
one made the fiction work for you—if one embraced the
suprareal. . . He
laughed softly, remembering those days, recalling how his father
would watch him, fascinated, his eyes burningly alive in that wasted
face. His father-brother. Amos's seed. "Ben?" He let
the moment fade—let the intensity wash from him—then
turned, looking up at his sister's shadowed form. "I
thought you were tired?" She
sat beside him, leaning back, her arms out behind her. "1 was,"
she said quietly. "But then I saw you out here and I thought. .
." He
turned, looking at her. It was dark, her face in deep shadow, and yet
he had no need for light to see her. He had only to close his eyes
and he could see her, as a child, a girl, and now—these last
few years—a woman. "You're
tired, Ben. All this . . . it's too much. You need help. More than I
can give you. Technicians. Someone to help you with the setups.
Someone to take some of the basic programming work off your hands."
She paused, then, exasperated by his silence, added, "You think
you can do it all, Ben, but you can't! It's wearing you down. I see
it day by day." He
laughed, but as ever he was touched by her concern. "I'm all
right, Megs. Really I am." Ben
lifted his face to the night. From where he sat he could smell her;
could almost taste the salt-sweet scent of her skin, feel the
silk-smooth warmth of her beneath the soft cotton of her dress. He
turned, kneeling, facing her, for a moment content simply to be there
in the darkness with her. Then, gently, he pushed her down, onto her
back, one hand lifting her dress, his fingers tracing the smooth
length of her inner thigh until they met the soft warmth of her sex,
the small noise she made, the tiny shiver in her limbs, enflaming
him, blinding his senses, making him jerk like a puppet and push down
against her urgently, thrusting at her even as she struggled to
unfasten him. And
then darkness. Violent, searing darkness. IN THE
FAINT LIGHT of dawn he woke. The house was still, silent, and yet he
lay there stiffly, as if alerted, not knowing why. He
went out, into the corridor, standing in the deep shadow, looking
toward the far end of the long, low-ceilinged space. The door to his
mother's room was closed. To the right, beside it, light from the
casement window fell onto the wall, illuminating the portrait there. Slowly
he went toward it. Every
day he passed it. Every day he glanced at it, giving it no more
thought than he would a blade of grass or a leaf fallen on the path.
But now he stood, studying it intently, trying to see beyond its
familiar shapes and colors to the feelings that had formed it—that
had here been channeled into canvas, oil, and brush. He closed his
eyes, letting his fingertips explore the surface of the canvas, then
stood back, squinting at it, trying to see it fresh. It was
himself. Or, rather, Catherine's vision of him. He stared at the
dark, fragmented face, at the flecked and broken flesh and nodded
gently. She had seen the doubleness in him. Had seen and captured it
perfectly. For a moment he let his vision dissolve, admiring the
abstract play of red and green and black, deriving a rare aesthetic
thrill from the composition; then, focusing again, he saw it whole
once more. No. Even Meg didn't know him this well. Even Meg. Catherine
. . . They had been students together at Oxford. Friends and,
ultimately, lovers. He had not thought of her in some while; had shut
her out, choosing not to remember. But now it all flooded back. The
way she rested, like a cat, in her chair, her legs drawn up beneath
her. The way her hair fell, a cascade of golden red, each strand a
fine, clear filament of flame. The touch, the taste, the smell of
her. He closed his eyes, the memory perfect, overwhelming, then,
shivering, he turned, going down the narrow twist of stairs. Downstairs
the curtains were tightly drawn, the darkness intense. He made his
way blindly to the door and raised the latch, stepping out into the
freshness of the new day, his bare feet treading on the dew-wet
grass. Bird
calls sounded from the trees across the bay, and then silence. He
moved out across the close-cut lawn, then turned, looking up at the
window to his mother's room. The quartered space was dark, the
curtains drawn, like a lid over an eye. For a
moment he stood there, thoughtful. She had seemed much happier these
past few days, as if, at last, she had come to terms with Hal's
death. No more did he wake to hear her crying in the night. And at
breakfast yesterday morning he had been surprised to hear her singing
softly in the garden. He
turned suddenly. There had been a noise. A high, keening noise that
came from the darkness on the far side of the bay. It could have been
an animal, but it wasn't. No, for there was nothing in the Domain
that made a sound like that. He
shivered, a strange excitement filling him. It was the sound that had
woken him, he realized. A strange, unearthly noise. "Intruders
. . ." he said quietly, a faint smile lighting his features.
There were intruders in the valley. CHAPTER
THIRTEEN
Intruders HE
SAT at his father's desk, his great-great-grandfather Amos's
keyboard—a strange, semicircular design—resting in his
lap. The curtains were drawn, the door locked. Across from him,
pulled down in front of the crowded, untidy bookshelves, a huge
flatscreen showed a view of the lower valley; of a tree-covered
hillside, a wide expanse of sunlit water. Ben
had sent out the remotes an hour ago; a dozen tiny, insectile "eyes"
that even now scoured the valley from the creek in the far north to
the castle at the river's mouth, searching for signs of intrusion. On
one of two small, desk-mounted screens to Ben's left the remotes
appeared as pinpoint traces on a map of the Domain, following
preprogrammed search patterns. Ben sat there patiently, switching
from view to view, alert for anything unusual, but as yet there was
nothing. As if
he'd dreamed the sound. But he hadn't dreamed it. And that meant one
of two things. Either there'd been an unprecedented breach of
security, or someone high up in Security had let the intruders in. The
obvious course of action was to call Li Yuan and ask him to send
someone in. Karr, perhaps. But that was the last thing Ben wanted,
because it would be a shame if he didn't find a way to use this—to
harness it for his art. Behind
him the brass doorknob half turned, then rattled. "Ben?
Are you in there?" It was
his sister, Meg. He glanced at the timer. Six fourteen. She was up
early. Very early, considering they had been working so late. "I'm
working," he called out, knowing even as he said it that it
wouldn't satisfy her. "Make breakfast. I'll be down in a while." He
could sense her hesitation, could almost feel her curiosity through
the wooden door, then there was the creak of floorboards as she made
her way back down the passage. He sat
back, considering his options. If Meg knew what was going on she
would want to call in the troops. She would be frightened, concerned
for their safety. And there was no need. He could take care of this
himself. He
stared at the map a moment, then, looking back at the keyboard, began
reprogramming the remotes, one by one sending the tiny eyes shooting
southward, out over the town and its tiny harbor, out past Warfleet
Cove and the ancient castle, and on, toward the sea. Out
there, they'd be. Somewhere out there. At the Blackstone, maybe, or
Castle Ledge, or sheltering by the Mew Stone . . . No. He
dismissed the thought. There wasn't shelter for a family of mice out
there, let alone a human settlement. Not a single island or outcrop
from Start Point in the south to Exmouth in the north, only the
smooth, white walls of the City, towering over the land and dropping
sheer into the sea. There was the odd rock, of course, jutting a
dozen yards or so above the rough waves' surface, but there was no
chance they might have settled one of those. The first high tide
would have washed them away. Even so, he had to look, because the
intruders must have come from somewhere. He
looked up at the screen once more, watching as the remote skipped
above the surface of the wind-ruffled water. Slowly, like a shadow
looming at the back of things, the great Mewstone grew, its jagged
spine silhouetted sharply against the morning sky. For a
moment he was struck by the simple beauty of the scene; by the
interplay of light and dark; the exhilaration of pure movement. He
could use this, maybe. Tie it in somehow. Sunlight
winked, winked again, then flooded the screen with light. And then
darkness. Sudden, absolute darkness, as the remote went beneath the
wall of rock that rose forty yards above the water. He
slowed the eye, widening the aperture to let in as much light as
possible, getting the computer to enhance the image, but there was
nothing. Nothing but sea and rock. He
switched, impatient now, picking up one of the remotes he had sent
south past the Dancing Beggars. At once he saw it, there, some two or
three hundred yards off, slightly to the left. A boat. A strange,
incredible boat. The
deck was a broad, ungainly raft of railway sleepers lashed tightly
together, the weight of the hull—more a decorative border than
a true hull—making the craft dip dangerously low in the water. He
moved the remote closer, scanning its length. Broken TV sets and car
fenders, refrigerator doors, hubcaps and radios, their innards
gutted, had been tied together with electric cable. Computer
keyboards and anglepoise lamps, vacuum cleaner hoses, video machines
and coffee percolators, satellite receiver dishes, steering wheels
and electric toasters, all had been welded into a single mass that
formed a low wall about the raft. It was
like a collage, a great collage of once-familiar things. Things from
that great, sprawling, dynamic, intensely technological world that
had existed before the City. Ben
laughed softly, delighted, then, with a grunt of satisfaction, he
gave the eye full power, skimming it quickly past the raft and on. Out
here it was. Somewhere out here. But what? A man-made island,
perhaps? An ancient sailing vessel? Or was it something else? To his
right the City dominated the skyline, a smooth wall of whiteness
following the coast in a long, staggered zigzag, its unnatural cliffs
towering two li above the breaking waves. To his left the sunlit sea
was calm and empty. As the seconds passed, excitement dulled to
uncertainty. What if there were nothing but the raft? And
then he saw it, low and far to the left, its outline glinting in the
sunlight, a faint wisp of smoke going up into the brightness. He
slowed the remote, changing its direction, sending it out on a path
that would skirt the vessel to its south. Again
he felt his heartbeat quicken, his mouth grow dry with anticipation.
A raft, it was—a raft! But bigger, much bigger than the other.
So big, in fact, that he sat back with a small laugh of surprise. And
not just one, but several. Huge things, bigger than anything he'd
ever seen or imagined could exist. Slowly he lifted the
remote, climbing the sky, until he was hovering high above the
strange armada, looking down. There
were five of them: massive constructs, perfectly hexagonal, like
patches from a giant quilt, a li to each side, loosely
stitched together by rope bridges in a dozen places. Moored here and
there at the edges were a number of smaller rafts, like the one he
had seen in the estuary. Ben
stared, fascinated, at the nearest of the rafts, taking in its
details. Earth had been piled onto the raft, covering its surface to
some depth—tons, thousands of tons, of earth. Dark, fruitful
earth that was covered now in places by lush green grass, in others
by orderly rows of plants and vegetables. At the center was a tiny
settlement of thirty huts, clustered in a circle about a central
meetinghouse. Paths went out from the settlement; paths dotted here
and there with storehouses and water storage towers. He
tilted the remote, looking. All five of the rafts were organized on
the same ancient principle, the only distinguishing feature being the
size of the meetinghouse of the central raft. There,
he thought; that's where I'll get my answers. And, moving
his hand gently, carefully over the controls, he sent the remote
down, in a long, lazy spiral, toward the broad, low ceiling of the
meetinghouse. MEG
STOOD on the bottom lawn, looking out across the bay, angry with him.
Two hours had passed since he'd said he'd come and still there was no
sign of him. The
tide was in. Beneath her feet, at the bottom of the tiny runged
ladder that was set into the concrete bank, the tiny rowboat bobbed
gently. She had been tempted to take it out and damn him, but beneath
her anger was a burning curiosity. For almost a year now he had
included her, at every stage and in every decision, but now—for
no apparent reason—he had locked her out again: physically,
the door barred against her entry. She
looked about her at the wooded slopes, the cottages, and beyond them
all the Wall. Some days she felt so lonely here, so isolated, and yet
it never seemed to touch Ben. Never. It was as if he
enjoyed the empty streets, the lifeless simulacra that, apart
from the three of them and the guards, were the sole inhabitants of
the Domain. As if this were enough for him. But she had realized,
long ago now, that she was missing something. She
touched her top teeth with her tongue, then shook her head. It was as
if she couldn't even think it, for to think it would be close to
saying it, and saying it would seem a betrayal of Ben. And yet the
thought remained. She
wanted someone else to talk to. Someone less harsh, less forbidding
than her brother. Someone to share things with. A tiny
shudder passed through her at the thought. Someone to share things
with. She had been sharing things with Ben all her life. Had
learned to see the world through his eyes. But suddenly it wasn't
enough. Not that she was unhappy as things were. She enjoyed Ben's
company and loved to see him working. It was just. . . She
smiled, realizing that she had come to the edge once more, both
literally and metaphorically. Beneath her naked feet the ground fell
away sharply, the water ten feet below where she balanced. Another
step and she would have fallen. The
thought of it brought back to her the day he'd saved her life; the
day he had dived into the cold, incoming tide and dragged her
unconscious body from the waves, then had breathed the life back into
her. Without him, she realized, she was nothing. Even so, she wanted
something more than him. Something different. She
turned, walking back slowly to the cottage, enjoying the sun on her
back, the faint, cooling breeze on her neck and arms. Back in the
kitchen she cleared the table, scraping Ben's breakfast into the
garbage, then busied herself tidying the place up. She was preparing
the dinner, peeling the potatoes, singing softly to herself, when Ben
finally appeared. She
didn't hear him. The first she knew was when he put his arms about
her and turned her to face him. "I'm
sorry," he said, kissing her brow. "I wanted to try
something out, that's all. A new idea ..." She
smiled, relieved that he was back with her; yet at the same time she
knew he was withholding something from her. "And
the next scene? I thought we were going to start on it early." "Ah.
. ." He looked past her; out through the latticed window toward
the bay. "I thought we might leave that for a while. This new
thing . . ." He looked back at her, then kissed her nose. "Let's
go out, huh? On the river, maybe. It's been some while since we took
the boat out." "I'd
like that," she said, surprised how, as ever, he seemed to
anticipate her mood; to read her better than she read herself. "Good.
Then leave that. I'll help you later. Let's pack a picnic. We can go
to the old house." She
looked at him strangely. "Why there, Ben? It's an ugly place.
There's nothing there now. Even the foundations . . ." She
stopped, realizing that he wasn't listening; that he was staring past
her again, his mind elsewhere. "Why
there?" she asked again, softer this time. "Because,"
he answered quietly, then laughed. "Just because." BEN
STOOD in the brilliant sunlight, his feet on the dark and glassy
surface where the old house had once stood, looking about him. On
every side of the broad, dark circle nature had proliferated, but
here the green had gained no hold. He crouched, then brushed at the
surface, wiping away the layer of dirt and dust. It was over eight
years since he had lost his hand, here, on this spot. Beneath him the
fused rock was mirror smooth. He stared into the polished darkness,
trying to see his face, then turned, looking across at Meg. Meg
had laid the cloth down on the edge of the circle nearest the river,
beneath the overhanging branches. She moved between sunlight and deep
shade, the dark fall of her hair and the mottling of leaf shadow on
her arms reminding Ben of childhood tales of wood nymphs and dryads.
He stood there a while, watching her, then went across. She
looked up at him and smiled. "I was thinking of the last time we
came here . . . before the accident." "The
library," he said, anticipating her. "And the secret room
beyond." "Yes."
She looked about her, frowning, as if surprised not to find it all
there, surrounding them. "Where
does it go, Ben? Where does it all go?" He was
about to say, "Up here," and tap his skull, but
something in her manner stopped him. It was not a rhetorical
question. She wanted to know. "I
don't know," he answered. Into the darkness, maybe. She
was still looking at him, her brown eyes wide with puzzlement. "Is
it all just atoms, Ben? Atoms, endlessly combining and recombin-ing?
Is that all there is, when it comes down to it?" "Maybe."
But even as he said it he realized that he didn't really believe it.
There was something more. That same something he had felt only
last night, in the flames and afterward in the darkness beside the
water. Something just beyond his reach. He
shivered, then looked about him again, conscious of the old house,
there, firm in his memory. He had only to close his eyes and he was
back there, eight years ago in the spring—there in the room
with the books; there in Augustus's secret room, reading his journal,
and after, in the walled garden, standing beside Augustus's tomb. His
brother, dead these eighty-eight years. Part of old man Amos's
experiment. Amos's seed, his son, like all of them. "Oder
jener stirbt und ists." Meg
looked up at him, curious. "What was that?" "It's
a line from Rilke. From the Eighth Elegy. It was carved on Augustus's
gravestone. 'Or someone dies and is it.'" He nodded, finally
understanding. Augustus saw it too. He too was in search of that same
something—that terrible angel of beauty. Ben
sat, facing his sister, then reached across and took a bright green
apple from the pile. As he bit into it, he thought back over what he
had seen that morning, remembering the dark, wind-tanned faces of the
raft-dwellers. Savage, barbarian faces, the teeth black or missing in
their mouths, their long hair unkempt, their ragged furs and leathers
greasy and patched. Some had worn ancient metallic badges with faded
lettering, like the names of ancient tribes. He had
assessed the speed of the raft armada and estimated that it would be
at least eleven hours before they reached the headland at Combe
Point. That would bring them there roughly at sunset. Until then he
could relax, enjoy the day. He
finished the apple, core and all, then reached across to take
another. "Ben.
. ." Meg's
look of admonishment, so like his mother's, made him withdraw his
hand. For a moment he was silent, watching her, then he laughed. "IVe
decided to change things," he said. "I've been thinking
that maybe you were right. Maybe the Han should live." Her
face lit with delight. "Do you think so? Do you really think
so?" He
nodded, then leaned closer, conspiratorially, including her again.
"IVe been thinking through a whole new scenario. One in which
Tong Ye is kept prisoner in the inn after the fight. He's badly
injured, close to death, but the girl nurses him. And afterward. . ." SHADOWS
WERE lengthening in the valley as Ben sat down at his father's desk
once more, the curtains drawn, the door locked tight behind him. It
was dark in the room, but he had no need for light. Memory guided his
fingers swiftly across the keyboard. At once twin screens lifted
smoothly from the desktop to his left, glowing softly. He
called up the map of the Domain, homing in on the four grid squares
at the mouth of the estuary. As he'd thought, the raft armada had
anchored off the Dancing Beggars, just out of sight of the guard post
at Blackstone Point. He
turned, facing the big screen as he brought it alive. It brightened,
then settled to a dull reddish-brown, littered with small,
ill-defined patches of darkness. The camera eye of the remote was
looking directly into the portico of the meetinghouse, but in the
late evening shadow it was hard to make out what, if anything, was
happening. He
switched between the three remotes quickly, then returned to the
first image, widening the aperture and enhancing the image until the
dull orange haze to the right of center resolved itself into an
ancient iron brazier filled with coals, the long, dark-barred shape
behind it into the struts and spars of the meetinghouse. In the last
of the daylight a dozen elders stood about the darkened doorway,
talking animatedly. In the space before them, a large crowd had
gathered, waiting cross-legged on the dark, smooth earth. Ben
eased back, breathing shallowly, his eyes taking in everything. It was
perfect. Just perfect. His fingers moved over the surface of the
keyboard. There was the faintest click as the tape began to run. At
the top left corner of the screen the "record" trace began
to wink redly. The
sun was low now, to the west, above the hills of Combe Point. Moment
by moment the light decayed, until, at a signal from one of the
elders, torches were brought—ancient oil-soaked rags on poles—
and lit from the brazier. At once the scene took on a different
aspect. In the
unsteady flicker of the torchlight, the faces in the crowd seemed
suddenly strange, almost demonic. Turning the remote slowly, he
panned across the sea of faces, noting how drawn, how emaciated each
seemed. Thin lips parted like a wound, neck muscles tensed. An eye
moved shiftily, uncertainly in a sunken orb, the pupil flickering
darkly like an insect on a pale egg. Beyond it a jaw lowered,
exposing blackened canine teeth that snarled and then laughed. Ben
stared, fascinated. It was as if the half-light brought out the truth
of these faces. Reduced them to a cipher to be read. Again he was
conscious of how unlike the faces of the City-dwellers these faces
were. Inside, the face was a mask, a wall, built to conceal. Here, in
these savage, simple faces, all was offered at a glance. One had only
to learn the language. He was
panning back across the crowd when the picture swung about violently.
A moment later the screen went black. At once Ben switched to the
second remote, turning it to focus on the malfunctioning eye. For a
moment he searched fruitlessly, then he saw it, there in the hand of
one of the guards. The man had plucked it from the rafters of the hut
where Ben had set it; had crushed the soft-cased machine as one would
crush an insect. Now, however, he was staring at the thing in his
hand, realization dawning in his savage, bearded face that it was not
a living creature. Cursing
softly, Ben tapped out the auto-destruct sequence. As he watched, the
remote glowed hotly in the guard's hand. With a small cry, the man
dropped it, then went to tread on it. But even as he did, the remote
caught fire, scattering sparks like a falling cinder. For a
moment there was commotion. A small crowd formed about the tiny,
melted shape, their voices briefly raised, before one of the elders
shooed them back to their places. Ben
sat back, relieved. If, even for a moment, they suspected he was
watching them, it would all be undone. His whole plan depended
on the advantage his eyes gave him; on his superior information. It
was the only real edge he had. He
switched between the two remaining remotes, testing each in turn,
boosting the image, the sound, almost to distortion. It was too late
to reposition them. He would have to trust now that whatever happened
next took place within sight of them, which meant outside, in front
of the meetinghouse. He daren't risk a second incident. He had
barely finished when there was a faint humming in the air—a
sound which grew by the moment. It was an aircraft; a Security
cruiser by the sound of it. He tilted the first remote, searching the
darkness above Combe Point. He saw
it at once, there, coming in from the east, flying low, its headlamps
cutting a brilliant path across the dark waters. He cut to the now
standing crowd, to the elders gathered on the portico—seeing
the awe, the feverish anticipation in every face—then switched
back. The cruiser was coming in noisily, ostentatiously it seemed,
making enough of a display to be seen clearly from the guard post. Ben
glanced at the empty screen to his left, then keyed in his father's
access code. All was ready now. He had only to see who it was. To
find out why and what they wanted. Then he could act. The
cruiser slowed, passing over the raft armada once and then again, its
searchlights playing on the crowd below, figures peering down from
within the craft. Then, slowly, it descended. As it
came down, the crowd moved back, away from the sleek black shape that
settled in their midst. A gun turret swiveled about, then was still.
A hatch hissed open skyward, like a wing unfolding. A moment later,
six masked and suited guards came down the ramp, heavy automatic
weapons held close to their chests. Whoever
it was, he was taking no chances. He knew better than to trust this
rabble. His men fanned out, taking up defensive positions about the
ramp, eyeing the crowd warily, as if expecting an attack. A moment
later he appeared at the top of the ramp. As he paused, looking about
him, Ben focused in, until the man's head filled the screen, his
features so close that the image had almost begun to break up. Ben
clicked, taking a copy of the image, then clicked again, transferring
it. The computer search took less than a second. On the screen to
Ben's left, the boxed image from the large screen was relocated at
the top right of the picture, a second image—the official file
copy, updated only eleven weeks back—dominating the screen, the
name of the officer printed underneath in English and Mandarin. Major
Per Virtanen. Virtanen.
Ben nodded, understanding. The face had meant nothing to him, but
the name . . . Ben
returned his attention to the big screen, watching the man come down
the ramp, then turn, looking about him, conscious of the impression
he was making. He was a tall, silver-haired officer in his
mid-fifties, his features strong, decisive, his eyes a penetrating
blue. His magnificent azurite-blue dress uniform was cut elegantly,
the embroidered silk patch on the chest—that of a third-ranking
military officer—depicting a leopard snatching a bird from the
air. All in all, he seemed the very picture of refined strength—the
perfect representative of the T'ang's authority—but Ben knew
better. Eight
years ago, when Virtanen had first come before the Appointments Board
to be considered for the post of Major, only one man had opposed his
promotion, Ben's father, Hal. In normal circumstances, Virtanen would
have been appointed, for there was no need for the Board's decision
to be unanimous. But Hal Shepherd had gone directly to Li Shai Tung,
the present T'ang's father, and had the appointment nullified. Ben
remembered it vividly. Remembered how angry his father had grown when
telling his mother of it. How he had stood there in the kitchen, his
fists clenched, his dark eyes blazing. It was
not unheard of for officers to "buy" their appointments—
indeed, it was more the rule than the exception—nor was the use
of family connection really frowned upon. No. What made Virtanen's
case exceptional was his use of Triad connections, the illicit drug
money, to buy influence. That and the suspected "murder" of
a rival for the post, hacked to pieces in his sedan by a tong
assassination squad. Nothing could be proved, of course, but the
circumstantial evidence against Virtanen was considerable. In the
words of the old Han saying, Virtanen was a toad masquerading as a
prince. A man unsuited for the task of upholding the T'ang's law. Accepting
Hal's advice, Li Shai Tung had upheld the objection and refused the
appointment, giving no reason. For Virtanen, confident of his
promotion, it had been a severe loss of face—not to speak of
the expense—and it was rumored that he had raged for days,
cursing Hal Shepherd to anyone who'd listen. And
now, eight years on, Virtanen had finally been appointed Major.
Eleven weeks ago, to be precise, in the wake of Li Yuan's deal with
the Triad boss, Fat Wong. Ben
scrolled the file quickly, scanning Virtanen's orders for the past
eleven weeks. Under the guise of restructuring his command, he had
removed all of those officers familiar with the running of the Domain
and replaced them with his own men, leaving the foot soldiers—the
actual guards who served in the Domain—until the very last. At
the same time he had had all Security reports for the Western
Isle—for what was once called Great Britain—routed
through his office. Ben
let his breath out slowly, watching the elders come on, their heads
bowed, their eyes lowered before the great man. Everything
made sense. All but one thing. Were Virtanen successful then there
was sure to be an inquiry; an in-depth investigation under Li Yuan's
direct control. And, as things stood, the finger would point directly
at Virtanen. And
that didn't make sense. A man like Virtanen, used to dealing with
snakes—to making deals and covering his ass—had to have
some kind of get-out. Ben
sat back, pondering the problem; considering what he would do
in Virtanen's place. The man looked so confident, so totally at ease.
He had to have a plan. He wasn't the kind to sacrifice himself simply
for revenge. No, not after waiting so patiently to bring it about. He
had had eight years now to brood on the question, so what had he come
up with? What devious little scheme was he hatching? Ben
waited. One moment there was nothing, the next. . . Of
course, he thought, his eyes widening as, up on the screen, the
elders knelt before Virtanen. Two of
the guards came across, moving between Virtanen and the elders, their
guns raised threateningly. There was a moment's angry murmuring and
then the elders backed off. As they did so there was a movement
behind them, in the doorway of the meetinghouse. A
man emerged, half hidden in the shadows; a tall man, maybe a
full foot taller than Virtanen and broad at the shoulders. He wore
dark silks and his hair was braided. In his hand was a slender silver
rod. Ben
smiled, recognizing what it was. It was a piston. A piston from an
old combustion engine. As the
man stepped down, a chant began from among the crowd. A low, almost
bestial sound that filled the flickering darkness. "Tewl.
. . Tewl. . . Tewl. . ." Ben
switched between the remotes, setting one to track Virtanen's face,
the other to focus on the newcomer. Halving the screen, he watched as
the two approached each other. Finally they stood there, face to
face, no more than an arm's length between them. The
chant died. Seen
from close up, Tewl was an ugly bastard. His broken nose seemed
overlong, while his mouth, paralyzed on the left side, seemed to form
a perpetually crooked smile. His eyes, however, were hard, and the
look he gave Virtanen was like the cold, calculating gaze of a deep
ocean predator. Virtanen,
clearly unused to such fierceness, looked aside momentarily, then
forced himself to meet that unflinching stare. "Tewl.
. ." The
crooked smile widened, and then Tewl moved closer, embracing
Virtanen. "You
came," Tewl said, moving back. And Ben, watching from the
darkness miles away, mimicked the sound, the shape that twisted mouth
made. Virtanen's
smile was forced. "Your people are ready, Tewl? They know what
they have to do?" Tewl
looked past Virtanen at the crowd and nodded. "We know what we
have to do. But you? You will keep your promise to us? There will be
no more trouble from your forces?" Virtanen
lifted his chin slightly, clearly put out. "You keep your part
of the bargain, Tewl, and I give my word. No one will trouble you.
The valley will be yours." Ben
nodded. Yes, and as soon as Tewl and his people had taken the Domain,
Virtanen would send in his troops. Too late to save the
Shepherds, of course, but the intruders would be punished.
Conveniently eradicated, down to the last man, woman, and child. There
would be "suicides" among the ranks of those who had served
in the Domain; a serious fire at the Central Records Office. Crucial
pieces of information would go missing. And a culprit from among the
staff of Security would be found, his records conveniently doctored.
And he too would be found to have swallowed cyanide rather than face
questioning. And in
the end, the T'ang's inquiry would show that Virtanen had acted
swiftly and correctly. That he had done all he could to try to save
the Shepherds. A slight taint of suspicion would remain, but not
enough to spur the T'ang to action. At least, not now when Virtanen's
connections with the Triads were so important. Ben
studied the man. There were small signs of tension and unease, but no
more than would be natural in such a situation. No. You might take
Virtanen at face value. If you knew no better, you might even believe
that his word was worth something. If you
knew no better. Leaving
the first remote focused on Virtanen, he switched to the second,
turning it slowly, panning across the crowd, the guards, the elders.
He was about to pan back when a movement on the far side of the
clearing—in the doorway of one of the surrounding huts—caught
his attention. He zoomed in. The
girl was standing just inside the door, one pale and slender hand
resting on the upright. For a moment he wasn't sure whether it had
been a trick of the light, but then, as she emerged again, he saw
that he had not been mistaken. That same flame-red hair. Those same
green, catlike eyes. He
caught his breath, astonished by the likeness. She was thinner and a
good few inches shorter; even so, she could easily have been her
sister. "Catherine
. . ." he whispered, staring into her face as if he stood
directly before her. It was
as if she was staring past him. Looking out past his shoulder at what
was happening on the far side of the clearing. Then, as if dismissing
it from her mind, she turned away. For a
moment Ben stared at the empty screen, then he leaned forward,
activating the remote, lifting it high above the clearing, then
settled it, there on the upright of the doorframe where her hand had
rested only moments before. Across
the clearing the two men were still talking. As the tiny, insectlike
remote crawled slowly into the dark interior of the hut, Ben tapped
into the audio output from the other eye. Virtanen's
voice seemed calm, but there was a tightly restrained anger
underlying the words. "You
shouldn't have done it, Tewl. Sending in the raft ... It could have
been dangerous. If you'd been seen . . ." "I
had to see," Tewl answered gruffly. "I had to be sure.
Besides, my men were careful." "Maybe
so, but you must do what I say in future. One wrong move and all is
undone. You understand me, Tewl?" Inside,
the darkness was intense. Ben boosted the image. Slowly the shadows
took on a grainy, reddish form. The girl was in the far comer, seated
on a low camp bed, her hand up to her neck. As he watched, she shook
out her hair and, stretching her head forward, began to comb it
through. Silence.
As the comb draws through the flamelike hair, Ben sits there in his
father's study, watching, the past alive, vividly alive—in him. And
then darkness. A violent, searing darkness. the
BANGING woke him. Ben turned his head, then winced, the pain intense
just above his left ear. Slowly he raised himself, letting his eyes
grow accustomed to the darkness. The chair lay close by, the keyboard
dangling from its arm. He pulled himself up, conscious of the tart
smell of sickness in the room, the hiss of static from the neglected
screens. Like
Time, bleeding from the darkness. It was
late. After eleven. He had been out for over two hours this time. It
was over two weeks since the last fit, and then he had blacked out
for two, three minutes at most. But this had been quite different. Ben
shivered, then put his fingers gently to the wound. The gash was
deep, almost an inch long, but there seemed to be no real damage. The
blood had clotted well. It felt more tender now than painful. The
banging came again. "Ben! Open up! Please!" "Coming.
. ." He
straightened up the chair and set the keyboard down on the desktop,
then cleared the screens. He had no idea whether the remotes were
still functioning, or whether anything had been recorded after his
fall, but that would have to wait. First he had to see to Meg. He
unlocked the door and tugged it open. Meg was standing there, her
face anxious. "Ben!
It's Mother. I don't know . . ." She stopped, seeing the blood
matted in his hair. "God Almighty, Ben . . . what happened?" "I
had a fall," he said, coming out into the hallway and pulling
the door closed behind him. "I blacked out a while, that's all.
Now what's all this about Mother?" "I
can't find her, Ben. IVe looked everywhere. IVe even been down to the
meadows and called, but there's no sign of her. And that's not like
her, Ben, is it? I mean, she always says where she's going." "Okay
. . ." He put his arms about her, drawing her close, reassuring
her by his touch. "Okay. Now tell me when you last saw her. She
was there when we got back from the old house, wasn't she?" Meg
looked up at him. "Yes. In the rose garden." "Right.
And that was shortly after seven. So she can't have gone far, can
she? You say you've looked everywhere?" "Three
times at least. I even took a torch down to the bay." "Okay."
He kneaded her shoulders. "There's probably a perfectly good
explanation. Look, why don't you go down to the kitchen and make us
some supper while I check the house again. And don't worry, Meg.
It'll be all right." She
nodded and turned away, happy to have something to occupy her mind,
but Ben, watching her go, felt a tightness at the pit of his stomach.
What if he was wrong about Virtanen? What if he'd miscalculated and
the man had taken her? What if he had her now? He
began, searching the upper rooms. In his mother's room he stood there
a long time, staring into her wardrobe, trying to work out
what it was that was missing. Her robe. The red silk
ankle-length bathrobe that she used to wear before his father's
death. Everything else was there. All of her dresses, every one of
her coats and long jumpers. He
turned, looking about him at the smooth white surface of the quilt,
the jars of creams and perfume bottles on the dressing table,
surprised by how tidy, how orderly the room was. If Virtanen had
taken her there'd be some sign of a struggle, surely? Unless he'd
come upon her in the meadow. But then, why would she be wearing her
bathrobe in the meadow? He
went down. Down, past the old dresser in the hallway, and left,
ducking under the low lintel and into the lounge where he and his
father had entertained Li Shai Tung on that spring evening eight
years past. On the
far side of the long oak table was a small, black-painted door, set
back into the whitewashed wall. Ben went across and put his ear to
it, then gave it a gentle push. It
swung back noiselessly, revealing a flight of steps, leading down. It
ought to have been locked. In fact, it had been locked. He had locked
it himself, only yesterday. He
turned, listening, hearing Meg at work in the kitchen, then turned
back. He went down five steps, then reached back to pull the door
closed behind him. Ahead was the faintest glow of light, like a mist
over the blackness. At the
foot of the steps he stopped, his pulse racing. He had known. Yes,
even as he had been entertaining those absurd notions about Virtanen
kidnapping her, somehow he had known she would be here. He
looked about him at the shadowy rows of standing shelves that filled
the cellar workplace; at the crowded racks and gaunt machinery that
stood untended on every side. She
was here. Her scent was in the air. He walked on slowly, silently,
moving between the shelves toward the source of light at the far end
of the cellar. Turning the comer, he stopped, taking in the scene.
Ten feet away, the morph was slumped in its metal frame, just as Ben
had left it yesterday. But about its shoulders now Was draped a red
silk bathrobe. Ben
moved on, slower now, more reluctantly, knowing now what he would
find; knowing, even before his eyes confirmed it, why his mother had
been so happy these past few days. Why she no longer cried in the
night. He
stopped, letting his fingers move absently across the smoothly
lacquered surface of the Shell. He had made changes to it since his
father's time, but it still looked like a giant scarab beetle, its
dark, midnight-blue lid not quite opaque. Peering close, he could
just make out her form, there inside the coffinlike interior; could
see from the rise and fall of her breasts as much as from the flicker
of the control panel just below the catch, that she was living out
the dream. He
looked down at the panel. She was more than halfway through the
three-hour sequence. It would be another hour, maybe more, before she
was back with them again. Ben
turned and went across to his desk. Seated there, he took a notepad
from the drawer and tore two sheets from it. The first note was to
his mother. "I'm sorry," it read. "I didn't realize. I
hope it brings you comfort, Love, Ben." He
folded it and set it aside, then began the second. On one side of the
paper he wrote "Ben &. Meg" in a small, neat hand that
was unlike his own. On the other side he quickly penned a note from
his mother, telling them that she had gone to see an old friend and
that she would be back after midnight. He signed it with a flourish,
then folded it lengthwise, the way his mother always folded her notes
to them. Satisfied,
he got up and, setting the fake note in his pocket, he took the other
across and slipped it into the pocket of the bathrobe, ensuring it
would be seen. He had
never told his mother about the Shell he and his father had made for
her. In the wake of Hal's death he had thought it best to keep it
from her, lest it upset her even more. But he had been wrong. Just
looking at her through the darkness of the glass, he could see how
happy she looked, how at peace. Ben
stood there, staring at the Shell, understanding, perhaps for the
first time, just how powerful this was. The Shell could heal. Could
turn misery to song and make whole the wound of death. It was a
powerful medium—the most powerful the world had ever seen—and
it had been trusted to him to make it work. He
touched his tongue to his top teeth, the way his sister Meg did,
then, with a tiny laugh, he went back up, pulling the door to behind
him. As he came out into the dining room, he called out to her. "Meg!
Meg! IVe solved the mystery!" She
came to the kitchen door, her face half smiling, half anxious, then
took the note from him. "Thank
God!" she said, looking back at him. "I knew it had to be
something like that. Even so, it's odd, don't you think? I mean, it's
not her way to go off without telling us." "Maybe
she's got herself a lover," Ben said mischievously. "A
dark-eyed soldier with a waxed mustache." Meg
looked at him, surprised. "Ben!" He
laughed. "No. I'm serious, Megs. I mean, haven't you noticed how
she's been these last few days? Haven't you heard her singing in the
garden?" Meg
went silent for a moment, her eyes thoughtful. "Yes, but. . ." Ben
reached up and lifted her down the four steps, twirling her about.
"Besides, while she's away, I could make love to you. Upstairs.
In her bed. She'd never know. She'd never ever know." CHAPTER
FOURTEEN
The
Hole in the Dark HE
ROSE EARLY and went to his father's room to survey the tapes. The
meeting was interesting, but it was what had happened after Virtanen
had left that had Ben on the edge of his seat. The
elders, silent throughout the exchange between Tewl and the Major,
had gathered about the big chieftain, gesticulating wildly, their
faces filled with a fierce passion. But it was not their animation
that fascinated Ben, so much as the language they used; a crude,
alien tongue that he had never heard before. For a while he had sat
there, letting the strange music play in his head, sending ripples
down his spine. Then, calling up Amos's Universal Lexicon, he
requested an aural trace on four words that had cropped up often
during their exchanges: Omma, Gwayteea, Nans, and Golaw. At
once a list of close matches in more than fifty languages appeared
beneath each word, the spellings as varied as the meanings given, but
in only eight instances did all four appear within a single language
set. He cleared all but those, then fed in a fifth: the word the
crowd had chanted; the word engraved on the pendant that hung about
the chieftain's neck. Tewl
Ben smiled. Of course . . . For
the next hour he worked patiently through the file, learning the
basics of the language, giving himself enough of a vocabulary to go
back to the tape again and listen, this time with an ear
attuned to what the elders were saying. Today.
They wanted to attack today. This very afternoon. To go from
here—ammo,—into the valley—nans—while
it was still bright—golotv. But there were those who wanted to
wait—gwaytya— until it was dark—tewl. And
Tewl, the dark man himself, what did he want? Ben
watched the chieftain consider what had been said—watched him a
second time, understanding this time why his eyes narrowed, why his
frown intensified. And then that tiny, hesitant nod of the head. They
would go in early, before Virtanen's men, and consolidate their
position, because Tewl, like many there, did not trust the Major. And
because they were warriors, unbowed beneath the sky; ashamed to skulk
like rats beneath the cover of darkness. Meg
touched his arm, drawing him back from his reverie. "And the
Shell, Ben? Are we going to work on it today or not?" He
looked up at her, the image of the tall, dark-robed chieftain still
vivid before his eyes, then nodded. "Yes,"
he said, a smile forming on his lips. "But there are a few
things I have to do first. Some preparations." "Preparations?"
she said, eyeing him warily. "Trust
me," he said, his smile suddenly like the Cheshire Cat's, dark
and enigmatic. "Just trust me." MEG
SAT on the turn of the stairs, eating an apple while she slowly
turned the pages of the book. Beside her, the tiny casement window
was open, the late morning sunlight filtering down through the leaded
squares, misting the dark fall of her hair with gold. It was a warm,
still day, the air filled with birdsong and the low hum of insects,
while from below came the sound of Ben, moving from room to room. It was
a perfect day. A day for thoughtless dreaming. But in that instant
Meg was unaware of it. For a moment she was there, outside herself,
the weather cold and bleak, the hillside bare, exposed to the
harshness of the elements. For a moment she saw the faces of the
villagers clearly, etched starkly in the fierce light of the great
bonfire, like wooden masks, moving from dark to light, from light to
dark. Catching
her breath, she looked up, one hand resting briefly in her tightly
braided hair, then called down to him. "Ben?" There
were footsteps, and then his face appeared at the foot of the stairs.
"What is it?" "This
book IVe found. It's wonderful. Listen." She
looked down at the page, then began to read, tracing the words with a
finger. "Not
a plow had ever disturbed a grain of that stubborn soil. In the
heath's barrenness to the farmer lay its fertility to the historian.
There had been no obliteration, because there had been no tending." His
voice cut in, low but resonant. "It
seemed as if the bonfire-makers were standing in some radiant upper
story of the world, detached from and independent of the dark
stretches below. The heath down there was now a vast abyss, and no
longer a continuation of what they stood on; for their eyes, adapted
to the blaze, could see nothing of the deep beyond its influence." She
stared at him, then nodded. "You know it, then." "And
the rest," he said, smiling up at her. "But it does give me
an idea. Maybe we could use Hardy's scene. Rework it and use it as a
kind of counterpoint to the burning of the inn." She
looked down. Something was going on. The very vagueness of his
suggestion told her as much. Why else would he want to distract her? "The
preparations ... are they done?" He
laughed. "No. Not all of them." "So
what were they for? What's going on?" She
saw his lips begin to form the shape of the word; saw him hesitate,
then look away, and knew she had been right. Nothing, he'd been about
to say, but, faced by her, he had been unable to lie to her. She
looked down, smiling. "It's
like this . . ." he began. Yet even as he said it, the air was
rent by the sound of an explosion; a low, reverberating noise that
shook the house and rattled the casement window. She
stood, dropping the book. "What in God's name . . . ?" But
Ben was smiling, grinning almost, with delight. "It's begun,"
he said, turning away from her. "It's finally begun." BEN
STOOD in the sunlit meadow, the glasses to his eyes. To the far left,
where the valley tapered to a point, a plume of smoke rose slowly,
dark against the pearled whiteness of the City's walls. "What
is it?" Meg asked, leaning gently against his back. "The
seal," he answered. "TheyVe blown the seal." "Who?" Ben
shook his head, then laughed. "I'm not sure. But I'm going to
find out." She
watched him turn and walk back toward the house, knowing he was
holding something back. But why? She looked back at the slowly
climbing coil of smoke, frowning at it, then, knowing she had no
choice, she turned back, running up the slope after him. Ben
was upstairs in their father's old room, staring down at the
flatscreen, his fingers flying across the console. She
stood there a moment, looking across at him, conscious of a strange,
almost feverish excitement in the way he crouched there over the
keyboard, then went across. "What's happening, Ben? Come on, you
have to tell me!" He
turned. "It's happened, Megs. After all these years, it's
finally happened. Someone's come for us." "Come
. . . What do you mean, come?" "WeVe
been invaded, Megs, that's what. The communication lines to the guard
houses are dead, the seal's been blown, and there are intruders at
the river's mouth." She
stared at him, appalled. "Then you must let the General know. He
must get someone here, at once." "No."
He said it clearly, firmly, then turned back to the screen, beginning
to tap out a new sequence on the keys. "I want to deal with this
myself." She
let out a tiny moan. "For God's sake, Ben, what do you mean?
There are intruders in the valley. They have to be dealt with. We
can't do that. We don't know how!" "1
didn't say 'we.' I want you to lock yourself in the cellar." "You
want. . ." She stopped suddenly, another thought dislodging
what she'd been about to say. "Where's Mother, Ben? Where
in God's name is she?" "IVe
sent her away," he said, concentrating on the message he was
typing onto the screen. "I asked her to get me something from
the City. She left two hours back. So you don't have to worry . . ." "Don't
have to worry?" She gave a high-pitched, nervous laugh,
horrified by what he was saying. "Don't you understand what's
happening, Ben? We're being attacked! The Domain is being invaded!" "I
know," he said calmly. "And I promise I'll be careful. But
you needn't worry. I'll deal with it." She
shuddered, looking at him as if she didn't recognize him, then shook
her head, for the first time in her life surprised, genuinely
surprised at him. "So what are you going to do?" He
turned slightly, tapping the SEND button as he did so. "I'm
going to fight them, Meg. That's what I'm going to do." "Fight
them? How?" He
looked away, a gleam of excitement in his eyes. "Something like
this doesn't happen every day. IVe got to take advantage of it." She
stared at him, sudden understanding dawning on her. So that was it.
He was going to film it all. To make a great adventure of it. She
shook her head. "No, Ben. You can't." "No?"
He cleared the screen, then turned back to her, his eyes piercing her
with their intensity. "Just watch me." For a
moment she thought of fighting him, of going behind his back on this
and letting the General know, but standing there, looking back at
him, she knew she wouldn't. "Okay,"
she said quietly. "Fight them, if you must. But you have to let
me help you, Ben. You have to." "Good,"
he said, smiling, squeezing her arm gently, as if that was what he
had wanted all along. "Then come quickly now. WeVe a lot to do." THEY
LAY in the long grass, a hundred ch'i from the opening in the
wall, the ground firm beneath them. Where the seal had been was now a
perfect circle of darkness, five times a man's height, the
pearl-white wall surrounding it smoke-blackened and misted. The seal
itself was broken. It lay on
the grass beneath the great hole, its perfect circularity shattered
like a broken mirror, long shards of pure white ice fanned out upon
the green. It was
still and warm. From the woods on the far side of the creek a
blackbird called, its piping song echoing out across the open space
between the walls. But from the hole itself there came no sound, no
sign of movement. The
field glasses lay on the earth beside Ben's elbow. For the past few
minutes he had been silent, listening to the receiver he had cupped
against his right ear. Meg
watched him a moment, then leaned closer, whispering. "What are
they doing, Ben? Why aren't they coming out?" "It's
too bright for them," he whispered. "Tewl wants them to
come out, but they won't. It hurts their eyes, so they're going to
wait until it's dark." She
stared at him, bewildered. "Who, Ben? Who are they?" "The
Clay," he said, pronouncing the word as if it had some
mysterious significance. "The men from the Clay." She
looked down. The Clay! Wild savages they were. Vicious, ugly little
brutes. And they were coming here! "How
do you know?" He
handed the small black cup of the receiver to her. She stared at it,
reluctant to place it to her ear, hearing the tiny, growling voice
that buzzed like an insect in the dark interior. "TheyVe
been talking," Ben said quietly. "Communicating back and
forth. Tewl. . . he's the chief of the raft people... he wants them
to attack at once. But they're refusing. And without them he won't
commit his own forces. Which is good. It gives us time. Another
twelve hours. It ought to be enough." "Sure,
but what's happening, Ben? I mean, why don't they just come in
anyway? If there's only us . . ." He
smiled. "They're not interested in us. We're only small fry. No.
They want to take the town." "The
town?" She almost laughed. "But there's nothing in the
town." "You
know that. And I know that. But they don't. Don't you understand,
Meg? They think it's all real." Real.
She shivered. Never had anything seemed so unreal as at that
moment. "Meg
. . ." He nudged her, pointing toward the seal, then handed
her the glasses. "Look!" She
looked. Two of the creatures could be seen now, leaning across the
lip of the seal, their dark, misshapen forms like something glimpsed
in a nightmare. She shuddered and handed the glasses back to Ben. "So
what are we going to do? How are we going to fight them?" Ben
lifted the glasses to his eyes, focusing on the naked figures that
crouched there, shading their eyes, peering reluctantly into the
brightness of the valley. Compared to the men from the raft, these
were smaller and more wiry, their bodies flecked with scars, their
eyes large and bulging in their bony heads. He had seen their like
before, fattened up and dressed in the fine silks of the Above, but
never like this; never in their natural state. Even
so, it was not that that excited him, looking at them. It was
something else. Ben shivered, then nodded to himself, knowing that it
was true what had been said. Sealed into the darkness, the Clay had
reverted, its inhabitants regressed ten, twenty thousand years, to a
time before cities and books. In these Clay-men there was no
refinement, no culture, unless pure instinct was the ultimate
refinement. They
were like animals. Thinking animals. Or like some strange genetic
throwback. Ben grinned, the old words coming to his lips. Man .
. . who trusted God was love indeed
And love Creation's final law— Tho'
Nature, red in tooth and claw With ravine, shrieked against his
creed. "What
is that?" Meg asked, pulling him down, afraid he would be seen. "Tennyson.
Though what the old bugger would have made of this. . ." His
voice trailed off. "Look. They're going back inside. Good. For a
moment I thought Tewl might have persuaded them, but they're going to
sit it out after all." He
turned his head, smiling at her, then began to get up. "Come
on, then, Megs. There's no time to lose. Twelve hours weVe
got. Twelve hours to do it all!" THE
GRASS had grown tall before the old barn. Huge swaths of nettle and
wildflowers blocked the entrance, forming a barrier fifteen feet wide
in front of it. Ben threw the sack down and knelt, pulling out the
ancient scythe and testing its edge on a nearby blade of grass. Then,
stripping to the waist, he set to work. Watching
him, Meg was reminded strongly of her father. How often she had
watched him standing there, just so, his body moving effortlessly
from the hips, like one of Adam's sons in the early morning of the
world. She
studied him, seeing how he moved, like some mindless, perfect
automaton. Saw the green fall before the silver, and frowned. He
turned, throwing the scythe down, a broad path cleared in front of
the big double doors. "I
don't understand," she said, looking past him at the dilapidated
old building. "If weVe only got twelve hours . . ." "Illusions,"
he said, meeting her eyes. "Surely you of all people should know
how fond old Amos was of illusions. This. . ." he turned,
indicating the barn, "is just another of them. Come . . ." Ben
went up on tiptoe, placing his eye against a dark whorled knot in one
of the wooden planks, as if trying to see inside. There was the
faintest sound, like the soughing of the wind through the grass, and
then he stepped back, lifting the rusted latch and easing one of the
huge doors back. Inside
was brightness, cleanliness. She stepped past Ben, wide-eyed with
astonishment. It was a storehouse, a huge storehouse, packed with all
manner of things. Six broad shelves lined the wall opposite, while at
the far end, to her left, a number of large machines squatted on the
white-tiled floor. She
went across, the smell of machine oil and antiseptic strong in that
big, high-ceilinged room. Under the glare of the overhead lights she
pulled one of the plain white trays from the second shelf. Inside,
sealed in see-through plastic and neatly labeled, were a dozen mortar
bombs. She glanced at one of the labels, noting the familiar oak tree
logo and the date, then looked closer, surprised to find Ben's
handwriting on the label. Ben's?
No. She noted the initials—"A.S."—and
understood. Amos. Great-great-great-grandfather Amos. Quickly
she looked, going from tray to tray. Rope ladders, absailing
harnesses and power-packs, land mines, mortars and ammunition,
handguns and rifles, rocket launchers, flash bombs and hunting
knives, decontamination suits, bulletproof vests and gas masks. And
more. Much, much more. The supplies of war, all of it neatly parceled
in see-through plastic with Amos's neat handwriting on the label. She
turned. Ben was standing by the door, looking through a hard-covered
file marked "Manifold." "What
is this, Ben?" He
hung the Manifold back on the peg by the door, then looked across at
her. "This? This is the intestines of the beast." He
walked across, his boots clicking on the dust-free tiles, and pulled
down two sleds from where they hung on the end wall, bringing them
back across. "Here,"
he said, handing her the smaller of the two. "1 want a rocket
launcher, a dozen shells, two handguns, one rifle with
ammunition—better make it two hundred rounds—two
lightweight gas masks, a dozen flash bombs, and two of those vests." She
stared at him in disbelief. "What are we doing, Ben? What in
Christ's name are we doing?" "We're
being Shepherds, Meg, that's all. Making preparations. Now come on.
You said you'd help." She
watched as he drew the big sled across and began to load it, pulling
down things from the shelves as if he knew where everything was. "YouVe
been in here before, haven't you?" "No." "Then
how did you know about all this?" He
reached up and took a long, dark package from the shelf, placing it
in the sled, then looked back at her. "This place has defenses
no one knows about but us. We Shepherds have been preparing for this
for near on two hundred years now." It was
not the words so much as how he said them. That "us" seemed
to exclude her. Seemed somehow masculine. "We Shepherds . .
." She
turned away from him, facing the shelves once more, doing as he'd
asked, filling the sled with guns and bombs and bullets, her mind
strangely detached from what she was doing. She had read the passages
in Amos's journal: had read about his preparations for the Great
Third War he believed was coming, but never for a moment had she
thought all this existed. The
intestines of the beast. . . She
shuddered, then looked down again, checking the handwritten label,
ensuring she had the right ammunition for the rifle. THE
CUT TURF was laid neatly on its back, beside the dark square of
earth. Nearby, forming a staggered line across the lower garden, a
further five patches showed black against the green. Meg
stood over Ben, watching him take two of the small devices from the
bag at his shoulder, noting how carefully he embedded them in the
earth. Earlier he had shown her how the flash bombs worked, going
through the remote-trigger sequence twice, to make sure she
understood. "Hopefully
we won't have to use them," he said, setting the turf back
firmly and looking up at her. "The speakers should do the trick.
But if you have to, don't hesitate. And remember, the object is to
take the little buggers alive. We use force only as a last resort." She
looked back at the cottage. It was late afternoon now, but most of it
was done. Using special panels from the storehouse, they had sealed
the kitchen end and the dining room, and blocked the stairway,
leaving only the entrance to the living room free, the door down to
the cellar open. Helping Ben fix the screens over the doors and
windows, she had understood for the first time what all the
fastenings on the frames were for. From childhood she had thought
them merely decoration, but now she knew. It was as Ben had said.
Amos had prepared thoroughly for this day. We
Shepherds. . . He
handed her the bag. "Here. You do the rest. I'll finish off in
the cellar." She
nodded, standing there a moment, watching him return inside, then
turned back, facing the water. It was only three hours now until
sunset. The thought of it made her throat constrict, her stomach
muscles tighten with fear, but she had said nothing to Ben. Not that
it would have made any difference. "Well,
fuck you, Ben Shepherd," she said quietly, moving across to the
next of the cut squares and kneeling down, the awkward shape of the
handgun pressing into her side. "Fuck you and Amos and all your
pigheaded breed." "Ben?" He
turned, looking back at her from the saddle of the old green bicycle.
"What?" "What
if they come while you're gone? What should I do?" "They
won't," he said, reaching back to check the towrope. "Besides,
I'll be back before it's dark. But if it makes you feel any better,
why don't you go up to the old church and sit on the wall. You get a
good view of things from there. And if they do come, you can
hide in the tower until I get back. Okay?" She
nodded reluctantly, watching him draw the pedal back, preparing to
set off. "Ben. . . ?" He
laughed. "What now?" "Take
care." He
smiled, then was gone, his strong legs powering him up the steep
slope between the hedges, the tightly packed sled rattling along
behind him on its casters. Ten
minutes later he was on the level above the ferry road. Resting the
bike against the wall by the old postbox, he unfastened the sled and,
letting it run on in front, made his way down to the landing stage. The
rowboat was where he had left it ten days before. Loading the sled
into the middle of the long, narrow boat, he pushed it out into the
shallow water, then jumped aboard, picking up the oars and setting
to, pulling himself across the narrow strait. The
path up to the old railway track was difficult, the stone steps
slippery, overgrown in places. The sled seemed to grow heavier
as he climbed, more awkward, but finally he was there, fifty feet
above the river, the ancient track stretching away between the trees. He set
the sled down, slotting the groove in its base onto the rail, then
squatted down, taking the slender case of the comset from his back
and unfolding it. Activating the screen, he quickly checked on the
remotes. In front of the breached seal there was no activity. Out on
the raft armada, however, there was plenty. Five of the smaller,
steam-powered rafts were being prepared, stockpiles of precious fuel
being loaded on board, along with great stacks of weapons—crude
spears, swords, and clubs for the main part. Satisfied,
he switched the comset off and secured it to his back. Then,
attaching the towrope to his belt, he set off once more, running
between the tracks, heading south toward the guardhouse, the sled
sliding smoothly along behind him. THESLEDLAYto
his right, hidden in the dense undergrowth. Above him, some
twenty-five feet up the embankment, was the blockhouse, its windows
lit up brightly. From where Ben lay, the assault rifle held against
his chest, he could see that one of the windows was open. From
within, music spilled out into the air. It was the Yueh Erh Kao,
"The Moon on High." For a
moment he found himself distracted; found himself wondering what it
was like to be a guard—a Han—here in this strange land,
listening to this most Chinese of melodies, and thinking of home. Of
China, half a world away. What did that feel like? He
listened, knowing that he was wasting time, but unable to move, the
music touching him as it had never done before. Breaching him. He
looked up, his eyes finding the pale circle of the moon, there, like
a ghost in the early evening sky. The
moon. He closed his eyes and saw it, full and bright, like a hole in
the darkness, and saw, at the same moment, its negative, there at the
valley's far end, the Clay-men huddled beyond it, waiting to emerge. The
moon... Opening
his eyes, he felt a pain of longing pass through him. A longing to be
something else—something other than he was. To be a Han,
a river pirate, a Clayborn. To be ... To be
other than he was . . . Yes, that was it. That was what drove him
on. He
turned slightly, looking out across the valley, for the briefest
moment held by the beauty of what he saw. In the fading light, a
flock of birds seemed to float in the air above the river, the tiny
specks of their bodies folding back upon themselves time and again,
like a veil fluttering in the breeze. How many times had he seen
that? How many times had he looked and not seen the beauty in it? The
music ended. He turned back, beginning to climb. In the sudden
silence he could sense the stillness of the valley all about him.
Could feel it waiting, like a lover, for the darkness. There
was the murmur of voices from above. Han voices. And then music, the
sound of strings and flutes—of p'i p'a, yueh ch'rn, ti
tsu, and erhu—echoing out across the English valley,
reminding Ben of that moment, eight years before, when Li Shai Tung
had sat at table with them, his carved ivory face in strong contrast
with the simple English-ness of everything surrounding him. The
world we've made, he thought, edging toward the open window. He
pulled himself up, slowly, carefully, until he stood there, his back
to the wall, the window to his right. Again he waited, listening,
letting the song play itself out. Then, in the silence that followed,
he moved closer, looking in at an angle through the open window. The
voices came again, but he understood now. A radio rested on the
cluttered desk beside the window. Beyond it the room was empty. Slowly
he moved his head around, looking in, searching the big room with his
eyes, the gun raised, ready. No,
not empty. There, on the floor in the far corner, lay one body, and
there, behind the table to the right, was another. But there were
five guards in all. Where were the others? Coming
around the comer of the blockhouse, he had his answer. A trestle
table had been set up in front of the main doors. A jug of wine
rested at its center. Chairs and broken wine bowls lay scattered all
about it. One
guard lay slightly down the embankment, on his back, his mouth open
in surprise. Another still sat in his chair, a neat hole through his
forehead. Nearby, in the doorway itself, a third was slumped against
the wall. Ben
walked toward the scene, his eyes taking in everything. He had known
these men. Only yesterday they had sat behind the barrier and
applauded him. And now they were dead. He
stood before the man in the chair, looking down at him. His name was
Brock and he had been shot from close range. Ben put the rifle down
and crouched, studying the wound, then moved behind the dead man,
examining the mess the bullet's exit had made, putting his fingers
into the shattered cranium. The flesh was cold, the blood congealed. He
went through, examining the bodies in the guardhouse, then came out
again, looking about him, picturing it in his mind. The duty guard,
Cook, had been strangled at his desk, the other, Tu Mai, had been
knifed in the back. Had one man done that? An officer, perhaps?
Someone they had no reason to suspect? Whoever it was, he would have
had to have killed the duty guard first, quickly, silently, and then
Tu Mai, gagging the young Han with a hand, perhaps, as he dragged him
down. Ben
turned. Yes, and he would have needed to have had the door closed
while he did it, too, else he'd have been seen by the men at the
table. He
closed his eyes, seeing it clearly. The officer had come out and
turned, facing Brock, drawing his gun, giving Brock no time to get up
out of his chair. He had fired once, then turned to shoot the second
guard, Coates. The last of them, the young lieutenant, Mo Yu, had
backed away, stumbling back over the embankment. He had been shot
where he fell. Ben
frowned, wondering why he had not heard the shots, then understood.
He and Meg must have been down in the cellar, getting things ready.
Which meant this had happened two, three hours ago at most. But
why? Unless, perhaps, Virtanen knew that Tewl planned to go in early.
Knew and was using that to firm up his alibi. Ben had
checked. These five were all that remained of the old guard.
The others—in the guardhouses in the town and at the mouth of
the river—were Virtanen's men. Yes,
it all made sense. This was the communications post for the valley:
the Domain's main—if not only—link with the outside.
Vir-tanen, questioned by an inquiry, would claim that Tewl's men had
attacked and overrun it. Which meant in all probability that Virtanen
intended to delay only long enough for Tewl's men to be successful
before he counterattacked, sweeping the intruders from the valley,
strengthening the evidence in his favor. AH of
which put pressure on Ben to tie things up quickly. The question was,
how long would Virtanen delay? An hour? Two? He
went back inside. The duty officer's log lay there on the
communications desk in the comer. It was open, the last entry noted
but not initialed. Frowning, Ben scanned the record quickly. It was
as he'd thought. They had to call in every four hours. Every
four hours . . . And yet the last message had been sent out thirty
minutes back. Virtanen?
Had Virtanen himself been here? It was unlikely. No, in all
likelihood Virtanen was at dinner right now, somewhere public and in
the company of important people—ch'un tzu of the first
level. Some place where he could be reached "urgently" and
summoned back to deal with this. Where he might make a great show of
his concern, his "anxiety" for the Shepherds. No.
Not Virtanen, but one of his servants. One of his Captains, perhaps.
Someone who could sit there for two hours with the bodies of the men
he'd butchered, waiting to send a signal. Ben
closed the log, then set to work, doing what he'd come to do. Moving
back and forth between the sled, he positioned a dozen of the big
flash bombs along the shore beneath the guardhouse, setting their
remote-trigger combinations. Then, climbing up onto the roof of the
blockhouse, he set up the two wide-angle cameras, focusing one upon
the quayside, the other on the mouth of the river, looking out beyond
the anchored junks. Finished,
he looked up, noting how high the moon had climbed since he'd last
looked, how bright it had become. The light was dying. In thirty
minutes it would be dark. He
turned, looking back at the silent figures on the terrace outside the
blockhouse. It was strange how little he felt. He had liked the men,
enjoyed their company, but now that they were dead he felt no
sadness, no sense of outrage. It was almost as if ... well, as if
they were merely machines now, like the morphs he used, or like
Amos's automatons that peopled the town across the river. Whatever
had animated them was gone. Had flown, like frightened birds. No,
what he felt wasn't sadness, or pity, but a fascination with their
newly transformed state. A curiosity that was as powerful as it was
new. What
was it like to be dead? Was it simple nullity? Or was there more to
it than that? Placing his fingers within the guard's shattered skull,
he had felt something wake in him; something dark and ageless. He
laughed, a strange, uncertain laugh, then bent down, picking up the
rope. Darkness, he thought, setting off once more, making his way
back down the slope toward the track. Ultimately there is nothing
but the dark.
>
. , - THE
MOON was high. Ben stood among the gravestones in the churchyard,
looking out past his sister at the broad sweep of the valley. Beneath
them, the houses of the village fell away, following the steep curve
of the road in a jumble of thatched roofs and chimney pots, their
pale white walls gleaming brightly beneath the circle of the moon.
Beyond lay the river, a broken sheet of silvered blackness, flanked
by the soft roundness of the hills. Hills overshadowed by the vast,
glacial presence of the City. Meg
sat on the old stone wall, her feet dangling out over the drop, her
dark hair lustrous in the moonlight. It had been dark now for almost
fifteen minutes, but still there was no word from Tewl, no sign of
the intruders in the valley. "What
do you think it's like in there?" "I
don't know," he answered quietly. "Like hell, I guess." She
half turned, looking back at him. "I mean, what do they eat?
Nothing grows in there. So how do they survive?" "Insects,"
he said, smiling at her. "And slugs and other small things that
crawl in from the outside." And one another, he thought,
but didn't say it. "It
must be awful," she said, turning back. "The most awful
thing there is. To be trapped in there. To know nothing but that." "Maybe,"
he said, but her comment made him realize just how much the Clay was
like his Shells. There, too, one was confined, cut off from normal
life. In such conditions the senses grew hungry for stimulation—for
the sweet water of dream and illusion. The mind was thrown inward.
Untended, it fed upon itself, like the monsters of the deep. He
rested his good hand on the stone beside him. A tall, leprously pale
stone, its tapered surface spotted with mold. "I wonder what
they dream about?" "Do
you think they dream?" He
nodded, his fingers tracing the weathered lettering on the ancient
stone. "I'm sure of it. Why, the darkness must be filled with
dreams. Vivid, lurid dreams. Imagine it, Meg. Eternal night. Eternal
blackness. Waking they must see their dreams. Live them." "I'd
go mad," she said quietly. "Yes
. . ." But there were many kinds of madness. And was the City
really so different? In some ways the Clay seemed far healthier.
There, at least, they dreamed. Up above, in the glare of that eternal
artificial light, they had forgotten how to dream. Or when they did,
their dreams were pale and powerless; had shrunk to a ghostly
insubstan-tiality, worn down by the relentless onslaught of a
thousand cheap illusions, ten thousand bright distractions. One
needed darkness. One needed the respite of dream. Else life was but a
mechanism. He
shivered, Shakespeare's words coming suddenly to mind. If I must
die, 1 wiU encounter darkness as a bride, And hug it in mine arms. Meg
turned to him, suddenly impatient. "Why don't they come? What
are they waiting for? I thought you said they'd come when it was
dark." "Soon,"
he said, soothing her, his good hand reaching out to touch and hold
her cheek. "They'll come here soon." And even as he said it
he heard the insect buzz of voices in the earpiece, the gruff sound
of Tewl giving his instructions. "Wait,"
he said, his hand going to her shoulder and squeezing it. "At
last. They're coming out." Moving
past her, he jumped up onto the wall and, spreading his arms, leapt
out into the darkness as if embracing it, landing in the long grass a
dozen feet below. "Come
on!" he called, turning to her, his moonlit face alive with a
strange excitement. "Quickly now!" And, turning away, he
began to run full tilt down the steep slope of the meadow, heading
for the seal. CHAPTER
FIFTEEN
Nature
Red in Tooth and Claw HE
watched them come out from the darkness, a dozen tiny, hunched
figures, running across the short grass to the creek, their naked
bodies silvered by the moonlight, two crudely fashioned longboats
carried between them. As
they ran, they glanced up fearfully at the bright circle of the moon,
astonished to find it there, and, gritting their teeth, fought down
the urge to flee from its all-seeing glare. They
set the boats down at the water's edge, then crouched, huddled close
together in the space between the canoes, staring back at the hole. A
full minute passed and then a second, larger wave of Clay-men
emerged, slowly, hesitantly, looking anxiously about them at the
silvered darkness of the valley. Some turned and tried to flee, back
into the dark, but one of their number stood before the hole, a
dagger in one hand, a whip in the other. "There,"
Ben said softly, pointing him out to Meg, who was crouched beside him
behind the low stonewall, the glasses to her eyes. "That one
there. He must be the chief. Look how he's gathering them up. And
see, at his waist. There's the handset he was using." "They're
all so ugly," Meg whispered, lowering the glasses. "There's
one there has had half his face eaten away. You can see the shape of
the skull. And there's another who's got only a stump for an arm." Her
voice fell silent. In the silvered dark below, the Clay-men
moved slowly across the open ground between the wall and the
creek, their shadowed forms like broken fragments of the darkness. For a
moment the silence was complete. Then, from the center of that
shadowy host came the crisp chatter of the handset. Standing toward
the back of the group, the chief froze, surprised by the voice at his
waist. He twitched, then, looking about him, lifted the handset to
his ear, holding it there as if, at any moment, it would bite. All
about him, his men had stopped, crouched low, as if to press
themselves into the earth. There was a moment's silence, and then the
chief answered, his voice low and guttural. "It's
Tewl," Ben whispered, leaning toward his sister, translating
what he could hear of the exchange. "He's telling the Clay-men
to get a move on. But the chief's not budging. He's saying they
didn't know there'd be a moon. It's spooked them. They thought it
would be black, like inside. He's telling Tewl his men need time, to
get used to it." "So
what's going to happen, Ben? Are they going to attack?" "Yes.
But this makes things tight. It looks like Tewl's boats have set off
already. The tide's against them, fortunately. Even so, unless we
deal with this end of things quickly, we won't get to the harbor in
time." "In
time for what?" she asked, staring at him, curious now. "For
the show," he said, looking back at her, the moon's bright
circle reflected clearly in the liquid darkness of his pupils. - "The
show?" "I.
. ." Ben fell silent. Down below, the chief had finished talking
and had tucked the handset back into his belt. Looking about him, he
picked out six of his men, then pointed up the hill toward the
cottage. "A'Uiarthal"
he said fiercely, thrusting his hand out once again, as if to
emphasize what he was saying. "An chy. Kherdes! Tenna dhe an
chy!" "What
is it?" Meg asked, a ripple of fear passing down her spine at
the sound of that awful, bestial tongue; at the threat implicit in
that thrusting, grasping hand. "What did he say?" But
it was as if Ben hadn't heard her. "Come on," he said,
touching her arm. "Quick now. We've work to do." And,
ducking down, he turned and started back toward the cottage, his body
hunched, his movements almost
furtive, mimicking the figures who, even as Meg looked back, peeled
off from the main body of the Clay-men and started up the slope
toward her. THEY
CAME ON slowly, sniffing the air like dogs, their short, wiry bodies
hunched low and twitchingly alert as they approached the cottage. In
the shadows of the lower garden they stopped, huddled together, the
low growl of their voices carrying to where Meg lay in her perch
above the potting shed, watching. Like
a pack, she thought, as one of them—a bull terrier of a
man— leaned over one of the others, his head twisted slightly,
as if to bite the neck of the creature. Nearby, the rest looked on,
making cringing gestures of abasement, like the young wolves she had
seen in the film Ben had shown her. She
shivered, her hands trembling as she widened the angle of the shot.
It was a wonder they still used language, their gestures were so
eloquent. It was just as Ben had said. Their bodies spoke. Do as
I say, the leader seemed to be saying. Don't have any ideas
of your own. She
watched the other stoop and lick the creature's hand subserviently,
then straighten up, his face filled with a pathetic eagerness. "Ena.
. ." The terrier-man said, pointing at the cottage. "Ena ha
ena!" There
was a moment's hesitation, and then they came on again, spreading out
as they approached the earth border of the rose garden. Two more
steps, she thought, remembering what Ben had said. Two more steps
. . . The
whispering began. At
first it was like the wind rustling through the leaves of an ancient,
autumnal forest; a dry, soughing noise that seemed half-articulate.
Yet if there were words amid that sound, they were as much imagined
as discerned. Then, as the noise grew slowly louder, the clear hard
shape of words formed from the confusion, like seeds falling to the
earth. "Ofanccw.
. ." The
Clay-men froze, half turned toward the sound, their eyes wide with
sudden fear. "Ofancow.
. ." A low
moan rose from the dark, huddled shapes on the slope. Yelping, they
threw themselves down, burrowing into the earth, as if to merge with
the darkness, but the moonlight was unrelenting; it beat down on them
mercilessly, pitilessly, forcing them to turn their heads and look
back at it. "Gwelafwhy
gans ow onen lagas . . ." the voice whispered, as if from
the air itself. "Ow golow lagas dewana why!" There
were barks of fear and whimperings and a long, low moaning that was
horrible to hear, like the sound of an animal in pain. "On;
enawy a-vyn podrethes agas eskem..." At
that the whimpering grew frantic. The Clay-men were baying now, in
tonnent, their fear so great that Meg could sense it from where she
lay; could smell its sharp, distinct odor in the air. Their squat,
ugly faces were distorted now, like the faces of the mad she had
glimpsed in her brother's sketchbooks. Fear had given way to
something else—to some darker, more primeval force. For
the briefest moment she hesitated, filled with a sudden, unexpected
sympathy for the creatures, then, quivering slightly, not knowing
what to expect, she pressed the switch. The
air beyond the Clay-men shimmered. And then, as if forming from the
air itself, four massive figures stood there, palely outlined against
the dark. Four ancient, ghostly warriors, their armored breastplates
glinting in the moonlight, long, wicked-looking blades in their
mailed fists. And their faces . . . Meg
shuddered, recognizing them. Ox and lion, they were, man and eagle,
their features harsh and unforgiving. AngeZs, she thought, glimpsing
the great wings—six in all—that rose from their broad,
muscular backs. Ben has conjured up the angels . . . Briefly
they stood there, powerful and malevolent, and then, as one, they
stepped forward, raising their swords. "Dyesk'ynnal"
said the Ox-faced angel, beckoning the Clay-men, his voice
booming like thunder in the silence. "Dyesk'ynna!" Until
that moment the Clay-men had crouched there, paralyzed by
the sight, but now, their nerve broken, they turned and ran,
shrieking, toward the safety of the cottage. And
Meg, watching, ran with them in her head, her spine tingling with a
fear she had never, ever thought to feel. "I
know your works," she said softly, fearfully. "You have the
name of being alive, and you are dead." MEG
sat at the bottom of the cellar steps, watching through the
tight-fitting mask as her brother bound the last of the unconscious
Clay-men. Beyond him stood the morph, inactive now, the nozzle of the
empty gas cylinder dangling loosely from its polished hand. Ben
turned, smiling up at her through his mask. "There," he
said, the words muffled. "All we have to do now is get them
upstairs, into the small barn, then we can get down to the town." "Upstairs?"
She shivered. Even the thought of touching one of the grotesque,
childlike creatures horrified her, let alone lifting and carrying
one. "Can't we leave them here?" He
shook his head. "I can't risk it, Megs. Think of the damage
they'd do down here if one of them got loose. Up there it doesn't
matter. The small barn is secure, and there's nothing they can
damage." "Isn't
there something you can give them to keep them out a bit longer? You
know ... a drug or something?" "And
if it killed them? No, Megs, I can't risk that. I want these . . .
these men, I need them for my work. That's why I bothered with
all this, so as not to harm them." She
looked away, finding no words to explain her aversion. He
smiled. "Look, I'll put them in sacks, if you like. If that
makes it any easier. But it has to be done. And the sooner the
better. Now, are you going to help me, or do I have to do it all on
my own?" "I'll
help," she said, finally, meeting his eyes again. "But not
this, Ben. I can't. I simply can't." He
studied her a moment, then, with the tiniest little nod, turned away.
Bending over one of the limp Clay-men, he lifted it, balancing it
over his left shoulder. Then, stooping to lift another, he draped its
wiry frame over the other shoulder before turning to face her again. "The
keys are hanging by the door. Go ahead and open up, then get your
brown waist-length coat and a bicycle from the shed. Wait for me by
the postbox above the ferry road. I'll be there as quickly as I can." She
nodded, knowing he was disappointed in her, but for once there was
nothing she could do. Nothing in heaven or earth would make her touch
one of them. Nothing. Not even Ben's disapproval. "Okay,"
she said. "But don't be long, Ben. Please. I couldn't bear it if
they attacked me. I just couldn't." "No,"
he said, his face softening. "Nor I." MEG
stood there on the veranda of the old naval college, looking out
across the river. At the foot of the hill, the water stretched away
to either side, a broad, uneven sheet of moonlit darkness, its
reflective brightness framed by the solidity of the hills. To her
left, beyond the scar of the Old Mill Creek, the dark flank of the
land hid any sign of the village and the cottage beyond. It was
there, on the far bank, that the darkness was most intense, the
primal blackness of the woods pressed against the water's edge
threateningly. To the south—to her right as she turned, looking
out across its sprawl—the lamps of the old town glowed in the
dark, each point of light distinct. Beyond it the castle was dour and
solid on its rock foundations, guarding the river's mouth. Fishing
boats were clustered in the old harbor, their masts like winter
saplings. Close by, lying alongside the cobbled quay, the big
merchantman rested at anchor, its sails furled, the oil lamps that
ringed its hull forming a necklace of light in the surrounding water. All
seemed well. All seemed . . . familiar. And yet, just beneath
where she stood, on the far side of the river, the Clay-men were
waiting, their log canoes tucked in against the bank, beneath the
overhanging trees. She
turned back, looking to see how Ben was getting on. He was standing
before the middle of the three big control panels, the portable
harness he was wearing making him seem strangely inhuman— more
machine than man. To his right, concealed from the river by the wall
of the veranda, a bank of screens—four wide, three deep—gave
a dozen different views of the valley. In
many ways it was all as before. The cameras were in place, the
tapes rolling. Lights winked and flickered on the boards.
Nearby, on the flat top of the tape-storage unit, one of the big
notebooks lay open, Ben's neat hand covering the pages. Outwardly
there seemed little difference between this and other times. Yet what
she felt was different. Was as distinct as it could possibly be. And
why was that? Why was the thought of this—of using this
situation—so disturbing? Was it simply personal fear, or was it
something much deeper than that? Something she couldn't face without
questioning all that Ben did, all he was1. She
studied her brother, as if to discern some difference in him,
something she had never noticed before that moment, but there was
nothing. He had always been like this: a lens, taking it all in.
Assimilating and transforming it. Recasting the world in his own dark
image. As
now. "That's
it," he said, straightening up. "All we need now is to
position the cameras properly and we're ready." She
nodded, yet for once she felt herself distanced from him, out of
sympathy with what he did. Before it had all been a game: endlessly
fascinating, yet a game for all that. Now it was real. Real men would
be hurt down there. Real blood spilled. And yet Ben acted as if the
game went on. As if there really was no difference. "Take
number three," he said, not even glancing at her, his eyes fixed
on what was happening on the screens. "I want a tight focus on
the quay in front of the inn." She
went across, adjusting the position of the camera until she heard him
grunt his satisfaction. "Good.
Now two." "Ben?" He
looked across at her, distracted. "What?" "What
are we doing, Ben? Why do you need this?" His
eyes met hers, then quickly moved away. It was the briefest of
contacts, but it was long enough for her to understand. He didn't
know. And the not-knowing was why. Was a reason in itself. She
shivered, then looked past him, noticing for the first time the
rocket launcher that lay on the grass beside their bicycles, its
brutal heaviness emphasized by the thick leather strap. "Two,"
he said again. "Please, Meg. We don't have much time." She
did as she was told, focusing in on the tiny crowd that stood in
front of the old Castle Hotel, drinking. Drinking...
Or pretending to drink. Just as they pretended to think and breathe
and talk. It was all one vast pretense. And Ben behind it all,
working his dead puppets for all he was worth. Dead,
she thought. It's all dead. And maybe that's why he needs
this. To bring it alive. To give it breath, and substance. But
somehow the explanation didn't satisfy. Her unease remained, and with
it a growing feeling that she should have defied Ben and called
Tolonen in. But now it was too late. "Look,"
Ben said quietly, pointing up at the top right-hand screen. "There,
beyond the junks." She
went and stood behind him, watching as the first of the steam-powered
rafts came into view, laboring through the water, its deck packed
with dark and threatening shapes. Seeing it, she felt her fear
return; a sharp, cold thing that seemed to sap her will. How could
they fight these creatures? How prevail against such odds? "Let's
hear what they're saying," Ben said, reaching out to touch one
of the pads on the panel beneath the screens. At once a soft,
guttural murmuring began. Hearing it, Meg shivered and turned her
head, looking up at the moon. What if it all ends here? she
thought. What if it all goes wrong7. But
Ben was clearly harboring no doubts. "Okay," he said,
turning to her. "It's just as I thought. They're going for a
frontal assault on the town. The Clay-men have been told to land just
upriver of the merchantman, the raft people farther down, by the
steps of the old Customs House. Tewl plans a pincer movement. He
wants to herd all of the townspeople into one place, then deal with
them there." "So
what's going to happen? What will you do?" Ben
smiled. "My morphs are going to fight." "Fight?
But how can they? They're not programmed to fight!" "Of
course they are. WeVe choreographed more than eighty different
moves." She
stared at him, astonished that he couldn't see it. "Yes, but. .
. well, those others won't be programmed, will they? They'll do
things that are ... unexpected." "That's
right." "But
they'll cut them to ribbons!" "Maybe.
Some of them, anyway. But not all. I'll be working some of them
through the harness here. The big tar, for instance, and the Han with
the limp. And others too. Switching from body to body. Hitting back
where they least expect it." Meg
frowned, trying to understand, to work out what he wanted from this
madness, but there wasn't time. Ben had turned and was leaning across
the central board, making minuscule adjustments to the settings,
while across the river, in the deep shadow beneath the overhanging
trees, two canoes were pushing off from the bank, moving with
silvered quickness across the darkness of the water. THERE
WERE SHOUTS in the valley. Hideous, unearthly sounds. On the cobbles
outside the ancient coaching inn, the crowd fell silent, looking
across the harbor toward the quay beyond. There, in the shadow of the
three-masted merchantman, two figures were struggling beneath the
lamp, as if locked in an embrace. For a moment there was only that,
and then, like demons crawling from a gap in hell itself, a dozen of
the Clay-men appeared over the lip of the river wall, whooping and
screeching, their dark, stooped figures making for the town. There
were shouts, the first murmurings of panic, and then the crowd broke,
some running toward the merchantman, but most to the right and the
safety of the Customs House. These last had not gone far when a group
of savage-looking creatures—maybe half a dozen in all—burst
from the shadows of one of the seafront houses, confronting them.
Big, crudely armored men with notched swords and vicious-looking
clubs. "Back!"
someone shouted. "Get help from the inn! There's weapons there!"
But even as the shout went up, the invaders rushed the front of the
crowd, laying about them savagely. Screams filled the air. Awful,
pitiful screams, like the sounds of real men dying. At
first the crowd was forced back by the viciousness of the onslaught,
several of them falling beneath the rain of blows, their limbs hacked
from their bodies or their skulls crushed by hammer blows, but then,
encouraged by the efforts of the young watchman from the
castle, they began to fight back. Using whatever weapons they
had at hand, they began to push the raft-men back step by step toward
the Customs House. Yet even as they did, more of the raft-men joined
the raiding party, swarming up the steps and out onto the lamp-lit
quay. Observing
it all from the safety of her vantage point above the town, Meg set
the glasses down and turned, facing her brother. For a
moment she watched as Ben kicked and swung, then ducked and came up
sharply, aiming a vicious punch into the air, his eyes never leaving
the screen in front of him. Down below, she knew, on the cobbles
before the Customs House, the morph of the watchman would have kicked
and swung, then ducked and come up quickly, aiming a vicious punch,
his movements the perfect duplicate of Ben's. She
shivered, frightened by the sight; by the sheer physicality of it,
the uncompromising violence of each movement. "There's too many
of them," she said quietly. "Your plan will never work,
Ben. They'll overwhelm the morphs before there's time." "Wait,"
he answered, moving back slightly, his eyes never leaving the screen
even as his hands made small adjustments to the control panel at his
side. "It's far from over yet." She
saw him lift his arm, as if to ward off a blow, then duck and twist,
as if he threw a figure through the air. From the town below, the
shouts and screams continued. The
screens were alive with activity. Close-ups of flailing arms and
agonized faces were juxtaposed against long-range shots of tiny
figures struggling beneath the harbor lamps. Metal bit deep into
flesh—some real, some made—while blood flew like
the spray of some dark fountain. Close
up and context, she thought, swallowing, recalling the number of
times they had done this kind of thing with the morphs. But this time
it was different. This time it was real. Or half real, anyway. She
studied the varied images of the struggle. The Clay-men had been held
on the quay beside the merchantman. In the opening moments of the
fight, Ben had had the crew pour down the wooden ramps and throw
themselves at their attackers, the morphs lashing out in a frenzy. At
first they'd been successful and several of the Clay had gone down,
badly hurt, but things were turning fast. More than thirty of the
morphs lay there on the quay now, inert or badly damaged, while
a dozen or more floated facedown in the water below. Less than half
their number remained standing. In a minute or two, they would be
overwhelmed, the left flank lost. Meg
turned back, lifting the glasses to her eyes, trying to make out what
was happening elsewhere. One of the strange, steam-driven rafts was
docked beside the Customs House steps. Out on the river, four more of
the rafts formed a staggered line across the water, their dark shapes
drifting slowly in toward the shore. The second was no more than
fifty yards out now, yet unless the first raft moved it would be hard
for the raft-men to disembark. Unless
they used the ferry ramp. She
turned slightly, focusing on the raft. There was feverish activity on
board; a great deal of pointing and shouting. As she looked, one of
the warriors—the steersman, maybe—slapped one of his
fellows down, then, jabbing his finger in the direction of the ramp,
forced the two rudder men to bring the unwieldy craft hard about. She
watched as the raft swung slowly around, avoiding the moored craft
narrowly as it made for the gap in the wall. For a
moment it glided in, the prow perfectly positioned for the ramp,
then, suddenly, there was a huge explosion. Meg
felt her chest tighten. In the echoing silence that followed she
could hear the splashing of things falling back into the water. Could
see the tiny shapes of stone and metal, flesh and splintered bone,
falling, tumbling through the broken darkness. On the
quay beside the Customs House the fight had stopped. The raiders
staggered back, staring out at the falling wreckage, horrified. "What
happened?" Meg asked, thinking for a moment that the raft's
boiler must have gone up. But when she turned, she saw that Ben was
smiling, and understood. He had mined it. Mined the ferry ramp. Sympathy,
that was it. That was what he lacked. That was the thing her
father, Hal, had had, and he, Ben, did not. The thing she had looked
for and not found in him, that moment before the old bam, watching
him use the scythe. Simple human sympathy. Ben
clenched his palm, briefly breaking the circuit that connected him to
the watchman as he took three paces back. Then, unclenching, he let
out a bloodcurdling yell, and half ran, half lunged at the screens. From
the town below, she heard the echoing yell the watchman gave, the
high, chilling scream of a badly wounded man, and turned to look. One
of the raft-men was down, on his knees, the watchman's sword embedded
to its hilt in his chest. "Ben
. . ." she whispered, feeling a shiver of pain pass through her.
"What in God's name are you doing, Ben?" But he
was unaware of her. As she watched, the sky lit up again. The junks
moored in the middle of the river had burst into flames and were
swinging around into the path of the last of the rafts. She heard the
shouts of panic, the splashes as some of the raft people threw
themselves over the side, but for most of them it was too late. As
the first of the junks collided with the raft, a rain of embers and
burning cloth fell over it, smothering the craft in a great sheet of
roaring flame. Meg
groaned, appalled. On all
sides the morphs were getting up from where they lay, crawling and
limping, hobbling or simply dragging themselves toward their foes,
ignoring the blows that rained down on them as they threw themselves
at their attackers, struggling to subdue them. In
front of the Customs House, the young watchman had sunk to his knees,
his head hacked cleanly from his shoulders. Yet even as he toppled
over, another of the townsfolk took his place—a big,
corpulent-looking fellow that Meg recognized instantly as the
innkeeper. With a bellow, the innkeeper swung his sword about his
head and brought it down savagely, an inhuman strength cleaving the
astonished raft-man from temple to waist. At
that a great cry went up. Until moments before it had all been going
well for the attackers, but now two of their rafts were lost, and
instead of timid townsfolk, they found themselves faced by demons.
Men who did not lie there, as the dead were supposed to, but stood
and joined the fight once more, not heeding the frightful wounds
they'd suffered. Out on
the river, the rafts were turning, heading back toward the river's
mouth and the safety of the sea. They had seen with their own eyes
how things were shaping. Even Tewl, who had stood there on the prow
of the third raft watching, gave a small shudder and turned away.
"Nog-us genys," he was heard to mutter. "Ny
harth o rnlath nag'iis genys." The
unborn . . . We cannot fight the unborn . . . "Enough!"
Meg said, angry with him suddenly. "For God's sake, Ben,
enough!" But
Ben could not hear her. Ben jumped and kicked and spun, fighting the
air, his eyes transfixed, chained to the images on the screens. IT was
over. The captives were huddled in the space before the ruined inn,
sixty or so in all, a cordon of battle-scarred sailors forming a
loose circle about them. Coming this close to them, Meg shivered. The
scent of them was strong, almost overpowering. A musty animal smell.
Looking down at the dark, painted faces of the raft-men, the bowed
heads of the Clayborn, she could remember how hard, how viciously
they had fought. Just now, however, they were frightened and subdued,
especially the Clay among them. The sight of the scarred and
mutilated dead rising from the ground had unnerved them. As well it
might. Ghosts they had been fighting. Yes, and one dark,
form-shifting spirit, who had fled each time they'd tried to cut him
down, only to return, renewed and twice as deadly. And
now that spirit stood before them, his human form encased in a
shimmering, silver mesh. A powerful magician, who commanded the
unborn and spoke their language with a skill not one of them
possessed. Ben
leaned toward them, his voice soft, conciliatory now that he had won,
their strange and ugly language transformed in his mouth so that it
was almost beautiful. Above his head floated three of the remotes,
their lens-eyes taking in each detail of this scene, each twitch and
furtive gesture of his captives. On
tape, she thought. You'd have it all on tape if you could,
wouldn't you, Ben? Yet the sourness she had been feeling earlier
had drained from her. What she felt now was a kind of tiredness, a
dreadful weariness that was in the bone itself. She had to get away.
Far away from all of this. It
began to rain. Out on the river there was a loud hissing as a mist of
steam rose from the smoldering junks. A low, fearful moan rose from
the Clayborn, who hunched even tighter into themselves, trem- bling,
but the raft people merely looked up, as if greeting an old, familiar
friend. It was
only then, as they looked up, their faces tilted to the night sky,
their weather-sculpted features revealed in the lamplight for the
first time, that Meg noticed. There were women among them. And not
just one or two, but a number of them, maybe eight or nine in all.
Meg narrowed her eyes, the shock she felt profound. Her
brother had been fighting women. Killing and maiming women. She
wondered if he had known that. And if
he had? She
looked down, suddenly frightened by what she was thinking, what
feeling at that moment. There
was a noise. A grunt of surprise. She looked up, and saw that Ben had
moved, had gone right up to the captives and was crouched there, his
hand reaching out to lift one of their chins and turn the face toward
him. "Jesus!"
he said, lifting the strap and tugging the battered helmet from the
warrior's head. Long,
red hair spilled out from within the helmet's crest. Green eyes
looked up past him, meeting Meg's. Green eyes in a pretty, Slavic
face. Meg
caught her breath. Catherine! It was Catherine! Or someone so like
her as to be her twin. Ben
stood, shaking his head, then turned, looking back at Meg. "I
saw her," he said, frowning, trying to piece things together. "I
picked her up on one of the remotes. In the village on the big raft.
But I never thought. . ." He
turned back, staring down at her, then put out his hand, as if the
woman should take it. But she drew back, her fear of him mixed with a
natural defiance. "Dos,
benen!" he said, ordering her. But the words were barely
uttered when the sky to the south of them lit up, the old castle
silhouetted briefly against the brilliance. A moment later, two loud
explosions rent the air. "The
rafts," Ben said, facing the fading glow. "Virtanen has
destroyed the rafts." How
do you know? she wanted to ask, but she was sure he was right. Besides,
she could hear die cruiser's engines now, could feel the faint
vibration in the air. "Over
there!" Ben said urgently, pointing past her toward the steps.
"In the gap . . . the ferry ramp!" And, not waiting to see
whether she obeyed, he went across, lifting the rocket launcher from
where he'd left it on the wall and slipping it over his shoulder. He
turned back, facing the captives. Some had stood. Others were
glancing nervously at the sky, as if they knew what was to come. From
the look of them, they would try to run at any moment. "Tryga!"
Ben said, his voice powerful, commanding. "Tryga amma!"
Yet even as he said it, there was a shadow on the moon and the
dark shape of a cruiser swept across the sky above the river, the
sound of its engines reverberating in the sudden stillness. There
was a murmur of fear from among the captives. The cruiser had been
unlit; had been like a giant beetle, whirring across the sky. A dark,
malignant thing, heavy with threat. "Go!"
Ben said, turning to her again, and shooing her away. "For God's
sake get out of sight! It'll be back any moment!" This
time she went, crouching between the sloping walls, halfway down the
cobbled ramp, the dark edge of the river only yards below. But what
about Ben? What was he going to try? To bargain with Virtanen? To
make him confess to what he'd done? Madness,
she thought, not for the first time that day. Ail of this is
madness. Our lives are in danger, and all because my brother wants
excitement! It was
not strictly true. Virtanen had started this. But Ben could have
wrapped things up much quicker if he'd wanted. If what she suspected
were true, he had gotten his evidence against Virtanen long ago. All
this was simply games. The
murmur of the cruiser's engines had faded, now it came back, stronger
than before, and, from the disturbance of the water below her, she
could tell that it was hovering out there, above the river. Slowly
she crept up the ramp again, until she could poke her head above the
brickwork and look across. The
captives were still there, huddled together tightly now, every head
turned to face the threat of the cruiser. All about them, the
morph-sailors stood impassively, their weapons raised, their
faces vacant. There
was no sign of Ben. She
turned her head, trying to make out the cruiser. At first she
couldn't see it, then, with a suddenness that surprised her, it
turned its searchlight full on, the beam's brilliance startling her,
making the captives cry out with fear. For a
moment everything seemed superreal, picked out in stark relief, heavy
with shadow. "Shepherd!"
a voice boomed down. "Ben Shepherd! Are you there?" Don't
answer, she pleaded silently, staring across at the cruiser as
if mesmerized. For God's sake, Ben, don't answer. "I'm
here, Major Virtanen!" came a voice from the far side of the
river. "Down here at the water's edge!" She
watched, her heart hammering, as the cruiser slowly turned, its lamps
sweeping across her and out, searching the far bank. And as it did,
she noticed a tiny speck—one of Ben's remotes?—float up,
away from the passageway beside the Customs House, lifting rapidly
toward the hovering cruiser. Slowly
the cruiser turned back, the brilliant light from its searchlight
scouring the quayside. "Why the games?" the voice asked
from within that glare. "We came to help you, Shepherd. To save
you from the raft-men." There
was a moment's silence, a moment's utter stillness, and then
laughter. Laughter that grew in volume until it seemed to fill the
Domain, echoing back and forth between the hills. Ben's laughter. The
detonation was unexpected. She felt herself thrown back; found
herself rolling, tumbling down the slope until she hit the coldness
of the water. Heat... the air had been full of heat. And the light.
For the briefest moment the light had intensified, as if... Her
ears were ringing. She sat there, waist deep in the water, and
understood. Virtanen had fired a missile. And
Ben? Where was Ben? She
pulled herself up and hurried up the slope. Through the swirl of
smoke she could see that the quayside was a ruin, as if a great chunk
had been bitten from the stone. Beyond that, where the
captives had been, was nothing. Nothing but a charred depression. She
stared at it, numbed, then sank down, her knees giving way beneath
her. "God
help us. . ." Smoke
swirled in the beams of the cruiser's lights. From the darkness
beyond that great circle of light, a figure emerged, moving slowly
through the veils of smoke until it stood there, at the center of the
charred and smoking depression, its arms and legs, its chest and
head, encased in shimmering silver. It was Ben, the rocket launcher
held loosely in his artificial hand, as if it weighed less than an
old man's cane. No.'
she wanted to scream, but her mouth was dry, her throat constricted
with fear. No! She could barely look she was so afraid for him. "Virtanen!"
Ben called, his voice cold, unlike she had ever heard it before. "Why
don't you come down here and face me? Or are you afraid of that? Do
you always prefer to kill people without warning?" There
was silence, and then a background muttering, which cut out quickly. "Rockets
not working?" Ben inquired, coming forward a few paces, and
hefting the launcher. "I wonder why that is?" From
the craft there was silence. A heavy, brooding silence. Ben
was looking down, studying the launcher, then, slowly, almost
lovingly, he lifted it to his shoulder, eyeing along the sights.
"It's a little trick of mine. Or should I say ours. You see, we
Shepherds have been expecting this for years now. Preparing for some
evil-minded bastard like you to come along." Meg
stood, knowing what he was about to do, knowing also that even if it
were justified, it was wrong to do it this way. Trying to keep calm,
she began to walk toward him. "Ben!
You can't!" "Stay
there," he said, raising a hand to stop her. "I wasn't
going to do this. But the bastard killed her. Without a moment's
thought. He just went and killed her." She
stood there, in the shadows, looking across at him, surprised by the
intensity of emotion in his voice. It was as if Virtanen had killed
the real Catherine. As if... She
licked at her lips, then spoke again, trying to keep her fear for him
out of her voice; to bring him back from the darkness where he
suddenly was. "Maybe so, Ben, but this isn't right. Let Li Yuan
sort this out. Let him make the decision." He
looked at her, meeting her eyes in a long, clear gaze, then returned
his left eye to the sight, tilting the mouth of the launcher up
toward the cruiser. "Be-enn!!" The
explosion knocked her off her feet, throwing her back against the low
wall that surrounded the ferry ramp. No, she kept thinking as she lay
there. No, it wasn't the way. But in that last clear meeting of their
eyes she had understood. He was mad. Her brother Ben was mad. PART
3 SUMMER 2210 The Coast
of Darkness
Thither
he plies Undaunted,
to meet there whatever Power Or Spirit of the nethermost Abyss Might
in that noise reside, of whom to ask Which way the nearest coast of
darkness lies Bordering on light; when straight behold the throne Of
Chaos, and his dark pavilion spread Wide on the wasteful Deep!
With him enthroned Sat sable-vested Night, eldest of things, The
consort of his reign; and by them stood Orcus and Ades, and the
dreaded name Of Demogorgon; Rumour next, and Chance, And Tumult, and
Confusion, all embroiled And Discord with a thousand various mouths. —John
Milton, Paradise Lost, Book II [^954-67]
CHAPTER SIXTEEN Circles
of Light IT
WAS DAWN in Kamak and Wang Sau-leyan, T'ang, mler of City Africa,
stood on the broad and deeply shadowed balcony, his back to his two
companions, looking out across the wide, slow river toward the Valley
of the Kings. Early sunlight lay like a stain on the clifrtops
opposite, a band of reddish-gold atop the blackness below. To the
south lay Luxor, ancient Thebes. There the City began again, its
walls, smooth white cliffs of ice, lifting two li into the morning
sky. On the river a bird circled low above the surface, dark against
the dark, then dropped soundlessly into the water. Wang
Sau-leyan turned, leaning lazily against the rail. Chi Hsing, T'ang
of the Australias, was to his right, staring downriver toward the
City. Hou Tung-po, T'ang of South America, stood in the arched
doorway, looking back at him, smiling. They had been talking all
night, but now it was done; the matter agreed among them. Tomorrow
they would begin their campaign. Wang
returned Hou's smile, then tilted back his head, enjoying the
freshness of the morning. It was simple really. Li Yuan had begun the
process a year ago, when he had presented his package of changes to
the Council. Now he, Wang Sau-leyan, would push things farther,
letting his "friends" in the Above know that he supported
their demands for new, more extreme changes to the Edict. At the same
time, Chi Hsing, Hou Tung-po, and he would finance a faction in the
newly reopened House to press for those changes: changes which
Li Yuan could not afford to grant. "What
will he do?" asked Hou, coming out onto the balcony. Chi
Hsing turned, looking back at them. They were all equals here, yet it
was to Wang Sau-leyan that they looked for guidance. Wang's
moon face looked away as he spoke. "Li Yuan will oppose us."
Then, turning back to face them, he added, "He and his friends
Tsu Ma and Wu Shih." "And
then?" Chi Hsing asked, concerned. They had gone over this
ground three times already, and yet still he wanted it fixed. "With
Wei Chan Yin sure to support them in Council, they could simply
overrule us, four to three." "Maybe
so. But I think our cousins will think twice before being so hasty.
Much has been said about the autonomy of the new House—of it
not being an instrument of the Seven. Well, we can use that, neh? The
people will be watching things closely in those first few weeks. They
shall want to see whether the Great Promises will be fulfilled, the
bargain between People and Seven properly made. The last thing our
cousins want is for their words to seem empty. A demand for further
changes, made publicly—constitutionally—in the House,
will be a great embarrassment to them. They will have to oppose it,
of course—they have no choice but to oppose it—but they
will find it awkward doing so." Wang
smiled, looking from one to the other. "Our purpose is not so
much to oppose Li Yuan as to make him show his hand in public. To
force him to intervene. For our part we must cultivate a reasonable
air, conceding the difficulty of change while acknowledging its
necessity. That way we might, at first, lend tacit support to the
idea while not committing ourselves to it." He
paused, then pushed away from the rail. "As for Li Yuan, we must
find other ways of isolating him from his allies in Council. We must
make him seem unreasonable, his schemes harebrained, disastrous in
their consequences. Tsu Ma, perhaps, might stay with him, but Wu Shih
is his own man and might be swayed. As for Wei Chan Yin, he is his
father's son and, like his father, will vote to maintain the stasis.
Within the year things will have changed. It will no longer be
four against three, but two against five. And then we shall
use the Council itself to bridle our young cousin." Hou
nodded enthusiastically, but Chi Hsing was still hesitant. In spite
of his fears he liked and respected the young T'ang of City Europe,
and his blood had sung with satisfaction when Li Yuan had acted
against the rebellious sons of the Above. Yet what he wanted most of
all was peace. Peace, so that his sons might live and grow to be men.
And Li Yuan, for all that he liked him, threatened that peace. Chi
Hsing met Wang's eyes and nodded. "So be it," he said. Wang
smiled. "Good. Then I shall begin at once, wooing our cousin
Wei. Rumor has it that something has been eating at him. Some secret
inner grief, connected to Li Yuan. Perhaps a private meeting between
us will reveal just what seed of bitterness he nurtures." "And
Wu Shih?" Chi Hsing pushed out his chin as he spoke. It was an
almost belligerent gesture, one Chi Hsing himself was entirely
unaware of, but to Wang Sau-leyan it was revealing. He knew that Chi
Hsing disapproved of his lifestyle—particularly of the Hung Moo
concubines he kept—but this was rooted elsewhere. Seeing that
gesture, he understood that he would not be able to trust Chi Hsing
completely. If it came to a crucial choice Chi Hsing might yet side
with Li Yuan. Again
he smiled. "As I said, Wu Shih is his own man. He will vote as
before. For tradition. And to preserve the functions of the Seven."
He shrugged. "As for Tsu Ma, he is Li Yuan's shadow. But two
against five cannot carry policy. Li Yuan will see this and, in his
frustration, seek to circumvent us." Wang
Sau-leyan looked from one man to the other and smiled, a great
feeling of satisfaction washing over him. Each had their role to .
play. Hou Tung-po would placate the Minor Families, wooing them with
new concessions—concessions that Wang Sau-leyan would draft and
present to the Council of the Seven as legislation, principal among
them a guarantee of posts in all the major Ministries—posts
they had, in effect, been denied this last half century. And
Chi Hsing? He was to penetrate the higher levels of Li Yuan's
administration—to buy and blackmail those nearest the young
T'ang. For they must know for certain what he was
thinking, what planning in the months to come. Only
reluctantly had Chi Hsing agreed. Yet he had agreed, and his
agreement bound him to this conspiracy. As time passed, circumstance
would bind him much closer to their cause. He would be shaped by his
actions until he became what he acted. And all the time his actions
would be against Li Yuan. "Come
inside," Wang said, embracing the two men. "Let's drink to
peace. And to a freer, happier world than this." Chi
Hsing smiled and nodded, but before he went in, he turned, looking
back at the darkness of the river, wondering. LI
YUAN leaned forward, spreading his hands along the cool wooden
balustrade, and looked across the lake toward the distant hills. He
had thought never to come here again, but here he was, not three
years passed since his last visit, his heart hammering in his chest
at the thought of the meeting to come. The
day was hot and still, unnaturally so, even for this southern
climate, but where he stood, on the north balcony of Yin Tsu's summer
palace, there was shade of sorts. Two body-servants stood behind him,
their heads bowed, the long-handled fans moving slowly, indolently in
their hands. Li
Yuan breathed deeply, trying to prepare himself, but there was no
preparing for this moment. He heard her soft footsteps coming down
the broad twist of steps behind him and turned, suddenly awkward,
moving between his servants to face her. Fei Yen had stopped, six
steps from the bottom, her head lowered. "Chieh
Hsia, I..." Her
hesitancy was a new thing. When she had been his wife there had been
a natural arrogance about her which had somehow awed him. Back then
he had always; felt inferior to her, but the years had changed that.
He was older now and T'ang. And she was a cast-off wife, exiled from
the Court. Twice exiled, he thought, remembering the two years
mourning for his brother. He
took a step forward, holding out his right hand to her. She came down
the last few steps and knelt, taking his hand and pressing her
lips to the great Ywe Lung ring, her small, dark head
bowed beneath his gaze. He bade her get up, then stood silently,
staring down at her. She
was still as beautiful as ever. That same porcelain delicacy he
sometimes dreamed of was still there in her, undiminished. "How
have you been?" She
had been looking down all this while, her eyes averted. Now she
glanced up at him. "I am well, Chieh Hsia." "Ah
. . ." But he had heard otherwise. The man who had been here
when he arrived was but the latest of a long line of lovers she had
taken. As if there were some lack in her that she could keep no man
for long. "And
Han?" "He
has grown, Chieh Hsia." She paused, then. "He is with his
nurses just now." Li
Yuan sighed. This too he had heard. As if the mother shunned the son
who had brought her fall from grace. The last time he had seen the
child, Han had been barely nine months old. And now the boy was
almost three. For a moment old feelings stirred in him. Looking at
Fei Yen he frowned, wondering where he had gone wrong with her. But
he had thought this through many times. The blame was not hers. The
mistake had been marrying his dead brother's wife. All wrongness
flowed from that. He had
come with no intention of seeing her, thinking her at Hei Shui in the
north, but she had come here with the man only hours before his craft
had landed, and so his scheme of seeing the boy without her had come
to nothing. "Can
I see him?" She
tensed, silent a moment, then answered him. "I would rather not,
Chieh Hsia . . ." It was
said softly, deferentially, but with a firmness that said much about
her feelings on the matter. It was as he'd expected. Despite her
unchanged looks, the last two years had hardened her. This new exile
wore at her worse than the last. For her it was a kind of death, and
she blamed him for it. He
looked away. "I have a gift for him." "Leave
it, then. I'll see he gets it." He
noted the impoliteness and turned on her, suddenly angry. "You
will bring him here at once. I wish to see the boy, and I
shall." He drew a breath, then, more gently, "I'd like to
see him, Fei Yen. To meet him." She
looked up, her eyes burning, their relative status momentarily
forgotten. "Why? You have your son, Li Yuan. What's my child to
you?" He bit
back the words that came to mind, turning from her sharply, his hands
clenched with anger and frustration. Finally, he looked back at her,
his chin raised commandingly. "Just bring him. Down there,
beside the lake. I'll see him there." "As
my T'ang commands." The
words dripped with bitter irony. Turning from him, she ran back up
the steps, her own anger evident in her every movement. He
watched her go, touched strangely by the familiarity of that anger,
then went down and waited at the lake's edge, looking across at the
ancient orchard. It was some while before the child came. He had been
changed and groomed. A nurse brought him down the steps, then left
him there, at the edge of the grassy slope that led down from the
summer palace to the lake. Li
Yuan turned, facing the boy squarely, and raised a hand, summoning
him. The child came slowly, but not hesitantly. Despite his age, he
carried his head proudly and walked like a little prince. His fine
dark hair was neatly cut and combed, and he wore fine silks of gray
and blue and black. Two ch'i from Li Yuan, he stopped and
bowed low, then looked up again, not certain what was required of him
beyond this formality. The
boy's dark eyes were proud but curious. He met Li Yuan's gaze
unflinchingly and when the T'ang smiled, his lips formed only the
faintest echo of a smile, as if maintaining seriousness were the
greatest art. A lesson he'd been taught. "I
am Li Yuan, Han. Your T'ang." "Yes,"
the boy said clearly. "Mama said." "You
know it is your birthday soon?" The
boy nodded, then waited, moving slightly on his feet. "Good.
And did your mama tell you that I've a gift for you?" Again
he nodded; a strong, definite movement of his neat and perfect head.
Seeing it, Li Yuan shivered and pressed his teeth
together. This was harder than he'd thought. Simply to see the
boy was painful. So perfectly named. So very much like his murdered
brother. He
nodded to himself, then took a pouch from the inner pocket of his
jacket. Tugging open the leather cord, he spilled the tiny object
into his other palm, then knelt, indicating that Han should approach
him. The
boy stood close. Li Yuan could feel his breath on his forehead as he
took the warm and tiny hand and slipped the ring onto the second
finger. Moving back, Li Yuan noted how the boy was staring at the
ring, puzzled by it. "What
does it mean?" Han asked, looking directly, frighteningly into
his eyes from only a hand's width away. For a
moment Li Yuan felt overwhelmed by the depth of the child's eyes, by
his closeness, the warmth of the tiny hand that rested in his own. He
wanted to hold the boy close and kiss him. Wanted, for one long,
almost unbearable moment, to pick him up and carry him from that
place. To take him back with him. The
moment passed. The boy stood there, watching him, awaiting his
answer. He
sighed, staring at the ring. "It's a kind of promise, Han. A
promise I made myself. Each year I shall bring you such a ring.
Until, when you're a man, full grown, there will be one final ring to
keep. One final token of that promise." Looking
up, he saw that the boy had made nothing of what he'd said. Li Yuan
smiled and patted his head. "Never mind. One day I'll explain it
better to you." He let
go of the tiny hand and stood, looking back across the lake. "It's
strange," he said, talking as much to himself as to the child.
"It reminds me of the orchard at Tongjiang. I used to play there
as a child, with my brother, Han." For
the first time the boy looked up at him and smiled. "Han? Like
me, you mean?" Li
Yuan looked down and nodded, letting his left hand rest gently on the
crown of the boy's head, his fingers in the dark, fine hair. "Yes,
Han. Like you. Very much like you." THE
TWO visiting T'ang were about to depart when Wang Sau-leyan's
Chancellor, Hung Mien-lo, appeared at the doorway, the Captain of Chi
Hsing's elite guard two paces behind him. "What
is it, Chancellor Hung?" Wang asked, turning to him. "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia," Hung answered, lowering his head first
to his own T'ang and then to the others, "but it seems there is
some trouble with the great T'ang, Chi Hsing's, craft. The preflight
checks have shown up faults in the computer backup systems. I am
advised that it would be unwise for the great T'ang to attempt the
return flight until such faults have been rectified." Wang
turned, looking back at Chi Hsing. "Well, cousin, what would you
like to do? You are more than welcome to stay here until the repairs
are made." Chi
Hsing stroked his neck with one hand, considering, then shook his
head. "No, Sau-leyan. It would be pleasant, most pleasant
indeed, but I must get back." "Then
why don't you use one of my craft?" Chi
Hsing smiled broadly, delighted by Wang's offer. "I would be
most honored, cousin. But what about my own craft?" Wang
turned, looking past Hung Mien-lo at the Captain. "I shall have
a team of my best technicians aid your crew, cousin. As for the
security aspect, your man, here, might stay, perhaps, to oversee the
work?" Chi
Hsing beamed. "Excellent! But you are certain you can spare a
craft, Sau-leyan? I can always send for my second ship." Wang
reached out and took his arm. "And waste four hours? No, dear
cousin. You are right. I have already kept you from your business far
too long. You will be missing your sons, neh?" Chi
Hsing laughed and nodded. "Even one night away from them seems
too long, sometimes." "Then
let us part. Come, cousins, I will see you to your craft . . ." HE was
saying his farewells to his onetime father-in-law, Yin Tsu, when Fei
Yen burst in at the far side of the hangar. "Li
Yuan!" she called angrily. "What is the meaning of this?" Yin
Tsu turned, aghast, trying at one and the same time to apologize to
his T'ang and remonstrate with his daughter, but she swept past him
imperiously, standing at arm's length from Li Yuan, her hands on her
hips, glaring up at him. "Come
now, Li Yuan! I demand an explanation!" He
laughed coldly, taken aback by her outburst. It was years since
anyone had spoken to him like this. "An
explanation? For what?" "For
what7." She laughed scornfully. "Why, for
the guards, Li Yuan! Am I to be a prisoner in my own father's house?
Am I to be followed and hounded every second of the day?" Li
Yuan looked to Yin Tsu, then back at her. "I have already
explained to your father why the guards are here, Yin Fei Yen,"
he said patiently, but she would have nothing of his reasonableness.
She moved closer, almost shouting the words into his face. "Have
I not been humiliated enough, Li Yuan? Have you not made me suffer
enough for my mistake? Must you continue to hound me and meddle in my
affairs?" The
word was unfortunately chosen, but still Li Yuan was patient. He
would not, at this last moment, be drawn by her. "You
misunderstand me, Fei Yen," he said, leaning close, letting his
voice carry only to her. "I know all about your lovers. But that
is not why I am doing this. We live in troubled times. The guards are
there for one reason only—to keep Han safe. As for you, my
once-wife, I have no wish to meddle in your life. And you are quite
wrong if you think I want you to suffer. No. I wish you only
happiness." For a
moment she stood there, her dark eyes watching him. Then, with the
faintest rustle of her silks, she turned away, walking quickly across
the hangar and out into the early afternoon sunlight. And Li
Yuan, watching her go, felt a part of him drawn out after her, as if
on a fine, invisible line, and knew, as he had not really known
before, that he was not quite over her. THE
captain sat at a table, a bottle of Wang Sau-leyan's best wine open
before him. A serving girl stood behind him, her fingers gently
massaging his shoulder muscles while he watched the men at
work on the far side of the hangar. The two craft looked identical
from where he sat and, not for the first time, he found his thoughts
turn uneasily to the question of why the T'ang of Africa should want
a perfect copy of Chi Hsing's craft. While
servants set out the meal, the Captain turned his head, looking
across to where Wang Sau-leyan was deep in conversation with a tall,
odd-looking Han. The Han seemed central to all of this somehow. It
was to him that the technicians came with their queries, and it was
to him alone that they would defer, as if the great T'ang were
invisible to them. That intrigued him—that absence of any mark
of respect for Wang Sau-leyan. When he'd first seen it, he had been
shocked, for it went against all instinct. But now he thought he
understood. He
returned his eyes to the men, busy at work inside the right-hand
craft, Chi Hsing's original. They had been at work now for over three
hours, and in that time they had been most thorough. A team of six
technicians had taken the control panels apart and painstakingly
rebuilt them. Meanwhile, two of their colleagues had broken down the
access codes to the craft's computer records and stripped them bare,
making copies of everything—of security keycodes, pilot
transmissions, field distortion patterns, and all. He had listened to
their excited chatter and felt his unease grow. The copy craft would
not simply look like Chi Hsing's, to all intents and purpose it would
be Chi Hsing's. And Chi Hsing himself would know nothing of
its existence. Unless.
. . He
felt the tension return to his muscles and tried to relax, to let the
young girl's fingers work their magic spell, but it was difficult.
Too much was going on inside. He looked at the bowls of delicacies
that had been set before him, conscious of how, at any other time, he
would have fallen upon such rare culinary delights, but just now he
had no appetite. When Wang's agent had brought him, he had not
expected any of this; had not really asked himself why Wang Sau-leyan
should wish to delay his cousin's craft, accepting the man's
reassurances. But this... He
shivered, then reached out to take some of the duck in ginger,
forcing himself to eat; to act as if nothing were wrong. But beneath
the outward mask of calm, he felt a sense of panic, knowing he
had got himself in out of his depth. Why should Wang Sau-leyan go to
such lengths to copy his cousin's craft unless he wished to use it?
And why should he do that? Moreover,
the presence of these men—political terrorists, he was certain,
if only from the way they pointedly refused to bow to the great
T'ang—added a whole new dimension to things. To find such men
here, at the heart of the T'ang's palace, what did that mean? Across
from the Captain, Wang Sau-leyan leaned back, nodding his
satisfaction, then turned and came across. The Captain rose at once
and bowed low, keeping his eyes averted. "You
have everything you need, Captain Gustavsson?" He
kept his voice calm, clear of the fear he felt deep down. "All
is well, Chieh Hsia. I am honored to be of service to you." It was
not what he had meant to say, but it would do. Moreover, it reflected
something true about the situation. He had not understood before,
but, in taking Wang Sau-leyan's money, he had become Wang's man.
There was no turning back from this. No way of excusing himself.
Inadvertently he had committed himself to whatever was being done
here. If
I had known . . . But it
was too late now for such thoughts. And when Wang put out his hand,
he took and kissed the great ring of power, knowing that it was this
or death, and there was his family to think of—his sons and
baby daughter, his wife Ute, and his invalid mother. Wang knew that.
He was sure to know it. It was why they had chosen him. Why it was
even possible that Wang's agents had been in some way responsible for
his money troubles. Certainly, he had never had so bad a night at
Chou as that session six weeks back when he had lost eight
thousand yuan at a single sitting. Even so, it had been his
decision, and now he must live with it. "If
there is any further service I might offer, Chieh Hsia." Wang
smiled, his plump, moonlike face taking on an air of great
benevolence. "Maybe there is something. For now, however, you
have my gratitude, Captain. And my protection." The
Captain looked up, surprised, then quickly lowered his head once
more. "I am deeply honored, Chieh Hsia." "Well...
let me keep you no more. Enjoy your meal while it is hot, Captain.
Such pleasures are rare in life, neh?" Rare
indeed, he thought, looking through his lashes at the back of
the retreating T'ang. He sat, his skin strangely cold, a new
tightness at the pit of his stomach. Eat, he told himself.
Enjoy the feast that's spread before you. But though there
were dishes there he had never dreamed he would taste, things that
only a T'ang might afford, he found himself picking at them
dispiritedly, chewing the richly flavored foods listlessly, as if
they were but tasteless copies of the things they purported to be. He
looked about him, as if waking, seeing the men working on the craft,
the odd-looking Han standing nearby, supervising them, and nodded to
himself, understanding. Lifting one hand, he put the fingers gently
to his mouth, feeling once more the cold, hard pressure of the Yu>e
Lung—the Wheel of Dragons—against the warm softness of
his lips, then drew them back, as if the flesh were bruised. WANG
SAU -LEYAN stood at the rail, the dark stillness of the Nile beneath
him, and looked up at the full and shining circle of the moon. For so
long now he had held himself in check, containing his natural impulse
to oppose and destroy. But now—finally—his patience would
be rewarded. He
smoothed his hands over his ample stomach, then smiled broadly. It
was strange how far he had come these past few years. Stranger still
that he had not seen this in himself from the first. But it had
always been there, since his first conscious moments. They
had never understood him. Not one of them. His father had disliked
him from the start, repulsed by the pudgy little creature he had
sired. His mother had persevered for a time, but had thought him a
stubborn, willful child. Dismayed by his behavior and unable to
control him except by the strictest measures, she had cast him from
her side before he was three, having nothing further to do with him.
Her sudden death, when he was seven, had left him curiously
unaffected, unable to share in the general grief, but it had given
him a strange, unchildlike understanding of his nature. From that
moment on he had known it was
his fate to stand outside that bright circle of human connectedness;
to be an onlooker, cut off from kith and kin. A Han, a son, but
really neither; more some alien creature born into a fleshy form. And
from that moment's realization had come the urge to oppose, the
impulse to destroy all that he touched. No,
and no one, not even Mach, understood how deep that impulse ran in
him; how strongly that urge to destroy tugged at him, sweeping him
along, like a smooth white stone caught in the dark ocean's undertow.
It was not power he wanted, but the opportunities that power brought:
the chance to meddle and corrupt, to smash and overturn. To break . .
. well, a whole world, if he so wished. A
whole world . . . No, not even Mach wanted that. Even he would stop
short at some things. The
oxygen generators, for instance. Those huge pumping stations that
reached down deep into the earth's mantle to tap the reservoirs of
energy and convert the basic building blocks of life into the most
precious thing of all—air. Mach knew of them, secret though
they were. He knew that, since the destruction of the rain forests,
life on Chung Kuo would have been insupportable without them—as
intolerable as the icy wastes of Mars. But never—not even for a
passing moment—would he have considered acting against them.
Destroying them. It was unthinkable. No, what Mach wanted was
an end to the old—to Seven and Cities and the stifling world of
levels. And afterward? Well, to be blunt about it, Mach hadn't really
thought it through. His vision of the new order was vague; a thin
tissue of ideals, with no more substance than the words he breathed
into the air. Necessarily so. For had he pictured what it would be
like—what it would really be like—when the Cities
fell, he would have quailed at the thought of the misery and
devastation to come. But
he—Wang Sau-leyan, T'ang of Africa—had thought long and
hard on the matter. Had pictured in his mind the long, straggling
lines of skeletal figures stretching out across that bleak, unending
wasteland. He had seen them, there in the clear, gray light of dawn,
trudging from nowhere to nowhere, tongues black in their wizened
heads, blank eyes staring straight ahead, while to every side, the
dead were heaped in rotting piles, all trace of human warmth, of
human connectedness, leached
from their wasted forms. And at such moments his nostrils would
twitch with distaste, as if sensing the overwhelming stench of
putrefying flesh. And he would smile. Yes.
He saw it clearly. A dying world, its foul, unregenerated air filled
with the darkness of corruption. And afterward, nothing. Nothing but
rock and wind and salted oceans. Nothing for a million years. He
lowered his eyes, looking out across the dark surface of the river
toward the ancient Valley of the Kings. Here death was close at hand.
Was a dark companion, ever-present, more intimate than any lover. He
could feel its breath upon his cheek, its hands caressing his softly
rounded flesh, and shivered at the touch, not from fear but from a
strange, inexplicable delight. No.
Not one of them knew him. Not one. Hung Mien-lo, Li Yuan, Jan
Mach—each saw but the surface of him; the softly rounded mask
of flesh. But beneath that—beneath the tissue of his physical
self— was something hard and unyielding; something wholly
inimical to life. He
turned, hearing the rush of wind, the beating of wings overhead, then
laughed, delighted. Birds filled the air suddenly, returning to their
nests on the far side of the river, their long, dark shapes swooping
and circling high above the moonlit darkness of the Nile. And then,
one by one, they plunged into the dark water, exploding in sudden
circles of light. Like
messengers, he thought, and felt a strange unearthly thrill pass
through him. Messengers. it was
a place of pools and paths and ancient stones, of pleasant bowers and
gently flowing streams. Birds sang in the sunlit branches of
time-twisted junipers while below, amid the lush green covering,
cast-bronze statues of long-extinct animals—bright red
pictograms cut into their flanks—lolled peacefully, as if
shading themselves for the fierceness of the late afternoon sun. It
was a scene of great tranquillity, of a long-cultivated harmony that
was almost indolent in its nature. But today, the Garden of
Reflective Quiescence gave Li Yuan no sense of inner peace as he
walked along its paths. For once, his eyes skirted the surface of
things, seeing nothing of the delicate
balance of form and color and texture the garden's designers
had striven so hard to create, focused only on the hard nugget of
unrest deep within him. Returning
from T'ai Yueh Shan, he had ridden out, urging the horse on madly, as
if to purge what he felt from his blood, but it had been no use. At
the ruined temple he had turned, looking about him, seeing her image
everywhere he looked. And
the child? He
stopped, realizing suddenly where he was. He had strayed from the
path and was among the flower beds. Earth clung dark and heavy to his
pale kid boots while his hand had closed upon a flower, crushing it,
scattering the bloodred petals. He looked down, appalled, then backed
away, turning, his hurried steps echoing off the flagstones as he ran
back down the path toward the Southern Palace. Li
Yuan leapt the steps in threes, then ran across the grass toward the
open doors of the Great Library. The ancient, Chu Shi-ch'e, looked
up, startled, from behind his desk as Yuan burst into the room, and
began to get to his feet. "Sit
down, Master Chu," Li Yuan said breathlessly, crossing the
broad, high-ceilinged room. Behind, Chu, his assistant, twenty years
his junior, looked on, wide-eyed, as the young T'ang dragged the
ladder along the rail, then began to climb. "Chieh
Hsia . . ." protested Chu, coming around his desk. "Let
the boy do that. . ." "I
am grateful for your concern, Master Chu, but it is a T'ang's
prerogative to do exactly as he wishes." "That
may be so, Chieh Hsia," the old man answered, tugging at
his long white beard, "but of what use is a servant who is not
allowed to serve?" Li
Yuan turned on the ladder, looking across at the Pi-shu chien. Chu
Shi-ch'e had been appointed Inspector of the Imperial Library by his
grandfather Li Ch'ing, more than sixty years earlier, and in all that
time he had never missed a day's service from ill health. Moreover,
it was said that Chu Shi-ch'e's knowledge of the archives was
encyclopedic. If his movements had grown slower with time, his mind
had remained as nimble as ever. Li Yuan hesitated a moment longer,
then relented, coming down, letting Chu's assistant—the
"boy," a stoop-backed old fellow of a mere
sixty-four years—climb in his place. "What
was it you wanted, Chieh Hsia?" Chu asked, coming
alongside, his bent head a sign as much of age as of respect for his
T'ang. Li
Yuan drew a long breath. "There is a tape I saw once, years ago.
It was of my brother Han, when he was a child. A very young child. In
the orchard with my mother, Lin Yua." Chu
stared at him a moment, his eyes narrowed, then turned away, firing
two rapid phrases of Mandarin at his assistant. Almost at once the
"boy" was clambering down the steps again, a long, narrow
case with a golden cover in one hand. The
case was part of the official archives—the daily record of the
Li Family, dating back more than two hundred years. Here, stacked
floor to ceiling on these walls, were the complete holographic
records of the Family, each case embossed with the great Ywe Lung,
the Moon Dragon, symbol of the Seven. Li
Yuan watched as the assistant handed the case to Chu Shi-ch'e, then
backed off, bowing deeply. Chu opened the case, checking the
contents, then, clicking it shut, turned, offering it to Li Yuan. "I
think this is what you want, Chieh Hsia." Again the old
man's eyes seemed to pierce him; to see through to the innermost
depths of him. And maybe that was so, for of all the Family's
retainers, no one knew half as much about his masters as Chu
Shi-ch'e. The old man gave a wintry smile. "If you will forgive
us, Chieh Hsia, we will leave you to view the tape." "Thank
you, Master Chu," Li Yuan said gratefully. "I will summon
you when I am done." He
watched them go, then turned, facing the black, lacquered platform at
the center of the room—a big circular stand six ch'i in
width, its surface carved in the form of a huge Ywe Lung, the
whole thing resting on seven golden dragon heads. Here he had come,
long years ago it seemed, to sit at his father's feet. And, as his
father talked, telling him of his long and dignified heritage, the
ghostly images of his ancestors would walk the earth once more, their
words as strong and vibrant as the hour they had uttered them. It had
always seemed a kind of
magic—much more so than the computer-generated trickery of the
ancestral figures in the Hall of Eternal Peace and Tranquillity, for
this was real. Or had been. Yet it was some while since he had come
here. Some while since he had let himself be drawn back into the
past. It was
a weakness, like the business with Fei Yen, yet for once he would
indulge it. And then, maybe, the restlessness would go from him, the
dead mouth of the past stop speaking in his head. He
looked down at the case in his hands, studying the date embossed into
the hard plastic beneath the Ywe Lung, then flipped the catch
open, taking out the hard green disc of plastic that held that day's
images. For a moment he simply stared at it, reminded of that moment
in the tomb, twelve years before, when he had carried the first of
the ritual objects to his father. That had been the pi, symbol
of Heaven, a large disc of green jade with a small hole bored at its
center. This here was like a smaller pi, lighter, warmer to
the touch, yet somehow related, even down to the tiny hole at the
center. Li
Yuan looked about him at the layers of gold-bound cases that lined
the walls, a tiny shiver passing through him at the thought of all
that time, all those memories, stored there, then crossed to the
garden doors. He pulled them closed, then tugged at the thick silk
cord that hung from the ceiling, drawing down the great blinds that
shut out the daylight. He
went across, leaning across the platform to place the disc onto the
spindle at the hub of the great circle of dragons, then stepped back.
At once the lights in the room faded, a faint glow filling the air
above the platform. "I
am Li Yuan," he said clearly, giving the machine a voice
recognition code, "Grand Counselor and T'ang of Ch'eng Ou Chou." "Welcome,
Chieh Hsia," the machine answered in a soft, melodious
voice. "What would you like to see?" "The
orchard," he said, a faint tremor creeping into his voice. "Late
morning. Lin Yua with my brother, the prince, Han Ch'in." "Chieh
Hsia. . ." The
air shimmered and took shape. Li Yuan caught his breath. The image
was sharp-edged, almost real. He could see the dappled shadow of the
leaves on the dark earth, the dust motes dancing in the
sunlight, yet if he reached out, his hand would pass through
nothingness. He walked about it slowly, keeping to the darkness,
looking through the trees at his mother, her skirts spread about her,
her face filled with sunlight and laughter, his brother Han, nine
months old, crawling on the grass beside her. As he watched, she
leaned out and, grabbing Han's tiny feet, pulled him back to her,
laughing. She let Han get a few ch'i from her, then pulled him
back again. Han was giggling, a rich baby gurgle of a laugh that
brought a smile to Li Yuan's face even as his chest tightened with
pain. No, he had not been mistaken. This was what he had remembered
earlier, deep down, beneath the level of conscious thought. This
moment, from a time before his time, and a child—his brother—so
like his own that to call them different people seemed somehow wrong. He
stared into the magic circle of light, mesmerized by this vision of
that distant yesterday, and felt a kind of awe. Could it not be so?
Could not a person be reborn, a new vessel of flesh fashioned for the
next stage of the journey? Wasn't that what the ancient Buddhists had
believed? He closed his eyes, thinking of the ruins in the hills
above the estate, then turned away. Weakness,
weakness ... He
shook his head, bewildered. What was he up to? What in the gods'
names was he doing? Yet even as he turned back, meaning to end it—to
kill the image and get out—he stopped dead, staring into the
light, bewitched by the image of his mother cradling his brother, by
that look of love, of utter adoration in her face. He groaned, the
ache of longing so awful, so overpowering, that for a moment he could
not breathe. Then, tearing himself free of its spell, he breached the
circle of light and lifted the disc from the spindle. As the
room's lights filtered back, he stood there, trembling, horrified by
the ease with which he had been seduced. It was as he had reasoned
that time, in those final moments before Ben Shepherd had come. This
longing for the past was like a heavy chain, binding a man, dragging
him down. Moreover, to succumb to that desire was worse than the
desire itself. Was a weakness not to be tolerated. No, he could not
be T'ang and feel this. One had to go on, not back. He let
the disc fall from his fingers, then turned, going to the door. There
was work to be done, Ministers to be seen. The unformed future
beckoned. And was he, its architect, to falter now? Was he to
see it all come to nothing? He
threw the doors wide and went out, hastening down the corridor,
servants kneeling hurriedly, touching their heads to the floor as he
passed. Back in his study he took his seat behind the great desk
while his servants rushed here and there, summoning his senior
officials. But it was neither Nan Ho nor his secretary, Chang
Shih-sen, who appeared in the doorway moments later; it was his
eldest wife, Mien Shan. He
looked up, surprised. "Mien Shan. . . What is it?" She
came two steps into the room, her head lowered demurely, her whole
manner hesitant. "Forgive me, husband, but might I speak with
you a moment?" He
frowned. "Is something wrong, Mien Shan?" "I.
. ." She glanced up at him, then, lowering her head again, gave
a small nod. There was a faint color at her cheeks now. She swallowed
and began again. "It is not for myself, you understand, Chieh
Hsia. . ." "No,"
he said gently. "But tell me, good wife, what is it?" "It
is Lai Shi, husband. This hot weather . . ." He
leaned forward, concerned. Lai Shi, his Second Wife, was four months
pregnant. "Is she all right?" "She
. . ." Mien Shan hesitated, then spoke again. "Surgeon Wu
says that no harm has been done. She was unconscious only a short
while. The child is unaffected." "Unconscious?"
He stood, suddenly angry that no one had told him of this on his
return. Mien
Shan glanced at him again—a timid, frightened look, then
lowered her head once more. "She . . . fainted. In the garden.
We were playing ball. I..." Again she hesitated, but this time
she steeled herself to say what she had to say, looking up and
meeting his eyes as she did so. "I begged Master Nan not to say
anything. You are so busy, husband, and it was such a small thing. I
did not wish you to be troubled. Lai Shi seemed fine. It was but a
moment's overexertion. But now she has taken to her bed ..." Li
Yuan came around the desk, towering over the tiny figure of his First
Wife. "You have called Surgeon Wu?" She
bowed her head, close to tears now; afraid of her husband's anger.
"He says it is a fever, Chieh Hsia, brought on by the
air, the heat. Forgive me, husband. I did not know . . ." "I
see ... and this fever—is it serious?" "Surgeon
Wu thinks it will pass. But I am worried, Chieh Hsia. The days
are so hot, and the air—the air seems so dry, so lacking in any
goodness." Li
Yuan nodded. He had noticed as much himself. For a moment he stared
at her, conscious of the simple humility of her stance; of how
different she was from Fei Yen in that. Then, touched by her concern,
he reached out and held her close, looking down into her softly
rounded face. "Go
now, Mien Shan, and sit with Lai Shi. I shall finish here and come as
quickly as I can. Meanwhile, I shall give instructions to Nan Ho to
have the Court removed to the floating palace. I cannot have my wives
troubled by this heat, neh?" Mien
Shan smiled broadly, pleased by the news. Yet her smile, which ought
to have warmed him, merely made him feel guilty that he could not
return it with a matching warmth. He
sighed, suddenly tired of everything. "Forgive me, Mien Shan,
but there is much to be done." She
drew back, bowing her head. "Husband . . ." He
watched her go, then turned, shaking his head, angry with himself.
Why was he so cold with them? Weren't they, after all, the best of
wives—kind and loving, solicitous of his health? Why then
should he show them such disrespect? Such indifference? Or was
it simpler than that? Wasn't it just as Ben had said that time?
Wasn't he still in love with Fei Yen? For a
moment he stood there, breathing deeply, conscious that, for the
first time since he had cast her from him, he understood. He loved
her, yes, but that meant nothing now. His duty was to his new wives.
He had not faced it before now. Not properly. He had let things
slide, hoping that time would cure him, that things would come good
of their own accord, but they never did. It was that simple—he
had not worked at things. He had lacked the will. But now . . . He
nodded, determined. From now on it would be different. From
this moment on he would work at things. Would make them right
again. Beginning this evening, at Lai Shi's bedside. And in time . .
. in time these feelings would subside and the dark, hard stone of
pain would be washed from him. He
unclenched his hands, letting the past go, letting it fall from his
fingers, then went back behind his desk, making a start on the pile
of documents; selecting only those that needed his urgent attention. FEI
YEN stood on the terrace beside the lake, barefoot and alone. It was
late now and the day's heat had finally dissipated, but the air was
still warm and close, and as she paced the cool, lacquered boards,
she gently fanned herself. His
visit had disturbed her deeply. At first she had thought it simple
anger and irritation at his meddling, but it was more than that. Even
after she had calmed herself—after she had bathed and had her
serving maids rub scented oils into her back and legs to relax
her—she had felt that same strange tension in her gut, and knew
it had to do with him. She had thought it finished, all emotion spent
between them, but it wasn't over yet; she knew that now. She
turned her head. To her right, on the far side of the lake, there
were lights on in the hangar. Faint noises carried across the dark
and silent water, the sounds of her father's servants preparing the
craft for her departure in the morning. She
sighed and, pushing away from the rail, descended the narrow steps
that led down to the shoreline. There, beneath the brilliant circle
of the moon, she paused, staring down into the dark mirror of the
lake. Beneath her feet a huge, white polished stone gleamed in the
moonlight, making her reflection—darker, less discernible than
the stone—seem almost insubstantial. Fading
away, she thought. I'm slowly fading away, like a hungry
ghost. She
shuddered and turned, trying to push the thought away, but it
persisted, nagging at her until she had to face it. In a sense it was
true. The life she should have had—her "real" life,
as wife to Li Yuan and mother of his sons—had ended years ago.
She had killed it, just as surely as if she had taken a knife and
slit her throat. And this life she now
had—this succession of empty days, which she filled with
passing lovers and idle pursuits—was a kind of afterlife,
lacking all purpose and all reason. A pang
of bitterness—pure and unalloyed—struck her at the
thought. It was all her own fault. And yet, what would she have
changed? What would she have done differently, given the choice? She
took a long breath, then turned, confronting her reflection once
again, leaning forward to study the image closely. She
had changed a great deal these past few years. Gone were the excesses
of former years. She wore no jewelry now. Likewise her clothes were
simpler—a plain chi poo was all she ever wore these
days. As for her hair, that was brushed back severely from her face;
plaited tightly and secured in a tiny bun on either side of her head. I look
like a peasant girl, she thought. Yes. And so she had dressed that
morning, three years ago, when she had broken the news to him. For a
moment she was still, remembering. What would you say if I told
you 1 had fallen? she had asked him, thinking he would
understand. But he had looked back at her blankly, puzzled by her
words. And she had had to make it clear to him. A child. A son. And
for a time they had been happy. But that time had been brief. As
brief, it seemed, as an indrawn breath. She
knew now she had been wrong to take Tsu Ma for a lover. But it had
been hard being alone all that time; hard to be a woman and to be
ignored. In any case, she had been beside herself. Tsu Ma . . . just
the thought of him had swayed her from her senses. Those afternoons,
stretched out beneath him, naked on his blanket in the ruins of the
ancient temple . . . that had been sweetness itself. Had been a taste
of Heaven. Yes,
and though it had been wrong, it was as nothing beside what Yuan had
done. To kill his horses . . . She shivered, the memory of it still
fresh. How could he have done that? How could he have killed those
wonderful, sensitive beasts? She had never understood. And
now he had returned; older and more impressive than he had been. A
T'ang in every word and action. Yes, it was true. The child she had
known was gone; dead, almost as if he'd never been. And in his place
was a stranger. Someone she ought to know but didn't. She
turned, looking back toward the terrace. A figure was standing
there; a small, hunched figure that she recognized after a
moment as her father. "Fei
Yen?" he called softly. "Is that you down there?" He
came down the steps and joined her beside the water. "Father,"
she said gently, embracing him. "I thought you had gone to bed." "And
so I shall, but not before you, my girl. What are you doing out here?
It's late. I thought you were leaving early in the morning?" "I
am. But I had to be alone a while. To think." "Ah.
. ." His eyes met hers briefly, then looked away. "I too
was thinking. Han needs a father. This life is no good for him, Fei
Yen. He needs a stronger hand. Needs balance in his life." It was
an old, familiar lecture, and as ever she smiled, knowing that her
father wanted not to judge her, but only what was best for the child.
She studied him a moment in the moonlight. He was old now, his gray
hair receding, his powers as a man waning, yet when he was with Han
it was as if the years fell away. No, she had never seen him laugh so
much as in the past few weeks. She
leaned close, kissing his brow tenderly. No one else in the world
loved her as her father did. No, and no one else forgave her,
whatever she did. "He
has his uncles," she said, as if in answer, but Yin Tsu gave a
dismissive snort. "And
a fine lot of good they are." He laughed; a short, sharp sound,
full of disappointment. "I had such hopes, Fei Yen. Such plans
for them. And what have they become? Drunkards and wastrels. Drains
on the family purse, one and all." It was
harsh, and, to a degree, unfair, but she let it pass. Her brothers
could fight their own battles. Right now there was Han to think of.
Han and herself. "And
these guards?" she asked tentatively. "You think Li Yuan
was right to do that?" Yin
Tsu considered it a moment, then shrugged. "I do not know, nu
er. It is ... unusual. But Li Yuan has his reasons, I am sure,
.and if it helps set his mind at rest, then that must be good, neh?
He carries a heavy burden, that young man, and carries it well."
His eyes shone with admiration. "Would that he were a son of
mine. . ." Then, realizing
what he had said, he looked away again, but not before she saw the
regret, the brief flash of bitterness that had crossed his features. She
looked up. In the distance, above the hills, two geese flew slowly
across the sky, their wings beating silently as they headed south,
toward the sea. The sight made her clench her fists, remembering that
time on the lake at Tongjiang with Li Yuan, Tsu Ma, and her cousin Wu
Tsai, on the tiny island, beneath the colored lanterns. The night she
had played the p'i p'a for them and sang the refrain from "Two
White Geese." And
now she was alone. Like grass on a lonely hill, knowing it must
wither and die. The words made her shudder, then turn back,
facing her father. "Come,"
she said, laying her hand gently on his arm. "Let us go back
inside." After
kissing him good night, she returned to her rooms; to the faint,
enchanting flicker of aromatic candles and the sight of her maids
busying themselves, finishing the packing for the morning. Waving
them aside, she went through to where Han slept and stood there,
looking down into the cot. It was
only at moments like these, when Han lay there, his limbs spread idly
in sleep, his dark hair tousled, that she realized just how much she
loved him. Not mildly, or casually, but with a fierce mother love
that was as protective as the mother wolf's for her cubs. She
reached down, brushing the hair back gently from his eyes, then
pulled the blanket up about his chest. She was selfish, she knew. The
men who came to pay court to her—hollow clowns and dandies
all—took up too much of her time. Kept her from him. But that
would change. She would spend more time with him. She
took her hand back, slowly, reluctantly, then blew a silent kiss. Let
him sleep, she thought. Let him dream his pleasant, childish
dreams. For tomorrow would be a long day. A long, long day. CHAPTER
SEVENTEEN
Distant
Thunder Kim
reached across and took the ink brush from the stand. Inking the
brush, he drew the document toward him and signed his name at the
bottom of the final sheet. "There," he said, sitting back.
It was the final touch; the last of the formalities. Now he was
theirs. He
looked up and saw how Reiss was smiling. SimFic's Chief Executive,
more than any of them gathered there, had wanted this. To rebuild the
Company's reputation and put it back up there among the Hang Seng's
top ten. Yes, and he had paid more than twice what Kim's broker had
estimated to bring Kim back into the fold. And so
here he was again. In Berdichev's old office, nine years later and
ninety-nine years wiser. Or so it felt. "Welcome
back to SimFic, Shih Ward," Reiss said, bowing his head and
offering Kim both his hands. "I am delighted that we've signed
you." Kim
stood, forcing himself to smile and take the man's hands. Two
years, he was thinking, was that it all it was1.
And yet, strangely, it didn't feel like it had before. Back then,
he had had no prospect of being free, whereas now, at least, he had a
contract. Five years—six, if he took up the bonus option—and
he would be free again. And rich. He
turned back, watching as one of Reiss's men "sanded" his
signature, then removed the papers into a special folder. It was a
long document, twenty-four
pages in all, and he had gone through it carefully with his broker
yesterday, but in essence it was simple. He was their slave now. For
the next five years he would do what they said when they said. That
was, as long as it did not endanger his life or seriously threaten
his health. And providing it was legal. Not that they had any
intention of placing him in any danger; not after the fee they had
paid to sign him. He
touched his tongue to his lower teeth thoughtfully. Twenty-five
million yuan had been placed in an account in his name
already. And there was more to come. Much more. Fifteen million a
year, for five years, and a further twenty-five if he stayed on that
extra year. And then there were the performance bonuses, the two
percent cut on any inventions subsequently manufactured from his
original patents, and the sliding scale payments for developing any
of SimFic's existing patents to "manufacturing standard." All in
all, he could come out of this exceedingly well. Rich enough, if
things worked out, to start again; older, wiser, and with the
capital, this time, to expand. Rich enough, perhaps, to marry a
Marshal's daughter. He
looked back at Reiss and smiled; a gentler, more relaxed smile. "I'm
pleased to be with you, Shih Reiss," he said, conscious of the
dozen or so senior executives ranged at the far end of the office,
watching their exchange. "I hope our partnership will be a
fruitful one." His
echo of Reiss's words from earlier that day brought a smile to the
Chief Executive's lips. "I hope so, too, Kim. I really do. But
come, let's go through. It's time." Kim
nodded, then allowed himself to be turned about, a faint sensation of
heaviness in his limbs. In the next room the technician was waiting
beside his machine. Kim, entering the room, studied it with a
detached interest, conscious of the sudden feeling of
hollowness—maybe even a trace of fear—at the pit of his
stomach. The machine was a kind of gantry, attached by a thin coil of
wire to a slim, black-cased comset. On the surface it looked fairly
harmless, yet it would provide them with the means of controlling him
for the next five years. A
slave, he thought. I'm going to be a slave again. A thing that
thinks. A puzzle-solver. Not a person but a commodity. To be
used as the Company desires. He
shivered, then stepped forward, letting the technician help him into
the brace. It
took only seconds. Then he stepped back, the collar pulsing gently
about his neck. He could feel its warmth, its energy, almost as if it
were alive, and, though he had meant not to, he found his left hand
had traveled up, unbeknownst to him, to touch and gently tug at it. "It'll
not harm you in any way," Reiss said, as if to reassure him.
"We'd have preferred not to, but the legal formalities . . ."
His voice trailed off, then, "Look on it as a safeguard. Company
life can be hard and very competitive, as you know." He laughed
awkwardly. "Well. . . it'll help us take good care of you. That
way we'll all be happy, neh?" Kim
nodded, giving Reiss the best smile he could manage; but suddenly the
reality of it was on him. This was his life for the next one thousand
eight hundred and twenty-six days. This . . . Reiss
turned and took a folder from one of his assistants, then turned
back, handing it to Kim. "Here are the details of your first
assignment. We thought we'd give you something familiar to begin
with. Something you can get your teeth into straightaway." Kim
took the folder and opened it. Inside were four flimsy sheets of
paper. On the first were four handwritten equations. On the second
was a tiny, neatly drawn diagram, the notations in a different hand
from the first. The third sheet was filled with notes, some by the
author of the equations, but most of them by whoever had drawn the
diagram. "Molecular
switches," Kim said quietly, feeling a pulse of excitement pass
through him. "It's what I've been working on." "I
know," Reiss said, watching him carefully. "We've been
working on the same lines for some time now. And this is the closest
weVe got. They're unstable . . ." "Yes,"
Kim flicked back, studying the equations a moment, then looked at the
final sheet. It was headed up with SimFic's double helix logo.
Beneath it, in a neat printer face, were the details of his
assignment. "Sohm
Abyss," he said, looking up at Reiss, wide-eyed. "You're
sending me to Sohm Abyss!" THE
PHILADELPHIA NIGHTCLUB was almost empty. It was just after seven in
the morning and the four young men sat about one of the central
tables, the top buttons of their pan loosened, their jackets
on the backs of their chairs. It had been a long night but a
successful one and they had raised more than a million -yuan.
Enough, for now, to keep the movement from bankruptcy. Kennedy
had left more than two hours back, more tired than usual, the new
security men he'd hired shadowing him closely. That was but one of
the changes they had noticed. Small things that made them think back
to what Kennedy had said to them that first time and reassess.
Overnight, it seemed, the mood of things had changed. It was
four days to the first round of voting and things looked good.
Michael Lever was up even on the more dubious EduVoc polls, and talk
was that his father's man, Edward Gratton, would be lucky to pick up
more than a third of the vote. All night people had been coming up to
Michael and slapping his back, congratulating him, as if the count
were a formality. It had made him uneasy. It felt like tempting the
gods. "You
worry too much, Michael," Kustow was saying. "What can
Gratton do in four days? TheyVe flung every last bit of dirt at you
they could find and it still wasn't enough. It's our time, and
nothing can prevent it. The tide has turned against the old men.
People want change. And by the gods, they're going to get it!" Parker
and Fisher laughed, but Michael was silent, brooding. His own seat
looked safe, it was true, but things weren't going quite so well
across the board. Indeed, if things didn't improve, they'd be lucky
to take four of the thirty seats they were contesting. But he was
also thinking of something Kennedy had said—something he had
whispered to him earlier that evening—about the possibility of
a deal. He had warned Michael to be careful. To be very careful. "A
lot hangs on this one, though," said Fisher. He turned in his
seat to summon a waiter for more ch'a, then turned back. "You
know, there's a whole clutch of seats that are vulnerable in the
second round. Forty or more, I reckon. And each and every one ripe
for the picking." "That's
provided we get a good vote first time out," Kustow added more
cautiously. "Sure
. . ." Fisher leaned forward, looking from one to another. "I
think we will. I think we'll do better than the poll showings. Much
better. That's why I've asked Kennedy if I could run for one of those
seats." Michael
looked up. "That's good, Carl. What did he say?" Fisher
laughed. "He said yes." All
three congratulated him at once. "Damn the ch'a," Kustow
said, getting up unsteadily from his chair. "This calls for
another bottle of that special wine!" "Where
are you going to run?" Michael asked, pulling Kustow down from
his feet. "Miami
Hsien. Against Carver." Miami
was Fisher's home stack. The place where his father's Company was
registered. Like Michael, he was going to be running directly against
his old man's candidate. Michael
looked down. "Is that wise?" Parker
and Kustow were watching Fisher closely now. Both knew what Lever
meant. The day after Kennedy had been nominated to run in Boston,
Fisher's father had disinherited him: had frozen the funds to all
three of his son's companies. Fisher had been forced to lay off his
work force. Some had found other jobs, but more than a hundred
families had "gone down." The local media had had a field
day, and Representative Carver had returned from a business trip in
City Europe to fly back and be interviewed in the home of one of
those families that had suffered through, as he termed it, "the
irresponsible management of a young and untried man." Going
down—with all its social stigma—was the one thing all
voters feared in common, and in the minds of the voters of Miami,
what Carl Fisher had done was unforgivable. "I
want the chance to put my case," Fisher said. "I want the
opportunity effacing Carver and telling him to his face that he's a
liar and a cheat. That for eighteen years he's been in the pocket of
my father." Kustow
whistled. "You'll say that to his face?" "He'll
sue," said Parker. Fisher
smiled. "Kennedy's hoping he will. He wants to fight the case
himself. I've given him all the stuff I had. Accounts books, file
numbers, memory copies of conversations." For
the first time since the crowds had left the club, Michael sat
forward and smiled. "YouVe got all that stuff?" Fisher
nodded. "I got it all together first thing. After I'd first met
Kennedy. Thought I might need some insurance." Slowly,
but with gathering force, Michael began to laugh. And in a few
moments they were all laughing. The waiter, when he brought the ch'a,
looked around at them, then shrugged and walked away, keeping his
thoughts to himself. EMILY
TURNED, looking about her, trying to estimate the scale of the
problem at a single glance, but it was hard to take it all in. The
eye was drawn constantly to the smaller details: to the distressed
face of a wheezing ancient, or the empty, hopeless eyes of a silent,
uncomplaining child; to the weeping sores of a young blind beggar or
the mute suffering in the face of a mother who yet cradled her cold,
long-dead baby. In the face of all this individual misery the greater
picture just slipped away. This much suffering was, quite literally,
unimaginable. She had thought Europe bad, but this . . . She
was down at Level Eleven, immediately above the Net, at the very foot
of Washington Hsien, here to publicize the newly launched "Campaign
for Social Justice." It was their plan to fund and build fifty
"Care Centers" across the City to try to deal with the
problem of low-level deprivation, but from the moment she had stepped
out into Main here, she had known how pathetic, how woefully
inadequate their scheme was. It would take a hundred times what they
proposed even to scratch the surface of this problem. Why, there were
more than fifty thousand people crammed into this deck alone—fifty
thousand in a deck designed to hold eighteen thousand maximum! When
she had been voted Chairwoman by the committee of Young Wives, she
had thought that this might^just might—be a way of getting
something done. For the past six months she had thrown herself into
the task of organizing meetings and raising funds. But
now, seeing it for herself, she understood. She had been
fooling herself. There was only one way to change all this. From the
top. By destroying those who allowed this to go on. She
walked among the crowds, feeling a thousand hands brush against her,
or tug briefly at her silks, a thousand eyes raised to her in silent
supplication. Feed me! Relieve me! Free me from this Hell! Above
her the tiny media cameras hovered close, capturing the scene,
focusing in on the expression in her face. And as she returned to the
great platform, with its banners and waiting guests, a reporter
pressed close, clamoring for a statement. "Just
show it," she said. "And let everyone in the Mids know that
this is how the people down here have to live. Every day. And"—she
steeled herself to say the lie—"and that they can help.
That if they give only a single yuan to the Campaign, it'll
help relieve some of this suffering." She
turned away quickly, lest her anger, her bitterness, made her say
more. No, It would help no one for her to speak out in public. Least
of all these people. What it needed now was action. Action of the
kind she had held back from until now. It was
time for her to organize again. To adopt the false ID DeVore had
prepared for her all those years back and become someone new. Rachel
DeValerian. Terrorist. Anarchist. Leveler. Yes,
it was time for the Ping Tiao to be reborn. FROM
WHERE KIM STOOD, high up on the viewing gallery, two U above
the great ocean's surface, the events of the great world seemed far
off, like the sound of distant thunder. The night was calm, immense,
the darkness stretching off in all directions. Without end.
Literally, without end. He could move forever through that darkness
and never reach its limit. Darkness,
he thought. In the end there's nothing but darkness. And yet,
all his young life, he had sought the light. Had striven upward
toward it, like a diver coming up from great depths. Far
off, the waves broke in a staggered line of white along the
encircling breakwater. That line seemed frail and inconsequential
from where he stood, yet he had flown over it earlier and seen the
great ocean's swell; had seen waves fifty ch'i in height smash
with ferocious power against the angled breakwater, and had felt more
awe in him at that than at the sight of the great mid-ocean City they
had built here over Sohm Abyss. He
turned. Above him, beyond the great spire of the central block, the
night sky seemed dusted with stars—a billion stars that burned
incandescently, like nothing he could ever have imagined. That too—so
different somehow from the simulations—awed him. The reality of
it. Until now it had all been in his head, like some complex
three-dimensional chart. But now, seeing it with his own eyes, he
understood what had been missing. Its vastness; its awe-inspiring
vastness. It was something he had known but never grasped. Not until
now. He
turned back, conscious of the faint yet discernible motion of the
viewing platform. Down below, among the levels, one felt nothing,
almost as if one were on dry land, but here the tidal swell of the
great ocean could be sensed, despite the breakwaters, the huge chains
of ice that kept the City anchored to the ocean's floor, ten ti
down. He
looked down thoughtfully. Something in him responded to that: to the
thought of those vast, unlit depths beneath the fragile man-made raft
of the Ocean City; to all that weight and pressure. Something dark
and antithetical to his thinking self, that looked back at him
sometimes in the mirror, sharp-toothed and snarling. He
placed his hands flat against the thin layer of ice that separated
him from the vastness outside and shivered. Darkness and Light. How
often it came back to that—the most simple of all oppositions.
Darkness and Light. As in the great Tao. And yet, ultimately, he did
not believe in the Tao. Did not believe that dark and light were one
and the same thing. No. For it seemed to him that the dark and light
were locked in an ageless, unending struggle for supremacy: a
struggle that could end only when one canceled out the other, in a
blinding flash of searing light or in the abnegation of total
nothingness. And
then? He
stepped back, amused. So what had existed before the universe?
And what would be there after it was gone? These seemed logical
enough things to ask, and yet, at the same time, they were nonsense
questions. A grasping after straws. What pertinence did they
have on the here-and-now of daily life? What use were they as tools? No use
at all. And yet he felt the need to ask them. "Shih
Ward?" Kim
turned. A Han was standing in the shadows beside the open door to the
service elevator, his shaven head slightly bowed. His green SimFic
one-piece was emblazoned with the number four, indicating his status
within the SimFic hierarchy at Sohm Abyss. "Is
it time?" Kim asked, finding himself suddenly reluctant to leave
the safety of the darkness. The
Steward looked up, meeting his eyes. "They are waiting below,
Shih Ward. You must come now." Kim
bowed, then went across. Yet at the safety gate he stopped, looking
down into the brightly lit heart of the Ocean City. Sohm Abyss was
typical of the mid-Atlantic Cities. The thick outer wall formed a
giant hexagon, linked by flexible walkways to a central hexagonal
tower, topped by a slender communications spire. From above it had
seemed like a bright and gaudy brooch cast thoughtlessly upon the
darkness of the waters, but from where he stood it was more like a
vast cat's cradle, the silvered walkways like the threads of a giant
spider's web . . . "Shih
Ward!" The
slight sharpness in the Steward's voice reminded him of what he had
become that morning. A thing. An entry on the SimFic Corporation's
balance sheet. Turning back, he bowed apologetically, then stepped
into the narrow cage. Obedient. Their servant. Yet
even as the gate irised shut, he realized suddenly that what they had
purchased was but a part of him, and that that same unknown,
uncharted darkness that lay beneath this great man-made artifact lay
beneath all things, large and small alike. Yes,
and as for consciousness itself, what was that but a brightly lit
raft, afloat upon the dark waters of the subconscious? A tiny,
fragile edifice of man-made reason. As the
elevator began to descend, Kim turned and, looking up, studied the
smooth curve of the Steward's shaven head, the folds of the green
cloth covering his back, and wondered briefly whether the
man was ever troubled by such thoughts, or whether status and
material standing were his only measure of things. If so,
what was it like to be like that? To be content with how things
seemed and not to question how things really were? What deep pool of
inner stillness did one have to tap to become so inured to the
greater mysteries? How did one let go of thinking and just be1.
Or was it that? Was it not so much "letting go" as
never properly grasping hold? For a
moment longer he picked at the problem, like a monkey poking inside
an ant's nest with a twig, then he relented. Curse
or blessing, it was what he was. What SimFic had paid him for. To
question it was pointless. No, what he had to do over the next five
years was to find a way to use it without using himself up. To keep
from becoming the thing they thought he was—a mere
puzzle-solver and generator of ideas. In doing so, he would have to
give them what they wanted, but at the same time he would also have
to keep back something for himself. One thing, perhaps. One pure and
singular vision. The
elevator slowed, then stopped. As the door irised open, admitting the
babble of conversation from the room beyond, Kim recalled the silent,
star-spattered darkness up above and smiled, knowing what it was. KUSTOW
walked back with Michael to the apartment he had hired on the south
side of the stack, overlooking the fashionable Square. On the way
they talked of many things—of Kennedy's new bodyguards and the
significance of the new set of changes to the Edict—but mainly
about whether Kustow too should run. "Is
that what you want, Bryn?" "I
guess so," Kustow answered. "Anyway, it doesn't look like
there's much else open to me now. We're all out of favor as far as
the Market is concerned, and we can't live off moonshine." Michael
turned, facing him. "That's not what I asked, Bryn. Is it what
you really want?" Kustow
looked down, considering. "If I hadn't wanted to get involved, I
guess I wouldn't have taken the first step, would I?" He
looked up at Michael ruefully. "I think we both knew
where this would lead. And Joseph Kennedy didn't pull any punches or
tell any lies, did he?" "I
guess not." "So
that leaves me two options, to be precise. Both of them political. I
can remain behind the scenes, as a shaper, or I can put myself up
front." "And
you want to be up front?" Kustow
took a deep breath. "I'm not sure. IVe liked what weVe been
doing. I mean, IVe enjoyed working with you and Carl and Jack. We
make a good team. But going it alone, with a new team . . ." He
shrugged. "I just don't know." Michael
was silent a moment. "People will expect you to run. As the
party grows you'll lose status unless you're a Representative. You'll
lose whatever you currently have. No, if you don't run you might find
yourself muscled out, Bryn. At least, that's how I see it." Kustow
dropped his head, then nodded. He was frowning, looking down at his
feet. When he looked up again there was a painful indecision in his
face. "You know what it is, Michael? I'm afraid." Michael
laughed shortly, then frowned. Kustow was the biggest of them. The
strongest. The most extroverted. It wasn't possible that he could be
afraid. "Afraid of what?" "Of
the whole business, I guess. Of power and politics. I don't want to
become another Carver, or Gratton, or Hartmann." Michael
shook his head. "You won't! Goddamnit, Bryn, isn't that what
we're about? To get rid of the old guard and bring in new ways—
better ways?" Kustow
shivered. "Maybe. I don't know. I just looked at things from the
outside tonight, that's all. Looked at all that backslapping and
fund-raising and the bodyguards and the whispering between friends,
and I wondered if we were really going to be any different from the
rest." There
was a moment's silence between them, then Michael took his old
friend's arm. "Come on. My apartment's only up the corridor.
Let's get a few hours' sleep, then talk again." Kustow
smiled gently and nodded. "Okay. Lead the way." Outside
his door, Michael turned and looked at Kustow again. Maybe
Bryn was right. Maybe it would turn out just as he feared. But if
they didn't try, if they just left it, that, surely, would be just as
bad? Michael
thumbed the lock and touched out the combination with his other hand.
As the door began to open, Kustow smiled drunkenly at him and
stumbled past. The
explosion was deafening. Michael was thrown back across the corridor
and fell awkwardly, blacking out. When he came to, what seemed only a
moment later, there were Security guards everywhere and two medics
were leaning over him, doing something to his legs. His legs were
numb. "Where's
Bryn?" he asked, trying to sit up. But he couldn't sit up and
the words came out as a kind of dry cough. He realized then that his
chest hurt. One of the medics leaned close to his face and told him
to relax, it would be okay. What would be okay? he wanted to ask, but
his hold on consciousness was weak. He kept slipping back into
blackness. Each time he woke things seemed to have jumped. Bit by bit
he began to piece things together. He was strapped to a trolley, his
head propped up slightly by cushions. To his right a big blunt-faced
man was talking into a handset and listening to the responses. He was
muttering something about a bomb. Someone had been killed. It was
only later that it hit him. Someone had been killed. Bryn. But
by that time he was lying in a hospital bed, under armed guard, and
there was nothing he could do. Again and again he saw Bryn smile and
stumble past him, unsteady from the wine he'd drunk. He wanted to put
out his arm and stop him. To call him back. To warn him somehow. But
there was nothing he could do. Bryn Kustow was dead. KIM
STOOD at the head of the steps, looking out across the sunken floor
of the reception hall, surprised by the sight that met his eyes. The
air was cool, the lighting a subdued shade of blue that seemed to
fill the huge, high-ceilinged room with moving liquid shadows. He
smiled, amused by the effect. It was like being at the bottom of a
pool. A huge pool filled with the soft, slightly echoing murmur of
voices. There were three, maybe four hundred people down there,
gathered in groups between the pillars. The Steward, two steps down
from Kim, turned and looked back at Kim impatiently, then
continued down the steps. A moment later, Kim followed. A
group of about thirty people—men for the main part—were
gathered beside what seemed like a large glass table set into the
floor. The Steward made his way across to them, then stepped back,
beckoning Kim to come forward. At the
center of the group stood a big, bearlike man in his early sixties
with an unfashionable goatee beard, neatly trimmed ash-white hair,
and an elegant cut in silks. He was William Campbell, SimFic's
Regional Controller for the North Atlantic Cities and, as he greeted
Kim, he leaned toward the young man. "Forgive
the informality, Kim, but it's how I like to do things. You see, out
of all eleven of SimFic's Regional Controllers, I have the biggest
administrative area and the smallest staff. Like the plankton,
there's a lot of me, but I have to spread myself very thin!" Kim
smiled, then took Campbell's offered hands, shaking them firmly. He
stepped back, looking about him, conscious of how all eyes were on
him. "I'm
delighted to meet you, Controller. And your friends, the ch'un tzu
here ... are they all SimFic employees?" Campbell
looked about him, his casual ease contrasting strongly with the
tenseness of the men surrounding him. "Not at all. We have these
evenings 'once a week. Anyone who's anyone in Sohm Abyss comes along.
But quite a number here are SimFic. I'll take you around in a moment.
Put names to faces." "Thanks,"
Kim smiled, warmed by Campbell's manner. Yet at the same time he was
conscious of a strange tension in the air about him, as if things
weren't quite as they seemed. He set the thought aside, determined to
be sociable. "I was up on the viewing gallery just now. It's a
beautiful place. I don't know why they don't build more of these
Ocean Cities." Campbell
laughed. "Economics, Kim. Pure economics. The cost of the City
itself is fairly negligible, but to site one of these little
beauties—to carry out all of the necessary surveys and secure
the seven great tether-cables—that costs a phenomenal amount.
We just couldn't justify it these days." Kim
nodded thoughtfully. "And yet it^ias done." "Oh,
sure. But as far as SimFic is concerned we've a different strategy
these days. I mean, why build these things new when you can acquire
them? Take Sohm Abyss, for instance. Right now we own twenty-five
percent of the facility. It's the most we can own under present
legislation. But things are changing." Campbell looked about
him. "It would be nice to fly the SimFic flag over one of these
Cities, don't you think?" There
was a nodding of heads, a strong murmur of agreement. "But
enough of that." Campbell reached out, laying one large,
bearlike hand familiarly on Kim's shoulder. "Let me take you
around. Introduce you to the people you'll be working with." Kim
let himself be turned and led away. "Who were they?" he
asked, glancing back at the group they had left. "Company
men," Campbell said quietly, stroking his goatee thoughtfully.
"Administrators for the most part. By the way, would you like a
drink?" Kim
hesitated. "I. . ." Campbell
stopped one of the waiters and took a wine cup from his tray. "Oh,
that's right. You don't drink. That's good. Some of them out here
drink far too much. And other things besides. They think I don't know
what goes on, Kim, but IVe my own sources. Take the guy in the gray,
for instance." Kim
turned, looking back, noting a tall, thin-faced man in gray silks. "YouVe
got him. Good. That's Bonnot. Alex Bonnot. He's the Scientific
Supervisor here. Your direct boss. A good man according to the
records. Reliable. Honest. But I've my doubts. So watch him, eh, Kim?
And let me know if he oversteps the bounds." Kim's
eyes flicked up to Campbell's face and then away, not quite
understanding what was meant. But this whole thing felt odd. Why, for
instance, hadn't Campbell introduced him to them? "I don't
follow," he said after a moment. "I thought you were
in charge of things here." Campbell
smiled. "Overall, yes. But Sohm Abyss is Bonnet's. At least, the
science side of things. The fish-farming, cold-storage, and
star-gazing part, as we like to call it. The administrative side is
run by the man standing next to
l»iih, Schram. Dieter Schram. He fancies himself as a bit of a
scholar, but he's hardly in your league, Kim. Dull, too,
unfortunately. Which is probably why he got this posting. As for
myself, I spend most of my time traveling between the Cities. I've
eight in my region, though I'm actually based at Cape Verde." "So
I take my orders from Bonnot?" "And
Schram. But they take their orders from me." Campbell turned
slowly, relaxedly, drawing Kim on through the crowd, ignoring the
staring faces, moving toward a group who were standing beside one of
the pillars. "Oh, I know what goes on in places like this. I
also know what's happened to you in the past, Kim. IVe read your file
thoroughly. But you can be sure that nothing like that will happen
here. In fact, you have my word on it." He slowed, looking down
at Kim. "Oh, I'll work you hard enough, Kim Ward, but I'll be
fair with it. And if we get results, I'll be generous to you. Outside
the terms of your contract, understand me?" Again
Kim wasn't quite sure that he did, but he nodded and, responding to
Campbell's broad, generous smile, grinned back at him, reassured. "As
I see it," Campbell continued, "if I can keep you happy,
you'll produce the goods. If you produce the goods, SimFic makes
profits. And if SimFic makes profits we all grow fat. So it's in my
best interest to keep you happy, neh?" "I
guess so." They
had stopped just before the group. The five men had turned to greet
Campbell as he approached and now they stood there, their heads
slightly bowed, waiting for the Controller to introduce them. "This
here is Hilbert, Eduard Hilbert. He's Head of Cryobiology and an
expert in biostasis procedures. . . cell repair and the like. Our
experiments are at an early stage, but we're hopeful, neh, Eduard?" Hilbert
bobbed his head. He was a thin, dark-haired man in his mid-thirties
with the slightly haunted look of a man who preferred the laboratory
to social gatherings. Kim extended his hand. "It's good to meet
you." "And
you." Hilbert looked away, embarrassed, yet his brief smile had
been friendly enough. Moreover, in turning he had revealed the
pulsing collar about his neck. He too was a commodity slave. "And
this," Campbell continued, introducing a young Han in his early
twenties, "is Feng Wo-shen. His background is in protein design,
but he'll be working with you, Kim, as one of your assistants." Feng
bowed his head low in what was a very formal way. Straightening up,
he met Kim's eyes, a natural enthusiasm burning in his own. "I
am delighted to be working with you, Shih Ward. We are all
very excited about the work ahead." Kim
returned his bow, then looked up at Campbell. "Assistants?" The
big man smiled. "Of course. We don't expect you to do all the
experimental work yourself. You'll need assistants for that. To start
with IVe allocated you four. If you need any more . . ." Kim
laughed. "No, no ... four's quite enough. It's just that. . .
Well, I didn't expect to be treated quite so well." Campbell
looked genuinely surprised. "Why the hell not? Look, Kim, we've
made a huge investment in you. It would be downright stupid not to
get the best out of you. You're a theorist, right? That's what we
bought you for, neh? Well then, it makes sense surely to free you to
do what you're best at. To utilize your talents to their maximum
capacity." Kim
thought briefly of geese and golden eggs, but merely smiled and
nodded. "I take your point, Controller. Yet a great deal of my
work is, of necessity, experimental. Feng Wo-shen and the others . .
. they'll be of great help, but you must understand . . ." Campbell
raised a hand. "Whatever you want. And whichever way you want to
do it. Just get me results, eh? Results." He turned back,
putting out an arm to indicate the next in line. "Now, this here
. . ." For
the next half hour Kim moved about the reception hall, meeting the
people he was to work with, coming back, finally, to the group about
the glass-topped table—a table which he saw, suddenly, was no
table at all, but a huge display tank, its occupant, if occupant it
had, hidden beneath a screen of greenery and rock. While Campbell
went through the business of introducing him formally to Bonnot and
Schram, Kim thought of the task ahead. At last he was to be given
everything he'd been denied before: good equipment, well-trained
staff, and whatever was needed to develop and manufacture a
marketable product. The only real difference was in how the profit
from the venture was distributed. He
smiled inwardly. What Campbell had said earlier was true. If he did
well, they would all be happy. And who knew, he might even enjoy the
work. Yet it wasn't quite as simple as that. He could see it in the
way Bonnot and Schram looked at him, with a jealous hostility and a
deep-rooted contempt for his stunted Clayborn body. Well, he could
live with that. Besides, there was always Campbell's promise of
protection. As
soon as was polite, he moved to one side of the group and leaned over
the tank, looking down into its depths, his fingertips resting gently
against the glass. The surface of the tank was cold, the ice thick,
reinforced, as if the water within were being kept at a different
pressure from the room. For a
time there was nothing, then, as if it had been waiting for him, it
appeared, slowly at first, one appendage coiling like a snake about
the rock, blindly searching with its tiny suckers. And then, with a
dreamlike slowness that was mesmerizing, it hauled itself up through
the concealing layers of weed, until its vast bulk seemed to fill the
tank. . . He
stared at it, fascinated. It was like a spider. A giant aquatic
spider, its long arms coiling sinuously along the restraining walls
of the tank. As he watched, the mottled dome of its head turned
through the shadows until it faced him, its huge eyes blinking
slowly, then meeting his own in a cold, incurious stare that seemed
to sum him and dismiss him. Kim
moved back, shivering. Once more mere knowing had failed him, for to
be in the presence of such a creature—one of the ancient
monsters of the deep—was to experience a sense of primal fear.
Yes, simply to meet those eyes was to stare into something vast and
dark and eternally alien, eternally withheld. It was
a deep ocean creature. How, then, had they trapped it? How brought it
here? How kept it? As it turned, slipping back beneath the masking
layers of weed and rock, he tried to estimate its length. Fifty,
maybe sixty ch'i it was. Huge, even by the measure of its
kind. Kim
turned, sensing another presence just behind him. It was Campbell. He
stood there, one hand tugging at his goatee thoughtfully. The
Controller looked past Kim at the disappearing monster, then
met his eyes again. "Well? What do you think of our pet?
Impressive, neh? One of the deep-level units found him, more than a
year back, some six li down in the center of the Abyss. They
stunned him, then put him in a temporary capsule with a few tidbits
while they decided what to do with him. In the end we had to build a
special pressure chamber. Even then it took us almost two weeks to
bring him up—a ch'i at a time, it seemed. But here he is. Our
pride and joy." Campbell turned, looking back at Kim. "You're
very fortunate, Kim. He doesn't deign to visit us that often. Most of
his tank's down there, beneath the City. A huge thing it is. You can
visit it sometime, if you want." Kim
gave a vague nod, then looked away. Six li. . . Which meant that the
pressure in the tank had to be phenomenal. "Has
he a name?" Campbell
nodded. "We call him Old Darkness. Among other things. But look,
let's talk about it later, eh? There's someone else I'd like you to
meet. She'd have been here earlier, but her flight was delayed. Come,
she's waiting over there." Kim
stared at the tank a moment longer, then followed Campbell across,
giving the briefest nod of acknowledgment to Schram and Bonnot as he
passed. "Here,"
Campbell said, ushering him into a circle of people. "Bar-ratt
and Symons you met earlier, but I'd like to introduce you to our new
Commercial Advisor. I understand you know each other already . . ." But
Kim was no longer listening. At the first sight of the short,
dark-haired woman, he had moved past Campbell and embraced her,
holding her against him tightly, fiercely, his eyes brimming with
tears. "Rebecca . . ." he said, amazed, moving his face
back to stare at her, as if at a long-lost sister. "The gods
forgive me, I thought you were dead. . ." THINGS
happened FAST. Within an hour of the attack, Gratton was on all
channels, coast to coast, expressing his shock and sadness. His image
was intercut with pictures looking down on the operating table as the
surgeons tried to put Michael Lever back together again. Only the
intercession of Kennedy got the floats out of there—under
threat of expensive legal actions. Then, before three hours
had passed, Kennedy himself spoke to reporters—calling a news
conference in the anteroom at the hospital, a white-faced Carl Fisher
standing at his shoulder as he talked. Various
terrorist organizations had been quick to disclaim the incident. The
Black Hand had even gone so far as to condemn the action. A MedFac
poll, taken half an hour after Kennedy's abrasive statement,
expressed the general attitude: Gratton was sunk ... if Lever lived. Kennedy
had accused no one. He had stood there, red-eyed, genuinely moved by
what had happened, and denounced violence as a political means.
Eloquently, he had outlined what had happened to these young men who
had only stood up for what they believed in. The disinheriting, the
double-dealing, the embargoes by the old men. And now this. He
phrased it cleverly, so that no one could accuse him of making too
direct a link between the attack and the old men who were out to stop
them, but the mere fact of juxtaposition gave his words a power that
forced his listeners to consider whether this act had come from the
same hands that had shaped the rest of it. Charles
Lever's writ against Kennedy was served an hour later. The floating
cameras, following him all the while now, caught the moment and
broadcast it, along with Kennedy's sad, regretful smile and his few
words. "Tell Mr. Lever I'm sorry he's more concerned for his own
political hide than for his son's life." Those
channels that hadn't had a camera there bought tapes and showed them
repeatedly throughout the remainder of the night and for the whole of
the next day. But by then they had fresher material to work on. Security,
conscious of how sensitive the matter was, had put two Special
Services units onto the case and results were already coming in.
Representative Hartmann had been taken in to Security Headquarters in
Washington for questioning, and three men from his political
entourage—all ex-Security—had been making statements all
afternoon. Hartmann had smiled at the cameras gathered overhead, but
the smile had been sickly—the smile of a man who knows the trap
has been sprung. News soon leaked out that they had taken him from an
off-planet shuttle in Denver. After
Kennedy's response to the writ, Charles Lever had locked his doors
against the media. At the Cutler Institute, they refused to comment
on the situation. Meanwhile, a southern network had followed up the
Bryn Kustow connection and was showing an hour documentary on the
dead man's life, together with an interview with his grieving mother.
His father had shut himself away and was refusing to comment. At
eight thirty, three hours after he had come out of the operating
theater, Michael Lever opened his eyes. Emily was seated at the
bedside, leaning over him. On the far side of the room, Kennedy,
Fisher, and Parker sat on hospital chairs, waiting. Overhead, a
single camera captured the moment for later transmission. At
first there was nothing in Michael's face, only a vague
disorientation. Then, as memory came back, he began to sob. Emily
leaned closer, whispering words of comfort and holding his hand
tightly. Behind her, the three men were standing now, tears streaming
down their faces. The camera's second lens caught this also. After
a moment Kennedy came across and stood beside Emily, looking down
into Michael's heavily bandaged face. He wiped his eyes and cheeks
with a surgical rag, then moved back slightly, giving the camera a
better view. Michael
shuddered. "Who did it, Joe? Do they know who did it?" Kennedy
shook his head. "Not yet." He said nothing about Hart-mann.
Nothing about his father's writ. Michael
closed his eyes and swallowed. When he opened them again they were
moist with tears. "I feel numb, Joe. From the waist down." Kennedy
glanced at Emily, then looked away. From above it seemed as if
Kennedy were finding it hard to say what he had to. He turned his
head to the side, his shoulders giving a tiny shudder; then he faced
Michael again, bracing himself. "They say that there's nothing
they can do about that, Michael. Fragments of the device passed
through your chest and lodged in the base of your spine. You're
paralyzed, Michael. From the waist down." Michael's
face was blank a moment, then he nodded. It was clear he was still in
shock. "They
say you were lucky," Kennedy went on. "You'd be dead if
you'd been alone." Again
Michael nodded, but this time a flicker of pain crossed his face. "I
loved him . . ." he said softly, his voice ending in a tiny
sound that tore at the listener like a barb. Then he turned his face
aside. A single tear traced its way down his cheek, the camera lens
switching to close-focus to follow its progress. Bryn
Kustow had taken the full brunt of the explosion. It had, quite
literally, torn him apart. But his body had shielded Michael from the
blast. Even so, the explosion had broken both of Michael's legs,
cracked his skull, and caused extensive internal injuries. Fragments
of hot metal as well as bone from Kustow's right arm had lodged in
Michael's flesh, severing blood vessels, musculature, and nerves. His
most serious injury, however, was his damaged spine. It was not
impossible that he would walk again—bioprosthetics could cure
almost anything but death itself these days—but it would be
some while before he would be on his feet. And the election was only
three days away. One
enterprising channel, having shown a diagram of the relative
positions of Kustow and Lever, gave their viewers a full hologrammic
reconstruction of the explosion. Billions watched as computer
simulations looking remarkably like the two short-haired and handsome
young men were blown apart by the explosion. Then, moments later, it
showed it once again, varying the viewpoint and slowing the action. Another
channel, deploring the taste and, maybe, regretful that they had not
had the idea first, set up a fund to pay for Michael Lever's
bioprosthetic treatment, taking the opportunity to comment on the
fact that, by rights, a certain Charles Lever should be footing the
bill. They, too, found themselves served with a writ within the hour. Hartmann
was charged with conspiracy to murder on the morning of the election,
but by then the damage had been done. Gratton had pulled out the
night before. When the polls closed, Michael Lever had been elected
almost unopposed, collecting ninety-seven percent of the votes cast.
More significantly, the New American Party, buoyed up by the sympathy
vote, had won no less than twenty-six of the thirty seats they had
been contesting. The
cameras were allowed briefly into Michael Lever's hospital room to
get his reaction. From his bed he smiled dourly up at the cluster of
floats and made a short speech of thanks. Then, clearly tired, he lay
back with the help of a nurse and, even as the cameras watched, he
closed his eyes and slept. It was left to Representative Joseph
Kennedy to read the prepared speech on Lever's behalf. A
thousand li northeast of where Michael Lever lay sleeping, Charles
Lever stood in a darkened room, watching the image of his son. It had
been a bad week, not least in the markets. But now, looking at his
son lying there, so vulnerable, so badly hurt, the old man softened.
"I didn't mean . . ." he said, in a whisper. At least, he
hadn't wanted to push things quite this far. He
reached out to touch and trace the image on the big screen, his
fingers following the strong line of Michael's cheek, just as once
he'd touched the sleeping child. Things
change, he thought, turning away. And maybe there was a reason for
that. A lesson in it. He shivered and stood there, facing away from
the screen, then turned back, hearing the commentator mention his
name. ".
. . whose silence has been taken by many to be, perhaps, more
meaningful than any words he could have offered." He
felt that same tightening in his chest, the anger coming back. None
of them had the guts, the balls, to come out openly and say it. But
the innuendo was clear enough. Lever spat out his disgust and took a
step toward the screen. As he did so, the image changed and in place
of his son's sleeping face was his own: a hard, uncompromising face;
the face of an old man. He breathed in sharply, as if stung, then
stormed across the room to the comset. Grunting with anger, he tapped
out the code for his lawyer. Then, while he waited for the
connection, he turned to listen to the commentary again. ".
. . and while Hartmann's confession makes no explicit allegations,
many leading figures on the Index are surprised that the Security
investigations have ended with Hartmann and his close associates. Is
vengeance the motive, as Hartmann claims? Or is there something
deeper and darker behind this whole business?" Even
as the commentator finished, Lever was through. "Dan?
Is that you? Good. . . Look I want you to arrange an exclusive
interview with EduVoc. Usual terms. We have the right of veto . . ."
He listened a moment, then huffed out irritably. "You think
that's wise?" Again he listened. "No. Of course not!
There's no link whatsoever!" He took a deep breath, calming
himself. "Look, Dan, all I know is that I'm sick to death of
this shit . . . this innuendo. I want it ended, right? If you can't
get veto, we go ahead without and sue the bastards if they play any
tricks on us." Kennedy's
face was on the screen now, a kind of sad dignity in his expression
as he read out Michael Lever's speech. But all the old man saw was
its smug self-righteousness, its falseness. You, he thought. You're
the bastard who did all this! Yes . . . the more he thought
about it, the more he realized what had happened. And maybe . . .
well, maybe Kennedy had even arranged this little stunt. To win
support. To make martyrs of his young men and turn a losing position
into a winning one. As
soon as he'd had the thought he was convinced of it. It made perfect
sense, after all. Michael's death—like Kustow's—served no
one but Kennedy. Finishing
his call, Charles Lever put the comset down, laughing sourly. He
could prove nothing yet, but given time he'd make the charge stick.
First, however, he had to clear his own name and turn opinion around.
And if that meant canning his feelings of betrayal, he would do that.
He'd act a part. And in time, maybe, he would get his son back. Not
the son he'd had. No, nothing could bring that back now. But
something. A son in name. Yes, he'd have that much. KIMWOKESUDDENLY,
kicking the coyer away from him, his naked body sheened in sweat. He
had been dreaming. Dreaming of his time in Rehabilitation. He had
been back there, in the Unit, the night that Luke had died, feeling
that same tightness in his chest, that same awful, devastating sense
of loss. He sat
up, setting his feet down on the warm, uncarpeted floor, then took a
long, shuddering breath. The memory was so powerful, so
vivid, that he had to remind himself where he was. Rebecca.
Meeting Rebecca again had brought it all back. She had been there
that night, along with Will and Deio. And the bird. The dead bird . .
. Five
of them, there'd been. Claybom. Escapees from that vast, uncharted
darkness beneath the City's floor. Each one of them a product of the
"Program"; an argument against the old saying that Clay was
Clay and could not be raised. Yes,
he could see them even now as if they sat about him in the darkness.
Deio, dark-eyed and curly-haired, to his left; the big, North
European lad, Will, lolling beside him, the fingers of one hand
combing through his short blond hair. Across from them sat Luke, his
strong Latin looks reminiscent of an ancient Ta Ts'in emperor,
a restrained, almost leonine power in his every movement. And finally
Rebecca, silent, thoughtful, defensive, her oval face cupped between
her hands as she stared back at Kim. Slowly
his breathing calmed. Slowly the ghosts faded from the room, until he
alone remained. He leaned across, switching on the bedside lamp, then
stood, looking about him, refamiliarizing himself with the tiny room.
Anchoring himself to the here and now. It was
some time since he had dreamed so vividly. Some time since he had
felt such fear, such loss, such longing. It was four years now since
he had left the Unit, and in all that time he had never once looked
back. Not that he'd forgotten those times. No, for it seemed he was
incapable of forgetting. Rather, it was as if he had built a wall
about them. A wall his conscious mind refused to climb. Until
now. He
went across to the tiny galley and stood at the sink, sluicing
himself down, letting the cold water run down his face and chest and
arms. And as he did he looked back again, remembering. Rebecca.
What did he remember of Rebecca? Mostly
her intensity, and the way she used to look at him, her dark eyes
staring relentlessly, her whole face formed into a question. She had
such a strong, intense face. A face perfectly suited for austerity
and suffering. She was always the last to understand Deio's jokes;
always the last to smile or laugh. One
would have thought that their shared experience would have bound them
tight, yet she had always been the outsider among them, even
after what had happened. And yet he had felt drawn to her even
then—to the vulnerability he had sensed beneath that facade of
imperturbability. Forgetting nothing, he remembered her words
clearly, as if she had spoken them only yesterday. Recalled how angry
she had felt at being "cheated": "It's
all just as Luke said. A trade. A crude exchange. Our lives for what
we can give them. And the rest—all that pretense of caring—is
nothing but hollow words and empty gestures." Did
she still believe that? Or had she forgotten what had happened back
then? Last night, talking to her, it had been hard to tell. She had
seemed so different; so outward and self-assured. But was that simply
another mask? After
Rehabilitation she had signed on for three years with the giant Cos
Vac Company as a commodity slave, working as a Technical Design
Consultant, but had bought out her contract six months early to take
up an offer from SimFic. She had worked for fifteen months in their
East Asian arm, then had moved here three months back, reporting
directly to Campbell. She
had done well for herself. To all intents and purposes she was her
own boss; a free woman, defining her own aims, carving her own path
up the levels. Yet standing there, listening to her, watching her
laugh and smile, Kim had felt that, beneath it all, something was
missing. Or was it memory playing tricks? Was it simply that he
remembered how vulnerable she had been that day they had taken Will
and Deio? Was it simply that he could see her still, sitting there
alone in the common room, desolate, her tiny, doll-like hands
trembling, afraid that they would come for her too? Kim
straightened up, studying himself in the mirror above the sink. Maybe
he was wrong. After all, he himself had changed a great deal since
those days. Four years. It wasn't long, but a lot could happen in
that time. He
turned slightly, frowning. Something, perhaps the play of light on
the water, reminded him suddenly of how the dream had begun. He had
been in the pool, floating on his back, staring up at the ceiling, at
the red, black, and gold of the ancient Tun Huang star map. He
narrowed his eyes, remembering. Slowly the colors melted, fading into
black, while all about him the edges of the pool misted
into nothingness. And suddenly he was alone, floating on the
surface of the great ocean, a billion stars dusting the darkness
overhead. There
was a moment's peace, of utter, perfect stillness, and then it
happened. With a
noise like a vast sigh the surface of the water shuddered and became
a massive field of earth; of moist, dark clay that stretched to the
horizon. He began to struggle in the soft, dark earth, but the more
he struggled the more the clay clung to his limbs, tugging at him,
slowly sucking him down into its black, suffocating maw. He
cried out, and woke, on his back at the bottom of a deep, dark well.
It was still and silent. Far above him the moon sat like a blinded
eye in the center of the sky. Lifting his hand, he saw it appear far
above him, like a vision, floating there in the darkness, the fingers
groping for the light. There
was a noise nearby. A scrabbling, scratching sound. Turning, he saw,
part embedded in the curving wall of the well, the faces of his
friends Will, Deio, and Luke. From the clay beneath each face a pair
of arms extended, hands clawing blindly at the clay that filled each
eye, each choking mouth. He
looked back. His hand had floated free, beyond his grasp, but it
didn't matter now. Lifting his bloated body, he began to climb,
flexing his eight limbs quickly as he climbed the wall. Up, into the
light. At the
top he turned, looking back. His friends had freed themselves. They
lay there now, exhausted, at the foot of the well. Seeing him, they
called out plaintively. Save us, Lagasek! Save us from the
darkness.' He
turned his great abdomen about, meaning to help them, to cast a
silvered thread down through the darkness and let them climb to
safety, yet even as he turned the earth heaved like a great sack and
folded in upon itself. And they were gone. He
cried out . . . and woke a second time, back in the room, in
Rehabilitation, himself again, listening to Will describe what he had
seen on the plain below the ruins of Bremen. A tribe of men. Of
blue-black men with teeth of polished bone. Kim
shuddered, remembering, then pushed back, away from the sink. He
looked up, meeting his eyes in the mirror, conscious suddenly of a
faint pulsing glow from the other room. He turned. The
comset in the far corner of the bedroom had come on-line, the
RESPOND key flashing a dull, insistent red. He
went through, leaning across the chair to tap in his personal access
code. At once the message spilled out onto the screen. Meridian.
Departing Titan: 15. 10. 2210 CKST Can route messages via SimFic's
Saturn Rep. [Campbell] He
pulled out the chair and sat, the dream forgotten. Jelka . . .
Jelka was on Titan! He imagined her out there and laughed,
astonished. The gods alone knew how Campbell had found out, but he
had. Kim shivered, a moment's doubt assailing him, then shook his
head. No, he would grab this chance to speak to her—to let her
know what had been happening. And to tell her that he would wait for
her. However long it took. CHAPTER
EIGHTEEN
East
Winds You'RE
FAMOUS now," Kennedy was saying. "People expect things of
you, Michael. Big things. You've been close to death, and that means
something to them." Michael
Lever smiled faintly and looked away. He was propped up in bed, a
small hill of pillows behind him. It was a large, private ward and on
tables to one side were dozens of sprays of flowers from
well-wishers. He looked back at Kennedy, a warmer expression on his
face. "I appreciate what you're saying, but. . . well, it's just
that I don't want to think too much about it yet." He looked
down. "Not yet. . . okay?" Kennedy
sat back. "I understand, Michael. I'm not here to push you. Just
to let you know how things stand. Right?" "Right." Later
that afternoon Kennedy was flying off to Chicago. There, this
evening, he would be making a speech on the matter of the proposed
new population legislation—in particular on what they were
calling the "Euthanasia Bill." The attack on Lever had
meant that more than the normal media attention would be on the
speech. Already several channels had been clamoring for Michael's
reactions and comments. Thus far Kennedy had fended them off, but
they both knew that, denied some kind of response, the media could
well turn hostile. Kennedy was here to try to persuade Michael to
make a limited comment. "I'm
sorry that it had to happen this way, Michael. This kind of life. . .
it's hyperreal. They want you to live every second in the lights. And
they're hungry. Like sharks. Feed them some blood—the other
guy's blood, if you can—and they're happy. But you can't keep
them out of the water. And you can't make friends with them. Not in
any real sense. So you have to deal with them on their own terms." Michael
looked up. He was less pale than he had been, but he still looked
drawn. "I understand, Joe." He sighed and reached out to
scratch at his useless legs. "Let's compromise, huh? Tell them
I'm tired now—sedated, maybe—and that I'm going to see
the playback of the speech in the morning and speak to them then. How
about that? That way you could get back here, maybe . . ." He
leaned back again, looking up hopefully at the older man. Kennedy
smiled. "Okay. We'll do it your way. And I'll try and get back
for the conference." "Try?" "I'll
be here, Michael. Okay?" Michael
nodded and let his head relax, closing his eyes. Kennedy, watching
him, felt the weight of all the unsaid things press down on him
briefly. The last week had been the hardest he had known, the demands
on him exhausting; but it would all be worth it in the long run. For
a moment he sat back and closed his eyes, pressing at his face and
yawning. He needed sleep, a whole week's worth of sleep, but there
wasn't time just now. This was a crucial moment: make or break time. Only
two days ago Charles Lever had come out of his self-imposed isolation
and spoken to the media about his feelings of grief and anger at what
had happened to his son. Kennedy had made sure that Michael hadn't
seen it, nor heard anything of the rumor circulating that Charles
Lever had organized the attempt on his son's life. But things were in
flux. The bombing had acted as a catalyst— fragmenting popular
opinion into two diametrically opposed camps. They had benefited from
the initial public outcry, and their fortunes had risen dramatically
on a tidal wave of emotional reaction, but in the week that followed
the old men had fought back. The media stories about Kennedy and the
other young men were vicious and often quite unabashedly libelous. To
even try to answer some of the grosser
charges was impossible. Cornered, their opponents were throwing mud.
And some of it would stick. Strangest
of all that had happened that week were two separate and quite
unexpected developments. First, two days back, at the same time that
Charles Lever was talking to the media, Kennedy had been approached
by an old acquaintance, a young man who claimed to be representing
the "Sons"—the group formed from the old
Dispersionist faction. Michael Lever and his friends had once been
members of the group, but had broken with them when they had linked
up with Kennedy. Now, it seemed, the Sons wanted to meet and come to
some kind of arrangement. Only
an hour after that visit, someone else had come to see Kennedy—Fen
Cho-hsien, Wu Shih's chief minister. He had
sat there for a long time afterward, wondering if the two events were
somehow connected—were an elaborate setup, designed to trap and
expose him to the media—but eventually he decided that it was a
genuine coincidence; one of those tiny twists of fate that made life
both unpredictable and interesting. The Sons had not said what they
wanted, and he had committed himself only to a meeting. But Fen
Cho-hsien had been specific. Wu Shih wanted a deal. He had
hoped to talk to Michael of this. To sound him on it. But Michael
wasn't ready yet. Bryn Kustow's death was too close. He was still
shocked; horrified by how personal this business was; astonished that
someone—anyone—should want him dead. A veil had been torn
aside and he had glimpsed what all of this was really about. Kennedy
opened his eyes and looked at the now sleeping Lever. He would be a
better man for this personal knowledge. Harder, less easy to fool.
Though the loss of Bryn was tragic, what they had gained might yet
make up for it. And
for himself? As a
Kennedy he had always known how things stood. He had been taught,
from his family's long history, how naked power was, and how frail
the flesh that wielded that power. And now Wu Shih had made that
history personal. If he said, "Come, make a deal," then he
would need to go and do as he was told. What other choice was there? He
shivered and stood up, leaving Michael to sleep. Perhaps it was
best that things were as they were. That way he alone could be
blamed. He alone take the responsibility. DEAD
MAN YUN pulled a piece of steaming pork from the pot and popped it
into his mouth, then turned, facing Fat Wong. "Aren't
they beautiful, Wong Yi-sun? Aren't they just peaches?" Fat
Wong smiled, looking across to where the three young boys sheltered
in the skirts of their mother, Yun Yueh-hui's daughter. "They
are little emperors, Yueh-hui. If they were my grandsons I would want
no more from life." Dead
Man Yun's face creased into a rare smile. He laughed, then slapped
Fat Wong's back robustly. "That is so, Wong Yi-sun. I am a
blessed man. The gods have truly smiled on me." Fat
Wong reached out, embracing his old friend briefly, touched by his
words. One could not count on much in this life, but Yun Yueh-hui had
been a staunch ally these past ten years. As safe as T'ai Shan. "You
know what to say?" Yun
nodded, his face impassive. "I know my part in this, Yi-sun, and
I am happy with it. We have no choice. We must cleanse ourselves of
this scourge before it overwhelms us." "Indeed."
Fat Wong moved back, watching as Yun turned, giving final
instructions to his servants. Then, at Yun's signal, they went back
into the dining room, the two of them following the servants and
their heaped trays. The
others were waiting for them there: Ho Chin, Feng Shang-pao, and Li
Chin, the three Bosses looking up from their places at the great oval
table. It was a long time since they had met like this, and Fat Wong,
looking about him, felt a vague sadness that this should pass. But
pass it must. The Great Wheel had turned. Change was inevitable. And
he could not let old friendships stand in the way of that. Not unless
he wished his family's banner to hang in another's hall. Fat
Wong sat, smiling at each of his fellows in turn, then watched as the
servants set out the bowls—thirty courses in all—at the
center of the table. "Why,
this is excellent," Three-Finger Ho said, speaking for them all.
"It is many years since I ate snake and monkey-brains." Yun
lowered his head slightly. "I am honored that you like my humble
fare. But come, ch'un tzu. Let us begin. Before the rice grows
cold." They
had met tonight to deal with Lehmann, to settle things, once and for
all, but for a time their talk steered clear of the matter, as if it
were a jagged rock. Fat Wong was happy with this, savoring the meal,
the flow of casual pleasantries, but as the servants began to clear
the bowls, he turned the conversation, bringing it directly to the
point. "So
what are we to do about this upstart? How are we to rid ourselves of
this pai nan jenl" The
term brought smiles from about the table; but they were tense,
nervous smiles that faded quickly. "The white man." It was
how they had come to talk of Lehmann among themselves, as if the term
distinguished him from the other Hung Moo. Moreover, it was apt. For
everywhere he went, death—the White T'ang—seemed to
follow. "Let
us kill him," Three-Finger Ho said bluntly. "Hire a shoo
lin to assassinate him." "It
has been tried," General Feng said, wiping his fingers on the
wet cloth, then handing it to the servant behind him. "Whiskers
Lu tried it, but our friend was too clever for him. No, if we are to
strike, it must be through someone close to him. Someone he trusts." "Difficult,"
Li the Lidless interjected, sucking at his fingers noisily. "He
lets few come close to him, and those are fiercely loyal. I doubt we
would find one among them who would take our blood money. No. We
would be better off fighting him." "A
war?" Fat Wong asked, eyeing Li from across the table. "An
all-out war, to the death?" Beside
him, Dead Man Yun looked down. "Exactly,"
Li Chin said, leaning across to take the last few cashews from one of
the bowls before the servant cleared it. "Five against one. How
could we lose?" Fat
Wong looked down, suddenly apprehensive. If Li Chin's idea took hold
he was in trouble. The agreement he had reached with Li Yuan—whatever
its merits in the long run-—depended in the short
term on him maintaining peace down here in the Lowers. Were he
to break that agreement, who knew how Li Yuan might react? Had his
preparations been more advanced he might have risked it. But he was
not ready yet. He could not afford to antagonize Li Yuan. "Is
that wise?" he asked quietly, meeting Li's staring, egglike eyes
with a show of apparent openness. "I have some sympathy for your
view, Li Chin, but think of the cost, the disruption to our
enterprises. Have we not always said that it is better to make money
than fight wars? Is that not why we have thrived while others have
gone under?" "Maybe
so," Li answered. "But when the east wind blows, the wise
man bows before it. We must bow to the inevitable, Wong Yi-sun. We
must fight the pai nan jen, before it is too late." "Is
war the only course left to us, brother Li?" Dead Man Yun asked,
gesturing for his servants to leave the room. "Have we exhausted
every other option?" Li
Chin turned, facing Yun. "Every day that passes makes him
stronger. Can you not see it, Yun Yueh-hui? We can delay no longer.
We must act. At once." Yun
nodded. "Of course. That is why we are here tonight, neh? To
deal with this problem before it becomes insoluble. But we must think
hard before setting out on such a venture. War is like a fire, easy
to start, but hard to control. I do not rule it out. No. But we must
save it for our final option, when all else has failed." Li
looked about him, seeing how the others were nodding in agreement and
sat back, shrugging. "So what do you propose?" Yun
glanced briefly at Wong Yi-sun, then looked back at Li, his dark eyes
staring back unblinkingly from his death-mask face. "I say we
starve him out. Destroy his markets. Attack him indirectly, through
his middlemen. Undermine him and make his rule untenable." "And
if that fails?" "Then
we fight him." Li
considered a moment, then nodded. "Okay. But how long do you
propose we give ourselves? Six months? A year?" "Six
months," Fat Wong said, hiding his satisfaction. Yes, and then
there would be war. But not against Lehmann. No. For by that
time he would have swallowed Lehmann up, pearl-handled knife and all.
"East winds . . ." he said, lifting his wine cup and
looking about the table. "Here's to east winds!" FROM
WHERE THEY STOOD, high up on a Fourth Level balcony, overlooking the
busy thoroughfare, the two men could see the loaded carts being
wheeled back toward the interdeck transit elevator. Lehmann's men
were everywhere, keeping the inquisitive at bay, making sure the
operation went smoothly and without a hitch. "You've
covered yourself?" Lehmann said, not looking at the man beside
him, his eyes taking in everything that was happening down below. "Naturally,"
the Major answered casually. "It'll be weeks before they sort
out the mix-up. And even then they won't be certain just what
happened." "And
your Captains know nothing?" The
Major smiled broadly. "No more than the men. As I said, it's all
a question of overlays. Of contradictory information. My man's good.
One of the best when it comes to manipulating the records. When the
T'ing Wei come to investigate the matter, they'll find two
sets of information—two versions of events—and both will
be corroborated." Lehmann
glanced at the officer. "And the money?" "Don't
worry, my friend. It's salted away where no prying eyes will find it.
As I said, I'm a patient man. Six years from now I can take early
retirement, if I want it, that is. When I do, I can look forward to a
nice little nest egg, neh? And all this will have been forgotten by
then. No one will notice if I live like a T'ang. They will think
merely that I have invested wisely over the years." He
laughed, but Lehmann, beside him, was silent, thoughtful. He had paid
the Major two and a half million to set this up. A further two and a
half was due once this was done. In return he got munitions worth
half that much, maybe even less. But it was worth it. Because this
way no one would know they had them. This way no rival Boss would get
to hear what he was up to. Lehmann
turned from the balcony. "Let's go," he said, touching the
Major's arm. "I want to be out of here before those alarms start
sounding." The
Major nodded, studying Lehmann a moment, an unasked question on his
lips, then turned, following the albino back down the stairwell
toward the waiting lift. THE
CROWD in the great hall had fallen silent. Only a faint murmur of
silks could be heard as heads turned to see who it was had come among
them. A thousand faces, Han, aristocratic, looked toward the giant,
jade-paneled doors at the far end of the hall. Two men stood there. The
Hung Mao stood between the towering doors, looking about him.
There was the faintest trace of a smile on his lips, but his eyes
were keen, sharply observant. For a min he held himself well;
proudly, as if he too were ch'un tzu. Beside him was the
Chancellor, Fen Cho-hsien, looking impatient, clearly put out by the
fact that he had to accompany the man. "Come," he said
distinctly, and started forward, moving between the lines of guests.
The Hung Moo walked behind him, looking from side to side quite
openly, his head making small bows, his face lit by the mildest, most
innocuous of smiles, as though he realized his presence was offensive
and wished to minimize that insult. When
Chancellor Fen reached the smaller doors on the far side of the hall
he turned abruptly, and signaling to the musicians, whose instruments
had fallen silent with the rest, he spoke a few words in the mother
tongue to those nearest him. At once heads turned back and
conversation began to pick up. The orchestra started up a moment
later. "I
am sorry to come among you thus," said the Hung Mao quietly. Fen
Cho-hsien studied him a moment, then nodded, placated by the modesty
of the man. He was not like most of the others. There was a subtlety,
a grace about him that was rarely found among them. Most were like
apes, crude in the expression of their needs. But this one was
different. Fen Cho-hsien bowed slightly and turned to face the doors
again, knocking firmly on the carved and lacquered panel. Two
guards opened the doors and they went through, into an
anteroom, then down a narrow corridor where a ceiling scanner
rotated in its flexible cradle, following them. At the far end of the
corridor, more guards were waiting. The Hung Moo had been searched
already, but now they repeated the process, checking him thoroughly
while the Minister waited, his eyes averted. Satisfied, one of them
spoke into a handset and pressed out a code. Behind them, the doors
to the inner sanctum opened. Wu
Shih came forward, hands extended. "Representative Kennedy, it
is a delight to meet you at last. I have seen much and heard much
about you." He took the American's hands and pressed them
firmly, his eyes meeting Kennedy's with an expression partway between
greeting and challenge. "I felt it was time that we met. . . and
talked." The
room was a delicate blue, every piece of furniture chosen to
complement its soft, relaxing shade. When they sat it was on low
chairs with silk cushions of a rich, deep blue, speckled with petals
of peach and ivory and bronze. Kennedy's dark business silks seemed
intrusive, a foreign element. He sat there, trying not to feel
discomfort. There had been no time to change. The summons had said
"At once," and you did not argue with the word of a T'ang.
Not yet, anyway. Wu
Shih leaned forward, the silk folds of his long, flowing gown
whispering softly. He seemed soft, almost effeminate beside the big,
hard-featured Hung Mao, but his eyes were like the eyes of a
hunting bird and his hands, where they showed from the soft blue
silk, were hard and dark and strong. "I
am sorry I gave you so little time. In such matters it is best to act
quickly. This way no one knows you are here." Kennedy
made a small, turning movement of his head, as if to indicate the
crowded hall outside, but Wu Shih simply smiled. "No
one but you and I. What I tell my people not to see they do not see." Kennedy
smiled, understanding, but remained on his guard. "You
wonder what I want. Why I should ask you here today." "You'll
tell me," Kennedy answered matter-of-factly. Wu
Shih sat up a little, reassessing things. Then he laughed. "Indeed.
I am forgetting. You are a realist, not an idealist. You deal with
real things, not dreams." There
was truth as well as irony in the words. Wu Shih had been doing his
homework. But then, so too had Kennedy. "The
attainment of real things—that can be a dream, can it not?" Wu
Shih gave a small nod. "Not like other dreams, neh?" He was
referring clearly to the Cutler Institute. To the dreams of the Old
Men. "Yu
Kung!" Kennedy said. Foolish old men. Wu
Shih laughed and clapped his hands. "You know our tongue, then,
Shih Kennedy?" "Enough
to understand. Perhaps enough to pass." The
T'ang sat back, studying him. "There's something that was not in
your file. Where did you learn the Kuan hua?" "My
father had many dealings with your servants and your father's
servants. A little knowledge of your ways was helpful. It was one of
the great secrets of his success." "And
your father taught you?" Kennedy
smiled and nodded. At that moment he seemed his most boyish and
charming and Wu Shih, looking at him, felt some element of warmth
creep into his calculations. He liked this particular American. So
unlike the crabby old men and their shriveled dreams of forever. "Then
perhaps my intuition is better than I first thought." Wu
Shih hesitated, then stood and turned away from the American.
Kennedy, aware of protocol, got to his feet, waiting silently to find
out why Wu Shih had summoned him. After a minute or so, the T'ang
turned back to face him. "I
must choose to trust you, Shih Kennedy. And that is no light thing
for a T'ang to do. We trust few to know what lies within our minds,
and you are a stranger here. Even so, I will trust you." Kennedy
gave the slightest bow, his eyes never leaving the other's face. "You
are a clever man, Joseph Kennedy. You know how things are. Where the
power lies in this City. And you know how to use power, how to
manufacture the raw stuff of which it is made." The T'ang
allowed himself a smile. "And no, not money. Not just
that. Something deeper, more dependable than money. Loyalty. I see
you and I see those about you and I recognize what it is that binds
them to you." He paused. "You are a strong man, Shih
Kennedy. A powerful man. My ministers have told me I should crush
you. Find ways to dishonor you. To entrap you and buy you. They have
proposed a dozen different schemes to break you and humiliate you." Kennedy
said nothing. He stood there, his head slightly lowered, listening,
his watchful eyes taking in everything. Wu Shih, noting this, smiled
inwardly. Kennedy was no fool. His strength came from deep
within—from a self-confidence that, like his own, was innate. "However,
what I see of you I like. I see a man who thinks like a man ought to
think. Who puts his people before himself. And I like that. I respect
it. But as a practical man I must ask myself a question. Can
there be two Kings in City America? If I let this man—
yourself—continue thus, will I not, in time, fall prey to his
success?" He was
quiet a moment, then, "Well?" "I
am the T'ang's man," Kennedy answered, no hesitation or trace of
uncertainty in the words. "I speak not against the Seven, but
against the Old Men." Wu
Shih narrowed his eyes a moment, then nodded. "So you say now,
Joseph Kennedy. But what when America is yours? What when the people
come to you and say, 'You, Representative Kennedy, are the man who
should be King. You are American. Let us be ruled by an American!'
How will you answer them? Will you turn to them and say, 'I am the
T'ang's man'?" He laughed. "I like you, and I do you the
honor of trusting you with these thoughts, but I am no yu kung,
Shih Kennedy. I too am a practical man." Kennedy
was silent a moment. Then, with what seemed almost a sigh, he spoke
again. "What do you want from me, Chieh Hsia? What can I
give you to ensure my loyalty?" Wu
Shih came closer until he stood almost face to face with the
American. "I want a hostage." Kennedy
frowned, not understanding. "There
is a new technique my friend Li Yuan has been perfecting. A means of
control." "Control?" "It
is a simple technical device. It does no harm, I assure you, and the
operation is perfectly safe." "And
you want me to ... to undergo this operation?" Wu
Shih shook his head. "No, Shih Kennedy. I see you still don't
understand. I want no martyrs. No, nothing like that." He smiled
and reached out to lay his hand on the American's shoulder. "I
mean your wife, your sons. That's who I mean." EMILY
CLOSED THE DOOR and turned, facing Michael, alone with him at last.
She felt raw, her nerves exposed by all that had happened these past
few days. The pace of events had left her no time to come to terms
with what she felt, but now, facing him, it all came welling up; all
the grief and hurt and naked fear. She
went across and stood there, looking down at him. He was asleep, his
face pale and pinched, his left hand, where it lay above the cover,
flecked with tiny scabs. She had seen the detailed pictures of his
injuries, of the horrific damage to his legs and lower back; had
stood there in the background while First Surgeon Chang had explained
to Kennedy what needed to be done. And had felt nothing, only a sense
of numbed unreality. Of shock that this should have happened now. Now
when she had finally decided to commit herself. She
took a long breath, then shook her head, reminding herself that all
of that had ended. To organize one needed anonymity, and in the space
of twenty-four hours she had become famous coast to coast, a "face,"
"Michael Lever's wife." So now that option was denied her.
If she wished to do something—to shape this god-awful world for
the good—she must find another way. She
looked down at him and sighed, then put her hand out, touching his
brow gently, reassured to find it warm. His
wife. But what had that meant so far? That she shared his bed. And
beyond that? Beyond
that it had meant nothing. Kennedy had made sufe of that. Yes, for it
was Kennedy who had made sure she stayed at home whenever Michael
traveled about the City; Kennedy who had insisted that she sit with
the other wives and girlfriends while the men
discussed matters of moment. For, after all, wasn't this a
man's world? And wasn't that her role—to be the quiet, dutiful
wife? She
shuddered, realizing that she had been lying to herself this past
year. Oh, she had been happy enough, even when Michael had been away,
for their reunions were moments to savor, to look forward to with
sweet anticipation. Yet it had never been enough. And now, faced with
the prospect of living without that, she understood the price she had
paid for her happiness; how much of herself she had denied. Kennedy.
It all came back to Kennedy. Since
the day she had married Michael he had made sure that she was shut
out of things; her voice silenced, her views ignored. Almost as if he
sensed that there was something that distinguished her from the women
of his own social circle, his level. Something more than a simple
question of breeding. And
Michael? Michael had accepted it all, as if there were nothing wrong
with it. And maybe, in truth, he really couldn't see it, for he too
had been bred to accept things as they were. But all that must
change. She was determined on it. From now on she would be at his
side at all times, offering advice and support, discussing each issue
with him as it arose, challenging his inbred notions of the world and
its ways, whatever Kennedy and the others thought of it. She
shivered, suddenly indignant, recalling all the times that Kennedy
had snubbed her. "My dear," he called her condescendingly.
Well, she would show him from here on. "Fm
?" L~>111
• * • • Michael
was looking up at her, a weak yet somehow radiant smile lighting his
features. Seeing it, all thought evaporated. She reached down and
hugged him, gently, carefully, laughing as she did. "How
are you feeling?" she said, kneeling beside him, her face close
to his own, her hand clasping his. "Tired,"
he said, "and a little numb. But better, much better than I was.
I'm glad the cameras have gone, that's all. It was hard. Bryn's
death. . ." She
smoothed his brow. "I know. Don't talk about it now. Let's talk
about us, eh? About what we're going to do about all this." There
was a flicker of pain in his eyes, a moment's uncertainty, and then
he spoke, his voice strangely quiet. "If you want a divorce . .
. ?" She
shook her head, strangely moved by the directness of his words, by
the blunt honesty of the man. "It's
still there, isn't it?" she said, a faint smile on her lips.
"They didn't blow it off, did they?" He
smiled grimly. "Not that I know of." "Shall
I take a look?" "Em!"
He laughed, his laughter shading into a cough. "Behave yourself!
The cameras!" "Bugger
the cameras," she said quietly. "Besides, it might give the
bastards something to smile about, neh?" For a
time they were silent, looking at each other, then Michael turned his
head aside, a slight bitterness, or was it self-pity, registering in
his face. "It'll
be hard," he said. "Harder for you, perhaps, than for me.
I've only got to get better. You . . ." "I'll
survive," she said, squeezing his hand. "Besides, I've
something to do now, haven't I? Something to take my mind off
things." He
looked back at her. "What do you mean?" She
smiled. "I'm your wife, Michael. That means something now. Much
more than it did before this happened. It gives me a voice." "And
you want that?" She
considered a moment, then nodded. "I've seen things," she
said. "Down there in the Lowers. Things you wouldn't believe.
Suffering. Awful, indescribable suffering. And I want to do something
about it. Something positive." He
stared at her a moment, then nodded, a smile coming to his face.
"You're a good woman, Em. The best a man could have. And if
that's what you want, then go ahead. Besides, I think you're right.
Joe's looking at how this affects the elections, but it's bigger than
that, isn't it? IVe been thinking, Em. Bryn's death ..." A flash
of pain crossed his face. "Bryn's death has got to mean
something. Something good has got to come out of it. So maybe you're
right. Maybe we should use this opportunity. You in your way, me in
mine." "And
Joseph Kennedy?" "You
don't get on, do you? I've noticed it. From the first, I guess. But
it didn't seem to matter before now. He's a good man, Em. I'd vouch
for it. But you do what you have to. And if he opposes you, tell me.
I'll back you. You know I will." She
smiled, then leaned closer, kissing his brow. "I know. In fact,
IVe always known it. But as you say, it didn't matter much before
now." LI
yuan CROUCHED there in the shallows of the lake at Tongjiang, his
silks hitched up to his knees, facing his fifteen-month-old son. Kuei
Jen was leaning forward as he splashed his father, giggling
uncontrollably, his chubby arms flailing at the water, his dark small
head beaded with bright droplets. A
ragged line of servants stood knee-deep in the water close by,
guarding the deeper water, the sunlight gleaming off their shaven
heads, their faces wreathed in smiles as they watched their T'ang
playing with the young prince. On the
bank, a picnic had been set up. From beneath the gold and red silk
awnings, Li Yuan's wives looked on, laughing and smiling at their
husband's antics. Lai Shi and Fu Ti Chang were sitting at the back,
on a long seat heaped with cushions, but Mien Shan, Kuei Jen's
mother, stood almost at the water's edge, her laughter edged with
concern. Kuei
Jen turned, looking across at his mother, then jumped, a funny little
movement that brought laughter from all about him. The infant looked
around, wide-eyed with surprise, then, seeing the smiles on every
face, clapped his hands and, giggling, jumped again. "That's
right!" Yuan yelled delightedly, encouraging him. "Wriggle,
my little fish! Wriggle!" And, throwing back his head, he roared
with laughter. But
Kuei Jen was beginning to get overexcited, and this time, when he
jumped, he stumbled, throwing out his tiny hands as he fell, a brief
cry of surprise escaping him before he went under. Quickly, Li Yuan
bent down and scooped the spluttering Kuei Jen up, holding him close
against his chest, there-there-ing him, and kissing his face. For a
while Kuei Jen howled and howled, but slowly Li Yuan's gentle words
had their effect and the child calmed, nuzzling in close to his
father's chest. "There!"
Li Yuan said, lifting him and holding him up, above him, at arm's
length. He laughed softly. "No harm done, eh, my little fish? No
harm." For a
moment longer he hugged his son, kissing the dark crown of his head.
"You're a good boy, neh?" he murmured. "A good boy."
Then, turning in the water, he waded across to the shore and handed
Kuei Jen to his mother. Mien
Shan took her son, looking past him at Li Yuan and smiling broadly.
"Thank you, Yuan," she said quietly. "And you are a
good father to your son. The very best of fathers." She
turned, summoning her maids. At once they were at her side with
towels and dry clothing, tending to the child. Li
Yuan smiled, touched by her words, then stepped up onto the bank,
letting one of his body servants towel down his legs while another
brought a fresh tunic and fussed about him, dressing him. As they
finished, he turned and looked across. Lai Shi and Fu Ti Chang were
watching him, their heads close, talking. He smiled, then went
across, planting himself between them, putting his arms about their
shoulders. For a
moment he sat there, silently enjoying the day. Out on the lake the
men had begun to play a game with a stuffed ox's bladder, batting it
about and diving to catch it, throwing up great sprays of water, to
the amusement of all. Even Kuei Jen had stopped whimpering and had
turned to watch them, a smile of amusement lighting his tiny
features. Watching
it all, Yuan felt a shiver of contentment pass through him. This was
enough, surely? Enough for any man. To have this day, this sunlit,
happy hour forever, that surely was enough? He
waited, silent within himself, but for once there was no dark voice
to counter that first strong feeling of contentment. So maybe this
was it—the balance he had been seeking all these years. Maybe
it was simple after all. A matter of relaxing. Of letting go. "Yuan?" He
turned his head, looking into the dark and pretty eyes of his Second
Wife, Lai Shi. "What
is it, my love?" Her
eyes slipped away, meeting Fu Ti Chang's on the other side of him,
then returned to his. "It's just that we were talking. Wondering
. . ." Something
in her face, maybe the slightest hint of mischievousness in her
mouth, told him at once what they had been talking of. "Wondering
whose bed I would come to tonight, is that it?" Lai
Shi nodded. For a
moment he studied her. Lai Shi was not the prettiest of his wives.
No, for there was something about her features—some
irregularity in that long northern face—that did not quite meet
the conventional standard of beauty. Yet when she smiled, when her
eyes sparkled with mischief, there was a sensuality to her face, a
voluptuousness, that made her by far the most attractive of his
wives. Saying
nothing, he turned, facing his Third Wife, Fu Ti Chang. She was the
tallest of his wives but also the youngest; a long-legged willow of a
girl with breasts like tiny pears and an elegance that, at times, he
found intoxicating. She sat there, letting him study her, her large
eyes meeting his openly, that modesty that was so ingrained a part of
her character staring out at him. "You
wish for a decision?" Fu Ti
Chang nodded. He
turned. "And you, Lai Shi?" "Yes,
husband. But before you do, let me say something. That ten days is a
long time for us to be without you. Last night you went to Mien
Shan's bed. And before that..." "Before
that I was away." He laughed. "I understand, Lai Shi. A
woman is a woman, neh? She has her needs." Lai
Shi smiled, while Fu Ti Chang looked down, a faint blush at her neck. "Well,
a decision you shall have. But first let me say what it is I most
like about each of you. Why the choice is such a difficult one." "Husband
. . ." Lai Shi protested, but Li Yuan shook his head. "No.
You will hear me out. And then I shall tell you my decision." He lay
his head back on the cushions and stared out across the lake,
considering a moment. Then, with a brief laugh, he began to speak. "If
we are to believe, as the ancient Buddhists once believed, that every
soul has been upon this earth before, then Fu Ti Chang was once, I am
convinced, a horse. A beautiful, elegant horse, with a good, strong
rump, long, fine legs, and the stamina of a Thoroughbred. Many a
night have I had her in the saddle until dawn, and never once has she
complained of tiredness!" There
was a giggle from Lai Shi, but Fu Ti Chang herself was still,
listening to his every word. "But
what I like most about my sweet Fu are her hands. For my youngest
wife has the gentlest hands under Heaven. If Kuan Yin ever made love
to a mortal man, then I am certain it was in the form of my darling
Fu Ti Chang." Fu Ti
Chang gave a slight bow of her head, clearly touched by his words. "Now,
as for Lai Shi, well, what am I to say? That she is the naughtiest of
my girls, the most willful?" "Tell
me what creature I was, husband. In my former life . . ." He
laughed. "Why that's easy, Lai Shi. You were a bird. A
mischievous magpie, the bringer of good news and joy." "A
magpie!" She laughed delightedly. "Yes,"
he said, smiling broadly, enjoying the game. "With a wicked,
teasing mouth that, many a night, has settled in my nest." ' , She
smiled, her dark eyes sparkling. "Can I help it if little niao
needs to be fed . . ." He
roared with laughter. "Maybe so, Lai Shi. But eaten?" He
stood, then turned back, looking down at them. "Nan Ho chose
well for me, neh? Too well, perhaps, for how am I to choose?
Thoroughbred or magpie, which is it to be ? I feel as if I ought to
have a copy made of myself." "Two
copies," Fu Ti Chang said, ever practical. He
turned, looking across to where Mien Shan was standing at the lake's
edge, the now-sleeping Kuei Jen cradled against her shoulder. "Of
course. I had not forgotten Mien Shan. But as for tonight . . . well,
why don't you both come to my bed?" "Both?"
Fu Ti Chang stared back at him, shocked, it seemed, but, beside
her, Lai Shi was grinning broadly. She leaned close, whisper-ing
something to Fu Ti Chang. For a moment Fu Ti Chang looked puzzled.
She frowned intently. Then, unexpectedly, she let out a peal of
raucous laughter. "Yes,"
he heard her whisper, and found himself intrigued. They
turned back, facing him again, suddenly very formal, sitting up
straight-backed in the long seat. "Well?"
he asked. "Is it a satisfactory answer?" "Whatever
our husband wishes," Fu Ti Chang said, bowing to him, her face
cracking as Lai Shi began to giggle at her side. "Whatever
our husband wishes." He was
about to comment, to ask them what was going on, when a movement to
his right distracted him. He looked across. His Master of the Inner
Chambers, Chan Teng, was standing there, his head bowed. "What
is it, Master Chan? Is something wrong?" "No,
Chieh Hsia. All is well." "And
the packing? That goes well?" "We
are almost done, Chieh Hsia." "Good.
Then it is something else, neh?" Chan
Teng bowed. "That is so, Chieh Hsia. Marshal Tolonen is
here, for your appointment." Li
Yuan shook his head. "I did not expect him until four. Is it
that late, already?" "I
am afraid so, Chieh Hsia." Ah, he
thought; then the afternoon is almost done. He looked about
him, savoring the sights that met his eyes; the servants playing in
the lake, his wives, his sleeping son. There must be more days
like this, he thought. Days of ease and happiness. For without
them, what is K/e? Nothing,
came the answer. Less than nothing. He
turned back, facing his Master of the Inner Chambers. "Thank
you, Master Chan. Go now and tell the Marshal that I will be with him
in a while. I must have a final word here." Chan
Teng bowed, then backed away, turning and hurrying off toward the
great sweep of steps and the palace beyond. Li Yuan watched him go,
then turned back, looking at his wives. It would have been nice to
have gone with them tomorrow, to spend a few more days
with them before duty called him back, but that was not to be.
There was far too much to do, down here on Chung Kuo: the GenSyn
Hearings were due to start shortly, and then there were the
preparations for the reopening of the House. A copy
... He laughed, remembering what had been said. Yes, it would
have been good to have had a copy—a twin—of himself these
past few years. One to work and one to play. Two selves to share the
joys and burdens of this world. He
turned. Mien Shan was watching him, smiling, real love there in her
eyes as she held the sleeping child. He went across and held her,
kissing her brow, then, bending down, carefully took Kuei Jen from
her. For a
moment he closed his eyes, lulled by the gentle warmth of his son
pressed close against him, then, with a final, tender kiss on the
infant's cheek, he handed him back, smiling at Mien Shan. "Ten
days," he said, a faint sigh escaping his lips. "Ten days,
that's all, my love, and then I'll join you up above." THIS
far into United Bamboo territory, Fat Wong's runners seemed to
outnumber the common people by two or three to one. Young men wearing
the emerald-green headbands of the Triad moved past Lehmann
constantly as he walked the packed corridors, while in the great
thoroughfare of Main, groups of young affluent-looking Han, their
green silks displaying the hand and bamboo cane symbol of the United
Bamboo, sat around tables, relaxed, drinking and playing Chou or
Mah'Jongg, for all the world like young aristocrats. He had
heard that Fat Wong was the biggest of his rivals and now, through
the false lenses he wore to mask his true identity, he could see it
was so. Here, in the cluster of stacks that formed the heartland of
the United Bamboo, the wealth of the brotherhood was on open display.
A dozen great cinnamon trees rested in massive ornamental bowls along
the central aisle of Main, while to either side the balconies were
festooned with bright red slogan banners and garlands of colorful
flowers, as if in celebration. The shops along the central mall were
full, the products cheap—a fifth the price you'd find anywhere
else in the City—while everywhere he looked there was an
underlying sense of orderliness
he had seen nowhere else in the City at this low a level. Indeed,
if he had not known better, he might have thought himself a good
twenty decks higher, up near the top of the City. Lehmann
looked about him as he went, his eyes taking in every-thing, the tiny
cameras, implanted into the cornea of the lenses, recording every
detail. He had
read the secret Security report the Major had obtained for him. At
the last reckoning Wong Yi-sun's annual turnover had been more than
one hundred and twenty billion yuan. It was a massive sum; one
that, to be frank, had surprised him, for it dwarfed his own turnover
by a factor of twenty to one. That was worrying, true, but no cause
for despair. No, for if anything it made his task easier. Only the Wo
Shih Wo and Dead Man Yun's Red Gang could compete with the United
Bamboo in terms of market share and the two of them combined were
only half Fat Wong's size. It was little wonder, then, that his spies
had reported back that the other Bosses were growing a little wary of
their erstwhile friend. Indeed, after what had happened to Iron Mu,
they were right to be suspicious of Wong Yi-sun's motives. So
much so, in fact, that, after their dinner at Dead Man Yun's, three
of the Bosses had met again, hours later, to discuss their own secret
agenda. An agenda that, had he known of it, would have outraged the
birdlike Wong. At the
gateway between the stacks, Lehmann waited at the barrier to show his
documentation to one of the guards. As before, the regular Security
men were shadowed all the while by United Bamboo officials who
checked their work and made their own unofficial checks on who went
through into their territory. Thus far Lehmann had passed through all
five gates with only the minimum of fuss, but this time, as the guard
made to hand him back his card and pass him through, one of the
officials—a bald-headed Han with a deeply scarred chin and a
short, slightly corpulent figure—took the card from the guard's
hand and, pushing him aside, placed himself directly in front of
Lehmann. He
glanced down at the card, then looked back at Lehmann, his whole
manner hostile. "What are you doing here, Shih Snow? What is
your business in this stack?" Lehmann
lowered his head, as if in respect, and held out the papers he had
had prepared, offering them to the Triad official. "Forgive me,
Excellency, but I have a routine maintenance call to make. The
documents will explain." From
beneath his lashes, he saw how the man deliberately ignored the
papers, disdaining to take them. "Who
asked you to come? Which official did you speak to?" "It
was Yueh Pa. He informed our office two hours back that there was a
malfunction in one of the junction boxes. In the east stack, Level
34." That
much was true. Indeed, he had been waiting three weeks for something
to go wrong so that he might pay this visit. But once in, he had no
intention of putting the fault right. At least, not in the sense they
wanted it done. "Yueh
Pa, eh?" The Han turned, offering a few words of Mandarin to his
colleague, then turned back to Lehmann, letting the card fall from
his fingers. "You can pass through, Shih Snow, but I will have
one of my men assigned to you all the while you are here, understand?
I do not like strangers. Especially Hung Mao. So keep your eyes to
yourself, do your job, and go." I
understand, pig's ass, Lehmann thought, bowing low to retrieve
his card, then maintaining the bow as he circled the man and ducked
under the half-raised barrier. Not that it would help them, even if
they attached a dozen runners to watch him. He
waited there, head lowered, while the official called across a young
thin-faced runner and gave him his instructions. Bowing low to his
Master, the young Han turned and, coming across to Lehmann, barked at
him in Mandarin, showing him the same contempt his Master had shown.
With a bow, Lehmann handed his papers across to the young brute,
showing nothing of what he felt, then followed on behind the man. On
into the very heart of Fat Wong's territory. "Shih
Kennedy! Shih Kennedy! Is it true what you said in your speech
tonight about the so-called Euthanasia Bill?" Kennedy
stood on the rostrum of the Press Room, elegant and powerful, facing
the crush of media men and reporters. Remotes
buzzed about his head like giant bugs, hovering in the bright,
overhead lights, their hungry lenses capturing his every word, his
every gesture, but it was to the men below that he played, addressing
them by name, leaning toward each questioner as he framed his reply,
as if confiding in them. "It's
true, Ted," he said, his features stem, responsible. "They'll
deny it, naturally, but we have copies of the study documents.
Fascinating stuff it is too. Like I said, this is no brief memorandum
we're talking about here, but a report of near-on six hundred pages,
detailing every little circumstance. Moreover, they've costed the
exercise down to the last fen. And why do that if it's
merely—and I quote—'an option we're considering'?" The
reference was to the statement issued by the T'ing Wei, the
Superintendent of Trials, immediately after the speech. Stung by
Kennedy's accusations—or "caught out" as some
commentators had put it—the T'ing Wei had backpedaled
furiously, at first denying that there was any such document, and
then, when it became clear that no one was going to accept that,
putting out a revised statement, admitting the document's existence,
but denying that it was anything more than a study. As for
the speech itself, that had been a sensation. A revelation. Not in
living memory had an audience responded so enthusiastically, so
passionately, to anyone. Kennedy had had them eating out of his hand.
Throughout the ninety minutes of the speech there had been a kind of
buzz in the great hall, a sense of something new happening right
there before their eyes. Kennedy had stood there at the front of the
stage, handsome, charismatic, like a king in exile. Scorning notes,
he had addressed the great crowd from memory, his deep, resonant
voice washing like a tide over their heads. And his words, simple yet
powerful, had touched a raw nerve. You could see that. See it on the
faces in the crowd; faces that filled the screens throughout the
great City of North America. This was his moment. The moment when he
came of age. And
afterward, the crowd had stood there, cheering wildly, applauding
Kennedy for more than twenty minutes, bringing him back time and
again to the stage, a great roar going up each time he reappeared,
followed moments later by the chant: "Ke-ne-dy!
Ke-ne-dy! Ke-ne-dy! Ke-ne-dy!" And
all the while he had stood there, smiling and looking about him,
applauding his audience just as they applauded him, his boyish
modesty there for all to see. "Shih
Kennedy! Shih Kennedy!" Kennedy
leaned forward on the rostrum and pointed down into the crush of
media men, singling out one of the many who were calling him. "Yes,
Peter. What is it?" "Are
you aware that a number of surveys done over the last six months have
revealed that quite a large percentage of people are actually in
favor of limited euthanasia proposals?" Kennedy
nodded somberly. "I think limited is the word, Peter.
I've seen those surveys—you're talking about the Howett Report
and the Chang Institute paper, I assume . . . Yes? Well, all I can
say is that one should look very carefully at the questions that were
asked in those surveys and see how they actually relate to these new
proposals. I think you'll find that there's very little correlation
between them. What the new 'Study1 reveals is that the
actual proposals are far more radical, far more deep-reaching.
Besides, there's a hell of a difference between thinking that
something might just possibly be a good idea and actually going out
and doing it. A hell of a difference. I mean, what we're talking
about here is killing people. And not just one or two, but millions.
Tens of millions." Kennedy
put his hand up to his brow, combing back a lock of his dark hair, an
expression of deep concern in his steel-gray eyes. "No,
Peter, what I think those surveys show is that most people recognize
that there's a problem. But this isn't the solution. At least, not
one that any decent person should be contemplating." There
was a buzz of sympathy from the floor. But at once the clamor began
again. "Shih
Kennedy! Shih Kennedy!" "Yes,
Ho Yang . . ." The
young Han, a reporter for the all-Han station, Wen Ming,
glanced at his hand-held comset, then looked up, addressing Kennedy,
an immediate translation going out across the airwaves. "In
your speech you seemed to imply that, as far-reaching as the Study
document was in terms of the upper age group, this was merely
the thin end of the wedge, and that we might expect such
preliminary measures to be followed by a whole package of population
controls. Could you amplify on that?" Kennedy
smiled. "Certainly. And, once again, this is not a matter of
mere speculation. These discussions are going on right now, in secret
rooms throughout the seven Cities. Deals are being made, proposals
drawn up. Proposals that, if we're not careful, will be presented to
the House and voted on by men whose interests are not necessarily
ours." "And
what exactly do you mean by that, Shih Kennedy?" Kennedy
leaned forward slightly. "I mean that there are men— rich,
powerful men, if you like—who put profit before family,
individual gain before the common good. And it's these men—these
hsiao jen, these 'little men'—who are at present
dictating things. I don't know about you, Ho Yang, but I think that's
wrong. I think that a matter of this importance should be debated
publicly and decided publicly. Something must be done, yes. We all
recognize that now. But it must be done openly, in the light, where
all can see." And so
it went on, for almost two hours, until, with a smile and a wave,
Kennedy stood down. But even then—even after the lights had
gone down and the remotes had been packed away—Kennedy wasn't
finished. After speaking with his advisors, catching up on the latest
news, he went out among the media men, shaking hands and stopping to
say a word or two here and there, suddenly informal, a friend, not
just a "face." "How's
Jean?" one of them asked. Kennedy
turned. "She's fine, Jack. Fine. In fact, she's going off with
the boys for a week or so, to escape all of this politicking. She's
always complaining that I work her too hard, so I thought I'd give
her and the boys a break, before things get really hectic." There
was laughter at that. All there knew just how hard Kennedy worked.
Phenomenally hard. In that he was like his father. "Okay,
boys, so if you'll excuse me now . . ." Kennedy
went through, into the anteroom. There, in a great cushioned chair on
the far side of the room, sat Jean, his wife, her arms aboufctheir
two young sons. They were looking away from him, unaware
that he had come into the room, staring up at the big screen in the
corner of the room. He
stood there a moment, looking across at them, torn by the sight.
There was such pride in young Robert's face as he stared at his
father's image. Such undemanding love. And Jean... He could barely
look at her without thinking of the deal he had made with Wu Shih. For a
time out there he had almost forgotten. The deal had seemed as
nothing. But now, facing his family once again, he felt the
hollow-ness flood back into him, leaving him weightless, like a leaf
in the wind. He
shuddered. What was it they said? When the east wind blows, the
wise man bows before it. Well, he had bowed, sure enough. But not
like a reed. More like a great tree, its trunk snapped and fallen in
the face of the storm. "Joe!"
Jean saw him and came across, embracing him. Moments later he felt
his two sons holding tight to him, one on either side. "Dad!"
they were saying. "Dad, it was wonderful! You were brilliant!" He
steeled himself. "I'm sorry, Jean. If there was any choice . .
." She
drew her head back, looking at him, then reached out to wipe the
tears that had come, unbidden, to his eyes. "It's all right. I
understand. You know I understand. And I'll stand by you, Joseph
Kennedy. Whatever you do." "I
know," he said. "Maybe that's what worries me most. That
you're so understanding. If I could only . . ." She
put a finger to his lips. "There's no alternative. We both know
that. Remember what you said, all those years ago, that night in your
father's house, that year we first met? You said . . . that it didn't
matter how it got done, only that it got done." She smiled.
"That's still true, isn't it, Joe? And what you did tonight . .
. that's a big step toward it." "Maybe
..." "No.
No maybes about it. Tonight you started something. Something that
even Wu Shih can't stop." He
looked down. To either side of him his sons were looking up at him,
trying to understand what was going on. "It's
all right," he said to them, holding them tightly against him.
"Everything's going to be all right. You'll see." There
was a knock. He freed himself, then turned and went across, pulling
back the door. A tall
Han waited there. One of Wu Shih's men, the number
seven—ch'i—embroidered in Mandarin on the chest of his
powder-blue silks. Beyond him the press room was empty, except for
two shaven-headed Han. "Are
they ready?" the tall Han asked. Kennedy
turned, looking at his wife, his sons, then turned back, giving a
nod. "They're ready," he said, trying to keep the pain, the
anxiety he suddenly felt, out of his voice. But the tears betrayed
him. He had
had his moment. It was gone now. Ahead lay only hol-lowness. CHAPTER
NINETEEN
Weimar NINE
YEARS . . ." the ancient murmured, tears forming in his watery
eyes. "Nine long years I've waited for this day." His
companion, a distinguished-looking graybeard of seventy-five years,
nodded somberly. He looked about him at the tiers of empty or
sparsely populated benches that stretched away on every side of the
House, then leaned closer to his fellow, placing a thin, fly-speckled
hand on his friend's arm. "Do you remember the last time we were
here, Johann?" "Like
yesterday," the ancient replied, a faint light appearing in his
eyes. "That was the day we voted down the Seven's veto, neh? The
day Secretary Barrow indicted the tai. . ." He sighed
heavily, his deeply lined face filled with a sudden pain. "Ach,
had we but known what sadness would follow . . ." "Had
we but known . . ." For a
moment the two were silent, watching as, below them, at the center of
the Great Hall, the officials of the Seven prepared the central
rostrum for the ceremony to come. Then, clearing his throat, the
younger of the two spoke again, drawing his powder-blue silks about
him as he did. "They
were sad years, true enough, but maybe they were meant to be. Maybe
that day and this were foreordained." He smiled morosely and
patted his companion's hand. "You know, the more I think of
those times, Johann, the more I feel that the conflict was
inevitable. That the War . . . well, that the War was necessary." The
ancient shrugged, then laughed; a dry, asthmatic sound. "Maybe
so. But we survived, neh? We few." The
graybeard looked about him again, conscious that, of the three and a
half thousand Representatives who had packed the House that day, nine
years before, a mere handful—two hundred at most—had
lived to see this day. "Few
indeed," he said, feeling a sudden weight—not bitterness,
but a mixture of regret and the inexorable workings of fate—descend
on him. Once
more silence fell. Far below them, out on the central rostrum where
the Upper Council sat, a group of gray-haired dignitaries were
seating themselves. There
was a moment's brief delay and then the ceremony began. At the
central lectern the elderly Representative for Shenyang Hsien, Ho
Chao-tuan, cleared his throat and began to read from the prepared
statement, formally dissolving the House. Overhead, a dozen remotes
hovered in the air, relaying their images back to the watching
billions. With
the faintest rustle, Ho Chao-tuan set the statement aside and began
to read from the list of standing members. As each name was read, a
shouted "Yes" would come down from one or other of the
elders scattered about the massive chamber. Eventually, all one
hundred eighty-three surviving members had responded. With a terse
nod, Ho backed away from the lectern, his part in the ceremony
concluded. As Ho
Chao-tuan moved back, a tall, middle-aged Han with a plaited white
beard stepped forward. This was Ch'in Tao Fan, Chancellor of East
Asia. Looking all about him at the near-deserted tiers, he thanked
the members, then, with a dramatic flourish, unfurled the official
scroll and began to read. On the
benches high above Ch'in Tao Fan, the ancient placed his hand on his
friend's arm and smiled sadly. "Our day is done," he said
quietly. "It is up to others now to finish what we began." "So
it is," the graybeard answered, sighing, helping his fellow to
his feet. "So it is." Down
below them, Ch'in Tao Fan spoke on, talking of the days to
come, and of the great step forward, while behind him, on the
far side of the great chamber, in the broad ceremonial corridor
beyond the great double doorways, the first of the newly elected
Representatives, more than eight hundred in all, waited silently in
their powder-blue silks, ready to take their places at the empty
benches. THREE
HOURS LATER, their business in the House done, three of the new
Representatives stood in the doorway of the private dining rooms
above the Great Hall. At their appearance one of the House Stewards
came across, his maroon silks embossed with the number thirty-five. "Ch'un
tzu," he said, bowing deeply. "You are most welcome
here. Your guest has asked me to apologize on his behalf. He has been
delayed, I fear, and will be a few minutes late. Refreshments,
however, have been provided. So, please, if you would come in." They
entered, looking about them and exchanging glances. The
room was large yet not imposing, the decor and furniture clearly
chosen with great care and with the most exquisite taste. Four tall
Ming dynasty officials' chairs dominated the left-hand side of the
room. Close by, on low Ching dynasty tables, bowls of lychees, plums,
and strawberries had been laid out. At the far end, in front of a
huge picture window that overlooked the formal gardens, a high
scroll-legged table was laden with porcelain jugs and bowls, while to
the right of the room, beyond a long, head-height screen of carved
mahogany, a table had been set for six, western silverware set at
each place beside the cloth-wrapped chopsticks. "What
will you drink, ch'un tzu?" the Steward asked, turning to
face them again. "Will it be your usual, Representative
Underwood? Or would you prefer a cordial?" Underwood
laughed, intrigued. "I'll have my usual," he said after a
moment. "And
you, Representative Hart? A cool black dragon wine? Or is it too
early in the day?" Hart
lowered his head slightly, both amused and impressed. "That
would be fine, thank you. But tell me, Thirty-five, is it normal for
the Stewards to know what each member drinks?" The
Steward looked at them, smiling politely. "It is not always so,
no. But my master is a meticulous man. He likes to do things
properly." "Your
master. . . ?" Hart looked to the other two. This grew more
curious by the moment. The
man had contacted them a week back, using an intermediary, and had
"bought" a meeting with them. Each had been informed that
the other two would be present, but beyond that they had been told
nothing. Nothing but the man's name. Li Min. The
Steward brought their drinks, then bade them sit. He smiled and bowed
to each in turn, then took two small steps backward. "As I said,
ch'un tzu, my master will be a little delayed. But please, be
at your ease until he comes. I must leave you for a short while to
supervise the meal, but help yourself. The fruit is fresh from the
Plantations this very morning." With a
final bow, the Steward turned and went. "Well.
. ." Underwood said, sipping at the ancient malt whiskey the
Steward had handed him. "If that doesn't beat it all! What do
you think our man, Li Min, wants?" Munroe
laughed. "What do they all want? Advantage. Someone to make
deals for them. To give them face." "And
is that why we're here?" Hart asked, reaching down to take one
of the large, blue-black plums from the bowl beside him. "To
make deals? And to give some Han merchant face?" "I'm
told it's what politics is about," Munroe said, straightening up
again. "But what do you think this one wants? I mean, it's odd,
don't you think? A Han, asking three Hung Moo Representatives to a
meeting on the morning that the House reopens. You'd think he'd
choose three of his own kind, neh? You know what they're like, these
Han." "Only
too well," Underwood said, setting his drink down. He picked up
one of the lychees and sniffed at it, then bit deep, lifting his
pocket silk to his chin to dab at the trickle of juice. "That's
exactly what I meant. I mean, I've heard there's been a lot of this
kind of thing going on these past few months, but this feels
different. The fact that he went out of his way to buy our time, for
instance. Now why should he do that?" "To
make sure we came?" Hart said thoughtfully. "Yes,
but why?" Underwood
had barely uttered the words when the door swung open and a tall,
extremely pallid-looking Hung Moo came into the room, followed
closely by two soberly dressed assistants, both of whom wore the
telltale flashing collars of commodity slaves. "Gentlemen,"
the Hung Moo began, putting out his hands to beg them to remain
seated. "Thank you for coming here. I am Li Min." Underwood
set the half-eaten lychee down. Across from him Hart and Munroe
looked equally stunned. Munroe
sat forward. "You? Li Min?" He shook his head. "But we
were expecting . . ." "A
Han? Yes, well, forgive my little subterfuge, gentlemen. It was. . .
necessary, let's say." The man turned, giving a curt hand signal
to one of his assistants who proceeded to close and lock the door. Underwood
was on his feet. "Is that really necessary, Shih Li?" The
man turned, facing him. "If you wish to leave, Representative
Underwood, you may, of course. I have locked the doors not to keep
you in, but to keep others out." "Then
what the hell is going on?" Munroe asked, on his feet beside
Hart and Underwood. "I want to know who you really are and why
we're here, and I want to know it right now or I'm walking." "That's
right," Hart said. "Please,
gentlemen. I shall do as you ask. But be seated. You are at Weimar.
In the great House itself. No harm can come to you here." Mollified,
the three men sat again, the tall Hung Moo taking the vacant seat
facing them. "All
right," he said, looking from one to the next, his frost-white
face expressionless. "You wish to know who I am and why I have
asked you here today. Well, the answer to the first is that I am
Stefan Lehmann, only son of Under-Secretary Lehmann." Hart
laughed, astonished. Beside him Munroe shook his head slowly.
Underwood just sat there, his mouth open. At
Lehmann's signal, one of his assistants brought & case and
handed it to him. He opened it and took out three files, offering one
to each of the men. "Inside
those files you will find genetic charts and other material
that will verify my claim. But as to what I want from you,
that depends very much on what you yourselves want." Lehmann
fell silent a moment, watching the three men study the material;
then, when it seemed they were convinced, he began again. "You
wondered earlier how it was that the Steward knew what each of you
drank. Well, he knew that because I have made it my business to find
out about each of you. Oh, you were no strangers to me, or at least,
your fathers weren't. But I wanted to know a great deal more about
each of you before I came and sat here facing you. I wanted to be
sure." "Sure
about what?" Hart said, his composure regained somewhat now that
he had had a little time to digest what was happening. "About
whether I could trust you." Lehmann paused, then, lifting his
left hand casually, pointed at Munroe. "You, Wendell. Your
father was disbarred from the House eight years ago and your whole
family sent down fifty levels. He never got over that, did he? He
died eight months later, some say of shame, others of poison."
Lehmann turned slightly, his hand swinging around until it pointed at
Underwood. "And you, Harry. All of your family property was
confiscated, neh? If it hadn't been for friends, you'd have ended up
below the Net. As it was, your father took his own life." Lehmann
let his hand fall back into his lap, his eyes on Hart once more. "As
for you, Alex, you had to suffer the humiliating indignity of a
pardon. Or at least, your father did. But it rubs off, neh? In this
world of ours, what happens to the father happens also to the son."
He paused again, nodding slowly to himself, knowing he had their full
attention now. "But when I look at the three of you, what I see
is not the sons of traitors but good, strong, hardworking young men.
Men who, through their own efforts, have regained the positions of
preeminence taken from them by the Seven. There is no doubting it.
You are Great Men once more. And yet the taint remains, neh?" Munroe
let out a long breath, then leaned toward Lehmann, his hands clasped
together in front of him. "So what's your point, Shih Lehmann?
What do you want from us?" To
either side of him, Hart and Underwood were staring openly at Lehmann
now, an intense curiosity burning in their eyes. "As
I said. It's not so much what I want, as what you want." He sat
back slightly, looking from one to the next. "You are
Great Men, certainly. Representatives. It would seem, to the outward
eye, that each of you has everything he needs. Status. Riches. Power.
Together with the Seven, you plan to make this world of ours great
again. Or so the media tells us. But knowing you—knowing each
of you as well as 1 do—1 would not have thought that there was
any great love in your hearts for the Seven." Munroe
stared back at him a moment longer, then looked down. "So?" Lehmann
paused. "So this. I wanted to let you know that it's not over.
That the War didn't end. That it's still going on, DeVore or no,
Berdichev or no. That I am my father's son and that the things he
stood for live on in me." "Dispersionism
. . ." Hart said, in an awed whisper. Lehmann
nodded. "Yes, Dispersionism. And something else. Something
wholly new." IT WAS
DONE secretly, quietly. In the media the news was that his wife and
children had gone away on a brief vacation while Kennedy worked on
campaign details. Then, for a week, there was nothing. When Kennedy
saw them again it was on the afternoon of the elections, at Wu Shih's
private clinic on the West Coast. They had been treated well—like
royalty—and he found them in the solarium, beneath the tiny
artificial sun, the two boys playing at the pool's edge. He
went across and knelt beside her chair. "How are you?" he
asked, kissing her, then searching her eyes for some sign of
difference. "I'm
fine, love. Really. IVe never felt better." She laughed, and for
a moment there really did seem nothing wrong, nothing intrinsically
different about her. Her skull was shaved, yes, but otherwise she
seemed her normal self—perhaps even bubblier than usual.
"They're going to give me some injections to speed up hair
growth. In the meantime I've been given the most delightful selection
of wigs. I've spent the whole morning just trying out different
colors and styles." He
smiled bleakly. "You're sure you're okay?" She
nodded. "Really. And the boys too." But now, in her eyes,
there was the faintest intimation that she understood what they had
done. "Don't. . ." she said softly, seeing the pain
in his eyes. "It's better than having you dead. Much better." He
nodded and smiled, as much to reassure himself as her. Then, after
kissing her again, he went and sat with the boys at the poolside, not
fussed by the fact that their small hands left dark, damp patches on
his silks, delighted simply to see them again. Robert,
the eldest, was babbling happily to his father, showing him the new
scar beneath his ear where the input socket sat, more proud than
fearful of its meaning. "Just wait till the other boys see
this," he said. "I betcha they'll all want one! And the
doctor says I could have a special unit put in so's I can see all the
vids direct." The youngster looked away, laughing, then launched
himself into the pool, not seeing the strange look of unease that
crossed his father's face. "Maybe
. . ." Kennedy said to himself, hugging his youngest boy's head
against his leg. But his heart was strangely heavy and, for the first
time in his life, he was uncertain. OLD
DARKNESS stretched sinuously at the bottom of his tank, his great
eyes closed, his long, gray-green tentacles coiling lazily in sleep.
About the tank, a scattering of rock and plant gave the huge,
glass-walled enclosure a false air of normality, the look of some
giant display case. But things were far from normal here. Within the
tough, reinforced layers of ice, the water was kept at a pressure
that would crush a frailer, human form like powdered clay. Nearby,
looking into the tank at the vastness of the sleeping leviathan, Kim
drifted, suspended in the water, his thoughts dark. To his right,
some twenty ch'i distant, was Rebecca, her hands pressed tight
against the outer glass. Behind
them, the early morning sunlight filtered down through the shadowed
outline of the City overhead, forming broad shafts of gold in the
pale blue water, while below them the endless depths stretched down,
into dark, unseen realms of perfect blackness. "He's
beautiful," Rebecca said, her eyes, half glimpsed behind the
face-plate of her mask, gleaming with a strange delight. "So
strong and graceful, don't you think?" Kim
half turned in the water, moving back, away from the menace of the
slumbering form. Powerful it was, and strong. But beautiful? He
turned, looking back at it, then shook his head. No, even in sleep,
Old Darkness was inimical. A deadly, hostile thing, lacking all
warmth, all sympathy with human life. Looking
at it, at the dark, repulsive bulk of it, he felt the deep stirrings
of unease. Inimical it was, and yet connected. The first time he had
seen the creature he had recognized it, but here, alone in the water
with the beast, that feeling was much stronger. Old Darkness ... it
was aptly named, for the light of intelligence, of love or
connectedness, had never touched this creature. It was a thing of
nightmare. And yet... He
shuddered, then forced himself to formulate the thought. It was as if
he were staring back at himself. Or not himself exactly, but a part
of him: that part that was forever hidden from the light. Here, in
the figure of Old Darkness, it was given solid form, cold and
gargantuan. Its
hideous, he thought, and yet the thing exists. It has a
purpose in the scheme of things. Like darkness itself, it
exists because, without it, there would be no light, no warmth.
Because, without it, there would be nothing. "What
does it eat?" Rebecca's
laughter came ringing through the earphones of his mask. "Anything
we give it," she answered, turning toward him, smiling through
her mask. "The deep survey teams bring it back tidbits from the
deep. Strange things with glowing eyes and spiny fins, bloated things
with heavy, scaly bodies and huge, hinged mouths." Again
he shuddered, imagining it down there in its natural element, and
wondered whether it was like that in the deepest recesses of the
mind; whether there were creatures there like Old Darkness, vast
leviathans of the imagination, gliding silently, dark against the
darkness, their long tentacles coiling and uncoiling as they preyed
upon the deformed progeny of the undermind. "Seen
enough?" Rebecca asked, kicking up toward him, her right hand
trailing lightly along the surface of the glass. He
nodded. Enough for thirty lifetimes. "You're right," he
said. "In a strange way he is beautiful. But frightening too." For a
moment she was close, beside him in the water, her hand on
his ami. "Maybe that's what beauty is. Something that
frightens us." And then she was gone, moving up, past him,
toward the hatch, some fifty ch'i above. REBECCA
SHOWERED and dressed, then came through to where Kim sat on the bench
in the men's room, cradling a bulb of ch'a between his cupped
hands. It was quite early—not yet nine—and they were
alone there in the big, echoing room. "Well?"
she said, sitting on the bench across from him. "How's it
going?" Kim
smiled. "Fine," he said. "Bonnet's a bit of a pain.
Schram too. He can't keep his nose out of things, can he? Whatever I
do, he has to know about it. But I've known worse." She
nodded thoughtfully. "You and I both." "Yes
. . ." For a moment he looked at her, realizing how lonely he
had been, how pleased to see her familiar face. But it was more than
that. They had come from the darkness of the Clay, he and she; had
struggled to make their way in this world of light, failing once and
yet surviving. Coming through. They both knew what it was to be a
"thing," owned bone, blood, and flesh by another, their
very existence subject to the whims of petty men. And that had formed
them, just as much as their experience of the Clay. Yes, and made
them different, separate from the rest. Physically and mentally
different. "Do
you ever think of those times?" he asked quietly. "You
know, back in Rehabilitation?" "Sometimes."
She looked down. "Do you remember the bird?" He
nodded. After Luke had defied them—after they had taken him
away that first time—the powers-that-be had given the four of
them that remained a bird. A strange, artificial thing, he realized
now. Something made, not born. A product of GenSyn's labs. The
bird's eyes had been amber, the pupils black. It had gazed into the
far distance, proudly, arrogantly, barely deigning to acknowledge
their presence there outside its cage. Strong, three-toed claws had
gripped the metal perch, the talons stretching and tightening as if
impatient. And when it had spread its wings, the vivid emerald
feathers unfolding like twin fans, it had seemed a gesture of
dismissal. Kim
shuddered, remembering that first moment. Will, like himself, had
thought it beautiful, and Deio had likened it to a song made flesh.
Only Rebecca had not been moved by it. "It's too bright,"
she had said, and he had turned, staring at the bird, wondering how
anything could be "too bright." From
that day on, Will had been obsessed. Each morning, the big North
European lad had fed the bird, talking to it through the bars of its
cage. And
each night he had pressed close to the cage, whispering to it. Always
the same. Four lines of poetry in the ancient guttural tongue of his
part of the Clay. Closing his eyes, Kim could still hear him saying
it, even now, four years on. Mit
alien Augen sieht die Kreatur das offene. Nur unsere Augen sind wie
umgekehrt und ganz un sie gestellt als Fallen, rings um ihren Freien
Ausgang. The
words had moved him, thrilled him, long before Will had told him what
they meant. \ With
all its eyes the creature-world beholds the open. But our
eyes, as though reversed, encircle it on every side, like
traps set round its unobstructed path to freedom. So it
was, for all of them, bird and Clay alike. And then Luke had died.
Suddenly, awfully. Will
had been devastated. Kim remembered that too. Remembered the sight of
him sitting on Luke's empty bed, still, dreadfully still, hunched
into himself, his big, changeling's body forced into a much smaller
area than it was used to, as if he was trying to fit himself into
Luke's skin, into his smaller, subtler form. Kim
looked up, his eyes moist. Rebecca was watching him, her eyes wide,
as if she too saw what he saw. "Why did he do it, Kim?" she
asked. "I thought he loved the bird?" He
shrugged, but the memory was so strong, so vivid, it was as if he
could see it there before him. The
bird lay at the bottom of its cage, its golden eyes dulled, unseeing,
its soft neck broken. Emerald wing feathers littered the floor beside
the damaged cage, evidence of a struggle, while in a chair nearby sat
Will, dull-eyed yet breathing, his hands resting loosely in his lap. "I
don't know," he said, the image slowly fading. But it was
untrue. He knew why Will had killed the bird. She
came close, crouching beside him, looking up into his face. There
were tears in her eyes now, pain in the lines of her mouth. "I
never understood it. Never. Luke, Will, Deio . . . there was no
reason for their deaths. No point." "No,"
he said, putting his hand over hers comfortingly. "It was
awful." He shivered, the pain raw in him, as if it had been
yesterday. "You know, I've blanked it out since then. I couldn't
live with it. Couldn't face it until now. I feel guilty, you know
that, Becky? Guilty that I survived and they didn't." "Yes,"
she said, looking up at him again, grateful that he had said it, her
hand squeezing his gently. "I know. I understand." "Yes
. . ." He wiped a tear away, then stood, pulling her up, holding
her a moment. "But here we are, neh? We came through." Her
dark eyes stared back at him, momentarily intense, looking through
the surface of him, it seemed, into the raw darkness beyond. "We
did, didn't we?" she said quietly, resting her head on his
shoulder. He felt the shudder that ran through her, the warmth of her
lips as they gently brushed his neck. She
moved back, away from him, offering him a small, apologetic smile.
"What are you doing tonight?" "Tonight?"
He shrugged. "My shift ends at eight, but after that, nothing.
Why?" Her
smile broadened. "We're having a party, that's why. Election
night, and all that. Why don't you come? It won't start until ten.
You could pick me up then if you like. It should be fun." He
stared at her a moment, thinking once more how different she was, how
assured this older Rebecca was, then nodded, smiling back at her. "Why
not?" ALL
day, right across City America, people had been voting to send
Representatives to the newly reopened House. Almost a tenth of the
seats were up for grabs in this round and there were already signs
that the old status quo was about to be shaken. In Miami central
stack a huge MedFac multiboard filled one end of the crowded, buzzing
Main. Below it, more than twenty thousand people were packed in,
staring up at the eighteen large screens. The scenes on most differed
little from that in Miami. Large crowds jostled noisily beneath a
thick mass of banners, and, from time to time, a huge cheer would go
up as another local stack declared. Over
each screen was the name of the Hsien being contested, and at the
bottom, superimposed on the screen, was a list of candidates and the
number of votes polled for each. As the evening drew on these figures
built up, and as they did the excitement in the crowd increased
accordingly. Change was in the air. Two
central screens showed something different. On the left was a map of
City North America, its distinctive, lopsided face divided up into
the four hundred and seventy-six Representative districts, colored by
party. To its right was a pie chart showing the relative strengths of
the seven parties that currently dominated North American politics.
Largest of these by far was the Reformers, who held eighty-seven
seats. But all eyes were on Kennedy's New Republicans, who had begun
the contest without a single seat in the old House and had won thirty
in the first round of voting. The
campaign had been harder and, in some ways, dirtier than anyone could
remember. Early on, Kennedy had declared that he would not put up
candidates for the three seats held by Evolutionist incumbents. It
was an unexpected but greatly popular move. Though the Evolutionists
were a long-established party, they were a steadily diminishing
power, and the New Republicans could have won the seats. Within a
week, however, Evolutionist candidates for nine of the remaining
contestable seats had withdrawn and urged their supporters to vote
for New Republican candidates. The
Reformers had hit back hard. Questioning the reliability of the
"new alliance," they had launched a campaign to
discredit Joel Hay, the Evolutionist leader, using material they'd
been holding for some time. It was vile stuff that struck at Hay's
most intimate behavior. Even so, for a day or two Hay fought back.
Then, realizing the damage he was doing to his party, he announced
his resignation. There
was jubilation in the Reformer camp, but, only a day later, their
smiles turned to frowns as Kennedy, who had maintained a strict
silence on the matter, now stepped forward to announce a formal
merger of the two parties under his own leadership. The press
conference, with New Republican and Evolutionist candidates lined up
behind Kennedy as he made his speech, went out worldwide. Overnight,
without the need for an election, the New Republicans had become City
America's third largest power, with forty-two seats. It had
not ended there. The next day the campaign against Carl Fisher had
begun in earnest with the appearance on a nationwide network of two
of Fisher's school friends, accusing him of homosexuality and a whole
string of other perversions. Fisher, shaken and angry, had reacted
with an unexpected bluntness that had done him no harm. "Let
them say it again to me, face to face, and I'll bust their jaws!" Overnight
it became his campaign slogan. Carl "Jaw-Buster" Fisher
went up five points in the polls, while Carver, the Reformer
incumbent, found himself the butt of a thousand cartoons, all
depicting him rubbing at a loosened jaw. Few, looking at the
athletically built and handsome Fisher, paid attention to the
accusations. He was pictured everywhere, surrounded by good-looking
women, punching a bag, knocking back a glass of beer after exercise.
Carver, older, flabbier, showed poorly by comparison. Reformer
claims of inexperience and political naivete carried little weight,
it seemed. Change was in the air, and the young men of the New
Republican and Evolutionist Party, the NREP, were an attractive
alternative to the old style Representative people had grown
accustomed to. But it wasn't only image. Kennedy picked his
candidates well. These new young men were the very cream of the
emergent ruling caste; the sons of powerful men and bred to power
themselves. They were well educated and quick in argument. And
backing them up was an elite of
political researchers and writers attracted by the promise of power.
Reformer money couldn't buy such backing, try as it did. As the
night drew toward its climax, it grew clear that a minor political
sensation was happening. With five seats still to be settled, the
Reformer vote was in tatters. The NREP had gained nineteen districts.
They needed only three of the four remaining Reformer-held seats to
become the second biggest party in North America, passing the On
Leong and the Democrats. In Carl Fisher's campaign suite, the Party
leaders gathered, watching the EduVoc channel, excitement like wine
in their blood. At the center of this small, select group, Michael
Lever leaned forward in his wheelchair and pointed at the screen. "Who's
he?" To the
left of the picture, behind Greg Stewart, their candidate for Denver
Hsien, stood a gaunt-faced, steely-eyed young man, some inches
taller than Stewart. He was shaven-headed and had the look of a paid
assassin. Kennedy
bent down beside Michael, speaking softly to him. "That's a guy
named Horton. Calls himself Meltdown." Michael
narrowed his eyes, then nodded. Now that Kennedy had given him a
name, he recognized him. "He was incarcerated, right? I never
met him but I heard about it. He was on a hunger strike, wasn't he?" Kennedy
nodded. "That's right. His father is a friend of your father." "And
he's working for us now?" "We've
come to an agreement, let's say. They'll be working closely with us
from now on." Michael
frowned. He wasn't sure about this. When Wu Shih had rounded them all
up—that evening of the Thanksgiving Ball—they had all
been outraged, but he saw now how dangerous the "Sons" had
been. He had wanted change, but not by such means as some of them had
subsequently proposed. Their tactics were the same as thpse that had
killed Bryn. And he wanted no more of that. "Are
you sure we want this?" he asked quietly. Kennedy
smiled. "I'm sure, Michael. And listen, I know what I'm
doing. We're in charge, not them. They need us, so they play
by our rules." "And
if they don't?" "They
will. Don't worry." Kennedy
straightened up. On the screen there was news from two of the last
five seats to declare. They had won Mexico City. Vancouver had stayed
On Leong. Parker,
standing behind Michael, laughed. "So not a rout, then!" Michael
half turned and looked up at him. "No. And it'll be harder next
time. They're learning from us all the time. There'll be new
candidates next time around. Younger men. And they'll be tailoring
their campaigns to look like ours. WeVe had it easy so far. They'll
not be so arrogant in the future." "And
we will?" There
was a faint hint of annoyance in Parker's voice, and a number of
people were looking down at Michael strangely, as if he were an
uninvited guest. But Kennedy spoke up, calling for order. "Michael's
right. First time out we got the sympathy vote. This time we took
them by surprise. They'd written off our first-round victories as a
sentimental anomaly—a flash in the pan. But from now on they'll
be on their guard. As Michael says, they'll change their ways. Same
old policies, but new ways of presenting them. New faces too. Maybe
even men who might have served us well. They'll be buying heavily." He
paused and looked around. The room had gone quiet. Only the sound
from the screen went on. They were all watching Kennedy now as he
stood at Michael's side, his hand on the invalid's shoulder. "But
we're not going to be stopped. The mood for change is genuine, and
change itself is long overdue. It'll be harder to win in the future,
and the contest will be much closer than tonight. But we'll win. And
we'll keep on winning, because those we oppose are a dead force—an
old, stinking corpse. WeVe got to show people that. But it'll get
harder to do, I warn you, because the harder we push the more devious
they'll get, the more disguises they'll use." Again
Kennedy stopped and looked around, nodding slowly. "We'll strip
them naked, neh? To the bone. . ," And then he laughed^ showing
his strong white teeth, and the suite was suddenly full of laughter.
From the far side of the room came the sound of popping
corks, and on the screen the news that they had won the last
three seats. Michael
looked up at Kennedy. "And what of us, Joe? Will we be
young forever? Will no one strip us bare?" He
said it softly, so that it carried no farther than Kennedy. For a
moment Kennedy seemed not to have heard, then he looked down at
Michael, his face different, more serious, perhaps more tired than
Michael had ever seen it, and nodded. "To the bone." And
his eyes, so dark and normally so strong, seemed filled with the pain
and certainty of his words. As if he saw and knew. KIM
SAT at a table in the restaurant, his empty ch'a bowl set to one
side, the letter he had been writing held loosely in his left hand as
he read it through a second time. It was
an hour since he'd come off shift and he really ought to have gone
back to his rooms to shower and change, but he had put off writing to
Jelka far too long now. So first this. Even if he had to start it all
again tomorrow, trying to get the words down right. To say all those
things that kept bubbling up from deep within. The
restaurant was filling up. Already the tables nearest Kim were full,
the talk alive with the news of what was happening in City America,
but Kim's attention was elsewhere, thinking of Jelka out on Titan. In
a year she would be on Mars, heading back in toward Chung Kuo. If he
sent the letter there, it might reach her quicker, perhaps, than
trying to get a message out to Titan in time. But first he had to get
it right. He sat
back, thinking suddenly of Rebecca, and of that moment in the
changing rooms earlier. He had said nothing of that to Jelka. Nothing
of what he'd felt; of the pain he'd suffered at the reopening of that
wound . . . nor of the catharsis. But why? Maybe
it was because it confused things. Because it would give her the
wrong idea. He huffed, annoyed at himself, his fingers going to the
pulsing torque about his neck, then, flipping back to the start of
the letter, he began to read it through once more. "Excuse
me . . ." The
voice was soft-spoken, very polite. Kim looked up. A tall Han
was standing there, holding a tray, his head slightly bowed.
The man smiled, the smile vaguely reminiscent of T'ai Cho, then
tilted his head, indicating the empty seat across from Kim. "Would
you mind?" Kim
shook his head, smiling back at the man. "No. Please do ... I'll
be going in a while, anyway." "Ah
. . ." The Han bowed again, then began to set out his meal. "It
is very kind of you. Some people, they. . ." He stopped, his
face suddenly apologetic. "Forgive me. Am I disturbing you?" Kim
laughed, then folded the letter and slipped it into his pocket. "Not
at all. Kim Ward," he said, offering his hand across the table. "Tuan
Wen-ch'ang," the Han answered, bowing a third time. He took
Kim's hand, shaking it vigorously. "I note we are both employed
by the great SimFic corporation, and yet I have not seen you here
before." Kim
nodded, noting for the first time the double-helix logo on the
shoulder of the Han's light-green tunic. "That's not
surprising," he answered. "I haven't been here long, and
I've spent most of my time in the lab." "Ah
. . ." Again the Han smiled. Again the smile reminded Kim of his
old tutor and guardian, T'ai Cho. "Where
do you come from, originally?" Kim asked, strangely drawn to the
man. "Originally?"
The Han laughed, showing slightly imperfect teeth. Again that was
like T'ai Cho, and the thought of it made Kim realize that he had not
contacted his old friend since he had been at Sohm Abyss. "Originally
my clan is from Ning Hsia, in the northwest. We are Hui, you
understand. Not Han." Again he laughed. A pleasant, warming
sound. "As for me, I was born on Mars. In Tien Men K'ou City, in
the south. My clan were settled there, you understand, after the
Third Colonial War. We helped build that City. That and many others." "Mars
. . ." Kim nodded, his thoughts briefly returning to the letter
and to Jelka. "It must be wonderful." Tuan
Wen-ch'ang shrugged. "Sometimes, yes. But mostly it is a
bleak and desolate place. Life is hard there. Very hard. Here
. . ." He laughed. "Well, let us say that life is much
easier here. One need not fear the cold, for instance." "No,"
Kim said absently, then, suddenly realizing what time it was, he
leaned forward across the table. "Look, Tuan Wen-ch'ang. I'd
like to talk more to you—it has been pleasant, most pleasant—
but right now I have to go or I'll be late. There's someone I
promised to meet." "Of
course." Tuan Wen-ch'ang stood, bowing low> as if to someone
high above him in status, then looked back at Kim, smiling his
imperfect smile. "I am here most nights, Shth Ward. If you see
me, come and sit with me. It is good to talk, neh?" "Very
good," said Kim, smiling, and with a final shake of the tall
Hui's hands, he left, stopping only at the door to glance back at the
man, reminded, even in the way the tall Hui sat, crouched forward
over his food, of T'ai Cho. TUAN
wen-ch'ang sat there a moment, waiting, watching the reflection in
the glass beyond the table. He saw the boy turn and look across at
him, then turn back, hurrying to his appointment. Tuan waited a
second, then, leaving the untouched plate of food, made his way
quickly to the door on the far side of the restaurant—the door
Ward hadn't taken. So far
so good, he thought, taking the cast from his mouth, and slipping the
false teeth into his pocket. It had been easy, winning the boy's
trust. The softness of his voice, the simple mimicry of the boy's
friend, had been enough. And the rest? Tuan Wen-ch'ang jabbed at the
buttons of the interlevel elevator, then, as the doors slid back,
went inside, a cold, malicious smile lighting his features. The rest
was simple. wu
SHIH sat back and breathed in deeply, pleased with the way things had
gone. The "State of the Parties" print-up was on the
screen, and he looked at it with a sense of deep satisfaction.
Reformers 94
NREP 65
On Leong 53
Democrats 42
Hop Sing 22
Innovators IO
Ying On 4
In the
last month Kennedy had come from almost nowhere to become the most
important man in North American politics. Wu Shih had read the
situation perfectly and had acted in good time. Now he might
congratulate himself. Li Yuan, he knew, would be delighted. Unlike
the Reformers and the Democrats, Kennedy was for Population Controls.
His success would soften the others' attitudes, and that would mean
that things would go much easier in the House. And that was good. Young
men, he thought. They think all things are new. Laughing,
he stood up and walked across to where he had left the draft of the
new Edict he had been working on. As if history were myth and men
could change their natures. Again he laughed, and this time a
servant came to the door at the far end of his suite, inquiring
dumbly if there were anything he needed, but Wu Shih waved him away. "We
are bom old," he said softly to himself, picking up the
corriset. "And perhaps that is bad. We do not hope for things
the way these young men do." It was
true. He thought them naive, even a touch ridiculous at times. But he
admired their hope, their optimism, their energy. Yes, the
last above all. Confucianism had never really touched them here in
North America. Elsewhere it had thrived, like some strange
debilitating bacillus, but in North America it had been grafted on
superficially. Like a mask, ready to be removed at any moment. Which
made them dangerous, though not uncontrollable. A
third time he laughed, thinking of what Li Yuan planned for them. To
make their desire for change the vehicle for stasis, that was a
stroke of genius! It was
crude as yet, and the tests were not yet complete, but it promised
much. If this worked then nothing was beyond them. Why, they might
yet spread out and take the stars. He
looked at the comset and smiled knowingly. The best designs were
always the simplest, the most direct. Like a well-glazed dish, they
pleased the eye immediately, yet satisfied more deeply with each
reacquaintance. So with this. Wu
Shih sat again, his smile widening. Americans! He'd wire them all! it was
fifteen minutes after midnight when, beneath a barrage of bright
lights, the leader of the New Republican and Evolutionist Party,
Representative Joseph Kennedy, emerged from the count, smiling and
waving to the crowds gathered in the Main below. Behind him, in the
long, high-ceilinged room, he had left a shocked and somber group of
people gathered about the losing Reformer candidate. Outside,
however, beneath banners and awnings that stretched across the wide
Main, there was no doubt of the popularity of the NREP's success. At
the first sight of Kennedy a great roar of approval and delight went
up from the crowd. To the
far right of the balcony, Kennedy's closest associates looked on
happily. Like the crowd below, they cheered and clapped
enthusiastically, carried away by the emotion of the moment. Kennedy
leaned over, looking out, shielding his eyes with one hand, the other
arm about the shoulders of his pretty wife, Jean. Turning to his
friends, he gestured for them to come across and share the spotlight.
As the young men slowly made their way to him, Fisher pushing Michael
in his wheelchair, a huge cheer went up, louder than the first.
Kennedy greeted each in turn, introducing each to the masses below,
hugging each of them to him delightedly. They
smiled, conscious of the floating cameras overhead catching every
word, every nuance of expression. They had grown accustomed to it
these past few weeks; even so, it wasn't easy, not knowing what was
to come. As Michael turned his chair, he saw how Kennedy's wife moved
back, out of the way, as if she understood. This
was the moment when they burned their bridges. The moment when they
started something new. Michael eased his wheelchair back, watching as
Kennedy stepped forward and, putting out a hand, indicated to the
crowd below that he wanted to speak. On huge
screens the length of Main, the cameras focused on his tall,
handsome figure, panning in on his by-now-familiar features. For a
moment the buzz continued, then, slowly, it subsided. Kennedy looked
about him, smiling, then leaned toward the crowd. "We
are all, here in this great hall, Americans. And proud to be
Americans. And Carl Fisher, our new Representative for Boston, is a
fine American, from a fine old American family." There
was a huge roar of approval at that. Kennedy waited for it to
subside, then carried on. "Today,
however, we did much more than elect a good candidate, though Carl
Fisher is certainly that. Today we launched a new campaign. A new
era. A new sense of ourselves as a people." The
cheering went on, beneath Kennedy's voice, greeting every sentence,
growing more and more enthusiastic by the moment as the crowd worked
itself up. Yes, and in tens of millions of households it will be
the same, Michael thought, looking up at Kennedy. They know
some' thing is happening here. And they expect something of him.
Something. . . different. Kennedy
put his right hand up to his brow, sweeping back his hair with that
characteristic gesture of his. "It might seem a small start,"
he said quietly. "A mere sixty-five seats in the House. But
there is still another round of voting. There are still one hundred
and eighty-six seats to be contested next month. And that's enough.
Enough, if we can take a good number of them, to give us a firm
foothold in government—to allow us to wield the kind of
influence we need if we're to bring effective change to this great
City of ours." For a
moment the cheering was deafening. Kennedy leaned forward again,
raising a hand for silence. "Carl
Fisher, your candidate, elected by you here tonight, is more than
just another Representative, however. He is one of the first of a new
breed of men—good, committed young men—who are set to
change the face of politics on this continent. Men who will kick out
the old gang and their tired old ways. Men who pledge themselves to
get rid of the wheeling and the dealing, the vested interests and the
power groupings, and return us to a sense of our greatness as a
people." Kennedy
smiled and, for the briefest moment, looked up into the
overhead camera, as if he could see Wu Shih and the Old Men
looking on. "This
is our time," he said, a sudden power in his voice. "A new
time. Time for us all to realize what was once great about our
country. What was truly great about America. It's time for us to call
it all back. To have back what weVe been denied all these years. To
grasp it and hold it and use it. For America. As Americans." He
paused, getting his breath. What he had just said had not been
uttered publicly before. Indeed, his words had been close to treason.
But no one made to gainsay him. He put out a hand, leaning out over
the balcony, looking about him at the great mass of people below. The
tension was palpable. When he paused this time he could feel all of
them there below him, waiting for his words, powered, just as he was
powered at that moment, by the great tidal flow of his rhetoric. "Americans,"
he said simply, and felt the great ripple of emotion that the word
conjured up roll out from him and roll back like a giant wave. "We
are Americans." He
stood there silently a moment, then raised both of his arms, palms
open, accepting the wild applause from below. Michael,
watching from his side, felt that great tide of wild emotion sweep
over him, and found himself crying suddenly, in love with the man;
with his sheer strength and vitality, and with the invigorating
spirit of change he had brought to them all. Change.
It was coming. At last, after all these years, it was coming. And
nothing—absolutely nothing—could stop them now. KIM
STOOD at the window, staring out across the bright-lit center of Sohm
Abyss, the music pounding in his head, merging, it seemed, with the
steady pounding of his heart. It was late and the celebrations were
growing wilder by the moment. There was a sense of exhilaration in
the air, a feeling that change had come at last, that a new age lay
ahead for everyone.' For
once he had joined in with the party mood, accepting the drink his
host—a plump, middle-aged Han he had met briefly that first
night—had offered him. Three refills later he was feeling
light- headed,
but also curiously lucid. Not that it mattered how he felt. Not now.
Campbell's "decree" had come two hours back, announcing
that tomorrow was to be a day of rest for all SimFic employees. In
celebration of that evening's momentous events. Kim
smiled, staring out through his reflection at the great web of
walkways that linked the outer hexagon of walls to the spirelike
inner tower, their graceful arcs beaded with lights, then turned
fractionally, sensing a movement just behind him. In the glass a face
appeared beside his own, the head overlarge, the eyes slightly too
big. A Claybom face. A moment later he felt a warmth against his back
and, closing his eyes, breathed in the scent of jasmine. "Becky.
. ." "I
wondered where you'd got to," she said, her mouth close against
his ear. "Don't you want to dance?" "I'm
tired," he said, turning his head so that she could hear him
above the music, her face only a hand's length from his own. "I
thought I might go soon." "Tired?
You tired?" She smiled, her eyes searching his own. "It's
early yet. Besides, you heard what Campbell said." "I
know, but..." "Here."
She took his left hand, then pressed something small into his palm. "What's
this?" "Something
to help you loosen up. Go on. Just pop it in your mouth." He
stared at the tiny blue tablet a moment, then shook his head.
"Thanks, but..." She
hesitated, then took it back from him. "Okay. But stay a little
longer, neh? Another hour. I mean, what's the harm?" "No
harm," he said, mirroring her smile. "But no drugs, eh? I
like to be in control." "I
know." She leaned close, kissing his cheek, then reached down
and took his hand. "I remember well." They
danced. For a while he lost himself in the music and the rhythm, the
flashing play of lights. Bodies crowded the center of the floor,
moving in a strange abandonment on every side, like particles in
violent motion. Later,
in a moment of lucidity, of sudden silence, he looked about him and
found that Rebecca had gone. He was about to go and look for her,
when she reappeared, two small, porcelain ch'a bowls held out
before her. "What's
this?" Kim asked, sniffing at the faintly opalescent liquid. "It's
ch'a," she said, laughing. "What did you think it
was? I thought you needed something to sober you up a bit before you
went." "Ah.
. ." He let himself be turned about and led toward a small table
in the far corner of the room. But even as they made their way
across, the music began again, the people all about them erupting in
a frenzy of sudden activity. He
squeezed through, holding the bowl up above his head, then sat
unsteadily. Setting the bowl down, he leaned toward her. "I
think IVe spilled some." "Never
mind," she said, moving around until she sat beside him on the
heavily padded sofa. "Here, have some of mine." He
watched her pour some of the sweet-scented ch'a into his bowl,
then, encouraged by her, lifted the bowl and drained it at a go. "Good,"
she said. "You'll feel better for that." "It's
good," he said, looking past her, his voice raised to combat the
assault of the music, the squeals and shouts of the celebrants. "I
don't think I've ever . . ." He
stopped, sitting back, then put his hand up to his throat. "What's
the matter?" she asked, concerned. "I.
. ." He felt the bile rise in his throat and swallowed hard. For
a moment he had felt nauseous, as if he'd eaten well and then someone
had gone and punched him in the stomach. "Are
you all right?" she said, her hand resting lightly on his thigh.
"Maybe you shouldn't have drained the bowl like that." "Maybe,"
he said, but the nausea was passing, a strange feeling of euphoria
washing over him. "I. . ." He laughed. "You know,
Becky, I think I'm drunk. I think . . ." She
put a finger to his lips, silencing him, then leaned close, speaking
to his ear once more. "I think I should get you home, that's
what I think." He
nodded. Home. Yes, but where was that? "Come
on," she said, pulling him to his feet, then turning him to
face her, her smile strange, enigmatic. "Now. While you
can still walk." he
woke, feeling strange, disoriented, a bitter taste in his mouth, the
scent of jasmine in his nostrils. It was dark where he lay. Whatever
light there was came from a doorway at the far end of the room, to
his right, while from beyond it came the sound of running water, the
hiss of steam. He
turned his head; too fast, it seemed, for the pain that shot from the
surface of his eyes to the back of his skull was fierce, as if a
spike had been driven through his head. He groaned and closed his
eyes, wondering what in the gods' names he had done to himself. Not my
room, he thought. This isn't my room. He made to grasp the
thought and push at it, but his mind refused to push. The thought
slipped from him and was gone. Dead, came the thought. It
feels like I've died and gone to hell. "Kim?" He
opened his eyes, slowly this time, turning his head a fraction at a
time, until he could see where the voice had come from. Rebecca
was standing in the open doorway, the light behind her. A towel was
draped loosely about her shoulders, but otherwise she was naked. In
the half-light he could see a thousand tiny beads of water covering
her flank, her breasts, the soft curve of her upper thigh. "Are
you awake?" He
made to answer, but his mouth was dry, his lips strangely numb. He
groaned and closed his eyes, but he could still see her, standing
there, her breasts small but prominent in the half-light, the nipples
stiff. For a
while there was nothing, only silence; a silence that before had been
filled with the sound of running water, the hiss of steam. Then,
suddenly, he sensed a presence beside him on the bed, felt a small,
cool hand brush his cheek. Gently, solicitously. The voice, when it
came, was soft, like the touch of the hand. It lulled him. "I
didn't realize you'd drunk so much, my love. I'd have not given you
it if I'd known." The
words passed him by. He felt himself gathered up, focused, in
the touch of her hand against his cheek, the sweetly perfianed scent
of her. "Here,"
she said, lifting his head gently. He
felt something small and hard being pressed between his lips. A
moment later, he felt the smooth edge of a glass against his lips. He
swallowed reflexively, letting the cold, clear water wash the tablet
down. "There,"
she said, letting his head fall back. "You'll be all right in a
while." He lay
there for a time, thoughtless almost, the warmth of her hand against
his chest comforting, reassuring him. And then, slowly, very slowly,
like waves lapping gently against the sand, thought returned to him. The
tablet. She had given him the tablet. He
opened his eyes, looking up at her, yet even as he did, the nausea
returned, stronger than before, making him retch. He
turned his head, leaning out, away from the bed, as the spasms came,
unable to help himself, the bile filling his throat, choking him
almost. Rebecca
moved back sharply, turning from him, hiding her anger, her momentary
disgust, listening to him retch. Then she turned back. "I'm
sorry," she said, collecting herself, one hand combing through
her short dark hair. "It's all my fault. I should have known." "Known?"
He stared at her, not understanding. There
was the strong, tart smell of sickness in the room. She
stood, looking back at him from the foot of the bed, then forced
herself to smile. But it was a faint, halfhearted smile. "It
doesn't matter. Look. Let's get you cleaned up. You can shower if you
want. I'll sort this out." Kim
sat up, wiping at his mouth. "I'd better go. I. . ." He
stopped, staring at her, mesmerized, it seemed, by her naked form, as
if he had not noticed it before that moment. He
looked down, suddenly embarrassed, but she had seen the movement in
his eyes, the uncertainty in his face. Letting
the towel fall from her shoulders, she moved up, onto the
end of the bed, moving toward him slowly, crawling on all
fours, her breasts swinging gently beneath her, her eyes watching him
all the while. "Becky
. . ." he said, the sound of it strange, almost pained, but it
was too late. His need betrayed itself. She leaned over him, slowly
unlacing his tunic. "It's
all right," she said softly, smiling down at him, her fingers
caressing the smooth warmth of his chest. "You're home now, my
love. Home." CHAPTER
TWENTY
Total
War 0UT
OVER THE GREAT northern ocean a storm was gathering. Air moistened
and made lighter by the unseasonable heat began to rise rapidly,
leaving behind it a low-pressure area that drew more air in along the
surface of the ocean. That air in turn was moistened and warmed,
rising in a great swirling chimney, spiraling in a counterclockwise
direction, heading east on the North Atlantic Current, toward the
great walled shores of City Europe. From
high above Chung Kuo, a satellite eye noted the buildup of cloud, the
ominous shape, and passed impersonal warnings down to its land-based
station. There, senior officials of the Ta Ssu Nung, the
Superintendency of Agriculture, studied the computer-enhanced
infrared images and consulted among themselves. It was a big storm,
true, even at this stage, but as yet there was no need for alarm. The
front was some two and a half thousand li out, approaching the
Biscay Abyssal Plain, and the computer prediction of its course
showed that it would in all probability strike the great uncharted
island to the west of the Western Isle. There was an objection to
this prediction. A very junior official suggested, in the most humble
terms, that the area of high pressure moving slowly down from Iceland
might push the great storm south. At the same time, a second area of
high pressure, over the Iberian Peninsula, was moving north. The
effect of this might be to channel the storm into a narrow
corridor between the two—a corridor of moist, hot air
that would serve only to feed the hurricane and increase its fury. In
the magnificently decorated offices of the Ta Ssu Nung there
was a moment's consultation among the senior officials and then a
decision was made. If the area of high pressure currently over
Iceland were to move south, the cold air that the storm would
entrain on its western flank might indeed add fuel to the developing
storm, but it would also induce the low to turn to the northeast,
thereby missing continental Europe. There were nods all around. All
agreed that the storm constituted no threat to the City. In all
likelihood it would spend itself over the uncharted island. And even
if it was forced south, there was little real chance of damage. The
walls of the City were sound, no agricultural regions lay in the path
of the storm, and the sea defenses of the great ports of Brest and
Nantes were adequate. A warning would be sent to the latter if
necessary, but otherwise no action need be taken. There was no need
to involve the T'ang or his staff. Out at
sea, however, the storm was gathering force. Six days of unrelenting
heat had created unprecedented conditions in the North Atlantic.
Moreover, the second area of high pressure, near the Iberian
Peninsula, was beginning to feed warm air into the storm system,
gradually strengthening the jet stream. Like a great mouth feeding
upon the hot, moist air, the great swirl of the hurricane grew,
increasing in speed as it went. And as it moved east, so too did the
area of high pressure over the Icelandic Basin, changing direction,
pushing the storm slowly, inexorably south. IT WAS
six MINUTES to four, and in the dimly lit silence of the corridors
surrounding Ujpest stack, Soucek crouched, surrounded by three
thousand of his men. Fifty ch'i along the corridor, out of
sight beyond the left-hand turn, was the barrier. At this early hour
only two men were manning this, the northwestern entrance to the
i4K's heartland. Beyond the barrier, eighteen thousand of General
Feng's best men slept on, unaware of what the dawn would bring. Soucek
looked about him and smiled, encouraging those nearest. They had
planned long and hard for this, and now it was almost time. Seventeen
hundred li to the west, Visak and four thousand men were
waiting, positioned about the Wo Shih Wo's heartland in Milan Hsien.
Three thousand seven hundred li beyond that, in the corridors
surrounding the Canton of Saragossa, Po Lao and a further three
thousand men waited to infiltrate the heartland of the Yellow
Banners. To the northeast, Lehmann himself led the largest of their
forces, an army of fourteen thousand men, crouched in the corridors
surrounding Metz, ready to take on Fat Wong and the United Bamboo. They
would hit at once. Four armies, taking on the full might of the Hung
Mun at one go, outnumbered eight to one, but with the advantage of
surprise. Surprise, and perfect planning. Communications
to the four heartlands would be cut at fourth bell. Minutes later,
hallucinogenic and disabling drugs—small capsules placed in the
ventilation systems weeks ago—would be pumped into the stacks. At
five minutes past four the first of the false broadcasts would be
made, using the taped voices of their enemies' most trusted men;
broadcasts that would override the local media stations, feeding
deliberately contradictory messages directly into the heartlands. At ten
minutes past, the first of the bombs would go off—the first of
many—spreading chaos and panic throughout the enemy stacks.
Five minutes later, a series of chemical fires would be set off.
Elevators would be shut down, exits blocked. Maximum
disruption, that was Lehmann's aim. Standing there yesterday, after
putting the final touches to the plan, he had turned from the map and
faced them, quoting Sun Tzu: "Speed
is the essence of war. Take advantage of the enemy's un-preparedness;
travel by unexpected routes and strike him where he has taken no
precautions." And so
it was, though the hours to come would tell just how unprepared their
enemies were. Soucek
looked down at the timer on his wrist. Three minutes to. He turned,
giving the signal for his men to put on their masks. Key
men had been bought in their enemies' camps. Men like the two on the
barrier; like the guards to General Feng's private rooms. Already
assassins were going about their work, creeping silently, stealthily
into forbidden rooms. Making it easier. Reducing the odds against
them. Even so, it would be hard. Lehmann had said as much. For this
was no skirmish, no simple test of strength, this was war, total war.
A war for survival. By the end of today things would be different
here below. Changed for all time. Soucek
shivered. And himself? Would he survive this day? Fifteen
seconds... He
raised his arm, tensed, looking about him hawkishly, his whole self
gathered in the gesture, then brought it down sharply, hurling
himself forward, a great wave of men following him down the corridor
toward the barrier. THIRD
OFFICIAL K'UNG sat back in his chair, heaving a sigh of relief. It
had been a tiring night tracking the progress of the storm, worrying
that the high pressure area moving down from Iceland would push it
farther south. But his worst fears seemed not to have materialized.
The Icelandic high had drifted east, and after a worrying three hours
the storm appeared to have stabilized, holding its course. Latest
estimates showed that it would make landfall somewhere out over the
southwestern tip of the Western Isle. K'ung
yawned, then looked about him, glad that he would be going off shift
shortly. All about him his staff had their heads down, making reports
and compiling information. But decisions. . . Well, he was glad he
had not had to make a decision this night. Leaning
forward again, he tapped through to the Ta Ssu Nung"s
office in the Western Isle and gave them the storm warning, quoting
the latest computer predictions for wind strength, sea height, and
time and location of landfall. That done, he stood, stretching his
weary muscles. His relief, Wu, would be here in ten minutes. In the
circumstances he might as well take advantage of his seniority to use
the shower first, while the water was still hot, and grab a bowl of
ch'a at the restaurant. He
looked up at the huge, wall-size chart once more, seeing the great
swirl of the storm, prominent in the upper left-hand corner of the
screen. In the hours since the crisis meeting, the storm had grown
considerably. Estimates of its size now put it at over two hundred
and fifty li from tip to
tip. But it was not so much its size as its direction that had
concerned K'ung. The front of the storm was now only three hundred li
from landfall, moving north-northeast at a rate of a hundred and
forty li an hour. He
went to move away, then stopped. In his tiredness he had almost
forgotten. Brest and Nantes were still on Code B alert. He would need
to give them the all-clear before he went. Wu, certainly, wouldn't
think to check. Seating
himself, K'ung keyed in the security code for the day, then tapped
out the message quickly, holding down both destinations at once. Done,
he thought, not waiting for the acknowledgment. It had been a
hard night. It would be good to shower the tiredness from his bones. FAT
WONG STOOD THERE, staring up at the empty bank of screens, then tried
the keyboard again. Nothing. The board was dead. "What
the fuck is going on?" Wong
Yi-sun turned, looking about him at the men who were crowded into the
compact space of his central control. These were his most trusted
men. His "sons." He studied their familiar faces a moment,
noting the fear—the real fear—in every face, and
understood its source. Word of mouth was that the attack had come on
three fronts; that runners from the Yellow Banners, the Wo Shih Wo,
and the Kuei Chuan were involved. Thousands of men, attacking
with heavy armaments and using gas. But the rumors were patchy,
unconfirmed. With the communications net down and bombs going off all
over the place, it was hard to say just what was happening. All he
knew was that he had woken to find two assassins in his room: men
they had later identified as Yellow Banners chan shui—Three-Finger
Ho's men. There
had been panic when he had first come into the room, but now they
were quiet, watching him expectantly. His children. "Hui
Tsin," he said, addressing his Red Pole, taking control of
things. "I want you to send a dozen of your best runners out to
each front. West, south, and east. They will be our eyes, our ears in
this battle. I want them masked and armed, each squad divided into
six teams of two: one
messenger, one guard. Each guard must be willing to lay down his life
to allow the messenger to get through, you understand?" "Yes,
Master." Hui Tsin bowed and hurried off. Wong turned, facing
another of his men. "Hua
Shang, I want you to get word to Yun Yueh-hui. Tell him that we are
being attacked and that the United Bamboo would welcome help from
their brothers of the Red Gang." "Master.
. ." "Oh,
and Shang . . . Send off a dozen runners, by different routes.
Instruct each one to contact Yun's headquarters by whatever means
they can. Speed is of the essence here." Hua
Shang bowed his head and was gone. Fat Wong turned, facing the
others. They waited, tense, yet almost content now that there were
things to be done, tasks to be accomplished, their faces open to him,
expectant. "Good,"
Wong said, beaming back at them. "You understand, my sons. The
day has come. It is war. So now we fight. Whoever comes against us." LI
CHIN LAY on his back, beneath the silken bedsheets, his eyes, which
had never closed in life, staring sightlessly at the ceiling mosaic.
His face was ash-pale, the pillow beneath his head dark, almost black
with his blood. The
eighteen-year-old, Li Pai Shung, stood there a moment, looking down
at his uncle. He had returned only yesterday, after a year at College
in Strasbourg Hsien, and had spent the night with his uncle and
friends, feasting until the early hours. And now Li Chin was dead,
murdered in his bed. And Li Pai Shung was suddenly 489. Boss of the
great Wo Shih Wo. He
shivered, then turned, summoning the Red Pole across to him. "You
have the men who did this, Yue Chun?" The
big Han bowed to his new master. "We cornered them, Master, only
fifty ch'i from here, but the assassins killed themselves.
Arsenic capsules, it seems." "Ah
. . ." Li Pai Shung looked away, his eyes returning once more to
the tiny stiletto wound at the side of his uncle's neck. "Then
we do not know who sent them." "They
were Fat Wong's men, Master. My lieutenant, Liu Tong, recognized
them." Li Pai
Shung turned, surprised. "Wong Yi-sun?" Then he laughed.
"No. Fat Wong wasn't ready. My honorable uncle was wrong about
many things, but not about that. Wong Yi-sun would never have moved
against us unless the odds were heavily in his favor. Unless he was
certain of victory. No, Yue Chun, this is something else." "General
Feng?" Yue asked, frowning. "It
is possible," Li Pai Shung said, recalling the intense rivalry
there had been with General Feng's I4K on their northeastern borders
over the past year. Possible but unlikely. There was a great deal of
difference, after all, between that kind of ritual muscle-flexing and
all-out war. And there was no doubting that, whatever else was
happening, this was a war. Already the Wo Shih Wo had lost six stacks
and more than three thousand men. He
turned back. Yue Chun was waiting with that perfect patience that
characterized the man. "All
right," Li Pai Shung said finally. "Whoever it is, let's
hit them back. And let's hit them hard." the
corridor ahead was blocked with the bodies of the dead. Here, at the
entrance to the central stack of Budapest Hsien, the i4K had made a
stand. More than a thousand men had died here in the last hour, in
hand-to-hand fighting that was fiercer than anything Soucek had ever
thought to see. He
stood there, getting his breath, while his men brought up the heavy
armaments. Despite this setback, things had gone well for them these
past six hours. The first assault had won them eight of the
twenty-six stacks controlled by the i4K. After that it had been
steady fighting, stack by stack, floor by floor. So
far, Lehmann's tactics had worked perfectly. Prisoners had been
taken, but they'd been bound and drugged, then left in rooms behind
their lines, freeing his own men for the fight. Those enemies that
had continued to resist had been shot out of hand. Where things had
been difficult—where
resistance had been particularly fierce—they had used bombs and
flamethrowers to clear rooms and corridors. Momentum
had been the secret. For four hours they had pressed forward
relentlessly, enclosing their opponents, panicking them, forcing them
to flee or surrender. But now they would have to fight a very
different kind of battle, for now they were on the death ground. This
was the final stack. Here the I4K either fought or ceased to exist as
a brotherhood. The
death ground. . . Soucek shivered, remembering the words Lehmann
had drummed into each of them. The words of the great Sun Tzu. Words
that were more than two and a half thousand years old. In
death ground I could make it evident that there is no chance of
survival. For it is the nature of soldiers to resist when surrounded:
to/ight to the death when there is no alternative, and when
desperate to follow commands implicitly. So it
was here, at this hour. Unless, as Sun Tzu suggested, he gave them
that small chance of escape—that narrow corridor of light
through the darkness—that would undermine their will to fight.
But first he must push them to the edge. Must make it clear to them
that there was no question of compromise; that it was his intention
to eradicate them, down to the last man. He
turned, watching as the two big guns were wheeled into place,
signaling his men to take up positions on either side of the
corridor, some twenty ch'i back from the barrier of corpses.
Then, when all was ready, he gave the order. FAT
WONG SAT DOWN heavily, staring at the note that had come. There
was no doubting its authenticity. It was Yun Yueh-hui's hand, and
the coded phrases were those they had agreed on long ago, should
this situation arise. But the words . . . He let
the note fall from his hand and looked up, searching the
faces of his men as if for explanation. "He
says he cannot come. Mei fa tzu, he says. It is fate." Wong
shook his head, numbed by what was happening. It was as if
T'ai Shan itself had fallen. In the last hour news had come of
the murder of General Feng, his
throat cut by his concubines in the bath, and of Li Ch'in, stabbed in
his own bed by two chan shih of his, Wong's, brotherhood. From
Three-Finger Ho in Saragossa there was no word, no answer to his
angry query about the two Yellow Banner assassins. Not that it was
important now. No, for he knew now who he fought. It was the pai
nanjen, the "white man," Lehmann. Already
he had lost more than two thirds of his heartland to the Kuei
Chuan. And though he had fought off the latest enemy offensive,
it had cost him dearly. Lehmann had only to keep on pressing and the
prize would be his. Which was why the news from Dead Man Yun was so
bad. With the Red Gang at their back, the United Bamboo would have
swept the Kuei Chuan from the levels. But Yun had betrayed
him. Wong
stood, his anger spilling over, and waved his men away, slamming the
door shut behind them. Alone, he let all of the hurt and bitterness
flow out, raging at the empty room. Then, feeling better for that
purging outburst, he sat again, letting his thoughts grow still. Was it
lost? Was all that he'd worked for gone? Or was there still a tiny
chance? Some way of turning things? Wong
Yi-sun closed his eyes, concentrating, clearing his head of all
sentiment, trying to see through the great swirl of events to the
clear hard truth at the center of things. Just why had Yun Yueh-hui
betrayed him? Why, in his moment of utmost need, had his brother
failed to come? He
opened his eyes again, staring down at his tiny, almost feminine
hands, using his fingers, like a child, to enumerate the facts. One.
Yun Yueh-hui's Red Gang, alone of the five brotherhoods, had not been
attacked by the Kuei Chuan. Two.
Dead Man Yun, his ally, who had given his sacred word to aid him if
attacked, had refused to come to his help. Three.
The Red Gang had not joined in the attacks, but had stayed within
their borders. Fact
one suggested a deal with the Kuei Chuan—an agreement,
perhaps, to share the spoils of war; maybe even to divide things up
after it was over. But if such a deal had been made, then surely the
Red Gang would have joined the Kuei Chuan in this venture,
attacking the United Bamboo
from the north? Indeed, an alliance in which one partner did the
fighting, while the other sat at home, made no sense at all. Yet if
it wasn't an alliance, then what in hell was it? As far as he could
make out, Lehmann had neutralized the Red Gang. But how in the gods'
names had he done that? What possible inducement could he have
offered Yun Yueh-hui to make him stay within his borders? Fat Wong
groaned, letting his head drop. He had been wrong last time they'd
met. He should have done as Li Chin said and destroyed the pai nan
jen. Now it was too late. Now there was nothing he could do. .
Nothing. Except to endure. LEHMANN
STABBED a finger at the chart, indicating where the fast-track bolt
ran through the center of Fat Wong's heartland, then looked back at
his two lieutenants. "That's
where you go in, along the track itself, even as our main force is
attacking the south entrance here. I want each of you to take in a
team at either end. Six of your best men. Men who are good with
knives and garrotes. The lights will be cut, so I want everyone
blacked up. You travel fast and silently. If a man falls, the rest go
on. The aim is to get to Fat Wong, and we won't do that unless we hit
him before he knows we're coming. The attack should distract his
attention, but don't count on it. Wong Yi-sun is a good fighter, an
experienced general. He will be expecting us to try at him again." "And
if we get him?" Lehmann
straightened up. "If you get him, weVe won. Wong is the head.
And without the head, the United Bamboo is nothing." There
were smiles at that, as if the thing were already done. "When
are we to go in?" He
glanced at the timer on the desk nearby. "In thirty-eight min'
utes. We hit them four minutes before tenth bell. You go in three
minutes later, so I want you in position well before then." There
were nods; then, when Lehmann said no more, both men bowed and left. Lehmann
turned, summoning the messenger across. Until
now things had gone well. Word from Budapest was that the
I4K were close to capitulation, while the news from Saragossa
was that only a handful of isolated stacks held out. Three-Finger Ho
had been taken, his Red Pole killed. But things were slowly changing.
In Milan, Li Ch'in's nephew, Li Pai Shung, had mounted a vigorous
counterattack, pushing Visak back and inflicting heavy losses. And
here, in Metz, his forces had found themselves bogged down in fierce
hand-to-hand fighting in the corridors, their progress slowed almost
to a standstill. It was time, then, to push things further. Lehmann
dismissed the messenger, then turned, studying the chart again. This
was his last throw. All of his reserves had been called up for this
attack. If it failed, that was it, for there was nothing more to call
upon. But it was close now. Very close. Leaving
the map, he went through, into the anteroom, then stood there,
looking through the one-way mirror into the room where Dead Man Yun's
daughter and her three boys were being held. The boys were in the
makeshift beds, sleeping; the woman sat in a chair beside her
youngest, her hand stroking his forehead gently, her face careworn,
prematurely aged by worry. Yun
Yueh-hui had been the key. If he had been there, at Fat Wong's back
with the full force of the Red Gang behind him, there would have been
no chance of success today. As it was, he, Stefan Lehmann, was within
hours of a famous victory, the like of which had not been witnessed
in the Lowers. Good planning had brought him within sight of that
victory, but planning could take you only so far: audacity—sheer
daring—was needed, if you were to go all the way. Audacity . .
. and luck. THE
STORM HAD TURNED. The high-pressure area to the north, which had been
dormant these past few hours, had begun to move south once more,
pushing the storm before it, channeling it into a narrow corridor of
warm, moist air over the north of Brittany. In the
central control room of the Ta Ssu Nung*s European office, a
red warning light glowed fiercely on the panel of the Controller's
desk, but for once there was no one there to see it. Third Official
K'ung had gone home and his replacement, Wu, had called in sick. A
replacement was on his way, but he would be an hour yet. Between
times the storm gathered speed and power, pushing a great wall of
water before it, heading now for the coast of France and the port of
Nantes. on THE
far side of Chung Kuo, at Tongjiang, Li Yuan sat in his study,
reading the handwritten message that had come an hour back. Scattered
on the desk nearby were the other contents of the package:
audiovisual files, a folded piece of lilac paper, a ring. He
looked up, his eyes straying briefly to the open doors and the garden
beyond, troubled by what he'd read, then turned, looking directly at
his Chancellor. "What
do you think? Are these documents genuine? Is it as this Li Min
claims? Has Wang's man, Hung Mien-lo, come to some arrangement with
Wong Yi-sun?" Nan Ho
considered a moment, then gave a sigh. "This troubles me, Chieh
Hsia. It troubles me greatly. As you know, latest reports
indicate that there is some kind of struggle going on in the lowers
of our City. The full extent of it we do not know as yet, though
first indications are that it is of some considerable scale. In the
circumstances, this message is of profound significance, for it
provides us with a much clearer understanding of what is happening." Li
Yuan drew the ring toward him, then picked it up between his
left-hand thumb and forefinger, studying it, troubled by something
familiar about the design inset into its face. "Maybe
so. But what do we know about this Li Min? Where does he come from?
And how has he come by the power to take on the rest of the
brotherhoods?" Nan Ho
hesitated, then gave a tiny shake of his head. "It is a great
mystery, Chieh Hsia. We have heard conflicting reports this
past year. One story tells of a tall pai nan jen—a pale
man—who killed one of the Big Bosses, Whiskers Lu, and usurped
his position. Certainly Lu Ming-shao has been killed, but how or why
has been hard to ascertain. As far as the usurper himself is
concerned, it has been difficult getting any word of who or what he
is. Either no one knows or no one wishes to say. Either way, our
investigations have drawn a blank. As
for this Li Min, we have no word at all. This is the first
anyone has heard of the man." Li
Yuan set the ring down, then picked up the handwritten paper once
again, his eyes drawn to the printed "chop" at the foot of
the page and the bright red signature to its right. The top
character, Li, was the same as that used by the son of K'ung Fu Tzu,
and denoted a carp. The underlying character, Min, meant "strong"
or "brave." "Brave
Carp," he said quietly, then set the paper aside. "An
adopted name, I would say, wouldn't you, Master Nan?" "It
is possible, Chieh Hsia" "If
so, then might this not be the kind of name our friend, the Hung Moo
who killed Whiskers Lu, would adopt?" Nan Ho
shrugged. "Again, it is possible, Chieh Hsia. But is this
significant? Does it matter who Li Miryis? Surely the important thing
here is Wang Sau-leyan's involvement? If it is true . . ." Li
Yuan raised a hand. At once Nan Ho fell silent. "As
you say, if our cousin Wang has tried to make a deal with Fat
Wong, then that is indeed significant. But not as significant,
perhaps, as what is going on right now in the lowers of the City." He sat
back, his eyes resting on the scattered files and papers a moment,
then got up and went across to the open doorway, standing there,
contemplating the afternoon sunlight, his back to his Chancellor. "I
must be honest with you, Nan Ho, I have never been entirely happy
dealing with Wong Yi-sun and his "brothers." Given the
circumstances it was a necessity, and yet my instinct has been
against it from the first. I recall only too well my father's
attempts to come to terms with the Hung Mun. And his failings in that
regard. Failings which, to be frank, have colored my own endeavors." Li
Yuan turned back, looking at his Chancellor. "Which is to say, I
suppose, that Hung Mien-lo's advances do not surprise me. I do not
trust our friend, Wong Yi-sun. Moreover, I have known for some time
now that my cousin Wang seeks to undermine me by whatever means
possible. In the circumstances, some kind of alliance of
self-interest has seemed to me not merely possible but inevitable. "All
of which is worrying, I agree, but not half so worrying as this
matter with Li Min. I mean, why should a man we have never
heard of before today go out of his way to attack a vastly superior
enemy? And why should that same man, confidently assuming that he
will emerge from this conflict triumphant, write to me in such terms,
pleading necessity and assuring me of his loyalty? It makes little
sense, wouldn't you say, Master Nan? That is, unless there is much
that we do not know." Nan Ho
bowed his head. "It is strange, I agree, Chieh Hsia, but
for myself I had put little store by the man's words. It was solely
their context that interested me, and the light they seemed to throw
upon a murky situation." He cleared his throat, then moved a
little closer to his T'ang. "It might well prove that I have
misread the situation, Chieh Hsia, but from what we know, it
seems most unlikely that Li Min will prevail." "Then
what does he want?" "To
draw you into this conflict, Chieh Hsia. To win you over to
his side and—by providing you with evidence of Fat Wong's
duplicity— to get you to throw in your Hei against the
United Bamboo, as you did once before against Iron Mu and the Big
Circle." Li
Yuan laughed. "Then why does he quite explicitly beg me not to
intervene?" He went across to the desk and picked Li Min's
letter up, quickly locating the passage. "Here! I quote you,
Master Nan. 'I most humbly beg His Most Serene Highness not in any
way to be drawn into this conflict. . .'" He looked up at his
Chancellor. "Is that not clear? Or am I to read his words some
other way?" "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia. I know how it reads, yet it makes no sense
unless one interprets it otherwise." "Unless
Li Min really does think he can defeat his enemies. Unless he
really is concerned that I might intervene on Fat Wong's behalf and
turn the tables against him." "But
Chieh Hsia. . ." Again
the young T'ang raised a hand. "I am loath to contradict you,
Master Nan, but for once my instinct is strong. Something is going on
down there that we do not understand as yet. Something of profound
and lasting significance to the future of my City. My gut instinct is
to act, and at once, but without further information it would be
foolhardy to commit myself. So that must be our priority: to
gather information; to find out all we can about this Li Min—
whatever it costs—and to monitor the situation down
there closely. To that end I want you to instruct General Rheinhardt
to mobilize a special force to go down there and find out what they
can. And I want Rheinhardt to report back to me, personally, every
hour on the hour." Chancellor
Nan bowed low. "As you wish, Chieh Hsia." "Then
go. There is no time to lose." Li
Yuan stood there a moment after Nan Ho had gone, deep in thought,
staring at the lacquered surface of the door, then he turned back,
looking across at the surface of his desk, his eyes returning to the
ring. That design, like a pike turning in the water: where had he
seen that before? He went across and picked it up again, trying to
fit it on his finger and noting, as before, how narrow it was, as if
made for a woman's hand. Yet it was clearly a man's ring, the
rough-cast iron alriiost brutal in its yang masculinity. pe
glanced down at the signature on the paper, then looked back at the
ring. A carp, a pike. The two things reminded him of his father's
words that time, about the City being a carp pool without a pike.
Well maybe that was it. Maybe that was the clue to it all. A
carp, a pike. For a moment longer he stood there, staring at the two
things, as if to free their significance from the air, then, with a
sigh of impatience, he turned and went out into the early afternoon
sunlight, determined to enjoy it. THE
BITTER SCENT of burning silk hung in the air as Fat Wong made his way
down the narrow steps, his tiny feet moving briskly, a handful of his
men following after. The sound of fighting was close now, the rapid
stutter of small-arms fire punctuated by dull concussions that made
the whole deck shudder. Wong's face was set, his movements urgent.
Time was against him. At the
foot of the steps he turned right. Ahead, twenty ch'i along,
the corridor was blocked by a makeshift barrier, manned by his own
men. Wong Yi-sun approached it at a run, waving the guards aside as
he clambered up over the barrier and dropped down nimbly onto the
other side, hurrying on, not waiting for his men. Farther up the
corridor, in a large room to the left, a temporary headquarters had
been set up. Going in, he went straight to the central table,
pushing aside the men who stood there. Looking down at the hand-drawn
map of the United Bamboo's heartland, he studied the position of the
brightly colored squares on the hexagonal grid, taking the situation
in at a glance. Lehmann
had split them in two, as neatly as if he had brought an ax down on a
log. To the west things looked particularly desperate. There, his own
forces were surrounded, cut off and heavily outnumbered now that five
of his tonghad gone over to Lehmann. Here in the northeast, the
position was nowhere near as bad, yet it was only a matter of time.
Once Lehmann had dealt with Wong's western forces, he would turn and
the final battle would begin. "What
news is there?" he asked, looking about him. "This
came, Master," one of his men said, bowing low and handing him a
sealed note. "It came in from the north, ten minutes back. From
Red Gang territory." Wong
Yi-sun laughed, then ripped it open anxiously, his hopes rising. At
last, Yun Yueh-hui was coming! At last! But it was not from Dead Man
Yun. It was from Li Pai Shung, the new Boss of the Wo Shih Wo,
greeting him and assuring him of his friendship and loyalty. He
crumpled the note and threw it down, a wave of bitterness washing
through him. The gods were mocking him. Raising his hopes and then
dashing them. For Li Pai Shung was already dead, the Wo Shih Wo
destroyed. And his old friend and ally Yun Yueh-hui still sat on his
ass in his rooms, doing nothing. "Why?"
he asked for the hundredth time that hour. "Why doesn't the
Dead Man come?" But
there was no answer, only the dull sound of an explosion close by,
rattling the plastic counters on the map. LEHMANN
WALKED slowly through the ruins of the deck, surprised by the extent
of the damage. When he had last seen it, this had been a luxurious,
orderly place, the balconies festooned with bright red banners and
garlands of colorful flowers, the shops and restaurants busy with
affluent young Han. Now it was empty, desolate, the great
floor littered with debris, the shop fronts gutted, the tables
overturned. The
heart, he thought. I have plucked the. heart out of the beast.
Yet still it fought on, stubbornly, defiantly, like a badly
wounded bear, refusing to die. He
turned, looking down the length of Main toward the bell tower,
remembering how it had once looked. Twelve great cinnamon trees had
stood along the central aisle, brightening the great space with their
broad green crowns. Now the aisle seemed bare. The ornamental bowls
were cracked and charred, the trees gaunt, blackened stumps, embedded
in ash. Death,
it all said. Death has come. Lehmann
sighed deeply, tired to his bones. The United Bamboo was broken. Once
their banners had flown proudly over this place: banners on which
nine long, thick canes of bamboo were gripped by a single giant hand,
ivory yellow against a bright green background. But now that hand had
been hacked from its arm, its tight grip loosened. And he had picked
up the canes and snapped them, one by one. He
turned, clicking his fingers. At once his men spilled out from the
corridors where they'd been waiting, slowly filling the Main. In the
midst of them, six men carried a bulky field communications unit on a
litter between them. Setting it down where Lehmann indicated, they
got to work. While they did so, Lehmann looked about him, taking
advantage of the lull in the fighting to think things through. His
assassins had failed, but then, so too had Fat Wong's counterattack.
And now the United Bamboo were backed up into three decks just north
of where he stood, all exits from those decks sealed top and bottom.
At best they had four thousand men. Half of those were wounded, all
of them tired and hungry, but they were no less dangerous for that.
When the final battle came, they would put up fierce resistance.
Besides which, his own men were close to the limit now. He had tried
to rest them when he could, to make sure they were properly organized
and supplied with food and ammunition, but it had been difficult of
late. Moreover, in the chaos of battle much had gone wrong. Take Hui
Tsin, for instance. They had surrounded Fat Wong's "Red Pole"
in one of the western stacks, cutting him off and then
slowly closing in. Lehmann had taken great care, sure that
they had him, but Hui Tsin had slipped the net, audaciously cutting
his way through the Kuei Chuan lines with a mere handful of
fighters, while his main force struck elsewhere. A good
man, Lehmann thought, feeling something akin to admiration for
Hui Tsin's ability. It is a pity he has to die. He
turned, looking across. The rig was prepared. The technicians were
standing there, heads bowed, awaiting him. He
went across and stood beside the desk, his tall, white figure
standing out against the soot-stained blackness of his surroundings.
For a moment he simply looked about him at his men, noting how they
looked to him, eager now, unquestioning, their tiredness set aside,
and inwardly he smiled, knowing he was close. "Come,"
he said, tersely, unsmilingly. "Let's finish the job." "Gods..."
, Hui
Tsin moved back sharply, a look of disgust, maybe even of horror on
his face. Fat Wong's Red Pole had seen many things in his life, but
never anything quite so vile as this. The three boys had been trussed
up—bound tightly hand and foot—and hung from hooks. Then,
while their mother watched, they had been killed, their eyes poked
out, their throats slit like pigs. He
turned, looking about him at the empty, blood-spattered floor, his
eyes finally coming to rest on Dead Man Yun's daughter. She sat there
in the far corner, unnaturally still, her knees drawn up to her
chest, her face ashen, her eyes staring into emptiness. He
shuddered, angered and sickened by what had happened here. If he had
known he would not have killed the guards, but taken them. Yes, and
made their last few hours in this world a living hell. As it was,
there was little time. The final assault would begin any time now and
Leipzig was two hours distant. If there was any chance of saving the
United Bamboo, he had to leave here now. To get this evidence to Dead
Man Yun and wake that aged dragon from his slumbers. Hui
Tsin looked about him, then nodded. "Cut them down and bring
them," he said quietly. "And be gentle with the woman. What
she has suffered here today we cannot even begin to imagine." No,
and yet it was the way of War, the way he had chosen long ago, when
he had first uttered the sacred oaths and partaken of the rituals of
the brotherhood. How many mothers' sons had he sent to their deaths?
How many days of grief and bitterness had his knife hand carved from
the whiteness of the years? The
gods help me, he thought, for my earthly soul witt surely sink
down into the earth-prison when I am dead, to rot in eternal torment,
while my spirit soul roams the upper regions, forlorn, a hungry
ghost. Maybe
so. But before that happened, there was one final score to settle;
one last, earthly battle to wage. Lehmann.
He would hang Lehmann on a hook and gut him. Or die trying. IT WAS
THE WIND that hit first, pushing ahead of the great storm like a
company of outriders, wreaking havoc wherever it struck. At
Nantes Spaceport, it struck without warning, effortlessly ripping the
perimeter fence from its foundations and whipping it across the open
space like a giant, deadly length of ribbon. Buildings exploded.
Small ships were lifted from their pads and thrown about like toys,
while in the deeper pits, the big interplanetary craft were rocked
and buffeted, their service crews picked up and crushed like ants
against the walls and safety doors. As the
wind moved on, channeled up over the roof of the great City, there
was a moment's silence, a moment's calm. From the toppled ruins of
the central spire, a handful of survivors hobbled out, blessing their
luck, then stopped, conscious of the growing darkness of the storm.
There, filling the sky from horizon to horizon, was a wall of solid
blackness. And a growing noise, a noise which, as it came nearer,
seemed to sound not merely in the air, but in the earth itself, in
every atom of one's body, a single, organlike note of such intensity
and scale that it seemed like the voice of Hell. For
the briefest moment they stood there, transfixed, their hands pressed
to their ears, and then the storm surge hit, a giant wall of water
sixty ch'i in height, that powered its way ashore, scouring
the great port clean before it hit the wall of the City with a force
that threw it back upon itself. Slowly,
unheard beneath the great storm's roar, a segment of that whiteness
tore itself away from the surrounding stacks. Slowly, with a
dreadful, dreamlike slowness, it collapsed, tumbling into the surging
darkness of the waters. And as it did the second wave struck,
smashing into the breach with a force that made that great wall
shudder and begin to split apart. dead
MAN YUN stood there, his normally placid face twitching with emotion
as he looked down at the corpses of his daughter's children. Their
tiny, bloodless bodies had been laid out on the huge bed in Yun
Yueh-hui's room; that selfsame bed where they had so often played,
leaping about with gay abandonment while he, smiling, had looked on.
If he closed his eyes he could hear them still: could hear their
childish laughter, their shrieks of joy echoing throughout his rooms. A/i,
yes, he thought, clenching his teeth against the memory. But
all that ended—all joy, all love, all happiness—when
these, my beauties, died. Yun
shuddered, tears running freely down his cheeks, then reached out to
gently touch and stroke each darling face, as once he'd done to
comfort them in sleep. But there was no comfort anymore. No, and
nothing safe. Nothing but pain and grief and bitterness. "My
beauties . . ." he said, the ache of longing in his voice
dreadful to hear. "My darling little ones . . ." "Master
Yun," Hui Tsin said softly, loath to break into the old man's
grief. "Forgive me, but there is little time." Yun
turned, staring at Fat Wong's Red Pole almost sightlessly, then gave
a tiny nod. "Good boys, they were, Hui Tsin. Such darling little
boys. They were my life. Without them . . ." Hui
Tsin bowed his head, embarrassed by the rawness he had glimpsed in
the old man's face, the frightening openness. Whatever else he'd
expected, it had not been this. Anger, he'd thought there'd be, and
maybe even rage, but this . . . this womanly response ... He
took a long breath, then spoke again. "Forgive
me, Master Yun, but unless we act now it will be too late. The pai
nan jen's forces are attacking and Wong Yi-sun . . ." Yun
raised a hand, silencing the Red Pole, his manner suddenly more firm,
much more the Yun Yueh-hui of old. "I
understand, brother Hui. And I shall act. But not yet. Not until I
have properly grieved my daughter's sons. Return to your Master. Go
now, at once, and tell my brother Wong that the Dead Man will come.
But do not push me, Hui Tsin. You have no sons, no grandsons, and so
do not understand how I feel, nor what I have lost this day."
Yun moved closer, towering over the Red Pole, a fierceness now behind
his eyes. "I see how you look at me, Hui Tsin, but you are
wrong. Do not mistake my grief for weakness, nor my tears for sudden
softness. When I come I shall come as an avenging demon. And then I
shall crush the pai nan jen. Were the legions of Hell lined up
behind him, I would crush him." CHAPTER
TWENTY-ONE
Connections TRADITION
HAD IT that when the first frosts came the Li Family would close up
the estate at Tongjiang and move wives, sons, and daughters to
Yangjing, their floating palace, 160,000 li above City Europe.
It was an annual occurrence—a tradition that stretched back to
the earliest years of the Seven when the huge geostationary
environments had first been built. Li Yuan had spent a dozen
childhood winters thus, not knowing snow until, at thirteen, he had
stood there by the frozen lake at Tongjiang, looking up in wonder at
the falling whiteness. Each spring the Family would move back, in
time to witness the first buds sprout from the seeming deadness of
the branch, to see the miracle of blossom in the orchard. This
once, however, they had come early, to escape not the frost but the
unseasonable heat of these late autumn days. Li Yuan stood in the
half-light of the shuttle hangar, smiling to himself, Kuei Jen
cradled warm against his shoulder, as he watched the unloading. At
such moments he felt his father move in his bones. So many times he
had looked up from playing among the unloaded crates and, through a
child's eyes, had seen his father, even as he himself stood now,
supervising the unpacking. Satisfied,
Li Yuan turned and went through. Kuei was fifteen months old now and
babbling his first half words. Li Yuan laughed tenderly, delighted by
the ill-formed nonsense, and nuzzled the child, 478 nodding
to the guards who stood there, heads bowed at the door to his rooms.
Inside, things had been prepared. A tray of sweetmeats rested on a
low table. Beside it was a bowl with food for Kuei Jen. A nurse
waited, eyes averted, ready to feed the boy. Normally
Li Yuan would have handed Kuei Jen to her and gone through to his own
suite, to rest or to do some work, but on whim he dismissed the woman
and, setting Kuei Jen in a low chair, knelt down, beginning to feed
the boy himself. He was almost done when there was a faint cough
behind him. His cousin, Wei Tseng-li, knelt in the doorway, his eyes
lowered. "Come
in, Tseng-li. Please. I am almost done here." Conscious
of protocol, Tseng-li hesitated, then, bowing low, he crossed the
room in a crouch and knelt across from the T'ang and his son, not
presuming to be standing while the T'ang knelt. But, seeing the smile
of pleasure on Li Yuan's face, he ventured a smile of his own. "He
is a healthy boy, Highness. He will be a fine athlete, a good
horseman when he is older." Li
Yuan looked to him, his smile widening. "You think so, cousin
Tseng?" He laughed, then turned back, pushing another spoonful
of dinner into the waiting mouth, careful not to let Kuei Jen grab
the spoon. "Is there anything of importance to be dealt with?" "A
few matters, Highness. But nothing so urgent that you cannot finish
here." Wei
Tseng-li had been Li Yuan's private secretary for more than six
months now; a post he had filled better than any expectations. In the
past weeks Li Yuan had come to rely on him more and more as the
demands on his time had increased. Now, with the House open, they
could relax a little. "Good,"
Yuan said, straightening a little. "I'll finish, then we can go
through." The
bowl was almost empty. Li Yuan scraped the spoon around its edge to
catch the last of it, tucking it neatly into his son's mouth. "You
have the way of it," Tseng-li said, laughing. "When I try I
have it everywhere!" Li
Yuan glanced at him, then set the bowl aside. "You feed him
often, then?" Tseng-li
smiled broadly, for the moment wholly unselfconscious. "Only
when Mien Shan permits. They are all quite jealous of the task. There
is a regular contest between your wives as to who will tend to young
Kuei. A loving jealousy, you might call it." "Ah
. . ." Li Yuan looked thoughtful a moment longer, then slowly
got to his feet. He hadn't known, and he wasn't sure exactly how he
felt about it. He had thought only the nurses fed the child. "Wait
here a moment, Tseng-li. I must give the child back to the nurse." He
lifted Kuei Jen from the seat, turning away from his secretary, then
paused. The child, at his shoulder, was looking past him at Tseng-li,
smiling in that open way that only young children have. His dark and
liquid eyes held two perfect, tiny images of Tseng-li. Li Yuan took a
slow, deep breath, then began to move again, aware that in that brief
moment he had both weighed and decided something. Tseng-li.
He could trust Wei Tseng-li. Maybe even with his life. LI
YUAN THREW HIMSELF forward, arms out in a dive, and cut the water
crisply. He pushed hard with his legs underwater, his arms pulling
him forward strongly, smoothly through the cool and silent medium. At
the far end of the fifty-ch'i-long pool he surfaced, gasping for air,
then rested there, one hand holding the tiled overhang while he got
his breath back. Throughout
the three hours he had spent with Tseng-li at his desk he had thought
of this. Of the cool silence of the pool, the flicker of shadows on
the plain white walls, the gentle lapping of the water against the
metal rungs. More of his time these days was taken up with official
business, and though he sought to delegate as much as possible, it
still left him little time that was his own. So often, recently, he
had found himself thinking of something other than the matter at
hand. He would catch himself imagining this: the long, weightless
glide after the plunge; the pattern of light and shade on the water's
mottled surface. For a
long while he floated there, thoughtless, the water rising either
side of him, following the curve of the palace. Then, coming to
himself, he pushed away and began to swim, a leisurely breaststroke
that took him to the other end. Turning, he started back. He
was halfway down when he heard the door behind him slide back.
Slowing, he turned and, floating there, his arms out, his legs
slightly raised, looked back at the doorway. The
figure in the doorway had knelt and bowed low, in k'ou t'ou,
forehead pressed to the floor. It stayed there, awaiting his
acknowledgment. Li
Yuan frowned and pushed with his legs, moving closer. "Who is
that?" The
head lifted slowly. It was Tseng-li. "Forgive me, Highness, but
I thought the pool was empty. I did not know you came here." Li
Yuan laughed, relaxing. He had been angry, but seeing Tseng-li he
softened. "You came to swim?" Tseng-li
bowed his head again. "I will go, Highness. Forgive me." "No
. . . stay. Come join me, Tseng-li. There's room for two." Still
the young prince hesitated. "Tseng-li!
Your T'ang commands you! Now join me in the pool!" He
said it sternly, sharply, yet he was smiling. It would be good to
relax in Tseng-li's company. Besides, there were things he wanted to
say to his young cousin; things he had found difficult to say
earlier. Tseng-li
got up slowly, and, after bowing one last time, stripped off quickly
and jumped into the water. Li Yuan watched him surface, then strike
out firmly with a bold, aggressive backstroke. He followed him slowly
down, coming alongside him at the far end of the pool. Tseng-li hung
there by one hand, looking back at him and smiling. "Highness?" "You
swim well, cousin. The curve doesn't bother you." Tseng-li
laughed and looked past Yuan at the steep curvature of the water. In
the artificial gravity of the palace things behaved differently than
on Chung Kuo. Li Yuan's great-great-grandfather, Li Hang Ch'i, had
had them build this pool, in defiance of the strangeness of the
place. He, too, had been fond of swimming. But Li Yuan's father had
never used it. He had felt the pool unnatural, odd. Tseng-li
looked back at Li Yuan. "I came here earlier and saw it. All day
IVe thought of coming here." "AH
day?" Li Yuan looked mock stern at him, and Tseng-li blushed, realizing
what he had said. But then the T'ang laughed and nodded. "You
were not alone in that thought, cousin. My mind was also drawn
here. But tell me, you don't mind its strangeness?" "No,
Highness. I like new things. Strange things." "And the
old?" "That too. We live in constant flux. Things persist,
and yet they also change. Is
that not the law for all time?" Li
Yuan laughed. "Now you sound like my father." Tseng-li
joined his laughter. "Like all our fathers!" For a time
they rested there, in the water, laughing. Then Li Yuan
pushed away from the ledge. "Swim by my side, Tseng-li.
There is something I must say
to you . . ." IT WAS
JUSTAFTERTENinthe morning when Kennedy reported to the duty captain
at Plainsborough garrison. After searching him thoroughly, the two
guards placed an audio-wrap over his head and led him to their craft.
That first part of the journey took an hour, then he was led up a
short set of steps and strapped into an acceleration couch. Minutes
later he felt the firm, steadily accelerating pressure of the
shuttle's climb. Only
when it docked, some eighty minutes later, did a gentler pair of
hands release his straps and take the bulky wrap from his head.
Kennedy sat up, feeling slightly nauseous, and rubbed furiously at
the two welts that the wraparound's harness had left across his
forehead and beneath his eyes. It had been a tighter fit than he was
accustomed to. Ironically—and, again, perhaps deliberately—they
had been showing an old historical saga, about the fall of the Sung
dynasty before the onslaught of the Mongol generals. A heavy-handed
piece of Han propaganda. Kennedy
cleared his throat and looked up at his liberator. From the touch,
the faint trace of scent, he had expected a woman, but it was not. A
middle-aged man, slender and finely featured, bowed and introduced
himself. He was dressed in silks of salmon-pink and lemon. "I
am Ho Chang, your valet. It will be some while before the T'ang can
see you. Meanwhile I shall prepare you for your audience." Kennedy
made to say something, but Ho Chang shook his head. "Wu Shih has
given specific orders. You must do exactly as I say." Kennedy
smiled inwardly, understanding at once how things stood. Beneath the
perfect manners ran a streak of raw hostility. Ho Chang did not like
him. Nor did he mean to like him. He let
himself be bathed and dressed. The cut of the silks felt strange; far
stranger than he had thought they would feel. They were elaborate and
heavy, like the silks the Minor Families wore, and he felt
overdressed in them. As he stood there, studying himself in the
mirror, Ho Chang fussed about him, taking great care to mask his
natural smell with scents. "The
very smell of you offends our noses," Ho Chang said bluntly, in
response to Kennedy's unspoken query. "You smell like babies.
Your skin . . ." He wrinkled his nose. "It stinks of milk." Kennedy
laughed, as if he took it as a joke, but beneath his laughter he felt
real anger. Unlike many of his kind, he took great care not to touch
milk products. Why then should Ho Chang insult him, unless as a
foretaste of the audience to come? Was that why he had been summoned
here: to be humiliated? Ho
Chang took him through to an antechamber, a great cavernous place
where shadows lay on every side and dragon pillars rose up into the
darkness overhead. There, insisting that Kennedy kneel, he lectured
him on the proper etiquette to be followed. It was all very different
from the first time he had met Wu Shih. This time full protocol was
called for. He would kneel on the stone before the raised dais and
strike the floor with his forehead three times. Not looking up at the
great T'ang, he would stand, then repeat the process, prostrating
himself three times in all before Wu Shih. This, the son kuei chiu
k'ou, was the ultimate form of respect as laid down in'the
ancient Book of Ceremonies; a form reserved only for the Sons of
Heaven. And
afterward? Afterward he would stay there, on his knees before Wu
Shih, not daring to lift his head and look upon his master until the
T'ang permitted. Nor would he speak. Not unless Wu Shih said he
might. For a
long time they waited there in the cool penumbral silence. Waited
until Kennedy felt certain that this, too, was deliberate; a ploy to
make him understand his own insignificance in the scheme of
things. Then, finally, it was time. Ho Chang led him to the
great doors and, bowing once, moved back, leaving him there. Slowly
the doors eased open. At once Kennedy knelt, as he'd been shown and,
lowering his head, shuffled forward until he came to the foot of the
steps. Wu
Shih sat on his throne. Behind him giant dragons of gold and green
were emblazoned on huge banners of red. Wu Shih wore yellow, the
color of imperial authority, the nine dragons—eight seen and
one hidden—emblazoned front and back. He watched silently as
Kennedy went through the son kuei chiu k'ou, then nodded his
satisfaction. "You
may lift your head, Shih Kennedy." Kennedy
looked up, surprised by the power, the resonance in Wu Shih's voice,
and, at a glance, saw how things were. Here his victories in the
recent polls mattered nothing. Here, knelt beneath the dragon throne,
he understood. Wu
Shih stared down at him a moment, then laughed; humorlessly,
imperiously. "Things
have changed since we last spoke, Shih Kennedy. You are more
dangerous, more attractive than you were. How strange that seems, yet
it was not wholly unexpected. Your success has merely hastened
things. Has made it necessary for me to act a little sooner than I
wished." Kennedy
looked for Wu Shih's hands and found them among the folds of yellow
cloth. They were as he remembered them. Not soft, like his facial
features, but hard and strong. The T'ang's face was deceptive, for it
suggested that one might deal with this man, but not the eyes, the
hands. They revealed the kind of man Wu Shih really was. A man of
great power. Ruthless and uncompromising. "I'll
not prolong things, Shih Kennedy," Wu Shih said, leaning forward
slightly, his omission of Kennedy's official rank the most casual of
insults. "I take you for a clever man, one who can see how
things are, therefore I'll not insult you with evasions, nor humor
you with airy promises. No. I have brought you here for the simplest
of reasons. To make a contract between us." Kennedy
opened his mouth slightly, then closed it, bowing his head. "Good.
I respect a man who understands how things really are. Such good
sense saves time in explanations, and right now I am an impatient
man." From
Wu Shih's smile, Kennedy understood that some irony was intended, but
it passed him by. "I shall agree, of course, to whatever you
ask, Chieh Hsia, but if it is to be a contract, might I know
what consideration I should expect?" The
T'ang smiled tightly. "Of course." He paused, then nodded.
The smile had gone. "For your part you will continue as you are,
speaking out against the policies of the Seven and opposing our
measures in the House. Seeming to be what you are not." There
was a moment's silence between them; a moment in which Kennedy, for
the first time, understood exactly what was required of him. Feeling
cold suddenly, alienated from himself, he slowly bowed his head,
listening, knowing what was to come. "You
will continue to campaign as now. In fact, you will act in all
respects as though no contract existed between us. Short of open
insurrection, that is." "And
in return?" "In
return I will pay off all your campaign debts. More than that, I am
prepared to fund an expansion of your activities and any incidental
expenses that occur. Your friend Michael Levers medical bills, for
instance." Kennedy
looked down, surprised, trying to make sense of things; but for the
moment Wu Shih's purpose evaded him. There was a moment's silence,
then Wu Shih spoke again. "Your
wife . . . how is she?" "She
is fine, Chieh Hsia." "And
your sons? Are they well after their treatment?" He
nodded, feeling a tightness at the pit of his stomach. "That's
good. I like them." Wu Shih laughed; a softer, more generous
sound than before. "Indeed, I like you, Joseph Kennedy.
You are a good man and I wish you no harm. However . . ." Kneeling
there, Kennedy felt that "however" hang in the air above
him, like a vast weight about to fall. "Well,
let us be plain, Shih Kennedy. I am not blind to the currents
of our times. I can see, for instance, that you are the man of
the moment; that what you presently stretch your hand out to grasp
will shortly be there within your palm." Wu
Shih leaned forward, his voice raised the slightest fraction. "Oh,
and don't mistake me, either. I know how you see us. Cut off from
things. Isolated behind a screen of Ministers and minor bureaucrats.
Yet the truth is other than you think. Because we spend so much of
our time up here you think we are out of touch. Secluded. But our
history is full of events that warn of the dangers of seclusion, and
we have made it our business to avoid this error—to trust no
one and to know everything. This is Wu Shih you are dealing with,
Shih Kennedy, not Han Huan Ti!" For a
brief moment Kennedy met the T'ang's dark, hawkish eyes and saw,
rather than the scorn he'd expected, something that was almost
respect. Han
Huan Ti, as every schoolchild knew, was an Emperor of the ancient Han
dynasty who had ruled through his court eunuchs and had been totally
cut off from the realities of his great empire. His reign had been an
evil time, characterized by popular uprisings and opposed by scholars
and soldiers alike. The point was not lost on Kennedy. "Then you
know I have another meeting, Chieh Hsia?" Wu
Shih nodded. "Three days from now. With my old friends, the
'Sons.11 understand they wish to join your organization." It was
more than Kennedy knew. "Perhaps," he said. "And you
would oppose that, Chieh Hsia?" "Not
at all. It would make sound political sense, after all. And with you
to keep an eye for me . . ." Kennedy's
knees were beginning to ache. He shifted his weight gently. "Then
this . . . contract makes no difference, Chieh Hsia?" "On
the contrary, it makes all the difference. For there will come a
moment—a single moment—when you will think you have
outgrown me." Wu
Shih paused, then stood up. Slowly he came down the steps until he
stood there, over the American, his foot raised, touching the brow of
the other. "It
is then, at that very moment, that our contract will find
its meaning. Then, when you think it matters least, that it
will bind you." It had
been the very lightest of touches, the merest brush of the T'ang's
silk slipper against the flesh of his forehead, but behind that
almost tender contact was .such a depth of brutality that Kennedy
shuddered and felt his stomach tighten, his testicles contract, the
naked reality of what he was doing hitting him. "Come,"
said the T'ang, stepping back. "The machine is ready." CHARLES
LEVER strode about the room, red-faced and angry. He had been
drinking heavily, and his temper hadn't been improved by the news his
accountant had brought him. "How
much7." he demanded, turning back to face the
sour-faced man who sat there in the chair in the corner of the room. "About
eleven million in all. Most of it drawn against bonds payable on his
inheritance. High rates, but what does he care?" Lever
went to the table and poured another glass of brandy from the
decanter, swilling it down thoughtlessly. "The scheming little
bastard! And to think I wasted my sympathy on him!" He laughed
unpleasantly. "Well, they won't see a /en! I'll disinherit the
little shit! Then they can chase him for satisfaction!" His
lawyer, standing by the door, sighed and looked away, holding his
tongue. There would be time later, when the old man had calmed down,
to explain the difficulties of disinheriting Michael, not least of
which was the fact that there was no one else to inherit. Not without
tracing the most distant of relations. "Will
you see Hartmann now?" asked Lever's private secretary, poking
his head around the door. It was the fourth time he had asked. "Fuck
Hartmann! What use is the bastard now?" The
head disappeared; went off to tell the ex-Representative—
released pending trial on Lever's personal bond for twenty million—
that his master was indisposed and could not see him yet. Lever
strode up and down, unable to rest, his whole body tense with anger,
with the feeling of betrayal. At first it had hurt, seeing Michael
there in his hospital bed, speaking out against him. He had
stood there before the screen, shocked and frightened by the
transformation in his son, as if all these years he had been
sheltering a viper in his bosom. And now the snake had turned and he
had been bitten. "Well,
damn him. Damn his black hide!" Lever's voice was almost
hysterical, on the edge of tears. But when he turned back to face the
young man his voice was calmer, more threatening than before. "Well,
that's it, eh? A fine reward for a father's love. Spits in my face.
Insults me. Questions my integrity." And with each statement he
tapped his chest with the stiff-held fingers of his right hand. His
large, double chin jutted out aggressively as he spoke and his eyes
glared, challenging anyone to gainsay him. "He's not my
son. Not now." He
turned to the lawyer. "Draw up the papers. Start now. I want him
out! I don't want him to get a single yuan, understand? And if
you need a new beneficiary, leave it all to the Institute." The
lawyer opened his mouth as if to query that, then closed it without
saying a word. He nodded and turned to go. "And
Jim," said Lever, calling him back a moment. "Arrange to
meet those bonds. In full. I'll have no one suffer for my son's
treachery." Alone,
finally, Lever stood there by the window, looking out across the lawn
toward the bright circle of the lake, seeing nothing but his son's
face, younger, much younger than it was now, smiling as it looked up
at him, so bright and eager and loving. He shuddered and, unseen, let
the first tear fall. Not love nor money could bring that back now.
Not love nor money. AT t h
at s A M E M o M E N T, in the great floating palace of Yangj ing, in
geostationary orbit high above City Europe, Li Yuan was talking to
his fellow T'ang, Wu Shih. Wu
Shih's face leaned in toward the surface of the screen, his features
grave with concern. "The rumors are strong, Li Yuan. More than
forty channels have carried something in the last few hours. And
MedFac has gone so far as to declare that there is a war going on in
your City." "A
war. . . ?" Li Yuan laughed, but beneath his laughter was
concern. He had had General Rheinhardt report to him regularly
since he had received Li Min's package, but now it seemed that
the initial assessment of the situation had been wrong. There was
indeed a war going on down there in the Lowers of his City, if not
one which, as yet, threatened him. But if Wu Shih were growing
concerned then it was time to act—firmly, decisively—to
bring the thing to a quick close. He
smiled. "I am grateful for your concern, Wu Shih, but the matter
is already in hand. Indeed, I hope to be able to issue a full
statement to the media two hours from now; one that will reassure
them and put an end to speculation." Wu
Shih smiled broadly. "I am glad it is so, cousin. It would look
ill to leave the matter any longer." "Indeed." Li
Yuan leaned across and cut the connection, then sat back, taking a
long deep breath. He had held back from acting until now, adopting a
course of wuwei—inaction—hoping that the matter
would resolve itself. But from the latest report it seemed that the
sides had reached a kind of stalemate. And that was dangerous. So far
the fighting had been limited to the Triad heartlands and to the
lower fifty. Locked in a stalemate, however, one or both of the sides
might look to escalate the conflict and bring in other, outside
elements. And who knew where that might lead? No. He had to act, and
now. He
leaned forward and tapped out the code that would connect him with
Rheinhardt, then sat back, waiting for his General to appear. "Helmut,"
he said without formalities. "I have a job for you. I want you
to prepare the Hei for action. They are to go in an hour from
now. It is time we settled this matter . . ." standing
THERE in the frame, Michael Lever looked about him. For the first
time in weeks the big hospital room seemed cramped and crowded.
Besides the two doctors and four attendants, others had come to see
him take his first steps since the bombing. He looked across at them,
smiling uncertainly, and feeling even less confident than he looked. "Take
your time," one of the doctors said, making a last check of the
frame. "Don't
fuss," he said, looking briefly at the manual controls on his
chest, hoping he would not need them. At the
far end of the room Kennedy was watching him, Mary and Jack Parker
close by. As he met Kennedy's eyes, the older man's face creased into
a smile. "Go for it," he said softly. "You can do it,
Michael." He
nodded, pleased that they were there, then looked back at the doctor.
"Ready?" The
doctor stepped back. "Whenever you are, Michael. But don't
strain for it. The connections have to develop. Work them too hard
and you'll have difficulties." He had
been told all of this before, but he listened, knowing how hard they
had worked to get him here so quickly: standing, about to walk again.
He turned his head and smiled at Mary. "Here goes, then." It was
an odd sensation, like wishing, and at first, like most wishes,
nothing happened. He was used now to the numbness of his body; had
grown used to the ghostly, disembodied sensation of not having his
legs or arms respond to the messages he sent them. This, then, was
strange. A calling upon ghosts. He
tried again, the message he sent—the desire—almost
tentative. There was the faintest tingling in his muscles, but no
movement. Not enough, he thought. Not quite enough. He
closed his eyes, resting. The frame, keeping him upright, was a
comfort, but he was still afraid. What if it didn't work? What if,
after all that delicate and painful surgery, the machine
malfunctioned? What then? They
had warned him about this. He would feel fragile, alienated from his
own body. The bioprosthetic implants would seem intrusive, maybe even
hostile to him. But they were not. They were simply undeveloped. He
had only to trust them. Opening
his eyes, he turned his head again, looking to the doctor. "It's
hard," he said. "It feels like there's no power there. No
pressure." "There's
a tingling?" "Yes,
but it's very faint." The
doctor smiled. "Good. Work on that. Bring that tingling on a
bit. Develop it. But remember, your muscles have done no work
at all these past weeks. There'll have been a slight atrophy. Nothing
damaging, but enough to make it seem at first that you're getting
nowhere. Keep trying, though, and it'll come." He
turned his head back. Then, gritting his teeth, he tried again. The
tingling grew. Then, suddenly, he felt the frame lift and then settle
again. He had moved his left leg forward about four inches. There
was a cheer in the room. He looked up. Everyone was smiling at him.
He laughed, relief flooding in. "That's
great," said the doctor, coming closer to check on the frame.
"That's really excellent, Michael." The
frame had done it, exaggerating his movement mechanically and taking
his full weight, but that did not lessen the sense of achievement he
felt. After so long he was connected again, linked up to his own
body. He shivered and felt tears come to his eyes. As he developed
the connections, the control he now had over his body, the doctors
would slowly diminish the supportive power of the frame. And
eventually, if all went well, he would discard the frame altogether.
He would walk again. Mary
came across and held him awkwardly, one arm reaching through the
frame to take his shoulder, the other caressing his cheek. "I'm
so glad, my love. Really I am." She stood back, grinning widely.
"I can't wait to see you walk into the House and take your
seat." He
grinned back. All of the fear he had been feeling these past few days
had dissipated. Slowly, conscious of the awkward, rather stilted
movements of the hydraulics, he raised his left arm and moved it
until his hand rested on his wife's shoulder. "Just now I feel a
bit like a maintenance machine," he said, laughing. Mary
leaned forward to kiss his forehead, then moved back as Kennedy came
across. Kennedy
leaned close, whispering, "I'm proud of you, Michael. You don't
know how proud. It's hurt me to see you lying there, day after day." "Thanks.
. ." Then, more hesitantly. "You don't know what it's
meant. I think I'd rather have been dead than lie there any longer." "I
know. . ." Kennedy made to step back, but was held there a
moment longer, the arm of the frame trapping him. "One
question, Joe." "Go
on." "Who
paid for all of this?" Kennedy
was about to answer, but Michael spoke again, quickly. "Look, I
know how much in debt we were after the last campaign, even after the
money I raised." He searched Kennedy's gray eyes. "So?" Kennedy
hesitated, then shook his head. "It's paid for. Let's leave it
at that, huh?" For a
moment Michael considered persisting, then he nodded. "All
right. I'll leave it. For now." Slowly, but less awkwardly than
before, he moved his arm away. "But I want to know who to
thank." There
was a strange movement in Kennedy's face, then, slowly, he '•
smiled again. "I can't," he said, shaking his head.
"Really, Michael. Just accept it." "Was
it my father?" "Your
father?" Kennedy laughed abruptly, as if the very idea was
absurd. "No . . . Look, Michael, I'm sorry, but don't ask me.
Please. I just can't say. Okay?" "Can't?" "Can't."
There was a finality to the way he said it that made Michael frown.
For some reason the subject had touched Kennedy personally, and at
some deep and hidden level. Why should that be? "Okay,"
he said after a moment. "I won't ask again." "Good,"
said Kennedy, stepping back out of his way. "Now let's see if
you can get that right leg going too." LATER,
alone with Parker, he asked again. "Don't
ask me," said Parker, sitting down at his bedside and leaning
across him to take his hand. "Joe saw to all that stuff. Anyway,
what does it matter? It's paid for. That's all that counts." "Is
it?" He was silent a moment, then, "You know, IVe felt
helpless in more ways than one, Jack. All the while IVe been here it
seems as though things have been kept from me. As if there's
something you haven't told me, any of you. Is there a reason for
that, Jack? Is there something you haven't told me?" Parker
looked down. "Like what?" Michael
took a deep breath, then shook his head. "I don't believe this.
Look, Jack, it's me, Michael, your best friend. What can't you tell
me?" Parker
met his eyes. "You want to know?" "Of
course I bloody want to know. It's driving me crazy all this not
knowing. Sure I'm an invalid, but don't treat me like a mental
cripple too, Jack. You know me better, surely?" "Maybe,"
said Parker. It was an odd thing to say. They had known each other
almost twenty years. "So?" "They
know who planted the bomb." Michael
went cold. How often had he thought about this? A thousand times?
More? And he had always assumed that they didn't know. "When did
they know?" he asked. Not who, but when. At that moment it
seemed more important. "Later
that day. They . . . they got him almost straightaway." Michael
shuddered and looked away. There was a slight tingling in his limbs.
The frame was hanging in its bracket at the far end of the room. For
a while he stared at it, conscious of how large and clumsy it looked
without him in it. Then he looked back at Parker. "Who was it?" Parker
smiled wearily. "Hartmann." "Hartmann?"
He laughed disbelievingly. Then, with a suddenness that took his
breath, he realized what that meant. "No . . ." Parker
was watching him, a look of deep concern in his eyes. "There was
a lot about it in the media those first few days. Since then it's
been embargoed. Which is . . ." "Why
I hadn't heard," Michael finished. Again there was that tingling
in his limbs, as if in response to some involuntary command, a
tensing of the muscles, a ghostly bunching of fists. "Who placed
the embargo? I didn't think anyone had enough clout." Parker
blinked and looked away. When he spoke again it was almost in a
whisper. "Wu Shih. Who else?" "Wu
Shih?" Michael was confused. "Why? I mean, why should he
want to do that?" Then, "Look, Jack, what's going on here?
I don't understand..." Parker
smiled bleakly. "Nor me. At least, not all of it. But between us
I'd say that our friend Kennedy has been making deals." "Deals?
With Wu Shih?" Parker
shrugged. "Let's just say that things have been a lot easier
these past few weeks. Too smooth. And I've been doing some thinking." "And?" "Look,
Michael, I'm sorry. I know how it seems. Your father's man tries to
have you killed. It's not a nice thought. It points the ringer where
you'd rather not have it pointed. But you did ask me. As for the
rest. . . I'm as much in the dark as you." Michael
closed his eyes, then nodded, but his face showed the sudden
bitterness, the despair he felt. When he openecTEis eyes again,
Parker was looking down. "Thanks, Jack. You're right. It's not
nice. But I feel better for knowing it. I ... I feel as if I can get
things straight in my mind now. Before, it was . . . confused. I felt
I was losing my grip on things." Parker
smiled but didn't look up. "You won't do anything?" "Like
what? Throw punches?" Parker
met his eyes. "Who knows? You're not as helpless as you look." "No,"
he answered, for the first time realizing what the operations meant.
"No. Not helpless at all." He
would get better, stronger. He would spend every hour, every minute
of his time getting better. And then, when he was ready . . . He
closed his eyes, letting the tingling fade from his limbs and chest,
calming himself. It had been a long day, a hard day. "Michael?"
Parker had felt the sudden tension in the fingers of the hand he
held, then the slow relaxation of the muscles. He leaned forward,
listening, then smiled, hearing the soft, regular pattern of his
friend's breathing. Michael Lever was sleeping. tolonen
STARED down at the ruins of Nantes spaceport a moment longer, then
turned to face Li Yuan's General, Rheinhardt. It was cramped in the
cruiser's cockpit, with barely enough room for the
pilot and the two big men, but no other craft had been
available. All else had been destroyed. "How
did it happen?" Tolonen asked, indicating the gap in the smooth
face of the City, the fallen stacks. "We're
not sure yet," Rheinhardt admitted, the somber expression on his
face a perfect copy of the older man's. "There are three
theories we're working on. The first is that subsidence, caused by
water erosion, undermined the supports and weakened them." "Is
that likely?" Rheinhardt
shook his head. "Not really. The river's course has changed over
the years, and it seems the water table has risen slightly in the
last decade. Even so, most of the pillars are sunk into the rock.
Besides, from what we can make out, most of them are still standing.
The stacks simply broke away by the look of it." "Or
were torn away?" "Maybe.
That's another of the theories. That the sheer, unprecedented force
of the storm—the tidal wave, particularly—simply ripped
the stacks from the surrounding sections." Tolonen
nodded. "And the third?" "One
of our experts has come up with the idea that the constant vibration
of the rockets taking off from the spaceport might have weakened the
connections between the stacks over the years." Rheinhardt
shrugged. "It seems highly unlikely, if you ask me, but we're
following it up anyway." Tolonen
sighed deeply, looking out once more at the scene of devastation
below. It was worse, far worse than he'd imagined it. The City was
supposed to be safe. One hundred percent safe. For a century and more
it had stood, undamaged by the elements, yet in the course of less
than thirty seconds, three whole stacks had slid into the Clay,
taking more than two hundred and eighty thousand people with them. If
news of this got out there would be panic in the levels, rioting. . . He
shuddered. Rheinhardt had been right to call him in. Right to cordon
off the surrounding areas and cut communications. But would it be
enough? Could they really prevent word of this from getting out? He
leaned forward, tapping the pilot's shoulder. "All right. Take
us back. I've seen enough." Rheinhardt
leaned close, lowering his voice. "Well, Knut? What should I do?
Li Yuan has ordered me to destroy our friend Li Min and scour the
Lowers of all Triad activity. And so I would gladly do. But that was
before I knew of this." He took a breath. "This . . . well,
it's the kind of thing that could set off the whole City, neh? Word
of it must be quashed, and at once. But IVe a problem. I haven't the
manpower both to quash this and take on the Triads. You can see that,
can't you, Knut?" "I
see it clear enough, Helmut. Besides, there'll be time enough to take
on that scum, neh?" "Then
you'll speak to Li Yuan?" Tolonen
smiled grimly. "At once. In the meantime let's have the T'ing
Wei earn their pay. Let's flood the airwaves with good news
and rumors of spring. And for once let us pray that it's enough." WONG
Yl -SUN lay there, wrapped in the ancient banner, like a wasp in a
spider's web. Blood from a thousand hatchet cuts had darkened the
fragile cloth, obscuring the original design, but the banner had once
hung in Fat Wong's hall, in pride of place. Lehmann
stood over the body of his rival, looking down at the pale, birdlike
face, and heaved a great sigh. He was close to exhaustion. For more
than forty hours he had fought. Fought beyond the point of hope
until, in the darkest hour, help had come. A hundred thousand
Hei—GenSyn half-men used by Security as riot troops—
sent in by Li Yuan to reinforce him. Turning the tide of battle in
his favor. Giving him victory. He
shuddered, remembering the moment, then crouched, reaching out to
touch the blood-encrusted silk. Peacock blue the banner had been, a
great triangle of gold at its center.. And in the blue had been
embroidered a single bloodred pictogram. Tian.
Nan Jen. Tu. Heaven. Man. Earth. It was
the banner, brought from the Fu Chou monastery six centuries
ago. Whoever held it led the great Council of the Hung Mun; was Head
of the 4895, the "Big Boss" here in the lowers of City
Europe. Or so
it had been. Until today. Lehmann
stood, then turned away, signaling to his men to take the body and
burn it, banner and all. All that was ended now. Six centuries of
tradition reduced to ash and dust. Now there was only he. All else
had been destroyed. He
stretched, easing his tired muscles, considering what he had done.
Two hundred thousand men were dead. Another eighty
thousand—prisoners, taken in the early hours of the
battle—would be dead within the hour. So he had ordered. And so
it had to be, for he could not risk the slightest threat of
opposition. Not yet. Not until he had rebuilt his organization and
stamped his mark upon these levels. He
turned, looking about him, noting how his men looked at him: in awe,
as if one of the ancient gods stood there among them. And inwardly he
laughed. Right now he was triumphant, was king of these levels, the
White T'ang, as they called him. But how long would that last? If Li
Yuan took it in his mind to crush him; to turn his brutish Hei
against their former allies . . . For a
moment his mind went numb. Tiredness, he told himself, but it was
more than tiredness. It was like that moment on the slopes of the
Otzalen Alps. That moment when he had looked down into the great
crater where DeVore's fortress had been and seen only darkness. Then,
too, he had felt like this, emptied of all thought, all enterprise. He
felt wasted, brittle-boned. A wraith. Victory, now that he had it,
seemed a hollow thing. Hollow, because it had not been his. Because,
at the final moment, he had depended on the favor of another. "Yao
Lu," he said, summoning one of his lieutenants. The
man hurried across and knelt, his head bowed low. "Master?" "How
much was in the chests you found?" "More
than two hundred million, Master," Yao answered, keeping his
head lowered. "And
in the rest of the caches?" "It
is hard to say exactly, Master, but more than five hundred million,
certainly." Seven
hundred million. It was a huge amount—much more than he'd
expected. With such a sum at hand, what could he not do, given
time? But that was it. The task of reconstruction was a
lengthy one, a time-consuming one, and he had no time. Not if he
wished to survive. Just
now one thing alone mattered. Placating Li Yuan. "Yao
Lu," Lehmann said finally, his decision made. "I want you
to gather it all together and bring it here. Every last fen of
it. And then I want you to contact the Major in charge of Li Yuan's
Hei and beg an audience with him. It is time we paid the great T'ang
his due. Time we paid tribute for the great service he has done us
this day." LI
YUAN STOOD on the great viewing circle, looking down at the
blue-white globe of Chung Kuo, one hand gently stroking his beardless
chin as he thought things through. He had hoped to have a week up
here—a week free of matters of State—but it was not to
be. Tolonen was right. The severity of the damage to Nantes spaceport
could not be overlooked. He had to deal with the matter urgently. He
shivered and turned away, looking about him at the room, remembering
how often he had seen his father standing where he now stood. His
father, deep in thought, one hand tugging gently at his plaited
beard. One day Kuei Jen would stand here looking down, matters of
State weighing heavily on his mind. But for now the child slept
peacefully, unaware of the burden he would one day bear. The
thought made him smile, but the smile was tinged with a faint
sadness. There were consolations, certainly, but sometimes the burden
seemed too much to bear. Some days he felt like giving it all up, as
his brother Han had once proposed, and handing it over to another.
But that could not be. This was his charge, his duty. What
to do, though, about Nantes? That was the question. If he went down
openly, Wang Sau-leyan was sure to hear of it, and that might prove
disastrous. There was another option, however. He could leave his
shuttle here and travel down on the service craft that was due to
leave in two hours' time. That would get him to Nantes in plenty of
time to deal with matters. Yes, and maybe he could persuade Wu Shih
and Tsu Ma to meet him there. Secretly of course. Because if Wang
were to hear of this, he might yet find a way to take
advantage of the situation. And with the Triads still at war down
there, it was impor- tant
to settle things quickly, before the rumors began to spread and panic
set in among the Lowers. His
decision made, Yuan climbed the steps quickly and went through,
heading for the nursery. Tseng-li
was kneeling, his back to Li Yuan, when the T'ang came into the room.
He was laughing, his laughter echoed back at him by the young child
who clung to his outstretched arms. On the far side of the room the
nursemaid, seeing Li Yuan, got up hastily, making to bow, but Li Yuan
motioned to her, raising a finger to his lips and smiling. She
straightened, but Tseng-li had seen the movement and half turned,
realizing that someone had come into the room. Kuei Jen also turned,
and, his smile widening, cried out to him. "Papa!" Laughing,
Li Yuan came forward and bent down. Tseng-li leaned back, out of the
way, as the little boy lifted his hands up to his father. "They
know their own," he said, getting up and giving a slight bow to
Li Yuan. "Some
more than others," Li Yuan answered, looking from Kuei Jen to
his secretary. "It is a sad thing that we who rule see so little
of those who matter most to us." He looked back at his son,
smiling broadly at him, then lifted him and hugged him tightly. "Like
now. I have to go back down, Tseng-li, at once. Something has come up
which I must attend to personally. I'll be gone two, maybe three
days." Tseng-li
gave another bow. "Is there anything I should be doing while you
are gone, Highness?" "Nothing
that cannot wait three days. My Ministers are capable men, after
all." Tseng-li
laughed, amused by the irony in his cousin's voice. "No,
Tseng-li," Li Yuan continued. "Just take care of my son, my
wives, while I am gone, neh?" The
fifteen-month-old Kuei Jen was making small burbling noises now and
pressing against Li Yuan's shoulder, rubbing his small, dark head
against the silk. "He's
tired," explained Tseng-li, dismissing the nursemaid with a
gesture of his hand. "He has been up several times in the
night." "Then
I'll hold him," said Li Yuan, with a small nod of finality. "It
is rather pleasant, neh?" "Just
now," agreed Tseng-li, smiling. "But they grow so fast. My
brother's children now . . ." He laughed, looking thoughtful.
"They're too big to carry already. Besides, they get so
independent." Li
Yuan nodded, watching his cousin carefully. Already Kuei Jen was
settling against him, snuggling in against the warmth of his
shoulder. "You miss your brothers, Tseng-li?" "Sometimes." Li
Yuan sighed, smiling at the small, warm weight he carried, then
looked back at Tseng-li. "A break would be good for you, neh?
Maybe when I get back." Tseng-li
nodded, keeping his silence; but his eyes showed gratitude. "Sometimes
I think that family is all. The rest. . ." Yuan laughed softly,
feeling the child stir gently against him with the movement. "Ill
thoughts for a T'ang, perhaps, but true. Nor would I trust a man who
felt otherwise." Tseng-li,
watching him, smiled and nodded. The child was asleep. CHAPTER
TWENTY-TWO
Circles
of Dark Captain
HENSSA of the floating palace, Yangjing, moved across the room
slowly, his legs drifting up as he turned and pulled himself along
the guide rungs, then anchored himself beside the lieutenant at the
screen. "The
codes check out?" The
lieutenant ran the signal again, then leaned back, letting his
captain watch as the code broke down on the screen. Behind the
sharp-etched lettering the image of the incoming craft was growing
steadily larger, its complex computer-generated recognition pattern
matching the programmed format perfectly. There
was total puzzlement on the captain's face. "Chi Hsing?" he
said. "What would Chi Hsing want?" The
lieutenant stayed silent. This wasn't his decision. Orders or no
orders, he wasn't going to shoot one of the Seven out of the skies.
He had a family down below to think of. "Send
for verification." "From
whom?" the lieutenant asked, staring fixedly at the screen. He
was conscious of the watching cameras, the tapes. No Board of Inquiry
would find his actions reprehensible. He would act to the letter, or
not at all. For a
full half minute the captain hesitated, while the craft drew slowly
nearer. Then, abruptly, he leaned across and, steadying him- 501 self,
tapped out a message on the touchpad. It was immediately coded and
sent: With respect, please advise purpose of visit. The
lieutenant saw the worry in his captain's eyes, and, for once, felt
some small sympathy for his normally overbearing superior. One did
not ask a T'ang what his purpose was. Such a breach of etiquette
might strip him of his rank. For a
time there was nothing. Then, as if there had been no query, the
original request-for-docking signal came back. The craft was only ten
minutes distant now and still closing. A decision would have to be
made. For
the first time the captain looked down at his lieutenant and shook
his head. "I don't like it." But he too was conscious, it
seemed, of the cameras overhead and left it at that. Turning, he
pushed off and drifted toward the far door. There, holding the top
rung firmly, he twisted and looked back at the lieutenant. "Give
them boarding clearance, but tell them there'll be a slight delay." "And
if they ask for a reason?" The
captain looked thoughtful a moment, then shrugged. "New security
procedures, that's all." Then he turned and, pressing the hatch
stud, slid through the irising circle into the corridor outside. The
lieutenant watched him go, then turned to face the screen again, his
fingers giving the clearance signal to the incoming ship. IT WAS
cramped in the shuttle. They sat in the forward compartment, six to a
side, their helmets almost touching across the narrow space. Their
suit systems kept them cool; even so, more than one of them had been
sweating these past few minutes as the bulk of the floating palace
grew larger on the screen above the hatch. They watched it in
silence, knowing that these moments were the most vital of the whole
mission. Here, as they approached, they were most vulnerable. One
mistake and they would be so much iced debris, floating in the
vacuum. For a
long time there was nothing. They could not hear the signal going
out, nor did they know anything of the query sent back. Moment by
moment the tension grew. Then, with a small click and a
hum, the internal channel came on and the group leader's voice
came across. "We've
got boarding permission. A small delay, it seems, then we're in. Good
luck!" There
was a small buzz of talk, and a sense in them all of great relief.
What lay ahead they had rehearsed to perfection. The worst of it was
now behind them. THE
CAPTAIN had arranged the men in a semicircle about the boarding deck.
They wore anchor shoes and full suits. Each held a small laser and a
deflector shield. Beyond that he had said nothing to them. If he were
right there would be time to give them simple orders. If wrong . . . He
smiled grimly, looking about him and listening to the sounds of the
docking shuttle. If wrong he would need to trust to Li Yuan's
understanding and compassion, for what he did now was an insult to
Chi Hsing. He
shivered and stared straight ahead at the huge doors, waiting for
them to open. His instincts told him this was wrong. Though the
signals were correct, the situation felt wrong. Why should Chi Hsing
visit now, and without warning? And why had he, Captain of the Watch,
received no notice of the visit? Against
this strove another inner voice. Who else would use Chi Hsing's
shuttle but the T'ang himself? Who use his codes? He was being
ridiculous even to begin to think that something was amiss. And
yet... Perhaps
this was why 1 was chosen. Perhaps they knew 1 would act this way.
Whatever, he had gone too far now for half measures. He would see
this through, whatever the personal cost. Whether his master
understood or not, duty bade him take this action. There
was a sudden silence. The craft had docked. Then he heard a sharp
hissing as the airlock filled. Thirty seconds, he thought, bracing
himself, lifting his weapon and pointing it at the doors. He saw
several of his men turn and look at him, then look back, not quite
certain why they were there, or what was happening, but he kept
silent a moment longer.
There'll be time, he told himself. Whoever it is, the;y'ZZ not
expect us here. The
hissing stopped. There was a low groan, then, with the slightest
hesitation, the doors began to slide back. Through the gap stepped
three men, fully suited, the first in a suit of gold, trimmed with
imperial yellow. "Chi
Hsing . . ." he began, lowering his gun and beginning to bow.
All about him his soldiers were sinking to their knees, their heads
lowered. But there was a movement behind the T'ang which made the
captain look and hesitate, then raise his gun again. But he was too
late. The air was crisscrossed with burning laser traces, and the
screams of his men were deafening in his ears. He himself was
shouting now, but his voice was lost in the general noise and
confusion. The three men were firing at the kneeling soldiers,
cutting them apart. Only he, miraculously, stood there in the midst
of it all, untouched. Trembling,
he lifted the weapon and fired, watching as the gold-tinted visor
split and then exploded. It is
not Chi Hsing, he told himself, as he held the beam on the falling
figure. It is not Chi Hsing. But even as the lasers of
the other men caught him, burning into his chest and arms and neck,
he felt a great pang of sorrow. He had killed a T'ang, a Son of
Heaven! And now his clan would be eradicated, the ghosts of his
ancestors unap-peased. His wife, his child . . . He
stumbled forward, then fell and lay still. One of the suited figures
paused, looking down at him, then stepped over him and clumped on
heavily toward the corridor. Behind him came others. Terrorists. Yu.
The suited figure laughed triumphantly, then yelled instructions
into his suit microphone. They
had done it! They were on board! out ON
the great mid-ocean city of Sohm Abyss it was late morning. The
restaurant was quiet, only a few people scattered about the tables.
Kim was sitting in his usual corner, a half-filled ch'a bowl at his
elbow, when Rebecca came into the room. Seeing him, she went across
and sat, facing him. He
looked up, meeting her eyes, uncertain what to say. He had not seen
her since the night of the party, but had kept to himself, working
longer hours than usual and sleeping in the lab. For a day or two, he
had even avoided coming here, lest she track him down. But he had
known all along that he would eventually have to face her. To have it
out with her. "Hi,"
she said softly, offering a smile. "I wondered where you'd got
to. I left messages on your comset. But maybe you didn't get them.
I'm told youVe been working hard." He
raised his eyebrows, as if he knew nothing about the messages, but it
was untrue. He had seen them. More than a dozen in all, asking him to
contact her and talk. "IVe
been worried about you," she said, leaning toward him, the scent
of jasmine wafting across to him. "I thought you might be angry
with me about what happened. When I woke up that morning and you'd
gone . . ." He
looked down. "I'm not angry with you." That
much was true. He wasn't angry with her, he was angry with himself,
for having made such a fool of himself. And now he felt ashamed.
Deeply, thoroughly ashamed. He had let himself down. Himself, and
Jelka. "Look,
I'm sorry," he said. "I was drunk, I..." She
laughed softly, provocatively. "Not that drunk." "That's
not what I meant," he said, meeting her eyes again, his face
deadly earnest. "I mean that it was wrong what we did. If I'd
have been sober I would never have gone to your room." "You
mean you didn't enjoy what happened?" Her eyes were wide,
staring into his. Reaching out, she touched his fingers, then closed
her own about them. "Because I did. And I can't stop thinking
about it. You and me, Kim, together in the darkness. It was
wonderful. Didn't you think so? You and me, doing that." She
shivered, squeezing his fingers tightly. "It
was wrong," he said again, steeling himself against her touch,
the soft seductiveness of her words. "There's a girl..." He saw
the movement in her eyes. The surprise and then the calculation. "A
girl? Someone you like, you mean?" He
nodded. "I made a promise." "A
promise?" She smiled, then frowned, the two expressions
strangely coexistent in her face. "What kind of promise?" "She's
young, you see, and her father . . . well, her father is a powerful
man. He doesn't want her to see me, so he's sent her away. To the
Colonies. But I made her a promise. I..." He
stopped, realizing that he had said much more than he'd intended. But
he wanted Rebecca to understand, to realize why that night with her
had been so wrong. Her
fingers slowly loosened their pressure about his own. She withdrew
her hands, then sat back, nodding to herself, a strange look on her
face. "So
you fuck me and leave me, and that's it, huh?" He
shivered. "It wasn't like that. If I'd been sober . . ." "If
yorid been sober." She shook her head, her face suddenly
hard, her eyes angry with him. "Don't you see it, Kim? Don't you
understand things yet? Or is it only atoms and abstract forces that
you comprehend? This girl. . . she won't wait for you. Not if her
father's against you. They hate us, Kim. Don't you get that yet? On
the face of it they may smile as they use us, but deeper down they
hate us. Clayborn we are. Different from them. And they despise us
for that." "No,"
he said quietly, disturbed by the sudden change in her, the pent-up
anger in her tiny frame. "Some of them, yes. But not all. This
girl . . •" She
stood abruptly, staring down at him, "You still don't see it, do
you? You and I, we're of a kind. We know how things are. How they
really are. We know about the darkness down there. Know, because it's
in us, every hour of every day. And we know what it's like to suffer,
to be bought and sold and treated like mere things." She
shuddered, staring down at him defiantly. "We're of a kind, Kim
Ward. Don't you understand that yet? You belong with me.
Wards, that's what we are. A pair. A matching pair." He sat
there, shaking his head, denying her, and yet a part of him saw the
truth in what she was saying. He licked at his lips, then spoke,
pained that it had come to this. "What
you say, Becky . . . it's true. We are alike. But that's all.
And what we did . . ." he shivered, "it was a mistake.
Can't you see it was a mistake?" She
stood there, staring at him; a long, angry stare that seemed to weigh
him. Then, without another word, she turned and walked away, closing
the door quietly, carefully behind her. For a
moment he sat there, staring at the door, conscious that it wasn't
over, that he had not convinced her that it was over, then, turning
his head, he realized that someone was standing there, not six paces
from where he sat. "Tuan
Wen-ch'ang!" The
tall Hui bowed his head and smiled, showing his imperfect teeth. "Kim
. . . May I sit with you?" "Of
course. Please . . ." Kim half stood, giving a tiny bow of
greeting. Tuan
sat, setting his chung down in front of him, then looked across at
Kim. "You
look disturbed, my friend. Is something troubling you?" Kim
looked down. If Tuan had come in while Rebecca was talking to him, he
would have seen, maybe even overheard something of what had passed
between them. Yet that was not what Tuan had meant. He was asking Kim
if he wanted to talk about his troubles, to share them with him. For
the briefest moment Kim hesitated, wondering whether he should keep
this to himself, but then, seeing the look of sympathy, of
understanding in the tall Hui's face, he nodded and leaned toward
him. "It's
like this..." "What's
happening up there?" Tseng-li
stood at Li Yuan's desk, staring down at the screen set into the
table's surface. He had been disturbed by the echoing metallic sound
of the shuttle docking, and had come here quickly, not stopping to
consult any of the others. The
lieutenant's face looked up at him, concerned. "I'm not sure, my
Lord. Chi Hsing's shuttle has docked. About three minutes back.
Captain Henssa went to greet him." "Chi
Hsing?" Tseng-li laughed, but his features formed an uncertain
frown. "Are you certain?" "The
coded signals were current and correct. No one but Chi Hsing's
personal Security could have known them, my Lord." Tseng-li
nodded, but he was thinking, This is wrong. Li Yuan would have
warned me. He would not have gone had he known Chi Hsing was
coming. For a moment he stood there, leaning forward as if in a
trance, then, "Have they boarded already?" The
lieutenant looked away at another screen. "Yes, they're coming
through even now. I..." His head jerked back, as if he had been
punched, his cheeks visibly paler, his eyes wide. "Arya......" The
screen went black. Tseng-li
ran. Out down the slow curving corridor and on, into the second room
on the left, nodding to the guard. There, he bent over the cot and
unceremoniously lifted the sleeping infant from among its covers and
ran on, out through the far door. People were stirring now, lifting
their heads as he ran through their quarters, or coming out to call
after him, but there was no time to stop and warn them. His duty now
was to Kuei Jen alone. Already it might be too late. At the
hatch that led through into the kitchens, a guard raised his rifle
and challenged him. "Let
me through!" he yelled, batting the rifle down. "Your
prince's life depends on it!" The
guard watched him go through, his mouth open, then nodded and turned
to defend the hatch, knowing now, if he'd not before, that something
was badly wrong. The
kitchens were empty. Tseng-li ran through the long, echoing rooms,
conscious of his own hoarse breathing, and of the half-dozing weight
of the child against his chest. He was cradling Kuei Jen awkwardly,
holding his tiny body firmly against him, afraid to drop or knock
him. On the
far side of the kitchens he stopped, taking deep breaths, then
listened. There were clear sounds of fighting now—explosions
and distant shouting, then the harsh but muted sound of someone
screaming. He thumbed the hatch's manual controls awkwardly and
clambered through into a narrow, rounded corridor where he had to
stoop and move more slowly. It all depended now on how quick the
intruders were, how well they knew the layout of the palace. If they
traveled straight up the hub they might have gotten there already, but he
was gambling on them not doing that. The private quarters were at the
front end of the palace, on the rim. If they were interested in the
T'ang and his family they would go there first. Or so he hoped. As he
moved along this narrow tunnel all sound was masked from him. But at
the end, he came out into the brightly lit well, and the noise came
back. Voices. Uncultured, Mid-level voices. He swallowed,
understanding at once. Terrorists! It was
hard to judge how far away the voices were. They could be down at the
far end of the hub still, or they might be directly above him, at
this end. If the latter, then he and Kuei Jen were dead. He
crossed the open space, then set the child down carefully in its
blankets, praying that it would not wake and cry. He straightened up,
breathing heavily, then opened one of the dozen or so lockers built
into the wall and took out the infant-sized pressure suit. Quickly he
fitted and sealed it, checking that the oxygen supply was working
before fastening the helmet. Then, reaching up into another of the
lockers, he took down his own suit and pulled it on. He had
wasted more than two minutes getting suited up. Now it was more
important than ever to be quick. Here,
at the "lower" end of the palace, there was only the
narrowest of connecting tubes from the rim to the hub. It was an
emergency and maintenance run, with a single stretch of laddering up
the inside of a plain metallic pipe. Clutching the child to him, he
began to climb. It looked simple, but he was climbing away from the
fast-rotating rim toward the hub. As he progressed along the rungs he
would grow steadily more weightless. Carrying the child he would need
to be careful. The last part of the climb would be awkward,
difficult. And
maybe, just maybe, they would be waiting for him. KI m
WAS SITTING on the edge of the desk, going through the latest batch
of results with Feng Wo-shen and another of his assistants, when the
doors at the far end of the laboratory swung open violently. "Becky..." He
stood, looking across at her. Little more thari an hour had passed
since he had last seen her, yet Rebecca looked quite awful. Her eyes
were dark and puffy, her hair disheveled. She had torn her
silks—ripped or cut them—and they hung raggedly
from her, like the clothes of a low-level beggar. But these were as
nothing compared to the strangeness of her stance, to the tense,
animal poise of her, the fierce hostility in her eyes. She
stood there a moment, staring at him, then, slowly, very slowly, she
began to come toward him, a strange awkwardness to her movements that
he recognized at once. So Luke had been, before they'd come for him.
And Will. And finally Deio. Each one in turn, like unstable
formations of atoms, spinning violently out of shape. She
had regressed, Returned to what she'd been, down there in the
darkness of the Clay. Or almost so, for there was still a spark of
sanity in her eyes, the merest glint of light where once the bright
fire of intellect had shone out. Feng
Wo-shen touched his arm. "Should I call Security?" "No,"
Kim said, putting out a hand, as if to physically stop him. "No,
Feng, I'll deal with this." Slowly
Feng backed away, drawing the assistant with him. Rebecca
had stopped, three paces from Kim, her body tensed, as if about to
spring. Looking at her, he could almost see the darkness flowing from
her. Darkness, like a great force of negativity, pouring from her
eyes, her mouth, the corded muscles of her limbs. And yet there was
still an element of control. Something still held her back— one
tiny, quivering cord of reason held her. Reason
... or obsession. She
raised her chin slightly, as if sniffing the air, then lifted her
arm, pointing at him. "You
were wrong, Kim Ward. You didn't understand." Her
hand was trembling, its frailty exaggerated by the movement, as if at
any moment it would disintegrate. For a moment her mouth struggled to
make shapes, as if some vital link between it and her inner self had
been severed; then, freeing itself, it spoke. "It
should have been us. You and me. Together, like Yin and Yang, until
the end of things." She shivered, an unnatural intensity making
her tremble. "You're mine, Kim Ward, don't you understand that
yet? Mine. It was meant" She
came closer, her eyes staring fiercely, defiantly into his. A
muscle in her cheek was twitching now, jumping violently, as
if something had got in behind the flesh. "But
you didn't want that, did you? You wanted something better than that,
neh? Something finer." She laughed coldly, her face ugly,
sneering now, her voice filled with a sudden venom. "You think
you're something special, don't you? You think they really want you
here. But it's not true. We're different from them. We're Clay, Kim.
Clay. And they never let us forget it. "Every
smile they give us is a lie. Every word a deception. But you can't
see that, can you? You're dazzled by the light of this place. So much
so that you can't see the darkness underlying everything." She
tilted her head slowly, lifting it, looking back at him from a
strange, unnatural angle. "Everything. Even your precious girl.
But then, you wouldn't have heard, would you?" He
narrowed his eyes. "What do you mean?" She
smiled; a hideous, triumphant smile. "IVe watched you. . . you
know that? Followed you all these years. Kept tabs on what you've
done, who youVe met. That's how I knew." The
smile slowly faded. Beneath it lay a bleak, hard bitterness. "It
was Tolonen, wasn't it? Tolonen who sent her away. I checked, you
see. I found things out." He was
silent, but her words made him afraid. "Tolonen,"
she said again, her face hardening. "Jelka Tolonen. Your paragon
of light. But do you know what she did? She nearly killed a man,
that's what. A young cadet. Kicked him to death, almost." He
shook his head. "You're lying." "Am
I?" She gave a bitter laugh. "From what I've heard, your
darling Jelka's a right little monster. Why, IVe heard . . ." The
sound of the slap startled Kim. He was conscious of Rebecca stumbling
back, of Feng's cry behind him, but before that there had been a
moment of utter darkness. Of forgetting. He
gave a little shake of his head, as if coming to, then looked across
at her again. Rebecca was standing there, one hand raised to her
face, a startled, angry look in her eyes. What
had she said? What was it now? He
looked down at his hand. The palm stung, as if it had been sprayed
with antiseptic. Then he looked back at her, at the red welt on her
cheek. For a moment there was no connection, only a kind of numbness,
a blackness where things ought to have been joined, and then he
understood. He had struck her. Because of something she had said.
Because . . . She
crouched, facing him, every cell, every atom of her being set against
him now. In that brief moment of darkness something had changed in
her. Whatever had been light in her was gone, extinguished by the
blow. What confronted him now was more animal than human. Even so,
the core of her obsession remained intact, undamaged. It was that
which drove her now. That and nothing else. Her
voice too had changed; had shed the veneer, the polish it had had
only moments before. It was harsh now and guttural, the words falling
awkwardly from her lips, like shards of broken pottery. "Yuu
erhh mae-en," she said, one hand making a clawing motion at him.
"Yuu aan mee, Kih-m. Turr-ge-thuur. Cle-ya. Wee urrh Cle-ya." "No,"
he said, appalled by the dreadful sound that was coming from her.
"No, Becky, please . . ." But it was too late. Snarling,
she threw herself at him, teeth bared. He
beat her off, hurling her back against the desk, winding her
momentarily, but she was at him again in an instant, her fingers
clawing at his eyes. "Becky!"
He thrust her away a second time, barely aware of Feng moving around
him and running for the door. "For the gods' sakes, Becky, no!" But
she was beyond words. With a savagery that frightened him, she leapt
at him again, coiling her arms about him tightly, as if to drag him
down into the depths she now inhabited. And this time he knew he
would have to hurt her if he was to stop her. Choking,
he struck out at her blindly, hitting her in the face and neck and
chest, surprising her with the viciousness of the blows, forcing her
to loosen her hands from about his neck. As she staggered back, he
brought his fists down hard, knocking her onto her knees. He was
about to finish it, to strike her one last time, when there was a
shout. 'Ward;
No.'" Kim
stopped, looking across. Administrator Schram was standing there on
the far side of the lab, Feng Wo-shen and two armed guards just
behind him. "Come
away, Ward. Now. We'll deal with this." Kim
looked down. Rebecca was kneeling just beneath him, her face tilted
up toward him, but her eyes were blank now, unseeing. As he watched,
a tremor seemed to go right through her, and then, slowly, her tiny
frame slumped, collapsing in upon itself. I've
killed her, he thought, horrified. Killed her ... Schram
was beside him now, taking control of things; ordering the guards to
bind the unconscious girl and take her, then turning to point at
Feng, instructing him to clear things up. But Kim was aware of none
of it. He was back there, suddenly; back in Rehabilitation, kneeling
beside the damaged cage, staring in at the lifeless bird, the vision
so real that he felt he could almost reach out and touch it. Again,
he thought, letting a shivering breath escape him. Events like
ripples in the great ocean of Time, circles of darkness stretching
out toward the distant shoreline of the future. He
groaned, thinking of the friends he had lost. First Luke, then Will
and Deio, and now Rebecca. Clay, they had been, each one of them,
formed from the earth and molded by dark circumstance. But to what
end? What point was there to all that death and suffering? What
reason? So that he might go on? No. It made no sense. No sense
at all. "Ward!" Schram
was staring at him, concerned, and shaking him. "Snap out of it,
Ward! It's over now. She's gone. We've taken her." "Taken
her?" Kim
turned, looking at Schram, seeing, behind the surface of the eyes,
the savage delight the man took in this tragedy. For him this sad
display had been a kind of triumph; proof positive that he was right—
that Clay was Clay and could never be raised, never be made truly
human. But Schram didn't understand. No, nor would he ever
understand. He would have had to have been there, first in the
darkness and afterward in the unit, with Luke and Will, Deio and
Rebecca. Kim
sighed, realizing for the first time the depth of his loss. They had
been something. Something bright and fine and wonderful. For a
time they had promised everything. Like a beautiful,
golden-eyed bird. A caged bird that had never flown. "Come
on now, back to work," Schram said, touching his arm, but Kim
batted his hand away. "Don't
touch me," he said, glaring at the man. "Don't you ever
touch me." He saw
the anger flare in the man's eyes and felt something harden deep
within him in response. Slave or no slave, he would not suffer this
kind of thing a moment longer. From here on he would fight it,
wherever he came up against it, not just for himself, but for those
who were no longer there to fight it. For the children of the dark
he'd come to love . . . and had lost. For
Luke and Will and Deio, and, finally, for Rebecca. "Call
Campbell," he said, staring back at Schram defiantly. "Now!
Tell him I want to speak to him. Tell him I want out of here." THE
EDGES OF THE HATCH were still hot from where they'd burned their way
through. The Yu squeezed through delicately, then twisted and
pushed as she'd been taught. The movement took her across the room,
to where the lifeless body of the Security lieutenant rested in the
chair, his arms floating out in front of him. Big globules of blood
and visceral matter were drifting out from the shattered mess that
had been his head. Unconcerned, the Yu swept it aside and pulled
herself down beside the corpse. A
quick inspection showed that the man had had no chance to damage the
desk. She turned and looked back at the hatch. One of her colleagues
was looking through the jagged hole into the room. "Well?"
she said impatiently, using the narrow-band frequency that linked
them all. "All
functional," the woman by the desk answered. "Vesa can put
the power through again. I've got the tapes." Leaning
over the corpse, she took two small tapes from a pocket at the neck
of her suit and slotted them into the surface of the desk. Power had
been out only two and a half minutes, but it was time enough to sound
warning bells down below on Chung Kuo. A squadron of fast and heavily
armed fighters would be heading toward them
already. The tapes might confuse them, maybe hold them a
while, until things were more advanced. Abruptly
the power came on again. On one of the screens she saw two of her
team, firing down a corridor, the bullets arcing with the Coriolis
effect they had been warned about. On another screen she saw a figure
in silks, floating motionless, facedown in the ornamental pool, a
dark red stain spreading out from among the long black strands of its
hair. A third screen showed two guards, waiting, their backs to a
large, heavily ornamented door. They looked scared to death, but
determined. She
watched a moment longer, fascinated, then looked away, busying
herself, getting down to work. KRIZ
STOOD on the viewing plate, looking down past her feet at the image
of the world. Often, in the run-throughs, she had paused and, for the
briefest moment, looked down. But this was different. This time it
was for real. She could feel the long, cold drop beneath her. It was
like standing with only a sheet of transparent ice between you and
all that space. She shuddered and looked across the room toward the
stairs, listening to the constant stream of messages in her ear. It had
gone well. Better than they'd hoped. Two minutes more and it would be
all theirs. "Kriz!
Kriz! Are you there?" It was
Donna, her lieutenant. Right now she should be in Li Yuan's quarters.
* "YouVe got him?" "No!
He's not here! We've missed him!" Kriz
frowned. It wasn't possible. His shuttle was still in the dock, and
his schedule showed that he was here. "No," she said
quickly. "Search everywhere. He has to be here!" Donna
came back to her at once. "And Kuei Jen too. He's not here
either!" "What?"
Disturbed and angered, she hesitated, then rushed across the room
and up the steps. "I'm coming through. Hold tight where you
are." Then, changing frequencies, she spoke quickly to the three
team members who had been left to hold the hub. "Anne, stay
where you are. Vesa and Joan,
move down the hub to the end. And be careful. There may be someone
there." She
ran on, past fallen guards and through smoldering, damaged rooms,
until she came to Li Yuan's private suite. Here, where they had
expected the fighting to be hardest, things were untouched. That,
more than anything, convinced her that Li Yuan had not been here. "The
wives?" she asked. "Farther
down," Donna answered, coming across. "We had to torch the
rooms. The guards fought hard." "AndKueiJen?" "He
was here. The cot bedding was disturbed. His nurse knew
nothing though. She was asleep. When she woke he was gone." "Then
he's still here." She smiled, reassured by the news. "Good.
Then let's find the little bastard!" TSENG-LI
SHIVERED. He could hear them coming, their heavy, weighted boots
clanking with each step. "Another minute!" he hissed softly
through his teeth. "Just give me another minute!" Kuei
Jen was already wedged inside the tiny craft they called "the
coffin," attached by a web of cords in the niche where,
normally, the engineer on duty would keep a spare air bottle. There
was neither time nor room for finesse how, though, so it would have
to do. And if they failed, well, it was better than dying here. And
death grew more certain with every passing moment. He was
outside, in the cramped maintenance area beside the blister that held
the small, beetlelike maintenance craft. For more than a minute now
he had been working at the catch of the manual controls, trying to
force it open with a wrench. But time was running out fast. Even if
he managed to get it open and operate the override, there was no
guarantee that he'd get back to the craft. He had visions of it
drifting out slowly on its two-ii tether, the outer hatch open to the
vacuum. If Kuei Jen didn't freeze to death he would suffocate
eventually. Unless Tseng-li could clamber back in somehow and close
the outer hatch manually. And even then they had only twelve hours of
air. Things
were bad. And getting worse by the second. He grunted and
hit out at the heavy catch viciously, swearing beneath his
breath. "Give, you bastard, give!" For a moment longer it
held, then, with a hiss, it gave, the automatic controls springing
the plate back so that it banged against his face plate. "Well,
sod you too!" he said, laughing, halfway between relief and
sheer panic. Quickly he reached in and turned and pulled out the
handle. At once he heard the dull concussion of the seals as they
moved into place. The maintenance room was now an airlock, both of
its access doors sealed off. It made him feel better, safer. It would
take them minutes to cut through them. And in minutes . . . He was
about to turn away, when another of the controls caught his
attention. A dial. It was calibrated finely, from o through to 2. At
present it was set just over i. A second set of figures gave
rotational speed. He knew at once what it was. Smiling, he turned the
dial slowly to the right. Then, with an abruptness that was almost
vicious, he slammed the dial back to the left and left it there,
turning to face the opening blister. KRIZ
WAS BY THE POOL when it struck. There had been a moment's sensation
of heaviness, of pressure, then, slowly at first but with gathering
speed, things began to happen. At first the feeling was quite
pleasant, a kind of lightness that was as much of the spirit as of
the body. Then, before she knew what had hit her, the huge sheet of
water in front of her began to lift and break apart. In her
ear-mike there was a gabble of sudden panic. The palace was slowing
down! Someone had stopped its spin! "Anne!"
she screamed, her feet coming away from the floor momentarily. "What
the fuck are you doing?" There
was a moment's radio silence, then Anne's voice came through. "What's
going on? Aiya! What's happening?" Kriz
understood at once. The override. Someone had got to the end of the
hub before them. Even as she thought it, Vesa's voice came through
loudly in her ear. "It's
sealed! Someone's sealed it off!" "Use
explosives!" Kriz yelled back. By now she was floating several
feet from the floor. Huge lumps of water were drifting out and up,
away from the pool. She could
imagine the chaos elsewhere. "Once you're inside, there'll be a
control panel. Try not to damage it. Reset the dial for one
atmosphere." She
could feel herself shedding weight by the moment as the great palace
slowed, its huge engines reversing its spin and bringing it to a
complete halt. Soon it would be as weightless all around the rim as
it was at the hub. Suddenly
it had all gone wrong. Badly wrong! "Vesa,
I..." The
ship shuddered. It was as if something had hit it. Something huge.
Kriz felt herself thrown across the pool, big gouts of water
colliding with her and turning her about. She was buffeted and
slowed. Then, when she thought things had died down, there was a
second, far bigger detonation, that seemed to pick her up and shake
her about, then cast her down, like a huge hand pressing her firm
against the bottom of the pool, flattening her. FROM A
HUNDRED LI out the first of the fighters saw it happen and caught it
on camera. There was a flicker and a blurring of the starlight
surrounding the tip of the hub. Slowly, almost gracefully, the spokes
of the lower end fell away, severing the hub from the rim. Then, only
moments later, the whole structure seemed to shudder and slowly
buckle, a strange electric tracery surrounding the docking nodule at
the top. The opposite end of the hub was swinging inward now, toward
the rim, but even before it struck, the whole palace seemed to
quiver, then shatter, like a fragile shape of glass. For a
moment the fighter's screen was incandescently bright. Then, very
slowly, it faded to a flickering, ember-strewn black. There was a
strong hiss of static on the audio band. "What's
happened?" said a voice, cutting through the distortion. "What
in the gods' names is going on up there?" "It's
gone," said the pilot softly, disbelievingly. "Kuan Yin
preserve us, it's gone!" CHAPTER
TWENTY-THREE
The Stone Within SEE,
" said Tsu Ma, nodding gravely. He sat, all color drained from
his face. "And has any wreckage been found yet?" The
man on the screen seemed to concentrate a moment, then nodded. He was
wired to the console in front of him and was receiving reports by the
moment. "Most of the wreckage appears to have stayed up there,
but a lot of it has been falling. There have been reports of large
chunks coming down into the sea off the Guinea coast." Tsu
Ma looked away a moment, then back at the screen, his whole face
grown stiffer, a sudden anger making his eyes flare. "Who did
this?" There
was no hesitation this time. "It was the Yu. Kiev had two
minutes of taped material sent out from Yangjing before its systems
cut out." "Yu.
. ." he said under his breath. Then, "How did they get on
board?" The
Security man shook his head. "We don't know that yet, Chieh
Hsia. Tracking reports certain . . . difficulties." "Difficulties?"
He was suspicious at once. "What kind of difficulties?" "Well.
. ." The man's hesitation showed his discomfort. He knew all the
old adages about the bearers of ill news. "It seems we have half
a day's tracking transmissions missing for that sector." "Missing?"
Tsu Ma laughed harshly. "That's impossible. There are backups to
the backups, surely?" The
man bowed his head. "That is so, Chieh Hsia, but there is
no stored record. Only a gap." Tsu
Ma was quiet, thinking, WangSau-kyan. This was his doing. But
how prove it? How tie him to this foulness? Then, like a cold wave,
dousing his anger, it struck him what this meant for Li Yuan: his
whole family gone. Tsu Ma shivered and half turned, hearing the
voices from the other room—hearing, at that very moment, as if
in hideous mockery of events, Li Yuan's strong and vital laughter.
Laugh no more, Li Yuan, for your wives are dead, and your infant
son. With
difficulty he returned his attention to the matter in hand. "Put
me through to Tracking. I want explanations." There
was a four-second delay, then a worried face replaced that of the
Security man. "Gerhardt, Chieh Hsia. Head of Tracking, North-em
Hemisphere." Tsu Ma
launched in at once. "What's happening, Gerhardt? I am told that
you are missing half a day's transmissions. Is that possible?" "No,
Chieh Hsia." "But
true." "Yes,
Chieh Hsia." "Then
how do you explain it?" Gerhardt
swallowed, then spoke up. "It has been erased, Chieh Hsia.
Someone here has removed it from the record." "Someone?"
Tsu Ma's voice was suddenly pitiless. The
official bowed his head submissively. "It is my responsibility,
Chieh Hsia. I know my duty." "Are
you saying that you did it?" Gerhardt
hesitated, then shook his head. Tsu Ma
took a deep breath, then spoke again, his patience close to snapping.
"This is no time for honor, man. I want to know who did it, and
at whose instigation. And I want to know as soon as possible.
Understand? We'll talk of duty then." Gerhardt
made to speak, then simply bowed. Tsu Ma cut the connection and sat
there, staring blankly at the empty screen. Then, grunting, he stood
up heavily and turned to face the doorway. Wu
Shih was standing there, looking in. Seeing the color of Tsu Ma's
face, he took two steps into the room. "What in the gods' names
is it?" Tsu Ma
licked at his dry lips, then, coming forward, took Wu Shih's arm and
led him back through. There, on a couch on the left of the room, Li
Yuan was sitting, a cup of dark wine in one hand. Tsu Ma looked to Wu
Shih, then indicated that he should take a seat. Li Yuan, looking up,
smiled, but his smile quickly faded. "What
has happened?" "I
have bad news," Tsu Ma answered him directly, knowing there was
no way of softening what had to be said. "Yangjing is destroyed.
There are no survivors." Li
Yuan opened his mouth, then looked down sharply. Carefully he put his
wine cup down. Then, ashen-faced, his eyes avoiding theirs, he got up
and left the room. Wu
Shih stared at Tsu Ma, his face a register of the horror he was
feeling. "This is true?" he asked softly, then, shaking his
head, he laughed bitterly. "Of course . . . You would not joke
of such a thing." He took a breath, then, "Kuan Yin!
How?" Tsu
Ma's voice trembled now. It had finally got to him. Seeing Li Yuan;
having to tell him. "Yu terrorists. They got aboard somehow." Wu
Shih shook his head. "It is not possible." "No?"
Tsu Ma's voice was sharp. Too sharp. He waved a hand uncertainly at
his fellow T'ang, then sat beside him. "I'm sorry ... but yes,
it is possible." "Wang
Sau-leyan . . ." Wu Shih said quietly, looking past Tsu Ma at
the empty doorway. "Yes,"
Tsu Ma answered him. "It could be no other. It has his mark." "Then
what?" Tsu Ma
laughed, the full horror of the irony striking him. "Then we
must do as Li Yuan said. Nothing. Until we have conclusive proof." Wu
Shih got up angrily. "But that was before!" Tsu Ma
looked down at his hands. "Nothing has changed. Not even the
fall of Yangjing could justify us acting without proof. Even Li Yuan
would say as much." Wu
Shih snorted. "It fits you ill to be so reasonable with other's
hurts. He has lost a son." "And
wives . . ." Tsu Ma added, remembering sharply his own part in
affairs. "But we are T'ang as well as men. We must act by law,
not instinct." "What
law does Wang Sau-leyan follow that he can butcher us and we do
nothing?" Wu Shih strode across the room, then came back. "I
cannot simply do nothing, Tsu Ma. I would choke on my own bile were I
not to act." Tsu Ma
looked up at him, his eyes wet with tears. "You think I do not
feel the same, Wu Shih? Gods, I would break him with these hands were
it so simple. But we must be certain. We must act with justice. No
man must fault us." Wu
Shih huffed again. "And if we find nothing?" Tsu Ma
was silent a long while. Then, meeting Wu Shin's eyes again, he
smiled bleakly. "Then I shall kill him anyway." WANG
SAU-LEYAN sat up irritably and tore the black velvet covers from his
eyes. "Well?
What is it?" The
servant kneeling in the open doorway lifted his head marginally. "It
is Chi Hsing, Chieh Hsia. He begs an audience." Wang
glanced at the bedside timer and shook his head. Then, as if suddenly
more awake, he got up quickly and wrapped his silks about him, then
made for his study. Chi
Hsing's angry face filled the big screen above the desk. He barely
waited for Wang to come into the room before he began. "What
is the meaning of this, Wang Sau-leyan? M;y shuttle! You have used my
shuttle!" Wang
Sau-leyari frowned, confused, then came closer to the screen, raising
a hand. "Hold on, cousin. I don't know what you mean. What about
your shuttle? What has happened?" Chi
Hsing laughed cynically. "No games, cousin. This is serious. It
could mean war." Wang
Sau-leyan's puzzlement was genuine, and Chi Hsing, seeing it, frowned
and seemed to lean back away from the screen. "You
mean you do not know?" Wang
shook his head, feeling a sudden tightness in his stomach. "No .
. . Something has happened, then?" Chi
Hsing took a breath, then, more calmly, answered him. "I had the
news only minutes ago. Li Yuan is dead. With all his family. Yangj
ing has fallen. Blown from the skies." Wang
Sau-leyan felt a powerful surge of exultation pass through him, but
kept his face a rigid mask. "Ah . . ." was all he said. But
the news was like a sweet wind blowing after centuries of drought,
sign of the refreshing rain to come. Chi
Hsing-spoke again. "Then you knew nothing of this?" Wang
shook his head mutely. But now that he had heard, he knew. Mach! Mach
had gone in early! "Who knows of this apart from you?" "My
private servants. A few of my Security staff." "Then
there is no problem. The shuttle will have been destroyed in the
explosion. No one could trace it back to you, surely?" Even
as he said it, he knew the steps to be taken. Who to bribe, what
records to destroy. There would be traces. The movements of
the shuttle would be recorded. But action could be taken—if
taken now—to erase such things. "There were no survivors?" "None." Again
he fought to hide the intense pleasure he felt at the news. He took a
breath, then nodded. "Leave it to me, Chi Hsing. I shall ensure
that no trace remains." "You
swear you had no knowledge of this, Sau-leyan?" Wang
let his anger show. "Do not insult me, cousin. I knew nothing.
And though this news pleases me, it brings me no pleasure to leam of
your own fears. I feel it my duty to help you, cousin." Chi
Hsing was silent a moment, then gave the slightest of nods. "I
do not like this, Sau-leyan. Nor do I share your pleasure at the
news. This strikes to the heart of us all. I know your hatred for Li
Yuan, but think. It might have been you or I. Whoever did this struck
out at the Seven—at us—not only at Li Yuan." Wang
dropped his head, as if chastened. "I am sorry. You are right,
Chi Hsing. But I'll not weep when I feel joy." Chi
Hsing stared at him a moment, then looked away, presenting
Wang Sau'leyan with a profile. "You realize the problems
this will cause us?" He
did. And when Chi Hsing was gone from the screen, he sat there torn
between anger and joy—joy at the news and anger at Mach's
preempting the new proposals in the House. Mach's impatience would
cause him problems—major problems. Still, if only each day
would bring such problems! Quickly he tapped out a discreet code
which, he knew, would worm its way to Mach, erasing all trace of its
passage. It would ensure no contact between them in the delicate
weeks to come. It
remained, then, only to deal with the matter of the shuttle. And
that, like all else, he would do through certain men in Chi Hsing's
own household. They knew not who they dealt with, only that such
dealings made them rich. Let them attempt to cover his traces. And if
they failed? Wang
Sau-leyan got up and walked back through to his dead father's
bedroom, too excited now to sleep. If they failed to clear Chi
Hsing's name it mattered little. The Seven would be Five. And with Li
Yuan gone . . . He
laughed, then went briskly to the window and drew back the curtains.
Outside it was dark, the moon low in the sky. It would be morning in
two hours. He held his hands out before him, palms open, and looked
down at them. Such smooth, white hands. For a long time he held them
there, staring at them, then closed them slowly, smiling to himself. Let
them make their accusations. He, Wang Sau-leyan, would have clean
hands. He
turned from the window, picturing himself there, in council, facing
the angry faces of Tsu Ma and Wu Shih, his own anger tightly
harnessed. "You do me wrong," he heard himself say.
"I knew nothing of this." It was
the truth. He laughed, delighted. Yes, for once it was almost the
truth. LI
YUAN lay THERE in the darkened room, grieving, the hurt a vast
weight, pressing down on his chest, crushing him; a dark and
heavy millstone, beneath which he lay, helpless. To move was
an effort, each hard-won breath a betrayal. They were dead. In a
moment of stillness, of unthinking nullity, someone crept into the
room and knelt beside him. It was Tsu Ma. He felt the older man's
hand at his neck, in the dark hair there; felt a wetness on his brow,
then the softest pressure of his cheek against his own. Eyes closed,
he held the other man tightly, letting the smothered grief escape.
Then, when the pain of it seemed to have lessened, he felt Tsu Ma
move back and release him. He sat, feeling hollow, staring
sightlessly into the shadows. "This
much loss . . ." Tsu Ma
did not complete his words. Li Yuan turned his head slowly, facing
him. There was such a pressure in his upper chest, such a need to say
something, yet nothing came. He coughed, almost choking, then bent
his head suddenly, succumbing to the sharpness of the feeling. At the
far end of the room the door slowly opened. "Chieh
Hsia . . . ?" Tsu Ma
turned his head, then stood and went across. "Yes," he said
quietly. "What is it?" There
was a brief whispered exchange, then Tsu Ma came back. "Yuan ...
if you would go through and wash your face. General Rheinhardt is
here. He has news." Li
Yuan stood slowly. In the light from the open door he could see Tsu
Ma's face clearly; see the redness of the eyes, the wetness of his
cheeks. "Rheinhardt?" he said hoarsely. "I thought no
one knew. . ." He
frowned, and looked past Tsu Ma, toward the servant in the doorway.
If Rheinhardt knew they were here, it meant their security was
breached. Only Tseng-li had known. Tsu Ma
reached out and took his arm. "Freshen up, cousin. Then come to
my study." Li
Yuan looked at him steadily, then shook his head. "No. I shall
come as I am. Tears are no cause for shame." They
went through, servants and guards looking down, not daring to look.
All knew how things stood. The rumor had gone out around
the palace an hour back. Even so, they could not help but
notice how Li Yuan bore himself. Such dignity in grief. Such
strength. In Tsu
Ma's study, Wu Shih came to him and held him a moment before leaving.
Then, with a nod to his private secretary, Tsu Ma also left the room.
The secretary gave a deep bow, then went to the far door and opened
it, letting Rheinhardt into the room. "I shall be here if you
need me, Chieh Hsia," he said, bowing again, then left,
closing the door behind him. Li
Yuan was alone in the room with his General. "Who
told you I was here, Helmut?" "It
was Tseng-li, Chieh Hsia." Li
Yuan was silent a moment, puzzled. Rheinhardt was unarmed, but he
still suspected a trap—some kind of trickery. "When did he
tell you this?" "Less
than an hour back, Chieh Hsia." Li
Yuan shivered. Haven't you heard? he almost said, then
realized that Rheinhardt would have heard all, before even he had
been told. He started forward. "What do you mean?" "Just
that I spoke to him, Chieh Hsia. He told me where you were. It
was . . ." The General hesitated, venturing a smile. "It
was a great relief to me, my Lord." At
once he understood. "You thought me dead?" "The
whole world thinks you dead." "And
Tseng-li?" Li Yuan took a step closer, his face caught between
doubt and hope. "He
is alive, Chieh Hsia. As is Kuei Jen." Li
Yuan laughed, openly astonished. "Kuei Jen? Alive?" "A
scoutship picked them up. Their craft was damaged, but they were
unharmed." "Their
ship?" "A
little maintenance craft. It survived the explosion. But they were
lucky. It seemed like just another piece of debris. Only a visual
contact saved them." But Li
Yuan was barely listening. He crossed the room quidkly and stood over
Tsu Ma's desk, studying the controls. Then, impatiently, he turned to
Rheinhardt. "Where are they now? How can I contact them?" The
General came across and punched in the access code, then stepped
back, away from the desk, leaving Li Yuan alone, looking down into
the screen. A
soldier's face appeared and, with a quick bow, turned and called
someone forward. It was clear that they had been waiting for this
moment. "Tseng-li!"
said Li Yuan joyfully, as the familiar face came onto the screen.
"How are you?" Tseng-li
bowed, smiling, his eyes wet. "We are alive, Highness." "And
my son? Where is my son?" Another
soldier brought Kuei Jen and handed him to Tseng-li, who turned back
to face the screen, cradling the sleeping child. The movement
disturbed Kuei Jen. He stretched and began to cry, one arm struggling
against Tseng-li's neck briefly before he quieted and grew still
again. "Kuei!"
Li Yuan called softly, tears of joy rolling down his cheeks. "My
little Kuei. . ." Tseng-li
was silent a moment, strong emotions crossing and re-crossing his
face. Regaining control, he spoke again. "They
were Yu, Highness. I heard them. But the craft. . ." He
hesitated, then said it. "It was Chi Hsing's shuttle. His
Security codes." Li
Yuan straightened up, a shudder passing through him. He had gone
cold. "You are certain, Tseng-li?" "Your
guards were thorough, Highness, but they were betrayed." Li
Yuan moaned. His momentary relief at finding them alive had masked
all else from him. Yet his wives were still dead, his palace
destroyed. And now, he found, Chi Hsing had betrayed him. "Not
Wang Sau-leyan, then?" He said the words quietly, shivering, a
sudden bitter hatred replacing the grief and happiness. "I
have no reason. . ." began Tseng-li, then stopped, seeing the
look on Li Yuan's face. "Li Yuan, I..." "Do
your brothers know you live?" Li Yuan asked suddenly, changing
the subject. "They
. . . No, they do not know yet, Highness." "Then
I will let them know myself. I would not have them grieve while you
live." Tseng-li
opened his mouth, then bowed, understanding. , "And
Tseng-li..." He
looked up again, meeting Li Yuan's eyes across the distance. "Yes,
Highness?" "I
do not know how you managed it, but my debt to you is great. Whatever
you want, you shall have it." Tseng-li
smiled bitterly. "There is but one thing I want now, cousin
Yuan. I want him dead." "Who?
Chi Hsing?" The
bitter smile remained. "Not him. The other one . . ." "Ah
yes . . ." Li Yuan took a deep breath. "Yes. And I too." TSU MA
WAS WAITING for him in the anteroom. "Well?" he said,
coming forward anxiously. "Tseng-li
lives," Li Yuan said, smiling at the news. "And my son,
Kuei Jen." There
was a look of delight on Tsu Ma's face. He embraced Li Yuan tightly,
then stepped back, a sharper expression on his face. "Then we
know what happened!" "Yes,"
said Li Yuan, looking down. "We were wrong, it seems." "Wrong?" "It
was not our cousin Wang. Not directly, anyway. This was Chi Hsing." "Chi
Hsing?" Tsu Ma laughed, disbelievingly. "Why, he hasn't the
guts!" Then, seeing how Li Yuan continued to stand there, the
same expression on his face, Tsu Ma shook his head. "What proof
is there?" Li
Yuan looked up. "They used his shuttle to board. His codes. What
more do we need?" Tsu Ma
stared at him a moment longer, then nodded. "I'll call a
Council, then . . ." But Li
Yuan reached out and took his arm. "No. Not this time. This time
we do things my way." CHI
HSING WAS bowed at Li Yuan's feet, one hand pressed to the cold tiled
floor, the other clutching the hem of the young T'ang's robes. He was
pleading now, almost in tears. "What
can I do to convince you, Yuan? I was betrayed . . ." Wang
Sau-leyan looked on from across the room, bitter and silent. He had
been made to seem a fool. His own face had betrayed him. But surprise
was not evidence and Chi Hsing had kept silent about their meetings.
It did not matter what Li Yuan or the others thought privately.
Before the world they needed proof, and they had none. "You
were betrayed?" Tsu Ma's voice was heavy with sarcasm. He made a
sound of disgust and turned away, going across to where Wu Shih and
Wei Chan Yin stood watching. Li
Yuan bent down and tugged the silk from Chi Hsing's hand. It was a
savage, ugly gesture. Chi Hsing looked up at his fellow T'ang
briefly, then lowered his head once more, humbling himself. All
majesty had gone from him. He was a supplicant now, begging for his
life. Li Yuan, on the other hand, seemed almost demonic in his power.
His face was like a hawk's, pitiless, almost inhuman in its abstract
cruelty. His eyes rested on Chi Hsing's topknot a moment, then he
moved his head sharply and stared angrily across at Wang. "And
you swear Wang Sau-leyan knew nothing of this? You are certain of
this, Chi Hsing?" Wang
made to speak, but Wu Shih barked at him. "Hold your tongue,
Wang Sau-leyan! Chi Hsing must answer this!" Incensed,
he nevertheless did as he was told, glowering at Wu Shih. If the
sight of Li Yuan's living face had been a shock, this now was almost
more than he could bear. How dare they speak to him this way! Chi
Hsing shuddered, then shook his head. "Wang Sau-leyan knew
nothing. I spoke to him, only moments after I had heard. I
thought..." "You
thought what?" The cold anger in Li Yuan's voice was terrible to
hear. Chi
Hsing took a breath, then spoke again, looking all the while at a
spot just in front of Li Yuan's feet. "It is no secret that he
hates you, Li Yuan. And so I thought—this is his work." "And
was it?" "Take
care," said Wang, taking a step forward. But he could see how
things stood. All etiquette had been forgotten. Li Yuan, as ever, had
ridden roughshod over tradition. These others were his dupes. His
accomplices. They
were all awaiting Chi Hsing's response. "He
knew nothing. I swear it. His surprise was unfeigned. There is a tape
of my call to him. I..." "Enough!"
Li Yuan said suddenly. He turned from Chi Hsing and came across,
stopping in front of Wang Sau-leyan. Giving the slightest bow, he
spoke again. "Chi Hsing, though disgraced, would hardly say such
a thing lightly. And the tape—I am sure that it shows what he
claims." He lifted his chin. "So, cousin, I must apologize
for what I asked." Wang
Sau-leyan's face was red with anger now, his nostrils flared, his
whole expression indignant, yet still he said nothing. Even in
apologizing, Li Yuan had insulted him and made a mockery of
tradition. And all the while his fellow T'ang had looked on, saying
nothing. Li
Yuan turned away sharply, his back to Wang Sau-leyan, and looked
across at Chi Hsing. "What, then, of you, Chi Hsing? What should
we do?" "This
is a nonsense . . ." began Wang, but before he could say any
more, Li Yuan had turned and placed one hand roughly, almost brutally
over his mouth, pushing his head back. He spoke fiercely, as if to a
vassal. "Be
quiet, Wang Sau-leyan! You have nothing to say here! Understand?" Li
Yuan removed his hand abruptly, glaring at Wang, then turned away
again, leaving Wang to touch his bruised lip tenderly. There was
murder in Li Yuan's almond eyes. Li
Yuan crossed the room again and stood over Chi Hsing. There was a
look of disgust on his face now. "Speak up, Chi Hsing. What
should we do with you?" "Do?"
Chi Hsing turned his head and looked past Li Yuan at the others, his
eyes imploring them, but their faces were as hard as Li Yuan's.
Seeing this, Chi Hsing dropped his head again, submissive. "There
is no precedent," he said quietly. "Nor
for the destruction of a palace," said Wu Shih, but Li Yuan was
uncompromising now. "You
have broken the most sacred trust, Chi Hsing—that which binds
us who must rule Chung Kuo. For myself I would see you dead and your
sons beside you in the ground. But this is not a personal thing. We
must consider how best to act for those we represent." Li
Yuan paused and turned to face the others who stood apart from him.
"We must decide now, and act at once. In this we must not be
seen to be indecisive. There are those who would take advantage of
our apparent disarray." He took a deep breath, then said it.
"Chi Hsing must stand down." "No!
You cannot do this!" Wang Sau-leyan said, outraged. "There
are but six of us here. We must wait for Hou Tung-po. A Council must
be called." Li
Yuan tensed, but did not look at Wang Sau-leyan. When he spoke again
his words were measured, and it was as if Wang had said nothing. "Chi
Hsing must do this for us. He must appear before the world and
confess what he has done. Then, before all, he will stand down. And
his lands will be forfeit to the Seven. We shall rule the Australias
as a colony, with a governor who will report directly to us in
Council." Both
Chi Hsing and Wang Sau-leyan were silent. It was Wu Shih, the eldest
of them, who spoke next. "So it must be. For the sake of us all.
And you, Chi Hsing, must be a sleeping dragon. You will retire to
your estate and take no more part in the doings of this world. Your
wives, your sons, will live, but they will not inherit." At
this Wang Sau-leyan came forward and stood between Li Yuan and the
others. "Again, this cannot be! This is a matter for Council!" "Are
you opposed to this?" Tsu Ma demanded angrily. "There
are forms . . ." Wang began, but Li Yuan interrupted him. "We
shall vote on this. Right now." Wang
Sau-leyan faced him angrily. "No! This is not right! Hou Tung-po
is not here. We cannot act like this!" "Right.7"
Li Yuan sniffed. "You have not understood me yet, have you,
cousin? My wives are dead, my palace blown out of the sky. And you
talk of forms, tradition . . ." He laughed scathingly. "If
you are so worried, let us meet form this way. Let us count cousin
Hou as opposed to what we do. Would that be fair, Wang
Sau-leyan? Would it be right?" Wang
bristled visibly. "And Chi Hsing?" Li
Yuan shook his head. "Chi Hsing has no say in this." "No
say?" Li
Yuan spoke angrily, each word clearly and separately enunciated. "It
is as I said. He has no say." Wang
Sau-leyan stood there facing him a moment longer, then turned away
sharply. "Do as you will, then. I'll have no part of this." "Your
hands are clean, eh, cousin?" It was Tsu Ma who taunted him. But
it did not matter now. It would be as Li Yuan said. "You
will do this?" Li Yuan asked, looking down at Chi Hsing. "I
have no choice?" "No,"
corrected Li Yuan. "We have no choice. For myself, as I
said, I would kill you now." Chi
Hsing hesitated, then bowed lower, placing his forehead to the ground
miserably. "Then I shall do as you ask." LI
YUAN STOOD on the balcony outside his dead wives' rooms, a thick
cloak draped about his shoulders. It was dark and chilly. Overhead a
thin, ragged cloud blew fitfully across the sky. Through screens of
leafy vine the light of the crescent moon cast a mottled silver over
everything. Kuei
Jen was sleeping. Tseng-li had been sent home to his brothers. Below
Li Yuan, in the palace grounds, a doubled guard patrolled silently.
Only he, it seemed, was restless. He turned, sighing, and looked back
into the empty, silent rooms, remembering. How
strange it was. Before, if he had been asked, he would have said that
it was not love he felt for them, more a kind of warm familiarity, a
feeling of physical comfort, and he might have smiled wistfully and
shaken his head, as if puzzled by the question. But now he realized
just how foolish he had been. How childish. Only now, through grief
and loss of them, did he finally understand just how much they had
meant to him. Love.
How clearly his father's words came back to him now. Love was the
thing that failed. Love ... a thing too insubstantial, too fragile to
hold and keep, and yet, in the end, there was nothing stronger,
nothing more real than love. He
shuddered, then stretched, feeling tired beyond words. In the greater
world huge changes were taking place even at that moment. Under Wu
Shih's direction, Chi Hsing was standing down and a Governor was
being appointed to run the Australian continent. Yet those changes,
great as they were, seemed as nothing compared to the changes in his
heart. There was no measuring such changes. They blotted out the
stars themselves, casting vast, dark shadows on the perceiving eye. Yes,
he thought, bowing his head. Death not Love is master of this
uiorld. As he
stood there, looking in at the empty rooms, small memories of them
returned to him. Against the emptiness he saw his second wife, Lai
Shi, turn and look across at him, laughing, that strange, flirtatious
movement of her mouth, special to her alone, making him smile. Beyond
her, the youngest, Fu Ti Chang, sat reading an old romance, her
jet-black hair like a fine veil over the pallor of her face. As she
turned to face him he caught his breath, finding the innocence of her
dark eyes suddenly quite beautiful. And if he turned, he could see
Mien Shan, there on the far side of the room, the great mirror behind
her, smiling as she cradled her son and gently sang to him. How much
he had liked that curious pursing of her lips when she sang. How much
he missed it now. The
memories faded, vanished. Empty rooms, he thought. That's
all I have now. Empty rooms. He
placed his hand against his neck, the warmth of his fingers strange
against the night-chilled flesh. He pressed, then gently tugged at
it, feeling the strength of muscle, the hardness of the bone beneath;
all of it so tenuous, so transient. All of it dust before the wind.
Perhaps, then, it was best to go as they had gone, in one brief and
sudden burst of pain. Pain, and then . . . nothingness. "Best.
. ." he said softly, letting his hand fall away, and gritting
his teeth against the sudden upsurge of feeling. Best? Who knew what
was best? And yet he was charged to know—or, at least, to seem
to know. It was what made his grief so different. So special. And yet
it was only grief, for all that, no different from the grief of
countless millions who had suffered since the dawn of Man. But
was grief all? Was there no more to it than this? Li Yuan drew
the cloak tighter about his shoulders, then offered the words
to the chill and silent air. "Must
it always be like this? Must the heart become a stone?"
He stood there for a long time after that, feeling a kind of disgust
for what he was. Then,
abruptly, he crossed the room and went through
to where Kuei Jen was sleeping and woke his nurse, telling her
to prepare the child to travel. /P> fei
yen MET HIM in the Great Room at Hei Shui. He had given her no notice
of his coming and she had had no time to ready herself. She had
thrown a pale blue gown about her and tied back her long, black hair,
but her face was unmade, her nails unpainted. It was years since he
had seen her look so natural. Hesitantly, her face showing deep
puzzlement, she crossed the room to him, then knelt at his feet, her
head bowed, awaiting his command. "YouVe
heard?" he asked her softly. She
gave the smallest nod, then was still. "I.
. ."he looked about him, conscious of the guards by the door,
the nurse behind him, holding Kuei Jen. Abruptly, he turned and
dismissed them. Then, bending down, he lifted her chin and made her
look at him. "I have to talk to you. I..." Her
eyes, always the most beautiful thing about her, robbed him of words.
For a moment he knelt there, close to her, conscious of her warm,
sweet smell, of her nakedness beneath the gown, and wanted only to
hold her; to close his eyes and hold on tight to her. She
moved back, away from him. "Why?" Her
eyes looked briefly at his hand where it yet hovered, awkward,
between their faces, then met his own again, their intensity
surprising him. He
drew his hand back, looking down. How explain what had made him come?
It was more than sudden impulse, yet even he knew how unreasonable it
seemed. This had ended years ago. And to come here now . . . "What
do you want, Li Yuan?" Her
voice was softer than before. He looked up at her, not knowing
what to expect and found her watching him strangely, her eyes
trying to fathom him. "I
thought. . ." she began, then fell silent. Her mouth had fallen
open slightly, its wet softness there before him, as in his dreams. "IVe
been thinking of you," he said. "Of us." He saw
the pain in her face and, for the first time, understood what she had
suffered; saw the emptiness that no number of casual lovers could
fill. Slowly, tenderly, he reached out and touched her cheek. "Don't,"
she said, but the slight pressure of her cheek against his fingers
gave the lie to the word. He
shivered. "They're dead." Again
there was a moment's pain in her face, awful to see. Then she nodded.
"Did you love them?" His
fingers grew still. "I did not think so. But I must have. It...
it hurts." She
bowed her head. There were tears in her eyes now. "Is that why
you are here? Because of them?" He
took a long, deep breath. "I do not know." For a
moment he thought of telling her of that moment earlier— out in
the dark, beneath the moon—when he had seen things clear, then
shook his head. "No,"
he said at last. "It isn't that. Or not just that. I... I missed
you." "You
missed me?" she said, a trace of her former bitterness
surfacing. She saw him wince and at once was contrite. "Li Yuan,
I. . ." She dropped her head, swallowed. "I am sorry. It is
hard. Harder than I can bear some days." He
gave a single nod. "I know." He
looked at her more carefully now and saw the faint crow's feet about
her eyes, the lines at mouth and neck and remembered that she was
eight years his elder. His dead brother's wife, and once his own. But
she was still beautiful. Still the most beautiful woman he had ever
seen. Again he wanted to kiss her and hold her, yet he felt
constrained. Death came between them, darkening their understanding
of how things were. He
stood, turning away from her. "I do not know what I want. I am
confused. I thought... I thought that if I came here it would
all come clear again. That maybe it would be as it was." For
the first time she laughed; a bitter, ugly sound. He turned, looking
at her, and saw how all softness had gone from her face. "Do
you mean to be so cruel, Li Yuan, or is it still some sickly
innocence that makes you so insensitive?" "I
didn't mean to ..." "You
never mean to. You just do." She
sat back, glaring at him, all humility gone from her now; more,
suddenly, the woman he had known and lived with. His equal. Ever his
equal. "Are you such a fool that you cannot see it?" He
shook his head, but already he was beginning to understand. "It
cannot be as it was," she said, getting up slowly and coming
across to where he stood. "There is more than death between us.
More than other wives, other husbands. Time has changed us, Li Yuan.
It has made you what you are, me what I am. Only the outward forms
remain—time-ravaged things that look like we once were."
She paused, looking up into his face. "We cannot go back, Li
Yuan. Not ever." He was
silent, uncertain. "Do
you still love me?" she asked suddenly. Her face was fierce,
uncompromising, but in her eyes he could see something else, deep
down, hidden maybe even from herself. A fragility. A need. And for
the first time he smiled; a tender, pitying smile. "I
have never stopped loving you." Her
whole face seemed to twitch and then reform, more ugly, more pained
than before, but somehow also more beautiful. She had not expected
this. Whatever she might have hoped for, his answer had surprised
her. She
looked down, then turned away, all fierceness gone from her suddenly.
Her chest rose and fell violently and her hands clutched at her waist
as if to hold in all that she was feeling. But when she turned back
there was anger in her face. "Then why? Why all of this if that
was true?" I
don't know, he thought, and for the first time knew it was
true. It could have been repaired. This, where they were now, was all
his fault. Oh, she had been
unfaithful, yes, but what was that? He had been hard on her—much
too hard. Was it her fault if she had proved less than perfect? Had
he loved only her perfection? "I
was young, Fei Yen. Maybe too young. I wronged you. I realize that
now." She
made a small noise, then shook her head hesitantly. "What are
you saying?" Her whole face was tensed against him, mistrustful
now. She was afraid of what he was saying; fearful of being led by
him and then discarded once again. These were old wounds, deep
wounds. Why open them again unless to heal them? "I
am tired," he said finally. "And hurt. But that is not why
I am here, Fei Yen. Nor do I wish to hurt you." He shook his
head, genuinely pained. "That is the last thing I want, believe
me." Her
voice was tiny now, tremulous. "So what then? What do you want?" He
looked at her; saw her again as he had once seen her, clearly, his
vision purged of all hatred and jealousy. "I want you back. I
want to try again." She
turned from him, hiding her face. "No, Yuan, that cannot be." "Why?"
He was astonished. Had he read her wrong? He had thought. . . "Fei
Yen? What is it?" She
half turned to look at him, then turned and ran from the room. But in
that momentary look he had seen. In some small way she was still in
love with him. He took three steps toward the far door, then stopped,
pain and confusion making his head whirl. But if she loves me ... For a
moment longer he stood there, undecided, then he turned and went back
out into the entrance hall. A guard came at his summons, then rushed
off to bring the nurse and Kuei Jen. While he waited, Li Yuan went to
the entrance arch and looked out down the steps toward the eastern
slopes, remembering how he had once gone hunting there, in the woods,
with his brother Han Ch'in. The
memory was ill—was like bile in his throat. He turned angrily
and yelled, bidding the nurse to hurry. Then, with unconcealed
bitterness, he pushed out through the doors and, ignoring the guards,
ran across the grass toward his skimmer. "Where
to, Chieh Hsial" his pilot asked, looking around at him,
then back at the nurse hurrying across the grass, Kuei Jen bundled in
her arms. Home,
he almost said, but even as he thought it he realized that there was
nowhere now he could really call home. "Fukien," he said,
finally. "Contact Tsu Ma. Tell him I have changed my mind. That
I would like to stay with him awhile."
EPILOGUE
AUTUMN 2210 After
Rain
At Heaven's border, the
autumn clouds are thin and driven from the west by a thousand winds. The world is beautiful at
dawn after rain, and the rains won't hurt the farmers. Border willows grow
kingfisher green, the hills grow red with mountain pears. A Tartar lament rises from
the tower. A single wild goose sails into the void. —Tu
Fu, After Rain, eighth century a.d.
IT
WAS LATE. Kim stood to one side of the landing pad, the tall figure
of Tuan Wen-ch'ang beside him, as the cruiser came in across the
ocean from the northwest, its lights sweeping the dark waters. In one
hand he held his pack—a lightweight holdall containing his
notebooks, a portable comset, and a change of silks. In the other he
clutched the envelope he had been given only twenty minutes back.
Inside it were details of his new posting. The
craft lifted and circled to the north, hovering there half a li
out while Security checked out its codes, the faint drone of its
engines filling the still night air. Then, like a bee moving from
flower to flower, it lifted up, over them, and settled on the pad
with a gentle hiss of hydraulics. Tuan
looked down at Kim and smiled, indicating that he should go first.
Kim returned his smile, pleased that Tuan had been posted with him,
and turned, making his way across as the hatch irised open, the ramp
unfolding onto the pad. North
America. That was where they were sending him this time. Back to the
East Coast. Moreover, they wanted him to apply himself to something
new—to genetics, the very field that Old Man Lever had tried so
long and hard to win him to. He smiled at the irony, able, after all
he'd been through, to see the funny side of that. More so
because of the news that had come through only an hour past
from Philadelphia. Halfway
up the ramp he stopped and turned, looking back, trying to fix this
final image of Sohm Abyss in his mind. He had grown here. More here,
perhaps, than anywhere else, for it was here that he had finally got
back in touch with himself. Here where he had made himself whole. Or
as whole as he could be without Jelka. The future now seemed far less
threatening than it had been only weeks ago. His planned life with
Jelka was no longer an unattainable vision but merely a promise
delayed. Tuan
put a hand on his shoulder. "What are you thinking, Kim?" "That
I'll miss this place." Tuan
gave a surprised laugh. "Really? After all that happened?" "Maybe
because it happened. But it's not just that. I felt in touch with
things here. Really in touch. Look at it, Tuan. You've the great
ocean below and the sky above. It's magnificent, don't you think? And
so open. So connected. Besides . . ." Tuan
raised an eyebrow, but Kim just smiled, letting it pass. "I
hear that our new boss is a good man." Kim
shrugged. "Curval's certainly the best in his field, if that's
what you mean. From all accounts he's revolutionized genetics
single-handedly these last twenty-five years. SimFic must have paid a
fortune to wean him from ImmVac." "As
much as for you?" Kim
laughed. "YouVe seen my file, then, Tuan Wen-ch'ang?" "No.
But I've heard the talk . . ." Kim
looked away thoughtfully, then looked back at Tuan, smiling.
"Whatever, it'll be interesting, neh?" "And
challenging . . ." Yes,
he thought, turning to go inside. Even so, he knew it was only a
filling of time, a distraction, until she returned. Until he could
see her blue eyes smiling back at him again. Jelka
stood at the window of the Governor's apartment, looking out. Beyond
the reinforced glass the surface of the moon was dark, the sun a pale
and tiny circle low in the sky, glimpsed through a thick
orange haze. To the east, along the shoreline of the great
ethane lake, the spires of the refineries reached up into the
darkness, their slender, needlelike forms lit by a thousand bright
arc lamps. Beyond them the sprawl of Cassini Base, a city of four
hundred and eighty thousand people, stretched to the foot of the ice
escarpment; a towering wall of crystalline nitrogen. Clathrate, she
had heard it called, and had noted the word in her diary. To tell
Kim, when she saw him again. She
turned, accepting the glass that was offered her, and smiled. It was
their last day on Saturn's largest moon. Tomorrow the Meridian
sailed for Mars. So, tonight—if "night" was a
term that made any sense in a place like this—the Governor had
thrown a special reception, inviting the leading citizens from each
of the nine colonies. They had been arriving here the last six days,
all manner of strange craft cluttering the big hangar to the south of
the town. Jelka
looked about her momentarily, taking it all in. They were a strange,
austere people out here, sparsely fleshed and taut-muscled beneath
the pressure suits they wore at all times. A tall, angular-looking
race whose movements were slow, considered. A product of the harsh
environment, she realized, and felt, once more, a kind of awe at it
all. Over two million people lived out here in the Saturn system. Two
million mouths that needed feeding. Two million pairs of lungs that
needed air. Two million bodies needing water, warmth, and protection
from the unforgiving elements. One
hundred and seventy-nine degrees below zero it was beside the great
ethane lake. An unthinkably bitter cold that brought with it no end
of technical problems for the men—and women—who worked
Saturn's moons, mining and manufacturing, or harvesting the rich soup
of complex hydrocarbons that lay within the great ethane lakes of
this, Titan, the largest of the colonies. She
moved through the packed crowd, smiling, offering a word here and
there, making her way across to the Governor, who stood with a small
group of Security officers on the far side of the great circular
room, beside the ancient orrery. She had met most of the people there
on her travels about the colonies. Only tiny Mimas, closest to
Saturn, had proved impossible to visit. Otherwise she had seen it
all. And recorded it—for Kim. "How
are you, Jelka? Have you enjoyed yourself?" She
stopped to answer the query, smiling, remembering the man from
lapetus Colony. "I'm
fine, Wulf Thorsson," she said, clasping his hand momentarily.
"And I have enjoyed myself greatly. I will be sad to go. But one
day I will come back here, maybe." The
big man smiled broadly, placing both his hands over hers, as if to
enclose them, or keep them warm. "With your husband, eh?" "Maybe,"
she said thoughtfully, then, with a brief nod, moved on. Yes, they
were good people out here. Reliable, trustworthy people. And so they
had to be. If you couldn't trust your fellow man out here you were
dead. Sooner or later. She
squeezed through between the last few people and came out beside the
Governor. Helmut Read was an old friend of her father's; a big man,
made from the same physical mold. The same mold, she realized, that
Klaus Ebert and his son—her onetime fiance—Hans Ebert had
been cast from. The thought disturbed her briefly, then it passed.
Like her father and Old Man Ebert, Read emanated an aura of
certainty, of ageless, infinite capacity. There was no problem too
great for him; no wrong that he could not somehow put right. So it
was with her father, she realized. Even so, sometimes such men were
wrong, however good their intentions. Read
turned and, seeing Jelka there, grinned broadly, welcoming her. "Come
through, my love. Come and talk to us!" he said, taking her
hands and drawing her close to hug her, then setting her there next
to him, her hand clasped tightly in his. He had
taken her under his wing from the moment she had entered Saturn's
system, three months back, and since then had gone to great trouble
to show her everything he could. She could picture clearly the pride
with which he had shown her the great hollowed shafts of the mining
operation on Tethys, the enthusiasm with which he had talked of the
expansion going on on tiny Phoebe, and of the plans to build a whole
new city on the far side of Titan, where Huygens Base now stood.
Things were happening out here, and far from being bored, she had
found it all quite fascinating. But then, she had always felt that
she was seeing it for two, and had tried to ask the questions Kim
might ask. And
sometimes, just sometimes, the sheer beauty of it touched her. As if,
in this rawness, she had a glimpse of that same austere beauty that
had once been Kalevala, the place from which her own people had come
two thousand years ago, the land of lakes and rocks . . . The
Governor turned to her, squeezing her hand gently. "I am sorry
you have to go tomorrow, Jelka," he said, looking at her sadly,
as if she were his daughter. "I cannot express how much I have
enjoyed having you here. Why, if I were twenty years younger . . ." "And
unmarried," added one of the officers, to general laughter. "And
unmarried," Read acknowledged, his smile broadening, "I
would have found a way to keep you here." "I
shall leave with a sad heart," she said quite genuinely. "I
had no idea what I would find out here, but I can see now why so many
stay here. It is a beautiful place. Perhaps the most beautiful in the
system." "Then
you do not mind the danger?" one of the officers asked, his
slightly stilted accent typical of the Colonies. "No,"
she answered, clear-eyed. "Indeed, that's part of its beauty,
neh? That sense of living on the edge of things. These suits . . ."
She tugged gently with her free hand at the strong but supple cloth
beneath the rigid neck and smiled. "IVe grown rather fond of
mine. Why, I think I'll continue wearing one when I get back to Chung
Kuo. Who knows, it might set a new fashion among the warm-worlders!" There
was delight at that, and laughter. Many times on her travels she had
heard how soft they thought the "warm-worlders" of Chung
Kuo; it being confided, at the same time, that they thought her
different from the others who came out on the big tour ships like the
Meridian. Totally different. And so
she was. Back there, close to the sun, she had felt cut off from her
fellows; a stranger among "friends," always the outsider.
But out here she felt strangely in her element and had found herself
drawn—instinctively drawn—to these big, slow, fiercely
independent people. She
smiled, looking about her at their finely sculpted faces. It took a
special kind of person to come and live out here, two billion li from
the sun; a special kind of mentality. The intense cold, the pressure,
the fact that everything—food, water, air, everything—had
to be manufactured: these
factors had forged a whole new race. Or remade the old. She wasn't
sure which. For a
moment she looked down, studying the ancient brass orrery nearby.
Four tiny planets circled the sun closely—Mercury, Venus, Chung
Kuo, and Mars. Beyond them, some way out, was Jupiter and then, the
same distance out again, was Saturn, where she was now. She
had come a long way these past fifteen months. Was ten times farther
from the sun than when she'd started. But her father had been wrong.
She had not forgotten Kim. Not at all. In fact, the farther out she
came, the more she thought of him; the more she tried to see things
through his eyes and think of them as he might think of them. The
films she took, the things she noted in her diary—all were for
him. And if it took six years before she could see him again,
nonetheless she would wait, holding herself prepared; saving herself
for him. For the time would come. The time would surely come. Three
days ago his "letter" had arrived. At first she had set it
aside, confused by the official-looking nature of the package, by the
SimFic logo on the reverse. It was only some fifteen hours later,
after a long and tiring tour of the Great Escarpment, that she
returned and finally opened it. It
was the first time she had heard from him since that day when she had
been hustled aboard the Meridian at Nanking spaceport. But not, it
seemed, the first time he had written. From the things he said, it
was clear he had written often to her. The thought of that angered
her, even now. The thought that her father had been meddling again,
keeping things from her, trying to run her life the way he wanted
it and not as she would have it. But
now she knew. What her father had said, the last time she had spoken
to him, had been a lie. Kim had not forgotten her. Far from it. And
if her father thought she would change her mind, then he simply did
not understand her. Not the way Kim understood her, anyway. She
looked up again, smiling at the thought. Yes, he alone, perhaps,
understood her—perfectly, instinctively—and trusted her,
the way these people out here trusted each other. In the face of
everything. Six
years they would have to wait. Six years until she came of age. But
she would wait. And in the meantime she would make her slow
way back to him. Inward, ever inward toward the great sun of
her being. Knowing
he would be waiting. Knowing he would be there, his dark eyes
watching for her. MORE
than A HUNDRED sedans filled the lawn before the Lever Mansion, their
pole-men crouched quietly, waiting, while servants from the house
went among them, offering bowls of noodles and tiny cups of rice
wine. Inside
the house, the invited guests had gathered in the great library,
talking in a hushed, slightly shocked tone. Only the day before, in
the selfsame room, Old Man Lever had addressed them at a fund-raising
meeting, his robust, no-nonsense manner inspiring many of them to
believe he would be there a century from then, still urging them on.
But now he was dead, and no end of rhetoric would bring him back. Not
in this cycle of existence. He lay
now in a great casket at one end of the room, his gray hair combed
neatly back, his massive chest unmoving beneath the pure white silks.
For the first time in many years he seemed at peace, no longer
striving for something that forever evaded him. No longer angry. The
guests had been arriving for the last four hours to pay their
respects, coming from every comer of the great City. Last to arrive,
tired by his journey from the clinic, was Lever's son, Michael. For
Michael, too, the news had come as a great shock. Like the rest, he
had thought the Old Man would live forever. For an hour or two he had
toyed with the idea of boycotting the funeral, of playing the part of
the spurned son to the bitter end, but he had not felt right about
that. No, for the truth was he still loved his father. The news of
the old man's death had shaken him to the core. He had stood there,
astonished; then later, alone with Mary, he had broken down, crying
like a child while she held him. Now, solemn and dignified, he walked
beside her through the door to his dead father's house, his
biopros-thetics giving him an awkward, stilted gait. "Steward
Dann," he said, greeting his father's "Number One" in
the great entrance hall. "I am most sorry that we have to
meet again like this." The
Steward bowed his head low, clearly moved that Michael had come. "And
I, Master Michael. I had hoped to welcome you back in happier
circumstances." Michael
smiled tightly, then walked on, Mary silent at his side, as strong
and supportive as ever. At the
entrance to the library he halted, turning to look at her, suddenly
fearful. In answer she reached out, squeezing his arm gently,
encouraging him to face what lay ahead. He
took a long, deep breath, then went on, the servants pushing the
great doors open before him. Seeing him, the crowd within grew
silent, all heads turning to watch as Michael crossed the room,
making for his father's casket. Looking
down at the old man, Michael felt a wash of pain and longing so
fierce, so intense, that it threatened to sweep him away. Then, with
the faintest shudder, he bowed his head low and reached out to touch
and briefly hold his father's hand. So
cold it was. So cold and hard. He
looked up, seeking Mary's eyes, for a brief moment a young boy again,
fearful and bewildered; then, taking another long shuddering breath,
he looked about him, smiling his thanks, his gratitude to all those
friends of his father who had come to see him in this, his final
moment on the Earth. "Thank
you," he said brokenly. "Thank you all. My father would
have been touched. And I... I am greatly moved by your presence. He
was a great man, my father. A great, great man." Many
looked down, moved by his tiny speech, but some stared at him openly,
as if wondering what his game was; why he came now, the obedient son,
when before he had denied his filial duty. As he
backed away from the casket, a faint murmur rose from all sides.
Already that morning a rumor had gone about that Wu Shih would place
a Steward in charge of the Company until a buyer could be found for
ImmVac, either as a whole, or broken down into its composite parts.
If the latter, many there hoped to benefit from Old Man Lever's
death. At the
doorway, Michael looked back briefly, then walked on, willing
himself forward, Mary half running to catch up with him. Out on the
lawn he stopped, among the pole-men and runners who had stood and
bowed before one of the Masters. Mary caught up with him there and
held him to her tightly while he sobbed. Finally,
he pushed back, away from her. "All right," he said softly.
"We're done here. Let's go." "Shih
Lever?" They
turned. It was Ainsworth, Old Man Lever's lawyer. Michael
looked down. "What is it? Is there something I have to sign?" Ainsworth
shook his head, then held something out to Michael. Michael took it
and studied it a moment. It was the original of the Disinheritance
Statement, the final page signed with an angry flourish by his
father. "I
have one," Michael answered coldly, drawing himself up straight
and holding out the document for Ainsworth to take back, something of
his father in him at that moment. "No.
You misunderstand. He signed it, but he never registered it. He
wouldn't let me. Which means that it's all yours, Michael. ImmVac and
all the rest. Yours." Michael
Lever narrowed his eyes a moment, eyeing the man as if he saw him for
what he was. Then, throwing the paper down, he turned and stomped
away, Mary hurrying to keep up with him as he made his way between
the rows of sedans and out toward the transit. A
U T H O R ‘ S NOTE T HE TRANSCRIPTION of standard Mandarin into European alphabetical form was first achieved in the seventeenth century by the Italian Matteo Ricci, who founded and ran the first Jesuit Mission in China from 1583 until his death in 1610. Since then, several dozen attempts have been made to reduce the original Chinese sounds, represented by some tens of thousands of separate pictograms, into readily understandable phonetics for Western use. For a long time, however, three systems dominated—those used by the three major Western powers vying for influence in the corrupt and crumbling Chinese Empire of the nineteenth century: Great Britain, France, and Germany. These systems were the Wade-Giles (Great Britain and America—sometimes known as the Wade system), the Ecole Frangaise de PExtreme Orient (France), and the Lessing (Germany). Since
1958, however, thd Chinese themselves have sought to create one
single phonetic form, based on the German system, which they termed
the hanyu pinyin fang'an ("Scheme for a Chinese Phonetic
Alphabet"), known more commonly as ^pinyin; and in all
foreign-language books published in China since January i, 1979,
pinyin has been used, as well as being taught now in schools
along with the standard Chinese characters. For this work, however, I
have chosen to use the older and, to my mind, far more elegant
transcription system, the Wade-Giles (in modified form). For those
now accustomed to the harder forms of pinyin, the following
(courtesy of Edgar Snow's The Other Side of the River;
Gollancz, 1961) may serve as a rough guide to pronunciation: 'Chi
is pronounced as "Gee," but Ch'i sounds like "Chee."
Ch'in is exactly our "chin." Chu
is roughly like "Jew," as in Chu Teh (Jew Duhr),
but Ch'u equals "chew." Tsung
is "dzung"; ts'ung with the "ts" as in
"Patsy." Tai
is our word sound "die"; T'ai—"tie." Pai
is "buy" and P'ai is "pie." Kung
is like "Gung" (a Din); K'ung with the "k"
as in "kind." J
is the equivalent of r but slur it, as rrrun. H
before an s, as in hsi, is the equivalent of an aspirate but is often
dropped, as in Sian for Hsian. Vowels
in Chinese are generally short or medium, not long and flat. Thus
Tang sounds like "dong," never like our "tang."
T'ang is "tong." a
as in father ih—her
e—run
o—look eh—hen
ou-—go i—see
u—soon The
effect of using the Wade-Giles system is, I hope, to render the
softer, more poetic side of the original Mandarin, ill-served, I
feel, by modem pinyin. This
usage, incidentally, accords with many of the major reference sources
available in the West: the (planned) 16 volumes of Denis Twichett and
Michael Loewe's The Cambridge History of China, Joseph
Needham's mammoth multivolumed Science and Civilization in China,
John Fairbank and Edwin Reischauer's China, Tradition &
Transformation, Charles Mucker's China's Imperial Past,
Jacques Gernet's A History of Chinese Civilisation, C. P.
Fitzgerald's China: A Short Cultural History, Laurence Sickman and
Alexander Soper's The Art and Architecture of China,
William Hinton's classic social studies, Fanshen and Shenfan, and
Derk Bodde's Essays on Chinese Civilization. The
Luoshu diagram, mentioned in the Prologue, is a three by three number
square
492 357 816 and
was supposedly seen on the shell of a turtle emerging from the Luo
River some two thousand years before Christ. As can be seen, all the
numbers in any one row, column, or diagonal add up to fifteen. During
the T'ang dynasty its "magical" properties were exported to
the Muslim world, where they were used—as here—as a charm
for easing childbirth. Wu
Shih's mention (in Chapter One) of "the three brothers of the
Peach Garden" is a reference to Lo Kuan Chung's classic Chinese
novel San Kuo Yan Yi, or The Romance of the Three Kingdoms, in
which the three great heroes, Liu Pei, Chang Fei, and Kuan Yu, swear
brotherhood. The
translation of Chu Yuan's T'ien Wen, or "Heavenly
Questions," is by David Hawkes from The Songs of the South:
An Anthology of Ancient Chinese Poems, published by
Penguin Books, London, 1985. The
quotation from Jukka Tolonen is from a song on the album Lambertland
by the Finnish band Tasavallan Presidentti, and the lyrics from
the song "Last Quarters" are reprinted with the kind
permission of Sonet Records. The
passage quoted from Book One [V] of Lao Tzu's Too Te Ching is
from the D. C. Lau translation, published by Penguin Books, London,
1963, and used with their kind permission. The
quotation from Rainer Maria Rilke's Duino Elegies is from the Hogarth
Press fourth edition of 1968, translated by J. B. Leishman and
Stephen Spender. Thanks to the estate of Rilke, St. John's College,
Oxford, for permission. Those wishing a translation of the four lines
used in Chapter Nineteen might refer back to the epigram used in Part
Three of The Middle Kingdom. The
translation of Tu Fu's "After Rain" is by Sam Hamill from
his wonderful anthology of Tu Fu's verse, Facing the Snow: Visions
of Tu Fu,
published by White Pine Press, Fredonia, New York, and is reprinted
here with their kind permission. Once
again, I find 1 have quoted extensively from Samuel B. Griffith's
translation of Sun Tzu's The Art of War, published by Oxford
University Press, 1963. I reprint the four passages used herein with
their kind permission and only hope I have directed a few readers to
this most excellent work. Finally,
for those of you unfamiliar with the pidgin Cornish used in Part Two
of the book, here are translations of the relevant passages. First,
the utterances of the Clay-men: Avodya! Get back! A'wartha! Up above! An
chy. Kerdhes! Tenna dhe an chy! The house. Go! Take the house! Ena.
. . . Ena ha ena! There. ... There and there! And Ben's
whisperings: Of
ancow. I am death. Gwelaf why gans ow onen
lagas. I see you with my one eye. Ow golow lagas dewana
why! My bright eye pierces you! Ou; enawy a'vyn
podretha agas eskem. . . My light will rot your bones. Fyough, byghan gwas!
Fyough! Flee, little men! Flee! Furthermore,
when the hologram of the Ox-faced angel says Dyesk' yrma!
("Come!"), there is a faint echo of The Revelation to
John (6:1). February 1992 A
Glossary of Mandarin Tenns Most
of the Mandarin terms used in the text are explained in context.
However, as a few are used more naturally, I've considered it best to
provide a brief explanation. ai
ya!—common exclamation of surprise or dismay. ch'a—tea.
It might be noted that ch'ashu, the Chinese art of tea, is an ancient
forebear of the Japanese tea ceremony chanoyu. chang
shan—literally "long dress," which fastens to the
right. Worn by both sexes. The women's version is a fitted,
calf-length dress similar to the chi poo. A South China
fashion, also known as a cheung sam. chan
shih—a fighter. Ch'eng
Ou Chou—City Europe. ch'i—a
Chinese foot; approximately 14.4 inches. ch'i
chu—spider. chieh
hsia—term meaning "Your Majesty," derived from
the expression "below the steps." It was the formal way of
addressing the Emperor, through his Ministers, who stood "below
the steps." chi
pao—literally "banner gown"; a one-piece gown of
Manchu origin, usually sleeveless, worn by women. Chou—"state";
here the name for a card game based on the politics of the state of
Chung Kuo. 555 chung—a
lidded serving bowl for ch'a. ch'un
tzu—an ancient Chinest term from the Warring States period,
describing a certain class of noblemen, controlled by a code of
chivalry and morality known as the li, or rites. Here the term is
roughly, and sometimes ironically, translated as "gentlemen."
The ch'un tzu is as much an ideal state of behavior—as
specified by Confucius in the Analects—as an actual
class in Chung Kuo, though a degree of financial independence and a
high standard of education are assumed prerequisites. erhu—two-stringed
bow with snakeskin-covered sound box. fen—unit of money (a
cent); one hundred fen make up a yuan. han—term
used by the Chinese to describe their own race, the "black-haired
people," dating back to the Han Dynasty (210 b.c.—A.D.
220). It is estimated that some ninety-four percent of modern China's
population are Han racially. hei—literally
"black"; the Chinese pictogram for this represents a man
wearing war paint and tattoos. Here it refers to the genetically
manufactured (GenSyn) half-men used as riot police to quell uprisings
in the lower levels. hsiao
jen—"little man/men." In the Analects, Book XIV,
Confucius writes: "The gentleman gets through to what is up
above; the small man gets through to what is down below." This
distinction between "gentlemen" (ch'un tzu) and
"little men" (hsiao jen), false even in Con-fuciys's
time, is no less a matter of social perspective in Chung Kuo. hsien—historically
an administrative district of variable size. Here the term is used to
denote a very specific administrative area: one of ten stacks—each
stack composed of thirty decks. Each deck is a hexagonal living unit
often levels, two li, or approximately one kilometer in diameter. A
stack can be imagined as one honeycomb in the great hive of the City. Hsien
L'ing—"Chief Magistrate." In Chung Kuo, these
officials are the T'ang's representatives and law enforcers for the
individual Hsien, or Administrative Districts. In times of peace,
each Hsien also elects a representative to the House at Weimar. Hung
Mao—literally "redheads," the name the Chinese
gave to the Dutch (and later English) seafarers who attempted to
trade with China in the seventeenth century. Because of the piratical
nature of their endeavors (which often meant plundering Chinese
shipping and ports) the name has connotations of piracy. Hung
Mun—the Secret Societies or, more specifically, the Triads. hun
tun—"the Chou believed that Heaven and Earth were once
inextricably mixed together in a state of undifferentiated chaos,
like a chicken's egg. Hun Tun they called that state" (from
"Chen Yen," Chapter Six of The White Mountain). It
is also the name of a meal of tiny saclike dumplings. jou
tung wu—literally "meat animal." Kan
pei!—"good health" or "cheers"; a
drinking toast. Ko
Ming—"revolutionary." The T'ien Ming is
the Mandate of Heaven, supposedly handed down from Shang Ti, the
Supreme Ancestor, to his earthly counterpart, the Emperor (Huang Ti).
This Mandate could be enjoyed only so long as the Emperor was worthy
of it, and rebellion against a tyrant—who broke the Mandate
through his lack of justice, benevolence, and sincerity—was
deemed not criminal but a rightful expression of Heaven's anger. k'ou
t'ou—the fifth stage of respect, according to the "Book
of Ceremonies," involves kneeling and striking the head against
the floor. This ritual has become more commonly known in the West as
kowtow. Kuan
hua—Mandarin, the language spoken in mainland Clyna. Also
known as Kuo-yu and Pad hua. Kuan
Yin—the goddess of mercy; originally the Buddhist male
bodhisattva, Avalokitsevara (translated into Han as "He who
listens to the sounds of the world," or "Kuan Yin").
The Han mistook the saint's well-developed breasts for a woman's and,
since the ninth century, have worshiped Kuan Yin as such. Effigies of
Kuan Yin usually show her as the Eastern Madonna, cradling a child in
her arms. She is also sometimes seen as the wife of Kuan Kung, the
Chinese God ofWar. li—a
Chinese "mile," approximating to half a kilometer or one
third of
a mile. Until 1949, when metric measures were adopted in China, the U
could vary from place to place. min—literally
"the people"; used (as here, by the Minor Families) in a
pejorative sense (i.e., as an equivalent to "plebeian"). Ming—the
Dynasty that ruled China from 1368101644. Literally, the name means
"Bright" or "Clear" or "Brilliant." It
carries connotations of cleansing. niao—literally
"bird"; but here, as often, it is used euphemistically, as
a term for the penis, often as an expletive. nu
er—daughter. nu
shih—an unmarried woman; a term equating to "Miss." pai
nan jen—literally "white man." pau—a
simple long garment worn by men. Ping
Tiao—leveling. To bring down or make flat. p'i
p'a—a four-stringed lute used in traditional Chinese music. san
kuei chiu k'ou—the eighth and final stage of respect, according
to the "Book of Ceremonies," involves kneeling three times,
each time striking the forehead three times against the floor. This
most elaborate form of ritual was reserved for Heaven and its son,
the Emperor. shan
shui—the literal meaning is "mountains and water,"
but the term is normally associated with a style of landscape
painting that depicts rugged mountain scenery with river valleys in
the foreground. It is a highly popular form, first established in the
T'ang Dynasty, back in the seventh to ninth centuries A.D. shao
lin—specially trained assassins; named after the monks of the
shoo lin monastery. shih—"Master."
Here used as a term of respect somewhat equivalent to our use of
"Mister." The term was originally used for the lowest level
of civil servants, to distinguish them socially from the
run-of-the-mill "misters" (hsian sheng) below them
and the gentlemen (ch'un tzu) above. siangchi—Chinese
chess. tai—"pockets";
here used to denote Representatives bought by (and thus "in the
pocket of") various power groupings (originally the Seven). t'ai
chi—the Original, or One, from which the duality of all things
(yin and yang) developed, according to Chinese
cosmology. We generally associate the t'ai chi with the Taoist
symbol, that swirling circle of dark and light supposedly
representing an egg (perhaps the Hun Tun), the yolk and the white
differentiated. T'ai
Shan—the great sacred mountain of China, where emperors have
traditionally made sacrifices to Heaven. T'ai Shan, in Shantung
province, is the highest peak in China. "As safe as T'ai Shan"
is a popular saying, denoting the ultimate in solidity and certainty. Ta
Ts'in—the Chinese name for the Roman Empire. They also knew
Rome as Li Chien and as "the Land West of the Sea."
The Romans themselves they termed the "Big Ts'in"—the
Ts'in being the name the Chinese gave themselves during the Ts'in
Dynasty (a.d. 265-316). T'ing
Wei—the Superintendency of Trials. See Book Three (The White
Mountain), Part Two, for an instance of how this department of
government functions. ti
tsu—a bamboo flute, used both as a solo instrument and as part
of an ensemble. tong—a
gang. In China and Europe, these are usually smaller and thus
subsidiary to the Triads, but in North America the term has generally
taken the place of "Triad." ts'un—a
Chinese "inch" of approximately 1.44 Western inches. Ten
ts'un form one ch'i. wan
wu—literally "the ten thousand things"; used
generally to include everything in creation, or, as the Chinese say,
"all things in Heaven and Earth." wei
chi—"the surrounding game," known more commonly in
the West by its Japanese name of "Go." It is said that the
game was invented by
the legendary Chinese Emperor Yao in the year 2350 B.C. to train the
mind of his son, Tan Chu, and teach him to think like an Emperor. wen
ming—a term used to denote Civilization, or written culture. wuwei—nonaction;
an old Taoist concept. It means keeping harmony with the flow of
things—doing nothing to break the flow. yamen—the
official building in a Chinese community. yang—the
"male principle" of Chinese cosmology, which, with its
complementary opposite, the female yin, forms the t'ai chi,
derived from the Primeval One. From the union of yin and
yang arise the "five elements" (water, fire, earth,
metal, wood) from which the "ten thousand things" (the wan
wu) are generated. Yang signifies Heaven and the South, the Sun
and Warmth, Light, Vigor, Maleness, Penetration, odd numbers, and the
Dragon. Mountains are yang. yin—the
"female principle" of Chinese cosmology (see yang). Yin
signifies Earth and the North, the Moon and Cold, Darkness,
Quiescence, Femaleness, Absorption, even numbers, and the Tiger. The
yin lies in the shadow of the mountain. yu—literally
"fish" but because of its phonetic equivalence to the word
for "abundance," the fish symbolizes wealth. Yet there is
also a saying that when the fish swim upriver it is a portent of
social unrest and rebellion. yuan—the
basic currency of Chung Kuo (and modern-day China). Colloquially
(though not here) it can also be termed kivai—"piece"
or "lump." One hundred fen (or cents) make up one
yuan. yueh
ch'in—a Chinese dulcimer; one of the principal instruments of
the Chinese orchestra. Ywe
Lung—-literally, the "Moon Dragon," the wheel of
seven dragons that is the symbol of the ruling Seven throughout Chung
Kuo: "At its center the snouts of the regal beasts met, forming
a roselike hub, huge rubies burning fiercely in each eye. Their
lithe, powerful bodies curved outward like the spokes of a giant
wheel while at the edge their tails were intertwined to form the rim"
(from "The Moon Dragon," Chapter Four of The Middle
Kingdom). In
Times to Come . . . in
beneath the tree of heaven, the fifth volume of the Chung Kuo saga,
the pace of events quickens as the final years of the great
Earth-spanning Empire of the Seven draw close. The
book opens with the courtroom drama of the GenSyn inheritance case—a
case that takes the strangest of turns—after which, the action
moves out to Mars, where, at a critical turning point in the Colony's
history, Li Yuan's principle enemy, DeVore, attempts to kidnap
Marshal Tolonen's daughter and make the red planet independent of the
rule of the Seven. Circumstances seem in his favor, yet the actions
of a lost race and one redeemed man—the traitor, Hans
Ebert—result in unexpected developments, developments that
strongly foreshadow events back on Chung Kuo. For
Kao Chen, disillusioned with his role as Major in Li Yuan's Security
forces, these are trying times. Cut off from his wife by her mental
illness and forced to serve a system he no longer believes in, Chen
finds he must fashion a new life for himself... or go under. Yet he
is not entirely alone. By chance he comes upon a young girl, Hannah,
who, awakened to the ugliness and brutal unfairness of her world,
wants to become its voice, its very conscience in the troubled years
to come. In
North America, Michael Lever and his wife Emily Ascher find
themselves the inheritors of a corrupt and decadent financial empire. Encouraged
by Emily, Michael presses for change, trying to create a more humane
system, but in doing so he finds himself once more lined up against
the entrenched forces of reaction—the Old Men he thought had
died out with his father. At
Weimar, Lever's friend and ally, Kennedy, learns the bitter lesson
that attaining power is sometimes far easier than exercising it.
Frustrated by delays and compromises, he decides to take matters into
his own hands and force the pace of change, even though to do so will
bring him into direct conflict with the T'ang of North America, Wu
Shih. And all the while the situation in North America is
deteriorating. One single spark could set the great City alight, a
spark that will eventually come from a wholly unlooked-for source. For
Ben Shepherd, the great artist of Chung Kuo, these are the years of
his maturity. His first great work, The Familiar, is finally
delivered to the world to great critical and popular success. But all
is not well for Ben. His sister, Meg, has left him, and his
monomaniacal drive to experience everything—and to record it
for his art—leads him into further danger as he makes an
expedition into the darkness of the Clay, that unlit wasteland
beneath the City's floor. Since
the death of his wives, Li Yuan has become a recluse, shutting
himself off even from his closest friends and ruling City Europe
through his chancellor, Nan Ho. However, when his cousin, Wang
Sau-leyan, T'ang of Africa, threatens him directly, he is forced to
face events once more. Standing beneath the tree of heaven, at the
graveside of his father and beloved elder brother, Li Yuan must
decide the fate of his world. Should he try to make peace once more?
Or should he fight a war, a war that is certain to destroy the very
system of City and Seven that he has striven so long to preserve? In
Beneath the Tree of Heaven the great world of Chung Kuo is
brought to the edge of chaos. In fire and ice a new age is about to
be born. . . .
Chung
Kuo. The words mean "Middle Kingdom, "and since 221 B.C.,
when the first emperor, Ch'in Shih Huang Ti, unifieH the seven
Warring States, it is what the "black-haired people," the
Han, or Chinese, have called their great country. The Middle
Kingdom—for them it was the whole world; a world bounded by
great mountain chains to the north and west, by the sea to east and
south. Beyond was only desert and barbarism. So it was for two
thousand years and through sixteen great dynasties. Chung Kuo was
the Middle Kingdom, the very center of the human world, and its
emperor the "Son of Heaven," the "One Man." But
in the eighteenth century that world was invaded by the young and
aggressive Western powers with their superior weaponry and their
unshakable belief in progress. It was, to the surprise of the Han, an
unequal contest, and China's myth of supreme strength and
self-sufficiency was shattered. By the early twentieth century
China—Chung Kuo—was the sick old man of the East: "a
carefully preserved mummy in a hermetically sealed coffin," as
Karl Marx called it. But from the disastrous ravages of that century
grew a giant of a nation, capable of competing with the West and with
its own Eastern rivals, Japan and Korea, from a position of
incomparable strength. The twenty-first century, "the Pacific
Century," as it was known even before it began, saw China become
once more a world unto itself, but this time its only boundary was
space.
CHUNG
KUO
by
DAVID WINGROVE
BOOK
4: THE
STONE WITHIN
A
DELL TRADE PAPERBACK
A DELL TRADE PAPERBACK Published
by Dell Publishing a
division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. 1540
Broadway New York, New York 10036
If
you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this
book is stolen property. It was reported as "unsold and
destroyed" to the publisher and neither the author nor the
publisher has received any payment for this "stripped book."
Copyright
© 1993 by David Wingrove All
rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted
in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including
photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and
retrieval system, without the written permission of the Publisher,
except where permitted by law.
The
trademark Dell® is registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark
Office. Canadian
Cataloguing in Publication Data Wingrove,
David The stone within (Chung
kuo ; bk. 4) ISBN 0-385-29876-5 I.
Title. II. Series: Wingrove, David. Chung kuo ; bk. 4.
PR6073.153558 1993 823'.914 €93-094218-3 ISBN:
0-440-50569-0
Printed
in the United States of America Published
simultaneously in Canada September
1993 10 98765432 BVG
for brian and margaret aldiss, Whose
love of things Chinese and of the vast
worlds of the imagination set me upon this
path. With much love.
"For
every one of us it is the same. Worlds end or open as we go." Wasps and
ants have a mean fate: how could their power be enduring? —Turn
Wen ("Heavenly Questions") by Ch'u Yuan, from the Ch'u
Tz'u ("Songs of the South"), second century B.C. Can't teach a
true peach being a prisoner Skin all round and stone within —Jukka
Tolonen, Last Quarters, 1972
Acknowledgments
AS THE
BEAST GROWS longer and the shape of it clearer, the list of people I
ought to thank grows with it. Let's begin with my editors, Carolyn
Caughey, Brian DeFiore, and John Pearce, for sheer niceness and for
maintaining enthusiasm, and to Alyssa Diamond ("Hi, David!")
for always being cheerful and on the ball. To Nick Sayers, departing
editor, huge thanks for all you did (especially for arranging that
football match!), and good luck with the new job. We'll meet again,
and all that. . . In the
long, lonely business of writing, a man needs a break and a beer now
and then, so here's to my brother Ian Wingrove, John "Mad Dog"
Hindes, Andrew Muir, Tom Jones, Rob Holdstock, Ritchie Smith, Tony
Richards, Robert Allen, Simon (and Julie) Bergin, and Keith ("Teech")
Carabine for getting me away from the word processor. To
Mike "the Shark" Cobley ("Hi, Dave!"), fraternal
greetings. Get the book done, Mike! And to Andrew Sawyer, first-line
critic, thanks once again for the thoughtful read. To
friends new—Ronan, Mike, Niall, Tom, Paul, Laura and Sean,
Vikki Lee and Steve, Storm, Sue and Michelle, Mary Gentle, Geoff
Ryman, Iain Banks, Bob Shaw, Gill and John Alderman, and Roger
("Dave")—thanks hugely for the wondrous times in
Dublin. When shall we three hundred meet again . . . ? To
my old friend Robert Carter, thanks once more for the input on
Part Two and for keeping the science tight. Likewise, to Alex
"The Weatherman" Hill, Jean pei for checking my
meteorology homework! Special
thanks, as ever, must go to Brian Griffin, to whom I owe the usual
massive debt, for reading the beast at its crudest state and—
as ever—understanding it far better than me. May The
Awakening find the cult audience it deserves. Music
this time around was provided by the late, great Miles Davis, the
Cardiacs, Nirvana, Frank Zappa, and the boys from IQ. Bless you lads. To
Gerry Francis and the boys from the Bush, a big thank you for that
New Year's Day performance. See you on Saturday. To
Susan and the girls (Jessica, Amy, and Georgia) go the usual thanks
for keeping my priorities right and providing a healthy balance to my
life. What more could a megalomaniac need? And,
finally, to my biggest fan over there in North America, John Patrick
Kavanagh, cowriter of the Chung Kuo screenplay, Empire of Ice,
fraternal greetings! Here's another to take down to the Keys . .
. CONTENTS
B O O K 4 The
Stone Within PROLOG
U E Spring 2209— IN THE SPACE BETWEEN HEAVEN
AND EARTH PA
RT 1 Spring 2209—
MONSTERS OF THE DEEP Chapter
i: Earth Chapter 2:
In the World of Levels Chapter
3: Fathers and
Sons Chapter 4:
Waves Against the Sand Chapter 5:
The Chain of Being Chapter 6:,
Into Emptiness Chapter
7: Smoke Rings and Spiders'
Webs Chapter
8: Dynasties Chapter
9: Plucked Eyes
and Severed
Heads Chapter
i o: Monsters of
the Deep Chapter
11: Lost PART
I Summer 2209—
THE INTERPRETED WORLD Chapter
12: The Beginning of Terror Chapter 13:
Intruders Chapter 14: The Hole in the Dark Chapter
15: Nature Red in Tooth and Claw PART 3
Summer 2210— THE COAST OF DARKNESS Chapter 16:
Circles of Light Chapter 17:
Distant Thunder Chapter 18:
East Winds Chapter 19:
Weimar Chapter 20:
Total War Chapter 21:
Connections Chapter 22:
Circles of Dark Chapter 23:
The Stone Within EPI LOG U E Autumn 221
o— AFTER RAIN Author's Note A Glossary of Mandarin
Terms Acknowledgments In Times to Come . . . The
War of the Two Directions
it HAD
BEGUN with the assassination of the T'ang's Minister, Lwo K'ang, some
thirteen years earlier, the poor man blown into the next world along
with his Junior Ministers while basking in the imperial solarium. The
Seven—the great Lords and rulers of Chung Kuo— had hit
back at once, arresting one of the leading figures of the
Dispersionist faction responsible for the Minister's death. But it
was not to end there. Within days of the public execution, their
opponents had struck another deadly blow, killing Li Han Ch'in, son
of the T'ang, Li Shai Tung, and heir to City Europe, on the day of
his wedding to the beautiful Fei Yen. It
might have ended there, with the decision of the Seven to take no
action in reprisal for Prince Han's death—to adopt a policy of
peaceful nonaction, utuwei—but for one man such a course
could not be borne. Taking matters into his own hands, Li Shai Tung's
General, Knut Tolonen, had marched into the House of Representatives
in Weimar and killed the leader of the Dispersionists,
Under-Secretary Lehmann. It was an act almost guaranteed to tumble
Chung Kuo into a bloody civil war unless the anger of the
Dispersionists could be assuaged and concessions made. Concessions
were made, an uneasy peace maintained, but the divisions between
rulers and ruled remained, their conflicting desires—the Seven
for Stasis, the Dispersionists for Change— unresolved.
Among those concessions, the Seven had permitted the Dispersionists
to build a starship, The New Hope. As the ship approached
readiness, the Dispersionists pushed things even further at Weimar,
impeaching the tai—the Representatives of the Seven in
the House—and effectively declaring their independence. In
response the Seven destroyed The New Hope. War was declared. The
five-year War-that-wasn't-a-War left the Dispersionists broken, their
leaders killed, their Companies confiscated. The great push for
Change had been crushed and peace returned to Chung Kuo. Or so it
briefly seemed, for the War had woken older, far stronger currents of
dissent. In the depths of the City new movements began to arise,
seeking not merely to change the system, but to revolutionize it
altogether. One of these factions, the Ping Two, or "Levelers,"
wanted to pull down the great City of three hundred levels and
destroy the Empire of the Han. For a
while the status quo had been maintained, but three of the most
senior T'ang had died in the War, leaving the Council of the Seven
weaker and more inexperienced than they had been in all the long
years of their rule. When Wang Sau-leyan, the youngest son of Wang
Hsien, ruler of City Africa, became T'ang after his father's death,
things looked ominous, the young man seeking to create disharmony
among the Seven. But Li Yuan, inheriting from his father, formed
effective alliances with his fellow T'ang, Tsu Ma, Wu Shih, and Wei
Feng, to block Wang in Council, outvoting him four to three. But
now, looking beyond the immediate political situation, Li Yuan wants
permanent solutions to the problems of overpopulation and civil
unrest. To achieve the former, he is willing to make deals with his
enemies in the Above—to relax the Edict of Technological
Control that has kept Change at bay for so long, and to reopen the
House at Weimar, in return for population controls. As for civil
unrest, he has devised a somewhat darker scheme: to "wire up"
the whole population of Chung Kuo, so that they can be traced and
rigidly controlled. For
the first time in years, then, there is real hope that peace and
stability might be achieved and chaos staved off. But time is running
out. Chung Kuo is a society badly out of balance and close—very
close—to total breakdown. In Wu
Shih's great City of North America, the first signs of social unrest
have already manifested themselves in movements like the "Sons
of Benjamin Franklin," and in a growing desire among the Hung
Mao—the Europeans—for a new nationalism. But the
problems are not merely between the rulers and the ruled. Among the
ruled there are also divisions. Divisions that run deeper than race .
. . MAJOR
CHARACTERS
Ascher, Emily—Trained
as an economist, she was once a member of the Ping Tiao
revolutionary party. After its demise, she fled to North America
where, under the alias of Mary Jennings, she got a job with the giant
ImmVac Corporation, working for Old Man Lever and his son, Michael.
Ultimately, however, what she wants is change, and the downfall of
the corrupt social institutions that rule Chung Kuo. Lehmann, Stefan—Albino
son of the former Dispersionist leader, Pietr Lehmann, he was briefly
a lieutenant to DeVore. A cold, unnaturally dispassionate man, he
seems the very archetype of nihilism, his only aim to bring down the
Seven and their great earth-encompassing City. His move "down
level" into the "underground" world of long and
Triad marks a new stage of his campaign. Lever, Charles—Head
of the massive ImmVac pharmaceuticals corporation, "Old Man
Lever" is a passionate "American" and one of the
instigators of the Cutler Institute's Immortality project. A
bull-necked, stubborn old man, he will let nothing get between him
and what he wants. And what he wants is to live forever. Lever, Michael—Son
of Charles Lever, he was incarcerated by Wu Shih for his involvement
with the "Sons of Benjamin Franklin," a semirevolu-tionary
group formed by the sons of wealthy North American businessmen. Cast
from childhood in his father's mold, he has yet to break from his
upbringing and find his own direction. Li Yuan—T'ang
of Europe and one of the Seven, as second son of Li Shai Tung, he
inherited after the deaths of his brother and father. Considered old
before his time, he nonetheless has a passionate side to his nature,
as demonstrated in his brief marriage to his brother's wife, the
beautiful Fei Yen. Having remarried, he is determined to find
balance, both in his private life and in his role as T'ang. Shepherd, Ben—Son
of Hal Shepherd, and great-great-grandson of City Earth's architect,
Ben was brought up in the Domain, an idyllic valley in
the southwest of England where, deciding not to follow
in his father's footsteps and become advisor to Li Yuan, he pursues
instead his calling as an artist, developing a new art form, the
Shell, which will one day transform Chung Kuo's society. Tolonen, Jelka—Daughter
of Marshal Tolonen, Jelka has been brought up in a very masculine
environment, lacking a mother's love and influence. Despite a genuine
interest in martial arts and weaponry, she feels a strong need to
discover and express the more feminine side of her nature; a need
matched by a determination not to succumb to the gender demands of
her world. Tolonen, Knut—Former
Marshal of the Council of Generals and qnetime General to Li Yuan's
father, Tolonen is a rocklike supporter of the Seven and their
values, even in an age of increasing uncertainty. In his role as
father, however, this inflexibility in his nature brings him into
repeated conflict with his daughter, Jelka. Tsu Ma—T'ang of West
Asia and one of the Seven, the ruling Council of Chung Kuo, Tsu Ma
has thrown off a dissolute past to become Li Yuan's staunchest
supporter in Council. A strong, handsome man in his late thirties, he
has yet to marry, though his secret affair with Li Yuan's former
wife, Fei Yen, revealed a side of him that has not been fully
harnessed. Wang Sau-leyan—T'ang
of Africa. Since inheriting—after the suspicious deaths of his
father and elder brothers—Wang Sau-leyan has dedicated every
moment to bringing down Li Yuan and his allies in Council. A sharp
and cunning adversary with an abrasive, calculating manner, he is the
harbinger of Change within the Council of Seven. Ward, Kim—Born in
the Clay, that dark wasteland beneath the great City's foundations,
Kim has a quick and unusual bent of mind that has marked him as
potentially the greatest scientist on Chung Kuo. His vision of a
giant star-spanning web, formulated down in the darkness, drove him
up into the light of the Above. But, despite the patronage of Li Yuan
and the friendship of powerful men, life has proven to be far from
easy for Ward, either in business or in love. Wong Yi-sun—Big Boss
of the United Bamboo Triad, "Fat Wong"—a tiny,
birdlike man—has won the favor of Li Yuan. Yet his ambitions
reach beyond more patronage. He
wants to unite the lower levels of City Europe under his rule. Wu Shih—Middle-aged
T'ang of North America, he is one of the few remaining members of the
old generation. A staunch traditionalist, he nevertheless has found
himself allied in Council with Li Yuan and Tsu Ma against the odious
Wang Sau-leyan. Yet with the resurgence of American nationalism he
finds himself confronted by a problem none of his fellow T'ang have
to face; a problem he must find an urgent and lasting solution to. LIST
OF CHARACTERS
THE
SEVEN AND THE FAMILIES' Chi
Hsing—T'ang of the Australias. Fu Ti Chang—third wife of
Li Yuan. Hou Tung-po—T'ang of South America. Lai
Shi—second wife of Li Yuan. Li Kuei Jen—son of Li Yuan
and heir to City Europe. Li
Yuan—T'ang of Europe. Mien Shan—first wife of Li Yuan.
Tsu Ma—T'ang of West Asia. Wang Sau-leyan—T'ang of
Africa. Wei Chan Yin—first son of Wei Feng and heir to City
East Asia. Wei
Feng—T'ang of East Asia. Wei
Hsi Wang—second son of Wei Feng and Colonel in Security. Wei
Tseng-li—third son of Wei Feng. Wu
Shih—T'ang of North America. Yin Fei Yen—"Flying
Swallow"; Minor-Family Princess and divorced wife
of Li Yuan. Yin Han Ch'in—son of Yin Fei Yen. Yin
Tsu—head of the Yin Family (one of the "Twenty-Nine"
Minor Families) and father of Fei Yen. Yin Wu Tsai—Minor-Family
Princess and cousin of Fei Yen.
FRIENDS
AND RETAINERS OF THE SEVEN Bachman,
Lothar—Lieutenant in Security. Bright Moon—maid to Li
Yuan. Brock—security
guard in the Domain. Chan Teng—Master of the Inner Chambers at
Tbngjiang. Chang Shih-sen—personal secretary to Li Yuan. Ch'in
Tao Fan—Chancellor of East Asia.
' Chu
Shi-ch'e—Pi-shu c/iien, or Inspector of the Imperial Library at
'Tbngjiang. Coates—security
guard in the Domain. Cook—duty guard in the Domain. Fen
Cho-hsien — Chancellor of North America. Fragrant
Lotus — maid to Li Yuan.
; Franke,
Otto — Wei, or Captain of Security, for Zwickau Hsien.
Gerhardt, Paul — Major; Head of Tracking, Northern Hemisphere.
Gustavsson, Per — Captain of Chi Hsing's personal guard.
Gustavsson, Ute — wife of Captain Gustavsson. Hauser, Eva —
wife of Major Sven Hauser. Hauser, Gustav — private
secretary/equerry to Marshal Tblonen; son of Major Sven Hauser. Hauser,
Sven — Major; ex-Colonial Governor; father of Gustav Hauser.
Henssa, Eero — Captain of the Guard aboard the floating palace
Yang- Ho
Chang — valet to Wu Shih. Hung Yan — "Wiring"
surgeon to Li Yuan. Hung
Mien-lo — Chancellor of Africa.
•• Karr,
Gregor — Major in Security. K'ung Feng — Third Official
in the Ta Ssu Nung, the Superintendency of
Agriculture, for City Europe. Lofgren, Bertil — Lieutenant and
aide to Marshal Tolonen. Mo
Yu — Security Lieutenant in the Domain. Nan Ho —
Chancellor of Europe. Read, Helmut — Governor of the Saturn
system. Rheinhardt, Helmut — General of Security for Li Yuan. Shepherd,
Ben — son of the late Hal Shepherd; "Shell" artist.
Shepherd, Beth — widow of Hal Shepherd; mother of Ben and Meg
Shepherd. Shepherd,
Meg — sister of Ben Shepherd. Tolonen, Jelka — daughter
of Marshal Tolonen. Tolonen, Knut — ex-Marshal of Security;
Head of the GenSyn Hearings committee. Tu
Mai— security guard in the Domain. Virtanen, Per — Major
in Li Yuan's Security forces. Zdenek — bodyguard to Jelka
Tolonen. Hui
Tsin-—Red Pole (426, or Executioner) to the United Bamboo.
K'ang A-yin—gang boss of the Tu Sun tang. K'ang
Yeh-su—nephew of K'ang A-yin. Kant—runner for K'ang
A-yin. Li
Chin—"Li the Lidless"; Big Boss of the Wo Shih Wo. Li
Pai Shung—nephew of Li Chin; heir to the Wo Shih Wo. Ling
Wo—Chief Advisor to K'ang A-yin. Liu Tong—lieutenant to
Li Chin. Lo Han—tong boss. Lu Ming-shao—"Whiskers
Lu"; Big Boss of the Kuei Chuan. Man
Hsi—tong boss.
: Meng
Te—lieutenant to Lu Ming-shao. Ni Yueh—tong boss. Peck—lieutenant
to K'ang A-yin (a ying tzu, or "shadow"). Po Lao—Red
Pole (426, or Executioner) to the Kuei Chuan. Soucek, Jiri—lieutenant
to K'ang A-yin. Visak—lieutenant
to Lu Ming-shao. Wong
Yi-sun—"Fat Wong"; Big Boss of the United Bamboo. Yan
Yan—tong boss. Yao
Lu—lieutenant to Stefan Lehmann. Yue
Chun—Red Pole (426, or Executioner) to the Wo Shih Wo. Yun
Yueh-hui—"Dead Man Yun"; Big Boss of the Red Gang.
YU Anne—Yu
assassin. Donna—Yu assassin. Joan—<-Yu
assassin. Kriz—senior Yu operative. Mach, Jan—maintenance
official for the Ministry of Waste Recycling; former
Ping Two member and founder of the Yu. Vesa—Yu assassin. THE
TRIADS Chao—runner
for K'ang A-yin. Feng
Shang-pao—"General Feng"; Big Boss of the i4K. Feng
Wo—lieutenant to K'ang A-yin. Ho
Chin—"Three-Finger Ho"; Big Boss of the Yellow
Banners. Hua Shang—lieutenant to Wong Yi-sun. Huang
Jen—lieutenant to Po Lao. OTHER
CHARACTERS Ainsworth,
James—lawyer for Charles Lever. Ascher,
Emily—past member of the Ping Two terrorists. Barrett,
Edel—SimFic employee at Sohm Abyss. Becker, Hans—sidekick
of Stefan Lehmann. Bonner,
Alex—Chief Negotiator for the P'u Lan Finance Corporation.
Bonnot, Alex—Scientific Supervisor for SimFic at Sohm Abyss.
Campbell, William—Regional Controller of SimFic's North
Atlantic Cities. Carver,
Rex—Reformer candidate for Miami Hsien and friend of Charles
Lever. Chan Long—security guard, working for Lever and Kustow. Chang—guard
on the Chung estate. Chang Li—First Surgeon in the Boston
Medical Center. Chiang Su-li—Master of the House of the Ninth
Dragon Tea House. Chung, Gloria—heiress; daughter of the late
Representative Chung Yen. Curval, Andrew—leading geneticist;
employee of the ImmVac Corporation. Dann, Abraham—steward to
Charles Lever. Deio—Clayborn
friend of Kim Ward from "Rehabilitation." DeValerian,
Rachel—alias of Emily Ascher. DeVore,
Howard—ex-Major in Security, and Dispersionist. Dunn,
Richard—business rival of Old Man Lever. Feng
Lu-ma—lensman. Feng Wo-shen—protein designer and
scientific assistant for SitriFic at Sohm
Abyss. Fisher,
Carl—American; friend of Michael Lever. Fisher, James—financier
and friend of Charles Lever. Gratton, Edward—friend of Charles
Lever and Reformer candidate for Boston Hsien. Haller,
Wolf—sidekick of Stefan Lehmann. Harrison, James—employee
of Charles Lever. Hart, Alex—Representative at Weimar.
Hattmann, William—friend of Charles Lever and Reformer
candidate. Hay,
Joel—leader of the Evolutionist Party of North America. Henty,
Thomas—technician. Heydemeier,
Ernst—artist; leading exponent of Futur-Kunst, "Science-Art."
Hilbert, Eduard—Head of Cryobiology for SimFic at Sohm Abyss.
Ho Chao-tuan—Representative for Shenyang Hsien. Ho
Yang—reporter for the Wen Ming media channel. Hong
Chi—assistant to Kim Ward. Horton,
Feng—American; a "Son"; also known as "Meltdown."
Hsiang Tian—merchant; store owner. Jennings, Mary—alias
of Emily Ascher. Johnstone,
Edward—friend of Charles Lever; father of Louisa Johnstone.
Johnstone, Louisa—long-standing fiancee of Michael Lever. Kennedy,
Jean—wife of Joseph Kennedy. Kennedy, Joseph—American
lawyer, and founder of the New Republican Party. Kennedy,
Robert—eldest son of Joseph Kennedy. Kennedy, William—youngest
son of Joseph Kennedy. Koslevic, Anna—schoolgirl friend of
Jelka Tblonen. Kustow, Bryn—American; friend of Michael Lever. Lehmann,
Stefan—albino son of Under-Secretary Lehmann. Lever,
Charles—"Old Man Lever," Head of the Imm Vac
Pharmaceuticals company
of North America; father of Michael Lever. Lever, Michael—son
of Charles Lever; Head of the MemSys Corporation, a
subsidiary of Imm Vac. Li Min—"Brave Carp," an alias
of Stefan Lehmann. Luke—Claybom
friend of Kim Ward from "Rehabilitation." Mai
Li-wen—lensman Marley,
George—business associate of Charles Lever. May
Feng—Hung Mao Head of EduCol. Milne, Michael—private
investigator. Mitchell,
Bud—American; a "Son"; associate of Michael Lever.
Munroe,
Wendell—Representative at Weimar. Nong Yan—bookkeeper to
Kim Ward. Pai
Mei—stallholder. Parker,
Jack—American; friend of Michael Lever.
Ping
Hsiang—Representative for the Above in discussions for, the
reopening of Weimar.
Reiss,
Horst—Chief Executive of the SimFic Corporation. Richards—guard
at Kim Ward's Ch'i Chu company.
Robins—employee
of Charles Lever. Ross,
James—private investigator. Schram, Dieter—Administrator
for SimFic at Sohm Abyss. Snow—alias
of Stefan Lehmann. Spence, Graham—employee of Charles Lever.
Spence,
Leena—"Immortal" and onetime lover of Charles Lever.
Stevens, Carl—American; friend of Michael Lever. Stewart,
Greg—American; NREP candidate for Denver Hsien. Symons—SimFic
employee at Sohm Abyss. T'ai Cho—friend and former guardian of
Kim Ward. Tewl—"Darkness";
chief of the raft-people. Thorsson, Wulf—settler from lapetus
Colony in the Saturn system. Tong
Ye—young Han sailor; a "morph," created by Ben
Shepherd.
Tuan
Wen-ch'ang—SimFic employee at Sohm Abyss.
Underwood,
Harry—Representative at Weimar. Ward,
Kim—Clayborn orphan and scientist; head of the Ch'i Chu
company. Ward,
Rebecca—Commercial Advisor to SimFic at Sohm Abyss; Clay-born
friend of Kim Ward from "Rehabilitation." Weller, John—Head
of Internal Distribution for Imm Vac. Will—Claybom
friend of Kim Ward from "Rehabilitation."
Yellow
Tan—lensman.
Yi
Pang-chou—schoolgirl friend of Jelka Tolonen. Yueh
Pa—official in the United Bamboo heartland.
THE
DEAD Barrow,
Chao—Secretary of the House at Weimar.
Bercott,
Andrei—Representative at Weimar.
Berdichev,
Soren—Head of SimFic and, later, leader of the Dispersionist
faction.
Ch'in
Shih Huang Ti—the first emperor of China (ruled 221-210 B.C.). Chung
Hsin—"Loyalty"; bond servant to Li Shai Tung.
Cutler,,
Richard—leader of the "American" movement.
Ebert,
Klaus—head of the GenSyn Corporation.
Feng
Chung—Big Boss of the Kuei Chan (Black Dog) Triad.
Fest,
Edgar—Captain in Security. Gesell,
Bent—leader of the Ping Tiao terrorist organization.
Griffin,
James B.—last president of the American Empire. Han
Huan Ti—Han emperor (ruled A.D. 168-189), also known as Liu
Hung. Hou
Ti—T'ang of South America; father of Hou Tung Fb.
Hsiang
K'ai Fan—Minor-Family Prince. Hwa—master
"blood," or hand-to-hand fighter, below the Net.
Kao
Jyan—assassin; friend of Kao Chen. K'ung Fu Tzu—Confucius
(551—479 B.C.). Lehmann,
Pietr—Under-Secretary of the House of Representatives and first
leader of the Dispersionist faction; father of Stefan Lehmann.
Lever,
Margaret—wife of Charles Lever and mother of Michael Lever. Li
Ch'ing—T'ang of Europe; grandfather of Li Yuan.
Li
Han Ch'in—first son of Li Shai T'ung and once heir to City
Europe; brother of Li Yuan. Li
Hang Ch'i—T'ang of Europe; great-great-grandfather of Li Yuan.
Li
Kou-lung—T'ang of Europe; great-grandfather of Li Yuan.
Li
Shai Tung—T'ang of Europe; father of Li Yuan. Lin
Yua—first wife of Li Shai Tung. Mao
Tse Tung—first Ko Ming emperor (ruled a.d. 1948—1976).
Ming
Huang—sixth T'ang emperor (ruled a.d. 713-755).
Mu
Chua—Madam of the House of the Ninth Ecstasy.
Mu
Li—"Iron Mu," Boss of the Big Circle triad.
Shang—"Old Shang"; Master to Kao Chen when he was a
child. Shepherd, Amos—Great-great-great-great-grandfather (and
genetic "father") of Ben Shepherd. Shepherd,
Augustus—"Brother" of Ben Shepherd, b. A.D. 2106, d.
2122.
Shepherd,
Hal—Father (and genetic "brother") of Ben Shepherd. Shepherd,
Robert—Great-grandfather (and genetic "brother") of
Ben Shepherd, and father of Augustus Shepherd. TsaoCh'un—tyrannical
founder of Chung Kuo (ruled a.d. 2051-2087). Wang
Hsien—T'ang of Africa; father of Wang Sau-leyan. Wang
Ta-hung—third son of Wang Hsien; elder brother of Wang
Sau-leyan.
Wen
Ti—"First Ancestor" of City Earth/Chung Kuo (ruled
180-157 B.C.), also known as Liu Heng.
Wyatt,
Edmund—company head; father of Kim Ward. Ywe
Hao—Yu terrorist. Ywe
Kai-chang—father to Ywe Hao. PROLOGUE
SPRING 2209 In
the Space Between Heaven and Earth
Heaven
and earth are ruthless, and treat the myriad creatures
as straw dogs; the sage is ruthless, and treats
the people as straw dogs. Is
not the space between heaven and earth like a bellows? It is
empty without being exhausted: The
more it works the more comes out. Much
speech leads inevitably to silence. Better
to hold fast to the void. —LAD
TZU, Too Te Ching, sixth century b.c.
WU
SHIH , T'ang of North America, stood at the top of the ruined, pitted
steps, looking down at the men. Behind him, headless, the huge statue
sat, embedded in its chair of granite. Overhead, spotlights set into
the floor of the Above picked
out the figures at the foot of the broad white stairway. Five men.
Five old, gray-bearded men, well-dressed and senatorial. Company
Heads. Americans. Wu Shih studied them, his contempt barely
concealed. His left foot rested on the statue's fallen head, his
right hand on his hip. One of
the men, taller than the rest, stepped out in front of the others and
called up to him. "Where
are they? You said you'd bring them, Wu Shih. So where are they?" Dead,
he would have liked to have said. Your sons are dead, old men.
But it wasn't so. Wang Sau-leyan had saved their lives. There had
been an agreement in Council and the traitors were to go free,
unpunished, the price of their treachery unexacted. It was
foolishness, but it had been decided. "They
are here, Shih Lever. Close by. Unharmed." Wu
Shih paused and looked about the ruins of the old city. From where he
stood, high above it all, the floor of the Above was less than fifty
ch'i overhead, a dark and solid presence, stretching away to every
horizon. Facing him, beyond the darkly shadowed outline of a toppled
obelisk, could be glimpsed the wreckage of the Capitol
building, a huge, silvered pillar thrusting up through its ruined
dome—one of many that rose to meet the smooth, featureless
darkness of the City's underbelly. He had
brought them here deliberately, knowing the effect it would have on
the old men. Overhead, its presence vast and crushing, lay the City
that he ruled—a City that rose two Ii—almost a mile by
their ancient measure—into the air, stretching from the
Atlantic to the Pacific, from the coast of Labrador to the Gulf of
Mexico in the south. While here below . . . Wu
Shih smiled. Here, in the darkness beneath the City's piles, lay the
ruins of old America—of Washington, once capital of the
sixty-nine States of the American Empire. And these men—these
foolish, greedy old men—would have the Empire back; would break
a century of peace to have it back. Wu Shih snorted and looked down
at the massive granite head beneathrthe foot. "You
have signed the documents?" A
moment's silence greeted his words, then Lever answered him, the
irritation in his voice barely restrained. "It's done." Wu
Shih felt a ripple of anger pass through him. It was the second time
Old Man Lever had refused to address him properly. "All
of you?" he demanded. "All those on my list?" He
looked up from Lincoln's head and sought Lever's eyes. Lever was
staring at the fallen stone, his face suffused with anger, his
expression so eloquent that Wu Shih laughed and pressed down on the
heavy stone, forcing the nose firmly into the dust that lay
everywhere here. "You
haven't answered me." Wu
Shih's voice had changed, grown harder, its flattened tones filled
with threat. Lever looked at at him, surprised by the command in his
voice—unaccustomed, clearly, to another's rule. Again this
spoke volumes. These men were far gone in their dissent—had
grown fat and arrogant in the illusion of their power. Li Yuan had
been right to see them as a threat—right to act against them as
he had. There was no respect in them, no understanding of their true
relationship to things. The old man thought himself the equal of the
Seven— perhaps, even, their superior. It was a dangerous,
insolent delusion. Lever
turned his head away sharply, spitting the words out angrily. "WeVe
signed. Everyone on your list." He beckoned to another of his
party, who came forward and handed him the document. Wu
Shih watched, his eyes half-lidded, seeing how Lever turned back to
face him, hesitating, as if he expected Wu Shih to come down the
steps and take the paper from him. "Bring
it," he said, and put out his left hand casually, almost
languidly. Wang Sau-leyan may have forced the Council -to make this
deal with their enemies—this "concession," as he
called it—but he, Wu Shih, would show these men exactly where
they stood. He saw how Lever turned, uncertainty in his face, looking
toward the others as if for guidance, then turned back and began to
climb. Each step was a small humiliation. Each a belittling of the
man. Then, when he was only three steps from the top, Wu Shih raised
his hand, commanding him, by that gesture, to stay where he was. Lever
frowned, but did as he was bid. "Kneel,"
Wu Shih said, his voice soft, almost gentle now. Lever
turned his head slightly, as if he had not heard properly. "What?" "Kneel" Wu
Shih's voice had been no louder, no harder, but this time it was
command not reminder. Again
Lever hesitated, half turning, the muscles in his face twitching,
conscious of his fellows down below, watching him. Slowly, huffing as
he did, the old man knelt, his face raised, eyes glaring at Wu Shih.
This was a protocol he had clearly thought he could avoid. " But
Wu Shih was unrelenting. He was determined to have the form of
Lever's respect if not the actuality, knowing that in such forms lay
power. Real power. The bowing of one man before another: it
was a gesture as old as it was profound. And even if true respect
were not forthcoming here, he could still insist on one of its
components— obedience. Simple obedience. Leaning
forward, Wu Shih plucked the paper from Lever's outstretched hand and
opened it. Its original—verified by retinal print and scan—was
already on file. Yet there was more power in this—this written
paper, signed by the hand of each and given here at this place where
the dream of America had died—than in the purely legal form of
their agreement. It was little understood by them, but ritual was
more than empty show. It was power itself. Was what gave form
to the relationships of men. Wu
Shih folded the paper, grunting his satisfaction. Half turning, he
made a signal. At once, a brilliant light fell on a nearby building.
For a moment there was nothing, then a door opened in the plain white
face of the building and from the darkness within stepped a group of
young men. The Sons. Gaunter, less proud for their fifteen-month
incarceration. But dangerous. More dangerous than Wang Sau-leyan
would ever contemplate. Wu
Shih raised his hand, dismissing the old man. Lever
backed away, moving slowly down the steps, then, at the bottom,
turned and went among his fellows, making his way across the littered
wasteland toward the building where the young men stood. Wu Shih
watched a moment, then turned away. In his hand he held their
guarantee of good behavior—their pledge to govern themselves
better than they had. But he had seen the hate, the irreverence in
Lever's face. Was such a guarantee worth having in the face of such
open defiance? He
smiled. Yes, for it would give him the excuse to act, without the
intercession of that meddler Wang. As he
made his way from there he knew for a certainty that this was not the
end of this, only a temporary respite. There would come a time when
he would have to face these men again. "Americans
. . ." he said beneath his breath, then laughed softly, looking
back at the headless statue, silhouetted against the lights from
above. The Supernal, they called themselves. Dwellers in the
Heavens. Supremely great and excellent. Exalted. He
laughed. So they might believe, but if they so much as spat he'd make
it hell for them. * * * LEAF
shadow fell on the pale, slatted rocks on the far side of the pool.
Li Yuan, T'ang of Europe, stood on the low, humped bridge, listening
to the sounds coming from the rooms across the water. Low trees
obscured his view of the courtyards and the house, but the sounds
came clear to him: laughter, light-headed with relief; the
chatter of excited female voices; and beneath both,
unremitting, the bawling of a newborn child. He
stood there, in perfect stillness, looking down at his dark
reflection in the lotus-strewn water. It was a child. A son—of
course a son—there would not be laughter if it were otherwise.
He stood, unmoving, not knowing what to think, what feel at that
moment, the world—the tiny world of tree and stone and
water—suspended all about him. A son
... He shook his head, frowning. There should be more than this,
he thought. I should be glad. I too should laugh, for today
the chain is forged anew, the Family strengthened. But there was
nothing—only an empty space where feeling ought to have been. Across
from him one of the nurses stepped out onto the balcony of the birth
room and saw him. He looked up in time to see her turn hurriedly and
go back inside; heard her warning to them and the sudden silence that
followed, broken almost at once by the high-pitched cries of the
newborn. He stood there a moment longer, then moved on slowly, his
heart strangely heavy, for once totally unprepared for what lay
ahead. Mien
Shan lay there, a tiny figure in his grandmother's huge bed—
the same bed where his father, Li Shai Tung, had come into the world.
She was propped up on pillows, her dark hair tied back from her
sweat-beaded brow. Seeing him she smiled broadly and lifted the tiny
bundle in her arms, offering it to him. "Your
son, ChiehHsia." He
took the child from her, cradling it carefully, conscious of the
others in the room watching him. With one hand he drew back the
blanket and looked down at the child. Dark hair lay finely on its
long, pale scalp, glistening wetly in the overhead light. Its eyes
were screwed shut and its thin lips formed ugly, awkward shapes as it
yelled incessantly, one thin arm and tiny hand reaching blindly,
repetitively into the air. It struggled against him as he held it, as
if sensing his unease. Even so, he laughed, feeling how small, how
light it was. So fragile and yet so determined. His son. Once more he
laughed, and sensed the mood in the room change, growing more
relaxed. He
looked down at Mien Shan and smiled. "Good. You have done
well, my love." He glanced across, seeing how his other
wives, Lai Shi and Fu Ti Chang, blushed with Mien Shan at the
endearment, and felt an unexpected warmth. They were good, kind
women. Nan Ho had chosen well for him. He sat
beside Mien Shan on the bed and turned to face her, holding the child
in one arm. Behind her, on the wall above the bed, was a copy of the
Luoshu diagram—the "magic" numbers used as a
charm for easing childbirth. Normally the sight of such superstitious
nonsense would have angered him. But this was no moment for anger. "Was
it hard?" he asked, lifting her chin gently with one finger,
making her look at him. She hesitated, then gave the slightest nod,
remembered pain in her eyes. He
took a deep breath, trying to imagine it, then nodded, his lips and
eyes slowly forming a smile. "I honor you, sweet wife. And thank
you, both for my son and for myself." For a
moment he looked at her, an unusual tenderness in his features, then,
giving the slightest bow, he leaned forward and kissed the wetness of
her brow. He
turned, facing the others in the room. Besides wives, nurses, and
doctors, several of his Ministers were present—witnesses to the
birth. Li Yuan stood up, still cradling the child, and took a step
toward them. "You
will announce that the Families have a new heir. That Kuei Jen, first
son to Li Yuan, was born this morning of his wife, Mien Shan, in good
health and in a state of physical perfection." He
nodded vigorously, holding the child firmer, seeing how they all
smiled at that. "A strong child. Like his grandfather." There
was a murmur of agreement and a nodding of heads. But then Li Yuan
lowered his head in the sign of dismissal and, with bows of respect,
the others left, leaving Li Yuan alone with Mien Shan and the child.
The babe in his arms had settled and was no longer crying. Now it
looked up at him, open-eyed. Huge, dark eyes that peered out from the
mystery of birth. And, lowering his face gently, he kissed brow and
nose and chin with a tenderness that took him by surprise. "Kuei
Jen," he said, smiling down softly at the child. "Welcome,
my son. May the world be kind to you." And, looking up, he saw
that Mien Shan was watching him, tears trickling down her cheeks. THE
ROOM WAS DARK, ill-ventilated. The old man in the bed coughed, a dry,
hacking cough, then sniffed loudly. "Draw the curtains, Chan
Yin. 1 want to see you all." His
eldest son went to the far side of the room and drew the heavy silken
curtain back a fraction. Brilliant light spilled into the room,
cutting a broad swath through the shadow. "More,"
said the old man, leaning forward from his pillows. "And open
the doors. It's like a sweatbox in here." Chan
Yin hesitated and looked across at the doctors, but they simply
shrugged. Pulling the curtain back fully, he pushed open the bronze
and glass doors that led out onto the balcony, then stood there,
feeling the freshness of the breeze on his face and arms, looking out
across the gardens toward the distant mountains. After a moment he
turned back, facing his father. In the
sudden brightness Wei Feng was squinting at him, a faint smile on his
creased and ancient-looking face. "Better," he said, easing
himself back onto the pillows. "It's like a tomb. Each night
they tuck me up and bury me. And yet, when the morning comes, I am
still here." Chan
Yin looked at his father with concern and love. He hated seeing him
like this, so old and powerless. His memories rebelled against this
image of Wei Feng and would have had his father strong and vigorous
again. But those were childhood memories and he himself was older,
much older now. Forty this next birthday. He sighed, then crossed the
room to stand with his brothers at the bedside. Hsi
Wang stood there in his Colonel's uniform, ill at ease in this
situation, his usual good humor subdued. Since his father's stroke he
had been only half himself, his normally untroubled face overcast.
Tseng-li, the youngest, stood right beside his father, his hand
resting lightly on the old man's shoulder, his beautiful face looking
down into his father's. From time to time Wei Feng would turn
slightly and look up at him, smiling. The
stroke had almost killed Wei Feng. Only expert surgery had saved him.
But pneumonia had set in shortly afterward. Now, a month
from the first heart attack, he was much better, but the
experience had aged him greatly. The left side of his skull was
shaved bald and his right arm lay useless on the covers. There had
been a blood clot and certain areas of his brain had died, among them
those which controlled certain of his movements. Not even expert
prosthetics could bring back the use of his right arm. "My
sons," he saidjsmiling, looking from one to the other, the
simple words heavy with emotion. For a moment the coughing took him
again, and Tseng-li bent his huge, tall body, kneeling, holding the
old man's hand more tightly until the spasm passed. Then Wei Feng
spoke again, looking mainly at his heir, Chan Yin. "The
doctors tell me 1 shall live." He smiled sadly, then nodded.
"Even that seems strange now . . . the thought of living."
Retook a long, shuddering breath, then spoke again. "But being
such a friend to death these last few weeks, I have had the chance to
study him—to look him in the face and come to know him. Like an
enemy one comes to respect for his great skill and cunning." Hsi
Wang laughed shortly and Wei Feng looked up at him, smiling,
indulging his laughter. "It is good to hear you laugh, Hsi. I
have missed your laughter." He licked his lips slightly, then
carried on. "I have stood beside him, you see, and looked back.
Into the light. Looked back and seen the shape of things, here, in
this shadow world of ours." Chan
Yin narrowed his eyes, listening, watching his .father's face, and
saw how the old T'ang's eyes seemed to look out past Hsi, as if he
really could see something that was denied to their vision. "For
the first time I saw clearly. How things are. How they will be." Wei
Feng turned his head and looked at his eldest son once more. "Which
is why you are here. You especially, Chan Yin. But you also, Hsi and
Tseng. As witnesses. Custodians, if you like." They
waited while Wei Feng took his breath. From the open doors came the
sound of the wind in the trees and the buzzing of insects. A faint
breeze moved the curtains gently, cooling the air in the room. "There
is something I want from you, Chan Yin. Something no father ought to
ask of his eldest son. But I have«een what is to come. And,
because I love you, I want you to swear to me that you will do what I
ask of you." Chan
Yin shivered, seeing the strange intensity in his father's eyes, and
nodded. "Whatever you ask, Father." Wei
Feng was quiet a while, watching him; then he sighed and looked down
at his useless arm. "I want you to swear to me that you will
support Li Yuan. Support him in whatever he asks, and for whatever
reason he gives. Whatever he asks of you, do it." He
paused, a sudden ferocity in his face, as if he was seeing things
again from the side of death. Looking back at the world of shadows
and light. "Do
it, Chan Yin! You must! For upon Li Yuan's shoulders rests the fate
of us all. Deny him and the Seven will fall, as surely as I will
someday die and you inherit." For a
moment Chan Yin was silent, thoughtful, then he looked up and met his
father's eyes, smiling, understanding the full import of what was
being asked of him. "I
swear to do as my father wishes. To support Li Yuan, whatever he
asks." He bowed low, then turned, facing his brothers. "This
I swear as a sacred trust, which you, my brothers, bear witness to." Wei
Feng lay back again, relaxing, looking up at the three faces of his
sons. "You are good men. Good sons. A father could not ask for
better sons." Leaning
forward, Tseng-li kissed his father's brow. "It isn't chosen,
Father," he said softly, smiling at him once more. "It
simply is." LI
YUAN sat at his desk, beneath the portrait of his grandfather. Across
from him the face of Wu Shih, ten times its normal size, stared down
at him from the wall screen. "You
talk of troubles to come, Yuan, but things have been quiet for some
time now. The Lowers have not been so placid these past ten years." "Maybe
so, but things are happening down there, Wu Shih. I can feel it. We
are sitting on a powder keg." "And
more powder every day, neh?" Wu Shih moved back a fraction, his
features formed into a frown. "Then maybe it is time, Yuan. Time
to implement what we have already decided." Li
Yuan sat there a moment, then nodded slowly. The decision had
been made the day before, in Council, the terms for the "new
deal" agreed among the Seven. It remained only to put it before
the representatives of the Above. In
principle the package was fairly straightforward. Five changes to the
Edict of Technological Control, in specialized areas. Stricter
monitoring controls. Changes to the Personal Liberty Act. More money
to be spent on low-level health care and maintenance support. Minor
concessions concerning space travel. The reopening of the House of
Representatives at Weimar. And in return, the House would set up the
legal machinery for population controls. Wu
Shih sighed deeply and tugged at his plaited beard. "My
instincts cry out against giving those bastards anything. But as
youVe rightly argued, we have a problem and it will not go away. So
.1. ." He shrugged and raised his hands, as if in surrender. "We
go ahead then? We ratify the document?" Wu
Shih nodded. "I see no point in waiting, Yuan. Even our cousin
Wang is in agreement. Indeed, his amendments to the Edict changes
were most thoughtful. It is clear the problem worries him as much as
you or I." "Perhaps
. . ." Li Yuan looked away a moment, stony-faced, deep in
thought, then turned back, facing the giant image of Wu Shih, meeting
those platelike almond eyes. "We should have done this sixty
years ago. Now . . . Well, maybe it is already much too late. Maybe
we are only building walls of sand against the tide." "Yet
we must try, neh? We are Seven, after all." The
tone of irony in Wu Shih's voice did not escape the young T'ang. Li
Yuan laughed, then fell serious again. "These are uncertain
times, dear cousin. But whatever happens, remember that I count you
as my friend. As brother to my father." Wu
Shih stared back at him, his expression giving nothing away, then he
nodded. "You have my support, Li Yuan, in whatever you do. And
yes. I will be an uncle to you in all things." He smiled,
relaxing. "Well, so much for business. Now how is that child of
yours? How is Kuei Jen?" Li
Yuank face lit from within. "He is . . ." He hesitated,
seeking the correct word, then laughed, finding nothing better than
what had first come to mind.
"He is beautiful, Wu Shih. Simply the most beautiful thing I
have ever seen." michael
LEVER stood there on the balcony overlooking the ballroom of his
father's mansion, remembering the last time he had been there,
fifteen months before, at the great Thanksgiving Ball his father had
thrown for the Supernal. Outwardly, things seemed to have changed
very little; the pillars and balconies of the great hall were
festooned as before with red, white, and blue banners, while at the
far end of the hall, beside a full-size replica of the ancient
Liberty Bell, a twelve-piece band, dressed in the dark blue military
uniforms of the Revolution, played the battle tunes of the old
American Empire— forbidden tunes that spoke eloquently of
another age, when the Americans ruled their own land and the Han were
safe within their borders. Looking about him, it was easy to believe
that this evening and the last were somehow connected, and that the
fifteen months that had elapsed between were merely a dream, a dark
delusion. But there was no connection, and those days—four
hundred and sixty-three days, to be precise about it—had been
no dream. He
pushed back from the edge, a feeling of hollowness, a tiredness that
went beyond mere physical exhaustion, making him feel giddy for a
moment. There had been a breach. Whereas, before, he had looked at
this with casual, accepting eyes, now he saw it clear. It was
the same, and yet it was wholly, utterly different. Like
himself. Oh, he knew how he looked. He had stood there for a long
time, earlier that afternoon, staring at himself in the full-length
mirror. He was gaunter than he'd been back then, and there was a
haunted, slightly melancholy look about him that had not been there
before, yet otherwise he seemed the man he'd been. But he was not
that man. From
the beginning they had kept him—as they'd kept all the Sons—in
isolation. At first he had not been frightened, but had nursed his
anger in silence, expecting his release at any moment. Yet as the
days wore on, he had found his mood changing as no word came. For
several days he had bellowed at his guards and refused the food jhey
brought. Then, changing his tack, he had adopted a more civil air,
demanding firmly but politely to see whoever was in charge.
Unexpectedly, his request had been granted. He
could still remember how it had felt, kneeling before the man in that
tiny, awful cell. Even thinking of it made him feel cold,
apprehensive. Before that moment he had never felt fear, never had to
bow his head before another man. But now he knew. And that knowledge
had changed him. Had made him a different man. Now, when he looked at
things, he saw not a world that was his to make and shape, but a
world in thrall to power and desire, a world corrupted by the dark
currents of domination and submission. In the
light of which, his father's anger, earlier, at Wu Shih's treatment
of him had seemed childish, almost laughable. What, after all, had he
expected? Gratitude? Respect? No. For the relations of men were
flawed—deeply flawed—as if they could not exist without
the brutal mechanisms of power. And
now this. This celebration of his homecoming . . . He
shuddered, then turned, making his way down, knowing he had no
choice; that this evening had to be faced and overcome, if only for
his father's sake. Even so, he did not feel like celebrating. I have
been on my own too long, he thought, feeling a faint uneasiness
as the murmur of the crowd below grew louder. I'll have to learn
all this again. At the
turn of the stairs, he paused, trying out a brief, apologetic smile,
conscious of how awkward it felt, of the way the skin stretched
tightly across his face. Then, reluctantly, like a prisoner being
taken to the place of punishment, he moved on, down, into the body of
the hall. CHARLES
LEVER stared at his son, a broad grin splitting his face, then drew
him close, holding him in a bear hug for the dozenth time that
evening. All
about them, pressed close on every side, the pack of friends and
relations laughed delightedly and raised their glasses to toast the
two men, their joy unbounded. "Have
you told him yet, Charles?" one of them called out. "Not
yet," Lever called back, holding his son's head between his
hands and staring once more, as if he could not have enough of the
sight. "What's
this?" Michael asked quietly. "Later,"
the old man answered. "There's plenty of time." Much
had changed, but he knew that tone in his father's voice. It was the
tone he used when he wanted to avoid something awkward. Michael
pressed him, softly but insistent. "Tell me. I'd like to know." Lever
laughed. "Okay. I wanted to keep it a while, but I guess now's
as good a time as any." His smile broadened again. "I've
asked Ted Johnstone about Louisa. He's given his consent to bring
things forward. I thought we could announce it tonight—make it
a double celebration." Michael
felt himself go cold. Louisa Johnstone... He looked down, licking his
lips, then looked back at his father. "No," he said softly,
almost inaudibly. "What
did you say?" his father asked, leaning closer. "I
said no. I don't want that." "No?"
Old Man Lever laughed, as if at a good joke. "Hell, Michael, you
can't say no. YouVe been betrothed to the girl fifteen years now. All
I'm saying is that we bring the wedding forward." Michael
looked about him at the expectant, joyous faces, then looked back at
his. father. Charles Lever had grown more solid by the year. His head
rested like something carved upon a bull-like neck, the close trim of
his ash-white hair accentuating the robust power of his features. That
is how I will look, forty years from now, he thought. But do
I have to be like him as well? "Not
now," he said, wanting to let the matter drop; to save it for
some quieter, less public moment. But his father was insistent. He
slapped Michael's shoulder, as if encouraging a fighter. "No,
come on, Michael! It's a great time to announce it! It'll give
everyone something to look forward to. And it'll help us put this
thing behind us." Michael
stared at his father, then shook his head. "Please, Father. I'm
not ready for it. Let's talk about it tomorrow, neh?" Even
that, that attempt at the old, father-son tone, had been hard; had
stretched his resources to their limit. But it was as if Charles
Lever hadn't heard. He shook his massive head and gripped his son's
arm firmly. "Don't
be silly, Michael. I know how you feel, but this'll help you snap out
of it. A woman, that's what you need! And sons! Plenty of sons!" "Help
me?" The sharpness in Michael's voice made Lever jerk his
head back, surprised. Michael
glared at his father, something breaking in him. "Don't you
understand? Don't you fucking understand? I don't need help. I
need to be left alone. Sons . . . What use are fucking sons when I
feel like this?" The
great room had gone deathly silent. A hundred faces stared at him,
shocked and uncomprehending. "There's
no need . . ." Old Man Lever began, but Michael made a
dismissive gesture. "You
push me, Father. You always did. But I mean it. I'm not marrying the
girl. Not now, not ever, understand me?" "Michael/" But
suddenly he was beyond words. He turned away, pushing through the
crowd roughly, ignoring the shouting at his back; seeing only the
floor of the tiny cell, the guard above him, that ugly mouth leaning
close, shouting abuse, teaching him about how things really were.
PARTI
I SPRING 2209 Monsters
of the Deep
Humanity must
perforce prey on itself, Like monsters of the deep. —WILLIAM
SHAKESPEARE, King Lear, Act IV, Scene II
Go into
emptiness, strike voids, bypass what he defends, hit him where he
does not expect you. —TSAO
TSAO [a.d. 155-220], Commentary on Sun Tzu's The Art of War
CHAPTER ONE Earth IN
THE CLEAR, golden light of dawn the seven "gods of the soil and
grain" stood at their places on the huge earthen mound. Dressed
in dragon robes of imperial yellow, each held an ancient ceremonial
hand plow, the primitive wooden shaft curiously curved, the long
blade made of black roughcast iron. Here, at the Temple of Heaven, at
the very center of the universe, the New Year rites were about to be
enacted, the furrows plowed, the sacrifices made to Hou T'u, "He
Who Rules the Earth," and Hou Chi, "He Who Rules the
Millet," as they had been since the time of T'ang, the founder
of the Shang dynasty, three thousand seven hundred years before. For a
moment longer they stood there, while ten thousand blue-cloaked
servants waited silently about the foot of the mound, the seven
gold-clothed figures forming a single burnished eye at the center of
the dark circle of earth, and then it began, the pure tone of the
bell sounding in the silence, followed by the low, monotonous
chanting of the officials. As one
they bent, moving outward, pushing the plows before them, seven black
furrows forming in the earth like the spokes of a giant wheel. Turning,
Li Yuan looked across the circle of the mound, seeing his fellow
T'ang spread out along the rim, their dark, silhouetted figures like
pillars holding up Heaven itself, their yellow-gold silks fluttering
like banners in the early morning breeze. For a moment the
illusion was perfect. For the briefest moment he was back a thousand
years, at the very center of the ancient Middle Kingdom, the
offerings made, the harvest guaranteed. But then, raising his eyes,
he looked beyond his cousins, beyond the pleasant arbors and orchards
of the Temple grounds. The
veil fell from his eyes. There, like a vast glacier dominating the
skyline, lay the City, its pearl-white walls surrounding them on
every side, towering over the lush greenery of the ancient gardens.
For a moment he felt almost giddy. Then, checking himself, he stood
straighter, listening to the chant, to the ancient words that spoke
of the harmony between the ruler and the earth and of the balance of
forces that must be maintained if the Kingdom was not to fall. For a
moment he let himself be comforted by the ancient formula—by
the thought that they might yet keep that age-old bargain and
maintain the threefold link between Earth and Man and Heaven. But it
was hard to concentrate. His eyes kept returning to the whiteness. To
the giddying whiteness that encircled the tiny, earthen mound. It was
like death. Death on every side. And when, for the briefest moment,
he let his attention stray, he grew conscious of the lie that lay
behind their apparent unity. For in that moment of vertigo he had
seen the Great Wheel break and spin aimlessly, like a cartwheel
tumbling down a cliff face. He
shuddered and closed his eyes momentarily, wishing it were over, then
looked down, noting the earth that clung to his boots and stained the
hem of his silks. As on another day, eleven years before, when they
had laid his brother, Han Ch'in, in his tomb. Later,
in the sedan returning to the Chi Nien Tien, the Hall of
Prayer for Good Harvests, he thought of all that had happened since
that day. Of the War-that-wasn't-a-War, of his father's death, and of
the failure of his marriage to his dead brother's wife, Fei Yen. All
had left their scars. And yet he had come through; had endured all
that pain and suffering, to reach these calm heights from which he
might look back. This hilltop of contentment. Yes.
And that was the strangest thing of all. For there was no doubting
how he had felt these past few weeks. His child, his wives—
these, more than anything, had become his comfort, his delight. Outside
the small circle of his family the storm clouds were gathering. There
would be War again. Or worse. And yet he was happy. When he sat
there, bouncing Kuei Jen on his knee, or carrying him against his
shoulder, feeling his soft warmth and hearing the soft pattern of his
breathing close by his ear, he would feel his cares fall from him.
For a while there would be nothing but himself and the child, as if
all else were a dream. And even afterward, when he had to go out from
that magic circle and face the problems of his world, he* would carry
that warmth—that light—within him, like a charm against
the world's darkness. The
sedan swayed gently, tilting slowly backward as the carriers climbed
the broad, white marble ramp that led up to the great three-tiered
tower. Happy.
Yes, he was happy now. And yet it was not enough. Climbing
down, he looked about him, attending closely to all he saw, as if
this were the last time he would witness all of this. It was that
thought—that strange and frightening glimpse of finality—which
made him look away as Wu Shih came across. "What
is it, Yuan?" Wu Shih said softly, speaking to his ear. He
turned back, smiling, taking the older man's arm. "It's nothing,
cousin. Just a fleeting thought." Wu
Shih nodded, understanding. "Then come. Let us make our
sacrifices." The
Seven stood in line before the great altar, their offerings held out
before them. A bell sounded, high and pure in the silence, and then
the chanting began again. Candles flickered in the shadows. New
Confucian officials came forward, their saffron robes whispering
against the stone floor, and took the offerings from the T'ang,
turning back to lay them before the statue that crouched, thrice
life-size, on the altar. Shang
Ti, the Supreme Ancestor, looked down on his seven sons with blind,
impassive eyes. He was Yang, Male, the personification of
Heaven itself and the great arbiter of the weather. Appeased by
sacrifices, he would provide good harvests; would look after the
black-haired people. Neglected he would spurn them. Would bring
plague and desolation. And death. Or so
it was said. So the officials chanted. Li
Yuan, standing there, was conscious suddenly of the great line of
kings and emperors who had preceded him. Of that ghostly throng who
stood with him, in his person, before the altar. Had they felt as he
felt now? Or was he alone in doubting the efficacy of laying paper
offerings before a blank-eyed statue? It was
not the first time he had questioned his beliefs. Often, in the past,
he had looked squarely, critically at the rites and customs he, as
T'ang, was obliged to perform. Yet this morning the ritual seemed
more hollow than before, his actions sheer pretense. And though he
had questioned things before, he had never experienced so profound a
mistrust of his own words and actions. What,
after all, did they mean? What did any of it mean? Oh, he
could see the beauty in it. Could even feel some part of him stir,
responding to the powerful sense of tradition, to the great weight of
years that the rituals evoked. But beyond that—beyond that
simple, almost aesthetic thrill—there was nothing. Nothing at
all. He
watched it all happening, distanced from himself, and tried to fathom
why. These three things—the darkening clouds of circumstance,
the great, enduring chain of tradition, and the bright yet tiny
circle of his own, individual happiness—how did they come
together? Where did they meet and make sense? As
they bowed and backed away, he looked to either side of him, but on
the faces of Wu Shih and Tsu Ma, of Hou Tung-po and Chi Hsing, on the
broad moon face of Wang Sau-leyan and the Regent Wei Chan Yin, there
was nothing but a solemn certainty. Whatever they thought of this, it
was hidden from him behind the walls of their faces. They
descended the steps in silence, slowly, almost casually now that the
ritual was over, making for the great tent and the breakfast that had
been laid out by their host Wei Chan Yin's servants. It was there,
beneath the golden awning, that Wang Sau-leyan came across to Li
Yuan, addressing him for the first time since his son had been born. He
faced Li Yuan, smiling, seemingly at ease, a tumbler of ch'a
cradled in the palm of one hand. "Well, cousin, and how is
the child?" It
seemed an innocuous question—the kind of politeness one
might have expected from a fellow T'ang—yet it was as if
a shadow had fallen over Li Yuan. He felt a sudden tightening in his
chest and—briefly, absurdly—experienced a powerful,
overwhelming fear for his son. Then it passed. He was himself again.
He forced a smile, lowering his head the merest degree, acknowledging
his cousin's query. "Kuei
Jen is fine. He is a strong and healthy child. Heaven has blessed me,
Wang Sau-leyan." Wang
smiled, no sign of calculation in his face. "I am pleased for
you, cousin. A man should have sons, neh?" Li
Yuan stared back at the young T'ang of Africa, surprised by the
almost wistful tone in Wang's voice, thinking to see something in his
eyes, but there was nothing. Wang nodded and turned away, his
business done. And Li Yuan, left to watch his back, stood there a
moment, wondering, that small, hard nugget of fear returning, like a
stone within his flesh. MAIN
WAS packed. Thirty, maybe forty thousand people were crammed into the
broad two-Zi-long concourse, banners and streamers of bright red
er-silk waved energetically above their heads. At the northern end of
Main, before the bell tower, a raised podium had been constructed.
There the crowd pressed thickest, held back by a double line of
green-uniformed Security guards. As
ninth bell sounded from the tower, the lights dimmed, a hush falling
on the great gathering. A moment later, cloaked in a veil of
brilliant white laser light, the huge statue of the goddess descended
slowly onto its pedestal. As the
figure settled there was a strong murmur of approval. Kuan Yin,
Goddess of Mercy and Fecundity, sat Buddha-like on a giant lotus, a
newborn baby cradled lovingly in her arms. Her face in the brilliant
white light was benign, radiant with compassion. There
was a moment's silence, then, with a great popping of crackers on
every side and the creaking of rattles, the crowd began to celebrate.
The sick and lame, held back by the crush, now renewed their efforts
to get to the front, to receive the goddess's blessing. On the
podium nearby, separated from the crowd by a wide corridor
of armed guards, the dignitaries looked on, turning in their
high-backed chairs to talk among themselves. The guest of honor—the
man whose money had paid for the giant statue—was a squat,
balding Hung Mao named May Feng. His company, EduCol, had benefited
from GenSyn's relaxation of food patents and—developing one of
those patents—had increased food production significantly over
the last twelve months, perhaps by as much as four percent throughout
City Europe, winning the praise of both T'ang and people. After years
of ever-stricter rationing and growing discontent, it had reversed
the trend and brought new stability to these levels. But what most of
those gathered in Main to celebrate EduCol's generosity didn't know
was just how poor, nutritionally, the new product was, nor the amount
of profit the Company had made on their new soy-substitute; foB while
the new process cost only one sixth of the old, the product price was
roughly the same. To May
Feng's right sat a big, slightly corpulent Han named K'ang A-yin, a
local gang leader, operating this and the surrounding stacks under
the protection of the Kuei Chuan Triad. Behind K'ang stood two
of his henchmen, their eyes shifting uneasily in their faces as they
surveyed the massive crowd. K'ang himself was studying the merchant,
noting the fashionable cut of his silk pau, the absence of
rings on his fingers. K'ang looked away, tucking one hand under the
other in his lap. He, at least, knew how much profit EduCol was
making. Five hundred percent, if reports were true. And he could use
a cut of that, to buy himself more muscle and finance a few schemes.
But May Feng knew nothing of that yet. As far as he was concerned,
K'ang was simply a businessman. The man to deal with at these levels. K'ang
smiled and looked past May Feng at his friend, the local Wei, or
Commandant of Security, who was standing off to one side of the
podium. "Well, Captain Franke. It's almost time ..." Franke
bowed his head, then turned, calling down to his lieutenant. A moment
later the great curtain which was draped across the width of Main
behind the bell tower twitched, then began to draw back. From the
tunnel beyond, a procession of carts, heaped with the latest range of
EduCol products, began to make its way out into Main toward the
crowd. At the
far end of Main, on a balcony almost two li from where the
dignitaries were sitting, a tall, bearded Hung Mao lowered
the field glasses from his eyes and turned, making a curt hand
signal. At once the group of men and women gathered about him turned,
making their way down the steps and out into the crowd below. Mach
watched them a moment, seeing how they went among the crowd, handing
out the leaflets, their voices murmuring old slogans, the
catchphrases of ancient discontents. And after they'd moved on, he
saw how those who had glanced at the leaflets now held them out to
their neighbors, angered by what they'd read, their own voices
raised. He
smiled, then turned away again, moving out into the corridor. Two
guards were standing there, staring up at one of the public service
screens. "You'd
best get downstairs," he said, showing them his ID. "It
looks like trouble." They
looked at his badge, then nodded, moving past him quickly, the noise
from the crowd growing by the moment. Mach
stood there a moment longer, looking up at the screen. Li Yuan was
talking to his citizens, telling them about the committee that had
been set up to investigate the possibility of changes to the Edict
and the reopening of the House. Mach moved closer, spitting up into
the face of the young T'ang, then, drawing his gun, he turned,
following the guards down. On the
podium May Feng was standing now, concerned. The noise from the far
end of Main was growing all the while, -ising above the sound of the
firecrackers. People at the front were turning their heads, anxious,
conscious that something was happening back there. "What
is it, Shih K'ang?" the merchant asked, fingering his
girdle-pouch nervously. K'ang
frowned, trying to conceal his own concern. "I'm not sure. I..." His
words were drowned out as deck communications cut in, the voice harsh
and accusing. "Death
to all profiteers and thieving First Level bandits! Death to all
those who would steal the rice from your children's mouths! Death to
those who profit from the misery and need of others! Death . . ." The
litany went on, fanatical, endless, stirring up already excited
passions into a frenzy; turning fear into a sudden blinding
panic that spread among the masses like a brushfire. K'ang watched as
the thin line of green gave and the crowd spilled out toward the
podium and the giant statue. Without thought, he turned and, his
henchmen close behind, leapt from the back of the platform, making
for the safety of the tunnel. It was not a moment too soon, for the
front edge of the crowd, impelled by the pressure of bodies from
behind, broke like a wave against the podium, bringing its supporting
stanchions crashing down. For a
moment May Feng kept his balance, then he went down, his mouth formed
in a perfect O of surprise before he was lost to sight, trampled
beneath the stampeding crowd. There was a steady roar within the
great space now, like the sound of a great wind blowing from the
north. As if caught in the grip of that wind, the great statue
shuddered, then, with a slow, soundless motion, it fell, crushing
more than two dozen people beneath it. All
was chaos now. There was gunfire from the far end of Main and the
sound of small explosions, of falling ice. And over everything was
the voice, chanting its litany of death, death, death. there
were THREE of them, not counting the stallholder. Becker was standing
at the back of the partitioned room, browsing the shelves of
secondhand tapebooks that crowded the walls. Haller lounged in a
chair nearby, staring up at the overhead FacScreen, one hand lazily
holding a squeezetube of prawn-flavored protein paste. Lehmann
was talking to the owner, Pai Mei, his back to the doorway. "Don't
worry," he was saying. "Just get down behind the counter
when things start. And remember—no one will harm you. I
guarantee it." Pai
Mei, a thin-faced, hard-looking man, hesitated. K'ang A-yin was a
bastard, but who knew what this one was like? Yet if the albino
failed, K'ang might think that he, Pai Mei, had put him up to it. He
shuddered, then gave a reluctant nod. It was a no-win situation. Just
then the ragged curtain was tugged back and two men came in. One was
tall, going to fat, the other smaller, lither, but more
dangerous-looking altogether. His bare arms were heavily muscled
and his head was shaved, the skull painted in an intricate
pattern of red and green that indicated he was a chan shih, a
fighter. They were K'ang's men. The
fat man stopped and looked about him. Glancing sourly at Pai Mei, he
touched the chan shih's arm. "Move them. I want to speak
to Shih. Pai in private." The
small man tapped Haller on the shoulder, indicating that he should go
and quickly. Smiling, apologetic, Haller got up and went. Becker,
turning, saw how things stood and, shoving the tape back hastily,
scuttled out after Haller. Only Lehmann remained, his back to the
newcomers. "You,"
said the fat man, coming up behind him. "Out of here! IVe
business with Shih Pai." Lehmann
turned, facing them. The chan shih seemed easier now that there was
only Lehmann in the room. He relaxed, looking about the room, for
that brief moment inattentive. The fat man, meanwhile, was staring at
Lehmann curiously, as if he ought to know him. But even he, for that
instant, was off his guard. Lehmann
struck. With one quick movement he kicked the chan shih beneath the
chin, then turned to face the fat man. Panicking, K'ang's lieutenant
tugged at the gun in his pocket, trying to free it. He had just
leveled it when Lehmann punched it from his hand, breaking the man's
wrist with the downward blow. His second punch floored the man.
Lehmann stood over him, looking down, his fist raised, waiting to see
if he would try to get up. Haller
and Becker stood in the doorway, smiling. They had seen already how
Lehmann operated. Becker looked across at Pai Mei and laughed. The
stallholder had gone white. He was staring at Lehmann in
astonishment. "I
thought that all three of you. . ." Pai Mei left the sentence
unfinished. Becker
stepped into the room and knelt down beside the chan shih, feeling
for a pulse at the neck. The small man was dead. "Shame,"
Becker said darkly. "I would have liked to have seen his
expression when I slit his throat." Haller, coming up beside
him, laughed at that, but Lehmann was unmoved. He stood there over
his wheezing victim, tensed, perfectly still, making sure. "That's
it, you see," Becker said, looking up at the stallholder, then
drew a large, razor-sharp knife from beneath his tunic. "They
never expect trouble from a single man. That's how they think. And in
the moment that they least expect trouble, that's when they're at
their weakest." He smiled again and looked across at Lehmann, as
if to say, "Isn't that so, Shih Lehmann?" But
Lehmann ignored him. Becker looked down again, shrugging, then got to
work, cutting into the flesh at the neck, blood oozing out over the
bare, unswept floor. Pai
Mei looked away, feeling sick. He
looked across. Lehmann was crouching now, talking to the fat man.
K'ang's man was making hoarse, gasping noises, as if he'd damaged his
windpipe, but he was listening very carefully as the albino spelt out
what he was to tell his boss. At one point he laughed dismissively
and turned his head away, but Lehmann grasped his chin in one long,
pale hand and turned his head back savagely, forcing him to look up
into his face. The fat man shut up at once, fear returning to his
eyes. Becker
had finished now. He wrapped the head in a towel and dropped it into
a bag. Haller, in the doorway, was looking past him, his attention on
the FacScreen and the media speculation about what tomorrow's meeting
of the Seven might bring for the people of Chung Kuo. "Big
things are happening up there," he said at last, looking down at
Becker, ignoring the pool of blood that had formed about his feet.
"Big changes are coming." "As
above, so below," said Lehmann, pulling the fat man to his feet.
Then, taking the bag from Becker, he thrust it into the man's one
good hand. Watching
him, the two men laughed, enjoying the fat man's discomfort. But
Lehmann didn't smile. Lehmann never smiled. THE
tong BOSS, K'ang A-yin, sat back in his chair, drawing the back of
his hand across his mouth, then looked around him at the eight men
gathered in the room. The Zwickau riot had shocked and angered him,
but this latest news was too much. K'ang was trembling with rage.
Only with the greatest effort did he keep himself from shouting. "Okay.
What the fuck is going on ? Who the fuck's this Hung Mao ?" There
was an awkward silence from his men, then one of them— Soucek,
his lieutenant—spoke up. "We
don't know. I sent a runner to Pai Mei's. He only confirmed what Feng
Wo said. The pale Hung Mao killed the chan shih. The others
hacked his head off. Why, we don't know." "And
no one knows the bastard?" Soucek
shrugged. "You want I should do some asking?" K'ang
looked away a moment, considering, then shook his head. "No.
I've a better idea. Chao, Kant... I want you to find out where he's
staying and hit him. When the fucker's asleep. I want him dead, him
and his two sidekicks. And I want their heads, back here, on my desk,
by the morning." Soucek
made to say something, to insist, perhaps, that he be given the job
of killing the Hung Moo, but K'ang raised a hand. "No, J iri.
Not this time. I want you to go and see Whiskers Lu and find out all
you can about what happened earlier. If the Yu are active again, it
threatens us all. And if it's something else, I want to know,
understand?" Soucek
nodded. K'ang
stood, looking about him, more at ease now that he was taking the
initiative. "Good. Then let's get going. Let's sort these
fuckers out, neh? Then we can get on with making money." THEY
CAME two hours later. Lehmann was expecting them. Haller's bunk was
empty, Haller fifty ch'i down the corridor in the public
washroom. Becker's was occupied, but by a dummy, while Becker
crouched behind the false partition, gun in hand. Lehmann lay beneath
the thin blanket on the upper bunk, masked and waiting. He too was
armed. There
were no locks at these lowest levels, so it was easy for K'ang's man
to pull the slide-to back a fraction and roll in the gas grenade. It
exploded with a dull plop, followed instantly by the hiss of escaping
gas. Lehmann counted, knowing they would make certain before coming
through. Sure enough, on a count of thirty, the slide-to was heaved
aside and two men came into the room, machine-pistols raised. A third
waited outside. He
didn't give them a chance. Poking the muzzle of the rocket launcher
from the blanket, he squeezed the hair trigger and watched the far
wall explode. There was no sign of the two men. Wall, floor, and men
had gone. A great, gaping hole had opened up, revealing the level
below. Fractured cables sparked. There was screaming from below and
the sweet stink of superheated plastics hung in the air, stronger
than the gas. From
farther down the corridor two shots rang out. Haller had done his
job. He appeared a moment later, gun in hand, looking across the gap
into the room. "Messy," he said, grinning through his mask.
"Maybe K'ang will talk now." "We'll
see," Lehmann said, sitting up and wrapping the big gun in the
blanket. "Either way, he'll know now that we aren't so easy*
He'll be more careful in future." "That's
good," said Haller, slipping the gun back in his
shoulder-holster, "It was a bit too easy for my liking." Lehmann
said nothing. He simply looked at Haller and shook his head. They had
a lot to leam. FROM
WHERE IT soared, high above the wood, the hawk could see the figures
down below, among the trees. The leading group had stopped now in a
clearing, resting their mounts, their necks strained back, hands
shielding their eyes as they looked up at it. Farther back, part
hidden by foliage, a second group waited. These last were smaller but
more numerous, and in its dark, instinctive way, it knew these to be
men; knew they were on foot. It
circled patiently, its keen eyes searching for that sudden,
distinctive movement that would betray its prey. For a time there was
nothing, then, as the wind changed, there was a flutter of sound and
a brief blur, as a guinea fowl broke cover far below. With a
cry the hawk fell, turning, straining after its prey. For a moment it
seemed as if the other bird might yet regain its perch, then, with a
sickening thud, the hawk struck. A roar
of triumph erupted from the men below. In the
clearing the three men leaned forward, watching the hawk
spread its wings wide, slowing its fall, the fowl held tightly
in its talons, then settle on the ground among the trees to their
right. Tsu Ma
leaned down, patting the dark neck of his mount fondly, then turned
his head, looking across at his fellow T'ang. "Well, cousins,
what do you think?" Wu
Shih placed one hand carefully on the pommel of his saddle and turned
slightly, inclining his head. They were talking of their cousin, Wang
Sau-leyan, T'ang of Africa. "I don't trust him," he said.
"He has been too quiet these past six months. Too damned
polite." "He's
up to something," Li Yuan added, sitting straighter in his
saddle. "Something deep. Something we can't see yet." Wu
Shih nodded. "I agree. I am not certain about much in these
troubled times, but of this I can be sure . . . Wang Sau-leyan
has not changed his nature these past few months. He is still the
same devious little shit-eating insect he always was." Tsu Ma
looked past them momentarily, watching his falconer run across to
where the hawk had brought down its prey, his lure out, ready to draw
the hawk off, then looked back at Wu Shih. "I
think you are right," he said. "But exactly what it is ...
Well, it's very strange. My servants in his household have heard
nothing. Or almost nothing . . ." "Almost
nothing?" Wu Shih stared at him intently. "Just
that there is a woman in his life. Or so it seems. A Hung Moo. He has
her smuggled in. Late, when he thinks no one will see. I'm told he
even visits her." Li
Yuan looked away. "How strange. I would not have thought it. A
Hung Mao . . . And you think it is serious?" Tsu Ma
shrugged. "Maybe it is nothing. Or maybe this is why our cousin
has behaved himself so well recently. Perhaps he has been
distracted." "In
love, you mean?" Wu Shih roared with laughter. "The only
one that ingrate will ever love is his own reflection. Love!" He
shook his head, then reached down, slapping his horse's flank. "No
. . . that moon-faced bastard is up to something. I guarantee it!" "Chieh
Hsia..." A
servant stood at the edge of the clearing, his head bowed. "What
is it, Cheng Yi?" At Tsu
Ma's summons, the man came across, his body bent double, and took his
T'ang's foot, kissing it, before falling to his knees beside the
horse. "News
has come, Chieh Hsia. There have been riots in City Europe. Many have
died..." "Riots
. . ." Li Yuan urged his horse forward sharply. "What in
the gods' names has been happening?" The
servant bowed his head lower, answering as if his own T'ang had
spoken. "It began at Zwickau Hsien, Chieh Hsia, at the
dedication ceremony for the new statue, and spread quickly to
surrounding stacks." "And
many have died?"
* "That
is so, Chieh Hsia. A great number. Tens of thousands, some say. Among
them the merchant, May Feng." Li
Yuan looked across at Tsu Ma, alarmed. May Feng had been a leading
figure in the new peace. Had sat on committees to discuss the
proposed Edict changes and the reopening of the House. What's more,
he represented a whole class—of powerful First Level
merchants—who had been won back to the Seven and their cause.
And now he was dead. Li
Yuan leaned toward the man, anxious now. "What happened? How did
he die?" The
servant swallowed. "It is not clear how he died, Chieh Hsia. All
we know is that his body was returned to his widow shortly afterward.
He had been cut open, it seems, then stuffed with dirt like a sack
and sewn up again." Li
Yuan shuddered and sat back. "Do we know who was responsible?" "It
is too early yet to know for certain, Chieh Hsia. Early rumors
attributed it to the Yu, but General Rheinhardt believes that the Hun
Mun had a hand in this." Again,
Li Yuan felt a ripple of shock pass through him. The Hung Mun—the
Triads, or Secret Societies—had kept out of things before now.
But that was clearly changing. If they were involved . . . "I
must get back," he said, turning his horse, looking from Tsu Ma
to Wu Shih. "If the Hun Mun are involved, I must act." "No,
Yuan," Tsu Ma said, putting out a hand to him. "I would
counsel against acting too rashly. Take some measures to calm things
down, by all means, but consider before you take action against the
brotherhoods. Your father's scheme, for instance . . ." "Buy
them off, you mean?" Li Yuan sat back, shaking his head. "No,
Tsu Ma. I will not bow to them in my own City!" "Nor
am I asking you to, cousin. Pursue your father's scheme—offer
them funds, assistance, power of a kind—while all the time
undermining their position." Li
Yuan narrowed his eyes. "What do you mean?" "The
new force. Karr's shen t'se ..." Li
Yuan looked down, then he smiled. "You know of that?" Tsu Ma
nodded. "My cousin's business is my business. How can I know how
I might help him unless I know his needs, his plans?" Li
Yuan turned, looking to the older man. "And you, Wu Shih?" Wu
Shih shrugged. "You have a special force, I take it. Good. Then
use it. Do as our good cousin, Tsu Ma, says. Play a double game. Buy
time. For it's time we need right now, not another war. Not yet." Tsu Ma
nodded. "Wu Shih is right, Yuan. Fight a war against the
brotherhoods now and it would weaken us greatly. And who would
benefit?" "Wang
Sau-leyan." "Exactly.
So do not be goaded into a futile war." Tsu Ma smiled bleakly.
"Oh, the time will come—and not so long from now—when
we must take on the Hun Mun. But let us pick that time, neh? Let us
be prepared for it." "Besides,"
Wu Shih added, coming alongside him, "we have problems enough
already, neh? The Yu, the Younger Sons . . . Why add to them?" Li
Yuan was silent a moment, calming himself, then reached out, taking
Wu Shih's arm. "Thank you, cousin. And you, Tsu Ma. But we must
get back, neh? There is much to be done. Besides, watching the hawk
has whetted my appetite for other sport." Tsu Ma
stared at him a moment, then laughed. "For once, Yuan, your
meaning escapes me, but let it pass. You are right. There is much to
be done. Nonetheless, we must meet more often, neh? Just the three of
us." "It
shall be so," Wu Shih said, giving a brief, decisive nod. "We
shall be like the three brothers of the peach garden, neh?" Li
Yuan, watching the two older men, felt the darkness subside a little.
So it would be. So it had to be from now on. The Three, he
thought, trying the term out in his head for the first time, and
finding it not strange but strangely comforting. Yes, we shall be
The Three. There
was a sudden flutter of sound. Behind Li Yuan, on the far side of the
clearing, the hawk lifted, stretching its wings, then settled on its
kill once more, ignoring the lure. CHAPTER
TWO
In
the World of Levels Jelka
was stretched OUT on the sun bed, looking out across the brightly lit
expanse of tiles to where her two school friends splashed noisily in
the pool. Beside her on the chair lay the compact computer notepad
she had been using, its display screen lit. For a
moment she watched their antics thoughtlessly, enjoying the warmth on
her skin, the faint scent of jasmine and pine from the nearby rock
garden. Then, with a tiny shiver, she returned to the matter she had
been considering. Yesterday
had been the last day of school; the end of her childhood, of twelve
years preparing for her adult life. Ahead of her, tonight, lay the
ordeal of the College Graduation Ball, and beyond that the rest of
her life—fifty, sixty years of it, maybe, needing to be filled. But
how? She
turned over, lying on her back a moment, conscious of how it felt to
be herself, seventeen, in a young woman's body, the future open to
her. She
stretched her legs, flexing her toes, exercising the muscles of her
feet and calves and thighs, as if warming up for an exercise session,
then relaxed again. The Marshal's daughter. . . that was how she was
known. As if she had no separate identity of her own. Jelka
shook her head, exasperated, then turned onto her stomach again. The
Marshal's daughter... If she had been his son, her future
would have been mapped out long before today. Cadet school, a
commission, and then the service. Fifty years of service: of dodging
assassins' bullets and attending official functions; of investigating
murders and pandering to the whims of some old Minister; of
unearthing corruption scandals at First Level and tidying up after
riots beneath the Net. Such was her father's life, and there were far
worse ways of spending one's time, but it wasn't that. It was having
a say in her future. As a son to the Marshal she would have had no
say in things. Not
that being a daughter had made all that great a difference. Had it
not been for Hans Ebert's duplicity—for the betrayal of his
T'ang and the murder of his father—she would have been married
now, her future set, determined. And no way out, except, perhaps, to
kill herself. She
shuddered, recollecting her aversion for the young Major. That was
something her friends had never understood. Something which, when she
mentioned it, brought looks of incredulity. Hans Ebert. . . why, he
had been every schoolgirl's dream, surely? A prince among men. She
laughed sourly, remembering how often she had heard him called that.
Moreover, as heir to the richest Company in Chung Kuo, she could have
expected a life of idleness, of unremitting luxury. Yes,
but Hans Ebert was also cruel, and arrogant and devious. She
looked down, recalling her father's hurt when Hans had finally been
exposed; a hurt mingled with grief at the death of his brother and
his wife, and of his oldest friend, Klaus Ebert. She too had felt a
similar grief, but also relief that Hans was gone from her life; a
relief that was like a huge stone lifted from her chest. She sighed
and shook her head. Maybe that was why it was so important now to get
it right; to make sure that her life from here on was her own. It
seemed simple enough, but there was one small complication. She was a
woman. For her friends that seemed to pose no problems. Only five of
the sixty girls in her year were not yet betrothed, and of those,
three were actively pursuing a husband. Eight were already married
and two—her close friend Yi Pang-chou among them—had
already presented their husbands with a child. Against which, only
six of her year were going on to Oxford, and in each case it was not
so much to fulfill their own needs as to make them the perfect
companions for their high-flying husbands. But so
it was in this god-awful world of levels. To be a woman—an
intelligent, capable young woman—it was unthinkable! One had to
be a drudge, a whore, an ornament. . . "Jelka?" She
hesitated, then turned, lifting her head lazily, as if she had been
dozing. "Hi. . . What is it?" Anna
was crouched beside her, toweling her dripping hair. Beyond her stood
the stocky figure of Yi Pang-chou. She was grinning, a faint color in
her cheeks. "You
should have joined us, Mu-Lan. What have you been doing?" She
smiled at the use of her nickname, then sat up, stretching, conscious
of how her friends were watching her. "I
was thinking. And making lists." "Making
lists?" Anna laughed. "Lists of what? Men you'd like to
marry? Why, you could have any man you chose, Jelka Tolonen, and you
know it." Jelka
shrugged. "Maybe. But it wasn't that kind of list. I was jotting
down my options." "Jotting
down my options," Yi Pang-chou mimicked, then giggled. Jelka
smiled, good-humoredly. "I know how it sounds, but here,"
she handed the comset across to Anna. "Go on. Have a look. Tell
me what you think." Anna
studied the screen a moment, then turned, passing it up to Yi
Pang-chou. "I can't see the point," she said, looking at
Jelka with a slightly puzzled frown. "It's so much effort. Why
not simply enjoy yourself? Take a rich husband. It doesn't mean you
have to be in his pocket. These days a woman has much more freedom." Jelka
looked away. Freedom! As if Anna had any understanding of the word's
true meaning. What she meant was the freedom to go to countless
entertainments; to drink and play to excess and to take young
officers for lovers. Beyond that she had no idea. For her this world
of levels was enough. But then, she knew no different. She had not
seen how beautiful it was outside. Yi
Pang-chou had been studying her list. Now she looked back at Jelka,
puzzled. "This
entry for Security. I thought they didn't accept women in the
service." "They
don't. Or not yet. But I thought I'd apply. I'm as qualified as any
cadet, after all. And I can fight. So why not? I thought I'd apply
for the auxiliary forces, specializing in space operations." Anna
raked one hand through her long dark hair, then laughed. "You're
strange, Jelka. You know that? If you really want to meet young
officers, you should attend a few more parties. You don't have to
sign up for the service!" "And
youVe a one-track mind, Anna Koslevic!" Jelka laughed, then grew
serious again. "I know it's hard to understand, but I want to do
something with my life. I don't just want . . . well, I don't want to
waste it, that's all." "Like
us, you mean," Yi Pang-chou said, coming across and sitting
beside her on the edge of the sun bed. "No
... I didn't mean it like that. I..." Again she laughed, but
this time her laughter was tinged with a certain desperation. "Look,
I can talk to you two. I can say things without you being hurt by
them. So when I say that I want something more than what I'm being
offered, it's not to put you down. It's . . ." She shrugged. "I
don't know. Maybe I want something that I simply can't have, but why
not try for it?" She looked from one to the other. "Do you
understand?" "Sure,"
Anna said, nodding. "It's simple. You want to be a man. You want
to go out there and do things. You want to break skulls and ride
horses. Like your 'ex,' Hans." Jelka
shook her head. "No. I want only to be myself. But why should
that be so difficult? Why should I be denied that?" "Because
it's how things are," Yi Pang-chou said, stroking the back of
her hand. "There's us and there's them. Women and Men. Yin and
Yang. And it's a Yang world." She smiled sadly. "Don't
fight it, Mu-Lan. It'll only make you unhappy." She
looked down. Maybe so. But she would never be at peace unless she
tried. Besides, there was always Kim. He, if anyone, would
understand. Anna
leaned close, placing her hand on Jelka's knee. "Anyway. Let's
forget about all that for now. It's almost six and our escorts are
coming at eight, so we'd best get ready." "Escorts?"
Jelka looked up, eyeing her friend sharply. "You didn't say
anything about escorts!" "Didn't
I?" Anna laughed innocently. "I guess it must have slipped
my mind. Anyway, let's go through. I'll lend you one of my chi poo
. . . the blue and gray silk with the black edging. And then I'll
make you up. Maybe it'll take your mind off all this nonsense . . ." Jelka
sat there, looking from one to the other, then laughed. "All
right. Just this once. But I hope you haven't said anything.
Anything, well. . ." "Anything
true?" Anna put on an earnest face, mirroring Jelka's own, then
burst out laughing. She leaned across, kissing Jelka's brow. "Come.
Let's get ready. Before those big, hulking Yangs arrive!" THE
main building of the Bremen Academy for Young Women—a huge
yamen in the old northern style—dominated the open space
at the top of the stack. On the great terrace overlooking the lake,
it was hot, the music loud. On the dance floor the press of young,
well-dressed bodies filled the dimly lit darkness, the rich,
cloyingly sweet scents of the dancers tainting the air, their drunken
laughter echoing out across the water. It was
late now, almost midnight, and the Ball had reached a fever pitch of
intensity. For the young women, the days of hard work were behind
them, the long vacation ahead, while for the young men, cadets and
commissioned officers alike, there was a sense of temporary surcease
from the rigors of duty. Tonight was a night for celebration, for
high spirits and wild excess. Some lay in the corridors leading off
the terrace, slumped in drunken stupor, while others cavorted wildly
at the edges of the crowd, howling manically, their formal jackets
unbuttoned or cast aside. Most, however, had found partners and could
be found pressed close in that central darkness, washed over by a
heavy pulse of sound, willing victims of those old, insistent
currents. Jelka
stood there at the center of that great crush, cradling an empty
glass, alone at last and conscious, for the first time that evening,
just how awful it was. The heat was stifling, the noise oppressive,
while to every side the crowd pressed in on her relentlessly; a great
tide of bodies, male and female, jerking and swaying to the ancient
rhythms of the pipes and drums. For a
moment longer she stood there, hemmed in, wondering if she
should wait for her escort to return from the bar, then she
turned and began to make her way across. She was aware of the
unnatural excitement in the faces that she passed; of the feverish
brightness of their eyes, the sudden, excessive animation of their
features. There was something strange and frightening about it all, a
sense of primal urgency, almost of hysteria. Outside
it was cooler, quieter. Jelka stood there at the top of the steps,
gulping in the cold, refreshing air and staring about her, as if
waking from some dark and threatening dream. Overhead, a very
real-looking moon shone down on her from the artificial sky, casting
a painted light upon the distant mountains, while to her left a faint
breeze rippled the dark lake's surface, scattering petals on the
white stone arch of the bridge that led across to the island and the
great watchtower. Away,
she thought. I have to get away. She
set her glass down on the steps, then made her way down, out onto the
path that led to the bridge, half running now, as if pursued. Halfway
down, however, she stopped and turned, staring back at it all, her
mouth wide open, as if stupefied. Then, with a faint shudder, she
went on. At the
foot of the watchtower she stopped again, staring up at its brightly
lit face. It was two minutes to midnight. Twelve years she had been
here at the Academy; twelve years, not including the time she had
spent in exile with her father and that time she had been ill, after
the attack. And in all that time she had never—not once—felt
at home here. She had stood there earlier, listening to the other
girls say how much they'd miss the dear old place; had heard them
profess to a genuine love for its strange old ways and nonsensical
rules, but for herself she felt nothing; only a strange relief that
it was over. And a sense of emptiness—of something unfulfilled
in her. She
turned briefly, looking back, wondering if she had been missed yet,
then moved on quickly, climbing the broad yet shallow steps up to the
open doorway. Inside, in the shadows just inside the door, a couple
was leaning against the wall, kissing, her hand at his neck, his arm
about her lower back. She hesitated, watching them a moment, then
tiptoed by, making her way up to the first level and the little room
at the front of the tower, above the clock. She
closed the door behind her, then went across and sat on the box
beside the window, her elbows on the mock-stone of the window ledge,
looking back across the lake at the crowded terrace. From a distance
it seemed a kind of madness, a mass delirium. As if, for once, they
had glimpsed the hollowness of it all. Glimpsed it and turned away,
drowning themselves in this frenzy of thoughtless activity. She
rested her chin on her hands and sighed. Coming here tonight had been
a mistake. She should have trusted to instinct and stayed at home.
But now it was too late. Too
late? Too late for what! That
small, inner voice—that never-resting, ever-questioning part of
her—was what kept her at a distance from it all; was what made
her different from the others. At school she had always been
something of an outsider, right from the first. Not that she had been
unpopular; it was simply that she had never formed any of those close
relationships that the other girls seemed to need. Some had tried,
like Anna and Yi Pang-chou, but they could only get so close before
she clammed up on them. "It's because of the attacks," Anna
had said to her once. "It's only natural that you should
mistrust the world after what happened to you." And maybe th&t
was true to an extent. Maybe those experiences had shaped her.
But the explanation was somehow insufficient, for she had always felt
like this. From the cradle on. There had always been a space unfilled
in her. A lack. But tonight it was different . somehow. Tonight the
sheer intensity of what she felt was new to her. Looking
back at the dance floor, she saw not celebration and the joyous
blossoming of new life, but a mechanistic orgy of self-denial; of
deadness incarnate. It was pretense; pretense on a vast scale. It
began with the great City in which they lived and spread like a virus
to infect every pore, every cell of their individual beings. And now
there was nothing. Nothing but meaningless activity and a desperate
filling of the hours. A willful forgetting. She
turned her head, her eyes sweeping the familiar landscape of the
College grounds, taking it all in. The star-filled sky, the moon, the
distant mountains; it was false, every last tiny bit of it. The
arched stone bridge, the lake, the ancient building. Manufactured,
all of it; a substitute for life, conjured from nothingness. Too
late. She
shuddered. It was true. Never had she felt so alienated from it all.
Never so alone. I am
trapped, she thought. Trapped in the world of levels. On the
steps beside the dance floor there was movement. A young cadet
officer had stepped out onto the top step and now stood there,
looking about him, a glass in each hand. Jelka
shivered and drew her head back, into the shadows. He
looked down and spotted the empty glass, then turned back, craning to
see where she had gone. Then he came on, negotiating the steps
smartly, elegantly, his manner—the very way he walked—
assured and arrogant. Unquestioning. On he came, along the path and
up onto the gentle arch of the bridge. For a moment he stood there,
looking about him casually, as if taking in the view, then he walked
on, glancing up at the watchtower, as if he could see her, there in
the shadows beyond the window frame. She
moved back, then stood, looking about her. There was no way out. The
floor above was locked. But maybe he would go away. The couple. . . She
heard noises from below; an angry grunt and then a murmured, "Excuse
me, I. . . ," followed by the sound of booted feet ringing on
the stairs. She
turned, facing the doorway, watching as it slowly opened. "Ah,
there you are," he said softly, smiling at her. "I thought.
. ." He
held out her glass to her, as if she should take it, but she simply
stood there, staring at him. He frowned, not understanding, then,
stooping carefully, watching her all the while, he set the glasses
down. The
jacket of his dress uniform seemed to glow in the light from the
window. The rich scent he wore filled the tiny room. He
hesitated, then came closer. "You should have said," he
said gently. "I thought you liked the music." She
could feel his breath on her cheek now; could smell the sweetness of
the wine. As if in a dream she saw his right hand lift and press
gently against her left shoulder, as if they were about to dance. "Don't.
. ." "Just
one kiss," he whispered, his mouth close to her ear. "Just
one tiny, little kiss..." She
moved back, shrugging off his hand. "Phase ..." She
saw the movement in his face. The sudden anger, softening instantly. "One
kiss," he persisted. "You know you'd like to." She
laughed sourly. "You know that, do you?" He
laughed, the uncertainty in his eyes fading quickly. "Of course.
That's why we're here, isn't it? Young girls like to be kissed. It's
only natural. And you're a very beautiful young woman, Jelka Tolonen.
Very beautiful indeed." He
made to touch her once again, to lift her chin and kiss her, but she
pushed him back sharply, the palm of her hand thudding against his
chest. "No.
Understand me, Lieutenant? Other 'girls' might well like it, but I
don't wish to be kissed. I simply want to be left alone." He
looked down at where her hand had struck his chest, then back at her,
angry now. "You shouldn't have done that." Again
she laughed. Who was he to tell her what she should or shouldn't do?
She glared at him angrily, then made to push past him and go down,
but he grabbed her arm roughly and pulled her about. "You'll
kiss me, understand?" She
stared at him, for that brief instant seeing things clearly. Here it
was again. As in that moment when she had faced Hans Ebert in the
machine, the day they had been officially betrothed. Yes, and as in
that moment when the wall to the practice room had been ripped aside
and the three assassins had burst in. To possess her or to kill her,
there seemed no other choice for them, these half-men. Like the pure
Yang they were, they had either to dominate or destroy. Maybe
so. But she would not acquiesce in it. Would not permit it. She
lifted her chin challengingly. "Are you drunk, Lieutenant
Bachman, or just suicidal?" His
right hand was clasping her wrist. Slowly he increased the pressure
on it, drawing her closer, his eyes watching her all the while, his
smile brutal, unforgiving now. Slowly she moved closer, drawn in
toward him, until only a hand's breadth separated them. His
left hand reached up and held her shoulder, his fingers digging into
her flesh, holding her there. "Kiss
me and I'll break your neck," she warned, her voice cold now,
dangerous. He
laughed, unimpressed. "Oh, IVe heard the rumors, Jelka Tolonen.
I've heard how you fought off the assassins that time. You're a real
tigress, neh? A regular Mu-Lan. But you will kiss me. And
you'll not break my neck." There
was a moment's softness in his face, a moment's relaxation, and then
he tugged her toward him savagely, his face pushing out at hers, his
mouth straining to find hers. And
then he was gasping, doubled up, groaning where her knee had come up
hard into his stomach. Jelka stood back, breathing unevenly, looking
down at him, then she turned and went down the stairs hurriedly,
leaping the last four and barging unceremoniously past the couple in
the doorway. "Hey.
. ." Outside,
she almost ran into her friends. "Jelka
. . ." Anna said, holding her arms and looking up into her face.
"What is it?" She
drew herself up straight, then shook her head. "It's nothing...
Really." "Are
you sure?" Yi Pang-chou said, concerned. "You look
dreadful. Your face..." "I'm
okay," Jelka answered, rather too harshly. Then, relenting a
little. "Look, it's all right. I've sorted things out. Let's go
back now, okay?" Beyond
the two young women, their escorts looked on, not certain whether
amusement or concern was the right expression. "Where's that
randy bastard Lothar?" one of them called. "Don't tell me
youVe worn the young ram out!" "Enough!"
Anna said sharply, turning to them. "Can't you see something's
happened?" "Too
fucking true it has!" The
voice came from behind them. From the watchtower. Bach-man stood
there in the doorway, one hand to his stomach, his face distorted
with anger. "You
should ask the bitch what she's up to, leading me on and then kneeing
me in the fucking stomach!" Jelka
turned, a cold, hard anger transforming her. If he said another
word... "She
needs a fucking beating, that's what she needs, the spoiled little
brat! She needs someone to knock some manners into her. . ." "Lothar!"
one of the young officers hissed. "Remember who she is, for
fuck's sake! Her father . . ." "Fuck
her father!" Bachman snarled, then straightened up and pushed
himself away from the doorway. "I don't give a shit if she runs
and tells her father! That's the way of these bitches, neh? The least
sign of trouble and they run and hide behind their father's skirts!" If his
words were designed to provoke, they seemed to have little or no
effect. Jelka stood there, strangely relaxed, as if a weight had
suddenly lifted from her. "Lothar!" "Don't
worry," she said calmly, distanced from the words. "I fight
my own battles." "Jelka,
come on, this is just silly . . ." Yi Pang-chou tugged at her
sleeve, but Jelka shrugged her off. She
was half crouched now, facing him, watching him approach. He was
clearly not so sure now. His hurt anger had been enough until now,
but suddenly it was not so good an idea. Besides, a small crowd was
forming on the steps beside the dance floor. It wouldn't do to make a
scene . . . "Ah,
fuck it... she's just a girl." Jelka's
smile was like ice. "What's the matter, Lothar Bachman? Are you
scared you might be beaten?" Anger
flared in his eyes anew. Slowly, his fingers trembling, he unbuttoned
his jacket and threw it aside. "Okay,"
he said. "YouVe had your chance." "Why,
you pompous little powder monkey!" The
reference eluded him, but the tone, cold and mocking, had its effect.
With a bellow he charged at her, throwing himself forward in a kick
which, if it had connected, would have shattered her lower rib cage.
But she was too fast for him. As he fell, she turned, her whole body
describing an arc, and kicked, the satin of her dress ripping, the
hard edge of her foot smashing down into his shoulder. He cried out,
but she was far from done. Savagely she kicked and punched, a kick, a
punch, another kick... "JeBca/" She
moved back, crouched, her bent arms raised before her as if to fend
off another attack, her eyes flicking from side to side. "Gods.
. ." one of the young officers said, his face pale. "She's
killed him! She's fucking well killed him!" But
Bachman wasn't dead. Not yet. Not unless four broken limbs and two
shattered collarbones could kill a man. "Kuan
Yin!" Anna said, kneeling over the young man and looking back at
her. "What have you done, Jelka? What in the gods' names have
you done?" Nothing,
she thought, straightening up slowly. At least, nothing you
d understand. k'ano
a-yin, gang boss of the Tu Sun tong, looked about him, then nodded,
satisfied that all was well. His headquarters were four decks up from
the Net, on Level 50. A respectable height for a man who, not so long
ago, had had nothing but the strength of his hands and the wit he had
been born with. He had bought and converted one side of a corridor,
turning it into a suite of rooms, some of them interconnected
offices, the rest—by far the greater part—his personal
quarters. Between was one long room created out of three living
spaces, which was where he held his meetings and greeted his guests. It was
an oddly luxurious room for this low level. The floor was carpeted
and wall-hangings covered the bareness of the ice. A long sofa, made
of ersatz leather, took up the whole of the left-hand wall. Nearby
was a low table, and against the far wall stood a bar. To anyone born
into the Lowers, as K'ang had been, it was impressive, yet underlying
its apparent luxury was a basic shabbiness. The carpet was faded and
worn, the leather scuffed and shiny in places; the bottles lining the
glass frontage of the bar were genuine enough, but their sour
contents had been distilled in vats not far from where they now
rested. K'ang
A-yin, standing in the doorway, felt a profound satisfaction in what
he saw. The walls were free of graffiti, the floor swept clean. It
smelled good and in many ways it resembled those images of the Above
that filtered down through the medium of the MedFac soaps. As ever
when he expected someone new, he was looking forward to
that first look of surprise in their face. Rubbing his hands
together, he laughed throatily and turned to his lieutenant. "Well,
Soucek? What do you think the bastard wants?" K'ang's
lieutenant, Soucek, was an exercise in contrast to his boss. A tall,
almost spiderish man, he had a face designed for mourning: long and
bony, with slate-gray eyes that were like the eyes of a dead fish,
and lips that seemed drawn by the finest of needles t» a tight
slit. He was a man of few words. "A
deal. Maybe a partnership." "A
partnership . . ." K'ang laughed, but his eyes were cold,
calculating. He had lost four men to Lehmann already, and there was
the growing feeling among the rest that this new man was some kind of
power. He cut his laughter off abruptly and turned away, sniffing in
deeply. He had
toyed with the idea of bringing Lehmann here and killing him. That
would be simplest, easiest. But something stopped him. He had failed
once, and besides, maybe he could use him. Make him a
lieutenant, like Soucek. The idea attracted K'ang. With such a man in
harness who knew what he might achieve? He might even drive Lo Han
back in the north and gain access to the lucrative drug trade that
came down from Munich stack. And who knew what might come of that? K'ang
looked up again, meeting Soucek's eyes, a faint smile on his
well-fleshed face. -"Okay. Set things up. Let's meet the
bastard." k'ang
was sitting on the leather sofa, cradling a tumbler of wine in his
left hand, when Soucek came in. "He's
here." Soucek laughed; a strange sound coming from that
humorless face. "And he's alone. There's no sign of his two
henchmen." K'ang
took that in, then nodded. "Good. Bring him in. And make sure
there are three or four of our best men in here with us. I don't want
to take any chances. Is he armed?" "Maybe,"
said Soucek. "He said he'd kill the first man that tried to
frisk him." K'ang
laughed uncomfortably. Waving Soucek away, he got up
heavily and walked across to the bar. Refilling his glass, he
went through what he knew of Lehmann once more, looking for a handle.
The strangest thing was that Lehmann had no history. One moment he
hadn't been there; the next, there he was. His two associates, Haller
and Becker, were faces from the Munich underworld. They had worked
for Lo Han before they'd crossed him. Somehow Lehmann had bossed it
over them, then, without warning, had muscled in on his, K'ang's,
territory. And that was it. The sum total. Except that Lehmann was
trained. And, if the reports were accurate, he had heavy munitions.
The sort Security used. So was
he a plant? A Security infiltrator? The possibility had made K'ang
check through his contacts, costing him dearly for a simple "No."
But even before he'd had it confirmed, he had ruled it out. Why
should Security bother with the likes of him? They had bigger fish to
fry. And anyway, he paid his dues—not light ones either—to
keep their eyes turned aside. Whatever
he was, Lehmann didn't fit. And K'ang, who wanted some kind of peace
in those stacks and levels the Kuei Chuan Triad allowed him to
control, needed him to fit. A deal would be best, but if not a deal,
then he'd try again. And again, until Lehmann was a corpse. That
thought was in his mind as he turned to face the door. Soucek
was standing there, one thin-boned hand on the jamb, his body turned
away from K'ang, looking out into the corridor. From another door,
behind K'ang and to his right, came three of his best men. Killers.
Good men to have behind you in a situation like this. K'ang
sipped at his wine, then nodded to himself, knowing how he would play
it. As he watched, Soucek backed into the room slowly and stood to
the side. The shape of his gun showed clearly through the thin
material of his trousers, his hand hovering close by. K'ang smiled at
him, as if to say, "Leave this to me," then moved forward a
pace. At
that moment Lehmann came into the room. There
was a sudden, perceptible heightening of tension in the room. Two
things were evident at once. Lehmann was tall, taller even than the
gangly Soucek. And he was an albino. Skin and hair were a deathly
white—a pallor emphasized by the whiteness of his simple, armless
tunic and his close-fitting trousers. Even his gun, which he held
loosely in his left hand, the barrel pointed at the floor, was
painted white. White . . . the color of death. K'ang
heard the sharp indraw of breath of the men behind him. The muscle in
his right cheek twitched, but he controlled it and slowly raised a
hand in welcome, meeting the albino's eyes. He smiled, exuding
confidence, but at the pit of his stomach he was experiencing
something he hadn't felt in years. Fear. A plain, naked fear. AT
FIRST Lehmann let K'ang A-yin do all the talking, knowing that his
simple presence there, silent among them, the big gun resting in his
hand, was eloquent enough. He had seen at once how it was— saw
where the real power lay—and, behind the solemn mask of his
face, had smiled. "I
can use you," K'ang was saying for the third time. "With me
you could go far. I'd reward you well. Look after you." K'ang
was a big man, broad at the shoulders and well-muscled, but some of
that muscle had gone to fat and there were definite signs of a paunch
developing. K'ang had grown lazy, self-indulgent. Like most of these
low-level tong bosses he had grown accustomed to the small luxuries
that surrounded him. Moving up, he had cut himself off from the
immediacy of the Lowers; had forgotten what had given him his power.
Soucek, his deputy, was the real power here. Neither knew it, but the
time would have come when Soucek challenged him for control. Now
there was no need, for he, Lehmann, had preempted that struggle. He let
his eyes stray a moment, letting no sign of his distaste for the
drabness, the sheer ugliness of the room, register on his face. This
was the worst of it, he sometimes felt; not the claustrophobic
inwardness of everything here, nor the overcrowded poverty of
life in the Lowers, but the ugliness, the unmitigated absence of
anything that pleased the eye. More than that he missed the
mountains, the cold, sharp freshness of the air. Missed the purity of
the ice. "All
right," he said, the words so sudden, so out of context, that
K'ang's face wrinkled up, not understanding. "I
said all right," he repeated, tucking the gun into the
strengthened web holster inside the top of his trousers. "I join
you as lieutenant. Equal to Soucek here." He indicated the tall,
gangly man without looking at him. "My two men . . . they work
with me still, right?" He
could see that K'ang didn't like that. It meant divided loyalties.
For a moment K'ang hesitated, then he nodded and held out his hand to
make the bargain. It was a large, strong hand, but warm and
overfleshed. There were rings on three of the fingers. By contrast
Lehmann's hand was like steel, inflexible and cold. "One
further thing," Lehmann said, extending the handshake
unnaturally, seemingly oblivious of K'ang's unease. "Your man,
K'ang Yeh-su."
* K'ang
looked down at his hand, then back up at Lehmann. "What of him?" "Get
rid of him." "Why?" "Because
he warned me. Sold me information about you." There
was a movement in K'ang's face that betrayed not merely surprise but
shock. K'ang Yeh-su was his nephew. His sister's son. For a moment he
said nothing. Then, "Why do you tell me this?" "Because
he's weak. Corrupt. He would sell anyone for the same price."
Lehmann hesitated, then added, "And because I'm your man now,
aren't I?" For a
moment longer he held K'ang's hand, then, as if he had tired of the
game, released it. But K'ang hardly noticed. Freed, he turned away
and signaled to one of his men. "Bring Yeh-su. Say nothing to
him. Just bring him." "Jelka?
Is that you?" Jelka
turned, making her way back down the unlit corridor to her father's
study. "Yes,
Papa?" The
Marshal sat at his big oak desk, a stack of papers to one side, a
file open before him, his hands, one flesh, one golden metal, resting
on the page. He looked tired, but then he always looked tired these
days, and his smile at least was as strong as ever. "How
did it go?" ..••< She
hesitated. He would find out. He was sure to find out. But not yet.
Not before she'd had time to think things through. "I don't
know. . ." She shrugged and gave a little sigh. "It's not
my thing, really. I..." He
laughed softly. "You don't have to tell me, my love. I know that
feeling only too well. I used to think it was me, but I know better
now. We're not party people, we Tolonens. Our ancestors were made of
sterner stuff, neh? All that northern ice—some of it must have
got into our blood!" His
laughter was warm, wonderful, and for a moment she simply stood
there, basking in it. But in the morning he would be different—
when he discovered what she'd done. So maybe it was best. . . She
moved closer, until she stood there, facing him across the desk,
looking down at him. "I... I did something tonight, Papa. I...
hurt someone." "You
hurt someone?" He frowned, trying to understand, then gave a
short laugh. "What? You mean, you broke their heart?" She
shook her head. "No. One of the young officers, it was. My
escort for the evening. Lieutenant Bachman. He tried . . ." Tolonen
sat forward, his face changed; suddenly stem, implacable. "What?
What did he try?" She
looked away briefly, wondering how it had got to this point; why she
had let it get out of control. "He tried to kiss me, Papa.
Against my wishes. He . /. he was persistent." He sat
back, indignation and anger written large on his face. "Bachman,
you say? Colonel Bachman's son?" "Yes,
Papa. But please . . . listen. I hurt him, you see. Hurt him badly." "Badly?
How badly?" She
swallowed. "I think I nearly killed him. If Anna hadn't shouted
at me . . ." He
narrowed his eyes, then shook his head. "You mean, you nearly
killed a man, and all because he wanted to kiss you?" "It
wasn't like that, Papa. He ... he was awful. It was as if I didn't
exist. As if he had the right. . ." She shuddered and looked
down, realizing she had clenched both her fists. "Even so, in
the end I provoked him. I made
him fight me. I could have walked away, but I didn't. I don't
know why ... I..." She stopped, looking back at her father. "Do
you understand, Papa? Something snapped in me. Something . . ." He
stared back at her a moment, then nodded. His voice was soft now,
almost a whisper. "I understand, my love. It's how we are, neh?
Brittle. That time I killed Lehmann in the House. It was like that
then. As if I had no choice. As if I'd lost control." For a
moment they were silent, staring at each other. Then, with a tiny
shudder, Tolonen looked away, fixing his gaze on the file in front of
him. "He'll live, I take it?" "Yes." He
looked up again, a strange kind of pride in his face. "So what
did you do to him? Kick him in the balls? Break his nose?" "I
wish it were that simple. I..." She shook her head, suddenly
exasperated with herself. "It wasn't even as if I was angry at
that point. It was like . . . like it was just something I had to do.
I... well, you'll think this strange, but it was like it was Hans in
front of me. Hans Ebert. And I had to stop him coming after me.
That's why I broke both his legs, to stop him. And his arms." He
stared at her, astonished, then sniffed in deeply. "Aiya. . .
And were there any witnesses to this?" "Several
dozen . . ." For a
moment he sat there, deep in thought, then, remembering something
suddenly, he got up and went across to the other side of the room,
where a long worktop filled the alcove. "Something
was delivered about an hour back," he said, searching among the
papers there. "It wasn't marked urgent and I was busy, so I left
it. It's here somewhere." She
watched him, wondering what was going on in his mind at that moment.
Did he really understand why she had done it? Or was he only saying
that? He would stand by her, certainly, because that was his way, but
for once that was not enough. She needed him to understand. Because
if he didn't understand . . . "Here,"
he said, turning back to her and slitting open the package with his
thumbnail. "If it's as you said. If it was a fair fight. . ." He
fell silent, reading through the brief report. She watched him
come to the end of it, then read it once again. He nodded, as
if satisfied, then looked back at her. "We'll
sit down, tomorrow, first thing, and make a report. In your own
words, exactly as it happened. Then I'll go and see Bachman, sort
something out about his son's medical expenses. The rest. . . well, I
think it's straightforward enough. It'll teach the lad manners, neh?
And maybe wake a few of them up, into the bargain." He Booked
away, giving a tight bark of laughter. "They're growing soft,
these young men. Soft . . ." "Papa
. . . ?" He
looked back at her, seeing how she stood there, close— suddenly
very close—to tears, and came across, holding her to him
tightly. "It's
all right, my love. It's all over now." He looked down into her
face, then gently kissed her brow. "You
understand, then? You understand why I did it?" He
nodded, his grim smile fading into concern. "It's how we are, my
love. Brittle. Easily angered. But strong, too, neh? Stronger than
iron."
CHAPTER
THREE
Fathers
and Sons LI
YUAN stood inside the doorway, looking across to where the T'ang of
East Asia lay in a huge, canopied bed. The room was bright and
unexpectedly airy. A warm breeze blew in through the open doors that
led out onto the balcony, the scent of apple blossom strong in the
air. Yet underlying it was the faintest hint of corruption. Of
sickness and age. "Wei
Feng. . ." Yuan said softly, his heart torn from him at the
sight of his father's oldest friend. The
old man turned his head on the pillow, his voice faint, almost
inaudible. "Shai Tung? Is that you?" Li
Yuan swallowed and moved closer. "It is I, cousin Feng. Shai
Tung's son, Yuan." "Ahh
. . ." Blind eyes searched the darkness whence the voice had
come, looking past the young T'ang of Europe. The voice was stronger
now, more confident. "Forgive me, Yuan. I was dreaming. . . Your
father and I were walking in the meadow.- We stopped beneath a tree.
. ." Yuan
waited, but there was nothing more. "How are you, cousin?"
he said gently, fearing the old man had drifted back into sleep. "Ah
yes . . ." Wei Feng's laughter was weak; the merest shadow of
the great roar of delight Yuan remembered from his childhood. Yuan
felt his stomach muscles tighten with pain at the thought. Was it all
so quickly gone? "Where
are your sons?" Yuan asked, surprised to find himself alone with
the old man. "Should I summon them, Wei Feng?" The
old man's head came round, his blind eyes staring up into Yuan's
face. The hair had not grown back on the half of his skull that had
been shaven, and the flesh there was a pale ivory, mottled, almost
transparent. One could see the bone clearly. "No,
Yuan," the old man said determinedly. Old age and sickness had
robbed Wei Feng of much, but his mind seemed as sharp as ever. "It
is you I wished to see. I..." The
old man swallowed dryly, unable to continue. Li Yuan looked about
him, then saw the jug and the cup on the table behind him and went
across. He poured a little of the water into the cup, then brought it
back, supporting Wei Feng's head while he sipped; then, setting the
cup aside, he wiped his lips for him. "Thank
you, Yuan. You are your father's son." Once
again, it was painful to see the thin, watery smile the old man gave
and recall the strength of former days. It made him feel that this
ought not to be—that this great fall from health and potency
was a kind of sin against life itself. He looked away momentarily,
robbed of words. Why had he not felt this for his own father? There
was a moment's silence and then the old man reached out, his frail
hand searching for Li Yuan's. Yuan took it, clasping it in both of
his, holding it firmly yet tenderly, his fingers stroking its back. Wei
Feng's face looked up into his, the clouded eyes turned inward. It
was a drawn and ancient face, creased deeply by time and care, the
skin blotched and discolored like faded parchment. "I
am dying, Yuan. My surgeons tell me otherwise, but I know it is only
days now before my time here is done and I go to join my ancestors.
That does not distress me. Life has been good. I have been fortunate,
both in my friends and in my wives and sons. I look back and see much
happiness. But I am not sad to be leaving the world above, for I have
seen what is to come. Dark clouds are forming, Yuan. A great storm is
coming. A storm so dark, so fierce it will be like nothing ever
witnessed by the eyes of man." A
faint shudder passed through him. For a moment his face was pained,
then it cleared, a look of wonder filling those ancient features. "I
have been dreaming, Yuan. Strange, powerful dreams. Again and again I
have seen it..." "Seen
what, cousin Feng?" Wei
Feng laughed as if amused, but the amusement quickly faded from his
lips. His voice was a hoarse whisper. "An
egg it was, Yuan. A great egg nestled in the earth. They give painted
eggs to celebrate a marriage, neh? Or to invalids, to wish them a
speedy recovery. But this egg was different. It was like the great
egg itself—the hun tun—from which the ten thousand
things came forth. Moreover, it was purest white, like a great stone,
polished and shining in the light that came from nowhere. It lay
there, nestled in the dark earth, and the people came from all around
to see it. .It was huge, Yuan. The biggest man seemed as a child
beside it. I stood there, among the crowd, watching, waiting for the
egg to hatch. Across from me, behind the bloodred curtains of her
sedan, a bride sat waiting in a high-backed chair. I glanced at her,
studying her in silhouette, then looked back at the eg|. Between my
looking away and looking back it had changed. Now it was stippled
with tiny cracks that ran from base to tip. Slowly they darkened. A
bell sounded—a single, perfect note, pure and high. As if at a
signal, the shell shattered into a thousand tiny pieces. And now a
man stood there, clothed in darkness, his back to me. He was huge,
taller than any man I had ever seen." Wei
Feng paused, getting his breath, his thin, darkly blotched tongue
tracing the length of his lips. "Shall
I get you more water, cousin?" Li Yuan asked, but Wei Feng shook
his head. "Let
me finish." The old man swallowed dryly, then went on. "I
looked across again. The curtains of the sedan were drawn back now
and I could see the bride. She was smiling. The kind of smile that
lasts ten thousand years. Her wedding dress hung in tatters from her
bones. Nails of black iron secured her to the chair. I looked back.
The man was turning. Slowly, he turned. And as he turned, all those
who fell beneath his gaze dropped to the ground, writhing in agony,
as if smitten by some sudden, virulent plague." Slowly
the old man's grip on Yuan's hand had tightened. Now it relaxed, a
look of puzzlement coming into that ancient face. "And
the man, Wei Feng . . . did you see his face?" Wei
Feng frowned deeply, then gave the tiniest of nods. "It was him,
Yuan. It was DeVore. But changed somehow. Enlarged. Made somehow
greater than he was in life." The old man shuddered, then turned
his head away. "I have had this dream a dozen, twenty times and
each time I wake before he turns to face me fully. But I have no
doubt. It was him. That profile. I could not forget it. Yes, I
can see him even now, smiling, his hands outstretched, facing his
bride." Li
Yuan shivered. Dreams. Was this where the first signs
appeared—in dreams? And was all that followed merely a working
out of what was first glimpsed in dream? "What
time is it, Yuan?" Li
Yuan turned, looking out. "It is late, Wei Feng. The afternoon
is almost done." "Ahh
. . ." Wei Feng nodded. Then, unexpectedly, he drew Yuan's hand
to his lips and kissed the great iron ring—the ring of power Li
Yuan had inherited from his father and his father's father, the great
seal of the Ywe Lung, the wheel of seven dragons, imprinted in
its face. Li
Yuan frowned, disturbed by the old man's gesture. This was not
something done lightly, nor on whim; he could see that by the way Wei
Feng stared up at him, his sightless eyes imploring him to
understand. But he understood nothing; only that this dear, kind
man—this confidant and ally, this strong and friendly presence
from his childhood—would soon be gone from the world. Gone, as
if he'd never been. And
afterward, outside in the cold and silent corridors, he stopped and
looked down, noticing for the first time that there was earth on the
hem of his gown. Earth ... He lifted his hand, staring at the great
iron ring, then walked on, his movements stiff with regret, knowing
he would never see Wei Feng alive again. IT was
LATE afternoon before Li Yuan got back to Tongjiang. Stopping only to
shower and change, he went directly to his study and sat there at his
desk, his Chancellor, Nan Ho, before him, Chang Shih-sen, his
secretary, at his side. Outside, in the Eastern Garden, his three
wives sat beside the lotus pool, laughing and talking, their
maids in attendance. For a moment he looked out, watching
them, the shadow of his earlier meeting with Wei Feng forgotten, his
eyes drawn to the new maid—the wet nurse—seeing how she
attended to the hunger of his eight-week-old son, Kuei Jen. She was a
pretty young thing, well-formed and with a delicate, pouting mouth.
He felt his sex stir at the thought of what that mouth might do and
looked down, a faint thrill of anticipated pleasure rippling through
him. He
turned back, facing his Chancellor again, a faint smile on his lips. "You
wish me to arrange something, Chieh Hsia?" Li Yuan
laughed. "Am I so transparent, Master Nan?" "You are a
man, Chieh Hsia, with a man's appetites. Besides, your First
Wife, Mien Shan, suggested it to me only the other day. She too, it
seems, has noticed your interest." Li
Yuan studied Nan Ho a moment, then nodded. "Arrange it, Master
Nan. We have but one life, neh?" "It
is done, Chieh Hsia. Now ... if we might begin." It was
the kind of gentle admonishment Li Yuan had come to expect from his
Chancellor. Another might have viewed it as impertinence, but he knew
better. Master Nan had been with him sine/ his sixth year,
first as his body servant, then as his Master of the Inner Chambers.
Recognizing his qualities, Li Yuan had sidestepped the usual channels
when he had come to the dragon throne, eighteen months back, and
promoted the industrious Nan Ho—a man without family
connections—to his most senior administrative post. It had been
a bold and unexpected move and had caused ripples at the time, but he
had had no reason to regret his decision. Nan Ho had proved himself
the perfect statesman, attending to Li Yuan's business as if it were
his own. Indeed, there was no more loyal servant in Chung Kuo. Unless
it was Tolonen. Li
Yuan sat back, staring at the great stack of state papers that were
piled up to the right of his desk. This was his daily burden—the
great weight he had taken on at his father's death. Reports from his
Hsien Ling, commissioned studies on the effects of proposed
legislation, warrants to be signed or queried, petitions from senior
Abave citizens, preparatory drafts for Council, Security summaries,
and more. Endless, it all seemed. Enough to keep a room full of
clerks busy for a week. He
half turned, looking up at Chang Shih-sen. At this customary signal,
Chang handed him the first paper. For the next hour or so the great
pile slowly diminished, but they were far from done when Li Yuan sat
back and, with a laugh, gestured for Chang to take the rest away. He
turned, facing his Chancellor. "Look
at us, Master Nan, sitting here while the sun is shining outside! Let
us deal with these tomorrow, neh?" Nan Ho
made to comment, then changed his mind. He could see that Li Yuan was
determined not to work that day. Smiling, he bowed low. "As you
wish, Chieh Hsia. But I must remind you that you have dinner at your
cousin, Tsu Ma's, estate this evening. We must be there at nine. Wu
Shih has confirmed that he will be attending." "Good.
. . Good!" The young T'ang clapped his hands. "Then come.
Let us join my wives. It is a fine afternoon, neh?" They
went outside, Nan Ho sending a servant running to bring wine and
tumblers. The women were beside the pool, laughing, sharing some
secret joke. As the men came out, they turned, almost as one, their
laughter fading, then stood, bowing their heads, the maids kneeling
in their T'ang's presence. "Where
is my son?" Li Yuan asked, looking about him, surprised not to
see the wet nurse there among the group by the pool. "He
is here, Chieh Hsia," a voice said from just behind him. He
turned, smiling, remembering suddenly what he had agreed with Nan Ho
earlier. The girl handed the child to him, then knelt, the faintest
color in her cheeks. She knew. He could tell she knew. "Kuei
Jen . . ." he said softly, transferring his attention to the
child in his arms. "And how is my darling little boy?" The
child stared up at him, cooing softly, his dark eyes round with
curiosity, his face the tiny image of his mother's. Li Yuan looked
across, laughing, and saw how Mien Shan was watching him, her eyes
moist with happiness, and for the briefest moment he thought of Wei
Feng and what he had said to him on his sickbed. Life was good,
if one let it be. He
turned, facing the sun. Then, as if compelled, he lifted the child,
holding him up at arm's length, as if offering him up. And when he
turned back, the child cradled against him once more, he saw how they
looked at him, in awe, as at that moment when he had stepped
down from the Temple of Heaven, wearing the dragon robes for
the first time. "My
son," he said, looking about him, fiercely proud, seeing how his
words affected them, even the seemingly imperturbable Nan Ho. "My
son." ON THE
EAST COAST of North America it was dawn, and amid the low,
flower-strewn screens of the Tea House of the Ninth Dragon it was
busy. Maroon-cloaked waiters moved between the crowded tables, their
faces impassive, the heavily laden trays they bore swept effortlessly
above their patrons' heads. At the tables, wizen-faced graybeards sat
there in their stiff-collared jackets, smoking and playing Chou or
Siang Chi, ignoring the muted screens set high up on the pillars on
every side. From two big speakers set either side of the long ch'a
counter, the romantic strains of "Love at the Fair"
drifted across the teahouse, competing with the babble of the old
men. It was a timeless scene—a scene as old as history itself.
For three thousand years old men had gathered thus, to smoke and talk
and drink their bowls of ch'a. Kim
sat at a small table at the back of the tea house, up a level, on a
narrow veranda overlooking the main floor, a white- and maroon-glazed
chung of freshly brewed min hung—"Fukien Red"—in
front of him, a small bowl of soyprawn crackers by his elbow. He had
first come here three months back, to kill an hour before a meeting,
and had found himself still sitting there three hours later, his
appointment forgotten, the tiny notepad he carried filled with
jottings, his head bursting with new ideas. Now he came here most
mornings at this hour, to sit and sip ch'a, and think. Sometimes
he would go down among the tables and sit there for an hour or two,
listening to the homely wisdom of the old men, but mostly he would
sit here, looking out across the busy floor, and let his mind
freewheel. Today, however, was special, for earlier this
morning—after a tiring all-night session—he had put the
finishing touches to the first of the five new patents he had been
working on: patents he had first conceived here at the Ninth Dragon. He
smiled, wondering what the old men would have made of it had
he shared some of his ideas with them: whether they would have
thought him sage or madman. Whichever, there was no doubting that
they would have found them strange. His idea for a new kind of
protein machine that could operate in space, for instance: that had
been conceived here, at this table, while watching the old men blow
their smoke rings in the air. In one
sense the problem had been a simple one. For the past two hundred
years, most scientific engineering had been done at the microscopic
level, using two basic "tools," NPMs and NPAs. The standard
NPMs—natural protein machines—that companies like GenSyn
used to engineer their products, while extremely versatile, were
highly susceptible to heat variations, operating within a very
limited temperature range. NPAs—nonprotein assemblers—made
of harder, more predictable molecules, were stronger and more stable
than the NPMs and were therefore used wherever possible in the
manufacture of most technological hardware. However, when it came to
the more sensitive areas of genetic engineering, most Companies still
used NPMs. In
terms of cost it didn't matter which one used, under normal
conditions, but these days an increasing amount of manufacturing was
done in the great orbital factories, under sterile, zero-gravity
conditions. At
present the potentially much cheaper conditions of manufacture that
appertained in the orbital factories were applicable only to
nonliving processes: for the production of basic "hardware."
For all other processes—for food production, say, or
biotechnology, where NPMs had to be used—the savings
were partly offset by the need to maintain an atmosphere on board the
factory ships and to keep that atmosphere at an unfluctuating
and—relative to the surrounding cold of space— high
temperature. Cut out that need and the savings would be the same as
for those factories that used NPAs; that is, somewhere between
fifteen and twenty percent of the total manufacturing cost. It was
a huge saving, and the development company that could patent a
protein-based nanomachine that could operate in extreme cold and
under vacuum conditions was certain to enjoy vast profits. Kim
drew the chung toward him and raised it to his mouth. Lifting the
rounded lid he tilted it gently and took a sip of the sweet black
ch'a. It was
a problem he had set himself a long time back—long before Li
Yuan had given him the means to set up his own company—and for
a while he had thought it insoluble. How could one make a living
thing that operated in the absence of those very things that
sustained it—heat and air? The two processes seemed and surely
were inimical. Even so, he had persisted, and, sitting there,
watching the smoke rings curl from those ancient mouths and climb the
air, had glimpsed how it might be done. Now, three months on from
that insight, he had finally worked it out—down to the smallest
detail. He had only to write the process up and patent it. He set
the chungdown, smiling, the tiredness in his bones balanced against
the sense of achievement he was feeling. Not only was his solution
aesthetically pleasing, but it also kept well within the rigid
guidelines of the Edict. The principles he'd utilized were old and
well documented; it was merely the way he'd put them together that
was new. Smoke
rings. He laughed, and took a deep swig of the ch'a. It was
all so very simple, really . . . "Shih
Ward?" Kim
turned. The Head Waiter, Chiang Su-li, stood there, his head bowed, a
few paces from the table. "Yes,
Master Chiang?" Chiang
bobbed his head, then handed across a message tab. "Forgive me,
Shih Ward, but a messenger brought this a moment back. He said I was
to place it directly into your hands." "Thank
you, Master Chiang." Kim fished in the pocket of his jacket for
a five yuan coin, then held it out, offering it to Chiang. Chiang
made no move to take the coin. "I thank you, Shih Ward, but it
is enough that you honor us with your presence at our humble tea
house. If you will allow me, I will bring a fresh chung of the
min hung." Kim
stared at Chiang a moment, surprised, wondering what he had heard,
then smiled. "That would be most pleasant, Master Chiang. It is
a most excellent brew." Chiang
bowed, pleased by the compliment, then turned away, leaving Kim
alone. For a
moment Kim sat there, staring at the blank face of the message card,
tempted to throw it away unread. Old Man Lever had made over a dozen
"offers" this last year, each one more outrageous than the
last. It was five weeks since the latest and Kim had been expecting
something any day. So what was the old tyrant offering now? A
partnership? A half share in his empire? Whatever it was, it wasn't
enough. Nothing—not even the whole of ImmVac's vast
holdings—could persuade him to work for Lever. Kim
looked out across the smoke-wreathed floor and sighed. When would
Lever finally understand that he didn't want to work for him? Why
couldn't he just accept that and leave him alone? What drove the old
man that he kept on upping the terms, convinced that it was only a
question of finding the right price? Death,
Kim thought. The fear of death, that's what drives you. And
you think I can find an answer to that. You've convinced yourself
that 1 can succeed where a hundred generations of taoists and
alchemists have failed, and unlock that last great secret.
Andmaybeyou'reright. Maybe I could. Or at least some counterfeit of
immortality—a hundred years of youth, perhaps. Yes,
but the truth is that I wouldn't, even if I could. Not even if it
meant that I too could live forever. He
shuddered, the strength of his aversion for the old man surprising
him; then, curiosity overcoming his anger, he pressed his thumb
against the release pad. For a
moment a combination of tiredness and false expectation made him sit
there blankly, a look of incomprehension on his face. Then, with a
laugh, he understood. Michael. . . The message was from Michael
Lever, not his father. Even
so, it was fifteen months since he had last seen Michael Lever, that
night of the Thanksgiving Ball, and though they had been friends,
much had happened between times. He could not be certain that the man
he had known was the same as the one who wanted to see him now.
Indeed, if the rumors were true, he had changed a great deal. But for
good or ill? Besides
which, Michael wanted to meet him tonight; at ten o'clock. Normally
that wouldn't have been a problem, but after a night without sleep... Kim
smiled. There were pills he could take to keep him awake. Besides, it
would do him good to have an evening off to see an old friend. And
maybe Michael could give him some advice. He'd been out of
circulation, sure, but things hadn't changed that much while he'd
been away. What he knew about the market was still valid. So maybe. .
. Kim
set the card down, watching the message slowly fade, then looked
across. At the ch'a counter, Master Chiang was setting out his
tray with careful, precise little movements that were characteristic
of the man. Kim watched him a while, then looked down, smiling. Yes,
it would be good to see Michael again. Very good indeed. THE
DOOR WAS OPEN, the tiny reception room empty save for a dust-strewn
desk and an unpainted stool. Emily Ascher stood there in the doorway,
holding tight to the stack of files and boxes that was balanced
beneath her chin, wondering if she had come to the right place. For a
moment she thought of checking the note Michael had sent her, but
there was little point; she knew what was written there. Suite 225,
it read; East Corridor, Level 224, North Edison stack. Turning,
she nodded to her guide, dismissing him, then went inside, putting
the files down on the desk. She
straightened up and looked about her, noting the shabbiness of the
place. The walls were strewn with old posters, the floor bare,
unswept in months. It had the look of a repossession. "So
this is it, neh?" she said softly and smiled to herself. She had
expected something grander; something more in keeping with the
Michael Lever she had worked with before his arrest. But this . . . She
went across and closed the door, then turned, hearing voices from
beyond the inner door. Male voices, laughing. She
slid the door open and went through, into a big, open-plan office.
Michael was sitting on the edge of a long laboratory-style desk on
the far side of the room. Nearby, sprawled in a chair, sat a second
man; a short-haired athletic-looking man of about Michael's age.
Seeing Emily, the two men fell silent, looking across at her. "Mary.
. ." Michael said, pushing up from the desk and coming
across, clearly delighted that she was there. "You found
us all right, then?" She
smiled, barely conscious of the use of her adopted name. "It was
no trouble. IVe been down this way before ... on business." "I
see . . ." He stood there a moment, simply smiling at her, then
turned suddenly, as if he had forgotten, and put his arm out,
indicating the other man. "I'm sorry . . . look, IVe forgotten
hpw to do all this. This here is Bryn. . . Bryn Kustow. He's an old
friend. He was at College with me. And. . . well, other things. And
this, Bryn, is Mary Jennings." Emily
met the young man's eyes and gave a brief nod, understanding. By
"other things" Michael meant that Kustow had been arrested.
He too had been one of Wu Shih's "guests" these past
fifteen months. She could see it in his eyes. Could see how much the
experience had changed these young men. "It's
not much as yet," Michael went on, looking about him at the big,
unfurnished room, "but we're going to make it something."
He looked back at her. "That's if you're going to join us." She
narrowed her eyes. "Pardon?" He
took a step closer. "Look, I know how it is. It's a big
decision. And you might think that you don't want to risk making an
enemy of my father, but. . ." "Hold
on," she said, laughing. "You're not making sense. What
decision? And why should I be making an enemy of your father?" There
was a moment's puzzlement in his face, and then he laughed. "Shit...
I didn't say, did I?" "No.
You just told me to come here. Friday, first thing. And to bring what
I'd need to start work at once. I thought. . ." "You
thought this was just another of my father's Companies, neh? You
thought you'd still be on the payroll." He looked away,
embarrassed now. "Look, I'm sorry. I'll spell it out. Then, if
you don't like what you hear, you can just turn round and leave, and
no one will be the wiser, okay?" She
stared back at him a moment, then looked across at Kustow, seeing how
closely he was watching her; as if recruiting her for some secret
brotherhood. "You're
setting up on your own, aren't you?" she said, looking back at
Michael. "A partnership. You and Shih Kustow here. Is
that right?" He
nodded. "And
you want me to join, right? As what? Personal assistant to you both?" Kustow
sat forward. "At first, yes. But hopefully it won't stay that
way. We plan to run things differently. We'll match your present
salary, of course. But you'll also be on bonuses. A share of profits.
If things go well, you can buy in. Become a partner." "I
see. And all I have to do is break contract with ImmVac and make an
enemy of the most powerful businessman in City North America?" Michael
reached out and gently touched her arm. "Look, it's okay. You
can say no. And we won't blame you if you do. But just consider
things a moment. It's a whole new venture. Something that won't come
along twice in your career. To be in at the start of something like
this . . ." "And
my contract with ImmVac? There's a hefty breach clause, you realize?" "We've
budgeted for that," Kustow said, matter-of-factly. He stood up
and came across, standing next to Michael. "All you've got to do
is decide whether you want in or not." "And
just what is this venture?" Kustow
smiled for the first time. "Near-space technologies. The kind of
things our fathers wouldn't normally touch." She
laughed. "Too right. That field is sewn up tight." "Right
now it is," Michael agreed, "but change is coming. There
are rumors that the Seven want to make a deal with the Above. A deal
that'll mean a radical rewriting of the Edict of Technology. Things
are going to open up, and when they do, we plan to be there, at the
cutting edge." "I
see. And all I have to do is say yes." The
two men looked at each other, then back at her, nodding. She
was quiet a moment, considering. It was a big decision. If she took
this step there was no turning back. Old Man Lever would make damn
sure of that. No, she had seen how he'd reacted that night Michael
had said no to him; had been witness to the private scenes
afterward. You didn't cross swords with Charles Lever. Not
unless you wanted to make an enemy of him for life. Common sense,
therefore, told her to say no. To turn around and get out of there at
once. But for once common sense held no sway. After all, she hadn't
come to America to carve herself out a safe career. She'd come here
to do something positive; to change things. It was time, then, that
she stopped running; that she dug in and did something she, believed
in. She
looked back at them. They were watching her; somberly, expectantly.
How well she knew that look. How often she'd seen it, back in the old
days, in City Europe. "Okay," she said, smiling broadly.
"Count me in." "Great!"
Michael said, beaming, slapping Kustow on the back. "Bloody
great! All we need now is a research scientist and a patents man." "That
and a lot of money," Kustow said, grinning, his eyes meeting
Emily's briefly to thank her. "A huge pile of money!" OLD
MAN LEVER strode out onto the podium of the great lecture hall and
looked about him imperiously. His gaze swept across the empty tiers,
then returned to the two great screens that dominated the wall to the
right of where he stood. "I
like it," he said finally, his voice booming in that great
echoing space. "I like it a lot. It's exactly what I envisaged." Behind
him, the four-man design team looked among themselves with
expressions of relief and triumph. It had been hard going satisfying
the Old Man, but now it was done, the building finished to his
precise specifications. And not before time. In three weeks the hall
would be filled to bursting for the inauguration ceremgriy. Before
then there was much to do: laboratory equipment had to be installed,
personnel hired and trained, not to mention the countless items of
decor—Lever's "final touches"—that had to be
seen to between now and then. Even so, to have reached this stage at
all seemed a miracle of sorts. Six months back, when things had been
at their worst, not one of them had believed the project would ever
see completion, not because what was asked of them was impossible,
but because of Lever's constant meddling in their work—his
abrupt changes of mind and irritating
refusal to trust their judgment at any stage. The pay had been good,
true, but he had ridden them hard. Not
that their experience was unique. In every area Old Man Lever had not
only insisted that they hire the best in the field but that he be
allowed to sit in on their consultation sessions. More than once he
had overridden specialist advice, determined to stamp his own view on
things, only to return, each time after a long, frustrating delay, to
the very thing he'd first rejected, and with never a word that he'd
been in the wrong. But so
it was with Lever. It was as if the man were obsessed. As if this one
project, this single huge building and what it held, consumed him,
blinding him to all else. And now, standing there at the center of
his creation, he glowed with a satisfaction that seemed much more
than the sense of achievement one usually got from a job well done. "Where's
Curval?" he said, half turning toward them. "Has anyone
seen the man?" "I'll
bring him, Mister Lever," the Architect said, recognizing that
tone of impatience in the Old Man's voice. Fourteen
and a half billion it had cost. Twice the original estimate. But not
once had Lever balked about the cost. "Money's irrelevant,"
he had said at one point, to the astonishment of the Project
Accountant. And so it had proved. Never once had he skimped to cut
costs. No, the problem had been one of time. Of getting the thing
done in time for the ceremony. As if it were a race . . . Curval
arrived, making his way between them, the great geneticist
hesitating, glancing at them uncertainly before he walked out onto
the broad platform. "Good luck," one said softly, almost
inaudibly. "Poor bastard," another mouthed silently as they
turned to leave, bringing a knowing smile to his colleagues' faces.
So it was. Their dealings with Lever were, thank the gods, almost
over; CurvaPs, poor sod, were only just beginning. "Ah,
Andrew. . ." Lever said, turning, smiling at the man and
extending his hand. "I wanted to talk to you. To make sure
everything's going to plan." Curval
bowed his head and took Lever's hand, allowing his own to be pumped
and squeezed indelicately. "It
all goes well, Mister Lever. Very well indeed." "YouVe
signed the two men you mentioned last time we talked?" The
last time they had talked had been the day before, less than eighteen
hours earlier, in fact, but Curval let it pass. "I
got onto it at once, Mister Lever. The contracts were signed and
verified this morning. The men will be here tomorrow, first thing,
ready to get down to work." "Good."
Old Man Lever beamed his satisfaction. "That£ what I like
to hear. So you've got your team now? Everyone you need?" Curval
hesitated. He knew what the Old Man wanted to hear. He wanted to hear
a resounding yes; that they had the best team possible—a team
good enough to tackle the big questions and overcome them—but
both he and Lever knew that that wasn't so. "It's
as good as we'll get, Mister Lever. If we can't crack it with this
team, no one will." Lever
stared at him a full ten seconds, then gave a terse nod. "It's
the boy, neh? You still think we need the boy?" Curval
took a long breath, then nodded. "I've looked over some of the
things you showed me and there's no doubting it. You can't
counterfeit that kind of ability. You either have it or you don't." "And
he has it?" Curval
laughed. "In excess! Why, he's head and shoulders above anyone
in his field. He's quick of mind, and versatile, too. If anyone could
make a quick breakthrough, it'd be Ward." Again he hesitated.
"Look, don't mistake me, Mister Lever, the team we've got is
good. Exceptional, I'd say. If anyone can find an answer, they can.
But it'll take time. All I'm saying is that having Ward would give us
an edge. It would help speed things up considerably." "I
see." Lever looked about him thoughtfully, then turned back to
Curval, smiling. "Okay. I'll come and visit you tomorrow. It'll
be good to meet the team at last. I can give them a little pep talks
neh?" Curval
nodded, his face showing no sign of what he thought of the idea,
then, with a low bow, he backed slowly away. For a
while Lever stood there, as if in trance, a deep frown lining his
grizzled features. Then, abruptly, he turned about, marching off the
platform and out through the open door, his silks flapping out behind
him as he made his way through the maze of rooms and corridors to the
entrance hall. Beneath
the great twist of stairs—that huge, unraveled double helix
that filled the north end of the massive domed cavern that was the
entrance hall—Lever stopped, looking about him, as if coming to
himself again. Waving
away the two servants who had hurried across, he went over and stood
before the blank partition wall that rested in the center of the
floor between the stairway and the huge entrance doors. This, this
great screen, was the first thing that visitors to the Institute
would see on entering the building, and as yet he was still to find
something to fill it. But fill it he would. And with something quite
exceptional. Lever
lifted his chin, then turned away, feeling a sudden rush of pride at
the thought of what he'd accomplished here. Here it was, the first
stage of his Dream completed. He had brought it this far, by force of
will and brute determination, and he would take it even farther,
right to the shores of death itself. He smiled, all trace of the
uncertainty he had felt back in the lecture hall gone from him. He
had a right, surely, to feel proud of what he'd done? No Emperor or
President had ever done so much. He
looked about him, then nodded, suddenly determined. For some reason,
young Ward didn't want to work for him. A dozen times now he had
turned down his offers. But that didn't mean that he had to give up.
No. If anything it made him more determined. He was used to having
his own way, and he would have his way in this eventually. Because
this was too important not to give it his best shot. And if that best
shot meant getting Ward, he would get Ward. Whatever it took. Yes.
Because here, at this place he had specially created for the purpose,
they were ready to begin. In the days to come they would take on
Death himself. Would track him down and face him, eye to eye. Yes.
And stare him down. kim
pushed AWAY the empty starter plate and looked about him, noting how
busy the restaurant had suddenly become, then turned back, meeting
Michael Lever's eyes across the table. "It's
strange, isn't it?" Michael said, a faint smile on his lips.
"I'd never have thought that I'd feel awkward in a place like
this, but these days. . . well,
I see it with new eyes, I guess. The wastefulness of it all. The
excess. Being Wu Shih's guest made me realize how much I'd taken for
granted, how much I hadn't seen." Kim
frowned, concerned. "You should have said. Look, I'll cancel the
main course, if you want. We can go elsewhere." Michael
shook his head. "No. It's okay. Besides, I'll have to get used
to this again if I'm going into business on my own accoimt. I learned
that with my father. This is where the deals are made, in the
restaurants and private clubs, with a full mouth and a swollen belly,
over a plate of expensive delicacies and a tumbler of brandy." Kim
laughed softly, enjoying the new Michael Lever. There was a depth of
irony to him that hadn't been there before his imprisonment; a sharp,
self-deprecating humor that suited him perfectly. Before, he had been
his father's shadow, but now he was himself; leaner but also stronger
than before. "Do
you really hate it all that much?" Michael
looked down. "I don't know. It's like I said, it's hard to see
it now the way they do. Being locked up all day ... it gave me the
chance to do a lot of thinking. To look at our world afresh." He
met Kim's eyes again. "My father can't understand that. To him
it's as if I've been away at College or something. He can't see what
IVe been through. He thinks . . ." He huffed out, hurt and
exasperated. "Well, he thinks I'm just being awkward, willful,
but it's not like that." Kim
leaned toward him, covering his hand with his own. "I
understand," he said, thinking back to his own experiences of
confinement. "It changes you, doesn't it? Throws you back upon
yourself." Michael
nodded and looked up at him, smiling, grateful for his understanding. "I'm
sorry. This whole business with your father. It must be hard for
you." Michael
shrugged. "It hurts, sure, but I've known worse. Besides,"
he said, brightening, "youVe not told me what you're up
to. Have you made your first million yet?" Kim
laughed. "No, but it sure as hell feels as if IVe spent it
setting things up!" He sat back, relinquishing Michael's hand.
"You know how it is. Creatively we're strong, but financially. .
. Well, to be honest with you,
Michael, I could do with some outside investment, but it's a question
of finding someone I can trust. Someone who won't attach too many
strings." "Ahh
. . ." Michael looked away, thoughtful a moment. "You know,
Kim, I thought I knew everything there was to know about business, I
thought no one could teach me anything new, but I'm having to learn
it all again, from scratch. Without my father's money, without the
power that ImmVac represents, I'm just another face, fighting for my
share of a hostile market." "Hostile?" "My
father. He doesn't like the idea of me going it alone. He thinks I
should be back home, running errands for him." "You
mean he's actively trying to stop you?" "Actively,
no. Or at least, not as far as I know. But you know how it is. The
word's out that my father's angry with me, and it's a brave man
who'll risk offending Charles Lever for the sake of trading with his
son. I've been cut dead a dozen, twenty times these past two days
alone by so-called 'friends.' But there are ways around that. Bryn
and I have been working on making contacts in the East Asian
marketplace. It'll cost us, sure, but at least we can do business.
Here in North America things are dead as far as we're concerned." "I
see." Kim leaned back, letting the waiter who had appeared clear
the plates. "So how are you funding all this?" Michael
smiled. "IVe personal accounts. Money my mother left me. About
fifteen million in all. It's not enough, but it'll get us started." Kim
narrowed his eyes. "That sounds ambitious." "It
is. But tell me, Kim, how much do you need? A million? Two?" "One
and a half," Kim said, as the waiter returned, setting down a
plate of steaming hash before him. "One point two if we trim
back to basics." "And
that covers what? R and D? Production? Distribution?" "R
and D is covered. I do all that up here." Kim tapped his skull
and smiled. "No. My costing is for the initial production run,
manufacture to fitting, allowing for a three-month payment schedule.
We start fairly small, keep borrowing to a minimum, and finance
expansion from profits." Michael
leaned toward him, interested. "YouVe got something ready to go,
then?" "Pretty
well. IVe been working on a few things this last year. Some didn't
pan out, but two of them . . . Well, let's say that I'm hopeful." "These
are new inventions, I take it?" Kim
nodded. "And
you've patented them, I hope?"
. "Not
yet." Michael
whistled through his teeth. "But that's madness, Kim! What if
someone raided your offices? You'd lose it all." Kim
shook his head. "They could strip the place bare, but they'd get
nothing. As I said, it's all up here, in my head. When I'm ready I'll
set it all down and take it along to the Patents Office and register
it. But not before IVe sorted out the practical details." Michael
smiled, impressed by the young man. "It sounds good. Better than
good, in fact. Look, Kim, why don't we do business? You need
funding, we need a bit of specialist advice. Why can't we trade? I
mean, I'll have to talk to Bryn and get his agreement, but I don't
see why we can't help each other out, neh?" Kim
stared at him, confused. "Wait a minute. Have I got this right?
Are you offering to back me? To put up the funds?" "Why
not?" "But
I thought you needed that money for your own venture?" "We
need ten million to get us started, sure, but that leaves more than
enough for what you want. And no strings. Or at least, just the
one—that you look over our proposal and give us your technical
advice on what we propose." Kim
was smiling broadly now, his dinner quite forgotten. "That's
great. Really great. But just what is your proposal?" "Near-space
technologies," Michael answered him, looking past him
momentarily, as if seeing something clearly in the air. "It's
the coming thing, Kim. The coming thing ..." wei
feng LAY on the great oakwood bed, his eyes closed, his long, thin
face at rest. His hands lay one upon the other above the
sheets, the slender fingers stiff, paler than the white silk
of the coverings, a kind of darkness beneath their pallor. At the
foot of the bed stood his three sons, heads bowed, the white of their
clothes in sharp contrast to the rich colors of the room. The
long illness had wasted the old man. He was a thing of bone beneath
the frail white gown he wore. His right arm and shoulder had
atrophied, as if death had taken that part of him earlier than the
rest. His lidded eyes rested low in the pits of their sockets, and
his thin-lipped mouth was a mere pale gash in the emaciated wasteland
of his face. The hair on the left side of his face had not grown
back, and the scars of the operations showed blue against the ivory
of his skull. When Li Yuan entered the room his eyes were drawn to
the stark ugliness of Wei Feng's head in death. He shuddered
involuntarily, then turned to greet the eldest son, Chan Yin, with a
silent bow. Li
Yuan stood at the bedside a long time, looking down at his old
friend, recalling through misted eyes how this kind and lovely man
had once twirled him around in the air, his eyes alight with the joy
of what he was doing, and how he, Li Yuan, had squealed with delight
at it. He glanced down at the narrow bones of the hands, the wasted
muscles of the arms, and grimaced. Had it been so long ago? No . . .
He shook his head slowly. Fifteen years. It was barely an indrawn
breath in the long history of their race. He
turned away, leaving the tears on his cheeks, stepping back as if in
a dream, then reached out to embrace each of the dead man's sons;
holding Chan Yin longer than the others, feeling the faint trembling
of the man against him. Chan
Yin stood back, a sad smile on his face. "Thank you, Yuan." "He
was a good man," Yuan answered, matching his smile. "I
shall miss both his advice and his friendship. He was a second father
to me." The
forty-year-old nodded slightly, for a moment seeming younger than the
nineteen-year-old Li Yuan. Before this moment, power had reversed the
traditional status of age between them, but now they were both T'ang,
both equals. Even so, Chan Yin deferred. Li Yuan noted this and
frowned, not understanding. There was no sign in his cousin that he
had inherited. Only a puzzling humility and deference toward himself. "What
is it, Chan Yin?" Chan
Yin met his eyes. Beyond him his younger brothers looked on. "My
father entrusted me to give you this, Yuan." From
the white folds of his mourning cloak the new T'ang took a letter. It
was white silk, sealed with bloodred wax, the traditional instrument
of the Seven. Li Yuan took it and stared at it, then, reluctantly, he
prized the seal open with his fingernail. Chan
Yin reached out a hand to stop him. "Not here, Yuan. Later. When
you are alone. And then we shall meet. Just you and I." He
paused, and raised his voice as if to let it carry to his brothers.
"But remember, Li Yuan. I am my father's son. His death changes
nothing." Li
Yuan hesitated, then bowed his assent, his fingers pressing the
hardened wax back into place. Then, with a brief, questioning glance,
he turned and left the death chamber. CHAPTER
FOUR
Waves
Against the Sand IT
WAS LOW TIDE. In the deep shadow at the foot of the City's wall, a
flat-bottomed patrol boat made its way between the tiny,
grass-covered islands that dotted this side of the river, the tight
beam of its searchlight sweeping slowly from side to side across the
glistening shallows. Just here, at the great Loire's mouth, the river
was broad, almost three li wide. Downstream lay the Bay of
Biscay and the gray-green waters of the North Atlantic. In the
bright, mid-morning sunlight, one of the big mid-ocean vessels was
making its way in the deep water channel toward the port of Nantes.
On the far bank, beyond the perimeter fence and its regularly spaced
gun turrets, could be seen the needle towers and blast pits of the
spaceport, the pure white of the City's walls forming a glacial
backdrop far to the south. As the patrol boat slowed and turned,
making its way round the low hump of a mudbank, the water seemed to
shimmer. Almost imperceptibly the vibration took form in the air, a
low bass growl that grew and grew in strength. A moment later the sky
on the far side of the river was riven by a long, bright streak of
red. On
the roof of the City, two li above the river's surface, a
group of officers watched the rocket climb the sky to the southwest.
To their backs, close by, five craft were parked about an open
service hatch: a big, black-painted cruiser, three squat Security
gunships, and a slender four-man craft with the Ywe Lung and
the personal insignia of the T'ang
of Europe on its stubby wings. Uniformed guards of the T'ang's elite
squad stood by the ramps of each craft, heavy semiautomatics clutched
to their chests, looking about them conscientiously. For a
moment the small group of officers was still, their necks craned
back, following the arc of the rocket, then, as the echoing boom of
the engines faded from the sky, they turned back, resuming their
talk. Marshal
Tolonen stood at the center of the group, his aide close by,
clutching a small documents case. Facing Tolonen stood Li Yuan's new
General, the fifty-two-year-old Helmut Rheinhardt. He and most of his
senior staff had come out to Nantes to see the old man off. "I
admire your thoroughness, Knut," Rheinhardt said, picking up on
what they had been saying, "but forgive me if I say that I feel
you're taking on much more than you need. For myself I'd have let
other, younger eyes do the spadework and saved myself for the fine
sifting. From what you've said, there's plenty enough of that, neh?" Tolonen
laughed. "Maybe so. But it's a principle IVe stuck to all my
life. Not to trust what I'm told, but to look for myself. I've an
instinct for these things, Helmut. For that small betraying detail
that another wouldn't spot. From here things look fine with GenSyn's
North American operation, but IVe a hunch that they'll look a great
deal different from close up." "You
think something's amiss, then, Knut?" Tolonen
leaned closer. "I'm damn sure of it! I've been working through
the official records these past three months and things simply don't
add up. Oh, superficially things look all right. The numbers balance
and so forth, but. . ." He sniffed, then shook his head. "Look,
Klaus Ebert was a conscientious, honest man. He kept a tight rein on
GenSyn while he was in control. But things were different at the
end..." "Hans,
you mean?"
-, Tolonen
looked away, a shadow falling over his granite features. "It
looks like it, I'm afraid. Most of the North American operation and
its subsidiary companies were handed over to Hans for the eighteen
months before Klaus Ebert's death. And it's in that period that
almost all of the anomalies occur." "Anomalies?"
It was Li Yuan's Chancellor, Nan Ho, who made the query. He was
returning to the group after briefly visiting his craft to take an
urgent message. Rheinhardt and his officers bowed and moved back
slightly, letting Nan Ho reenter their circle. Tolonen
hesitated, then nodded. "Accounting irregularities. Forged
shipment details. Missing documents. That kind of thing." It was
a bland, almost evasive answer, but from the way Tolonen met Nan Ho's
eyes as he said it, the Chancellor knew that it was more serious than
that. Something else was missing. Something that, perhaps, couldn't
be mentioned, not even in company like this. "Besides,"
Tolonen went on, changing the subject, "it will be good to see
old friends again. My work has kept me in my study this past year.
And that's not healthy, neh? A man needs to get out in the world. To
do things and see things." Rheinhardt
laughed. "It sounds like you've been missing the service, Knut!
Maybe I should find you something to do once all this GenSyn business
is finished with. Or maybe you would like your old job back?" There
was laughter at that; a hearty, wholesome laughter that rolled out
across the roof of the City. Hearing it, Jelka Tolonen looked up from
where she was sitting on the steps of the nearest gunship and
frowned. How familiar such manly laughter was, and yet, suddenly, how
strange, how alien it sounded. She stood, looking out past her
father's men, toward the distant horizon. It was
a beautiful day. The sun was high and, to her back, the air fresh
with no trace of wind. Cloud lay to the west, high up, over the
shining ocean, a faint, wispy cirrus feathering the deep blue of the
sky. It was beautiful, simply beautiful, yet for once she felt no
connection to that beauty, no resonance within herself; as if some
part of her had died, or fallen fast asleep. A
week had passed since the incident at the Graduation Ball, but she
had still to come to terms with what had happened. When she thought
of it, it seemed strange, unreal, as if it had happened to someone
else, or in some other life. Yet what concerned her more was the
constant, nagging sense of unease she had felt these past few
weeks; that sense that things were wrong, seriously wrong,
with the balance of her life. As far
as Lieutenant Bachman was concerned, her father had smoothed things
over, just as he'd said he would. Even so, she had slept badly this
last week, haunted by dreams in which she was a machine, a dreadful
spinning thing with blades for arms, scything down whoever strayed
across her blind, erratic path. . And
where was her softer self in these dreams? Where was the girl she
knew existed beneath that hard metallic shell? Nowhere. There was no
sign of her; of the girl she felt she ought to have been. Or was it
true what her father had said that night? Was it simply that they
were made of sterner stuff? Of iron? Of all
this she had said nothing. At home, she had acted as though nothing
were happening deep within her. As if it were all done with and
forgotten. Yet she knew it was far from over, for she was undergoing
a change—a change as profound and as radical as any being
suffered by the greater world beyond her. And maybe there was even
some connection. Maybe the change in her mirrored that outer
change—was some strange kind of recognition of the reality of
events? She
looked down at herself, at the simple dark blue one-piece she was
wearing. It was what she always wore when she accompanied her father,
its neat, military cut fitting in with her surroundings. Yet today it
felt different. Today it felt wrong. ' "Jelka?" She
turned, surprised, facing her father. "I
didn't hear you ..." "No
. . ." He smiled and reached out, holding her upper arm gently
with his bright, golden hand. "You were miles away, weren't you?
What were you thinking of, my love?" She
looked down. "That I'll miss you," she said, hiding behind
the partial truth. "And
I you," he said, drawing her close and embracing her. "But
it won't be long. Ten days at most. Oh, and guess who I'll be
seeing?" She
shrugged, unable to guess. "Shih
Ward . . . you know, young Kim, the Claybom lad ... the scientist." "You're
seeing him?" He
held up a small white envelope. "I'm having lunch with him, it
seems. Li Yuan wants me to deliver this personally. The gods know
what it is, but it'll be nice to see the young fellow again." "I.
. ." She licked at her lips, wanting to say something, to give
him some message to pass on, then shook her head. "I'll miss
you," she said finally, hugging him tightly. "I'll miss you
a lot." He
grinned. "Now, now. You'll be all right, my boy." Then,
realizing what he'd said, he laughed. "Now, why did I say that,
eh?" "I
don't know," she said quietly, burying her head in his chest. "I
really don't know." THE
CANVAS filled the end wall of the studio, dominating the room. It was
not merely that it dwarfed the other paintings—for the new
piece was easily ten, maybe twenty times the size of the artist's
earlier work—it was the color, the richness, the sheer scale of
the composition that caught the eye and drew it in. To the
left of the canvas, what seemed at first glance to be a huge,
silver-white mountain resolved itself into a tangle of bodies, some
human, some mechanical, the metallic figures unexpectedly soft and
melting, those of flesh hard, almost brutal in their angularity.
Looking more closely, it could be seen that this great mound of
bodies was formed of two great chains, linked hand to hand, like a
gigantic coil of anchor rope, the whole thing spiraling upward into
the blue-black darkness of deep space at the top right of the canvas:
a huge double helix of men and machines, twisting about itself,
striving toward a single, brilliant point of light. In the
foreground, beneath the toppling mass of bodies, was the great ocean,
the Atlantic, incongruously calm, its surface shimmering in the
sunlight. Yet beneath its placid skin could be discerned the forms of
ancient ruins—of Han temples and pagodas, of stone dragons and
palaces and the skeletal framework of a rotting imperial junk. It was
shan shui—"mountains and water"—but shan
shui transformed. This was the new art. An art of symbiosis
and technological aspiration that was the cultural embodiment of the
old Dispersionist ideals: Futur-Kunst, or Science-Art, as it was
called. And Hey-demeier, the artist, was its leading exponent. Old
Man Lever stood before the painting, some twenty ch'i back,
his face creased into an intense frown. He had brought* Heydemeier
over from Europe six months back and installed him here, giving him
whatever he needed to pursue his art. And this—this immense
vision in oils—was the first fruit of that investment. He
turned to Heydemeier and nodded. "It's good. Very good indeed.
What is it called?" Heydemeier
drew at the thin black cigarette and gave a tight smile of
satisfaction. "I'm glad you like it, Shih Lever. I've
called it 'The New World.'" Lever
laughed briefly. "That's good. I like that. But why so big?" Heydemeier
moved past the old man, going right up to the canvas. For a while he
studied the fine detail of the picture, brushing the surface of it
lightly with the fingertips of one hand, then he turned back, facing
Lever. "To
be honest with you, Shih Lever, I wasn't sure it would work, coming
here to America. I thought it might be a step backward. But there's
something very different about this place. It's more alive here than
in Europe. You get the feeling that this is where the future is." Lever
was studying the young man hawkishly. "And that's where this
comes from?" "Partly."
Heydemeier drew on the cigarette again. "Now that it exists I
realize that this was what I was always striving for, even in the
smaller works. What was lacking was a sense of space—of
outwardness. Being here, away from the confinement of Europe, freed
that. Allowed it, if you like." "I
can see that." Heydemeier
half turned, indicating the great swirl of bodies. "So. There it
is, Shih Lever. Yours. As we agreed." Lever
smiled. "It's an important work, Shih Heydemeier. I don't
need experts or advisors to tell me that. I can see it with my
own eyes. It's a masterpiece. Maybe the start of something wholly
new, wouldn't you say?" Heydemeier
looked down, trying to conceal his pleasure at the old man's words,
but Lever could see that he had touched his weak point—his
vanity. He smiled inwardly and pressed on. "I
mentioned my advisors. Well, to be frank with you, Shih Heydemeier,
it was on their word that you came here. They said you were the best.
Without equal, and with your best work ahead of you. So it has
proved. And that's good. I can use that. I like working with the
best. In everything." Lever
went across, standing there face to.face with the artist. "You're
a clever man, Ernst Heydemeier. You understand how things are—how
they work. So you'll not take offense when I say that my interest in
you was strictly commercial. A Company like mine—like
ImmVac—needs its showpieces, its cultural totems, if you like.
And the more prestigious those totems, the better. They give a
Company great face. But this. . ." He reached out and gently
touched the surface of the painting, a look of genuine awe in his
face. "This goes beyond that. This transcends what I asked of
you." Heydemeier
turned, looking back at his work. "Maybe. But it makes you
wonder sometimes . . . Whether you'll ever create anything half as
good again. Whether you can ever make something more . . . original." He
turned back, meeting Lever's eyes. "But that's the challenge,
neh? To surprise oneself." Lever
watched him a moment, then nodded. "It's yours, Ernst. The
painting, I mean. Keep it." "Keep
it?" Heydemeier gave a laugh of surprise. "I don't
understand . . ." Lever
looked past him, enjoying the moment. "On one condition. That
you paint something for me." Heydemeier
looked down, then gave the tiniest shake of his head. His voice was
apologetic. "I thought you understood, Shih Lever. I thought
we'd discussed this already. I don't undertake commissions. This . .
." He looked up, meeting Lever's eyes unflinchingly. "This
was different. Was my rent, if you like. Repayment of your
hospitality. But what you're
talking of... that's different again. I have to be free to paint what
I want. It just doesn't work, otherwise." "I
understand. But look at that. Look at it again, Ernst Heydemeier.
That's a moment in your life—in your career—that you
won't repeat. Oh, you may paint things which are better technically,
but will you ever recapture that one moment of vision? Besides, I
could resell this tomorrow and make, what, five, maybe ten million
;yuan. As to what it'll be worth ten years from now . . ." He
paused, letting that sink in. "And what am I asking for in
exchange? Three, maybe four days of your time." Heydemeier
turned away, his discomfort and uncertainty evident in every muscle
of his long, gaunt body. "I
don't know, Shih Lever. I..." "Okay.
I won't force the issue. Keep it anyway. Let it be my gift to you.
But let me tell you what it was I wanted. Just hear me out, okay?" Heydemeier
turned, facing the old man again. Whatever he had expected from this
meeting, it had not been this. He stood there, bemused, his earlier
composure shattered. "All right," he said resignedly. "I'll
listen, but that's all. . ." "Of
course." Lever smiled, relaxing now he had brought him this far.
"It's a simple little thing really . . ." Twenty
minutes later, as Lever was climbing into his sedan, a messenger
came. He tore the envelope open impatiently, knowing even before he
glanced at it who it was from. This was the second time in the last
twenty-four hours that his son, Michael, had written to him about the
freezing of his accounts. "Damn
the boy!" he said, angry at being chased up in this manner. "Who
the hell does he think he is! He can damn well wait. . ." He
held the letter out stiffly, waiting for his secretary to take it,
then, changing his mind, he drew it back. "No.
Give me brush and ink. I'll give him his answer now." "There,"
he said, a moment later. "Maybe that will teach him manners!" He
stepped up into the sedan again, letting the servant draw the
curtains about him, but the satisfaction he had felt only moments
before had gone, replaced by a blinding fury at his son. Well,
Michael would learn just how
decisive he could be when pushed to it. It was about time he
understood how things really were. He
shuddered and sat back, reminding himself of the days successes—of
the unexpected thrill of the auction that morning, the pleasant and
productive lunch with Representative Hartmann, and his "negotiations"
with Heydemeier. But this last—this final matter with his
son—had taken the bloom off his day. "Damn
the boy!" he said again, turning the heavy ring on his left-hand
index finger, unconscious that he was doing so. "Damn him to
hell!" JELKA
CRUMPLED UP the note and threw it down, angry with herself. Angry
that she couldn't find the words to express what she had been feeling
that night. Or
maybe it wasn't that at all. Maybe it was simply that she had wanted
to hurt the young lieutenant; that, in a funny way, she'd needed
to. But if that was true, what kind of creature did that make
her? She
sat back, taking a long breath, trying to calm herself, but there was
so much darkness in her; so much unexpressed violence. Why, she
couldn't even write a simple letter of apology without wanting to hit
out at something! She
stood, looking about her at the chaos of her room. Sketches of
uniforms and weaponry, of machines and fighting soldiers, cluttered
the facing wall, while to her left a number of old campaign maps
covered the face of her wardrobe. A combat robe hung over the back of
the chair beside her unmade bed, while nearby, in a box in the
corner, a selection of flails and staffs and practice swords reminded
her of how long she had spent perfecting her skills with each. Above
the box, high up on the wall, was a brightly colored poster of
Mu-Lan, dressed in full military armor. Mu-Lan, the warrior princess,
famed throughout history for her bravery and skill. Mu-Lan
. . . the name her girlfriends called her. She
swallowed, her anger turned to bitterness. He had made her this. Year
by year he had trimmed and shaped her. Year by year he had molded
her, until she was this thing of steel and sinew. Or was
that fair? Was her father really to blame? Wasn't it true what he had
said that night? Wasn't it simply that she was of his blood, Tolonen,
with the nature of their kind? Hadn't she glimpsed something of that
on the island that time? Hadn't she seen her own reflection in the
rocks and icy waters of that northern place? So maybe it was true.
Maybe he wasn't to blame. Even so, if she had had a mother... She
caught her breath. Slowly she sat again. If
she had had a mother. . . What then? Would it all have been
different? Would she have turned out normal? She
laughed; a strange, bleak sound. What, after all, was normal? Was
"normal" what the others were? For if that was so,
then she didn't wish to be normal. But to be as she was, that was
dreadful, horrible. Unbearable. She
went through to the kitchen and took a refuse sack from the strip
beside the freezer, then returned to her room. She stood there,
looking about her numbly, wondering where to start. Mu-Lan,
perhaps . . . She
went across and ripped the poster from the wall, stuffing it down
into the sack. Then, in a frenzy, she worked her way around the
walls, tearing down the pictures and sketches, the posters and the
maps, thrusting them all down into the sack, grunting with the
effort. Finally she emptied the weapons box into the sack and tied
the neck. She
stood back, looking about her at the bare walls. It was as if she had
been dreaming all these years; sleepwalking her way through the days.
Oh, there had been moments when she had woken—like the time she
had defied him over the marriage to Hans Ebert—but for the most
part she had colluded in her fate. But now all that must change. From
here on she must be mistress of her own destiny. Lifting
the sack she went back through, into the kitchen. Waving the serving
girl away, she stood there, over the portable incinerator, half in
trance, thinking of her mother. In
some other world, perhaps, it was different. There, beneath an open
sky, she was herself, complete. For an instant she pictured it;
imagined the log house on the hill beside the forest, the stream
below; turned
and saw, as if in memory, her father standing in the doorway, her
mother—the image of herself—beside him, his arm about her
shoulder. Felt herself turn, her skirts swirling out about her naked
legs, her bare feet running on the sunlit grass . . . She
closed her eyes, the pain of longing almost overwhelming her. In some
other world ... The
click of the incinerator brought her back. She looked about her, as
if coming to from the depths of sleep, then shuddered, the tension in
her unabated. What wouldn't she give to be able to live like that. To
be like that, open and whole. Maybe
so. But that was only dreams. This here was the world she inhabited.
This massive, brutal world of levels. This Yang world, heavy with the
breath of men. And what were her dreams against the weight of that
reality? Nothing. And
yet she would become herself. She would. For to be like
them—to be "normal" in the way that they were
normal—would be a living death for her. A slow and painful
suffocation. And she would rather die than suffer that. She
had been running from it. All her life she had been running from it.
But now, suddenly, she was awake. That moment at the Graduation Ball
. . . she understood it now. That—that awful moment when she
had turned and goaded him—had been the moment when she had
stopped running. The moment of awakening, when she had turned, quite
literally, to confront the very thing she hated. "I'm
sorry." she said softly. "It wasn't you, it was . .
." She
shivered, understanding finally what had happened to her that
evening. It wasn't Lieutenant Lothar Bachman she had meant to hurt.
It was what he represented. He ... well, he had been like . . . She
looked about her, her eyes coming to rest on the figure of the
kitchen god, squatting on the shelf above the cooking utensils, and
nodded to herself. Yes.
It was as if she had been confronted by the clay figurine of an evil
demon; a figure that she had had to smash to be free of its
enchantment. And
was she free? „ Jelka
looked down at her long, slender hands, seeing them clearly, as if
she had never seen them before. No, not free. Not yet. But she would
be. For she was awake now. At long last, she was awake. "Mary?
Have you got the file of old MemSys contacts?" Emily
looked up from behind the desk screen and met Michael Lever's eyes,
conscious of the slight edge in his voice. This business with his
father was getting to him, especially since the Old Man had frozen
the accounts. "It's
here," she said, reaching into her top left-hand drawer and
taking out the bulky folder. "Not that it'll do you any good.
None of them will talk to us, let alone contemplate trading with us.
They're all scared as hell of taking on your father, Michael. You'd
be better off trashing this and starting anew." "Maybe."
He hesitated, then came across and took the folder from her. "Even
so, I'm going to try each one of them again. Someone's got to give." "Why?"
There was a strange hardness in her eyes. "Your father holds all
the cards. Every last one of them. And you've got nothing." "Maybe,"
he said again, not challenging what she'd said. "But I've got to
keep trying. I can't go back. Not now." "No."
She said it softly, sympathetically, knowing how much pressure he'd
been under these past few weeks, and how well he'd coped with it. The
old Michael Lever wouldn't have coped, not one tenth as well. "As
for the other matter. . . I'll let you know if we hear anything,
okay?" He
smiled uncertainly. "Okay. I'll get to it." When
he was gone, she sat back, combing her fingers through her short
blond hair. The other matter—the freezing of the accounts—
was what lay behind his current tenseness. If the Old Man refused . .
. She took a deep breath, trying to see ahead. What would she do if
Michael gave up and went back to his father? She'd be out of a job,
for a start. Worse than that, Old Man Lever would make sure she'd
never work again. Not in North America, anyway. And maybe other
places too. Wherever his long arm reached. But
strangely enough her own fate didn't concern her half so much as the
prospect of Michael giving up. Of him succumbing after coming this
far. She'd survive. She always did. But Michael... If he gave up now
it would destroy him—cripple him emotionally. If he gave up now
he would be tied—tied forever to his father's will, whether his
father lived or not. She
shuddered and looked about her at the room in which she sat. In three
short weeks they had built this thing from scratch. And though it was
as nothing compared to MemSys and the great ImmVac Corporation, it
was at least something. New growth, not an expansion of the old. Yes,
and left alone it would have grown and grown. Michael and Btyn were a
good team. Innovative, capable, resourceful. As good as any she had
worked for these past three years. The Company would have been big.
As it was, it was likely it would be dead, and probably within the
hour. "NuShih
Jennings?" She
looked up again. It was Chan, the guard. He'd slid back the outer
door and was looking in at her. "What
is it, Chan Long?" "There's
a messenger here," he said quietly, ominously. "From
ImmVac. I think it's an answer." She
nodded. Chan knew as well as anyone what was going on. That was his
business. And like her, he knew what it was likely to mean. She
smiled tightly, feeling sorry for the man. "Okay.
Search him and show him through. But show the man respect. It's not
his fault." Chan
gave a small bow and slid the door closed again. A minute or so later
the door slid fully back and Chan came through, ushering in a tall,
dark-haired Hung Moo in the bright red uniform of ImmVac's messenger
service. From the way he glanced at Chan as he passed, it was clear
he had not welcomed being body-searched, but Emily was taking no
chances. She
stood, coming around the desk. "You have a message, I
understand? From Shih Lever." He
hesitated, then gave the slightest nod of his head. Inwardly
Emily smiled ironically. If she had been a man, his bow would
have been low, to the waist, perhaps, but as she was merely a woman .
. . "I
have a note," the man answered, looking away from her, as if he
had dismissed her. "It is to be given directly into the hands of
young Master Lever." She
took a long, deep breath. Young Master Lever. How clearly
those words revealed Old Man Lever's attitude toward his son. How
subtly and damagingly they placed Michael. She
moved closer, until her face was almost pressed against the man's. "I
will tell Shih Lever that you are here. If you would be seated,"
she pointed past him, indicating the chair on the far side of the
reception room. "He is a very busy man, but he will see you when
he can." As she
turned away, she could see it in her mind. The thing to do was to
keep the messenger waiting—an hour, two hours, maybe even to
the close of business. That way the message would get back to Old Man
Lever that his son was not to be treated like a troublesome infant,
but respected as a man. That was what she would have done, anyway.
But she was not Michael. Michael wanted an answer. Wanted an end to
the tension and misery of not knowing. She
hesitated, then slid back the door. Inside she closed it behind her,
then went across. Kustow was sitting to the left behind his desk,
Michael to the right. They watched her cross the floor, their eyes
filled with a tense expectation. "It's
here," she said simply. She
saw how the color drained from Michael's face. He closed the MemSys
folder, then turned in his chair, looking across at Kustow. "Well,
Bryn, what do you think?" Kustow
sat back, eyeing his partner somberly. "I think he's given you
the finger, Michael. That's what I think." "But
he can't," Michael said quietly. "Surely he can't? I mean,
it's my money. Legally my money. If I took the matter to court. . ." Kustow
shrugged fatalistically. "You'd win, certainly, but not for
several years. You, better than anyone, should know how expert your
father's lawyers are at drawing things out. And in the meantime youVe
got nothing. Not even this . . ."
,, "Maybe,
but . . . ach . . .what gives him the right, Bryn? What gives him the
rucking right?" For a
moment all of the anger and frustration he was feeling was there in
Michael Lever's face. Then, with a shudder, he took hold of himself
again and looked across at Emily. "Okay.
Show him in. Let's hear the worst." She
went back and brought the messenger through, watching as Michael took
the envelope from him and slit it open. He read it through, then, his
hand trembling, passed it to Kustow at his side. "Okay,"
he said, meeting the messenger's eyes, his whole manner suddenly
harder, more dignified. "Tell my father that I note what he says
and that I thank him for his generosity." "Is
that it?" the man asked, staring back at him. "You
may go," Michael said, letting nothing of what he was feeling
enter his voice. "YouVe done what was asked of you." When
the messenger had gone, Michael turned, facing Kustow, his shoulders
hunched suddenly, his eyes miserable, the pretense of dignified
defiance cast off. "That's it, then. The end of things. . ." Kustow
studied the note a moment, then looked back at him. "Is that
what you want?" "No.
But what are our options? There was seventeen million in those four
accounts. Without it. . ." "Without
it we start again. Trim things down. Reassess our priorities. Work
out what we can do. WeVe still got my money." "Two
million. Where will that get us?" "It'll
get us started, that's what. As for the rest, we'll come up with
something. We can borrow from the East Asian markets, maybe. Or from
his major business rivals." "But
you said you didn't want to borrow. You said that that would make us
vulnerable." Kustow
smiled. "True. But I said that before your father turned nasty
on us." He handed Michael back the note, then put his arm about
his shoulders. "Look at it this way, Michael. Your money would
have given us a cushion—might have made the ride a little less
bumpy—but it was never the main component of our strategy.
Talent, ability,
innovative ideas, that's what this Company was going to be based on,
and it still can be. But I can't do it alone, Michael. I need you.
And you need me." "But
what about our plans . . . ?" "As
I said. We scale things down. Put a rein on our ambitions for a
time." He shrugged. "Look, this'll set us back, I don't
deny it, but it doesn't have to put an end to things, not unless you
want it to. So what about it, Michael? Are you going to crawl back to
him, your tail between your legs, after all weVe done and said, or
are you going to spit in his eye and carry on?" Michael
glanced at Emily, then turned back, studying Kustow closely, his eyes
recalling all they had been through those past few years. Gripping
Kustow's arms firmly, he nodded. "Okay,"
he said quietly. "We'll do it your way. If it fails we're no
worse off, neh?" "Not
the tiniest bit. . ." Again
he nodded, a smile slowly returning to his lips. "Okay. Then
let's do it. Let's spit in his eye." IT was
A DARK-LIT, shabby place that stank of cheap perfumes and sour
liquor. The carpet underfoot was threadbare, the walls covered with
inexpensive erotoprints. The girls, lined up against one of the
walls, were in character; they too were cheap and worn, their faces
overpainted, their bodies mere parodies of desire. "Well?"
said K'ang, turning to face Lehmann, a grin splitting his big face.
"What do you want? It's my treat. I always bring my boys here,
once a month. Gives them a break. A bit of fun." Lehmann
looked about him, letting no sign of the disgust he felt show in his
face. "No," he said simply. "Come
on . . ." K'ang made to take him by the arm, then remembered how
he felt about that and backed off. "You're sure ? I mean, if
it's not your thing. If. . ." The
look on Lehmann's face warned him not to say what he was thinking.
K'ang shrugged and turned back to the others. "I'll
have the fat one," said Ling Wo, K'ang's chief advisor. "Which
one?" said the Madam, coming across to him and winking. She
herself was grossly fat and, like her girls, wore little or nothing
about her genitals, as if such crude display could make her more
desirable. Ling Wo let her fondle him and leaned close to whisper in
her ear. "Have
them both!" she said and laughed raucously, slapping his
shoulder. "Shih K'ang here will pay, won't you, dear?" K'ang
laughed loudly and said, "Of course. Have both, Ling Wo!"
But his eyes said something different, and Ling Wo chose between the
girls. Lehmann,
watching, saw the Madam look from one man to the other, then turn to
her girls and make a face. One by
one the others made their choices, K'ang's three advisors first, then
Peck, the new man from the south who had joined, them only a week
back. Peck
was an old acquaintance of Soucek's and had worked for K'ang A-yin
years before. Now he was back, after some trouble with Security. He
had come in as Lieutenant, to strengthen the tong. Or so the story
went. To Lehmann it read otherwise. Peck had been brought in to
counter him. To bring the odds back in K'ang's favor. Not that it
mattered. Then
it was Soucek's turn. "I'll
pass this time, Shih K'ang." K'ang
laughed. "What do you mean, pass? Since when did you ever pass?
You gone off girls or something?" Soucek
lifted his big, long head and met K'ang's eyes. "I'll pass,
that's all." K'ang
went quiet. He looked from Soucek to Lehmann, then looked down at the
floor. When he looked up again he was smiling, but his eyes, as ever,
were cold. "You don't like the way I treat you, Jiri, is that
it?" Soucek
shook his head. "You treat me fine, K'ang A-yin, but I just
don't want it this time. Next time okay. But now . . ." His face
was hard, expressionless. K'ang
looked across at the remaining girls, including the one he always
had—the best of them, though it said little for her—and
then smiled. "Okay. You sit here with Lehmann and chat, neh?"
And at that he laughed. He turned to Lehmann. "Mind you, Stefan,
you'd be better off fucking
your brains out than trying to get a decent conversation out of Jiri
there." Then,
laughing, the Madam on one arm, the girl on the other, he followed
the others inside. Lehmann
waited a moment, then turned, looking across at Soucek. "Why
didn't you go in?" Soucek
met Lehmann's eyes. "I was watching you. Seeing how you saw it."
• "And?" "You
don't like all this, do you?" "What
does it matter what I like? You're K'ang's man." "That's
not forever." "Nothing's
forever. But that isn't what you meant, is it?"
;, Soucek
was about to answer when the Madam came bursting in again. "You
boys want anything? Drinks?" Lehmann
looked at her blankly, then, "Yes. Wine will do." Soucek
half-lidded his eyes, curious. He had never seen Lehmann touch
alcohol before. The Madam left the room, then returned with two
drinks, setting them down on a small table at the far end of the
room. "There.
You'll be comfy over here." Lehmann
looked at her again, such hostility behind the blankness of his face
that the Madam's smile faded momentarily, then came back stronger, as
if to cover up the unease she felt in his presence. "If there's
anything else you^need, just call." They
waited until she went, then sat, Lehmann with his back to the wall,
Soucek facing him. The two drinks rested on the low table between
them. "Tell
me about Peck," Lehmann said. "Peck?"
Soucek laughed coldly. "Peck is ying tzu." Lehmann
lowered his head slightly. He had heard of ying tzu—
shadows—and their services. They were trained specialists,
contracted out to gangland bosses. Like the chan shih they were a
staple of the underworld here, though far more rare. "That
costs." Soucek
nodded and reached out to take his glass, but Lehmann put out a hand,
stopping him. "Why are you telling me?" "A
warning." Lehmann
studied him carefully, his gaze penetrating. "Just that?" Soucek
smiled again, his thin-lipped mouth an ugly, lifeless thing. "No."
He hesitated and then looked down. "Because you're strong." "And
K'ang isn't?" Soucek
looked up. "He's strong. In some ways. But you. . ." He
shook his head. Lehmann
was silent a long time after that. Then he picked up his glass and
sniffed at it. "I'm K'ang's man now." Soucek
watched him; saw him put the glass down untouched. "Now?" Lehmann's
eyes seemed to soften marginally, as if he was pleased that Soucek
had understood him, but still he didn't smile. Soucek looked down at
his glass and nodded to himself. In this as in all else from now on
he would copy Lehmann. If Lehmann shunned women, he too would shun
women. If Lehmann touched no drink, he too would do the same. For
there was a secret in all this, he saw. A kind of strength. Macht,
the others called it, in the old slang of these parts. Power. "What
do you want?" Lehmann's
question surprised him. To be like you, he thought, but what
he said was different. "I don't want to be here forever. I..." He
stopped and turned in his chair. Six men had come into the room. Two
of them had been talking when they came in, but on seeing Lehmann and
Soucek there they had fallen silent. As Soucek watched, the Madam
came out and, with a glance across at Lehmann and himself, leaned
close to one of the newcomers and whispered something to him. Then,
with a broad, false smile, she came across again. "Well,
we are busy tonight!" she said with an excessive gaiety that
struck Soucek as rather odd. Then, looking at their glasses, her
smile widened again. "You want fill-ups?" Soucek
turned and looked down at the glasses. They were empty. He looked up
at Lehmann, surprised, but the albino's face was blank. "Why
not?" said Lehmann tonelessly, lifting the glasses and handing
them to her. Soucek
watched Lehmann a moment longer, then turned in time to see the Madam
usher the men out through a door she hadn't used before. She was the
last to go through and as she did, she turned, taking an almost
furtive glance back at them. As
soon as she was gone, Lehmann was on his feet and crossing the room
toward the exit. "What's
happening?" began Soucek, jumping up. « Lehmann
turned suddenly, like an acrobat, his balance perfect. "Just sit
there," he said softly. "Pretend nothing's happening. If
she asks, tell her I've gone for a piss. And whatever you do, don't
touch the drink. It's drugged." at the
door Lehmann paused, slipping to one side as it irised open. No one.
He went through quickly, using the far wall of the corridor to stop
and turn himself, his gun out and searching, then relaxed. The
corridor was empty. Crouching,
he set the gun down, then took off his wristband and turned it inside
out. Quickly he tapped out the contact code. At once the tiny screen
came alight, bloodred. There was a moment's vague activity, then the
screen's color changed and a miniature of Haller's face stared back
at him. "What
the hell time . . . ?" Haller began, then saw it wasn't Becker.
His manner changed at once. "What is it?" Lehmann
spelt out the situation, gave the location, and told him what was
needed. "You've got eight minutes maximum. Bring Becker. Go in
at the front. And remember, no noise." He cut
contact, put the wristband back on, and picked up the gun. Then,
pausing only to look back along the corridor, he began to run. There
would be a back entrance. Sealed maybe. Guarded probably. But he
would face that when he got there. It was
a narrow side alley with three ceiling lamps. He stood in part
shadow, looking down. There was one man, his back to him, expecting
nothing yet. Unhesitant, Lehmann moved quickly between the distinct
pools of light and came behind the man silently, wrapping the fine,
hard wire about his neck with a graceful looping of his hands. The
man's cry of surprise and pain was cut off sharply, almost before it
fonned. Lehmann let the lifeless body fall, the wire embedded
deep in the flesh. He
tested the door's frame for weaknesses, pushing at it, then leaning
hard against it. Moving back from it, he took a breath, then kicked
twice, in two separate places. The door fell inward, the crude
latches snapped off. Quickly
he moved through the dust cloud, conscious of the noise he'd had to
make. Almost at once he was facing one of the Madam's girls who had
come out of her room to see what was happening. He grabbed her, one
hand about her mouth, then pushed her back into the room, looking
about him. She was alone. With a quick, strong movement, he snapped
her neck and lay her down. Then, shutting the door behind him, he
went back for the dead man. He had
been lucky so far. No one else had heard, and no one had seen the
corpse lying there in the shadows by the door. Quickly, grunting with
the effort, he dragged it inside, then set the door back in place
behind him. Would
they be missing him yet? Getting suspicious? It was almost five
minutes now since he'd gone for that piss. Was Soucek all right? He put
the dead man in with the corpse of the whore, then came out again.
For a moment he stood there, listening. Things seemed okay. He
took a breath, then went on, half running down the long, dark
passageway, following it around. There was a door to the left. He
paused, lifting the flap. Peck was inside, naked, on his back, a
busty blonde riding him vigorously. Lehmann dropped the flap silently
and went on. At the
door to the reception area he stopped again, listening. He could hear
Soucek's voice, and the Madam's. All seemed fine. He went through. He saw
the relief on the Madam's face, and knew at once what she'd been
thinking. "IVe changed my mind," he said, before she could
say anything. "There's a girl down the end there, I..." He saw
her smile widen and again could read her thoughts. You like to watch.
He looked away, as if he had been caught out, and stood back as
she pushed past. Soucek had stood up. Lehmann nodded and signaled for
him to come. As she
opened the door Lehmann came behind her and put his hand over her
mouth so that she couldn't cry out. He felt her tense, could feel the
sudden fear in every muscle of her body. She was staring at the two
corpses wide-eyed. "You
can join them or you can help me," Lehmann said quietly. She
nodded and he released his grip. She was breathing heavily, trying to
control herself. "Just
do what you were going to do. Give us three minutes, then send them
in." She
turned, surprised. Her mouth worked silently, its hideous rouge
making ugly shapes, then she nodded. She made to step past him, but
he reached out and held her. "Remember," he said, drawing
her up with one hand until her face was just beneath his. "Say a
thing and you're dead. Those others, they're dead anyway. My men are
coming here now. But you . . . you can live. If you do what you're
told." She
swallowed, then found her voice. "Okay. I'll do what you say." He
pushed her away, disgusted by the foulness of her breath, the painted
corruption of her face. He would kill her when it was done. When
she was gone, Soucek turned to him. "What do you want me to do?"
he said quietly. He had drawn his gun. Lehmann
reached out and took the gun. "No noise. Use your knife. Or
this." He handed Soucek a garrote with short matt-black handles.
"Or best of all, use your hands." Soucek
stared at him. "Are you serious?" "Yes.
Now no noise. Understand?" "Why?" Lehmann
glared at him. "Just do it. Right?" Soucek
nodded, chastened by Lehmann's look. They
went out and down the passageway. At the turn, Lehmann stopped and
pointed over to the right. "There," he whispered. "In
that doorway. They'll not see you when they come around." He
turned and pointed back a little way. "I'll be there, ahead of
them. When they're past, you come up behind them. You should be able
to take two of them at least." Soucek's
eyes widened, then, remembering what his informer, Mas-son, had said
about Lehmann's ferocity, nodded and got into place in the doorway.
He had only moments to wait. One of
them came through on his own and stood there, listening. Distinct
sounds of sexual pleasure were coming from several of the rooms now.
Soucek, from his hiding place, saw the man hesitate, then turn back
to the door, beckoning the others through. They
moved quickly, as though this had all been planned and rehearsed. But
as they turned the corner Lehmann came at them. One went down at
once, a knife in his throat. A second followed a moment later as
Lehmann kicked high and shattered his nose. From behind them Soucek
moved quickly, thrusting with his knife, then swinging his blade
high, catching the one who was turning back on him in the chest. There
was the faintest groan from one of the men, but otherwise it was a
strangely silent struggle, a violent, desperate conflict, fought in
the deep shadow of the passageway, as if in the blackest of
nightmares. In less than a minute it was over. Soucek
stood there, panting, his arms shaking, and looked across at Lehmann,
amazed. "Mutes,"
Lehmann said, as if it explained everything. Soucek
laughed softly. "But they were talking. I heard them . . ." "That
one . . ." said Lehmann, pointing to the one who lay there, the
big throwing knife deeply embedded in his throat. "And that one
over there." The man he indicated was face down, a garrote wound
tightly about his neck. "The rest had been operated on." Soucek
bent down and looked. It was true. Four of the dead men had had their
larynxes surgically removed. "Why?" he asked, looking up. "It's
an old trick. I saw it at once." From
the nearest room the sounds of pleasure grew louder briefly, then
died away. Then, from the end door, stepped two more figures. Soucek
tensed, reaching for his knife, but it was only Haller and Becker. "Just
in time, I see," said Haller, grinning. "Keep
your voice down," said Lehmann in a fierce whisper. "YouVe
brought the bags?" Haller
half turned. "Becker has them." "Good.
Then let's get these bodies through to the end room and tidy up." They
worked quickly, taking the corpses down and piling them onto the bed
beside the whore and the house guard. Then, while Haller cleaned up
in the corridor, Becker got to work. Soucek
looked away from the grisly work and stared at Lehmann. "I don't
understand. What's going on?" Lehmann
watched Becker a moment, then turned to face Soucek. "Who did
this, do you think? Who would set K'ang up this way?" Soucek
thought a moment. "Lo Han?" "Exactly.
It had to be Lo Han. K'ang A-yin threatens no one else. And Lo Han
would have heard that both I and Peck had joined up with him. He'd be
worried by that. He'd think there was a reason for it." "Maybe.
But why this? Why the silence? The secrecy?" Lehmann
looked down at Becker again. "You could say that I didn't want
to inconvenience S/iih K'ang, or interrupt his pleasure, but the
truth is I want to meet Lo Han. To find out a bit more about him." Soucek
made to speak, then stopped. Lehmann turned, looking at what he'd
seen. It was the Madam. She stood in the doorway, her mouth open in
horror, watching Becker. . "How did he pay you?" Lehmann
asked, looking at her coldly. For a
moment she seemed not to have heard him, then her eyes jerked away
from what Becker was doing and looked back at Lehmann. "What?" "What
did Lo Han give you to set this up?" "I
... I..." she stammered, then, turning aside, she began to
heave. Lehmann
looked away, disgusted. "Never mind. You can tell Shih Soucek
here." He looked back at Soucek. "We'll be gone in a while.
Tell K'ang that I got tired of waiting. Tell him I've gone looking
for other sport." "And
if he asks what?" "Tell
him it's drugs. Tell him IVe gone to get some drugs." THE
RESTAURANT had been cleared, guards posted at every entrance. Beneath
the broad slatted steps, elite marksmen lay behind low, makeshift
barriers, their high-powered rifles covering the approach corridors,
while in the busy kitchens Wu Shih's own personal taster sampled each
dish as it was presented to him, sending them through only when he
was completely satisfied. At the
center of the dark, tiled surface Marshal Tolonen sat facing Kim
across a table crowded with silver trays of delicacies. Briefly the
old man turned away, talking quietly to his ensign, then he turned
back, facing Kim again. "I'm
sorry about all this, Kim, but Wu Shih is determined that nothing
happens to me while I'm in his City. It might seem a little much, but
such measures are necessary these days. We live in difficult times." "Difficult
but interesting, neh?" Tolonen
laughed. "So some might say. For myself I'd prefer things a
little duller and a little safer." "And
is that why you're here, Marshal Tblonen? To make things a little
safer?" "Call
me Knut, boy," he said, leaning forward and beginning to fill
his plate with various bits and pieces. "But yes, you might say
I'm here to make things safer. Between you and me, I'm not quite sure
what it is I'm looking for, but I know the smell of rottenness when I
catch a whiff of it, and there's something rotten buried in these
levels, you can be sure." "Is
there any way I can help?" Kim asked, reaching for a plate. Tolonen
looked back at him. "It's nice of you to ask, but until I know
what exactlyis been going on here, it's hard to say what I'll need.
I'll bear it in mind, though, boy. And very kind of you too. Oh, and
by the way . . ." The old man felt in his jacket pocket with the
fingers of his golden hand, then passed a sealed note across the
table to him. "Li Yuan asked me to hand this to you personally." Kim
took the note and, setting down his plate, turned it between his
fingers, studying the great seal a moment. He glanced across, noting
how the Marshal was busy filling his plate, then looked down again,
slitting the envelope open with a fingernail. Inside
was a single sheet, handwritten in Mandarin; the message brief and
familiar. Dear
Kim, You
have been much in my thoughts of late. Working on the proposed
amendments to the Edict, I have often stopped and thought how helpful
it might have been to have had you at my shoulder, advising me. But
before you mistake me, this is no appeal for help, but a heartfelt
thank you for all you have done in the past. I merely wished you to
know that should you ever need help, in any way, you have only to
ask. I hope all goes well for you. With
respect, Li
Yuan He looked up. Tolonen was
watching him, smiling faintly. "So . . . how's it all going?" "Things
are fine, though there's not much to report, really. IVe been holding
fire on the business front, while IVe been working on some new
patents." "Patents,
eh?" Tolonen narrowed his eyes, as if he thought the whole thing
slightly dubious. Kim
laughed. "Nothing illegal, I assure you. In fact, to be honest
with you, I was surprised to learn what could actually be done within
the existing guidelines. IVe spent a long time recently, checking out
what was already on file . . ." Tolonen
interrupted him. "I'm sorry, boy, I don't understand . . ." "At
the Central Patents Office," Kim explained quickly. "It was
hard work sifting through all that stuff, but worth it in the end.
Originally, all I wanted was to check whether existing patents had
been registered in any of the areas I was working in." "And
were there?" "One
or two, but nothing even vaguely like what I proposed. However, in
looking through the register, I noticed that there were whole
areas—areas permitted under the Edict—which had
essentially gone undeveloped these last one hundred and twenty
years." Tolonen
eyed him curiously. "Whole areas? You mean, like whole fields of
research?" Kim
shook his head. "In the context of what's there—and we're
talking about several billion patents on file—you'd probably
consider these 'gaps' quite small, but in terms of the research
possibilities, they're vast. I could have spent months there, simply
locating more such 'gaps.'" "I
see." Tolonen took a mouthful of tender pork and chewed for a
moment, considering. "Have you ever thought of speeding the
process up?" "How
do you mean?" Tolonen
turned his head slightly, indicating the access slot just beneath his
right ear. "One of these. I'd have thought it would make your
job a whole lot easier." "A
wire?" Kim looked away, suddenly uncomfortable. "I don't
know. . ." The
old man leaned toward Kim. "Looking at things from the outside,
it strikes me that more than half your work involves what you might
crudely call 'processing' information. Now, if you were to find a way
of speeding that up, you'd get a lot more done, surely?" "Maybe." Tolonen
laughed gruffly. "The only thing that surprises me is that you
hadn't thought of it yourself. You're usually way ahead of me. Way
ahead!" Kim
looked down, busying himself for a moment filling his plate. When he
looked up again, Tolonen was still watching him. "So
what is it, lad? Are you afraid? Is that it?" "I.
. ." Kim hesitated, not wanting to say what it was. How often
had he thought this one through. How often, sitting there in the
Patents Office, had he yearned for a faster way of doing things, and
come to the same conclusion. Yet against the logic of the thing was a
deep ingrained fear of being wired—of somehow being controlled. "The
operation's simple," Tolonen said. "And I'm certain, if you
wanted it done, Li Yuan's own surgeon would perform the task. Surgeon
Hung is the best there is. And so he should be. He learned his skills
from his father, who did this. Fifty years I've had this. Fifty
years! And it's been a godsend, especially these past six months,
what with all this GenSyn business." "I
don't know," Kim said, meeting his eyes again. "It would
make things easier. There's no doubting that. I just wonder ..." "What?
That it might impair some other part of you?" Tolonen laughed,
and reached across, holding Kim's shoulder briefly with his human
hand. "I've never had your kind of talent, so maybe I'm not the
one to comment on such things, but I've found my own wire nothing but
a help all these years. All I know is that I couldn's have coped
without it. Seriously." Kim
gave a tiny nod. "Maybe." But he still seemed unconvinced. "Well,"
Tolonen said, leaning back again, the pearl-white chopsticks gleaming
in his golden hand, "you think about it, boy. And if you want it
done, I'll arrange everything for you. It's the least I can do." later,
alone in his office, Kim sat there at his desk, toying with the
graphics display on his comset and thinking about what Tolonen had
said. Maybe he should get wired. Maybe he was just being silly about
the whole thing. After all, it wouldn't hurt to be able to process
things a little faster. No, nor was there any evidence that the
procedure impaired creative thought. Quite the opposite, if reports
were true. In fact, there wasn't a single reason not to be wired,
nothing but his own irrational fear. Even so, he held back, unable,
finally, to commit himself. So
what was it? What was he really afraid of? Control,
he thought, unwilling even to utter the word, however softly. I'm
afraid of losing control again. And
maybe that was paranoia, but he wasn't quite convinced. After all,
hadn't he been the one called in by Li Yuan to look at the
feasibility of wiring up the whole population? Hadn't he seen for
himself how easy it would be to take that first simple step? And if
he took that first step by himself? It
isn't the same, he told himself for the hundredth time. The
two things are completely different. And so they were. The kind
of .wiring Tolonen had in mind was nothing like the process Li Yuan
was looking into, yet his mind refused the distinction, preferring to
connect them. Wires in the head. They were a means of control. And if
he took the first step, who was to say that someone else might
not take the next, making him their beast? Nonsense,
a part of him replied: you're talking fearful nonsense
notv, Kim Ward. But
was he? Or was his instinct sound in this? He
huffed, exasperated with himself, then turned, startled, hearing the
faintest rustle of silk behind him. A
young Han stood there, head bowed, a small tray held out before him.
"Forgive me, Master. I have brought ch'a." Kim
relaxed. It was only his bookkeeper, Nong Yan. "I'm
sorry, Yan. I thought I was the only one here," Nong
placed the tray down beside him, then turned, smiling. "And so
you were, Master. I came in half an hour ago and saw that you were
working, so I thought it best not to disturb you." "Ah
. . ." Kim nodded, yet he was surprised. Had he been that deep
in his thoughts, then, that he hadn't heard the door? He set the
comset down and reached across, lifting the chung and pouring two
bowls of the steaming ch'a. Looking up, he offered one to the
young bookkeeper. "So
how are our finances, Yan? Are we in desperate straits yet?" Nong
took the bowl with a terse nod, then squatted on the edge of the
desk, beside the comset. "You know how things are, Master Kim.
All bills are paid, all commitments met. Even so, the underlying
problem remains as before. We are undercapitalized. If we are to
expand. . ." ".
. . we must get new funding," Kim finished for him, studying the
details of the diagram he had sketched out on the comset's screen. "I
hear what you say, Yan, but until I hear from young Shih Lever, we
must struggle on as we are." He took a sip from his bowl, then
looked up at the young man again. "You're happy, I take it,
Yan?" "Happy,
Master?" Nong Yan laughed, his softly rounded face lighting up
briefly. "I have a fine wife and a good Master. Why should I not
be happy?" Kim
smiled. "Good. Then have patience with me, Yan, and we shall all
be rich men." He tapped the surface of the comset's screen with
a fingernail, indicating the faintly webbed smoke-ring shape
there. "Once the patent has been registered things will
begin in earnest. Until then, we hang fire. You know how it is in
this business, Yan. The least said in public the better." "So
it is, Master." "Good."
Kim reached across, clearing the screen, then looked back at Nong
Yan. In the few moments he had been distracted by the young
bookkeeper, he had come to a decision. Taking Toloneji's card from
his wallet, he studied it, memorizing the contact number, then tucked
it back into the top pocket of his jacket. Setting
the ch'a bowl down, he leaned forward, tapping out the number
on the comset's pad, then turned, looking up at Nong Yan. "Thank
you, Yan. If you would leave me now . . ." As the
ensign's face appeared on the screen, Kim turned back, and, with a
confidence he did not wholly feel, asked to be put through to the
Marshal. The
doubts remained. Even so, he would have it done. Besides, it would be
good to visit Tolonen; to sit and talk to him at length. Yes, and to
see his daughter, Jelka, once again. There
was a moment's delay and then Tolonen's face appeared. "Kim! It
was good to see you earlier! Very good indeed!'" Kim
gave the slightest bow. "I felt I ought to thank you for the
meal, Marshal. It was quite excellent." The
old man laughed heartily. "It was, wasn't it!" "As
for the other matter ..." "YouVe
thought it through, I take it?" Kim
nodded. "And?"
Tolonen asked eagerly. "And
I'd like to accept your kind invitation, if I might." Tolonen
leaned back, delighted. "So you're going to have it done, eh?
Good! Excellent! I'll arrange everything. Just let Hauser here know
when you want to come over and we'll organize it all. You won't
regret it, Kim, believe me, you really won't!" "No,"
he said, smiling, reassured somewhat by the old man's genuine
delight. Yet when the screen went dead once more, he felt the
tightness return and wondered briefly if he had acted for the good. Too
late, he thought. And even if that wasn't entirely true, he knew
that he had taken a vital step toward it. Ten
days. He would have it done ten days from now. And as he framed the
thought, an image came to mind: the image of a young woman, tall and
straight and elegant, with hair the color of the sun and eyes the
deep blue of a summer's sky. Kim
frowned, wondering if she would remember him. Whether, in the long
months that had passed since they'd met, she had ever once thought of
him. He leaned forward, tapping out his personal code, summoning up
the diagram again, but his mind was no longer on the patent. Does
she remember me1, he thought, a sudden longing to see
her face overwhelming him. Does she7. And if
she did? What then? He
looked down at his hands where they rested in his lap—tiny,
childlike hands, scarred and stunted by his experience in the Clay—
and wondered what she had made of him that time, remembering how her
eyes had met his own. Had he been wrong, or had something passed
between them in that instant? For a
moment he sat there, undecided, then, angry at himself, at the doubts
that constantly assailed him, he stood and, clearing the screen once
more, hurried out, calling farewell to Nong Yan as he went. THE
white SILK envelope lay open, empty on the desktop. The chair behind
the great desk was unoccupied, the portrait of Li Kou-lung,
great-grandfather to Li Yuan, looking down imperiously on a room
where nothing stirred. An ornate dragon lamp cast a pool of yellowed
light about the desk, throwing heavy shadows on the tiled, mosaic
floor. On the desk beside the lamp, a faint wisp of steam still
drifting up from its untouched surface, rested a shallow bowl of
soup, the long, straight silver handle of the spoon jutting out
horizontally, the dark line of its shadow dissecting the jaundiced
whiteness of the silk. Li
Yuan stood in darkness beside the carp pool, Wei Feng's letter held
loosely in his left hand as he stared outward, into the shadows. He had
dismissed the servants and ordered that no one should disturb him, no
matter how urgent the need. And now he stood there, unmoving, deep in
thought, trying to see, in that utter, impenetrable darkness, his way
through to clarity: to formulate a decision—a degree of
certainty—from the sudden chaos of his thoughts. Once
before he had stood where he stood now, both figuratively and
literally, facing this same matter. Back then anger and
frustration—and a feeling of betrayal—had formed the
thought in him, "Why Seven?" and then, as now, he had
passed through the anger to a feeling of peace and to the realization
that he had survived the worst his enemies could throw at him. Yet
there was a difference, for now he understood that such peace, such
respite, was temporary. Whatever he did, however he acted, his
enemies would multiply. Cut off one head and two more would grow in
its place, like that in the legend. But now, with Wei Feng's letter,
something new had entered the calculations of power. Now that
thought—"Why Seven?"—was given more than a
tentative expression. Li
Yuan sighed. The old man had seen how things stood; had seen the
divisions that lay ahead if things remained as they were, and had
said to him directly, unequivocally, "Take power, Li Yuan. Grasp
it now, before all Seven go down into the darkness." Those, his
words, had been mirrored in his son's, Chan Yin's, face. He
understood now; knew what that look of deference and humility had
meant. And Chan's words, "I am my father's son," they too
took on a new significance. At
first he had-not believed what he had read. Slowly, one finger
tracing the words, he had mouthed them to himself, then had sat back,
oblivious of the servant who had brought his evening soup, trying to
take in the profound significance of Wei Feng's final message to him.
How would he, in Chan Yin's position, have behaved? Would he, like
Chan, have submitted to his father's wishes? He
frowned, realizing he did not know himself as well as that. To give
away his birthright. To bow before another when there was no need. He
shook his head. No, even filial duty broke before such demands. Chan
Yin would have been within his rights to ignore his father's dying
wishes; to have dismissed them as the addled ravings of a sick and
disappointed man. But he had not. Beyond
this question of duty and birthright lay a second, more
complex one: the matter of acting upon Wei Feng's wishes, and
the likely political repercussions. Ignoring the morality of it a
moment, he could not, even in practical terms, accept what Wei Feng
had offered him. He could not be the new T'ang of Eastern Asia
in Chan Yin's place. While the letter stated this as Wei Feng's wish,
and though Chan Yin and his brothers might agree to and accept the
terms of this document—two factors which might make his
inheritance incontestable in law—there was not the slightest
possibility that the other five T'ang would allow it. Even Tsu Ma
would act to prevent it if he knew. No, if he even so much as
mentioned the possibility, it would have the effect of isolating him
in Council and achieve in an instant what Wang Sau-leyan had long
striven to do. Chan
Yin would inherit. The chain would remain unbroken. But in the dark
something else had come to the young T'ang of Europe. Some deeper
scheme that might build upon what Wei Feng had freed him to
contemplate. A scheme whereby the Seven might become both simpler and
more effective. Might become—he dared to whisper it aloud—"Just
three of us. Tsu Ma. Wu Shih. And I..." And,
once uttered, the idea took root in the depths of him, became a
growing seed that he might now begin to nurture with the water of
thought and the sunlight of action. Returning
to his study he stood there in the doorway, looking across at the
portrait of his great-grandfather, a man he had never known,
wondering how he would have viewed such things and whether he, in
similar circumstances, would have thought or acted differently. He
could ask, of course, consult the old man's hologram, yet he sensed
it would do little good. Li Kou-lung's responses had been programmed
in a different age; an age of solid certainties when even to think of
such matters would have been considered a sign of frailty. Sighing
deeply, he crossed the room and pulled at the bell rope, summoning
Chang Shih-sen, his secretary. He
stood there, waiting, staring down at the shallow bowl, then reached
out and, with one finger, gently breached the cold, congealed
surface, thinking to himself, Three. Just Three, before
raising the finger to his mouth. Li
Yuan turned from the desk, drawing himself up straight, as Chang
Shih-sen entered. "Call
Wei Chan Yin for me," he said, all signs of tiredness gone from
him, replaced by a strange excitement. "Ask him if he will come
here. At once. He will be expecting my message." Chang
Shih-sen bowed and turned to go, but Li Yuan reached out and held his
arm a moment. "And Shih-sen ... ask him to bring Tseng-li, the
youngest. I have a use for him. Then rest. I will not need you for a
while." CHAPTER
FIVE
The
Chain of Being IN
THE FORMAL GARDENS surrounding the great House at Weimar, songbirds
were singing in the cypress trees, greeting the dawn. The great House
itself was empty, as it had been these past eight years, since Wang
Hsien, father of the present T'ang of Africa, read the Seven's Edict
of Dis-bandment, but in the pavilion to the east of the vast,
zigguratlike mass of the assembly building, a conference was taking
place. There, in the shadow of the nearby City, fourteen men—the
seven Chancellors of the Seven and seven graybeards,
ex-Representatives of the House— sat around a huge circular
table, discussing the future of Chung Kuo. On the ceiling directly
overhead was a huge chart of Chung Kuo, with the boundaries of the
new Hsien, the administrative districts, marked in red against the
background white, like capillaries on the surface of a clouded eye.
For eleven hours now they had talked, with only two short breaks for
refreshments, but now it was almost done. Nan
Ho, seated at the table, looked up frpm the silk-bound folder in
front of him and smiled, meeting the eyes of the pigtailed old Han
facing him. "You
are a stubborn man, Ping Hsiang, but not unreasonable. What you ask
for is far from what my Masters would have wished. But, as I have
said many times this night, we are not here to impose. No. We must
come to some new compact between Seven and Above. For the sake of
all." There
was a murmur of agreement about the table and from Ping Hsiang a taut
smile and a single nod of the head. "Good.
Then let us agree on this final point. Let us delay the
implementation of the package of measures agreed earlier until ten
months after the House has passed the proposal. That way no one can
say we have not been fair and open." "And
the draft of these proposals?" Ping Hsiang asked, looking to
either side of him as he spoke. "A
document is being prepared, even as we speak, and will be ready for
the signature of all before we leave. You will all be given copies to
take with you, naturally." Nan Ho
saw the grins of pleasure at that news and smiled inwardly. He had
brought them a long way this night, from open hostility and mistrust
of the Seven and their motives, to a new respect, and maybe even a
grudging admiration for the men who ruled them. On the way he had
gained all that his masters had entrusted him, as spokesman of their
negotiating committee, to gain, and had given no more—less, in
fact—than they had empowered him to give. All in all, then, it
had been a successful round of negotiations, and the irony was that,
now that it was done, the men who sat facing him positively glowed
with satisfaction, as if they had put one over on him. But
then, that was the art of negotiation, surely? From the simplest
marketplace haggling to the subtle art of statecraft, the principle
behind it was the same: one had to forget the value of the thing one
wanted, and begin negotiations from a point beyond. To over or
undervalue, that was the basis of it, the one and only secret. But to
do that one had also to know, with pinpoint accuracy, just what the
thing desired was truly worth. So it had been today. He had spent
long months establishing clearly in his mind just what it was the two
sides wanted from this meeting. And
now it was done. Nan Ho
stood, looking about him, then clapped his hands together sharply,
summoning the pavilion's servants. At once, two dozen shaven-headed
young men entered, heads bowed respectfully, bearing trays of food
and wine. He watched them move about the table, offering
refreshments, then turned away, going across to the long window that
curved away to either side. Out
there a new day was beginning, sunlight glittering off the upper
windows of the House, stretching down the smooth, pearled flanks of
the great building toward the deep shadow at its foot. Yesterday,
before the meeting, Nan Ho had had the great doors unlocked and had
gone into the House, pacing its empty corridors and lobbies until he
came out into the echoing vastness of the central debating chamber.
There, surrounded by tier upon tier of empty seats, he had imagined
it, a year from now, filled with the elected representatives of the
Above—ten thousand voices clamoring to be heard above the
din—and for a moment had found himself beset by doubts. Yet he
knew that there was no stepping back from this course, no real
alternative to this compact between Seven and Above. It was as Li
Yuan argued: it was this or nothing. And so he had shrugged off his
doubts and gone to the negotiating table with a clear, hard mind,
softening his stance only when it was clear to those who sat opposite
him that he was bargaining from a position of strength, not weakness.
Only then had he relaxed, bowing like the reed before the wind,
making unexpected concessions. The Seven's demand for a maximum of
two children per married couple was softened to three. A provocative
"retrospective action" clause, never intended to be part of
the final package, was fought for and then abandoned. A proposal to
extend the voting franchise from the top fifty to the top one hundred
levels—a measure as abhorrent to the Seven as it was to the
seven graybeards facing Nan Ho—was pressed and then dropped.
And so it went on, false bargains being made, while real concessions
were gained. There
were footsteps just behind him. Nan Ho half turned, then formed his
features into a tight, polite smile. It was Hung Mien-lo, the
Chancellor of City Africa, Wang Sau-leyan's man. "Well,
Chancellor Nan," Hung said softly, his voice not carrying beyond
their circle, "we have what we came for, neh?" Nan Ho
looked beyond Hung Mien-lo at the graybeards gathered on the far side
of the table. "So it seems," he said, mistrustful of the
man. "But it is not the power we give them that worries me—for
that is little enough—as that which they might yet take for
themselves. There is no stepping back from this course. To close the
House a second time . . . Well, it is inconceivable, neh?" Hung
Mien-lo smiled. "Maybe. And yet stranger things have happened." Nan Ho
shook his head, disturbed by the thought. "No. To close the
House again is unthinkable. Our task henceforth is a simple one. We
must find ways of harnessing that power." "Like
'Pockets' you mean?" Nan Ho
narrowed his eyes, trying to gauge what the odier meant by his
comment. "Pockets"—tai—were Representatives who
had been bought by the Seven, and who had, in the past, exerted
considerable influence over the House. But in the period leading up
to the War-that-wasn't-a-War the Seven had tried to swamp the House
with "Pockets" and the institution had fallen into
disrepute. The impeachment and arrest of the tai in the Spring of
2201 had, in effect, been a declaration of independence by the House
from the Seven, and had led directly to the War. Nan Ho
shrugged. "In this, as in all else, the past shows us the way to
the future." "The
past. . ." Hung Mien-lo laughed softly and leaned closer. "And
when the future finally comes? What then, Master Nan? How do we block
the future? How harness it? For it is coming. You and I know that,
even if our masters don't." Nan Ho
stared back at Hung Mien-lo a moment, his face impassive, then,
seeing that the scribes were finished, the document prepared, moved
past his fellow Chancellor, leaving the questions unanswered. THE
TWO bodyguards looked about them nervously as the sedan was set down,
unused to being so far down the levels, but Michael Lever, stepping
down from the carriage, seemed not to notice their unease. He looked
about him, noting the stark neatness of his surroundings, then
crossed the narrow hallway. There
was no entrance hall, no suite of offices isolating the inner
workings of the Company from the outside world, merely a big double
door, decorated, like many Company premises, with the Company logo.
Lever smiled, amused by the simplicity of it all. He reached out to
touch the delicate, shimmering web, then drew his
fingers back sharply, surprised to find the strands warm, the
background deathly cold. He
took a step back, studying the design. At the center of the web was a
tiny, smiling spider, while above it was the Company name, Ch't
Chu—Spider—written in English and Mandarin. This
was the first time he had visited Kim at his facility and, despite
all Kim had said, he was surprised to find it all so low-key. Why,
there wasn't even a camera over the doorway . . . The
doors shuddered, then, unexpectedly, melted away, leaving only the
logo, hovering in the empty darkness. One of the guards made to come
past him, but Michael raised a hand. Then, a faint smile of amusement
on his lips, he stepped through. There
was the faintest crackle of static, the feeling of having.passed
through the flimsiest of barriers, and then he was inside. A tall,
slightly balding Han stood before him, his head lowered, his hands
folded before him respectfully. "Welcome,
Shih Lever. We were expecting you." Michael
laughed. "I see you were." He turned, watching the door
shimmer back into existence. "Two
holograms," the Han explained, straightening up. "One for
the door, one for the logo. And behind them a security force field.
It was Kim's idea." Michael
nodded. "It's clever. But I prefer more solid things." "Perhaps
so. But solidity is a relative thing, Shih Lever. If the field had
been turned on, you would have found it hard enough to walk through,
hologram or no. But forgive me, let me introduce myself. My name is
T'ai Cho." Michael
lowered his head. "T'ai Cho ... I am delighted to meet you. Kim
has spoken often of you. He is fortunate to have such a good friend
and guardian." The
Han bowed, but his face remained expressionless. "The good
fortune has been mine alone, Shih Lever. The honor of serving so fine
and talented a young man falls to few in this life. I would have
counted my life as having had little meaning had I not met Shih
Ward." Michael
nodded, impressed by the Han's words. Yet if what Kim had told him
were true, he owed T'ai Cho not merely his chance in life, but life
itself. When Kim had come out of the Clay, it was T'ai
Cho who—as his tutor in the Reclamation Project—had
not merely recognized and fostered Kim's talent, but had interceded
at a crucial moment to prevent his death. "But
let us not stand here talking, Shih Lever. Let me take you through.
Kim is working just now—finishing something he began last
night—but he will not be long. Maybe you would like to watch.
If you would follow me..." "Thank
you, T'ai Cho. It will be a real pleasure." * He
followed T'ai Cho through. There were two small offices off to the
left of the corridor, but the main work space was a big L-shaped room
at the end. There he found Kim, sitting with his back to the door,
crouched forward, facing an experimental environment—the
vacuum-sealed transparent box five ch'i to a side. The top half of
Kim's head was hidden within a bulky headwrap, a dozen or more wires
trailing off into a console to one side, while his arms were inside
the box, enclosed in skintight armatures as he operated the nano-fine
waldoes. Two lab-coated technicians sat on the edge of the desk
nearby, so engrossed in what Kim was doing that they didn't even look
up as Michael came into the room. Michael
went across and stood behind them. As far as he could see nothing was
happening. Or—and the thought struck him as strangely
amusing—as if Kim were only pretending to do something. The
delicate appendages seemed to cut and mold the air, drawing out fine
lines of nothingness, the tips of the waldoes sparking and
flickering, but it was all to no apparent purpose. He felt a vague
twinge of disappointment. There seemed no point to what Kim was
doing; no discernible result. Michael squinted, trying to make out
something he had missed, but it was no good. There really did seem to
be nothing there. He
turned, looking about him. There were benches, cabinets, various
items of machinery, most of them inexpensive, older models, all of it
so unexpectedly shabby that he found himself making unwarranted
comparisons: setting all of this against the state-of-the-art
efficiency of his father's labs. It all seemed wrong somehow; too
small, too cobbled-together. How could anything worthwhile be
produced in conditions like this? For
the briefest moment he wondered whether he might not be
mistaken in his plans to work with Ward, but then he
remembered his father's interest and what he had heard from his
European contacts. And then there was what he himself knew about the
boy's abilities. The
boy . . . He turned, studying Ward in profile, then looked away,
conscious of how his thoughts had betrayed him. Appearances. With
Ward it wasn't possible to judge things on appearances, for he was
not what he seemed. Nineteen now, Ward seemed little more than a
child, a boy of twelve, thirteen at most, his diminutive stature the
result of his childhood in the Clay. That experience, down there in
the darkness beneath the City's foundations, had shaped him, inwardly
and out, making him—at a glance—different from those he
went among. Michael smiled. Compared to the tall, well-fed citizens
of First Level, Kim seemed but the unfleshed suggestion of humanity—a
throwback to an earlier evolutionary stage. Physically, Kim had so
little substance. But appearances were deceptive, for there was a
fire in his eyes, a strength even in his smallest movement that
belied that first impression. And one further thing. For Ward was
reputedly the finest theoretical scientist in the whole of Chung Kuo. He
looked back. Kim was watching him, his dark eyes curious. "Michael.
. ." he said softly, greeting him. "One moment and I'm
done." He
watched. Where there had been nothing, a fine point of pure white
light blossomed, a fine web of threads spreading out like buds from
the radiant hub, then turning back on themselves until they formed a
tiny, spherical net, the whole thing taking on detail and complexity
until it seemed to glow with an intense energy. It began to turn,
slowly at first, then faster, the glow fading and returning until it
formed a regular pulse. Michael
shook his head, astonished. It was beautiful. He glanced at Kim and
saw how he was leaning forward now, his lips parted, his breathing
shallow. Michael shivered, then looked back, his eyes drawn to the
spinning helix of light. It
spun, faster and faster, and as it spun brief, brilliant pulses of
light flashed from its glowing heart, each pulse striking one of the
tiny studlike targets that dotted the inside walls of the chamber.
Slowly the light intensified until he had to half-lid his eyes, then
turn aside, his eyes squeezed shut, one hand shielding his face. But
even then he could still see it
through the flesh of his eyelids, spinning at the center of the void,
like a tiny, burning star, flashing magnificently. For a
moment longer it maintained its perfect equilibrium at the center of
the vacuum, then, with a noisy crackle of static, the light abruptly
died. Michael
turned, blinking, staring into the darkness of the chamber, then
looked across. For a moment Kim sat there, perfectly still, then,
with a tiny shudder, he sat back, pulling his arms from the waldoes. "Kuan
Yin!" Michael said softly, shaking his head. Kim
turned his head and looked at him, a faint, almost apologetic smile
on his lips, then, tugging off the headwrap, he came across, taking
Lever's hands. "Michael. . . It's good to see you. How are
things?" Michael
smiled. "I'm fine. But what was that?" Kim
half glanced back at the empty chamber, then shrugged. "It's
something long-term, that's all. A problem I've set myself. I thought
I had a solution, but, well, let's just say that it's not stable." Michael
laughed. "Yes . . . but what was it? It looked beautiful." Kim
moved past him, then turned back, a rough sketch in one hand.
"Basically, it's a switching device. It's meant to transmit
energy at a molecular level. The trouble is, it has to be able to
maintain its form and turn at phenomenal speeds—at the speed of
molecular reactions themselves, to be accurate. At present, however,
it's very fragile. The least molecular interference from outside and
it breaks up. As you saw. Add to that the fact that it's far too big
for practical use, and you can see just how far I am from solving
things." Michael
glanced at the paper Kim had given him, but the equations meant
nothing to him. They might just as well have been written in Shang
dynasty Mandarin. "Maybe, but it's certainly impressive." Kim
laughed. "You think so? Well, maybe, but sometimes it feels like
I'm grasping at nothingness itself. That I reach out and close my
hand and . . . there's nothing there. And I ask myself, what if I'm
wrong? Good as I am, what if I'm wrong? What if all the talent I have
isn't enough? What if the universe is different from how I
conceive it? What if it won't conform to the pattern in my head?" "Then
you change the pattern, surely?" Kim
studied Michael a moment, then looked away. "But what if I am
the pattern?" For a moment Kim stood there, perfectly still,
staring into the empty chamber, then, as if remembering suddenly
where he was, he looked back, smiling. "Well, how did it go? Is
it still on?" It was
Michael's turn to look away. "I'm sorry, Kim. The Old Man
wouldn't budge. And without those funds . . ." Kim
reached out and touched his arm. "I understand. And it's all
right. We can make do as we are for a while longer. But you . . . you
needed that money, didn't you?" Michael
met his eyes and nodded. "So?
What will you do?" Michael
smiled stoically. "I've a scheme or two. The Old Man won't put
bit and brace on me that easily." Kim
nodded, but he could see how disappointed—and, beneath that,
how angry—Michael was at his father for freezing his accounts. "It
was such a small amount," Michael said quietly. "Less than
he spends on some of the old memorabilia he buys. But that's how it
is. We have to live with it, neh?" He reached inside his jacket
and took out a letter. "Here. I thought this might help." Kim
took the envelope without looking at it. "What is it?" "A
letter of introduction, to the Hang Su Credit Agency." "Credit?"
Kim laughed, recalling the difficulties he had faced in going to the
Credit Agencies when he had first set up Ch'i Chu. The message had
been the same everywhere he'd turned. Find a major sponsor or forget
it. That was how things worked here. Big fish and little fish. But he
had been determined to keep his independence. He had struggled on,
slowly using up the funds Li Yuan had given him, cutting corners and
making do, trusting that his talent would be enough to pull him
through. But now it was make-or-break time. He had to sell some of
his ideas—to generate enough money to allow Ch'i Chu to live
another year or two. He
shrugged. "I'm not averse to the idea, but who in their right
mind would give me credit?" Michael
smiled. "Don't worry. IVe made discreet inquiries and it
seems that the Brothers Hang are willing to do business with
you. IVe arranged an interview for tomorrow at two." Kim
laughed, genuinely surprised. "Okay. But what do I put up for
security? IVe sunk everything I have into this place. And now that
your father has tightened the reins . . ." Michael
was still smiling. "What about the patents? They're worth
something, aren't they?" "Maybe.
Once theyVe been developed." "Then
use them. You plan to register them tomorrow, right? Good. Then go
and see the Brothers straight afterward. Put the patents up as
security. You'll have your funding by six tomorrow evening, I
guarantee." Kim
studied the envelope a moment, then, smiling, looked back up at
Michael. "Okay. I'll do as you say. And thank you, Michael.
Thank you for everything." "Oh,
and one last thing. How busy are you?" Kim
laughed. "I'm always busy. But what do you mean?" "Tonight,
I mean. Could you free some time?" "I
guess so. Everything's prepared for tomorrow. What is it?" Michael
smiled, a broad, warm smile of enjoyment, undiminished by his
troubles with his father. "It's a ball, Kim. A coming-of-age
ball for a good friend of mine." He reached into his pocket and
took out a card, handing it across. "Here. Your invitation. It's
fancy dress." "Fancy
dress?" Lever
laughed, beginning to leave. "Ask T'ai Cho. And if you've any
trouble rustling up a costume, contact my secretary, Mary. She'll
sort something out for you." Kim
studied the gilt lettering of the invitation and nodded, recalling
the last time he had been to a ball—the evening the younger
sons had been arrested—and felt a tiny, unexpected thrill of
anticipation ripple down his spine. "Sweetheart?" Jelka
stood there before the giant image of her father's face, smiling
broadly. "Daddy! How are you? When are you coming home?" The
great wall of the Marshal's face restructured itself, the muscles of
the mouth and cheeks rearranging themselves, the broad smile becoming
a look of dour resignation. "Something's
come up, I'm afraid. A development in the GenSyn case. It's
important—something I have to follow up personally—so I
might be here another three or four days. Is that all right?" She
smiled determinedly. "Of course, Papa. You do what you have to
do. I'll be okay." "Good."
He stared at her proudly a moment, his eyes great orbs of steel amjd
the craggy cliff-face of his features. "So
how was lunch?" "Lunch?"
He frowned, then, realizing what she meant, gave a broad grin. "Lunch
was fine. Young Ward sends his regards. It seems he'll be coming over
to Europe quite soon, to be wired." "Wired?"
She looked up into her father's face uncertainly. "You
know . . ." He touched the access slot beneath his right ear
uneasily, knowing how she felt about it. "The standard thing. A
direct-processing link. He says it'll help with his work. Make things
easier. Anyway . . ." he cleared his throat and put on a
determinedly cheerful expression, "you can talk to him directly
about it when he's over. IVe invited him to dinner." She
nodded, pretending a polite interest, but beneath it she felt her
chest tighten, her pulse begin to quicken. "That's good. It'll
be nice to see him again." For a
moment the old man's face beamed down at his daughter, drinking
in the sight of her, then, with a deep sniff, he sat back slightly,
his expression suddenly more businesslike. "Well,
my girl. I must get on. There's much to do here, and I'd like to get
it done with as soon as possible." "Of
course. And take care, all right?" He
nodded, the movement exaggerated by the screen. "And you, my
love." Then he was gone, the screen blank. She
went across and sat at her father's desk, swiveling the big chair
back and forth, staring out across the room thoughtfully. So the
boy was coming here... She
frowned, then gave a small, strange laugh. The boy was not a child
these days. In fact, if she remembered rightly, Kim was almost a
year older than her. It was just that she still thought of him
like that. After all, he was so small. So tiny and graceful. So
delicately formed. . . She
shivered, then stood, disturbed suddenly by the thought of him coming
there. ,But why should that be? He was just a boy, after all. A
friend and colleague of her father's. It wasn't as if... She
shook her head, then turned, facing the screen once more, staring at
the perfect whiteness. It was just that his eyes had burned so
brightly that time. As if they saw things differently. For
the briefest instant she saw once more the tiny fox, there in the
cave on the island, staring back at her with its dark and feral eyes,
the memory so vivid it was as if she stood there, watching it once
more. And then it was gone, leaving only the plain white screen, and
the memory of some wild, dark thing that did not belong in the world
of levels. NAN HO
was flying east, over the heart of Asia, the sun behind him now, the
Altai Mountains beneath. Ahead lay the great desert, beyond it,
ancient China and, in the shadow of the Ta Pa Shan in Sichuan
Province, the estate at Tongjiang. He had sent ahead that he was
coming, but, in the wake of Wei Feng's death—announced on the
media an hour into his flight—he was not certain what state
things would be in. Wei
Feng had been the oldest, the last of that generation. Even Wu Shih,
the eldest of them now, was but a .young man by comparison. The
thought troubled Nan Ho as he sat in his padded chair, sorting
through his papers. The new T'ang, Wei Chan Yin, was a good man and a
sound administrator, who had proved himself already as Regent in his
father's stead, but Wei Feng's death had robbed the Council of its
last real vestige of experience. Without the old man, they seemed
less dignified, robbed somehow of authority. It would not be said,
not openly, but it was certain to be thought—to be whispered
ear to ear. And, though no outward change would be evident, the Seven
would be weaker. For power was something manifested not merely in its
exercise, but also in how the people perceived those who ruled them. For
the third time in as many years, the Seven were diminished: first by
the murder of Wang Hsien, then by Li Shai Tung's sudden
demise, and now this. It was fortunate, perhaps, that they had
made their "deal" with the Above before the news had
broken. Or maybe not. Maybe this news—to be announced this very
evening—would be seen as further weakness. As a further erosion
of power. And
when power failed altogether? Nan Ho
shuddered, then pushed the papers aside, angry with himself,
conscious that Hung Mien-lo's words had got to him. Yet even as he
settled back in his chair, a new determination formed in him.
Whatever happened from now on, he would be prepared for it. For he
was warned now. It would be no one's fault but his if they faltered
in the years ahead. And he, Nan Ho, son of Nan Ho-tse, would do his
utmost to ensure that that did not happen. He would make it his sole
concern—his life's work. Even
if death were the only payment for his pains. LI
YUAN was waiting for Nan Ho in his study when he arrived, the young
T'ang dressed in the traditional clothes of mourning, as if it were
his father who had just died. The great desk in front of him was
unusually clear, only a small white envelope set to one side. Nan Ho
glanced at it as he bowed, then looked again, surprised to find Wei
Feng's distinctive seal set firmly in the bloodred wax. "You
have done well, Master Nan," Li Yuan said without preliminaries.
"I have spoken to Wu Shih and Tsu Ma and they are pleased with
the terms you have drawn up. I thought we might have had to give much
more." Nan Ho
lowered his head again, but the mystery of the envelope distracted
him. What message had the dead T'ang left? And was it to Li Yuan
alone, or did all seven have similar envelopes? "Now
that the matter is settled, there is something else I would like you
to take on, Master Nan." Nan Ho
met the young T'ang's eyes, for that brief moment bridging the great
gulf in rank that lay between them. "Chieh Hsia?" "I
have had news from Tolonen in America. It seems he is on to something
out there." "Did
he say what, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan shook his head. "Don't you find it odd, Master Nan? I
mean, it is most unlike the Marshal to keep things to himself.
If he has a fault it is usually that he keeps us far too well
informed." Nan Ho
laughed. "That is so, Chieh Hsia. But this is his old
friend Klaus Ebert's business. Tolonen saw the man as a brother, and
he goes about this business as a brother would." "True
enough," Li Yuan said thoughtfully. "I have noticed that
already. He sees this as a debt of honor, neh?"
t- "That
is so, Chieh Hsia. He did say one thing to me, however. At Nantes,
before he left." "Yes?
And what was that?" "He
mentioned some anomalies in the GenSyn records for their North
American operation. When I questioned him about it, he spoke of
accounting irregularities, forged shipment details, missing
documents, and the like. It was a bland, evasive answer. A safe
answer. Yet when he met my eyes I knew he meant something else.
Something is missing, Chieh Hsia, and Tolonen has gone to find it." Li
Yuan sighed. "I do not like it, Master Nan, but for once I shall
have to put up with it. The Marshal is a stubborn old man, but an
honest one. We shall find out when he is ready to tell us, I suppose.
But in the meantime, I want you to find out what you can. I do not
want us caught wholly unprepared." Nan Ho
bowed low. As ever he was already onto the matter. "As you wish,
Chieh Hsia." After
the Chancellor had gone, Li Yuan leaned across, drawing the envelope
toward him. In five hours Wei Chan Yin would be here. He
raised the letter to his nose and sniffed, then, setting it down
again, shook his head. What had he expected? The smell of death? Of
fear and darkness? Whatever, there was nothing. Nothing but the
neutral scents of wax and ink and paper. Even so, he had felt a kind
of fear—an almost primal dread—of what lay within that
slender pocket of whiteness. It was fate, written in the dark,
spidery hand of a dead man. Li Yuan shivered, thinking of it, and
pushed it from him. In
five hours... OLD
MAN lever stood on the podium at the center of the crowd, a full
whiskey tumbler held in one big, square-knuckled hand, a
red, white, and blue silk folder in the other. Behind
him, a huge stars and stripes banner was draped over the far end of
the vestibule, concealing the entrance to the deck. Lever smiled and
looked about him, lifting his glass in greeting. They were all
gathered here today— all of the original investors—fifty
of the most important men in the North American Above,
multibillionaires every one of them. But it had been his idea and his
drive which had brought this into being. And now, at the inauguration
ceremony, it would be he, Charles Lever, who would take the lion's
share of the praise. "Gentlemen.
. . Friends. . . Welcome." Lever combed a lock of steel-gray
hair back from his eyes and beamed, showing strong, slightly
yellowing teeth. "You all know why we're here and what we're
here for, so let's skip the formalities and go right on in. I'm sure
you're all as anxious as I am to see how the money has been spent. .
." There
was a roar of approval, and as Lever stepped down from the podium and
made his way across, the small crowd followed, talking among
themselves. It was
not often that they met, and to all it seemed particularly auspicious
that it was on such a day, when news of Wei Feng's death and of the
triumph at Weimar coincided. The normally placid old men fairly
buzzed with the news. It was all linked in, they said; part of the
new tide, turning in their favor. From the low ebb of their
humiliation on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial they had rebuilt.
And now their time was coming. The negotiations at Weimar had been
the first step; the elections were the next. And each step would
bring them closer to their aim—of a strong and independent
America, free of the rule of the Seven, taking its rightful place in
the world once more. Not an empire, maybe, but a nation. And who knew
what might come of that? Maybe they would take up where they had left
off and reach out for the stars, the eagle stretching its wings . . . Beneath
the huge stars and stripes banner Lever turned, facing them again. "I
realize that you gentlemen have been champing at the bit, wanting to
know what's been going on here, but when you see what has been
achieved in the past ten months, I'm sure you'll agree that it was
money well spent." He
lifted a hand. At the signal, the banner drew slowly to one side, revealing
a huge entrance tunnel, the walls and ceiling of which had been made
to seem like marble. Over the entrance was a massive memorial stone,
an inscription cut into the stone in a bold, classical face: THE
RICHARD CUTLER FOUNDATION FOR
GENETIC RESEARCH
Opened
this Seventh day of March, a.d. Two Thousand Two Hundred and Nine, by
Charles Alexander Lever, Head of the ImmVeip Corporation of North
America. Through
the archway could be glimpsed a bright space, landscaped like a great
park, and in its midst something huge, like the plinth of a giant
statue. They
went through, coming out into a wooded glade from which could be seen
the full extent of the Foundation and its grounds. Lever
had had the top three decks "knocked into one" as he called
it, so that the ceiling—a huge screen, programmed to seem like
a summer sky—was a good two hundred ch'i overhead. But that was
not what first caught the eye. In the center of the landscaped
gardens was an immense building; a structure which was as familiar to
the old men standing there as the stars and stripes of the Sixty-Nine
States. The Empire State Building. For a
moment there was stunned silence and then an uproar as the old men
clapped and yelped their approval. "It's
wonderful, Charles," his friend, the financier, James Fisher,
said, slapping Levers shoulder enthusiastically. "The architect
is to be congratulated. He's caught the spirit of the old building to
perfection." Lever
beamed, conscious of congratulations from all sides. "Yes, he
has, hasn't he. I gave him the basic idea and he came up with the
rest. He had to modify, of course, but the general effect is just
what I wanted. The labs and most of the research facilities are
beneath this floor, of course—the whole thing stretches down
another five decks— but this is the showpiece. The reception
area, the main wards, and the lecture halls are all within the main
building." He smiled and looked about him once more, "As
you'll see." In
front of the huge studded entrance doors Lever turned and raised his
hands. "Gentlemen! One last thing before we go in. I am proud to
say that only yesterday I received delivery of the latest masterpiece
by the greatest painter of our age, Ernst Heydemeier." There
was a low murmur of surprise. Lever looked about him, savoring the
moment, then added, "Furthermore, let me add that I have donated
this specially commissioned painting to the Institute in
commemoration of this inauguration ceremony. If you would follow me.
. ." As
Lever turned, the doors began slowly to ease back, revealing the
facing wall-screen and Heydemeier's painting. There was a gasp of
surprise and then, as more and more of the giant canvas came into
view, a mounting tide of applause. At the
center of the painting the giant figure of a youth, his muscular
chest naked, stood atop a mountain's rugged crest, looking toward the
west, the shaft of a huge banner clasped firmly in one hand. His
tautly sculpted and beautiful features glowed with a visionary
fervor. Behind the youth and the wind-furled flag, a company of
youths—young gods, they seemed—climbed toward the summit,
their faces gleaming, looking toward the sun that bathed the whole
picture in its glorious golden light. "Gods
. . ." one of the old men murmured, staring up at the huge
canvas, his mouth agape. Nor was he alone. All about Lever the old
men had fallen silent as the full scope of the massive painting came
into view. There was a moment's hesitation, then, slowly, with a
growing sense of awe, they began to approach the screen. Old
Man Lever stood there, looking about him, knowing what they were
feeling at that moment. It was what he himself had felt only
yesterday when he had first seen the painting. It was astonishing.
Once more Heydemeier had taken his idea and transformed it. And now
that he had seen it for himself, he knew. This was the Dream. This
was what had driven him these past few years. This vision of
perfection, glimpsed in the golden light of a new dawn. He
shivered. If it could be done, it would be done here. And this, this
masterpiece of visionary painting, was the perfect statement of
intent. To be a god and live forever—what was wrong with
wanting that? "It's
astonishing," someone said close by, real awe in his voice. "Youre
right, Charles," another added softly. "It's a masterpiece.
IVe never seen its like!" He
looked about him, smiling, accepting the words of praise that came
from all sides. Then, raising his voice once more, he beckoned them
on. "Come, gentlemen. Let's not stand here gawping. Let's go
through. There are wonders enough within." TWO
HOURS later they were standing in the central lecture hall, beneath a
massive reproduction of Martin Waldeseemuller's spectacular
"Universalis Cosmographia," the ancient world map, dated
1507, which filled one whole end of the theater. The original
woodcut, the first map to give the New World the name of America,
hung in Old Man Lever's study in Philadelphia. They
had seen it all now, and had been impressed. There was no doubt that
if a solution to the aging process could be found, it would be found
here, for they had bought the finest state-of-the-art equipment and
hired the very best men in every field. Expert after expert had met
them as they'd toured the facility, giving a brief speech of
explanation before they moved on, each one impressive in their own
right, each building upon the general impression of competence. It
looked good. Very good indeed. All that was needed was time and money
. . . and a little luck. Or so Lever had claimed. Already the
research had begun; each of the eight departments looking into their
own highly specialized area. Everything had been thought out
carefully beforehand, every base covered. Or so it seemed. The
tour completed, Lever went among the old men, talking with them,
gauging their response, modestly accepting their praise. But all the
while something nagged at him. It looked good. Indeed, it was
good—the best money could buy. But it wasn't "the best."
Nor would it be until he had Ward working for him. He had
looked about him as they toured the establishment, trying to see it
all as they saw it, with fresh eyes, but all the time he was
conscious that it was just a shell—a delightful piece of
technological trickery, manned not by geniuses but by lesser men,
schooled in old and rigid ways of thought. And he knew—because
he had made it his business to
know—that it all meant nothing—nothing at all—
without that final tiny piece; that spark that would bring this
great, magnificent engine of research to life. It all
came back to Ward. He had to have Ward. And if the man could not be
bought, maybe he could be hassled into the job. Bullied and
threatened and ultimately forced into taking on the task. Because, if
his advisors were correct, there was no one else who could take on
the task. No one brilliant enough to see through the obvious and come
up with a wholly new solution to the problem. Lever
took another glass of whiskey and drained it at a shot. No, if Ward
would not come willingly, he would come out of need: because there
was nowhere else to go, no one else to turn to. And that would
happen. He would make sure it would happen. Because the alternative .
. . Lever
stood there, staring up at the ancient map, conscious suddenly of the
billions of men and women who had lived and died since this chart had
been drawn. Of all those countless souls gone to dust and
nothingness. Then, drawing a long shuddering breath, he turned,
smiling, and went among the crowd of old men once again, letting
nothing of his unease show on the surface of his well-lined face. michael
was silent for some time after Kustow had gone, studying the papers
Mary had set before him, then he turned in his chair, looking across
at her. When
he had hired her, three weeks back, he had not been sure how things
would work out. Her record, working in middle management for MemSys,
the biggest of his Companies, had been good— first rate, in
fact—but she had had little experience of working as a personal
assistant. Nor would he have hired her had any of the four men he had
wanted been available. But they were not. Whether his father had
frightened them off or simply bought them out was irrelevant. He had
been left with no choice. It was Mary Jennings or no one. And maybe
he had only got her because his father had thought it beneath him to
buy off a mere woman. But Mary had been better— far better—than
either he or his father had anticipated. She was sharp, efficient,
and resourceful. Moreover, she worked well under
pressure—an invaluable trait at present, when the
pressure was unrelenting. In many ways she was the best assistant he
had ever worked with. He sat
back, lacing his fingers together. "Em . . . ?" She
looked up, startled. "I. . ." Then she saw the look of
surprise on his face and looked away. "Why
did you call me that?" "Call
you what. . . ? Oh. Em, you mean?" He held up a copy of one of
her reports. "It's how you sign yourself. The letter M. I guess
IVe seen it so often now IVe come to think of you simply as Em." She
looked down, her mind still reeling. Of course. M for Mary. Mary
Jennings. How strongly she had come to associate herself with that
name these past twenty-one months; yet at the slightest reminder it
had been dislodged, her real name brought back to her. Em for Emily.
Emily Ascher . . . She
shivered, articulating it clearly in her head. Emily Ascher, late of
City Europe and member of the Council of Five of the now defunct Ping
Tiao—the infamous "Levelers"—who had
brought chaos to the levels and then, foolishly, she thought, had
fire-bombed Bremen stack, killing over eleven thousand innocent
people. It was twenty-one months now since DeVore had given her false
papers and bundled her off onto an inter-City rocket to a new life.
Months in which she had maintained a low profile, keeping herself to
herself, building up the solid foundations of her life, all the while
waiting, biding her time. For
the time would come. And when it did ... "You
know, I think you're right." She
looked across; saw how he was watching her. "Pardon?" He
tapped the report. "About Dunn. I don't think we can trust him.
He may have been my father's enemy for a long time now, but that
doesn't necessarily make him my friend." He smiled. "I know
how my father thinks. How he operates. He's a rich man, not averse to
buying whatever he needs. And money can make a man—even a
Dunn—take stranger bedfellows than his lifelong enemy, neh,
Em?" She
had it on her tongue to correct him, to ask him not to call her that
again, but something in the way he said it touched her. It was like
that moment when he had asked her to take over as his assistant. She
could have said no. Indeed, the sensible thing would have been
to say no. But there had been something in the way he'd asked
her—some hint, perhaps, of that vulnerability she had witnessed
in him—that had made her agree. And so now. She
smiled. "It's been my experience that one should trust least
those who claim alliance purely on the basis of a shared hatred.
There's always a falling out." So it
was. She had seen the Ping TiOo destroyed for that very
reason, when Gesell had allied himself with the odious DeVore. But
never again. When it came to making alliances, she would set her own
terms in future. Michael
was looking at her strangely. "By the way, what are you doing
tonight?" She
laughed, the question catching her totally off guard. "I'm
sorry..." He
looked away, as if flustered—as if he had overstepped some
mark, then sat back, laughing. "Look, if youVe something on,
forget it, but I thought, if you hadn't. . . well, perhaps you'd like
to accompany me to a ball." "A
ball? You mean, like on the trivees?" He
shook his head. "No. This is real. An old friend of mine. She's
celebrating her twenty-fifth, her Coming-of-Age. Her parents died
some years back and her estate's been in trust all this time, but now
it's all hers and she's throwing a huge party at the family home. I
just thought. . ." She
sat back, staring at him. "Why me?" she asked, after a
moment. "I'm sure there must be a dozen beautiful women out
there who'd be . . ." "I
thought it might be fun," he said, interrupting her. "YouVe
worked hard for me and, well, I thought you might enjoy it. I was . .
." He laughed. "Well, I wasn't sure how you'd react. I
thought you might mistake my motives. You know, a boss and his
assistant. . ." "Especially
when the assistant's a woman..." He
narrowed his eyes, staring at her, then nodded, a faint smile of
amusement on his lips. "Well? Would you like to see how the
Supernal let their hair down?" Did
she? Did she really want to mix at this level? For a moment
longer she hesitated, and then she smiled; a beautiful,
radiant smile. "I'd like that, SMi Lever. I'd like that
very much." "Good.
But it's Michael. . ." he said, returning her smile. "Tonight
you must call me Michael." "Is
that it?" Wei
Chan Yin looked up from where he sat in Li Yuan's chair and met the
young T'ang's eyes. There was nothing in his face to show what he was
feeling, nor had he hesitated once in drafting the document. He had
sat there, handwriting it to Li Yuan's dictation, not glancing up,
nor aside to where his brother, Tseng-li, stood. More like a servant
than an equal. Yet Li Yuan knew, better than anyone, the strengths,
the qualities of this man. He had often talked with him when they had
both been Princes and when, in the final period of his father's
illness, Chan Yin had acted as his father's Regent on the Council. "Sign
it at the bottom," Li Yuan said. "Then have Tseng-li put
his name to it as witness. I will sign last." Chan
Yin smiled and nodded. His hand moved across the thick parchment,
signing his name with a flourish of the brush. That done, Tseng-li
moved up beside him and, leaning over the desk, inked his brush and
signed beside his brother's name. Chan
Yin looked up and, turning the paper about, offered it to Li Yuan.
Tseng-li held out the brush. Li Yuan took the brush and signed,
taking a deep breath as he straightened up. "You
understand why this must be?" he said, smiling sadly at Chan
Yin. Chan
Yin paused, then shook his head. "Not yet, Yuan. Not ever,
perhaps. But it was my father's dying wish." His mouth formed a
faint smile. "You understand?" Li
Yuan laughed. "Maybe. Maybe not. But I am grateful, cousin." Chan
Yin gave a slight bow. Beside him, Tseng-li was looking down at his
elder brother, that same restraint—product of the goodness that
was in them all—shaping his features. Seeing the two men thus,
Li Yuan felt deeply moved. To have such sons as these. A man might
die satisfied, knowing he had bred so straight and true. He sighed,
the determination forming in
him that he would use this document only if he must. "Tseng-li,"
he said softly. "There is something else I want from
you." The
youngest looked up, his dark eyes looking out from his beautiful face
with a directness and openness that Li Yuan had rarely met. "What
is it, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan smiled at the honorific. "I would like your service,
Tseng-li." He paused, then, "I want you to replace Chang
Shih-sen and be my secretary." Chan
Yin looked up at him, for the first time a look of surprise on his
face. But Tseng-li merely nodded. "As you wish, Chieh Hsia." "Good."
Li Yuan smiled, more at ease now that it was all concluded. "Then
we might set the day for your coronation, Wei Chan Yin. It is time
you too were T'ang." CHAPTER
SIX
Into
Emptiness KIM
stepped down from the hired sedan and looked about him, astonished. A
red-painted wall ten ch'i in height enclosed the First Level mansion,
a gateway, topped by an ancient bell tower, providing the only way
into the grounds. The huge double doors were of burnished bronze,
studded with iron, the whole thing flanked by massive dragon pillars,
painted a vivid emerald green. It was brutal. Like something from the
fifteenth century. A Ming frontier fort, complete with watchtowers.
The last thing one expected to find here at the top of the City. All
around him sedans were setting down, their occupants climbing out and
making their way across what seemed some kind of horse track to the
gateway. The variety and richness of their costumes were fascinating.
They had come dressed as gods and goddesses, emperors and concubines,
notorious villains and revered sages. All of history had been
pillaged for this one night. By comparison his own spider costume was
somewhat dour and unimaginative. He had not realized how much time
and effort these people would put into something so ...
insignificant. He
went across, then stopped, staring up at the great stone lintel
that supported the bell tower. At its center, a single Han
pictogram had been carved into
the stone: the character Chung, meaning "The
Arbitrator"—the name of the family who owned this
great Mansion. He
frowned, conscious that his expectations had once again been
turned upsidedown. He had thought it would be like that
evening at the Lever Mansion, when the Young Sons had been arrested.
To be honest, he had not expected any Han to be present. He turned,
looking about him, watching the people filing past him. They formed a
queue beneath the bell tower, waiting to enter, their invitation
cards held out for inspection by two huge, bare-chested Han, who
stood before the open doors, barring the way. Kim
joined the queue, catching the air of excitement that was on every
side. Reaching the front, he expected the guard to take his card and
pass him through, as he had all those before, but the man blocked his
way, putting a hand on his chest, restraining him. "Wait
there," the guard ordered gruffly, then turned his head.
"Chang!" he called, summoning the second guard. "Get
the Captain over. That missing invitation—I think we might have
found it!" Kim
looked down, containing his anger. He had met this before. Not often,
but enough to recognize it for what it was. To them he was not
another human being, he was Clay, the lowest of the low. His large
eyes and diminutive stature gave that away at a glance. And some—like
the guard—hated the Clay and all those who came from there with
a bitter and totally irrational hatred. He
waited, his eyes lowered, listening as the guard and the Captain
talked between themselves in Mandarin. Their assumption that a mere
Clayborn couldn't understand the tongue was typical of their kind. "You!
Raise your head!" The
Captain's barked command surprised Kim. He jerked his head up,
meeting the man's eyes. The Captain studied him a moment, then made a
coarse remark in Mandarin. Behind him the guards laughed. "Well?"
he said, thrusting the invitation at him. "Where did you get
this? You're not on the guest list, and one of the invitations was
reported missing. It can only be assumed . . ." "What
can only be assumed?" The
voice came from behind the guards. They stepped back, revealing the
tall figure of Michael Lever, dressed in the bright blue and white
costume of an American general of the late eighteenth century. "Shih
Lever . . ." the Captain said, bowing low, as if acknowledging
both the real and illusory gulf in rank between them. "Forgive
me, but this man was trying to gain admission to the grounds. There
was a report this afternoon
that one of the invitations had gone missing and..." "Be
quiet, you imbecile! Shih Ward is my honored guest. He is a great
man. A ch'un tzu. You will bow low before him and apologize .
. ." Embarrassed,
Kim spoke up. "Michael, please, there's really no need. The
Captain was mistaken, that's all. Besides, he^was right to be
cautious. These are troubled times and this is a great house. Its
doors should be protected." Michael
stared at Kim a moment, then shrugged. "If that's what you want.
But I think you're mistaken. I think this shit knew exactly what
he was doing." Almost
certainly, Kim thought, butl'tt not be a party to such
pettiness. Not while I've a choice in it. They
went through, into a huge open space—a garden landscaped in the
Han fashion. At the far side, beyond a pair of gently arching white
stone bridges, a large two-story Mansion in the southern style rested
amid tree and rock. Already, it seemed, the great house was full to
overflowing. Guests crowded the veranda, talking and drinking, while
from within came the muted sound of pipes and strings. Kim
turned, looking up at his friend. "I thought it would be
different. I thought. . ." "You
thought it would be like last time, neh? And you're confused, because
this is Han. Well, let me explain things, before we meet our
hostess." He
drew Kim aside, moving toward a quiet arbor. There they sat, facing
each other across a low table of sculpted stone, Michael's tricorn
hat laid to one side. "Back
when the House was still open, Gloria's father was a Senior
Representative—an important man, spokesman for his tong, the On
Leong." Kim
frowned. The five major tong of City America shared an ancestry with
the Triads of Europe and Asia, but their recent history was very
different. When things had collapsed over here, after President
Griffin's assassination, it was the five tong who had helped hold.
things together on the East Coast and in enclaves in California and
the Midwest. And when the City was built across the continent,
they had taken a major role in the social reconstruction program.
Their reward was a legitimization of their organizations. They had
become political parties. "I
see," Kim said, "but I still don't understand. I'd have
thought that the long would be your natural political adversaries." Michael
sat back, smiling. "They are. But Gloria is very different from
her father. She wants what we want—an independent and
outward-looking America. And she's not alone. There are many Han who
think like her. Most of them—the influential ones, that is—are
here tonight." Kim
looked down. "And there I was, thinking . . ." "That
I hated the Han?" Michael shook his head. "No. Only our
masters. Only those who try to keep us from our natural destiny. The
rest. . . well, there are good and bad, neh? What has race to do with
that?" "Bryn?
Can I have a word?" Bryn
Kustow excused himself from the group with which he was standing,
then came away, following Michael Lever down the broad corridor and
into one of the empty side rooms. With
the door firmly closed behind them, Michael turned, confronting him. "Well,
Michael? What is it?" Michael
reached out and held his arm. "I've just had news. The bankers
have called in the loan." "Ahh.
. ." Kustow considered that a moment, then shrugged. "Then
that's it, I guess. The game's over for the boys." "Is
that what you want?" Kustow
looked up. "No. But what's left to us? WeVe allocated most of my
capital, and yours is frozen." Michael
hesitated, then. "What if I could get the money somewhere else?" Kustow
laughed. "Where? Your father has the money market tied up
tighter than a fly's ass." "That's
what he thinks. But IVe been checking out a few tips." "And?" "And
weVe a meeting, tomorrow afternoon at two, with the Clear Heart
Credit Agency of Cleveland." "And
they'll lend us what we need?" Michael
hesitated. "I don't know. What with this latest development
we'll need to reassess things carefully. Work out what we need to pay
off the loan and fund new development. The rates are^high, but it's
that or go under." "I
see." Kustow looked away a moment, then turned back, a faint
smile on his lips. "There is one other option. I mean, if we do
have to seek alternative employment, there is one sphere we could go
into." Michael
laughed. "I don't follow you, Bryn. What are you going on
about?" "IVe
been busy, too, Michael. Making calls. And IVe set up a meeting. Just
you and me and an old school friend of ours. Two days from now, out
at his place." "An
old school friend?" Kustow
put a hand on Michael's shoulder. "Trust me. Meanwhile, let's
enjoy ourselves, neh? And smile, damnit. The night's young and youVe
a pretty woman waiting for you out there!" a fan
fluttered in the pearled light. There was the scent of rich perfumes,
the swish of ancient ballgowns, the rustle of silks and satins, the
low murmur of conversation, interspersed with bursts of drunken
laughter. Emily Ascher stood at the head of the steps, looking down
into the Hall of Ultimate Benevolence, amazed by the sight that met
her eyes. The great hall was a riot of red, white, and blue,
decorated with all manner of Americana. Faded flags and ancient
banners hung from the surrounding balconies and across the great
ceiling, interspersed with huge, carved wooden eagles. At the far end
a huge cracked bell rested on a raised platform—the Liberty
Bell. Behind it hung a wall-size map of the American Empire at its
height, most of South America shaded blue, each of the Sixty-Nine
States marked with a blazing golden star. In the space between, two
or three thousand garishly dressed young men and women milled about,
talking and drinking. Emily
turned, wide-eyed, to her companion. Michael was watching her, a
smile on his lips. "Impressed?" She
nodded. "1 didn't expect. . ." But what had she
expected? She laughed softly. "Are these occasions always like
this?" "Not
always. But then, most hostesses don't have Gloria's style. She's
done us proud, don't you think?" "Us?" "The
Sons . . ." "But
I thought this was a coming-of-age party." "And
so it is." He smiled enigmatically, then offered her his arm.
"Here, let's go down. There are some friends I'd like you to
meet." Two
hours later she found herself among a group of young men gathered at
the far end of the hall, about the Liberty Bell. There were nine of
them in all: Michael Lever, three of his close friends, and five
other "Sons" who had shared the long months of
incarceration at Wu Shih's hands. Like Lever, all were dressed in the
style of the early republic—authentic blue and white uniforms
that had been purchased at great expense. With their short-cropped
blond hair and knee-length boots they brought a strangely somber note
to the occasion, making a striking contrast against the other
partygoers. At
first their talk had ranged widely, embracing all manner of things:
from the planned reopening of the House and new research into space
technologies to developments in the GenSyn inheritance case and the
latest round of inter-City trade agreements. But as the evening drew
on, their mood had grown darker, their talk focusing in upon the
tyranny of the Seven and the corresponding failings of their
fathers. Lever's
close friend Carl Stevens was talking, gesturing animatedly as he
spoke. "Our fathers talk of changing things, of a return to
Empire. That's something we'd all like to see, but when it comes down
to it there's really not much between them and the Seven. Whichever
ruled, the Seven or our fathers, we would remain as we are.
Dispossessed. As powerless then as we are now." Beside
him, Bryn Kustow nodded. "Carl's right. If anything, our
position would be much worse than it is now. If the Seven fell and
our fathers came to power what
would happen? Would they embrace us as their natural partners in the
venture? No. Not for a second. We know how they think. We've all had
a taste of their treatment these past years. They see us as a threat.
As potential usurpers. It's sad to say, but in effect we have become
our fathers' enemies." There
was a murmur of reluctant agreement, heavy with unease. "But
what can be done?" one of the others, Mitchell, asked. "They
have all the power—the real power. All we get is the
scraps from their tables. And what can we do with scraps?" The
bitterness in Mitchell's voice was mirrored in every face. Kustow
looked across at Michael, then looked down, shrugging. "Nothing.
. ." he answered quietly. But there was something about his
manner that suggested otherwise. Standing
there at Michael's side, Emily let her eyes move from face to face,
conscious of the sudden tension in the circle. Despite what was being
said, something about this whole elaborate charade of "Empire"
made her stiffen inwardly against them. They talked of changing the
balance of power—of "liberation"—when all they
really meant was grabbing it for themselves. In that they were no
better than their fathers. No. Even after their experience of
incarceration, they didn't understand. To them it was still
essentially a game. Something to fill the hours and stave off the
specter of boredom. Even
so, it was good to see this—to understand how they thought, how
they acted—for in some strange way it made her stronger, more
determined. For a
moment she abstracted herself from their talk, looking inward,
focusing on the ideal she had worked for all these years. The ideal
of Change—real change—free of the old power
structures. Something pure and clean and utterly new. That was what
she had struggled to achieve all those years in the Ping Tiao. A
new world, free of hierarchies, where men and women could breathe new
air and live new dreams. Yes, and that was what Mach and Gesell had
really betrayed when they had chosen to work with DeVore. She
shivered, then looked aside. Michael was watching her, concerned.
"What is it, Em?" She
stared back at him a moment, not recognizing him for that
instant, surprised to find herself there in the midst of that
gathering, among those she would, without a moment's thought, have
destroyed. And then, as realization struck her, she laughed. And he,
watching her, smiled, his smile broadening, not understanding, yet
liking what he saw in that austere and sculpted face. And as he
looked, a strange new determination formed in him, as if from
nowhere, making his nerve ends tingle. "Well,
Michael? Have you enjoyed your evening?" Michael
Lever turned, embracing his hostess, holding her a moment and kissing
her cheek before he stepped back. Gloria Chung was a tall, strikingly
elegant young woman with the classic features of the Han aristocracy.
It was said her ancestors had been related to the great Ming dynasty,
and, looking at her, it was not difficult to believe. She had dressed
tonight as the famous Empress Wu in sweeping robes of midnight blue
embroidered with a thousand tiny golden suns. They
were alone on the broad upper balcony. Below them the last of the
guests were making their unsteady way back through the winding
pathways to their sedans. She moved past him, standing there at the
rail, looking out over the dim, lamp-lit garden. "I've
had a good time," he said quietly, taking his place beside her
at the rail. "It's been nice to think of something other than
the troubles with my father." "And
the girl?" "The
girl?" He looked blank for a moment, then he laughed. "Oh,
you mean Mary?" She
turned her head, studying him, as if she could see right through him,
then she smiled. "I was watching you, Michael. Watching how you
were together. It was . . . interesting." He
turned his head. "What do you mean?" "I
do believe you're half in love with her." "Nonsense,"
he said, shocked by the suggestion; yet even as he said it, he saw
the truth in it. He stood there a moment, looking at her, then pushed
away from the rail, masking his slip with a laugh. "And what if
I were?" She
reached out, holding his upper arm, then leaned close, kissing him.
"Don't get me wrong. I'm not disapproving. If it makes you
happy. . ." She moved back slightly, her eyes searching his.
"She'd be good for you, Michael. I can see that. She's strong." "Yes,
but. . ." He sighed. No, it was impossible. His father would
never approve. "YouVe
taken the first step. Why not the next?" "What
do you mean?"
» "I
mean, get out of your father's shadow for good. Show him you're your
own man. Marry her." He
laughed, astonished. "Marry her?" He looked down, troubled,
then turned away. "No. I couldn't. He'd cut me off. . ." "He'd
not dare. But even if he did, how could things be any worse than they
are? What else could he do?" "No.
. ." "No?
Think about it, Michael. The Old Man's backed you into a corner. He's
cut off your finances and tried every which way to prevent you from
making a go of it on your own. As things are, you're going to have to
make a choice, and soon—either to go back to him and beg
forgiveness; to go down on your knees before the Old Man and agree to
his terms; or to assert yourself. So why not do it now? Right now,
when he least expects it." He
faced her again. "No. Not while there are still other options." She
shivered. "You mean, like the Clear Heart Credit Agency?" He
stared at her. "How did you know that?" "Because
I make it my business to know. And if I know, you can be sure your
father knows. In fact, I'm certain of it." "How?" "Because
he's the owner of the Clear Heart Credit Agency. As of this morning." He
closed his eyes. "So
what are you going to do?" "Do?
What can I do?" "You
could do what I said. Marry her. Be your own man. As for the money,
I'll give you that. It's two million, neh? Good. I'll have a draft
ready for you in the morning. My wedding gift." He
stared at her, astonished, then shook his head. "But why? I
don't understand you, Gloria Chung. Why should you want to do this
for me?" She
smiled and leaned close, kissing him again. "Because I believe
in you, Michael Lever. And because I want to see you strong. Strong
and independent. For all our sakes." twelve
tiny HOMUNCULi —hologram figures no more than six t'sun in
height—were gathered in a half-circle on the desk's surface,
blinking and flickering in the faint light from a nearby float-globe.
In a tall-backed chair, facing them, Old Man Lever looked down at his
Departmental Heads and growled. "So
what's the problem? Why can't we use someone else? Someone cheaper
than ProFax? Someone more reliable?" Several
of the figures shimmered, as if about to speak, but it was one of the
central holograms—the tiny form of Lever's Head of Internal
Distribution Services, Weller, who answered Lever, his image
hardening, glowing stronger than before, standing out from the images
to either side. The
figure bowed its head. "Forgive me, Master, but we have had a
good record of trading with ProFax. Our association with them goes
back over twenty years. In our experience, there is no one more
reliable." Lever
huffed irritably. "If that were true, we wouldn't be having this
discussion, would we?" He sat forward, looming over them. "So
let me ask you once again, what is the problem? I could understand it
if ProFax owned the patent to this process, but they don't. And they
certainly don't have a monopoly of the market. So why can't we buy
the stuff elsewhere? And why can't we cut the rates we pay for it
into the bargain? It strikes me that this is the perfect
opportunity." He sat
back, steepling his hands. "Okay. This is how we do it. We get
our legal boys to send ProFax a writ, letting them know that they're
in breach of contract, then we withhold all payments for products
already shipped, and send out a request for tenders to all of
ProFax's major competitors. And we do all this right now, understand
me, gentlemen? Right now!" As he
uttered the final words, Lever slammed his right hand down on the
"cancel" button and hauled himself up out of his chair,
even as the images faded from the air. At
that very moment, right across the City, his major Departmental Heads
would be being woken up and told of the decision. Yes, and cursing
me silently, no doubt, Lever thought, smiling savagely. But
that's how it was in this world: one didn't look back, one got on
with things. If something made sense, there was no good reason for
delay. Nor was there room for sentiment. Both were weaknesses. Fatal
weaknesses, if one let them be. He
went across to the drinks cabinet on the far side of the study and
pulled down a bottle of his favorite malt whiskey, pouring himself a
large glass, then turned, looking about him. It was
a big, ranch-style study with heavy wooden uprights and low rails
dividing the room up into "stalls." To his left, beyond one
of the rails, stood a mechanical horse, beneath a portrait of himself
as a twenty-year-old, bare-chested in buckskins and shiny leather
boots. It was
some while—months, if not years—since he had tried
himself against the horse, nor had he even thought of it, but now,
for some reason, he went across and, ducking beneath the rail, stood
next to it, letting his left hand rest on the smooth, cool leather of
the saddle while he sniffed in the heavy animal musk of the thing. Across
from him, behind the desk, set back against the far wall, was a big,
glass-fronted cabinet, filled with sporting trophies: mementos of an
athletic youth. Beside it, lit softly from above, was a head and
shoulder portrait of his wife, her fine golden hair set like a halo
about her soft, angelic face. Earlier,
he had sat in his private viewing chamber, enclosed in the darkness
there, watching a hologram of his son Michael, wrestling with him
beside the pool while his young wife, Margaret, looked on. It was an
old film, taken shortly before Margaret had died. Michael had been
eight then, he fifty-four. He
shivered, thinking of the years between. Twenty years this autumn.
Long years in which he'd tried hard to forget; to steel himself
against all the hurt and injustice he had felt at her death. At the
suddenness of it all. He had buried himself in his work,
throwing everything into the task of making his Company, ImmVac, the
number one economic force in North America. But it had cost him. He
had never grieved for her properly and inside he was hurting still.
Even now, after all these years, he could not look at her without
feeling his stomach fall away, a dryness come to his mouth. It had
been hard, bringing up the boy without her, but he had done it. And
for a time it had worked. For a time . . . Lever
turned his head aside, a sudden bitterness making him grimace. After
all he had been through—after all he had done for the boy—how
could Michael have turned on him like that? And in public too! The
arrogance of the boy! The ingratitude . . . He
shuddered, then slapped the horse's rump, angry with himself. Angry,
not because of what he felt, but for the weakness, the sentiment he
had allowed to sway him. Ducking
beneath the rail he went across and took the envelope from the table
by the door, tearing it open angrily. Inside was the letter he had
written earlier: the brief note of reconciliation, forgiving Michael
and asking him to come back. For a moment Lever stood there, the
letter held in one trembling hand. Then, with a spasm of anger, he
ripped the thing in half, then in half again, his face distorted with
anger and pain. "No,"
he said softly, looking about him, bewildered, frightened suddenly by
the strength, the violence of his feelings. "Not now, and maybe
not ever. No. Not until you come crawling back, begging my
forgiveness." And
would that be enough? Would that repair what had been broken between
them? No. And yet without it there was nothing. Less than nothing, in
fact, for this bitterness, this anger ate at him, day by day, hour by
hour, giving him no rest. Like death, he thought, and shivered again,
wondering how it was all connected. Like death. in
THREE DAYS Lehmann had brought the local tongboss, Lo Han, to the
conference table. Fourteen of his men were dead and six more had
joined K'ang A-yin, under Lehmann's lieutenantship. Now Lo
Han sat there, three of his henchmen behind him, facing K'ang
across the table, making a deal. "It's
too high. Far too high," Lo Han said, spitting out the end of
the cigar he had been chewing on. "Fifteen
percent or the deal is off," answered K'ang, turning in his seat
to smile at Lehmann, as if to say, "You can fight, but when it
comes to making deals, just watch an expert." Lehmann
said nothing, knowing that what K'ang was asking for was ridiculously
low. The figures Lo Han was showing in his books were rigged. Even at
a conservative estimate he must be raking in four or five times as
much. And a sixth of twenty percent wasn't much, seeing as he had
been soundly beaten on four occasions now. But it didn't matter.
Whatever K'ang agreed to, he, Lehmann, would tear up when the time
came, for he wanted a pure one hundred percent of Lo Han's drug
trade. In his
six weeks down here Lehmann had learned much about the Lowers. He had
watched carefully and listened to Soucek attentively. He knew now how
they thought and what they wanted. He knew what motivated them and
how far they would go to get what they wanted. He knew their
strengths and their weaknesses—particularly the latter—and
had come to see just how he could use both to attain his ends. And
what were those ends? When
he had returned to the City from off the mountainside, he had wanted
nothing less than total vengeance against the Seven. He had seen
himself as a lone figure, slipping between the levels like a shadow,
bringing death to the Families and all who supported them. But that
was just a dream. As a single man he could not hope to change things,
yet by his very nature he was singular: he could not parcel out his
thoughts, his hatreds, and share them. Even so, there was a middle
way. Singular
he might be, but not necessarily alone. Already he was forming a
solid corps of men about him, Soucek chief among them. Men loyal to
him alone, however it appeared on the surface. Consulting no one,
letting no one into his thoughts, he went about his business, winning
allies by the strength of his actions, the single- mindedness
inherent in his nature. He did not have to ask; men followed him,
recognizing in him something they had longed for, maybe dreamed of.
Men confided in him, seeking nothing in return. Trusting him. Willing
to be used by him. Wanting to be used. Respect
and fear. Loyalty and a deep-rooted uncertainty. It was this mixed
response to him—there in all who came to know him—that
eventually defined for him the means by which he would come to attain
that impossible, dreamlike end which was the very source, the
fountainhead, of his singularity. He
would use their respect and fear, channel their loyalty and
uncertainty, knowing that both aspects were necessary and, in their
combination, powerful. But at the heart of things would be his own
singular desire, deadly and uncompromising, shaping things, molding
those who were both attracted to and appalled by him into a body—a
weapon—through which his will would be done. He
held the thought in mind a moment longer, then frowned. At the table
the small men were still haggling and bargaining over nothings—Lo
Han's crude arrogance matched by K'ang's petty greed. He looked past
them and saw how the eyes of Lo Han's henchmen had strayed to him,
troubled by his changed expression. Turning away, he went to the door
and tugged it open, ignoring the looks of query from K'ang and Lo
Han. Outside he nodded to Soucek and walked on, conscious of his
questioning glance. Soucek
caught up with him at the corridor's end. "What is it, Stefan?"
he whispered, concerned. Lehmann
turned, facing the tall, cadaverous man, taking his upper arms in his
hands, but for a moment he said nothing. He
knew that they had their rules, their limitations, even here where
there seemed to be no rules at all, only brute force. All human life
set limits to its actions. There was always a point beyond which they
would not go. But he, who valued nothing, had no such rules, no
limits. He was beyond good and evil. For him nothing mattered but the
accomplishment of his will—the fulfillment of his singular
desire. And if
that were so, why then should he wait? Why did he not act at once,
not fearing the consequences? Knowing that the consequences were
likely to favor him. It was this that he had been
thinking as he stood there behind K'ang—this that had
made him frown. He squeezed Soucek's arms and stared into his pale
green eyes. "Are
you with me, Jiri?" Soucek
nodded, seeming to grasp at once what was happening. "Right
now?" he asked. "Why
not? The two together. They might suspect treachery from each other,
but not from us. They'll think we fear an,all-out war between the
long. But with the two of them dead . . ." He let
go of Soucek's arms. The
tall man smiled. It was clear that the idea appealed to him strongly;
that the thought of killing K'ang scratched a long unsatisfied itch.
He drew his gun. "Okay. I'll take Lo Han's henchmen." It was
both clever and sensitive of him. In effect he was saying, You,
Lehmann, are the leader. To you goes the honor of killing K'ang and
Lo Han. Lehmann
nodded slowly and pulled the huge pearl-white gun from its webbing
holster. "Yes,"
he said, his voice cold, brittle like ice. "Let's do it now." lehmann
STOOD there in the Oven Man's doorway, a tall, unnaturally gaunt
figure dressed in white. At his feet lay the corpses of three of the
runners who had attacked them. Two more lay dead inside the room. The
rest had fled, throwing down their hatchets, as if it were Yang Wen,
the God of Hell himself, that faced them. The
killing of Lo Han and K'ang A-yin had shocked the local tong
bosses. But shock had quickly led to the realization that there
was a power vacuum. A vacuum that needed to be filled, and quickly.
Within the hour, two of them met and decided to act. A messenger had
been sent to Lehmann to set up a meeting to arrange a truce, but the
meeting was merely a pretext. The bosses had decided to deal with
Lehmann before he became a problem. Lehmann
had known that. In fact, he had counted on it. He had turned up with
three men, unarmed, knowing how the tang bosses would try to
play it. Fifteen runners, armed with silver hatchets. These would
administer the "death of a thousand cuts"—a warning
to all other potential usurpers. But
Lehmann had had no intention of dying. He had other lessons in mind. An
hour before the meeting he had set up small groups of men in the
approach corridors, making sure they understood that they were not to
intercede in any way, merely show themselves when the tong runners
beat their retreat. Then, when the runners had shown up—
hard-faced, arrogant little shits, dangerously overconfident—
Lehmann had set his men behind him and faced them alone, taunting
them, belittling them, until, one by one, they had come at him. Soucek
stared at him now, remembering. Lehmann
had straight-fisted the first runner before the man had even known
the blow was on its way, the force of the punch sending the man
staggering back. He was dead before he fell. The
second runner had been more cautious, but Lehmann had taken the
hatchets from him as if he were a child, then had lifted him
one-handed and snapped his neck. He had stepped over the corpse and
made a beckoning gesture with his left hand. Come
on... Three
more had tried, the last with a kind of fateful resignation, as if
mesmerized by the power of the man who stood before him. If man it
was. And then, as one, they had broken, running from the figure in
white, whose thin, emaciated limbs were paler than ice, and whose
eyes were like tiny windows into hell. He had
heard the catcalls of the men in the approach corridors; the jeers
and mocking laughter as they goaded the fleeing runners. And then had
watched them return, to find Lehmann as he was now, framed in the
doorway to the Oven Man's room. Soucek
looked about him, finding his own awe reflected in every face, there
in the wide, admiring eyes of every man. He turned, facing Lehmann
again, then knelt, abasing himself, laying down his neck before the
man, not quite knowing why he did so, only that this was what he
ought to do. And, all about him, the others did the same, letting
Lehmann move between them, pressing his foot against each exposed
neck. Marking them. Making them his men. His absolutely. Even unto
death. Just as Li Yuan had done on the day of his coronation. And
when Soucek stood again, it was with a sense of Tightness, of
utter certainty. There was no going back from this. From here
on there would be no half measures. It was Lehmann or nothing. And
with that sense of Tightness came another—a sense of destiny.
Of things beginning. It was like being in a dream, or at the
beginning of a myth. From this time on they walked a special path.
And wherever it took them—to Heaven or down into the very
depths of Hell—he would walk it behind the man. For that was
how it was from this moment, for all of them gathered there. It had
begun. IT WAS
AFTER FOUR when Emily got back. She kicked off her shoes and went
through to the bathroom, humming softly to herself. Reaching up, she
placed her hand against the side of the shower unit. Good. It was
hot. That meant the servant had remembered to come in earlier. She
pulled the dress up over her head and let it fall onto the chair at
her side, then slipped out of her chemise. It had
been a memorable evening, and an unexpectedly enjoyable one. She
stepped into the shower, casting her mind back over the evening's
events as she soaped herself beneath the steady fall of water. Michael
Lever really wasn't so bad, now she had come to know him better. Not
that she had always felt that way. When she had first joined MemSys
she had viewed the Levers with a distant loathing, not distinguishing
much between father and son, seeing only the rapa-ciousness of the
parent Company, ImmVac, and the unheeding damage it did in its
eternal quest for profit. But now . . . Well, the past six weeks had
taught her much. Systems were systems and they ought to be opposed,
but it was not so easy with people. You had to take each person as
you found them. And in many respects Michael Lever was a good
man—honest, reliable, capable of instilling a fierce
protective-ness and loyalty in those about him. Was it his fault that
he'd been bom heir to ImmVac? Before
now she hadn't been sure. She had wondered whether there really was
any difference between father and son, but tonight, listening to him
talk about what he wanted for the future, she had seen another side
of him—one she had never guessed existed. That desire for
change—that burning need in him to do something for the
ordinary people of America . . . was that real or was it
merely rhetoric? Despite the warmth of the water, she shivered, just
thinking about it. His passion—that fierce, uncompromising fire
she had glimpsed when he'd turned to her briefly—had seemed
real enough. But how far would he go along that road? As far as she
was willing to go, or would his courage fail him in the face of
genuine change? Would he shy away from taking that ultimate step? She
cut the flow and stepped out, squeezing her hair, then wrapped it up
in a towel. For a moment she stood there, staring sightlessly at the
steamed mirror as she dried herself, then turned and went through
into the bedroom. The
bedroom was dark. Only the light from the bathroom spilled into the
opening. Even so, she saw him before she crossed the
doorway. He was
sitting on her bed, a gun in his hand, covering her. A tall,
unbearded Han with close-cropped dark hair and a face she had never
seen in her life. She
made to step back, but he lifted the gun slightly, clicking off the
safety. The signal was unmistakable. She froze, letting her hands
rest at her sides, fingers apart, the gesture meant to reassure him.
She was naked, the light behind her. "What
do you want?" She
said the words calmly, showing no sign of the fear she felt. He could
kill her in a second. Two bullets through the heart. It was what she
had been expecting every day since she had come from Europe. And now,
finally, they had caught up with her. He
stood, then crossed the room, the gun covering her all the while, his
eyes never leaving her. He lifted something from the dressing table
and threw it across to her. It was her robe. With the barest nod of
thanks, she pulled it on. "Who
sent you?" she asked, trying another tack. The
smile he gave was strange, almost familiar. And his build. She
frowned, trying to place the memory. And then he spoke. "How
are things, Emily?" She
narrowed her eyes, uncertain, then laughed, astonished. "Jan . .
. ? Is that you?" The
smile broadened. Slowly the gun came down. It was Mach— Jan
Mach—she could see that now, despite the change of face. There
was something about the way he stood there—about the way he
used the muscles of his face—that could not be disguised. "What
happened?" He
took a breath. "They were onto me. We were attacked, eleven days
back, at third bell. They killed more than twenty agents and took
maybe thirty more, six of our cell leaders among them—comrades
who knew me personally. Who could identify me." "Karr?" He
nodded. "It must have been. I'd heard rumors he was creating a
new force, but I didn't think they were ready yet." He shrugged,
his features momentarily formed into a grimace as he recalled what
had happened. "This . . ." he touched his face tenderly, "I
had done eight days ago. It still hurts. I should have rested—should
have left the bandages on a while longer—but things were too
hot in Europe. I had to get out." "Do
you want to stay here?" Mach
looked at her a moment, then nodded. "It won't be long. Two days
at most." "And
then?" He
looked down at the gun in his hand, then threw it down onto the bed.
"IVe got to go back. There's some unfinished business. An old
score to settle. IVe set it up, but I've got to be there to make sure
it all runs smoothly." Mach looked back at her, smiling. "And
you? What are you up to over here?" She
was about to answer him when there was a knock on the door. She
turned, anxious, then looked back at him. "In the bathroom. Hide
in the shower unit. Take the gun. I'll try and put them off, whoever
it is." He
nodded, then did as she said. Only when he was inside, the door
pulled over, did she go down the hallway. "Who
is it?" "Delivery!
For Nu shi Jennings."
„ She
put her tongue to her top teeth. Delivery? At four seventeen in the
morning? She reached out, turning the lock, drawing the door
back a fraction and staring out through the thumbnail gap. A
small Han was standing there, head bowed, half-hidden behind the huge
basket of flowers he was carrying. She
gave a small laugh, still suspicious. Then she saw the note and at
once recognized Michael Lever's neatly rounded hand. She pulled the
door back. "Gods..." He
handed her the basket, then stood back, bowing deeply. She turned,
reading the note as she pulled the door closed behind her, then
returned to the bedroom. "Well.
. . ?" Mach began, coming out from the bathroom, then stopped,
seeing the flowers. "A friend?" he asked, curious. "Yes,"
she said hesitantly, closing her hand over the note, for some reason
not wanting him to see what was written there. "A very dear
friend." They
were orchids. Perfect, exotic orchids, worth a thousand yuan
apiece, and there had to be—what?—thirty or more of
them here. She frowned, disturbed by the gift, then drew the basket
to her face, sniffing at them, drawing in their delicate, wonderful
scent. "A
lover?" Mach asked, blunt as ever. "No,"
she answered. But even as she said it, she could see him again,
smiling, turning to share a joke with her; and afterward, his dark
eyes burning, talking of the great changes to come. "No,"
she said again. "Just a friend. A very good friend." CHAPTER
SEVEN
Smoke
Rings and Spiders' Webs YOU'VE
CHECKED EVERYTHING?" Soucek
nodded, a feral grin splitting his narrow face. "Not so much as
a cockroach could get out of there unless we willed it." "Good."
Lehmann drew a long breath, then nodded. "All right. Let's go
meet them." They
passed through the cordon, some of the men familiar, others
strangers, all of them wary, nervous, but under strict orders to
start nothing. If things went wrong today there would be war such as
the Lowers hadn't seen in decades. A war that was certain to draw in
the Triads. The
deck had been cleared for the meeting, and only the tong were
present. The big men—all nine of his rival gangleaders in the
Kuei Chuan's territory—were waiting for Lehmann in Main,
standing out in the broad open space. They formed two groups, one of
five men, one of four. Lehmann paused, taking in every detail, then
walked on, Soucek at his side. He
could see in their faces that word had gone before him. His height,
his deathly pallor, the whiteness of his clothes, his holstered gun.
Some of them feigned indifference, but there was no mistaking what
their eyes told him. They were afraid of him. They had only come here
today because they were afraid. Like K'ang and Lo Han before them
they had tried other means of dealing with him. Now
they were forced to come to terms. Or risk a protracted
guerrilla war that would waste their resources and distract them from
the business of making money. He
raised his empty hands as if holding a large bowl, the fingers spread
unnaturally wide, like long, fine needles of ice. The gesture seemed
to stress his alienness; his long, thin arms held awkwardly, his
whole body crouched slightly, like a fighter's. The pose was half
challenge, half greeting. It distinguished him from the relaxed,
almost slovenly postures of the men facing him. "Gentlemen?" He let
the archaic word hang in the air between them, its irony unexplained,
and saw them frown and look among themselves. And though it amused
him, he let nothing show in his face, only an intense watchfulness—an
almost machinelike attentiveness. "What
do you want?" one of them asked. It
was the first question, the primary question one man asked of
another, openly or otherwise. Lehmann turned slightly to face the
man, taking in at a glance the fact that they had chosen for their
spokesman one who seemed stronger, more aggressive than the rest; a
fierce-eyed, bearded man of bull-like stature. Unlike the rest he
dressed simply, his fingers free of the heavy rings that seemed a
mark of status down here. Lehmann raised his chin slightly, then
answered. "I
want what you want. Peace. A truce. Concessions." The
bearded man smiled, showing strong white teeth. His name was Ni Yueh
and Lehmann knew all there was to know about him. All that could
be known without entering Ni Yueh's head. It was a surprise to
him, however, that they had chosen Ni Yueh. He had expected to have
to deal with Yan Yan or Man Hsi, one of the talkers. It made him
reassess things and change his tactics. Ni Yueh was a bullyboy. An
intimidator. It was obvious that this was the way they thought they
could deal with him. Well, he would show them otherwise. Before Ni
Yueh could say another word, Lehmann turned away from him and,
changing his stance, relaxing the muscles of his face, took a step
toward Yan Yan, offering his hand. "There
have been misunderstandings," he said. "Bad rumors. We need
to clear the air." Reluctantly,
looking to Ni Yueh then back to Lehmann, Yan Yan took the offered
hand. Lehmann
smiled. It was a charming, almost innocent smile. A disarming smile.
Slowly, Yan Yan's lips formed a mirror to it, but his eyes still
showed uncertainty. Lehmann closed a second hand about Yan Yan's,
keeping the handshake warm and unthreatening. "There's
no need for enmity," he said reassuringly. "There's enough
for all, neh? More than enough." Yan
Yan looked down at the long, pale hands that held his own, then up
into Lehmann's face again, puzzled. But it was Ni Yueh who spoke. "You
say that, but why should we trust you? What's to stop you doing to us
what you did to K'ang A-yin and Lo Han?" Lehmann
lowered his head slightly, his expression seeming to say, "Oh
dear, that again . . ."He released Yan Yan's hand and half
turned, looking across at Ni Yueh. "I've
heard the stories. Heard the tales men whisper to each other, and let
me assure you, they are simply not true." There was an
earnestness, a sincerity in his voice as he said it that half
convinced them. A plea for belief. The very look of a wronged man.
His eyes seemed pained by the misunderstanding. Regretful. "I
didn't want to kill K'ang A-yin. He was a friend. A benefactor. But
he made a deal with Lo Han, and my death was part of that deal.
Soucek here can vouch for that, can't you, Jiri?" Soucek
nodded and stepped forward, saying the words Lehmann had had him
rehearse. "It
was halfway through the meeting. Lehmann and I had gone out to check
that everything was secure in the corridors. When we came back, K'ang
had moved back against the far wall and Lo Han was sitting there with
his big snub-nosed gun in one hand, laughing. It seems that K'ang had
given his permission to kill Lehmann. He told me to leave the room.
Told me it was simply business. But I stayed." "How
loyal," said Ni Yueh in an undertone that suggested he didn't
believe a word of it. But Soucek turned on him angrily. "Maybe.
But I saw it like this. A boss looks after his men. He sells one he
sells them all, right? So I made a choice." There
were nods from the other big men. Soucek's outburst had impressed
them. If it was as Soucek said, then Lo Han and K'ang had clearly
broken the code. It was not done to betray one's own so casually,
even for the sake of peace. "So,"
Ni Yueh said, stepping between the two men and confronting Lehmann
face to face, "there was Lo Han, sitting behind the desk with
his gun out. How is it he didn't kill you?" Lehmann
held Ni Yueh's eyes. "Because I was better than him. Quicker.
And now he's dead, and I'm alive. It's simple, really." "Too
fucking simple!" Ni Yueh turned to face the others. "I
don't believe a word of this. I trust this bastard about as much as
I'd trust shit to taste good." There
was laughter, but it was short-lived. Lehmann had split them. The
three who had been standing with Ni Yueh were still glaring at him,
but the others—Yan Yan and Man Hsi among them— were not
happy with Ni Yueh's words. Man Hsi spoke up. "I
don't see what proof you have, Ni Yueh. We all know how things get
distorted. I say we should forget the past and make things good for
the future. That's why we're here, right? Not to bicker and fight.
WeVe done too much of that already and it's got us nowhere. No. WeVe
got to make deals. Patch things up. For all our sakes." Ni
Yueh was scowling. For a moment he seemed about to answer, then,
abruptly, he shook his head and turned away, as if he'd washed his
hands of it. Turning to Lehmann, Man Hsi spoke again, his voice
growing softer, more conciliatory. "So
what deal have you got for us, Shih Lehmann? What can you
offer us to make the peace?" Lehmann
looked past Man Hsi at the others, knowing how things stood. If they
had wanted—if they had really wanted—they could
have wiped him out. It would have cost them dearly, but it had been
possible. They could have done it. But now? Inside—deep
inside—he laughed. Now it was too late. Simply in agreeing to
come here and meet him they had made their greatest concession. Had
admitted to him their lack of will. Even Ni Yueh, for all his
hostility. Turning
to Soucek, he nodded, then waited while his lieutenant brought the
documents. As arranged, others brought a long, six- legged
table and a stack of chairs and set them down close to where the big
men stood. Then, documents in hand, Lehmann put out a hand, inviting
them to sit. There
were ten copies of the treaty; one for each of the signatories. He
watched as they first frowned, then, with greater interest, began to
read the fifteen terms that would bring peace to the Lowers of
north-central Europe. A treaty that divided the Kuei Chuan's
territory into ten equal parts. That provided the detailed
conditions by which they dealt with one another. Lehmann had modeled
it on the commercial treaties he had found among his dead father's
effects, but the terms were specific to the tang. Man
Hsi looked up, met Yan Yan's eyes, and smiled. As Lehmann had
expected, they were impressed. They had never seen the like of this
before and it pleased them greatly. It gave their activities the seal
of legality. It made them feel like businessmen. Like Company
executives. Lehmann watched each of them straighten up as they
finished reading and seemed to puff out, bigger than they'd been only
moments before. Kings. If only of the Lowers. "Well?"
he said, looking to Man Hsi. Man
Hsi looked across at Ni Yueh, who nodded grudgingly, not looking at
Lehmann. After that it was a formality. Soucek handed out brushes and
they signed, Yan Yan with a flourish that strayed over the signatures
of three of his fellow bosses. Slowly the documents were passed
around the table until each of the copies bore ten signatures at its
foot. That done, Lehmann stood, raising his hand for silence. "By
this document—a copy of which will be held by each of us—
we have peace in our part of the great City." He smiled
pleasantly, and nodded. "Yes, peace and prosperity. But. . ."
his face changed, all friendliness draining from it, ". . .
should anyone break this treaty, then all the other parties
must and will unite to bring the transgressor to account."
He paused dramatically and looked at each of them in turn. When he
spoke again his voice was fierce, insistent. "It is only if each
one of us knows this and fears it that the agreement will
work. You understand?" There
was a moment's hesitation, then nods and a murmur of agreement. "We
understand," Ni Yueh said, his voice heavy with sarcasm. But his
eyes showed something different now. The treaty had affected him; had
made him question what he had earlier believed. And though the
bantering tone remained, deep down he was far less certain. Lehmann
had impressed him despite all. "Good,"
said Lehmann, releasing Ni Yueh's eyes. "Then our business here
is done." the
CORRIDOR was packed. People had been gathering for the last thirty
minutes outside the offices of the Ch'i Chu corporation,
curious to see who had ordered such a grand sedan. Old men and
children, young wives and idle youths, Han and Hung Mao alike,
all stood there, gawping and chattering. Some busied themselves
examining the sedan, feeling the thickness and quality of the green
er-silk coverings or peeking inside at the big, luxuriantly cushioned
chair. There were jokes about how big a man the chair might carry,
and then sudden laughter as one of the young boys acted out a mime,
pretending to be a fat official, his pomposity matched only by his
grossness as he waddled across to take his place in the chair.
Others, meanwhile, had formed a crowd about the squatting pole-men,
trying to strike up a conversation, but long experience had made the
carriers taciturn. The four men waited patiently, saying nothing,
their eyes downcast, conscious of the runners who stood nearby. There
was a murmur of surprise as Kim appeared, dressed simply, a slender
folder tucked beneath his arm. Many looked beyond him, waiting to see
who else was to come, but there was no one, only the employees of
Ch'i Chu, who came out and stood there under the arch of the
entrance. Many
in the crowd had seen the boy, either in the tea house, or walking
the corridors late at night. Few, however, understood who he was, or
what his role in the strangely named Ch'i Chu corporation was. They
had thought him just a boy. A messenger, perhaps, or the nephew of a
rich man. But now they looked at him anew, redefining him. Or trying
to. Kim
stopped, glancing about him uncertainly, then turned back, a smile
coming to his face. Bright red good-fortune banners had been
draped over the doorway to the offices. Beneath them, all six
of his staff had formed up, to say good-bye and wish him luck. "Here,"
T'ai Cho said, coming forward and handing him a small, sealed box.
"You'll need this." "What
is it?" "Lunch,"
T'ai Cho explained, smiling broadly. "From what I'm told, it
will be a good few hours before they process the patent, and I know
you. You would forget to eat." Thanks,
Kim mouthed, touching his arm briefly, then looked back at the
others. The two middle-aged Thais he had hired as researchers were
grinning broadly now and waving, excited as children. Beside them, to
their right, his assistant, a fresh-faced, young Han named Hong Chi,
was looking about him, wide-eyed, clearly enjoying it all. Seeing Kim
watching him, Hong smiled, then lowered his head, blushing. Kim's
guard, a stocky young Hung Mao named Richards, met his eyes
proudly and shouted a gruff "Good luck!" while Nong Yan,
his bookkeeper, called out, "Go now! Make us all rich!"
which brought a huge shout of laughter from the rest. "I
shall," Kim said softly, feeling warmed by the smiling faces
that surrounded him on every side. "Be sure I shall." With a
bow to them all, Kim turned, climbing up into the sedan. As the
pole-men lifted the heavy chair, he leaned out, waving goodbye, his
voice drowned by the cheering of the crowd and the shouts of the two
runners as they cleared the path ahead. Sitting
back, Kim felt a shiver of anticipation ripple through him. So this
was it. He looked down at the folder in his lap and gave a little
laugh of surprise. Some days he would simply sit there, staring at
his hands, astonished that he had survived the darkness of the Clay
to come to this. And he would count himself blessed that it was so,
in spite of all that had happened in between. Even so, today was
special, for today it all came together at last. "Smoke
rings . . ." he said quietly, then laughed again, feeling the
sedan sway and bob beneath him. "Smoke rings and spiders' webs." EMILY
TURNED quickly, the narrow beam of the overhead light picking out the
false image in the mirror, then flipped backward, ignoring
the hologram that appeared suddenly to her right, facing the shadowed
figure by the door, the knife held out before her. The blade flashed,
sank deep into the upper rib cage, then jerked back. She took a step
back, breathing deeply, then sheathed the knife, satisfied. "Cut,"
she said quietly. At once the lights came up, the apartment's
computer registering her command. Shuddering,
Emily wiped the back of her hand across her forehead. It had been a
hard workout. For the first time in a long while she had forced
herself to the very limit. She
looked about the room—at the bloodied figure of the mannequin;
at the darted targets she had set up on the walls; at the
ceiling-mounted projectors; at the mats and traps and trip wires—and
realized she had missed the excitement of all this. It was time she
did something. Time she started organizing once again. Quickly
she went about the room, tidying up, stashing the equipment in the
storage box at the far end of the room and covering it all over with
a pile of sheets and old clothes. Then she went through to the
shower, standing there under the flow until the water ran out,
considering the way ahead. Mach was out, meeting contacts and making
deals: doing what he was good at. She had barely seen him for more
than twenty minutes since he'd arrived that night. As for herself, it
was two days now since she had been in to the office. She
had called in sick. A brief message on Michael Lever's personal
comset. He had called back, less than a minute later, asking if she
needed anything; saying that he'd call if she wanted him to. But she
had sent back that it was all right. It was just a virus. Nothing
serious. Just one of the new forty-eight-hour things that had been
sweeping the levels recently. She would keep to her bed and come in
when she felt better. His second message was brief, almost
businesslike, except for the way he'd signed it. "Love Michael." So
where did that leave her? She walked about the apartment, toweling
herself, recalling how Michael had looked at her the other evening at
the ball, and how she'd felt, watching him as he talked, conscious of
a growing admiration for him. In the hallway she stopped, standing
before the flowers he had sent, and lifted one of the perfect pink
and white orchids to her nose. The blooms were still fresh, their
scents rich. With the faintest shiver she turned away, returning
to the bedroom. There, she stood before the wardrobe, wondering what
to wear. She was going down level, so it would have to be something
basic. The kind of thing her alias, Rachel De Valerian, might wear. She
looked across. The false ID was on the bed, where she'd left it
earlier. A permit card. Employment details. False retinas. Everything
she'd need if she were to be stopped and questioned by Security.
DeVore had thought it all through. Had made sure to do a fine job for
her. But why? Because he knew she would eventually begin again,
agitating, causing trouble for the Seven? Was it simply that? Or was
it something else? Had he some other purpose that was as yet hidden
from her? Whatever,
it was time to take a few risks. Time to make good on the promises
she had made herself. She
had changed and dried her hair when a knock came on the door. Three
raps, a pause, a single rap, a pause, and then a further three. Mach.
He was back. She
studied herself in the mirror a moment, composing herself, then went
through, slipping the bolt from the door, then pressing the key-open.
As the door began to slide back, Mach came through, barely looking at
her, making straight for the bathroom. "Hey!"
she called after him. "What's the hurry?" She
followed him along, then stood there in the doorway watching as he
undid his jacket and took out three high-powered Security automatics,
each handgun wrapped in sheet ice, and placed them in the now empty
water-cabinet above the shower. That
done, he turned, grinning at her, his new face still a shock to her
each time she saw it. "That's
good," he said, noting at once how she was dressed, his careful
eyes not missing that her eye color had changed, but registering it
by the movement of a finger to one of his own eyes. "Who
arranged that for you? DeVore?" She
stared at him, something of her old hostility returning. "Well
it wasn't you, was it, Jan? You wanted me dead." Mach
laughed strangely. "Did he tell you that?" He shrugged. "He
told me you'd slipped the net. That he'd tried for you, but that
you'd been too good for him." She
shivered, thinking back. No, it hadn't been like that. DeVore had
found her easily enough, and—if he'd wanted to—he could
have killed her. But he hadn't. And here she was, two years on, ready
to begin again. "They
killed him, you know," Mach said, moving past her, heading for
her bedroom. "I tried, at Nantes Spaceport, but his man—that
red-eyed albino bastard, Lehmann—buggered things up for me.
Killed three of my best men. But then the T'ang's man—that big
man from the Net, Karr—finally got him. Smashed his head open
with a rifle butt, so IVe heard." Again
she followed him through, watching as he took his things from the
bottom of the wardrobe and placed them quickly but carefully into a
holdall. "I
didn't know," she said. Then, "What are you doing?" He
turned, still half crouched, looking back at her. "I'm moving
on, Em. Fresh fields. New ventures. You know . . ." She
shook her head. "You surprise me, Jan. You always did. You're so
resourceful. So flexible." He
stood, then laughed softly. "Do I detect a note of disapproval
in that last comment, Emily Ascher?" She
met his eyes clearly, trying to see him through the mask of new
flesh, then nodded. "We want different things, you and 1. We
always did, only it took me a long while to see that." He
studied her a moment, then looked away, pressing the lips of the
holdall together and hoisting it up over his shoulder. "No, Em.
It isn't what we want, it's what we're prepared to do to get it.
That's what makes you and me different. But now we can go our own
paths, neh? Now weVe the opportunity to see whose way is best."
He met her eyes again. "I'll not lie to you, Em. If you'd stood
in my way, I'd not have hesitated to have had you killed. But you
didn't. And I don't think you ever would. If I did, I'd never have
turned up at your door two nights back. So, whether you believe me or
not, let me tell you that what DeVore said simply wasn't true. I
didn't want you dead. Nor do I now. And if there's anything you
need—if there's any way I can help, then just call me. I owe
you one, right?" She
stared at him, then shook her head. "So where are you going?
Back to Europe? Or do you plan to move down-level here?" His
smile stretched the new skin about his mouth tight in what seemed
almost a parody of a smile. "Neither, Em, my dear. I'm going to
be a house guest. That's where I'm off to right now. I'm staying with
Old Man Lever down in Richmond." OLD
MAN LEVER was standing beside the pool, drying himself, as the two
men were led in to see him. He turned, relaxed, watching them
approach him around the pool's edge, then threw the towel down,
stretching out a hand to greet them. "Milne
. . . Ross . . . It's good to see you again. You'll have a drink, I
hope?" The
two men hesitated, looking to each other, then nodded. "Good."
Lever turned, snapping his fingers. At once the Steward went across
and busied himself, preparing drinks. Lever took a light silk jacket
from the back of a chair and threw it across his broad shoulders,
then turned, facing them again. "Well?
What have you got for me?" "Nothing
much, I'm afraid," Ross said, one hand going up to draw a thin
wisp of strawlike hair across his balding pate. "She's a regular
Miss Goody-two-shoes from what we can make out. Good at school. A
clean College record. And not a mention of her ever appearing, even
as witness, before a deck judicial hearing. In short, the public
record backs up the Company file. Nu Shjh Jennings is what she says
she is. It's all there, except..." He
hesitated, looking down. "Except
what?" "Except
that it doesn't make sense," Milne finished in his quick, nervy
fashion. "It's all too pat. Too neatly structured. Like someone
made it all up. It's . . ." He squirmed, his shoulders moving as
if he had something up the back of his jacket. "Well, it's
lacking anything distinctive. You know, the kind of things that shape
a life. That give it its flavor." "Hmmm,"
Old Man Lever nodded to himself. "But it all fits?" "On
the surface," Ross answered, lifting a hand slightly, signaling
the dark-haired Milne to keep quiet. "But we could dig a little
deeper, if you want. We could go back to Atlanta Canton. Speak to a
few people who knew her before
she moved out. Find out what she was really like." Lever
was silent for a time. Then, taking a long swig from his glass, he
shook his head. "What reason could there be for those records
being wrong?" Ross
looked at his companion, then shrugged. "No reason. Just that it
feels wrong. WeVe been doing this job near on twenty years, Mister
Lever, and you get to know the smell of wrongness. And this. . .
well, this just stinks of wrongness." Beside
him, Milne nodded emphatically. "Okay,"
Lever said, setting his glass down. "Let's assume the records
have been doctored. Let's say that someone's done a number on
her official files. Fine. But let me ask you just two questions. Who
did it? And why?" "I
don't know," Ross said, meeting the old man's piercing gaze. "I
just know that someone has. As Milne says, it's just too neat." But
Lever was shaking his head. "No. It makes no sense. It takes a
lot of clout to change those records. A lot of clout." He
laughed, then, leaning closer, added softly, "And who should
know better than me, neh?" He
moved between them. "No, gentlemen. Thanks, but let's leave it
at that. I was hoping you might dig up something I could use against
the woman—a string of ex-lovers or something—but it looks
like I'm just going to have to plain invent something." He
laughed. "Hell, maybe I should just have done that in the first
place!" "And
our file?" Ross asked tensely. "I'll
keep that," Lever said, meeting his eyes again. "You'll be
paid well, Shih Ross. Very well indeed. But this thing is closed now,
understand me? Closed." WHEN
THEY WERE GONE, Lever turned, looking up at the balcony overlooking
the pool. From behind the cover of a vine, a man emerged and leaned
against the rail, looking down at him. Lever called up to him. "Well,
Mach? What do you think?" Mach smiled. "It's as you said,
Mister Lever. It makes no sense. If
this Jennings woman were a sleeper, put in by some rival of
yours, she'd have stayed on where she could have done most harm, not
gone to Michael." Lever
nodded. Those were his thoughts exactly. Even so, Ross's conviction
had shaken him. He'd used Ross and Milne often these past ten years,
and their instinct was generally sound. So what if... ? For a
moment he entertained the thought, trying to think of a reason—any
reason—why her records might have been doctored, then shook his
head, dismissing it again. No. It made no sense. No sense at all. "Well,
that's it, then," Milne said, cradling his ch'a bowl and
squinting at his partner across the table of the low-level tea house.
"Another file closed." "Maybe,"
Ross said, his eyes following the progress of one of the serving
women. "And maybe not." Milne
watched his face, waiting, knowing that Ross was chewing something
over. "IVe
been thinking," Ross began in a lazy drawl, turning his
attention back to Milne. "Thinking that we could do with a
holiday. And with what Mister Lever's paid us, I reckon we could have
ourselves a hell of a fun time in Atlanta." "Atlanta
. . . ?" Milne stared back at him blankly a moment, then
laughed, understanding dawning on him. "Atlanta! Hell,
sure. Atlanta." "Good,"
Ross said, sitting back and nodding, a smile of satisfaction
splitting his face. "And maybe we can do a little digging while
we're there. I mean . . . what harm can it do?" LI y u
AN was at the far end of the gallery, standing beneath one of the
five huge portraits that filled the midnight-blue walls. As the great
doors opened, the young T'ang turned, looking toward them, then
smiled, beckoning Tolonen across. "Knut,"
he said, offering the ring finger of his right hand for the old man
to kiss. "You are well, I hope." Tolonen
came to attention, his head bowed, his close-cropped steel-gray hair
presented to his T'ang. "I am fine, Chieh Hsia. I..." He
stopped, conscious of something odd in Li Yuan's manner. Of a strange
thoughtfulness in that young, unbearded face, an unnatural stillness
to his bearing, that reminded him suddenly of the boy's father, Li
Shai Tung. So the old man had been at times, as if something had
lodged in his thoughts, like a rock in the middle of a stream. Tolonen
turned, looking up at the portrait Li Yuan had been studying and gave
a small smile of recognition. It was Ch'in Shih Huang Ti, the First
Emperor. The unifier of ancient China. The tyrant, so-called. In the
portrait he was standing on the shoreline of Shandong, staring out
toward the east—to P'eng Lai, the Isle of the Immortals. Tall,
bearded, and arrogant, the peach of immortality clutched in his left
hand. "I
have been thinking," Li Yuan said, moving past Tolonen to stand
beneath the portrait once again. "Trying to see some pattern in
the flow of time." "A
pattern, Chieh Hsia?" "Of
what men are, and what they do, and why they never learn." Tolonen
looked down. "Do you really think that's so, my Lord?" Li
Yuan nodded. "I do, Knut. Take our friend here. In many ways he
was a great man. A military genius and a visionary administrator,
whose actions shaped our land for two thousand years. And yet, as a
man, he was ultimately flawed, for he wanted more than life could
give him. He wanted to live forever, and that destroyed him. All the
good he had done was undone by that. His great empire lasted but a
year or so beyond his death." The
young T'ang moved on, his booted footsteps echoing on the tiled
floor, until he stood beneath the second of the portraits. Of the
five, this was the most famous, for copies of it hung in every deck,
at every level of the great earth-spanning City. "Wen
Ti. . ." Li Yuan turned, looking back at Tolonen, a strange, sad
smile on his lips. "How many times have you heard old men and
schoolboys praise him for his virtue? How many times has his name
been used like a charm to castigate an errant child or a poor
official? In the history books he is portrayed as a rock, a mountain
of a man, as just as he was compassionate, as fair as he was stem,
and yet, under his rule, the Middle Kingdom almost faltered.
Incursions by the northern barbarians, the Hsiung Nu, twice forced
him to make accommodations—to cede land and make huge tributary
payments. Why, his capital, Ch'ang-An, almost fell to them! And like
Ch'in Shih Huang Ti, only a year or so after his death the empire was
in chaos, rebellions sweeping the provinces." "He
did his best, Chieh Hsia . . ." "Maybe
so, Knut, but it gives one pause for thought, neh? Ch'in Shih Huang
Ti was a tyrant, yet beneath him the empire thrived. Wen Ti was a
good man, yet beneath him the empire suffered. Which, then, should I
model myself upon?" "Is
the choice that simple, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan smiled, then moved on to the next painting, looking up at the
image of an elegant-looking middle-aged man in golden silks. "No,
Knut. It is never that simple. Take the case of Ming Huang here,
sixth of the great T'ang emperors. He was a great man. A wise ruler
and a powerful warrior. His reign was a golden age, it is said. The
great poets and painters of our history—Li Po, Tu Fu, Wang
Wei—such men thrived under his rule. It was a time of great
culture, of prosperity and peace, and yet all that was destroyed, the
empire torn apart by rebellions, and why? Because of his weakness.
Because of his infatuation for a woman." Tolonen
looked down, uncomfortable with this sudden turn. "So it was,
Chieh Hsia. So history tells us, anyway. But what is your point?" The
young T'ang turned. "My point? Why, that emperors are men, not
figureheads or abstract forces, and that what they are shapes the
destiny of those they rule. They stretch out a hand and the shadow
falls across a continent. So it is. So it has always been. And I,
Knut. In what way am I different?" He
turned back, staring up at the handsome features of Ming Huang a
moment longer, then, with a small shake of his head, went across to
the fourth of the portraits. "Mao
Tse Tung," he said quietly, his eyes taking in the familiar
icon. "First of the great Ko Ming emperors. The Great
Helmsman himself. Like Ch'in
Shih Huang Ti—his idol—Mao could be ruthless and
tyrannical. Beneath him, the Middle Kingdom was unified again, all
invaders cast out. And yet, like Wen Ti—whose values he tried
to overthrow—Mao tried hard in his early years to give the
people peace and prosperity, to end corruption and reform the
bureaucracy. To make the Middle Kingdom strong and healthy after
decades of suffering and neglect. In many ways he seems the perfect
balance between the two men. And yet he too was flawed. Flawed by a
belief in his own infallibility. In his Great Leap Forward, tens of
millions died, Knut. And for what? Simply to prove him wrong." Tolonen
looked down, frowning. "But you are not any of these men, Chieh
Hsia. You are yourself. Surely you can learn from their
mistakes and be what they were not?" Li
Yuan glanced at the old man questioningly, then turned, making his
way across to the last of the five great canvases. For a moment he
stood there, staring up at the powerful image of the man his own
ancestors had overthrown. Tsao Ch'un. The Tyrant. Founder of the
City. Of Chung Kuo itself. "Coming
here, seeing these men, their faces, it makes me wonder. Can I learn
from their mistakes? Or am I doomed to take the same path? To go down
in history as a weak and foolish man? Or as a
tyrant?" Tolonen
went across and stood beside him. "Does it worry you, Yuan?" "Worry
me?" Li Yuan laughed, then turned, facing his father's General
once again. "Yes, Knut. It worries me. But not as others might
think. It worries me that my weakness might prove the death of
millions. Or that some excess of desire or pride, arrogance or
cold-heartedness might turn my face to tyranny. I look at these
faces, these giant figures from our past, and I ask myself. Am I
strong enough? Wise enough? You said of Wen Ti just now, 'He did his
best.' Well, will my best be good enough? Have I, within me,
what it takes to mold and shape a world and all its people? Or will
ignorance and desire destroy me, as they have destroyed so many in
the past? I am determined, yes. But what if determination fails,
Knut? What then?" The
old man sniffed deeply, then shrugged, clearly disturbed by the young
T'ang's words. "Never
mind. . ." Li Yuan looked down, unclenching his fists and
staring at them a moment, as if to comprehend them. Then, as if
coming to once more, he looked back up at the old man, his dark,
hazel eyes less intense than a moment earlier. "So tell me,
Knut. What did you find in my cousin's City?" "Something
strange," Tolonen answered, his voice suddenly clear and
resonant. "Something strange and horrible." IN
WHAT HAD ONCE BEEN K'ang A-yin's offices, Soucek stood at ease,
waiting to be acknowledged. The place had been redecorated since
K'ang's death, a simple elegance replacing K'ang's cheap ostentation.
A minute passed, then, finally, Lehmann looked up from the screen on
his desk, noted the two men his lieutenant had brought back with him,
and nodded. "Good.
Did it go well?" Soucek
sniffed. "I don't think they like us much. But as for our money
. . . well, that's a different matter, neh? Money is money, Above as
Below." Lehmann
switched off the screen, then came around the table. Ignoring his
lieutenant, he studied the two newcomers carefully, reaching out to
check the tight, flickering bands about the neck of each. Satisfied,
he stepped back. "Welcome,"
he said simply. "My name is Stefan Lehmann, and you'll be
working for me." Soucek
could see the fear and uncertainty in their faces, just as earlier he
had noted their clear disgust at their new surroundings. Lehmann too
must have noticed it, for he seemed quick to reassure the men. "I
understand how you're feeling just now. You weren't expecting to come
down here, were you?" They
nodded. "No.
Well, I know that what youVe seen so far is pretty bad, but I've had
special quarters prepared. Something more like what you're used to." Soucek
narrowed his eyes, fitting another piece into the puzzle. Lehmann
hadn't told them yet what he was up to. The first Soucek
had known about this was when Lehmann had handed him a special
clearance pass and sent him up to Level 180 to meet with a Company
Broker. All the documents and payment certifications had been in a
sealed package. Soucek had only to ensure that the broker handed over
the two men; Lehmann could do all the rest from his newly installed
desk console. But Soucek had glimpsed the figure the broker had
tapped into his comset and had whistled to himself. Why, they had
paid more than two months' profits for a year's contract on each man! "There's
a lot to do here," Lehmann was saying, "but I want you to
familiarize yourself with the details of our operation before you get
down to things. And 1 want your input, understand? If you see that a
thing can be done better, I want to know how, okay?" The
strangers, still more intimidated than reassured by the look of the
tall albino, nodded hastily. "And
understand this . . . I've added an extra clause to your contracts."
Lehmann paused, looking from one to the other. "It's very
simple. You do well for me and I look after you. You help me increase
my profits and you get a cut. A small one, but significant. And it's
nondeductible against your lessee's contract." Soucek
saw how that changed things. The two men glanced at one another, then
looked back at Lehmann, smiling. "Good,"
Lehmann said, turning away, retreating behind his desk. "Now get
some rest. We'll start tomorrow. My lieutenant here will show you
your quarters. He'll get you anything you want." Lehmann
sat, leaning forward to touch the screen, bringing it alive. The
audience was over. Soucek ushered the men out. Walking
back to the special area, one of them, a fair-haired man in his early
twenties, turned to Soucek and asked him who Lehmann was. Soucek
shrugged. "He runs things down here." "You
mean he's a Deck Magistrate?" "No.
Judges he can buy by the dozen." He saw
how thoughtful they were. How their initial disgust had turned to
puzzlement and to a new kind of respect. Yes,
thought Soucek. After all, he had the clout to bring you
two down here. Why, 1 don't yet know. But I shall soon. "And
what are you, ch'un tzul" It was
their turn to laugh. "You mean you don't know?" the
blond-haired one said, stopping. "I thought you understood.
We're commodity slaves." He touched the flickering band at his
neck. "That's what this means. Your boss has bought our services
for a year." Soucek
drew in a breath. He didn't like to be thought ignorant. "I know
that," he said, brazening it out. "I meant, what do you
do?" "Whatever
he wants us to do. But our specialties are computers and drugs
synthesis. I'm the computer man." Ah,
thought Soucek, so that's it. But why does he want specialists?
What is he planning? They
walked on, coming to the special area. Guards let them into corridors
that had been newly carpeted at great expense. The walls were freshly
painted, the two suites furnished with pieces brought down from the
Above. It was all in stark contrast to the corridors and rooms
through which they had passed. Here it was cool and quiet. No crowds
of people crushed against each other. No ragged urchins tugged at
you, their dirty faces pleading for a coin, or for something to eat.
Now that he had seen it for himself, Soucek saw how like the Above
this was. Ordered. Elegant in its simplicity. And Lehmann had known
that. Had known what K'ang had only guessed at. As if he had
experienced it himself. Later,
alone in his room, stretched out on his bunk, he thought things over.
He had known Lehmann only weeks now, but in that brief time he had
had the opportunity to study him better than he'd studied anyone
before. Even so, Lehmann remained something of an enigma, forever
hidden behind those glassy, blood-pink eyes. At times he felt like
asking him right out, "What are you thinking?" but knew how
it would be. Lehmann would turn and look at him, then look away,
saying nothing. As if to say, "What business is it of yours?"
And yet, for all that, he respected Lehmann more than he respected
any man. Maybe even loved him in some strange way. But what was
Lehmann? Who was he? He had
not seen it at first. Only slowly, gradually, had he begun to notice
all the things that were different about him. Not the immediate,
obvious things—his height and gauntness, the color of his skin,
his eyes—but other, less readily discernible things. Things
seen in contrast only. His
scorn for luxuries. His innate austerity. Things that contrasted
sharply with the other tong Bosses. Unlike them he had never even
considered moving up the levels. He had laughed contemptuously when
Soucek had suggested it. "They'll pay for their softness,"
was all he'd said. But Soucek had thought long and hard about the
meaning of those words and had heeded them. Copying Lehmann, he had
given up alcohol, drugs, and meat, and had begun to spend more time
in the practice rooms, honing his fighting skills. After
the meeting with the other nine Bosses, Lehmann had sent him up to
see Ni Yueh alone, with gifts and letters of friendship. He recalled
sitting in Ni Yueh's plush offices and seeing it all with Lehmann's
eyes, noting the waste—the "fat" as Lehmann called
it. And he had looked at Ni Yueh anew—perhaps even as Lehmann
saw him—seeing not merely his strength and brutality, but also
the softness, the small signs of weakness. "Desire is a chain,"
Lehmann had said. "Only will and discipline can break it."
Well, he had looked at Ni Yueh now and seen a man in whom desire was
stronger than will. And had said nothing. That too he had learned
from Lehmann. The weak man babbled his thoughts to any that would
listen. The strong man kept his silence. Ni
Yueh had liked the gifts, the letters, and he, Soucek, had returned
with other gifts and written promises. But Lehmann had scorned the
presents and pushed them aside, more concerned with Soucek's view of
things. He had listened attentively, then turned away suddenly,
nodding to himself. "We'll bait him," he had said. "Hook
him and draw him in." And though Soucek had not understood the
exact meaning, he got the drift of it. "How far can you trust
him?" he had asked, and saw how Lehmann turned, studying him
closely. "Trust?" he'd answered. "I trust no man,
Jiri. Not even you. If it were a matter of life and death, a question
of choice—of my life or yours— could I trust you? Could I
redly trust you?" He had
wanted to say yes, but with Lehmann's eyes upon him he had not wished
to answer glibly, insincerely. He had hesitated, then bowed his head.
"I don't know... I..." But Lehmann had only shaken his head
and taken his arm, as if to console him. "Have no illusions,
Jiri. Strip what you feel bare. Look hard at yourself. All else means
nothing." It was
the closest he had come to Lehmann, and the moment had seared itself
into his memory, but it was the closeness of utter strangers. Even at
that moment, he had sensed the utter cold of the vacuum that
surrounded Lehmann and kept them separate. Where there were no
illusions there could be no warmth. And love, even love, became a
thing of ice. WHISKERS
lu's face filled the big overhead screen, his left eye staring down
blankly from the pink, crab-mottled rawness of his melted face, his
narrow, lipless mouth formed into a fierce grin. "Wong
Yi-sun! Welcome! Come inside! We are all here now." Fat
Wong hesitated, then, with a nod to his bodyguards, passed beneath
the great lintel of the House of the Ninth Ecstasy, entering Lu
Ming-shao's territory. Inside, he looked about him, surprised by the
understated elegance of the place. When he had first heard that the
meeting of the Council was to be held in a singsong house he had been
outraged, wondering whether this were some subtle insult on Whiskers
Lu's part, but his advisors had reassured him that this was where Lu
Ming-shao did most of his business from these days, and so he had
accepted the invitation. Now, seeing it for himself, he understood.
Lu's First Level contacts would feel at home in a place like this. It
was a good place to do business. Even so, it was of a piece with Lu
Ming-shao that he should run the Black Dog Triad from a whorehouse. There
was the faint rustle of a curtain to his left. Fat Wong turned,
facing it, one hand on the knife at his belt, then he relaxed. A
scantily dressed young woman stood there, her head bowed. "Might
I take your cloak, Wong Yi-sun?" Fat
Wong studied the girl, noting how delicately she was formed,
wondering briefly whether that delicacy were a product of chance or
of human manufacture, then he nodded, letting her take the silk from
his shoulders. As he turned back, Whiskers Lu appeared on the far
side of the room, coming across to embrace him. "Yi-sun
. . ." he said, holding Fat Wong at arm's length, as if he had
not seen him in a long while. Then, with a flourish of his arm, he
turned, inviting Wong to go through. Again
Wong hesitated, the habit of suspicion shaping his response, then let
himself be led through. In a room at the center of the House the
other four Bosses were waiting, sitting about in huge, comfortable
chairs, drinks and trays of sweetmeats on low tables at their sides.
As he entered, they called out, greeting him, as if they were old
friends and this a chance to drink and eat and talk of women and past
times, whereas the truth was that what they were to discuss today was
of the utmost importance, heralding a new phase in their relationship
with the Above. Fat
Wong smiled, letting himself fall into the role, accepting the
tumbler of wine Whiskers Lu held out to him, knowing that his stomach
implant would neutralize its effects. He sat, looking about him,
conscious yet again of the refinement of the decor. He had had his
advisors dig back into the history of this place and had learned what
had happened here with the old Madam, Mu Chua, and the Minor-Family
Prince, Hsiang K'ai Fan. It was Mu Chua who had built this place and
established its reputation, running the House for more than thirty
years. Her death—her throat slit by Hsiang K'ai Fan even as he
was fucking her—might easily have been a disaster for Whiskers
Lu, but the intercession of Li Yuan's General, Hans Ebert, had saved
Lu's skin. In a secret deal negotiated by Ebert, the Hsiang family
had agreed to pay Lu Ming-shao twenty-five million yuan in
compensation, provided he took no retributive action. With those
funds Whiskers Lu had rebuilt the House of the Ninth Ecstasy and
installed a new Madam. He had also imported one or two "oddities,"
things accepted from the Hsiang family in lieu of cash. Among those
oddities were one of the GenSyn ox-men and five of GenSyn's famous
"Imperial Courtesan" line—the model with the two
additional orifices. Such "treasures" had won a new
clientele to the House and things were almost as they were. Whiskers
Lu came close, leaning over Wong, his voice lowered to a whisper. "If
there is anything you would like to try while you're here, Yi-sun,
you are most welcome." Fat
Wong smiled, as if pleased by the offer, but it was yet another
instance of Lu Ming-shao's poor breeding. Or his naivete. He studied
Whiskers Lu a moment, noting the changes that this last year had
brought. Gone was the ragged fur he had once sported about his
shoulders; gone too the wild-barbarian look. Lately he had
taken to wearing his hair slicked back, his mustache trimmed and
waxed. Lu thought it made him look more refined, but the truth was
otherwise; it only made his masklike face look more artificial, more
foolish. Wong smiled inwardly, then looked past Lu. There, in the
comer of the room, was a u«i chi board, set up as if midway
through a game. He had heard that Lu Ming-shao had recently taken up
the game and this seemed to confirm it. Rumor had it, however, that
Whiskers Lu was very bad at the game and had killed two opponents in
fits of temper. If so, it was but another thing against him. The time
was coming fast when Lu Ming-shao would prove too great an
embarrassment to the Hung Mun, and when that day came he, Wong
Yi-sun, would be the first to act. It was
another hour before they came to business. Between times there was
the usual sparring—the sounding-out of positions before the
hard bargaining began. This once, however, there was little to debate
and they came quickly to agreement. The matter was a simple one. In a
year's time the House at Weimar would be reopened. Before then,
candidates had to be selected, elections held. It was an ideal
opportunity for the Hung Mun to buy their way in. Rumor had it that
the new House would have real power, real influence. If so, it was to
the advantage of them all to gain a foothold. The only question was
how big a foothold and how much that would cost. Li the
Lidless was speaking, reading from a special report he had had his
advisors draw up. ".
. . it is also felt that any attempt to spread our net too wide might
not only prove a strain upon current resources but might also result
in a diminishment of effective influence. It is suggested, therefore,
that each of the six brotherhoods concentrate on acquiring the
friendship of five Representatives. The resultant pressure group
within the House—funded centrally and with the capacity to
'extend' its influence on certain matters within the House; that is,
to buy the votes of responsive members—ought to provide a solid
foundation for our continued expansion up the levels." Li
Chin sat back, looking about the circle of his fellow 4895. "Long
years we have waited in the darkness down below. Now our time has
come. We must climb. Up, into the light." Fat
Wong leaned forward, conscious of the receptive mood Li's words had
created. "Then we are agreed? Thirty Representatives, to be
controlled directly by this Council. Policy and funding to be as
outlined in Li Chin's report." He
looked about the circle, seeing how enthusiastically they nodded; how
willingly they embraced this next step. For once the potential
benefits for all outweighed the petty needs of individual Triads. But
how long would that last? How long would it be before one or the
other of them tried to win a greater share of influence than their
fellows? Once already he had had to deal with such divisions,
enlisting Li Yuan's aid to crush his rival, Iron Mu. But next time
would be more difficult. Next time he might have to fight them all.
Which was why it was important to pacify them just now, to seem to be
working with them closely, hand-in-hand, so that he might build up
his strength. Because
ultimately he did not want what Li Chin wanted. No. He wanted it all. Fat
Wong turned, looking across at Whiskers Lu once more, and, smiling,
his manner deceptively casual, said what had been on his mind all
along. "I
hear there has been trouble among your tong, Lu Ming-shao. They say
there is a new man, cutting in. I wondered . . ." He saw
the agitated movement of Lu's good eye, the sense of turmoil beneath
the glassy mask of his face, and knew he had touched a nerve. But
when Whiskers Lu spoke, it was in the same almost-bantering tone he
always used. "It
is so, Wong Yi-sun, but when is there not trouble among the lower
orders? Besides, the matter is already settled, a new balance found.
One must let the little men fight their battles, neh?" They
were good words, and Fat Wong bowed his head, acknowledging them, but
all there were aware of the significance of the exchange, for while
the rest of them had worked their way up the levels of their
respective brotherhoods, Whiskers Lu alone had won his post by
conquest. He had not entered the brotherhood as a child, nor was he
steeped in the ancient rituals of the Hung Mun. No. Like the "new
man" Wong had mentioned, Whiskers Lu was an outsider, a usurper, and
had bullied his way into a position of power. The reminder was thus
unwelcome. "Well,
brothers," Whiskers Lu said, standing, his whole manner
suggesting that he had already forgotten what had just been said,
"now that we are agreed, let us retire to the next room. I have
arranged an entertainment. Something rather special. Something
...different." His
lipless mouth grinned broadly, but as he turned away, Wong noted how
Lu's left hand was clenched, the tendons showing at the wrist, as if
all of his anger—anger that could not be expressed on the
masklike nullity of his face—had been channeled down into that
hard, bunched node of flesh and bone. And, seeing it, Fat Wong
smiled. Yes.
Step by step he would undermine them, even as he seemed to be working
with them. Step by step, until he was ready. And then there would be
war. War such as the lowers had never seen. WHISKERS
LU let the door close, the last of his guests departed, then turned,
his thin smile fading, and glared at the three men who remained in
the room. "How
dare the fucker discuss my private business in my House!" Lu
Ming-shao kicked out, sending one of the low tables flying, tumblers
and bowls of food scattered across the carpet. "The
toad! The fucking insect! What the fuck does he think he's playing
at?" The
three men looked to each other but said nothing. When Whiskers Lu was
like this, it was best to keep one's head low and wait for the storm
to pass. Lu
Ming-shao shuddered, his one good eye burning in his glassy face. "If
it had been any other man, I'd have slit his fucking throat! But I'll
have him. See if I don't!" He
turned, anger making his movements jerky, angular. "Po Lao . . .
Why was I not told what was going on? What the fuck are you up to,
keeping me in the dark?" Po
Lao, Whisker's Lu's "Red Pole," his second-in-command,
bowed his head, accepting the
criticism, but inside he was fuming. Lu Ming-shao had been
told about the new man, and not once but several times, but he had
been too busy preparing for the Council meeting— closeted with
designers and entertainers—to pay any attention. "It's
not fucking good enough," Lu went on, standing close to Po Lao,
the pink, crab-mottled flesh of his melted face pressed right up
against Po's. "I want you to go down there, personally, and
see to the matter. To sort things out for good and all, because I
don't want any more trouble, understand me? And I particularly don't
want any word of what's happening in our territories getting out to
that cunt Fat Wong." Po Lao
felt his face burning beneath its rigid exterior. For a moment he was
giddy with suppressed anger. Then, with a curt bow, he turned away.
But at the door Whiskers Lu called him back again. "And
Po Lao. No fuck-ups. I want it settled. Right?" Po Lao
turned back, meeting Lu Ming-shao's good eye, letting nothing of what
he was feeling show. "1 understand, Master Lu." "Good.
Now go. I want to hear from you tonight." "Shih
Ward?" Kim
looked up, beginning to smile, then checked himself, realizing that
it was not the young official he had been dealing with earlier, but
the Supervisor of the section. Beyond the stoop-backed old graybeard
stood two departmental guards, their side arms held across their
chests. "What
is it?" he asked, standing, puzzled by the look of stern anger
on the elderly Han's face. In
answer the man thrust a folder at Kim—the same folder he had
submitted only four hours back at the counter on the far side of the
waiting room. "It's
all done, then?" he asked, staring down at it, wondering
momentarily where the completed patent certificate was. "Are
these your documents, Shih Ward?" the Supervisor asked, ignoring
Kim's comment. Kim
glanced at the folder again. "Yes. Of course. Why? Is there a
problem?" The
man's smile was cold, ironical. "You might say that. But first
let me confirm two things."
He reached across and opened the folder, drawing out the slender,
microns-thick official form. "Is this your signature at the
bottom of this patents application form?" "Yes." "And
you understand that this form is to be used only for new patents
originated by the signatory?" Kim
nodded, concerned now; not understanding why the man should need to
ask, nor why he should feel the need to have guards present. "Then
I am afraid to say that this form is invalid, being in breach of
Section 761 [D] of the Patents Protection Laws. Moreover, Shih Ward,
it is my duty to arrest you for making a fraudulent application,
infringing a patent already registered at this office." Kim
laughed, but it was the laughter of disbelief, not amusement. "It
isn't possible. I checked. A week ago. Here at this very office.
There was nothing. Nothing even vaguely like it!" The
official smiled, clearly enjoying his role, then produced a copy of a
patent protection form. He let Kim study it a moment, watching as the
young man's face drained, then took it back from him. Kim
stood there, his hands shaking, his mouth agape. "Someone stole
it," he said quietly. "They must have." The
official turned, handing the folder to one of the guards, then turned
back, puffing out his chest, as if to display the big, square badge
of office there. "Your comments have been noted, Shih Ward, and,
along with the recording of this interview, will be submitted to the
Hearing in two days' time. Until then, I am afraid you will have to
be detained." "Detained
. . . ?" Kim shook his head, disbelief tilting over into a kind
of stupor. He felt sick and dizzy and hardly heard what the man said
next, but then, suddenly, his hands were being pulled behind him. He
felt the restraint-lock click into place about his wrists, then he
was being pulled backward out of the room. "You
must send word!" Kim called out, trying to make the official
listen. "You must tell T'ai Cho!" But the Supervisor had
already turned away and was talking to the other guard. And then the
door slammed shut in front of him and he felt a sharp, sudden blow on
the back of his head. And then nothing. CHAPTER
EIGHT
Dynasties THE
GIRL WAS ASLEEP, her long, auburn hair fanned out across her naked
back, the thin sheet draped across her buttocks like a shroud. For a
moment Old Man Lever studied her, conscious of the contrast between
them. Her flesh was so smooth, so new, like silk over the taut
frame of bone and muscle, no sign of age marring its perfection. He
sighed, then pulled himself up heavily, stretching the tiredness from
his bones. Suddenly he felt old. Very old. He looked about him, at
the simple luxury of the room, a luxury to which he had been born,
and shook his head, as if he didn't understand whence all this had
come, then looked down at himself again, at thinning legs and a
stomach gone to paunch, a chest to flab—at the changes and
distortions time had brought to the landscape of his flesh. All these
years he had kept himself trim, had fought Time itself, fleeing from
it, like a swimmer in dangerous waters, but Time, patient as a shark,
had waited in the depths, staring up at him with cold, impersonal
eyes, biding its time, knowing there was no escape. He
shuddered, then padded across to the armchair in the corner of the
room and pulled on the dark blue silk dressing gown he had thrown
there earlier. The girl had been good—very good indeed—
and she had finally brought him off, but it had been a long, uphill
struggle, and he had almost sent her away at one point, ashamed of
his failure. 180 It had
happened before, of course, and he had blamed it on tiredness or an
excess of wine, but it was neither—he knew that now. He was
simply getting old. He
drew the sash tight about his waist, then went across, standing there
at the mirror, looking at himself clearly in the light from the
overhead lamp. In four weeks' time he would be seventy-four. One year
older than Tolonen. An old man. Powerful, as old men went, but old
all the same. He
turned away, angry with himself. Only an hour ago he had been full of
life, buoyant after the news from the Patents Office, standing there,
whooping at the screen. Yes, just an hour ago he had felt as though
he could run ten Zi and then take on a pair of serving girls, one
after the other, as he'd done in his youth. But now he knew. It was
only the adrenaline rush. Only the ragged tide of feeling through an
old man's head. Going
across to the room's comset, he tapped out a code irritably. "Get
me Curval on the line," he said, even before the picture had
properly formed. "And get him now, whatever he's doing." He
looked across at the girl again. She had turned and was lying on her
side, one breast exposed above the sheet. Lever shivered. No, it
wasn't her fault. She had tried. Had tried her damnedest to be sweet
to him. Besides, the girl was mute. So maybe he would keep her. Maybe
he would have her assigned here, to his private rooms. He turned back
as Curval's voice came through. "Curval... I want you to come
here at once. I've a job for you. I want you to go up to Boston for
me and see the boy again. I'll brief you when you get here."
' Curval
made to answer, but Lever had already cut him off. Turning away, he
crossed the room quickly and stood over the girl, shaking her until
she came awake. "Quick
now," he said, pulling her up. "You must help me dress. IVe
things to do." And
as she busied herself about him, he began to feel better; began to
shrug off his earlier mood. No, it was no good skulking and sulking.
One had to do something. First he'd draft a note—an
answer to the T'ang of Africa—to be sent by way of Mach,
agreeing to his offer. Then he would arrange a meeting of the major
shareholders to the Institute
and force them to agree to an increase in funding. Last, but not
least, he would see Curval, and brief him. For Curval would be his
key. He
smiled, letting the girl fuss about him, wondering why he had not
thought of it before. At present Curval was Head of the Institute,
his reputation as the leading experimental geneticist of his age
unchallenged. But Curval, good as he was, wasn't good enough, not
when it was a question of squaring-up to death. He had as much as
admitted to Lever's face that he considered the problem unsolvable.
Even so, he might be the means by which Ward could be wooed back to
the fold. Yes, where money and threats had failed, maybe a play at
Ward's natural scientific curiosity might succeed. If Curval could
show him how wonderful a challenge it was. If he could fire him with
a new enthusiasm. Especially
now, when the boy was down and vulnerable. Lever
looked down. The girl had stopped, staring at the fierce erection he
now sported. He laughed, then drew her close, forcing her head down
onto him. Yes,
he would be young again. He would, be young. TWO
hundred LI to the north, in the boardroom of a small company, four
men sat about a long oak table, talking. Michael
Lever had been silent for some while, listening, but now he leaned
forward, interrupting the stream of talk. "Forgive
me, Bryn, but the point isn't whether it can be done, but
whether it ought to be done. I don't know about you, but I don't want
to live forever. It's bad enough thinking of being fifty, let alone
being fifty forever." Bryn
Kustow was hunched forward at the far end of the table, facing
Michael, his elbows pressed against the polished surface, his long
forearms stretched out along the wood, meeting in a handclasp. His
ash'blond hair was cut aggressively short, but the style suited him.
He looked like a soldier, sitting there. "Fifty,
no, but what if you could be twenty-five for the rest of time?
Wouldn't that tempt you?" Michael
shook his head. "I know how I feel. Besides, I want sons of
my own, and I want those sons to love and respect me. I don't
want to be a barrier in their way." Kustow
nodded and leaned back in the big wheel-back chair. Between him and
Michael, to either side of the table, sat their friends and longtime
companions, Jack Parker and Carl Stevens. They were dressed simply
and sported the same aggressive hairstyle as Kustow. It gave them a
kind of uniformity. One look was enough to place them. Sons, they
were. Part of the new movement. "It
sounds like you hate him," Stevens said, leaning toward him.
"Has it really got that bad?" "No.
It's not as simple as that. For all he's done to me these past few
weeks, I still don't hate him. But this obsession of his with
immortality. Well, it's gone too far. All his energies seem to be
channeled into the search for a new serum or for some new way of
switching off the aging process." He looked across at Kustow,
his face filled with hurt. "I've seen it grow in him these past
few years, like a sickness. And I don't want to be that way. Not
ever. I don't want to be old in the way he's getting old. Hanging on
like a beggar. There's no dignity in that." "My
father's the same," said Parker, looking about him at the circle
of his friends. "He's got no time for anything else, these days.
The day-to-day stuff he delegates, then goes off to jaw with the old
gang." He paused and shook his head. "And you know what
they're talking about? They're talking about spending a further
fifteen billion on the Institute. Fifteen billion! And who loses
out?" "Sure.
So what do we do about it?" They
stared at Kustow, as if he'd said something that was difficult to
grasp. "Do?"
Stevens asked, shaking his dark, cropped head and laughing. "What
can we do? It's like Mitchell said the other night at
Gloria's. TheyVe got all the money, all the real power. All we have
is the vague promise of inheritance." "Vaguer
by the day," said Parker, nudging him and laughing. But
Kustow and Lever weren't laughing. They were watching each other.
Kustow narrowed his eyes in a question, and Michael nodded. "Okay
. . . we'll come clean," said Kustow, standing up and walking
around the table until he stood behind Michael. "The paperwork, earlier
. . . that was a front. Michael and I called you over today for a
special reason. Not to make deals, or anything like that, but to work
on this thing that's bugging us all. To see if we can do something." "We're
listening," Parker said, leaning back, assuming an air of
businesslike attentiveness. Across from him, Stevens nodded. It was
Michael who spoke. "Essentially,
you're right, Carl. They have got all the real power. But let's not
underestimate ourselves. What have we got? Let's look at it.
Let's see what we"can rustle up between us." He
separated his hands and sat back, using his right hand to count the
fingers of his left. "One, we've got our personal allowances.
Not inconsiderable. There's many a small company who would welcome
the same figure in turnover. Don't be offended, but Bryn and I have
been checking up. Between the four of us we could count on a figure
of some one and three quarter million yuan." Parker
laughed. "And where would that get us? Your accounts are frozen,
Michael, or had you forgotten?" "Hold
on," said Kustow. "Michael's not finished yet." Michael
smiled, his handsome face showing patience and determination. "Two,
there's what we could divert from those funds we control on behalf of
our fathers' companies." Parker
frowned. "I don't like the sound of that. It sounds vaguely
criminal." "It
is. But let's face that when we have to. From such funds we could
probably command upward of twenty million yuan." Stevens
whistled. Personally he was in charge of three small production
companies that serviced his father's near-space development
corporation, but they were minnows—sops his father had given
him to keep him quiet; more a hobby than a job. He was an engineering
graduate and the eldest of them at twenty-eight, but in himself he
felt like a boy still, playing when he should have been acting in the
world. "Three,
there are Trusts we could borrow against. Even at the most
pessimistic rate we could expect to raise something like fifteen
million yuan." Parker
interrupted him. "They'd know." He laughed briefly, then
shook his head. "Don't you see? If we set about realizing all of
this they'd know at once that we were up to something." Lever
smiled. "Good. Then you're thinking about it seriously?" The
young man sat back, chewing on some imaginary straw, then nodded. But
there was a hesitancy in what he said next. "I think I see what
you're getting at. We have the money, so that's not it. That's not
our key, right? Because we can't use money against them. TheyVe got
it tightly bottled up as far as money's concerned." Kustow
came forward and leaned over the table, facing him. "That's
right. But the very fact that we have the money gives us an
edge. The fact that if we wanted to, we could call on some forty to
fifty million between us, that gives us power." Stevens
took his hand from his mouth. "I don't see it, Bryn. How? If we
can't use it, how does it help us?" Kustow
half turned and looked at Lever. Again, Lever nodded. Slowly, Kustow
straightened up, then, without another word, he left the room. "What's
going on?" Parker asked, laughing uncertainly. "What is
this, Michael? Some kind of revolutionary cell we're forming here?" Lever
looked at him calmly and nodded. "That's just what it is, Jack.
But we're joining, not forming it." Stevens
had tilted back his head and was scratching beneath his neck. For a
moment he said nothing, then, slowly, he began to laugh, his laughter
getting stronger. "Well, I'll be. . . ." Kustow
was standing in the doorway again. "Gentlemen, I want you to
meet an old school friend of mine. A man who, we hope, will someday
make America great again." He stood back, letting a tall,
dark-haired man step past him, into the room. Stevens
had stopped laughing. Parker, beside him, gasped and half rose from
his seat. "Hello,"
said Joseph Kennedy, smiling and putting out his hand. "It's
good to meet you. Bryn's told me a lot about you two." kennedy
leaned BACK in his chair and stretched out his arms, yawning and
laughing at the same time. The table in front of him was cluttered
with half-filled glasses and empty wine bottles. Around the table the
young men joined in his laughter, pausing to suck on their cigars or
drain a glass, the air dense with cigar smoke. They
had all known Kennedy, of course. You could hardly grow up in the
North American Above and not know the Kennedys. Even after the fall
of the Empire, a Kennedy had overseen the period of transitional
government and, through his influence and skill, had prevented the
great tragedy from becoming a debilitating catastrophe. This was that
man's great-great-grandson, a figure familiar from the elite MedFac
channels. When his father had died, eight years back, he had
inherited one of the biggest legal firms on the East Coast and had
not hesitated to step into his father's shoes at once. Now, however,
it seemed he was tired of the legal game. He wanted something bigger
to take on. Which
was why he was there, speaking to them. Joseph
Kennedy was a big, good-humored man, handsome in the way that all the
Kennedys were handsome, but with something else behind the good
looks; something that made people look at him with respect, perhaps
even with a degree of awe. He was powerful and charismatic, like an
animal in some ways, but supremely intelligent with it. His mind
missed nothing, while his eyes seemed to take in more than the
surface of things. Though
he was a good six years older than the men he had come to meet, there
was a youthfulness about him that made him seem one of them. He had
made them at ease quickly and with a skill that was as much inherited
as his vast personal fortune. But he did not play upon his charm. In
fact, the opposite was true. When he spelled out what it was he
wanted from them, he made certain that they knew the cost of their
involvement. It would be bad, he told them. In all likelihood they
would be disinherited before the year was out, estranged from their
families. At worst there was the possibility that they would be dead.
The stakes were high, and only a fool went blindly into such a
game. That
said, however, he reminded them of their breeding, and of
what there was to gain. "Freedom,"
he said. "Not just for you, but for all men. Freedom from the
old men who chain you, but also freedom from the Seven." "We
will make deals," he said. "At first our enemies will think
us friends, or, at worst, accomplices. But in time they will come to
know us as we really are. And
then they'll find us worse than in their darkest dreams." And
when he said that he paused and looked at them, each in turn,
measuring how each one faced him and then, as if satisfied, nodded to
himself. There
was more, much more, but in essence they knew what he wanted of them.
Loyalty. Obedience when the time came. Support— covert at
first, but then, when he asked it of them, out in the open. When the
time was right they would mobilize all their resources; four out of
hundreds across the great continent who would rise up and change the
face of North American politics for all time. Behind
them were discussions about the Edict, about the immortality
treatments and the latest terrorist attacks in Europe. Now, at the
tail end of the evening, they were talking of other things. Of women
and ball games and mutual friends. Kennedy had been telling them an
anecdote about a certain Representative and the daughter of a Minor
Family. It was scandalous and close to the knuckle, but their
laughter showed no fear. They were as one now; wedded to the cause.
And when, finally, Kennedy left, they each shook his hand and bowed
their heads, mock solemn, like soldiers, but also like friends. "Was
he always like that?" Stevens asked Kustow when he had gone. "I
mean, was he like that at College, when you knew him?" Kustow
stubbed out his cigar and nodded. "Always. If we had a problem
we went to him, not to one of the teachers or the Head. And he would
always sort it out." He smiled, reminiscing. "We idolized
him. But then, in my second year, he left, and everything changed." There
was a moment's silence, an exchange of glances. "Does
anyone fancy a meal?" Parker said, breaking the silence. "I
don't know about you guys, but I'm starving." "Sure,"
Kustow said, looking to Stevens, who nodded. "And you, Michael?" Michael
hesitated, then shook his head. "Another time, maybe. Right now
IVe got to sort something out." "Mary?" He
looked back at Kustow, wondering how he knew, then laughed. "I
spoke to her earlier. Said I'd see her sometime this afternoon. I..." There
was a hammering at the outer door. "What
the hell?" Kustow said, turning to face the sound. "Do
you think. . . ?" Stevens began, looking to Michael. "No,"
Michael said quietly as the hammering came again. "But whoever
it is, they sure as hell want to see someone in a hurry." He
went across quickly and slid the door back, then strode out across
the plush expanse of carpet in the reception room. The three men
followed him, standing in the doorway, watching as he slid back the
bolt and stood back, pulling the double doors open. Outside,
in the dimly lit corridor, stood a Han. A tall Han in plain green
silks with mussed hair and a distraught expression. "T'ai
Cho!" Michael said, surprised. "What in the gods' names are
you doing here?" "It's
Kim!" T'ai Cho said breathlessly, grasping Michael's arm. "He's
been arrested!" "Arrested?
For what?" "At
the Patents Office! They say he stole the patent he was trying to
register! You have to do something, Shih Lever! You must!" "What
is this, Michael?" Parker asked, but Kustow touched his arm and
gave him a look, as if to say "leave it." "I'll
come," he said, looking across at Kustow. "Bryn, will you
get word to Mary. Tell her that I've been delayed. I..." He
turned back. "T'ai Cho ... has Kim got legal help?" "No
... no, he .. ." "Okay."
He patted T'ai Cho's arm, as if to reassure him, then looked back at
Kustow. "Do you know where Kennedy was off to, Bryn?" "Just
home, I think." "Good.
Then contact him. Tell him I need him. Tell him . . . tell him a good
friend of mine is in trouble and that I'd appreciate his advice and
help." Kustow
smiled and nodded. "And
Bryn . . . tell Mary that I'll see her when I can." "So
what happened?" Kim
had been standing at the far end of the bare detention room, facing
away from where Michael Lever was sitting on a narrow, pull- down
bench, but at Michael's words he turned and came across, kneeling
beside the taller man. "It
was my bookkeeper, Nong Yan," he said, looking up into Michael's
face. "It had to be." "How
do you know?" Kim
shrugged. "No one else saw it. No one else had even the vaguest
idea what I was working on. Even so, I don't know how he did it. He
could only have had the briefest glimpse of it. I. . ." Again
his eyes drifted off, as they had once or twice already; as if this
were a scientific puzzle, to be analyzed and solved. Not that it
really mattered now. In
less than three hours it had all come apart. The patent was
gone—stolen—and with it any chance of securing terms from
the Hang Yu Credit Agency. Indeed, news had reached the bankers fast,
for a handwritten message had reached Kim an hour back, expressing
the regretful apologies of the Brothers Hang. But that was not all.
Acting on the news, Kim's present bankers had recalled their
development loan and taken immediate action to recover the debt,
stripping the facility of all its equipment. At the same time, news
had come that a third party had bought up all of the surrounding
units—units Kim had made offers for only days before—at
four times the normal rental, effectively preventing any physical
expansion of Kim's operation. Not that it made any difference now. "I
should have realized. . ." he said, after a moment. "Realized
what I was up against." "My
father, you mean?" Kim
nodded. "He's toyed with us both, neh? And for what? In my case,
so that he might use me to pursue some addlebrained notion of
postponing the inevitable. Even though I couldn't do it." "He
thinks you could. He thinks you could find a way of prolonging life.
Of extending it, three, four hundred years. Maybe indefinitely." Kim
took a long breath, then looked up again, his expression suddenly
intense, his eyes burning. "Technically,
perhaps. But that's not what I mean. I couldn't do it because I
couldn't do it. I wouldn't let myself. The consequences are
unthinkable. Once in my life already IVe meddled in things that
should have been left well alone, but this time I have a choice. So
no. The
dream of living forever must remain just that. A dream. I mean, just
think of it! Unlink the great chain of being, and what would follow?
It would be a curse, Michael. Nothing but a curse!" Michael
shuddered, then looked away, disturbed by this sudden glimpse of the
young man's potency; by the dark, intense power locked away in his
taut, diminutive form. "So
what will you do now?" Kim
smiled. "It depends on what your friend Kennedy can arrange. I
was going to go to Europe next week, but what's the point? Whatever I
do, your father blocks me. He's obsessed." "You
should go," Michael said quietly. "Really, Kim. You can't
let him beat you. This . . ."He shivered, then stood, beginning
to pace the room. "He's been like this all his life. If he
wanted something, he'd get it, no matter what. If someone stood in
his way, he'd crush them. And no thought for the consequences. Once .
. . not long ago, really ... I thought that that was how things were.
That it was normal to behave that way. But now . . ." He
stopped, turning to look back at Kim. "Look, Kim. If I could
help you, I would. You know that. Whatever you needed. But he's
fucked me too. Boxed me in. It's how he works. Destroy and control.
There's no subtlety to him. No compromise, either. But he doesn't
have to win. Not unless we let him." Kim
smiled. "Okay. I'll go to Europe. Just as soon as all the legal
stuff's sorted out. But I'm finished here. Look . . ." He
took the four handwritten letters from his pocket and handed them
across. Michael studied them a moment, then looked up again, his eyes
pained. The stamped timings on the resignation letters showed they
had come within an hour of his arrest. Kim took them back from
Michael, staring at them a moment, as if they were a mystery he
couldn't solve, then pocketed them again. "I
keep trying to tell myself that it's understandable. That I'd do the
same. But it's not true. I..." He looked away, close, suddenly,
to breaking down. "What's happening, Michael? What in the gods'
names is happening?" "It's
this world," Michael answered softly. "That's why we have
to change it. You in your way, me in mine. WeVe got to fight the old
men who want to keep things as
they are. Every step of the way. Because if we don't. . ." There
was a knocking on the door. A moment later a lock drew back and the
door swung inward. It was Kennedy. Behind him two men stood to
attention, like an honor guard. "Michael
. . . Kim . . ." Kennedy stepped into the room, tall and
imperious, offering his hand for Kim to take. "Okay. It's all
dealt with. I've filed bail for fifty thousand yuan, so you're
free to go. However, the hearing has been brought forward, to eleven
tomorrow morning. Which means we'll have to get our act together,
fast." "So
what do we do?" Kennedy
smiled broadly. "We produce files. Experimental notes and the
like. Things that'll prove beyond all doubt that the patent's your
development." Kim
shook his head. "They don't exist. It was all up here, in my
head." "All.
. ." Kennedy gave a small laugh, then looked to Michael. "I
guess you were right, Michael. He is different." "Even
so," Kim said, as Kennedy returned his attention to him. "I
doubt that theyVe got anything either. In fact, I'd guarantee that
they don't even understand yet what theyVe got, let alone how it
works." "I
see. But how do we use that? The burden of proof is on us, not them.
They registered first. We're the ones in default." "Unless
we counterclaim? Sue them for false registration?" Kennedy
smiled, the smile growing broader by the moment. "Hey, now
that's a good idea. A very, very good idea." But
Michael was shaking his head. "It's not on, Joe. I mean, Kim's
broke. How can he sue when he's broke?" "Maybe,"
Kennedy answered. "But I'm not. And I'm sure as hell not letting
your father get away with this one, Michael. Unless youVe any
personal objections?" Michael
looked down, then looked back at the two men, smiling. "No. None
at all, as it happens." "Good.
Then let's go and get something to eat and talk this through.
Somewhere where your father will get to hear of it. The Kitchen,
maybe." Kim
stared at Kennedy a moment, then nodded. "Yes," he said
quietly, remembering the first time he had visited Archimedes
Kitchen, and Old Man Lever's joke about the shark meat they had
eaten. Well, now he knew. Finally he understood what the Old Man had
meant that evening. They had stripped him bare. Down to the bone.
Even so, he had lost nothing. Nothing of substance, anyway. So maybe
this was a good thing. To be taught this lesson. To progress from it
and build anew. And maybe having the wiring implant put in—maybe
that too was serendipitous. Maybe that too was meant. He
gave a little shudder. Just for now he was beaten. Things here were
finished for him. But now was not forever. He turned, looking about
him at the bareness of the room, remembering all the times he'd been
incarcerated, then, smiling, put out a hand, touching Michael's arm. "Okay.
Let's go and be seen." SOUCEK
STOOD in the mouth of the cave, watching while Lehmann moved among
the deep shadows within, gathering together his belongings. Out here
he was afraid—possibly more afraid than he had ever been—but
he showed nothing, conscious that Lehmann was watching him. To his
back was the slope, that awful uneven surface, shrouded in
treacherous whiteness, that in places fell sheer a thousand ch'i
to the rocks and icy water below. He would not look there, not
now, lest his courage fail him. No, the warm darkness of the cave was
more to his liking—to the habit of his being. He had never,
until two hours back, set forth beyond the City's walls. Had never
suspected that such a place as this existed. But now he knew. This
was where Lehmann had come from. This place of cold and ice and
fearful openness. Lehmann
moved quickly, almost effortlessly about the interior of the cave,
taking things from ledges and from small niches hacked into the rock
face. Weapons and clothing, tools and food, and, most surprising of
all, a complex communications system—unlike anything Soucek had
ever seen—in an all-weather case, the logo of SimFic impressed
into the hard plastic in the bottom right-hand corner. "That's
it," Lehmann said, coming out into the brightness once again.
"I'll destroy the rest, then we can get out of here." Soucek
moved back, taking care with his footing, recalling how unpleasant it
had been to fall, then watched as Lehmann set the timer on a small
device and gently lobbed it into the cave. He turned at once, as if
unconcerned, and began trudging back up the mountainside, following
the ragged line of deep indentations they had made in the snow coming
down. Soucek followed, glancing back once and then a second time.
They were thirty ch'i up the slope when it blew, the sound
startlingly loud, echoing back and forth between the great peaks,
rock fragments scattered far into the valley below. Soucek stopped,
looking about him anxiously, his fear getting the better of him
momentarily. Across from him, half a U distant on the facing
slope, a huge spoon-shaped wedge of snow slid, slowly, as if a giant,
invisible hand were scooping it up, then settled, throwing up a fine
cloud of whiteness, the snow packed high against the tree line. Soucek
turned, looking up the slope at Lehmann. The albino stood there,
perfectly at ease, gazing about him, an expression of awe—
something Soucek had never expected to see on that narrow, unsmiling
face—transforming his features, making him almost handsome. And
Soucek, seeing that, understood. Here was Lehmann's home. This his
element. Yes, it was this, this fearful emptiness, that had formed
him; that was reflected in the icy mirror of his being. It was from
here that he drew his strength, and it was this—this place of
stone and ice and sky—that made him singular; made him utterly
different from the rest. Soucek
turned back, forcing himself to look around, fighting down the fear
that threatened to engulf him, trying—wilting himself—to
see it as Lehmann saw it. And for a moment, for a single, fleeting
moment, he saw the beauty, the sheer inhuman beauty of it all. "Look!"
Lehmann said, his voice strangely excited. "There, Jiri! There,
above that peak to the far left of us." Soucek
turned, looking, shielding his eyes against the brightness of the
sky. For a moment he saw nothing, nothing but the empty peaks, the
pale blue sky, and then he spotted it—saw the dark speck
circling high above the point of rock. "It's
an eagle, Jiri. A T'ang among birds! Look how magnificent
it is." But
Soucek had turned, and was watching Lehmann, seeing only him; seeing
only how powerful the man seemed, here in his natural element. "Yes,"
he answered. "Magnificent." whiskers
lu's "red pole," Po Lao, had left ten minutes back, having
shouted at Lehmann for the best part of an hour. Now Lehmann sat
there, at his desk, silent, staring at his hands. Soucek, standing in
the doorway, could feel the tension in the room. They were all
there—all of his lieutenants—and all had witnessed the
dressing-down Po Lao had given him. He had expected Lehmann to act—to
answer Po Lao with a knife or a gun, perhaps—but he had done
nothing, merely stared incuriously at the man as he ranted, letting
him spend his fury in words. And
there was no doubting that Po Lao had been furious. He had
been waiting for them on their return, sat in Lehmann's chair, his
feet up on Lehmann's desk, his runners scattered about the corridors,
making sure Lehmann's men made no move against him. And for once the
legendary patience of Po Lao had given way to temper, and to an
outburst of anger that was a clear sign that Whiskers Lu had been
riding him hard. Lehmann
had opposed nothing Po Lao had said, yet there had been a stillness
to him—a rocklike imperviousness—that had impressed even
Po Lao in the end. Soucek had seen it with his own eyes. He noted how
the Red Pole's eyes went time and again to Lehmann's face, conscious
after a while that here was a man he could not intimidate. And with
that realization he had lowered his voice and become more reasonable,
more conciliatory, until, at the end, it had seemed almost as though
he and Lehmann had come to some strange, unspoken agreement between
them. For a
moment longer Lehmann sat there, deep in thought, then, with a
strange, almost lazy motion, he drew a sheet of hardprint toward him
and, taking the ink brush from the pot, drew the schematic outline of
a running dog on the back of the paper, the figure
starkly black against the white. He looked up, his eyes moving
from face to face, as if measuring each of them, then, taking his
knife from his belt, he nicked the top of his right index finger, so
that a bead of blood appeared. Slowly, applying the gentlest pressure
to the cut, he placed the tip of his finger against the paper,
drawing a bright red circle about the figure of the dog. Soucek,
watching, looked about him, seeing the understanding, the sudden
excitement in every face and felt his heart begin to hammer in his
chest. OLD
MAN LEVER turned from the screen, speechless with fury, then hurled
his goblet into the old stone fireplace. As a
servant scrambled to clear up the shattered glass, the old man paced
the room like a wounded cat, cursing, his eyes blazing, oblivious, it
seemed, of the men who stood in the shadows to either side, watching. "How
could he?" Lever said, stopping before the screen once more.
"How dare he!" He clenched a fist and raised it,
looking about him, as if searching for something to hit out at. "And
Kennedy . . . what's Kennedy's involvement in this?" There
were blank expressions on all sides, shrugs and apologetic bows. But
no one knew. This had come as a surprise to them all. Lever
raised his voice. "Does no one know anything?" "There
are rumors that Kennedy plans to move into politics," Curval
answered, stepping out from beside one of the pillars. Lever
fixed him with one eye. "Politics?" "They
say he wants to form his own party. To challenge the old guard when
the House reopens." Lever
studied the geneticist a moment, then began to laugh; a scornful,
dismissive laughter that was like the braying of a wild beast. In an
instant the big room was filled with laughter as Lever's men joined
in, sharing his joke. But beneath the laughter was relief that the
old man's rage had been defused, his anger deflected. For the time
being. "Politics!"
the old man exclaimed, wheezing with amusement. "Who would have
believed it? And my son?" He turned back, facing
Curval again, his eyes suddenly much colder. "Is my son
involved in this?" Curval
shrugged. "I wouldn't have said it was Michael's thing. But if
Kennedy stood bail for Ward, maybe there's something in it. I mean,
why else should he get involved?" Lever
stared at him a moment longer, then went across and sat down behind
his desk. For a while he simply sat there, deep in thought, then,
looking up, he set to work. "Okay.
Harrison... I want you to find out all you can about young Kennedy
and his plans. James ... I want a team posted to cover my son's
activities. I want to know where he is and what he's doing every hour
of the day from now on, understand? Robins ... I want you to compile
a list of all Kennedy's contacts—business and personal—
along with their financial strengths and weaknesses. Spence ... I
want you to take over the winding up of Ward's business affairs. I
don't want any last-minute hitches, okay? Good. And you, Cook, I want
you to find out a bit more about this trip to Europe our young friend
is apparently making. I want to know if he has any plans to set up
over there. If he has, 1 want to know who he meets and what's
agreed." Curval
stepped forward, catching Lever's eye. "And my meeting with the
boy? Is that still on?" Lever
shook his head. "Not now. Later perhaps. When things are better
known. Right now it might prove . . . counterproductive, let's say.
Ward has ridden this one. He's survived. Right now he has friends,
supporting him, buoying him up. But that won't last. Besides, there's
nowhere for him to go now. No one to turn to after this. We have only
to isolate him once more. To harry him, like dogs at his heels, until
he tires and falls. And then . . ." Lever smiled, broadly,
savagely, like some wild thing scenting victory. "And then we'll
have him." , SOUCEK
STOOD THERE over the cot, rocking it gently, cooing to the
now-sleeping child. Across from him, Lehmann was tidying the room.
The woman lay face down on the bed, as if asleep, the single stiletto
wound to the back of the neck hidden beneath her long black hair. Lehmann
had explained nothing, simply told him to come. As on
the last occasion, when they had gone outside, Lehmann had
taken him into the service shafts, this time climbing the pipes
fifty, maybe a hundred levels, until Soucek had begun to wonder
whether they were going up to the roof itself. But then Lehmann had
turned off, following the map in his head, finding his footing
easily, confidently. They had come out thirty ch'i from here,
in a maintenance corridor. There Lehmann had handed him a uniform
from his pack, then put one on himself. The orange of deck
maintenance. ID in hand, he had come directly to this door, as if
he'd done it several times before, and knocked. There had been the
sound of a baby crying, a woman's spoken query, and then they were
inside, Lehmann talking to the woman, reassuring her. A moment later
she was dead. Soucek
had watched as Lehmann turned the woman over. He had taken a thin
sheet of printout from his pocket—a sheet with her picture on
it—and checked it against her. Then, satisfied, he had lifted
her and placed her facedown on the bed. When the baby began to cry
halfheartedly, Lehmann had turned, looking directly at Soucek, and
made a rocking gesture. What
are we doing here? Soucek wondered, looking about him. It was a
normal Mid-Level apartment, modestly furnished. And the woman. She
was simply a wife, a mother. So what the fuck was Lehmann up to? What
did he want here? His
answer came a moment later. There were footsteps outside in the
corridor, then a brisk knocking and a cheerful call. "Sweetheart!
It's me! I'm home!" Lehmann
signaled for Soucek to go out into the kitchen, then went across.
Moving to one side of the door, he pressed the lock. As it hissed
back and the man came into the room, Lehmann moved between him and
the door, his knife drawn. He was
a tall, almost cadaverously thin man, with dark, short-cut hair and
of roughly the same height and build as Lehmann. "Becky?"
he asked, confused, seeing the woman on the bed, apparently asleep.
Then, understanding that someone else must have operated the door
lock, he jerked around. Soucek,
watching from the kitchen, saw, in the mirror on the far side of the
room, the look of horror in the man's face; saw Lehmann glance at a
second paper. Then, letting the paper fall from his hand, he
leaned in toward the man, as if embracing him. A moment later, the
man fell back, the smallest sound of surprise escaping his lips. As
Lehmann knelt over the body, Soucek stepped out into the room again. "Who
is he?" "There,"
Lehmann said, concentrating on what he was doing. "The paper on
the floor." Soucek
went across and picked it up. It was a printout giving brief personal
details of the man. Thomas Henty. Hung Moo. Married. One child. Age
thirty. A technician. Soucek turned back, looking across, then
grimaced. Lehmann was using a narrow scalpel now, and was carefully
cutting the man's eyes from his head. As Soucek watched, he severed
the optical nerve and gently dropped the eyeball into a special
tubelike carrier he had taken from his pack. There was the faintest
hiss as the soft eye slid into the cold compartment, then the lid
clicked over. Moments later the other eye joined its companion in the
narrow box. Eyes.
He was stealing the man's eyes. "What
about the child?" Lehmann
leaned back, looking across at Soucek. "Forget the child. He's
dead. They're all dead now." And, as if in explanation, Lehmann
took a small device from his pack—an incendiary—and,
setting the timer for sixty seconds, placed it between the two
corpses on the bed. "Quick
now," he said, going across to the door. "We've another
call to make and only forty minutes to get there." But
Soucek paused at the door, looking back into the room. The sight of
the dead couple on the bed and the soft snuffling of the sleeping
child tore unexpectedly at his feelings. For the briefest moment, he
stood there, as if paralyzed, wondering what special torments the
demons of hell would have in store for him when his life above the
Yellow Springs was done. Then, with a tiny shudder, he turned away,
following Lehmann out into the corridor. THAT
NIGHT the dream came once again. Again,
as once before, she stood alone upon that tilted, shattered land,
trapped beneath a low, impenetrable sky of steel. It was dark, an
oppressive, elemental darkness lit now and then by sudden
flashes of light. All about her the storm raged violently, growling
and shrieking at her with a voice of primal evil. Before, she had
felt only fear; a gut-wrenching fear that had rooted her to the spot.
This time, however, it was not fear she felt but excitement. Excitement,
and a sense of expectation. Beneath
her the tower slowly climbed the slope, its wooden, spi-derish limbs
folding and stretching inexorably, its dark mouth grunting and
wheezing as it came on. With each searing flash of light she saw it
gain on her, its shattered, glasslike eyes glittering malevolently,
its jagged, toothless maw crammed with splintered bone. Closer
it came, and closer yet, and as its foul breath rolled up the hill
toward her, she cried out, her voice high and clear above the noise
of the storm. There was a moment's silence, a moment's utter
stillness, and then, as once before, the earth between her and the
tower cracked and split. She
shivered, watching, knowing what would come. Knowing and yet fearful
in case, this time, it would be different. Slowly,
like a shadow forming from the dark mouth of the earth, he emerged: a
stooped little creature with short, strong limbs and eyes that burned
like coals. Turning, he looked at her, his wet, dark skin glowing
with an inner light. She
smiled, greeting him, recognizing him for the first time. It was Kim. For a
moment he was still, watching her, his dark yet fiery eyes seeming to
pierce her to the bone. And then, slowly, his lips parted in a smile,
like a pocket opening in the blackness of his face, light—a
brilliant, burning light—spilling out, falling like molten gold
from the mouth of a furnace. He
smiled, and then, with an agility that surprised her, he spun about,
facing the tower, his arms held up before him, as if to ward it off. "Avodya!"
he said clearly. "Avodya!" Slowly
the tower heaved itself up, creaking beneath its own bloated weight,
a furious whispering and muttering coming from within its hideous
maw. Then, with a rush, it came up the slope at him, its cracked eyes
glinting, its thin legs straining, a low moan rising to a screech as
it ran. "Avodya!" On it
came and on, rushing at him through the half-dark. On, like some
vast, unstoppable machine, until, with a fearsome cry, it threw
itself at him. And as
it fell, the darkness seemed to explode. Where the small, dark
creature stood was now a web of brilliant, coruscating light that
pulsed between the fingers of his outstretched arms. Slowly,
ever so slowly, the tower fell, tumbling, shrieking, into the fierce,
pure fire of the web. And where it touched it sparked and vanished,
flickering into nothingness. For a
moment longer, its shrieks echoed across the shattered land, flapping
like bats against the ceiling of the sky. Then, as they faded, a
pure, high ringing tone grew, until it filled the sudden stillness. She
blinked and looked, but he was gone. Slowly, fearfully, she went
across. The earth whence he'd come no longer gaped, but was smooth
and seamless. And beyond it, there where he'd stood—there,
where the tower had tumbled shrieking into the fiery web—was
nothing. Nothing but a huge circle of ash. Jelka
shuddered and then woke, remembering. Kalevala and the storm. And the
morning after—the circle of darkness in the woods and the seven
charred tree stumps. And Kim. All of it linked somehow. All of it
tied in to the future. But how or why she did not know. Not yet. CHAPTER
NINE
Plucked
Eyes and Severed Heads Tolonen
was stripped to the waist, exercising, when Kim came into the room.
He turned, nodding to Kim, then continued with his routine, bending
to touch his toes, then throwing his arms up above his head, twisting
his torso once, twice to either side, before ducking down again. It
was a vigorous, impressive routine that even a much younger man would
have found strenuous, but at seventy-five the old man made it look
easy. He was in fine physical condition and, but for the bright,
golden sheen of his artificial arm, he seemed in perfect health. Kim
waited, watching respectfully, in silence. Only when the old man had
finished and was standing there, toweling himself down, did he cross
the room and stand by the broad oak desk that dominated the study. "Hello
there," Tolonen said, coming across. "How are you, boy?" He
reached out with his good hand and held Kim's hand a moment, meeting
his eyes squarely, challengingly, as he always did. "I'm
fine," Kim answered, taking the seat the Marshal offered him. "I
wasn't sure you'd have time to see me." Tolonen
smiled, making his way around to the other side of the desk.
"Nonsense. You're always welcome here." Kim
bowed. "Thank you. But I wouldn't dream of keeping you from your
business." The
old man laughed. "There's no chance of that, my boy. I’ve
got to be off in twenty
minutes. Li Yuan himself has summoned me. I'll have to shower and
change before then, but we've time for a chat, neh?" Tolonen
turned, taking a tunic from the back of the big, leather-backed
chair, then pulled it on in one swift motion. To Kim, watching
wide-eyed from his chair, he seemed like a god, there was so much
power and authority in every movement. He
turned back, facing Kim again, and sat, leaning toward Kim across the
broad expanse of the desk's surface. "So how's business? Did you
finally get around to registering those patents?" Kim
hesitated, not wishing to burden the old man with his problems.
"There were difficulties," he said, after a moment.
"Complications with the patent. . ." "Complications?"
Tolonen sat back slightly. "You mean the thing didn't work,
after all? But you were so confident." "No
. . ." Again Kim held back, loath to discuss the matter. But
Tblonen was staring at him now, curious. "The device works.
That's not the problem. The problem is that someone beat me to it.
They registered a day before me." "I
didn't think anyone was working on the same lines. I thought you
said. . ." Tolonen stopped, his face changing, suddenly
realizing what Kim was actually saying. "But that's outrageous!
Does Li Yuan know of this?" "Not
yet." "Then
maybe he ought. We should do something . . ." Kim
looked down, shaking his head. "Forgive me, Marshal, but I would
rather the T'ang knew nothing of this. He has much on his mind as it
is. Besides, the problem is mine, not his, and I shall find ways and
means to solve it." Tolonen
stared back at the young man a moment, taking in his words, then gave
an emphatic nod. "All right. But if this should happen again . .
." "I'll
let you know . . ." Kim smiled. "But enough of my troubles.
How did your investigations go?" Tolonen
gave a small sigh and put his hands together, metal and flesh
interlaced. "They say that those who look shall find, neh? I can
say very little just now, I'm afraid. I..." He stopped, studying
Kim's face a moment, then
reached into the drawer to his left and took out a slender computer
file, placing it on the desk between them. "Can
I trust you to be discreet, Kim?" Kim
narrowed his eyes. "This has to do with what you found?" "It
has. At present only three people know what is in that file. With
yourself and the T'ang, it'll make five. And so it must remain, for
the time being. You understand me?" "I
understand." "Good.
Then take the file and read it. And let me know what you think. In
return I shall have a special team investigate this matter of the
patent." He lifted a hand to still Kim's objections. "I
heard what you said, my boy, and I respect you for it, but sometimes
it does not hurt to have a little outside help, neh? All I ask is
that you keep the information in that folder to yourself and return
it once you have had time to consider its significance." Kim
leaned toward the old man, about to ask him about the file, when the
door to his right swung open and Jelka came hurrying into the room.
She was talking, already three or four steps into the room, when she
stopped and fell silent, realizing that her father was not alone. She
bowed her head. "Forgive me, Father. I didn't realize you had
company." Jelka
turned, looking across at Kim. He was sitting there, like a
large-eyed child in the big, tall-backed chair, the very smallness of
him making her frown involuntarily, then look back at her father. Kim
smiled, amused, not hurt by her reaction. Across from him, Tolonen
stood, turning to his daughter with a kindly, indulgent smile. "This
is Kim," he said. "Kim Ward. A valued servant of Li Yuan.
And this, Kim, is my daughter, Jelka." Kim
stood, offering his hand, seeing how she had to bend slightly to take
it. Her hand was warm, its pressure firm against his own, enclosing
his, her eyes friendly, welcoming. "I
know who Kim is, Daddy," she said, releasing Kim's hand. "He
was on the Project." Kim's
eyes widened, surprised that she remembered. But Tolonen merely
laughed. "Of
course! I'm forgetting, aren't I?" He came around, putting an
arm about his daughter's shoulders. "Why, you might
almost say that she found you, Kim, after the attack. We had given up
any hope of finding survivors, but Jelka insisted that you'd escaped.
She made us search the vent for signs that you'd got out that way.
And you know what? She was right!" Kim
stared, his mouth open. He hadn't known. He
looked down, suddenly abashed. That first time he had seen her—when
she had come with her father to visit the Wiring Project—he had
stared at her in awe, thinking her some kind of goddess. Never, even
in his wildest imaginings, had he thought she would remember him. But
she had. More than that, she had made them look for him. Kim
looked down at his hand. He could still feel the gentle warmth, the
firm but pleasant pressure of her hand enclosing his, and shivered,
surprised once more by the strength of what he felt. And when he
looked up, it was to find her watching him still, a strange intensity
in her vividly blue eyes. The
file lay on the desk beside him. For a brief moment both men had
forgotten it, but now Tolonen reminded Kim, pointing to it. "Take
it with you, Kim. And look at it closely. You don't have to answer at
once. The end of the week will be soon enough." Kim
stared at the file a moment, then, impulsively, answered the old man.
"I don't need that long. I'll give you my answer tomorrow."
He smiled. "Whatever Li Yuan wants, I'll do. If lean. . ." At
that Tolonen laughed, and, as if letting his daughter in on a joke,
began to explain. "Kim here is a physicist. Our experts say he's
the best, despite his years. Maybe the best weVe ever had." He
could see how she glanced at him, then back at her father, as if she
couldn't quite take it in. Indeed, to Kim, sitting there watching
her, nothing seemed more implausible than the fact that men like
Tolonen and Li Yuan should need him, seeing in him something that
they could not match, and using words like "the best." To
the part of him that was Claybom—that had come up from the
darkness beneath the City—it seemed absurd. And when this girl,
so tall and beautiful that she seemed somehow unreal, narrowed her
eyes and asked him if it were true, if he was the best, he
could only laugh at her and nod, watching
her face change slowly until it mirrored his own delight at the
absurdity of things. "If
I can. . ." Tolonen murmured, echoing Kim's words, then laughed.
But Kim didn't hear. He was still staring at the girl, seeing how she
looked away from him, then back, something strange happening in her
face even as he watched. He
looked down at the unopened file and nodded to himself. But the
gesture had nothing to do with what was in the folder. Had nothing to
do with physics, or projects, or Li Yuan's needs. It was the girl. In
an instant he had decided something, irrevocably and without further
doubt. He would not rest. Not until he had married her. IN THE
IMPERIAL SHOWER ROOM of Tongjiang, the maids of the inner household,
Fragrant Lotus and Bright Moon, were preparing to wash the young
T'ang's hair. Taking soft woolen towels from the big cupboards above
the sinks, they laid them out beside the glazed bowls of unguents and
shampoos, the silver combs and brushes, the trays of brightly colored
beads and silken thread; then, returning to the sinks, they opened
the great dragon mouths of the taps and sprinkled a fine, nut-brown,
aromatic powder into the steaming crystal fall. As
they worked, Li Yuan watched them from his chair, at the center of
the great tiled floor, enjoying the sight of the two young women, the
sound of the ancient songs they hummed as they busied themselves
about him, the sweet scent of their softly veiled bodies as they
brushed past. He
sighed, for once not merely content but happy. For a long time he had
denied himself such things as this, attempting to harden himself
against the world, but now he understood. This too was part of it.
Without these moments of soft luxury—of surrender to the
senses—there was no balance to life, no joy. And without joy
there could be no real understanding of the flow of things. No
wisdom. For a
long time he had struggled to be what he was not. To be some purer,
finer creature. But it was all in vain. From the day of his betrothal
to Fei Yen, the balance of his life had been lost. Casting off his
maids, he had cast off that part of him that needed warmth and
comfort, a mother's touch. He had tried to shape himself, as a
tailor cuts cloth to make a gown, but the gown he'd made had been too
tight. It had stifled and disfigured him. He
looked down, remembering those times. To have one single, perfect
love; that had been the dream. To have a woman who was all to him,
just as he was all to her—like Yin and Yang, or night and
day—that had been the dream. But the world was not a dream. The
world was harsh and true to itself alone. In it there was falseness
and betrayal, sickness and hatred, cruelty and loss. Loss beyond the
strength of hearts to bear. And
yet there was this. This simple light of joy to set against the
darkness of the times. The joy of a woman's touch, a child's embrace,
the laughter of a loving friend. These simple things, weightless as
they seemed in the great scale of things, were the equal of a hundred
deaths, a thousand cruel blows. Feathers and iron. Joy and grief.
Balanced. Li
Yuan laughed softly, then looked up, conscious suddenly that the
maids had finished and were standing there before him, watching him. "Chieh
Hsia. . ." they said as one and bowed low, their smiles
betraying how much they too enjoyed these moments alone with him. "Here,"
he said, standing and putting out his arms to them. "Hsiang He.
Ywe Hui. Come here, my little blossoms. Come here and tend to me." TOLONEN
WAS WAITING for him in his study, standing by the door to the eastern
garden, his golden hand glinting in the sunlight as he turned to face
his master. "Chieh
Hsia," the old man said, bowing low. "Forgive me if I came
too early." Li
Yuan shook his head and laughed. "Not at all, old friend. The
fault is mine. I spent too long in the shower this morning and now
everything is running late." "Then
I will be brief, Chieh Hsia, and come directly to the point.
You asked me to have my discovery checked out and analyzed. Well, I
now have the preliminary findings and they are most disturbing. Most
disturbing indeed." Li
Yuan looked across and saw the folder on the edge of his desk. "Is
this it here, Knut?" "That
is it, Chieh Hsia. Li
Yuan stared at the Marshal a moment, then went around his desk and
sat. Drawing the thickly padded folder toward him, he flipped it
open. On top of the pile was a picture of the thing he had seen last
time Tolonen had visited him. The thing he'd brought back with him
from North America. In the picture it looked like a giant walnut, the
size of a young child's hand. Just looking at it, Li Yuan could
recall the scent of the original, the dry spicy mustiness of it. A
brain it was. An artificial brain. Smaller and less complex than a
human brain, but a marvel all the same. In many ways it looked like
the brains GenSyn produced for many of their top-range models, but
this was different. GenSyn brains were limited things, grown from
existent genetic material—painstakingly nurtured in baths of
nutrients over a period of years. But this brain had been made.
Designed and built, like a machine. A living machine. When
he had seen it first, a week ago, he had been unimpressed. The thing
was long dead—the only one of five to have remained in its
storage case. But the experimental notes—a small library of
computer records—had been saved intact. Using them, Tolonen had
spent the last week piecing together what had happened. Now, reading
through his summary, Li Yuan felt himself go cold. "Kuan
Yin!" he said, looking up at Tolonen. "What put you onto
this?" The
old man bowed stiffly. "Gaps in the record, Chieh Hsia. Things
that didn't make sense. There was too much wastage of basic
materials, for instance. The percentages were far higher than in
previous years, so I did some digging, found out where the "waste"
was being shipped, and followed the trail. As I suspected, it was
being sold off cheaply, the funds being used to finance a small R and
D establishment in the far south. That's where I found it all.
Untouched. The room sealed up." "A
mistake, do you think?" Tolonen
shook his head. "I think we were just lucky. My guess is that
whatever this was, it was almost ready to go. And the only reason it
didn't is because we hit them first." Li
Yuan frowned. "What do you mean?" "Look
at the dates on the final research entries. They're all late autumn
2007. That's significant. That means this thing was coming to
fruition at the same time that we dealt with Hans Ebert and DeVore.
If I'm right, we settled with them before they could get this under
way. Before they could use one of these things." "I
see. So you think this was Hans Ebert's doing?" Tolonen
sniffed deeply. "I'm certain of it. Not only are his initials on
a number of the documents, but the whole thing has the twisted feel
of one of his schemes. That said, I think he was making these things
up for DeVore. Maybe even to DeVore's specifications. From the
shipping documents we've found, they were going to be shipped to
Mars." "Mars?"
Li Yuan stood, then walked slowly across to the window. "Why
Mars?" Tolonen
turned, watching the young T'ang. "I'm not sure, Chieh Hsia,
but I feel sure it has something to do with those copies that
came in from Mars that time." "But
my father's investigations drew a blank." "Maybe
so. But perhaps we should look again. More thoroughly this time. Send
Karr perhaps." Li
Yuan glanced at him, then looked back out at the sunlit garden.
"Perhaps." Tolonen
hesitated a moment, then spoke again. "There is one other thing,
Chieh Hsia. Something which isn't in the summary. Something
we're still working on." "And
what's that?" "The
brain. It wasn't like anything else GenSyn ever produced. For a
start, it wasn't connected to any kind of spinal cord. Nor did it
have to be sited in a skull. Moreover, it's a lot more compact than a
normal human brain, as if it was designed for something else. It
makes me think that this was only a single component and that the
rest was being made up elsewhere, maybe at sites all over Chung Kuo." "To
be sent to Mars for assembly, you think?" "Maybe."
The old man frowned and shook his head. "Maybe I'm just being
paranoid about this, Chieh Hsia. Maybe it's all dead and gone, like
the brain itself. Maybe we killed it when we killed DeVore. But
I'm not so sure. The fact that this could be built in the first place
worries me immensely. If you were to put a number of these inside Hei
bodies, for instance, you could do a lot of damage. No one would
be safe. Not if those performance statistics are correct." "So
what do you suggest?" "That
you meet with Wu Shih and Tsu Ma and let them know of this at once." "And
the rest of the Council?" Tolonen
shook his head. "For once I think you need to keep things tight.
Master Nan will need to know about this, certainly. But if Wang
Sau-leyan were to find out, who knows what he would do? If this thing
was built once, it could be built again. And in our cousin's hands,
who knows what evil might result?" "That
is so," Li Yuan said quietly. "Yet why not simply destroy
all record of it? That would be simplest, surely?" "Maybe
it would, Chieh Hsia. But can we take the risk? Can we be
certain that these are the only records of the experiments, or are
there copies elsewhere? On Mars, perhaps? Or somewhere else, hidden
away?" Li
Yuan looked down. "So we must live with this?" "It
seems so, Chieh Hsia. At least, until we can be sure." "Sure?"
Li Yuan laughed bleakly, recalling with surprise his earlier mood of
joy. When could they ever be sure? old
MAN LEVER turned, the dark, curly-haired head held firmly between his
broad, square-fingered hands, and smiled. "Well,
what do you think?" Lever
held out the severed head, as if offering it to the three men who
stood before him, but they merely grimaced, their fans fluttering
agitatedly before their faces. "Really,
Charles," one of them, a tall, morose-looking man named Marley,
answered. "It's grotesque. What is it? GenSyn?" Lever
shook his head, but the smile remained in his eyes. He was enjoying
their discomfort. "Not at all. It's real. Or was. As far as I
know there are only three such heads in existence, but this is the
best. Look at it. Look how well preserved it is." As he
thrust the head out toward them, there was a sharp movement back; a
look of revulsion in their faces so profound it was almost comical. Lever
shrugged, then turned the head in his hands, staring down into the
dark, broad features. Lifting it slightly, he sniffed the black,
leathery skin. "It's
beautiful, neh? Slaves they were. Negroes, they called them. They
were brought over to America from Africa four, five centuries ago.
Our forefathers used them like machines, to toil in their fields and
serve in their mansions. They say there were once thousands of them.
Subhuman, of course. You can see that at a glance. But men, all the
same. Bred, not made." Marley
shuddered and turned away, looking about him. The room was cluttered
with packing cases from a dozen different auction rooms, most of them
unopened. But those that were open displayed treasures beyond
imagining. Clothing and furniture, machines and books, statues and
paintings and silverware. Things from the old times none of them had
dreamed still existed. He
turned back. Old Man Lever's eyes were on him again, as if studying
him, gauging his reaction to all this. "I
thought we might have a special exhibition suite at the Institute,
George. What do you think? Something to boost morale. To give us a
renewed sense of our heritage. As Americans." Marley
shot worried glances at his fellows, then looked back at Lever, a
faint quiver in his voice. "An exhibition? Of this?" Lever
nodded. "But
wouldn't that be ... dangerous? I mean. . ." Marleys fan
fluttered nervously. "Word would get out. The Seven would hear
of it. They would see it as a kind of challenge, surely?" Lever
laughed dismissively. "No more than the Waldeseemuller map that
already hangs there. No, and certainly no more of a challenge than
the Kitchen. Besides, what would our friend Wu Shih do if he knew?
What could he do?" Marley
averted his eyes before the fierce, challenging gaze of the other,
but his discomfort was evident. And maybe that was why Lever had
invited them this morning—not to show off his most recent
acquisitions but to sound out their reaction to his scheme. The
ancient map of the world that hung in the great hall of the
Institute, that was one thing, and Archimedes Kitchen and its
anti-Han excesses, that was another. But this—this scheme for
an exhibition, a museum of ancient Americana—was
something else entirely. Was an act of defiance so gross that to
ignore it would be tantamount to condoning it. And Wu
Shih could not afford to condone it. So
why? Why did Lever want to bring things to a head? Why did he want a
confrontation with Wu Shih? Was he still burning at the humiliation
he had suffered on the steps of the ancient Lincoln Memorial, or was
this something else? In setting up this exhibition was he, perhaps,
attempting to create some kind of bargaining counter? Something he
might trade off for some other, more worthwhile concession? Or was
that too subtle a reading of this? Mightn't the old fool simply be
ignorant of the likely result of his proposed action? Marley stared
at the severed Negro head in Old Man Lever's hands and shuddered
inwardly. It would not do to offend Lever, but the alternative for
once seemed just as bad. He met
Lever's eyes firmly, steeling himself to ask the question. "What
do you want, Charles? What do you really want?" Lever
looked down at the head, then back at Marley. "I want us to be
proud again, that's all, George. Proud. We've bowed before these
bastards all our lives. Been their creatures. Done what they
said. But times are changing. We're entering a new phase of
things. And afterward . . ." he lowered his voice, smiling now,
"well, maybe they'll find occasion to bow their heads to us,
neh?" Yes,
Marley thought, or have ours cut from our necks . . . He was
about to speak, about to ask something more of the Old Man, when
there was a banging on the door at the far end of the room. Lever set
the head down carefully, then, with a tight smile that revealed he
was loath to be interrupted, moved past them. While
Lever stood there at the door speaking to his First Steward, Marley
looked to his two companions—like himself, major contributors
to the Institute's funds—and saw his own deep reluctance
mirrored there. But how articulate that? How convey their feelings
without alienating Lever? He
turned, looking back at Lever, and caught his breath, surprised by
the look of unbridled anger in the old man's face. "Send
him up!" Lever barked, dismissing the servant with a curt
gesture. Then, composing himself as well as he could, he turned back,
facing them again. "Forgive
me, ch'un t^u, but my son is here, it seems. I forbade him to come
without my express permission, but he is here nonetheless." "Ah.
. ." Marley looked down, understanding. The rift between Old Man
Lever and his son was common knowledge, but until now he had not
known the depth of their division. Things were bad indeed if Lever
had barred his son from the family home. "Should
we leave, Charles? This matter of the exhibition ... we might speak
of it another time. Over dinner, perhaps?" He had
hoped it would be enough to extricate them from a potentially
embarrassing situation and buy some time to discuss the matter
privately among themselves, but Lever was shaking his head. "No,
George. If the boy has the impertinence to disturb me while I am in
conference with my friends, he is hardly to be rewarded for it with a
private audience, neh?" Marley
bowed his head slightly, the bitterness and determination in Lever's
voice warning him against pursuing the matter. A moment later the son
himself was there in the doorway; a tall, athletic-looking young man
so like his father that they might easily have been taken for
brothers. "Father,"
the young man said, bowing his head dutifully, waiting to be asked
into the room. But Old Man Lever gave no word, made no gesture of
admittance. He merely stood there, stone-faced and implacable. "I
asked you not to come. So why are you here, Michael? What do you
want?" Michael
Lever looked to the three men, then back to his father, as if
expecting something of him. Then, understanding how things were, he
lowered his head again. "I
had to see you, Father. To speak to you. This thing between us . . ."
He hesitated, finding it hard to say the words, then looked up,
meeting his father's eyes. "I wish to be reconciled with you,
Father." Old
Man Lever stood there a moment, unmoving, silent, as if
carved in granite, then, turning away abruptly, he gave a
tight little laugh. A derisory, dismissive laugh. "Then
you will marry Louisa Johnstone, after all?" "Marry
her. . . ?" The younger man faltered, at a loss. He glanced
uncertainly at the others, then took a step toward his father. "But
that's behind us, surely, Father? I'm talking of the future. Of being
your son again, your hands . . ." "My
hands!" Old Man Lever whirled around, his face ugly now, one
angry look from him enough to make his son step back beyond the
room's threshold again. "And if my hands will not do as I ask
them?" He shook his head contemptuously and waved the young man
away. "Pah . . . Go and play with your dreamer friends, boy. Go
sleep with your low-level whores. I'll have nothing to do with you,
boy. Nothing at all!" For a
moment the young man said nothing. Then, with one final, precise
bow—a bow that showed immense self-control—he withdrew.
"So be it, then," he said softly, turning away. "So be
it." But
Marley, standing there, had seen that initial look of angry
bewilderment on the young man's face and knew he had been witness to
a final breach. Whatever the rights and wrongs of this—and
Lever was certainly right to insist that his son obey him—there
was no doubting that the old man had set out to deliberately
humiliate his son, speaking thus to him before those who were not of
his kin. He turned, looking at Lever, expecting to see that stern and
unrelenting expression maintained on his features, and found, to his
surprise, not anger but regret and—underlying all—a hurt
so profound, so all-embracing, that it threatened momentarily to
engulf the old man. For
the briefest unguarded moment it was so, and then, as if a steel door
had slammed down over it, it was gone. "Well,
ch'un tot," Lever said, clearing his throat, "as I
was saying . ,." WHILE
MILNE STOOD at the counter, asking questions of the clerk, Ross
looked about him at the walls and furnishings of the Records Office,
as if they might give some kind of clue. It was
a dirty, shabby place, empty drink-bulbs and crumpled paper
forms littering the spittle-stained floor, while on the walls
of the public space were torn and faded posters, overpainted with
slogans and graffiti, one symbol—a simple black
palmprint—dominating all others. "Who's
this?" Ross asked, leaning over an old Han seated on the bench.
"Are they popular here in Atlanta?" But the ancient stared
straight through him, as if he weren't there. "Terrorists,
I guess," Ross murmured, straightening up and looking about him
once more. Not that there was much to know about places like this.
They were all much of a muchness these days. He
went back across, standing beside Milne at the counter. A young Han
clerk was talking animatedly to Milne in Mandarin, running his finger
along the open page of one of the big official Records books. "So
what have we got?" Ross whispered. "Anything good?" The
clerk glanced at Ross, then, removing his finger, slammed the book
shut. "That's it," he said, in halting English. "That's
all there is." "Shit,"
said Milne quietly. "Just our luck." "What's
the problem?" Milne
looked away nervously. "There was a deck fire, three years back.
All of the local records were destroyed. Backups, too, in a separate
fire. The deck itself was cleared. Reseeded with new settlers. TheyVe
been rebuilding the files ever since, but there's not much. Only what
we've seen already." Ross
looked down. "Hmm. Bit of a coincidence, neh? I mean, when was
the last time you heard of something like that? Two fires?" "It's
not impossible. Fires happen." "Maybe.
But it's all too neat, don't you think? I mean, if you wanted to put
in a sleeper, what better way?" "And
you think that's what happened? You think Mary Jennings is a sleeper
for one of Lever's enemies?" "And
you don't?" Milne
hesitated, then gave a reluctant nod. "Right.
So what we do is this. We find out where the survivors of the fire
were moved to, and then we go and speak to some of them. Find out
what they remember about our friend Mary Jennings. That is, if
they remember anything." Ross turned back, facing the counter
again, a fifty-yuan bill held out between his thumb and
forefinger. "And
then?" Ross
looked back at his partner and smiled. "And then we do something
we should have done right at the start. We make a facial check on our
friend. Not just here in North America, but right across the seven
Cities." He laughed. "It's time we found out just who Mary
Jennings really is." emily
SAT before the mirror in her room, brushing out the long dark tresses
of the wig. It was a tight fit, but that was good. Unlike the other
she had bought, this one looked natural. As well it might, for it
reminded her of how she had once looked, twelve years ago, when she
was seventeen. Seventeen.
It was not long as the world measured things, and yet it seemed
another lifetime. Back then things had seemed so simple. So black and
white. She had known then where she stood in the world and what she
wanted. Meeting Bent Gesell, she had become his woman, faithful to
him alone, sharing his ideals; that vision of a better, purer world.
A world without levels, free of hatred and corruption. For eight
years that vision had sustained her. Had driven her on. But then
Gesell had been seduced: won over by the dream of power DeVore had
seeded in his head. The
vision had died. And yet DeVore had saved her. After the debacle at
Bremen, it had been DeVore who had come to her, offering her a new
identity and a passport to a new life—that same life she had
led these past twenty-one months. Yes,
but what had she done in that time? What achieved? Nothing,
came the answer. For almost two years now she had sat on her hands,
serving her natural enemies, doing nothing for the cause she'd once
believed in. So
maybe it was time to begin anew. To go down the levels and organize
again. She
stood, looking about her at the tiny room. Her bag was packed, her
jacket laid neatly across it. Beside it on the bed rested the second
of the two IDs DeVore had given her. Stooping, she picked it
up and studied the tiny image within. Rachel DeValerian, it
read. Maintenance Engineer. She
smiled. Even Mach knew nothing of this. Only DeVore. And he, if Mach
could be believed, was dead now, his skull smashed into tiny pieces
by the T'ang's man, Karr. Only
she didn't believe that. From what she knew of the man, she couldn't
believe he would have let himself be caught so easily. No. He was out
there somewhere. Waiting. Biding his time. And
Michael? She
sighed. The note had gone by messenger more than three hours back. He
would surely have read it by now. In fact, she had been expecting him
to call these last few hours. But nothing. It was as she'd thought—as
she'd said in the letter—he was too preoccupied with other
things to see what he had done to her. Too bound up in his father's
business. For a while she had thought him cured of all that, changed,
free to pursue his own straight path through life, but she had been
mistaken. Kennedy's visit had opened her eyes to that. Yes,
and the news that he had gone to see his father—to beg
forgiveness and become his "son" again—had hit her
hard. Had woken her to the reality of her life. She
had delayed too long. Had let herself be blinded by her love for him.
Well, now she knew. It was no good waiting for Michael Lever. No use
relying on any man. Surely she had learned that lesson once already
in her life, with Gesell? Even
so, some instinct kept her here, waiting for him to call, to knock on
the door and tell her it was all a mistake. That what he'd said to
her was true. That he had changed. That
he loved her. "Ten
minutes," she said softly to herself, glancing at the timer on
her wrist. Ten more minutes, and then she would go. She
tucked the ID into the inner pocket of the jacket, then went across
and stood before the mirror once again, carefully removing the wig
and replacing it in the carrier. She
had booked her flight already, under the name of Mary Jennings,
taking the rocket to the West Coast and then a fast-track
south. There, in the teeming lowers of old Mexico, she would
switch identities. To begin again. As Rachel De Valerian. She
looked about her nervously, going through all she had done these past
few hours. All bills were paid three months ahead, all commitments
met. Only Michael would miss her. And then maybe not. She
closed her eyes, wishing, hoping against all reason, that he would
call, at this late hour, and put things right between them. That he
would simply walk through the door and take her in his arms and. . . There
was a banging on the outer door, so sudden that it made her jump. Michael... She
went across and stood there, trying to calm herself, but her pulse
was racing, her heart pounding in her chest. As the hammering came
again, she called out, her voice tiny, barely in control. "Who
is it?" "It's
me! It's Bryn!" Bryn.7
And then she understood. It was Bryn Kustow, Michael's partner. Thumbing
the lock, she stood back, letting him in. "YouVe
got to help me," he said breathlessly. "Michael's gone. He
went to see his old man and they had a big bust up. I got a call. I
don't know who it was. One of the old man's cronies, I suspect.
Marley, maybe. But it seems that Michael was very upset. The Old Man
really gave it to him. Making demands. Insisting that he marry the
John-stone girl. Humiliating him in front of strangers. I tried
Michael's apartment but he wasn't there. No one's seen him for
hours!" Taking
his arm, she made him sit on the edge of the bed, then stood over
him, her mind in a whirl, trying to take in what had happened. "Okay.
Slow down. Let's think this through. You say you went to his
apartment. Had he been there?" "I
think so. I mean yes. Yes, he had. The manservant said he'd called
in. Very unlike himself. Very distressed." "And
did he take the note?" "The
note?" "I
sent him a note. It's important. It might explain things." Kustow
shrugged. "I don't know. I... Yes. Hang on. The man said
something about. . . about a special messenger coming." "Shit."
She shuddered, knowing now that she had got it wrong. Whatever
Michael had been doing, going back to see his father, it had had
nothing to do with her. And that was Kennedys fault. Kennedy who had
misled her. "Look,"
she said, "he won't have gone far. I know what he's like. He
won't want to face anyone he knows. Not now. I reckon he's gone down.
Down to the lowers. If I were you, I'd check the bars in all the
local stacks. Somewhere dark and anonymous, where he's not likely to
be known. That's where you'll find him." "Michael?
Down there?" Kustow laughed, but then he saw how she was looking
at him and his laughter died. "You think so?" She
nodded. "Yes. And when you find him, tell him this. That the
note was a mistake. I didn't understand. I thought. . ." She
shrugged. "Look, just tell him that I'll wait for him. If he
wants me, he knows where I am. And Bryn . . ." "Yes?" "Tell
him that I love him. And that I need him, even if his father doesn't.
Tell him that, neh?" kim
was standing with his back to her when she came into the room, his
dark head tilted forward as he looked down at something in his hands.
She set the tray she was carrying down noiselessly, then, quietly,
knowing he had not heard her, went across and stood there, behind and
slightly to the side of him, looking down at the object he was
holding. It was
a globe of yellowed ivory, carved with intricate towers and
ornamental bridges, crowded with tiny figures, yet small enough for
him to cup in one of his tiny, childlike hands. She watched him set
it back carefully, then half turn, realizing suddenly that she was
there. "I'm
sorry, I..." She
smiled and shook her head. "No, don't apologize. Handle them if
you want." He
looked at her strangely, his lips parted, the pupils of his eyes
forming large dark circles that surprised her with their intensity.
There was a wild, untamed quality about him that both frightened and
attracted her. His eyes seemed to fix and hold her with a power she
didn't quite understand, yet when she found her voice again all that
she said was, "YouVe nice eyes. They're so dark ..." "They're
green," he said, laughing, looking up at her. "No
. . . not their color. . ." She
hesitated. She had been about to say that they were like the surface
of the northern sea; that their greenness seemed to mask an
unfathomed depth of darkness. But he knew nothing of seas and so she
kept silent, watching him, knowing only that she had met no one like
him before. His dark hair was cut neat against his large but not
unattractive head, and his skin had the pale smoothness of a child's.
He was dressed simply, so simply that in that single respect alone he
was distinct from anyone she knew. Even her father's young soldiers
wore jewelery and made up their faces. Yes, even the austere and
distant Axel Haavikko. But Kim wore nothing special, added nothing to
his natural self. He
looked past her at the tray. "Is that ch'al" "Yes."
She laughed, feeling a sudden warmth come to her cheeks. She had
forgotten. For that brief moment she had forgotten everything. "There
are some sweetmeats too. But you'll stay for dinner, I hope. My
father should be back . . ." He
nodded, then moved around her, bending down to take one of the
sweetmeats from the tray. She
turned, watching him. In some indefinable way he was beautiful. Quite
beautiful. Nor was it the kind of beauty she was accustomed to. He
was not tall, nor broad, nor handsome in the classical Above sense of
that word. Even so, something shone out from him. Some quality that
was more sensed than seen. Some powerful, uncompromising thing that
simply wasn't there in other people. She felt that he was somehow...
in touch. Was that it? In touch. But in touch with what? She
shook her head, watching him bend to take another of the sweetmeats,
his smallest movement different, somehow connected. She
watched, frowning with the intensity of her watchfulness, but she
could say no more than that. He
turned, looking back at her, smiling. "Won't you join me?" "I
. . ." She laughed, embarrassed, realizing how awkward, how
gawky she must have appeared at that moment, but he seemed not to
notice. He merely stood there, smiling, one hand raised to her in
invitation, waiting for her to come to him. She
crossed the room and took his hand, the movement so easy, so natural,
that it seemed to her that she had somehow always done it. But the
feel of his palm against her own stirred her so deeply that she
shivered and glanced down to where their fingers met and interlaced.
When she looked up again he was watching her. She
frowned, suddenly conscious of how frail, how small he was beside
her, how her hand enveloped his, her strong, slender fingers thicker,
longer than his. Like a mother with her child. His
face was serious, unsmiling now, his eyes still questioning her.
Then, unexpectedly, he lifted her hand to his lips and kissed it,
brushing it with his lips gently before releasing it. Again she
shivered, then turned away quickly, a sweet but painful sensation
filling her, physical in its intensity. And as she turned, the memory
of her dream came back to her, so that she saw it vividly—saw
again that small, dark creature, whose eyes burned like coals and
whose wet, dark skin shone with an inner light. She saw it climb from
the darkness of the cracked and scarred earth and lift the mirror at
the tower. Saw it and gave a small cry, as if in pain. But it was
recognition. She
turned back. He was watching her, concerned, not understanding why
she had made the sound. "Are
you all right?" She
made to speak, but at that moment there were noises in the hallway
outside. Kim was still watching her, confused, unable to comprehend
the pain, the sudden intentness of her glances at him. "I . . ."
she began, but it was all she could say. It was him. Now, the dream
returned to her, she saw it. Saw how his eyes saw through her to the
bone and the darkness underneath. Saw it and knew—even as her
maid came into the room—that this was her fate. This childlike
man. This fierce and gentle creature. "Jelka?"
He was looking at her strangely now. "Are you all right?" She
took a breath and nodded. "I... I'm fine." But she felt
faint, felt both ice cold and fiery hot, as if a sudden fever had
taken her. Forcing
herself to be calm, she looked across at her maid and smiled, as if
to reassure the girl. "You'll
stay for dinner, Shih Ward?" "If
you want me to." She
nodded. "I... I must go now," she said, looking down. "But
please, make yourself at home. My maid. . . my maid will see to you."
Then, with one final glance at him, she turned and left the room. And
after, as she lay on her bed, thinking back on what had happened, she
saw him differently: saw not the man nor the creature of her dreams,
but the two transposed, inextricably mixed. And knew, with a sudden
certainty that surprised her, that she wanted him. THREE
HOURS had passed and now Kim sat there in the Marshal's study,
listening to her talk. Jelka was standing on the far side of the
room, beside the huge window wall, staring out into the artificial
depths of the past and re-created country of Kalevala, a wistfulness
in her face that seemed to mirror the light in the other land. And as
she talked, he leaned in toward her, entranced, hanging on her every
word. "You
can't help yourself, that's the worst of it. It's like a constant
betrayal of yourself. You feel nothing, and yet you go on smiling,
talking, laughing, all to fill the vacuum, to mask the nothingness
you're feeling all the time." She glanced at him. "At
least, that's how it was." She laughed, showing her perfect
teeth, her chin slightly raised. Kim,
watching her, caught his breath, pained by the beauty of that one
small movement. She was like something from a dream; so tall and
straight and lovely. Her hair was like a screen of golden silk, her
eyes the blue of the sky in the land beyond her. And her mouth . . . "As
for the rest of them, they don't even seem to notice how things are.
It's as if they're dead to it all. I mean, perhaps they really can't
tell the difference between this and real life. I don't know . . ."
She shrugged, her eyes suddenly pained, "But it seems to me that
there's a falseness, an intrinsic flaw in them. It's as if the
City's swallowed them. Eaten them up, souls and all. And yet they
seem happy with that. It's as if they really don't need anything
more." She
turned, facing him, a fierce determination in her eyes. "That's
how it is here, Kim. Like a living death. Yet when I saw you I knew
at once that you were different." She shivered, the intensity of
her words forcing her face into a grimace of pain. "Do you
understand what I'm saying? It's not your size. It's not even what
you do—that talent that my father values so highly. It's you.
You're different from the rest of them. And I want that. I want
it so much that it hurts me to think that I might not have it. . ." She
looked away, her eyes releasing him. But her words had seared him. He
looked down at his trembling hands, then answered her. "You
have it," he said, meeting her eyes. "All of it." He
laughed strangely. "I think I wanted you from the first moment I
saw you. Your eyes . . ." She
turned, surprised. "Then it wasn't just me? You felt that too?" "Yes
. . ." He was silent a moment, then, quietly, "I love you,
Jelka Tolonen. I have done from the first." "You
love me?" She laughed, surprised. "You know, I thought all
that was done with. That nothing would ever touch me again. I
thought. . ." Again
she shivered, but this time she came across and knelt beside him,
taking his hands. "You
see, I wasn't expecting anything. I didn't think that anything more
could happen to me. There was the engagement to Hans Ebert, of
course, but, well, it was as if I was living inside a kind of shell,
in a magic theater where things only seemed to happen, and nothing
real ever took place. I thought that that was all there was ever
going to be. And then I saw you . . ." He
turned his face, meeting her eyes. It was like looking into the
sky. He could sense the depths of blackness beyond the blue
and remembered suddenly his
vision—of that great web of brightness
spinning out through the surface of her eyes into the darkness
beyond. "And
your father?" Her
eyes moved away, then came back again. "Papa . . . ?" She
shook her head, real anguish behind the tiny movement. "He's a
darling really. I just can't tell you . . ." He
nodded. He had seen for himself how Tblonen doted on his daughter.
"And yet?" "Well,
it's just that he can't see that there's a difference. To him it's
all politics. Deals. Who's in and who's out. And death underpinning
everything. I love him, but. . ." He saw
just how much that "but" had cost her and touched a finger
to her lips to prevent her from saying more. She smiled, grateful to
him, and gently, tenderly kissed his fingers. It was the prelude to a
proper kiss. Their first. He broke from it, surprised, his eyes wide,
seeing his own astonishment mirrored in the perfect blue-black of her
pupils. "You're
beautiful," she said, her fingers touching his cheek. "So
dark and perfect." He
laughed softly. "And you're mad. Utterly mad." She
nodded, but her eyes were filled with that same fierce determination
he had witnessed earlier. "Maybe. But I'd fight the whole Above
to have you." THE
TWO MEN stood before the unmarked door, waiting to be admitted.
Soucek turned, reading the plaque on the wall nearby. LEVEL ONE
HUNDRED AND EIGHTY-SIX it read; NORTH 2 STACK, CANTON OF DUSSELDORF.
He looked about him, trying to get some clue as to what they were
doing, why they were here, but there was nothing. This far up the
levels the Seven were still firmly in control. Things were neat and
tidy. As if the chaos of the lowers were a dream and nothing else but
this existed. For a
moment Soucek stared past his feet, trying to picture the levels
stacked up beneath him, layer above layer; to imagine all those
people—young and old, Han and Hung Moo—eking out their
lives in the packed and degenerating strata of the City. Narrow,
blighted, desperate lives. He had not really thought of it before,
not until he had begun to travel between the levels on Lehmann's
business, but now he could not shake it from his mind. He had seen
the City from outside; had gone up the levels and seen what existed
up Above, and knew—with a certainty he had never had
before—that it was wrong. There had to be a better way. He
looked back at Lehman, seeing how patiently he waited; how he held
the flask loosely in one hand, as if it contained nothing of value. And
yet three men had died, not counting the woman and her child, to get
what it held. Soucek
shuddered, remembering. But just then the door hissed back, and a
tiny, boyish-looking Han in a black, er-silk pau stepped
through. He smiled, offering both hands in greeting to Lehmann. Tiny
golden hands that were like the hands of a mechanical toy. His head
was shaven, a faint purselike scar just behind and beneath his right
ear revealing that he had been wired. He wore a sweet, aromatic
perfume, but beneath it one could discern the strong scent of
chemicals. "Feng
Lu-ma," Lehmann said, acknowledging the man, but he ignored the
offered hands. The
Han shrugged, then moved past them, looking up and down the corridor
before he ushered them inside. "You're
early," Feng said, toying nervously with the tiny lenses that
hung like a necklace of delicate glass pendants about his neck and
shoulders. "I didn't expect you until four." He led
them down a narrow, unlit passageway and out into a bright, crowded
workshop. The walls were covered with row upon row of tiny
translucent box files, while the nearby work tops were cluttered with
dissecting instruments and culture dishes, stacks of slender
ice-covered folders, and strange, spiderish-looking machines. Four
young Han—thin-faced, malnourished-looking youths—glanced
up from behind their high desks on the far side of the room as they
entered, then quickly returned to their work, delicate, silvered
instruments flashing between their fingers. There was the sharp,
almost tart odor of chemicals, the original of the scent that lay
beneath Feng's perfume. Moreover, it was cold; surprisingly so after
the warmth of the corridors outside, but that was to be expected.
Soucek looked about him, taking it all in, surprised to find this
here. Before now he had only been guessing, but now he knew. It was a
lens shop. He
turned, looking at Lehmann, seeking something more—some final
piece to the puzzle. On the surface of things it made no sense coming
all the way up here to a lens shop. No, if Lehmann had wanted a lens
shop there were plenty beneath the Net who would do as good a job and
ask only a tenth of what they charged at this level, so why come
here? But even as he asked himself he began to understand. It was
of a piece with the murders. Lehmann had gone to inordinate lengths
in selecting his victims. He had read the files Lehmann had handed
him. Besides the physical match, Lehmann had gone out of his way to
ensure that all of them, even the married technician, had been
without complicating family connections. That meant, of course, that
there was no one to mourn their deaths. No one to ask awkward
questions. After which, it had been simplicity itself to bribe an
official and falsify the public record—to make it seem as
though the men were still alive. Which,
of course, was necessary if Lehmann were to use their eyes. For no
matter how good a copy might be made of their retinas, no one—no,
not even a Plantation Guard—would pass a dead man through a
checkpoint. Anonymity,
that was what Lehmann sought. That was why he had chosen his victims
so carefully; why he had come here rather than trust to the dubious
"confidence" of one of the Net shops. Yes, he had heard
tales of how certain long bosses had bought information about
their rivals, then had had them tracked and trapped. But
Lehmann was too clever to have that happen. That was why the official
at the public record office had subsequently had his throat cut; why
his colleagues had been pacified by an anonymous "sweetener." He
watched as Lehmann haggled with the man, then handed over four large
denomination credit chips and the flask. The Han took the flask
around to the other side of the nearest work top and sat, unscrewing
the lid and tipping the frozen eyes out into a sterilized cold dish.
He poked at them delicately with his tiny golden fingers, lifting
each in turn and studying it beneath the light. Then, satisfied, he
looked back at Lehmann. "These
are fine. There's two, three percent damage at most. Certainly
nothing I can't repair. You haven't, by any chance, the original
retinal mappings?" Lehmann
took the copy files from the inner pocket of his tunic and handed
them across. All references to names and whereabouts had been
removed. Again, Lehmann had taken great care not to let the lehsman
know any more than he had to. Soucek
saw how the man's eyes narrowed, scanning the files, noting the
erasures, then returned to Lehmann. "I should charge you more." Lehmann
stared at him impassively. "I can take them elsewhere if you
wish, Feng Lu-ma. To Yellow Tan, perhaps. Or your friend, Mai Li-wen.
Maybe I should . . ." The
Han studied Lehmann a moment longer, then looked down. "When do
you need them by?" "Tomorrow." There
was a moment's pause, then. "All right. You'll come yourself?" "No.
My man here will come." "But
you ought. . ." Lehmann
leaned across the work top threateningly. "I know what I ought
to do, Shih Feng, but I'm a busy man. Besides, I've worn lenses
before. I don't need your help to fit them. You just do your job and
everything will be fine, neh?" The
Han stared at him thoughtfully, then nodded. "Tomorrow, then.
After ten." But
Soucek, watching him, could feel the weight of curiosity at the back
of the man's words and knew—without needing to be told—that
he would have to kill the man. bryn
kustow stood there in the doorway of the crowded club, looking about
him anxiously as customers elbowed past. It was dangerous this far
down the levels and normally he wouldn't have come here alone, but
just now things weren't normal. Michael was down here somewhere. Kustow
squinted, trying to make out faces in that long, ill-lit room, but it
was hard. The Blinded Eye was packed tonight, the noise from the big
speakers in the corners deafening. Ta, it was—"beat";
a stripped-down form of Han folk music, amplified heavily; the music
of these parts. Kustow stood there, grimacing against the sound,
searching the crowded tables for a face he knew, but they were mainly
Han here. Ugly little bastards too. Tong runners and minor criminals,
for sure. As he craned his neck, a big, pug-nosed Han planted himself
directly in front of him. "What
you want, fuck face?" "A
friend," he shouted back, keeping his tone measured. "I'm
looking for a friend. A big guy. Short blond hair." The
man glared at him a moment, then turned, pointing across the room. On
the far side of the bar a light flickered fitfully. Beneath it, at a
packed gaming table, a tall Hung Moo was slumped across the table,
face down. To either side of him, eager Han faces watched the dice
fall and tumble across the baize, ignoring him. Kustow
felt his stomach tighten. Was it Michael? And if it was, was he all
right? He reached in his pocket and took out a ten-yuan chip,
pressing it into the big man's hand, not certain it was the right
thing to do down here. But it seemed it was. With a glance at the ten
piece, the man stood back, letting him pass. "Over
there," he said again, as if Kustow hadn't taken it in first
time. "Take the fucker home, neh? Before he gets his throat
cut." Kustow
made a tiny bow, then, pushing through the crowd, made his way
across. As he came out in front of the table, another Han, smaller
yet more vicious-looking than the last, barred his way. "What
you want?" he shouted against the wall of sound. Behind
the thin-featured Han the gaming had stopped. A dozen Han faces were
watching Kustow coldly. "My
friend," Kustow shouted back, indicating the slumped figure of
Michael Lever. "IVe come to take him home." The
Han shook his head. "Your friend owe money. Five hundred yuan.
You pay or he stay." Kustow
looked about him, trying to read the situation. Was it true? Had
Michael lost that much to them? Or was the Han trying it on? "You
have his paper?" he yelled back, meeting the Han's eyes once
again. The
Han sneered. "What fucking paper? He owe me money. You pay or
you fuck off!" Kustow
took a long breath. Five hundred. He had it on him. Twice that, in
fact. But it wouldn't do to let them know that. He felt in his
pocket, separating out three of the big fifties and three tens. "I
can give you one-eighty. It's all I have. But I can give you my note
for the rest, if that's okay?" The
Han hesitated, eyeing him suspiciously, then nodded. "Okay. But
get him out of here right now. And don't come back. Not if you know
what good for you!" FORTY
MINUTES LATER and a hundred levels up, Kustow held Michael Lever
steady as he leaned over the sink, heaving. Michael's hair was wet
where Kustow had held his head beneath the flow, but the two tablets
he'd forced down his throat were beginning to take effect. Michael
turned his head slightly, looking back at his friend. "I'm
sorry, Bryn. I..." Kustow
shook his head. "It doesn't matter. Really it doesn't. But what
the fuck were you doing down there? You could have been killed." Michael
turned back, staring down into the bowl again. "Maybe that would
have been for the best." "Don't
say that. It's not true." "No?"
There was a strange movement in Michael's mouth and then his whole
face creased in pain. "It's finished, Bryn! It's all gone
fucking wrong!" "No,
Michael. No. There's the Movement, remember? And there's Mary. . ." Michael
shook his head. "She's gone. I got her note." "No,
Michael. You're wrong. She wants you. She told me so. The note... it
was a mistake. She didn't understand what had happened." Michael
snorted. "She understands all right! I'm washed up! A failure!
And my father hates me!" He shuddered violently. "There's
nothing, Bryn! Nothing!" Kustow
gripped his shoulders firmly. "You're wrong, Michael. You don't
know how wrong. She needs you, even if the old man doesn't. And I
need you, too, you silly bastard. Don't you understand that?" Michael
turned, looking up at him uncertainly. "She needs me? Are
you sure about that? What did she say?" "She
loves you, Michael. Don't you understand that? She loves you. So stop
all this bellyaching and go to her. And for fuck's sake do it before
you end up dead in some clapped-out, five-piece drinking den!" Michael
stared at him. "Do what?" Kustow
stared back at him a moment, then laughed, surprised at his naivete.
"Why, marry her, of course. Marry her. Now, before it's too
late." "Marry
her?" Michael laughed sourly and shook his head. He shivered,
then, straightening up, pushed away from the sink. Kustow tried to
stop him, but, breaking free of his friend's grip, Michael stumbled
toward the door. For a moment he stood there, his forehead pressed
against the door's surface, then he turned back, swaying unsteadily,
meeting Kustow's eyes. "Look,
I know you mean well, but just leave me alone, Bryn, understand? Just
fucking leave me alone!" CHAPTER
TEN
Monsters
of the Deep THE
SWEEPER PAUSED, leaning on his broom, staring across at the scene
outside Hsiang Tian's Golden Emporium. Black dog banners were
everywhere one looked, the triangular silks fluttering gently in the
false wind generated by the big fans sited above the storefront.
There was a low buzz of expectation and then the crowd began to move
back, Triad runners pushing them back from the front of the store.
There was a moment's angry jostling and then the crowd settled again,
watching as Whiskers Lu strode out, his stylishly cut black silks
glistening in the bright overhead lights. Lu
Ming-shao was a big, exceedingly ugly man, with a melted, misshapen
face and an air of uncouth brutality. He spat, then turned, summoning
Hsiang Tian from within. Hsiang came, his head lowered, ingratiating
himself, yet uncomfortable all the same. "Bring
them out," Lu Ming-shao ordered, his rough voice booming. "The
four I liked best. I want to see them out here, in the light."
Hsiang turned, snapping his fingers. At once there was hurried
movement within. A moment later the first of the sedans emerged, a
long, sleek model with delicate satin coverings, carved dragon-head
lamps, and a high-backed "wooden" chair, designed to seat
two; a tien feng, or "Heaven's Wind." It was carried
by six of the Emporium's runners, their dark mauve one-pieces
emblazoned front and back with the bright red pictogram, a box within
a box, hsiang, and their status
number. Setting the sedan down close to Whiskers Lu, they
knelt, heads bowed, waiting patiently while he mounted the chair and
settled his huge bulk across both seats. Then, at Hsiang's signal,
they lifted slowly, taking the sedan in a slow, smooth circle. Whipped
up by the Triad runners, the crowd yelled and cheered, genuinely
enjoying the sight, but when Whiskers Lu stepped down, it was with a
curt shake of his head. "Next!"
he barked, turning his back on Hsiang. There was a further commotion
inside, and then the second sedan appeared. This was a bigger,
seemingly more substantial model, an eight-man yu Jco, or
"Jade Barge." It was broader and squatter than the previous
model, and Lu Ming-shao looked less out of place in its huge,
thronelike chair. What's more, the extended canopy, with its bloodred
er-silk covering, gave the whole thing a slightly regal appearance,
reminiscent of the state carriages of the Minor Families. Even so,
when Whiskers Lu stepped down again, it was with an expression of
distaste. Seeing
that look, Hsiang turned quickly, summoning the next sedan. As it
came out under the bright exterior lights, the sweeper made his way
across and, pushing his way through the fringes of the crowd, stood
near the front of the press, close to the line of runners, watching
as Lu Ming-shao mounted the sedan. He had
heard many tales of Whiskers Lu, of his legendary fearlessness, of
his heartlessness and casual brutality, but his eyes saw something
else. Whatever Whiskers Lu might once have been, he was no longer the
man of legend. Sharpness had given way to self-indulgence,
brutishness to a kind of uncultured hedonism. Oh, there was no
doubting that Lu Ming-shao was a big, fearsome-looking monster of a
man, and not one to casually make an enemy of, yet those special
qualities that had made him a 489—that had allowed him to wrest
power from the hands of his deadliest rivals—were phantoms now.
He saw how Whiskers Lu looked about him, aware not of the possible
danger from the crowd—the ever-present danger of assassination—
but of the impression he was making on them. He noted the big
expensive rings the man wore, the elegant First Level fashions and
understood. Three years of unopposed leadership had changed Lu
Ming-shao. Had made him soft. Worse, they had made him vain. As
he watched, Whiskers Lu climbed up into the wide, deeply cushioned
seat and settled back among the padded silk. Yes, only a fool paraded
himself this way before the hsiao jen, the "little men."
Only a fool closed his eyes, relaxing, when an assassin's bullet lay
only a fraction of a second from his heart. Lehmann
turned, then made his way back through the throng, satisfied. He had
seen enough. It would be easy to take Whiskers Lu. Easier than he'd
anticipated. But it was best not to be too cocksure. Best to plan it
properly and make sure the odds were wholly in his favor. Returning
to his cart, Lehmann folded down the handle of his broom and fixed it
to the two clips on the side. Then, for all the world like a common
sweeper going off shift, he swung his cart in a sharp half-circle and
began to push slowly toward the side corridor, making for the down
transit. the
nurse handed Jelka back her pass and came around the desk. Behind
her, in the glass-fronted booth that overlooked the spacious
reception area, the clinic's security guard relaxed, returning to his
game of chess. "Is
he expecting you?" Jelka
smiled. "No. But I think he'll be pleased to see me." "Well,
follow me. He's awake, but he may be working." "Working?" The
nurse laughed. "He never stops. The morning after the operation
he was sitting up, looking at files. But we've kept him from using
the input as yet. It takes a while for the implant to take, even with
the latest drugs." Jelka
gave a vague nod, frowning. It sounded horrible. Behind her, her
bodyguard, Zdenek, looked about him, ill at ease without his gun.
Only Jelka's strongest pleas had made him agree to come in here. "Were
there any problems?" "No.
It's a standard enough operation, these days. More than three million
last year, they reckon. But he has to rest. Otherwise he'll be back
in here with an embolism. And that would be very serious." "Ah
. . ." But Jelka was far from reassured. "He's
a friend of yours?" It was
none of her business, but Jelka answered her anyway, aware that
Zdenek was listening, and that whatever the bodyguard heard would be
reported back to her father. "He works for my father. And for Li
Yuan." The
nurse glanced at her, her eyes widening, then nodded. "Ah, so
that's why he's here." She laughed. "I thought it was
strange." They
came to the end of the corridor and turned left. At the second door
the nurse stopped and tapped out a code on the panel beside the door.
A screen lit up at once, showing an overhead image of a patient in a
bed. It was Kim. Leaning forward slightly, the nurse spoke into the
grill. "Shih
Ward, you have a visitor. Jelka Tolonen. Will you see her?" Kim
smiled broadly, looking up at the camera. "Of course. Please . .
. show her in." As the
door slid back, the nurse stood aside, letting Jelka go inside.
Zdenek made to follow, but Jelka turned, facing him. "Please,
Zdenek, stay here. I'll be ten minutes, that's all." He
hesitated, then shook his head. "I'm sorry, Nu Shih Tolonen, but
your father would have me court-martialed if I did. My orders are
never to leave you alone." He paused, clearly embarrassed at
having to be so heavy-handed. "You understand why ..." She
was quiet a moment, then turned to the nurse again. "Have you an
audio unit? Just the earphones." The
nurse hesitated, then nodded. "You want me to get a pair?" Jelka
nodded, then turned back, smiling at Kim. "I'm sorry. This won't
take a moment." He
smiled, drinking in the sight of her. "That's all right. It's
really nice to see you. How did you know I was here?" She
glanced at Zdenek, then smiled broadly. "I'll tell you ... in a
moment." The
nurse returned, handing Jelka the headphones and a small tape
machine, an under-ear sling. Jelka handed it to Zdenek. "Will
you wear this for me?" The
big man looked at the earphones and laughed, relenting. "Okay.
But when your father asks me I want to be able to tell him something.
All right?" She
smiled and leaned forward, pecking his cheek. "I'll make
something up. Okay?" Zdenek
nodded, then went to sit in the far corner, the earphones balanced
awkwardly on his large, close-shaven head. Satisfied, Jelka went
across. She pulled out a chair, sitting beside the bed, her back to
the guard. Kim
was sitting up in bed. The comset he'd been working on was pushed
aside on top of the bedclothes. He leaned forward, intending to kiss
her, but she made the smallest movement of her head. "What's
the matter?" he asked quietly, then looked past her at the
guard. "Is this your father's idea?" "He
thinks it's necessary when I travel." "And
you?" She
nodded. "They've made three attempts on my life already. It's
unlikely they'll stop now. They can get at him through me. That's why
it's best to take no chances." "I
see." But it was clear that he hadn't realized before just how
tightly circumscribed her life was. She
smiled, her mood brightening. "Anyway. How are you?" He
looked past her briefly, then met her eyes again, smiling. "I'm
fine. It's still sore, and the headaches are bad, especially at
night, but they say it's healing well." She
leaned closer, looking at the silvered stud that jutted from the
flesh beneath his ear. The skin surrounding it was red and chafed,
but the single, thread-thin scar above it looked good. Even so, the
thought of the implant made her feel queasy. She had never been happy
about her father's, and though he had had it long before she was bom,
it still seemed unnatural. More so than his artificial arm. "Well?"
he asked softly. She
drew back her head and looked at him. The uncertainty in his voice
was clear. He hadn't been sure how she would take it. After all, he
hadn't even told her he was going to have it done. "You
need this?" He
looked at her intently a moment, then nodded. "It'll make my
work much easier." She
looked at the silvered stud again. "It's a neat job." "The
best. Li Yuan's own surgeon." "Then
I'm glad. Really I am." She hesitated, then looked down. "Your
work ... it means a lot to you, doesn't it?" He was
quiet, watching her. "No
... I mean, I know it does. My father said. But more than that, I can
see it in you. It's what you are. You can't separate yourself off
from it." He let
out a long breath. "And you don't mind?" She
looked up, meeting his eyes. "No. Why should I mind? It's what
you are. It's what makes you what you are. I can see that." "Can
you?" He watched her a moment, then nodded. "Yes. I can see
that." They
were silent a moment, then she reached out and took his hand. "I
understand. I..." She lifted her shoulders slightly, looking
away from him, then met his eyes again. "It's like my father, I
suppose. He loves me, fiercely, almost possessively, but there's more
to him than that. He has to do what he does. When he was exiled—when
he couldn't be General anymore—it was like he was dead. Or like
a shell, paper-thin, the mere pretense of a man. Seeing him like that
made me understand. Like you, he is what he does. The two things are
inseparable. Without it ... well, maybe he would be less of a man
than he is. And maybe I'd love him less than I do." "Maybe,"
he answered, his eyes watching her carefully, a strange tenderness in
their depths. "And you?" She
laughed and sat back, cradling his hand now in both of hers. "Me?" "Yes,
you. Isn't there something you want to do? Some part of
you that needs something more?" She
shook her head slowly, squeezing his hand between her own, her face
suddenly more serious. "No. There's nothing I want to do." "Nothing?" She
smiled. "No. IVe already found what I want." from
his SEAT in the corner Zdenek watched everything. Jelka had her back
to him so he could see nothing of what passed on her
face, but he could see the Clayborn Ward clearly. He saw how
the child-man smiled, and looked down, disturbed, knowing he would
have to tell what he had seen. And
then? He
felt sorry for Jelka. This would hurt her. Badly, perhaps. But it was
necessary. Her father would end this thing, for there was no way she
could marry Ward, and a mistake here might spoil her chance of
marrying well elsewhere. Besides, Ward was Clayborn, and Clay was
Clay, it could not be raised. And
Jelka? He watched the back of her head, seeing how the overhead light
caught in the golden strands of her hair. For a moment he was
distracted by it, then, smiling, he looked down at his big, ugly
hands. Jelka Tolonen was something special. Something high and fine
and . . . well, above Ward, anyway. Far, far above him. "Well?
What should we do?" Tsu Ma
turned, facing his cousins, his broad, manly figure framed in the
moon door. Beyond him, through the broad circle of the entrance, the
sun lit up the western garden. "To be frank with you, Yuan, I
think we should dig much deeper. Find out where the brain came from,
and who designed it. What Tolonen says makes sense. We should send
Karr out to Mars again. Have him turn the Colony inside out until he
finds what's going on out there. This . . ." he shook his head,
"this frightens me, Yuan. The fakes that came in to kill your
brother, they were bad enough, but these!" "I
agree," said Wu Shih. "Toloneris findings are the most
significant thing to have come to our notice these past twelve
months. To think that they were so close to developing and using
these things. It only goes to prove how right our forefathers were in
clamping down on research into these areas. Indeed, it makes me have
second thoughts about our plans. We must be careful how we change the
Edict. Careful what we permit within our Cities." Li
Yuan looked from one to the other, then nodded. "Then we are
agreed. We will keep this to ourselves. As for Karr, I will think the
matter through. Just now he is doing important work for me, keeping
an eye on what is happening down below. But that may have to wait. As you
say, cousin Ma, we must find out where these things came from, and it
may well be that Karr alone can do that for us." They
walked on slowly, following the path toward the lake. "And
this evening?" Wu Shih asked quietly. "Shall we still go
ahead, as planned?" Tsu Ma
looked up, meeting his eyes. "Our path is set. The announcement
must be made. Even this cannot alter that." "Maybe
so," said Li Yuan somberly, "but I have slept badly since
learning of these things. It is as if we are being warned." He
sighed, then stopped, turning to face his fellow T'ang, the great
expanse of the lake behind him. "Our ancestors argued that there
can be no compromise with Change. So we were taught to believe, from
the cradle on. Yet now we seek to make a deal with Change. To let it
run, like a fish on a line. But what if the line breaks? What if we
lose control?" "There
is no option," Tsu Ma answered bluntly. "You/know that,
Yuan. If we falter now we are lost. A deal must be made. Something
given, something taken back. No one has said it will be easy. But
that is why we are T'ang. To make such decisions and carry them
through. And to face the problems as they arise. It is our great
task, and I, for one, will not shirk from it." Wu
Shih reached out, touching his arm. "We did not say you would,
cousin. I am merely thinking that perhaps we ought to delay a
while—to give us time to find out more about this other matter—
before we announce the reopening of the House." "And
if we did?" Tsu Ma shook his head. "No, cousin. Too many
people know of this already. Ministers and their assistants.
Representatives and leading businessmen. To delay would have them
question our determination. It would cause more problems than it
would solve. No. Our path is set. We must grasp the reins and hold on
for dear life!" "So
it is," Li Yuan said, acknowledging the truth of what Tsu Ma had
said. Yet in the last day his reluctance had taken on a clear and
solid form. It was as he'd said. Tolonen's discovery was like a
warning. A sign of things to come. The step they were about to
take—the changes to the Edict and the reopening of the
House—were irrevocable. And while they might think they knew
what would transpire, there was nothing in past experience to say for
certain what would happen. From
here on the future was unknowable, like a page from an unread book. Once
before the world had fallen into chaos. Once before . . . He
shuddered and turned away, staring out across the ancient lake toward
the orchard. And as he looked, the image of a sprig of white blossom
snagged in the darkness of his memory, then blew away, turning,
turning in the wind. "And
that's all you heard?" When
Zdenek nodded, Tolonen sat back, his left hand placed flat against
the desk, his right rubbing at his neck, metal against flesh. There
was no doubt that Zdenek's report had disturbed him, but the old
man's response was not quite what the bodyguard had anticipated. For
a while he simply sat there, his granitelike face clouded, uncertain.
Then, sniffing deeply, he shook his head. "I
don't know. I simply don't know." There
was a kind of precedent, of course. Once before Tolonen had
interfered directly in his daughter's life. Then he had tried to
marry her—against her will—to Klaus Ebert's son, the
traitor, Hans. The old man had been wrong, and he knew it, but was
that what was affecting him now? Or did he hesitate for another
reason? After all, it seemed he rather liked the young man, Clayborn
or no. Admired him—for as much as he could admire someone who
wasn't a soldier. But was that important when the question was one of
marriage to his daughter? "You
will keep this to yourself."
. It was
command, not question. Zdenek bowed his head curtly, coming to
attention again. "Shall
I continue to watch them, sir?" Again
Tolonen seemed in two minds. A bodyguard was necessary in these
troubled times, but he had not foreseen the need for a chaperon.
Zdenek had his own thoughts on the matter, but kept them to himself.
It would have been impertinent of him to say more than he had
already. Tolonen
was frowning, his top teeth pulling at his lower lip. Then, as if the
indecision were too much for him, he stood and came around
the desk, stopping an arm's length from where Zdenek stood,
looking at him steadily. "You
will do as you have done in the past and no more. Understand?" Zdenek
parted his lips, as if to speak, then gave a curt nod. Tolonen was
silent a moment, then spoke again, his voice softer than before. "I'll
admit that what you say makes me . . . uneasy. If her aunt were
living still. . ." Tolonen's
voice trailed off. He turned away abruptly, going back around his
desk. Seated again, he looked up at Zdenek. "All
right. That's all. And Zdenek . . . thank you." ALONE
AGAIN, Tolonen went and stood by the viewing wall, thinking things
through. For a while he stared sightlessly away through the
artificial landscape of trees and mountains, then turned and went
back to his desk, his decision made. This time he would be subtler.
Yes, he would let time be the cure of this. Leaning
forward, he spoke into the intercom, summoning his private secretary.
The young equerry came into the room a moment later, coming to
attention in the doorway, his head bowed. "General?" "Come
in, lad. Close the door and come over. I want to ask you something." The
young soldier hesitated, then did as he was told, surprised by the
unusually personal tone in the General's voice. "Sir?" Tolonen
smiled, indicating that he should take a chair. "At ease, lad. I
need to pick your brains." The
equerry drew up a chair and sat. It was the first time in eight
months' service with Tblonen that he had done so, and he sat up
straight, as if at attention, his head held rigid. "You
come from a good family, Hauser," Tolonen began, smiling warmly
at the young soldier. "Your uncle was a Major, was he not?" The
equerry nodded, then found his voice. "In the colonies, sir. And
the mining satellites." "And
your eldest brother . . . he's there now, isn't he?" "Yes,
sir. On a five-year tour of duty." "And
does he like it out there?" The
young soldier smiled for the first time, relaxing. "He loves it,
sir. Says it's beautiful out there." Tolonen
sat back, studying his equerry with some care. The young man sat up
even stiffer than before, conscious of the Marshal's eyes on him. "Have
you ever thought of a colonies posting?" The
equerry looked down, his tongue touching his top teeth momentarily; a
gesture Tolonen had noticed before. "Well,
lad?" he coaxed, more gently than before. The
young soldier met his eyes. "I do what is asked of me, sir. But.
. . well, yes, I would welcome such a posting if the opportunity
arose." "And
if it arose now?" The
young man allowed himself a smile. "Now, sir?" Tolonen
laughed. "Let me explain . . ." IT WAS
cold in the Dissecting Room, colder than Maryland in January, yet Old
Man Lever stood there, bareheaded and without a jacket, staring down
at the row of corpses laid out on the long slab. Nearby, Curval, the
Chief Geneticist, stood watching him. The two men were alone in the
room, the investigation team dismissed for the moment while the Old
Man saw things for himself. "What
went wrong?" he asked, turning, meeting Curval's eyes. "We're
not sure," Curval answered, looking past Lever at the eleven
shaven-headed bodies. "It seems like some kind of virus, but
we're not certain." Lever
licked dryly at his lips. "Why not?" Curval
shifted awkwardly. "Because it might not be that. All of the
corpses show traces of the thing, but the virus itself doesn't seem
harmful. My personal belief is that it's a long-term side effect of
the drug treatment. But we'll know that for sure as soon as weVe
tested a few of the living immortals." Immortafs
. . . Old Man Lever shuddered and turned back, staring down into the
blank face of one of the dead. There had been deaths
before, of course, mainly from accidents, but nothing on the
scale of this. No. Once this got out... "Does
anybody know? I mean, apart from the staff here?" Curval
nodded. "I'm afraid so. The clause in the original contracts
allowed us to bring all the bodies back here—for tests—but
there's been trouble with some of the relatives. I got a team onto it
at once, but it looks like a group of them are going to go public,
tonight at ten." Curval
waited, tensed inside, for the Old Man to explode with anger, but
there was nothing. Lever simply stood there, as if in shock, staring
down at the nearest corpse. "There's
no choice, then," he said, after a moment. "We have to go
public before they do." "Is
that wise? I mean, what will we say?" "That
the treatment is a failure. And that we're working on something new.
Something better. Something that weVe just invested a further ten
billion yuan into." Curval
blinked. "WeVe got new sponsors?" Lever
shook his head. "No. The money will come direct from ImmVac. At
the same time we'll be making substantial payments to all those on
the present program to ensure that they receive the best medical
treatment possible in the coming days." Curval
bowed his head. "I see." So the
rumor was true: some of the major sponsors had pulled out. If
news of that broke at the same time as this, then the Project was as
good as dead. And even if it survived, it would be the object of
wide-scale public derision. Faced with that possibility, Old Man
Lever was willing to double the stakes and risk all on a further
throw of the dice. To make a brave face of it and ride out the
present storm, hoping to limit the damage. And
who knew?—it might even work. Curval
looked up again, meeting the Old Man's eyes. "So what do you
want me to do?" "I
want some kind of research outline. Something that'll sound
impressive. And I want some visuals of our best men at work in the
labs. You know the kind of thing." Curval
nodded. "And the boy? Ward?" Lever
stared back at him, eyes narrowed. "Offer him what he wants.
Whatever he wants. But get him." WHEN
CURVAL HAD GONE, Lever walked slowly up the line, then back, stopping
beside the last of the corpses, that of a fifty-seven-year-old woman. For a
long time he stared down at her, at the cold, pale shape of her,
unable to take in what had happened. Her name was Leena Spence and
she had been one of the first of his "immortals." He had
slept with her once or twice, before she'd had the treatment, but
lately, tied up in the business of the Institute, he had seen little
of her. And
now it was too late. He
shivered, the cold beginning to get to him at last. So this was
death. This. He swallowed, then leaned closer, studying the fine blue
tracery of lines that covered the pale, smooth flesh of her skull
like the hand-drawn pictograms in an old Han notebook. He
reached out, running his fingers over the faint blue lines, as if to
gauge the mystery of it, but it was like a map he could not read of a
country he did not know. Queequeg's back, Curval had called it once,
for some reason, and that came back to Lever now, making him frown,
then shake his head, as if to deny what had happened here. But they
were dead. His immortals were dead. Eight yesterday, a further five
today, like machines being switched off one by one. A
virus, Curval had said. But what kind of virus? Something harmless.
Harmless and yet deadly. If that was what had done this. Old
Man Lever drew his hand back, shuddering, then turned and walked
swiftly away, rehearsing words and phrases in his head, beginning at
once upon the task that lay ahead. ROSS
LAY on the narrow bed, reading, files scattered all about him.
Nearby, at the table, Milne was hunched over his comset, working
through the transcripts of the interviews they had done that morning.
The stay-over was a small, spartanly furnished room that had cost
them ten yuan for the week. Not that they planned to stay a
week. No.
For with what they'd got that morning, they could probably wrap
things up that evening. They
had tracked down more than thirty of the former inhabitants of Mary
Jennings's "birth-deck," including a midwife who had worked
there more than forty years. Not one of them had any knowledge of the
girl. That, in itself, might not have been conclusive. There were
between five and ten thousand people in an average deck, and it was
possible—just possible—that their sample was
insufficient. But the results of the facial identification check had
confirmed what they had suspected all along. Mary Jennings was a
fake. In reality she was Emily Ascher. A European. "Listen
to this," Ross said, sitting up, then turning to face his
partner. "It seems that her father was involved in some kind of
scandal. He was an official in the Hu Pu, the Finance Ministry. It
looks like he made some kind of mistake on the interest rates. There
was a Hearing and he was kicked out. The family fell. One hundred and
twenty levels. Six months on, the father was dead. The mother had to
cope with the child on her own." Milne
looked down. "How old was she?" "Nine,
I think." "Then
maybe that's why." Ross
frowned. "Why what? I don't follow you." "Why
she became a terrorist." Ross
laughed. "Are you serious, Mike? I mean, what evidence have we
got?" "Instinct,"
Milne said, glancing at him nervously. "I've been thinking about
it. She's not your usual kind of sleeper. I mean, she's a woman for a
start. And most industrial espionage is short-term. The sleeper gets
in, does his job, and gets out—as quick as possible. They're in
a year at most. I've not known one to be in there as long as her. And
then there's the background. Maintenance and economics. The
combination fits the profile. Remember that report we read about the
makeup of the Ping Tioo. I reckon that's what she was. Ping Tioo. The
timing fits too. She vanished only weeks after Bremen. And then here
she is, over here, in the Levers' employ. There has to be a reason
for that." "Coincidence,"
Ross said, putting his feet down onto the floor. "For
a start the Ping Tioo had no foothold over here.
Besides, it would take real clout to destroy a deck and all its
records." Milne
shook his head. "1 think the fire was genuine. An accident. But
someone took advantage of it. Someone with Security training,
perhaps. And a lot of influence." Ross's
eyes slowly widened. "DeVore? You mean DeVore, don't you?" Milne
nodded. "They say he was working with them at the end. So why
not this? It's the kind of thing he was good at." "But
why? What's his motive?" "I
don't know. Just that it all fits. Her background. The timing. The
nature of the deception. And it makes sense, too, of the spare ID of
Rachel De Valerian. I think she was put in as a terrorist sleeper.
Biding her time. Waiting to set up over here, when the time was
right." Ross
was quiet a moment, considering things, then he nodded. "It
would certainly make sense of why she left Old Man Lever to join up
with the son. That was bothering me. But if DeVore put her in over
here . . ." He laughed. "Hey. Maybe you're onto something." "Then
maybe we should get it all written up and get back to Richmond
straight away." Ross
looked down. "You think we should take this to Lever, then?" "Why,
who were you thinking of?" "Wu
Shih, perhaps?" Milne
laughed uneasily, but before he could answer there was a faint
rapping at the door. Ross
looked at Milne tensely, then stood. Drawing his gun he crossed to
the door. "Who
is it?" "Room
service!" Ross
glanced at his partner. Did you order room service7, he
mouthed. Milne
shook his head, then stood, drawing his own gun. Ready7.
Ross mouthed. Milne nodded. Moving to the side, Ross reached out
and thumbed the door lock. As the door irised back, a tall Han
stepped into the room, carrying a fully laden tray, covered in a
cloth. "Compliments
of the management," he said, setting the tray down on the
bedside table, then turned, a look of surprise and shock coming into
his eyes as he saw the drawn guns. "Ch'un tzu?" Ross
looked to Milne then back at the Han. Only then did he lower his gun
and, with a faint, embarrassed laugh, went across and lifted the
cloth from the tray. There were six bowls of steaming food. "I'm
sorry," he said, turning back and meeting the Han's eyes. "You
can't be too careful. I thought. . ." The
movement of the Han's arm was deceptively fast. Ross felt himself
being lifted and turned, something hard and acid-hot slicing deep
into his back. There was the sound of a gun's detonation, followed
instantly, it seemed, by the searing pain of a bullet smashing into
his collarbone. Then he was falling toward Milne, the darkness
enfolding him like a tide. M ACH
LOOKED about him at the room, then, setting the detonator on the
incendiary, stepped back. He had what he'd come for. The rest could
burn. For a
moment he paused, smiling, pleased with himself. His instinct was
still good, despite what had happened in Europe. If he had not
followed these two, the game would have been up for Emily. And for
him too, perhaps. As it was, he knew now what had happened that time
with DeVore. Yes.
Milne had been right. A clever man, Milne, but no good with a gun. As
for Emily, what he'd found out today might one day prove invaluable. "Rachel
De Valerian," he said softly, noting how closely the surname
mimicked the form of DeVore's own. He laughed and tapped the file
against his side, then, turning away, he thumbed the door lock and
stepped out into the corridor. Richmond was two hours away. the
place stank. But this was not the normal stink of the Lowers, this
was a powerful, strongly animal stench that seemed to fill and
thicken the close, warm air, pressing like a foul cloth against the
mouth and nostrils. Soucek had gagged at first and turned to
look questioningly at Lehmann, but the albino had showed no reaction. "Gods,
what is this place?" Lehmann
glanced at him. "It used to be a pen." He indicated cages,
the silvered snouts of the feeding tubes, retracted now into the
walls. "Some friends of mine have emptied it for a while." Soucek
nodded, understanding. He had never seen one of the great meat
animals—the jou tung wu, as they were called—but
he had seen pictures. He looked about him, imagining the huge,
brainless creatures, one on each side of the central walkway, the
vast pink bulk of each crammed tight into the rectangular mesh, the
dozens of tiny, eyeless heads guzzling at the trough. He made a noise
of disgust. No wonder the place stank. He was
about to say something more when he saw the figures at the far end of
the pen; three of them, each of them holding a hand up to his mouth.
He almost laughed, but checked himself, letting nothing show on the
blank of his face. It was a sign of how much he had changed since
knowing Lehmann. Show nothing, he thought, recalling what Lehmann had
said. The man who shows what he's thinking is weak. He allows
his opponent an advantage. And never more so than when the
stakes were as high as they were today. There
was a moment's hesitation as the three men looked among themselves,
then they came forward. They were big men, their bare arms heavily
muscled. Together they seemed to form a type, but no one knew better
than Soucek how different from each other these three were. The
three stopped a body's length from where Lehmann and he stood.
Everything about them was wary. They had committed themselves heavily
simply by coming. If Whiskers Lu found out, they were dead. But that
didn't mean they were won over. Far from it. "You've
chosen a sweet place for our meeting, Shih Lehmann." The
speaker was Huang Jen. As lieutenant to Po Lao, Red Pole of the Kuei
Chuan, he was the most senior of the three. It was not surprising
that they had chosen him as their spokesman. But the bovine look of
him was misleading, for he was a clever, subtle man— though not
entirely. He had a reputation for sadism. To his left stood Meng Te,
a big Han with a large, shaven head who had joined the
Kuei Chuan from one of the northern long a year
back. Making up the three was a sullen-faced Hung Moo named Visak. "Sweet
enough," Lehmann answered, stepping forward, taking each of them
in turn by the hands. "Like what we do here, neh?" Lehmann
was holding the hands of Visak as he said this, and Soucek, watching,
saw how the man's eyes widened marginally, trying to fathom the
albino. Visak was the most interesting of the three. It was
rare—almost unique—for a Hung Moo to rise in the ranks of
the Triads and said much for his ruthlessness and ability. Though
beneath Huang Jen and Meng Te in the Triad hierarchy, he was, without
doubt, the most dangerous of the three. Before Lehmann had asked him
to sound the man out, Soucek would have considered him the most loyal
of Whiskers Lu's henchmen. Fiercely loyal. But here he was. Security-trained,
Visak's prowess in hand-to-hand fighting was legendary throughout the
Lowers. In stature he was one of the few men Soucek had met who were
as tall as Lehmann, and seeing the two of them together, he noted how
big Visak really was, for the sheer breadth of his chest and
shoulders made the albino seem frail. But Lehmann appeared undaunted.
He met the other's gaze unflinchingly. "You
understand the need for secrecy?" Huang
Jen lifted his chin disdainfully. "Your man promises much, if I
take his vague inferences to mean anything. Will you spell it out for
us? Make it clear?" Soucek
glanced at Lehmann uneasily. What if this were a trap? What if
Whiskers Lu knew about their meeting? It would mean war, surely, for
all Lehmann said of Lu's softness, his lack of will. But Lehmann
seemed contemptuous of such fears. "I
am the coming force," he said, looking from one to the other.
"The very fact that you are here means that you understand this.
That you know where the future lies." He
stood there imperiously, relaxed but commanding, as if every word he
said were incontestable fact. And though Soucek had seen this side of
him before, he felt his nerve ends tingle with a strange excitement
as he listened. At these moments it was like hearing the voice of
some dark, unnatural power. It both terrified and awed him. "In
time it will all be mine. From the north to the south. From west
to east. Every last corridor. You know this. You hear what is
whispered among your men. Even now they see it clearly. Lehmann, they
say. Lehmann's the one. And they're right. You know they're right." Visak
glanced at the others, then laughed. But Soucek could see that even
he was awed. "I
want proof," he said. "Something more than words." The
words seemed strange, rehearsed, and Soucek, watching, narrowed his
eyes suspiciously. Was Whiskers Lu behind this? Was he listening even
now? But Lehmann was shaking his head slowly. "No,
Visak. No sideshows. No games. What we do we do in the utmost
seriousness. You are here because you have already chosen. Children
want proof. Children and old men. But men such as you and I... we
work in certainties, neh?" Visak
raised his chin challengingly, then relented, giving a grudging nod.
Huang Jen, who had been watching him, looked back at Lehmann. "You
are right, Shih Lehmann. There are whispers. But you have still not
answered me. What do we get out of this? And what do you want
from us?" Lehmann
was silent a moment, his pink eyes seeming to hold and judge each one
of them in turn. Then, satisfied, he answered. "I
want you to swear loyalty to me. Here. Right now. I want each one of
you to be my man. To serve me. And, in the time that is to come, to
do what I ask of you." "And
in return?" "You
live. You rule with me." Huang
Jen smiled. "And that's all?" But the smile quickly faded. "The
choice is simple," Lehmann said coldly. "All or nothing.
Which is it to be?" For a
moment there was silence, stillness. Then, hesitantly, Meng Te went
down onto his knees and bowed his head. Slowly, and with one final
questioning look at the albino, Huang Jen also knelt. For a
time it seemed that Visak would choose against, but then, with a
suddenness that was strange, he too knelt and lowered his head. Only
then did Lehmann go down the line, offering his foot for them to
kiss, speaking the words he would have them offer him in token of
their loyalty. He
moved back, calling on them to stand. "I
want you to prepare yourselves. To gather about you those loyal to
you and put aside those who might waver. When things are ready, I'll
send and tell you what to do." Soucek
shivered, understanding how they were feeling at that moment. He too
had knelt and sworn his loyalty. Yes, he thought, watching
them bow and turn away, I understand this better now. It was
not simple force or cunning they responded to, but something
stronger, deeper than those; something so different from what they
were used to that to encounter it was to be changed, as he, Jiri
Soucek, had been changed. To be in Lehmann's presence was to cast off
all masks, all illusions. It was to grasp the raw essence of things.
It was like . . . like pressing through the flesh and touching bone! All
... or nothing. It was so potent an offer that to refuse it was
almost impossible for men such as they. Even so, he wondered whether
it were enough. Whether they were bound to Lehmann as he himself was
bound. He
turned, looking at Lehmann. The albino was staring at the tunnel's
mouth, concentrating, his features fixed, like" a mask. Then he
turned, looking at Soucek. "That will make Whiskers Lu think,
neh? He'll try to kill me, I warrant." It was
so unexpected that Soucek laughed. "Then Visak was act-ing?" Lehmann
shook his head. "Not all the time." He sniffed loudly, then
cleared his throat. "Still, times are sad when such hsiao jen
are legend. You'll watch him, neh?" Soucek
nodded, but he was thinking through what had happened, trying to see
it all anew. Lehmann
turned, starting toward the tunnel's mouth. "Come, Jiri. Let's
go. It stinks here." Soucek
looked up, his eyes widening, surprised that Lehmann had even
noticed. TO the
SOUND of martial music, the golden curtains swept back, revealing the
dragon throne, mounted on a platform of seven broad steps. To each
side, vast pillars rose up into depths of darkness, while
in the great chair itself Wu Shih, T'ang of North America and
spokesman for the Seven, sat cloaked in silks of imperial yellow. As
the camera panned in, his face grew until it filled the screen, its
stem authority staring out at the watching billions. "People
of Chung Kuo," he began, his dark eyes clear and certain. "Today
I have great news to tell you. An announcement of the utmost
importance to everyone in the seven Cities. For the first time since
the dark cloud of war fell over our great civilization, there is
peace in the levels. Both high and low can look forward to a future
of safety and prosperity, of growth and stability. But to ensure that
stability, certain measures must be taken." Wu
Shih paused, his lined and bearded face emanating a strength, a calm
assurance that was impressive. Rocklike and yet fair he seemed at
that moment. A father to his people. "First
of all, the State of Emergency which has been in place these past
nine years is immediately revoked. From this day on, the law will be
as it was before the troubles began. Furthermore, all political
prisoners will have their cases reviewed by civil tribunals, these
matters to be concluded, at the latest, six months from now." There
was a faint softening to the features, the merest hint of a smile.
"Secondly, the House of Representatives at Weimar will be
reopened one year from now, elections to be held in three stages in
the six months prior to that. Further announcements regarding the
dates of such elections and of franchise rights will be posted
throughout the Cities in the days to come." He
paused once more, letting that sink in, then continued, his eyes
staring out unblinking at the gathered masses, commanding their
attention. "Thirdly,
and perhaps most significantly, we have decided upon a package of
revisions to the present Edict of Technological Control. In five
important areas we shall be allowing new developments. Developments
which, it is hoped, will be of benefit to everyone living within our
great society. Changes." Throughout
Chung Kuo there was a murmur of surprise. Changes. Never had
they thought to hear the word from the lips of a T'ang. But Wu Shih
was not finished. "Finally,
there is one last great matter we must face as a people. One
challenge which we must let unite us in the years to come. For many
years now we have chosen not to speak of it. To ignore it, as if by
itself it would go away. But it will not go away. And so, finally, we
must tackle the great question of our time. Are we to be a single
people, free and safe and prosperous? Or are we to see ourselves
riven by division, our great Cities destroyed, our institutions
falling into anarchy and chaos?" There
was a slight upward movement of the great T'ang's head. His eyes
burned now with a fierce challenge. "We
cannot let that be. We cannot let our children suffer. Therefore we
must confront the fact that has stared us in the face too long. Our
numbers are too great. Chung Kuo groans beneath the burden of that
weight. That is why, in the years to come, we must work together,
People and Seven, to find a solution to this last great problem that
confronts us. This is a new beginning. A new chance for us to set
things right. People and Seven. Our chance to be strong again. To
ensure stability and a good life for all." As the
final words echoed out across the great world of levels, the camera
panned back, revealing once more the dragon throne, the pillars, and
the steps. Slowly the golden curtains closed. Wu
Shih rose from his seat and, coming slowly down the steps, made his
way through the kneeling technicians and out into the hospitality
suite at the back of the studio. Guards opened the doors before him,
their heads bowed low. He went through. Inside, his fellow T'ang, Tsu
Ma and Li Yuan, were sitting on the far side of the room, facing a
giant screen. They turned as he entered, standing up to greet him. "That
was good," Tsu Ma said, coming across and holding Wu Shih's arm
briefly. "Yes,"
added Li Yuan, smiling. "The people will sleep soundly tonight,
knowing what is to come." "Maybe
so," Wu Shih answered, taking a seat between them, "and yet
for once the words felt hollow even as I uttered them. All that talk
of a new age. Of peace and stability and of working together, People
and Seven. I would that it were so, that we could call on them and
they'd respond, yet I fear we must face dark days before things get
any better." Tsu Ma
looked down thoughtfully. "Maybe. And yet to say as much would
only bring it that much quicker. No, you spoke well tonight, cousin.
For once we must pray that what we say will come about, even as we
prepare ourselves for the worst." "Prayers,
cousin Ma?" Li Yuan laughed gently. "Has it come to that?" Tsu Ma
met his eyes somberly. "Maybe that's the answer, Yuan. Prayers
and chanting, bells, icons and incense ... as in the old days." Wu
Shih, watching him, frowned. "Are you serious, Tsu Ma?" Tsu Ma
turned, smiling bleakly. "No, my dear friend. I would sooner
allow our cousin Wang to cut my throat than have us return to those
dreadful times. Yet from recent reports it seems that such thinking
is rife, even as high up as the Mids. There is a need among them.
Something that the City does not satisfy." Li
Yuan nodded. "I too have heard such things. Of new cults, new
movements in the lowers. My forces try the best they can to uproot
such growths, yet the garden is long untended, the weeds many. I fear
the day will come when we must relinquish such regions to the
darkness." Wu
Shih sighed. "I confess that is how I also feel. I tell myself
that we must prevail, yet in my heart of hearts 1 am uncertain." Tsu Ma
nodded. "We must face the truth, cousins. It is as Wang said,
that day at Astrakhan when we first saw how things were to be among
us. We live in new times. There are new ways of thinking and
behaving. It is said that in my great-grandfather's day everything
under Heaven, yes, even the wan wu, the ten thousand things
themselves, would bow before the sound of his voice, the solemn glare
of his eye. But now?" He laughed sourly. "Well, our eyes
have lost their fierce glow, our voices their terrifying power. Or so
it would seem, neh? And our Cities . . . our Cities are filled with
the shadows of fear and ignorance and hatred. And how can one fight
such shadows?" "And
yet we must." "Yes,
cousin Yuan. And we must also guard against these other, inner
shadows—the shades of fear and despair. For we who rule are not
as other men. If we fall, who will stand in our place? If we fall,
all is lost." A
heavy, brooding silence fell, and then, unexpectedly, the screen
behind them lit up once more. "Cousins..." It was
Wang Sau-leyan. His moon-shaped face filled the great screen,
smiling, as if he saw them. "Wu
Shih . . . you spoke well tonight. Indeed, you spoke for us all when
you said that this was a new beginning, a new chance to make things
right. So it is, cousin. So it is. But time alone will show just how
important this moment is. It is a joyous moment, a truly great moment
for the Seven and for the people of Chung Kuo. Let us go forward from
this moment and build upon that vision of a new age. I, for one, will
not hesitate to strive toward that goal. You can be assured of my
continued support in Council for all measures designed to bring that
aim about." The
smile broadened momentarily, like a fracture in that pallid expanse
of flesh, and then, unexpectedly, Wang bowed his head. "And
so I bid you good night, cousin Wu. Likewise to my cousins, Tsu Ma
and Li Yuan. May the gods protect you and your loved ones." The
screen blanked. Below it the three T'ang sat in stunned silence,
staring at each other. At last Tsu Ma broke the spell. "Now
what in the gods' names was that about? What is that calculating
bastard up to now?" "Whatever
it is," Wu Shih said irritably, "you can be certain of one
thing—that our effusive cousin means not a single word of what
he said." "Maybe
not," said Li Yuan thoughtfully, "but now, at least, we are
forewarned." "True,"
said Tsu Ma, leaning back in his chair, a sudden twinkle in his eye.
"And there's one, at least, who casts a shadow large enough to
fight." THERE
WAS A SUDDEN , violent banging at the door. Emily woke, groping for
the gun she always kept at her bedside, her heart hammering. For a
moment she thought herself back in her tiny apartment in Munich
Hsien, then she realized where she was—America—and sat
up, suddenly alert. There
was no gun, only the bedside timer. It was after four and the
apartment was in total darkness. For a moment she sat there,
breathing shallowly, listening, wondering if she had imagined it, and
then it came again. Mach.
It had to be. Security wouldn't have bothered knocking. She
hissed out her anger, then got up quickly and threw on a robe. He had
better have a good excuse for waking her at this hour. A fucking
beauty of an excuse. She
stabbed the view button angrily, studying herself briefly in the
wall-length mirror beside the door, then looked back at the screen. "Michael..." Michael
was leaning against the wall beside the door, his closely cropped
head lowered, his body slumped forward, as if he were ill. As she
watched he swayed back slightly and looked up at the camera, bleary
eyed. No,
not ill. Drunk. She
studied herself in the wall-length mirror, wondering what he wanted
of her, then, with a tiny shudder, slammed her hand over the
door-release pad. He
stood there unsteadily, simply looking at her. She made to chastise
him, then stopped, catching her breath. "Michael.
. ." she said, pained by the sight of him. "What is it?" He
looked away, then looked back at her, tears welling in his eyes. She
had never seen him like this. Never seen him anything but strong,
resourceful, positive, even when things had seemed hopeless. But that
look in his eyes had been dreadful. She had never seen such misery,
such a vast, despairing sense of loss. "Come
on," she said gently, putting her shoulder under his arm to
support him. She drew him inside and closed the door behind them.
"Let's have some ch'a. You can tell me all about it." "It's
finished," he said, shuddering, his face screwed up in sudden
torment. "There's no going back. It's ended between us." She
stared at the side of his face, wondering what he meant. "Who
. . . ?" she began, then understood. "He
pissed on me, Em. The old fucker pissed on me." The
words were angry, accusing. But the anger of the woros was underlaid
with a raw hurt that genuinely surprised her. She
sat him down in the kitchen in one of the big chairs, then began to
prepare the ch'a, her mind racing. "It
was Kennedy," he said, telling her what she already knew. "It
was his idea. He thought it would help things. Take the pressure off.
Give us some breathing space in which to raise some funds and develop
our campaign. It seemed like a good thing to do at the time. But I
didn't. . ." Again
his voice broke, betraying him. He closed his eyes, squeezing the
lids tightly shut, but still the tears came, defying his every effort
to hold them back. "I
didn't know," she said softly, sympathetically. "I thought
you hated him." "Hated
him?" He laughed and opened his eyes again, staring at her
almost soberly. "I could never hate him, Em. Never. He's my
father. He's. . ." Again
he could not go on. "So
what happened?" she asked, coaxing him gently. "What did
he say?" He
took a deep, shuddering breath, then shook his head. "It wasn't
what he said, it was how he did it. He had his cronies there. You
know, that crowd he's roped in to fund his immortality project. I
wanted to speak to him alone, but he wouldn't have it. He wouldn't
even let me into the room. And then. . ." He licked his lips,
then carried on. "Well, it was hopeless. He doesn't want to
know." He looked up at her forlornly. "He wants me to be a
slave to him—to do everything he says. And I can't do that, Em,
I can't! He asks too much. He always has." "I
see . . ." But she didn't. Not yet. This was something specific.
Something he was holding back from her. She
turned away, busying herself a moment, pouring the ch'a. When
she turned back it was to find him leaning forward in the chair,
watching her strangely. "What
is it?" she said, setting the bowl down on the table beside him.
"What aren't you telling me?" He
laughed, but it was a strangely forlorn sound. "You're a good
woman, Em. And not just good at your job. There's something about
you. Some quality . . ." He shrugged and sat back slightly, his
movements awkward, slightly exaggerated, as if he were trying hard to
control himself. "I saw it from the first. Even before
you started working for me. I noticed you. Did you know that? 1 used
to look out for you in my father's offices. I..." He
looked down at his hands, as if it were suddenly hard to say what he
was about to say, then looked back at her again, his whole manner
suddenly changed. "Gloria
Chung . . . remember her, Em? The hostess at that party we went to.
She told me something that night. Something I should have known for
myself but hadn't really seen until then. Well, tonight, facing my
father, what she said came back to me. You see, I had to make a
choice. Oh, I don't think the Old Man was even aware of it. Anything
else he'd have asked of me I would have done. Anything. But that..." Emily
shook her head, suddenly exasperated with him. "What, for the
gods' sakes? What the hell are you talking about, Michael?" "It
was you," he said, his gaze suddenly piercing her. "That's
what it was all about. He wanted me to marry the Johnstone girl and I
refused. As before, only I didn't know it back then. But tonight I
was certain of it. Anything else, and I'd have agreed. Anything. But
to lose you, Em ... No. I couldn't do that. Not that." He
stood unsteadily, taking her hands. "Don't you understand it
yet? I want to marry you, Em. To spend my life with you." The
words surprised her; caught her totally off guard. She was silent a
moment, then recollecting herself, she shook her head. "But what
about your father? You love him, Michael. You need him. If you marry
me, he'll cut you off for good." He
shuddered, the full weight of his hurt there briefly in his eyes.
"Maybe. But it's done already, Em. It's finished between us.
Really. There's no going back. So now it's just you and I. That's if
you'll have me. That's if you feel even the tiniest bit the way I
feel toward you." She
laughed, but beneath her laughter was a kind of numbed
surprise—almost awe—that he had done this for her; that
he had cast it all off simply to have her. "I'll
have you, Michael Lever," she said quietly, surprised by the
strength of what she felt for him at that moment. "Just you and
I. For life. And no going back, neh? No going back." CHAPTER
ELEVEN
Lost IT
HAD BEEN a long time since they had entertained, and I Jelka felt
awkward, unpracticed in her role as hostess. I Their guests, the
Hausers, were friends of her father's from years back, the husband
ex-Security and a onetime Colonial Governor, the wife a soldier's
wife, silent and dutiful in all things. Their son, Gustav, had come
to work for the Marshal as his equerry and was shortly to be
reposted. Jelka often saw him about the house, though he kept much to
himself. He seemed a pleasant enough young man, though, like all of
them, bred with a certain stiffness to him. At the
table she busied herself, turning to have a word with the servants,
making sure things went smoothly, then turning back to ensure that
the conversation kept flowing. Not that there was any real problem
with that, for the two men monopolized the talk. First it was pure
reminiscence, then, after their wineglasses had been topped up and
the dessert was out of the way, they moved on to that perennial topic
among the old: How things had changed. "It
was far simpler back then," Hauser began, nodding and looking to
his wife. "Values were stronger. Positions were much clearer cut
than now." He sipped and leaned forward, giving Jelka the
benefit of his gaze. "There was no question of divided
loyalties. A man was what he said he was." She
wanted to question that. It struck her that men had always
been as they were now—a mixed bunch, and some more mixed
than others—but she kept her silence, smiling, as if she
agreed. Hauser
smiled back at her, pleased by her acquiescence. "Our job was
simple, back then. We rounded up a few malcontents. Made sure things
ran smoothly in the levels. None of this 'Who's my friend? Who's my
enemy?" business." Tolonen
sighed and wiped at his lips with his napkin. "That's true,
Sven. Why, if I could but tell you . . ." He shook his head
sadly and reached for his glass. "Honor is not a thing you can
buy. It must be bred. Must be there from birth in the immediate
environment of a man. And if it's not. . ." He drank deeply,
then set his glass down again, pursing his lips. Jelka,
watching him, thought of Kim. Was it true, what her father said? Was
honor simply a thing to be bred into a man? Couldn't a man be
naturally honorable? "Unfortunately,"
continued her father, "we live in an age where such standards
are vanishing fast. Young men like your son are rare, Sven." She
looked down once more, keeping the smile from her face. The old
Governor had pushed out his chin at her father's remark and nodded
sternly, the gesture so like a character in a trivee historical that
she had it on her lips to remark about it. But there were rules here,
and she would obey them, dislike them as she might. She said nothing,
merely looked past the governor's wife to the waiter, indicating that
he should fill the woman's glass again. "You
must be excited." Jelka
looked back at the ex-Governor and realized he had been talking to
her. "I beg your pardon, Major Hauser?" "About
the trip. It must be wonderful. Seeing all that so young. I was in my
late forties before I first went out." She
still wasn't following him. Confused, she looked to her father for
explanation, but the Marshal was staring fixedly down at the table,
as if deep in thought. "Yes,"
went on the Governor, "I can remember it clearly, even now.
Seeing the moons of Jupiter for the first time." She
laughed. "I'm sorry. I'm afraid you must be mistaken." It was
the old man's turn to look confused and turn to her father. "What's
this, Knut? I thought you'd settled things?" There
was a slight color to Tolonen's cheeks. He met his old friend's eyes
firmly, but his voice was quieter than usual. "I haven't told
her, Sven. Please..." "Ah
. . ." There was a moment's clear embarrassment, then the old
man turned and looked back at Jelka. "Well, as it's out, I guess
you might as well know. I suppose your father wanted to surprise you,
neh?" Jelka
had gone cold. She was looking at her father steadily. What had he
done now? "A trip?" she asked, ignoring their guests
momentarily. "I
would have told you," Tolonen said, still not looking at her.
"Tonight. When our friends here had gone." There
was a slight emphasis on the word friends that was meant to
remind her of her duty as hostess, but she ignored it. "You're
doing it again, aren't you?" She
could sense how both their guests had stiffened in their seats. Her
father, however, had turned to face her. "Doing
what?" "Interfering.
. ." She said it softly, but the impact of the word couldn't be
softened. She was thinking of Hans Ebert and her father's pressure on
her to marry him. He had been wrong then, and he was wrong now. She
loved Kim. And she would not be separated from him. Not for
some soldier! She
shivered, realizing the point to which her thoughts had brought her.
Did she really hate all this talk of duty and breeding? Hate all this
soldiering? "Jelka.
. ." her father said softly. "You must listen to me. In
this I know best. Really . . ." She
folded up her napkin and threw it down on the table, then stood.
Turning to the Governor and his wife, she gave a small bow and a
faint smile of apology. "I'm sorry. I really don't feel well. If
you'll excuse me . . ." She
made to turn away, but her father called her back. "Where
do you think you're going, girl?" She
took a deep breath, then turned to face him. He was angry with her.
Furiously angry. She had never seen him quite like this. But the
sight merely steeled her to what she was doing. She faced him out,
for the first time in her life openly defying him. "What
is it?" He
waved a hand at her, indicating that she should sit. But she remained
as she was, standing away from the table, the chair pushed out behind
her. He saw this and narrowed his eyes. "You'll
sit down, and you'll apologize to our guests for your behavior." She
opened her mouth, astonished by him. Slowly, she shook her head. "No.
I'll not go." "Sit
down!" There
was real menace in his voice this time. She sat, slightly away from
the table, making no effort to draw her chair up. "I'll not go,"
she said again, as if he had not heard her the first time. Hauser
was silent, looking from her to her father. But his face was the
mirror of her father's. "You'll
go because I tell you to. Understand?" She
went very still. Then, looking up at him again, she shook her head. This
time he stood and yelled at her. "You'll go, dammit! Even if my
men have to bind you and carry you on board. Understand? You're still
my daughter, and until you're of age, you do what I say!" She
shuddered, looking away from him. He was so ugly like this. So... Not
meaning to, she laughed. It
went very quiet. She could feel the chill of the atmosphere about
her. She looked up at him again. He was looking at her strangely,
almost as if he didn't recognize her. "What
are you afraid of?" she asked. "What?"
He didn't seem to understand. "Afraid?" "Kim,"
she said. "Why are you so afraid of him? Why would it be so
wrong if I married him?" She
had said nothing before now, but this was the nub of it. The reason
for all this heavy-handedness. Her
father laughed oddly. "You'll not marry him. Not him." She
met his eyes and saw that he was determined in this. But he had
reckoned without her opposition. Like before, he had thought she
would bow meekly to his wishes. "I
have your blood," she said softly. "If needs be, I'll fight
you on this." "You'll
go," he said, with an air of finality. For a
moment longer she hesitated, then nodded. "I'll go," she
said, "because you make me go. But it will change nothing. I'll
marry him, see if I don't." His
eyes widened and his mouth opened as if he were going to argue more
with her, but then he nodded, and sat down. He had her agreement.
That, for now, was enough for him. The rest would take its course.
Why fight tomorrow's battles before they came? "Now
may I go?" she asked, still sitting there. He
looked back at her again, then across at his guests. The ex-Governor
gave a tight little nod and a half-smile. Beside him, his wife sat
stiffly, looking down at her hands, as if in shock. "Go
on, then," Tolonen said softly, and stood for her, as if nothing
had happened. But, watching her go, he knew that something had broken
between them. Some last link of childish trust. He shivered, then
turned back to his guests. "I'm
sorry, Sven," he said. "I should have warned you . . ." THE
BOARD ROOM was tense, silent, as Old Man Lever, at the head of the
table, read through the figures on the loan document. To his left
along the great oak table sat the financiers, eight in all, to the
right his team of advisors. All eyes were focused on the Old Man as
he turned the page and, looking up, tapped the document in front of
him. "The
top-up's too high. I thought we'd agreed on two point six." "Two
point eight, Mister Lever," Bonner, the Chief Negotiator,
answered quietly. "I have it minuted." Lever
stared at him a moment, as if Bonner had taken leave of his senses,
then, taking his ink brush from the stand beside him, he put a line
through the figure and wrote the new figure beside it, initialing the
change. There
was the briefest exchange of glances to his left, a small shrug
of acceptance from Bonner. The matter was decided. As ever,
Lever had gotten his way. "And
what about this matter of extended term insurance?" Lever added
casually. "I think we should share the expense, fifty-fifty.
What do you think?" Bonner
looked down. "It's unusual, Mister Lever. The borrower usually
bears the cost of any loan insurances, but if that's what you want."
He looked back up at Lever and smiled. "Besides, I'm sure the
project will come in on time." Lever
smiled, then reached out to pat Bonner's arm. "Good. Then we'll
get this signed and witnessed, neh?" Bonner
let out a breath, the tension draining from him. The two points on
the top-up would cost them over fifty thousand, and the insurance
might add up to one hundred and fifty thousand more, but in terms of
the total deal that was nothing. Eight
billion yuanl Bonner's mind reeled at the thought of it. It
was the biggest loan his Finance House had ever set up. And even at
the fine rates Lever had insisted on, it would bring handsome
profits. Personally, as Chief Negotiator, his own share was a quarter
point, but a quarter point on eight billion was nothing to sneer at. And
every last fen secured by prime ImmVac stock, the best on the
market. Bonner stood, bowing to the old man. Behind him, in a line,
his team did the same, keeping their heads lowered as Bonner walked
around the table to append his signature to the bottom of the
agreement, then flicked back, initialing the two changes. A second
copy of the document would be retinally imprinted and registered
later in the day, but for now their business was concluded, the deal
done. Old
Man Lever turned and, looking across at his Chief Steward, clicked
his fingers. At once, the Steward turned and pulled open the doors.
Waiting there in the corridor beyond were six servants, bearing trays
of wine and delicacies. Quickly they went about the table. "Come,"
said Old Man Lever, looking about him with a broad smile, "let's
celebrate! For today the Cutler Institute for Genetic Research is
mine. Lock, stock, and barrel, as my grandfather used to say." He
laughed, then nodded to himself. Standing, he took a wine cup from
the nearest servant and raised-it. "This is a great moment, and
nothing . . . nothing, can spoil it!" AH
about the table, Cups were lifted, voices raised in the
traditional toast. "Kanpei!"
> "Mister
Lever..." The
Steward stood at Lever's shoulder, leaning close, his voice a
whisper, low but insistent. Lever
turned a fraction. "Yes?" "News
has come, Master. Moments back. It's Michael, Mister Lever. He's
married. Married the Jennings woman." MACH
AND CURVAL were standing in the anteroom when Lever came storming
out, his eyes bulging with anger. They had heard the tray go crashing
down, and Lever's angry shout, but the sight of him, his face set
into a fierce grimace, his fists bunched tight, surprised them both. "What
is it?" Mach said, catching up with the old man. "What in
hell's name has happened?" Lever
stopped abruptly and turned, facing Mach. "It's Michael. He's
betrayed me." "Betrayed
you?" Lever
shuddered. "He's married her. The bastard's gone and married
her!" Mach
stared at him, shocked. Emily, he meant. Michael had married Emily
Ascher. "It's
not possible," he said, after a moment. "She wouldn't. I
mean. . ." He shook his head, unable to explain it. "Are
you certain?" "Not
certain, no, but fairly sure. I'd put a trace on him, you see. I..."
Again Lever shuddered. "He's betrayed me, Jan. Pissed on me!
First with the Ward boy, and now this!" "Maybe
theyVe got it wrong. Maybe . . ." "No.
This time he's really done it. Done it to spite me. To piss on me. My
son. . ." "Charles.
. ." "No.
This is my fault. I should have expected this. Should have known he'd
do this." He shivered, lowering his voice. "I should have
had her killed." Mach
glanced at Curval, then shook his head. "No, Charles. It would
have solved nothing. You have to live with this. To show him it means
nothing to you." "Nothing?"
Lever closed his eyes, the sudden pain in his face something
awful to see. "That boy meant everything to me. Everything.
And now..." "You
must show him he means nothing," Mach said, insistent now. "It's
the only answer, Charles. The only answer." whiskers
Lu, Big Boss of the Kuei Chuan, stood, letting out a great
roar. Fat Wong's handwritten note lay on the desk before him, its
curt, six-word summons the reason for his anger. "How
dare that jumped-up little cocksucker tell me what to do! How
dare he summon me like one of his runners!" Lu's
men kept their heads lowered, their eyes averted. They had been
poring over a plan of the lowers, discussing the recent incursions by
the i4K in the eastern stacks and the movements up-level of the Red
Gang to their north, trying to work out countermoves, but this had
pushed all that from Lu Ming-shao's mind. For ten minutes now he had
raged, taxing the limits of his invention with the names he had
called the United Bamboo's 489. And yet everyone there knew that
Whiskers Lu would go. He had to. For Fat Wong was currently strong,
his alliances in Council secure, whereas the last year had seen the
decline of the Kuei Chuaris fortunes, the erosion of their
once firm links with their neighboring Triads. Yes,
and that too had been Fat Wong's doing, no doubt. Lu Ming-shao had no
proof of it, but how else could it have happened? Why else would the
i4K have dared encroach on Kuei Chuan territory unless Fat
Wong had given his tacit agreement? And now this. "Why
not kill him?" Visak said suddenly, speaking into the stillness
between Lu's rages. Whiskers
Lu laughed humorlessly and fixed Visak with his one good eye. "Kill
him? Kill Fat Wong?" He laughed again, this time in disbelief.
"How?" "An
assassin," Visak said, meeting Lu's ferocious stare. "I
know a man. He's special." "Special?"
Whiskers Lu leaned forward, holding the edge of the table, and
laughed. "He'd have to be a ghost and walk through walls to get
Fat Wong." Visak
lowered his head. "With great respect, Master Lu, this man is
special. He could get Wong Yi-sun. Wong and all his top men." Whiskers
Lu was breathing shallowly now, his hands gripping the table's edge.
His mottled, masklike face twitched violently. Then, relaxing, he
pushed back again, composing himself, drawing his silks tightly about
him. He turned, making a show of studying the glass cases on the wall
behind his desk—the cases that contained the heads of his three
great rivals—then nodded. Lu
Ming-shao took one of the heads down, studying it a moment, a brief
smile flitting across his glasslike features as he recalled the
moment he had killed this one—that look of dumb incomprehension
in the man's eyes as he had choked the breath out of him, and the
great surge of satisfaction he had felt afterward. Unconsciously he
smoothed the tip of his thumb across the surface of the blinded eye,
then reached up again, setting the head back in its place. "All
right. But it has to be tonight. Understand? I'll be fucked if I'll
let that bastard live to see another day. Not after the way he's
insulted me. Contact your man at once. Offer him whatever he needs.
Then bring him here, understand? I want to see this ghost. An hour
from now if possible, but tonight, at any rate. Before the meeting." He
turned, meeting his lieutenant's eyes. "Oh, and Visak. You will
make sure of your friend, won't you? Very sure." Visak
nodded, then, bowing low, turned away. Whiskers Lu watched him go,
then sat, thoughtful now, his rage spent. For a moment he was silent,
staring at the handwritten note, then, reaching out, he crumpled the
note into a tiny ball, popped it into his mouth, and swallowed. For a
moment there was nothing. Then, as if all the tension in the room had
been suddenly dispelled, Whiskers Lu began to laugh, his laughter
echoed back at him. LU
MING-SHAO pushed the young girl aside unceremoniously, then eased his
huge bulk up off the bed. He pulled on the robe his man was
holding and tied the sash tightly about his waist, eyeing his
lieutenant. "So
he's here, then?" Visak
lowered his head. "In the audience room, Master." "Unarmed,
I hope." "Yes,
Master. And under guard." "And
the task I want of him. He Understands what it entails?" "He
does, Master." "Good.
How did he react?" Visak
hesitated, his eyes straying briefly to the young Han girl on the
bed, who lay there, naked, watching the exchange, her eyes, curious.
He looked back at Lu Ming-shao, meeting his one good eye. "Our
friend is rather a cold fish. He is not one to ... react." Whiskers
Lu stared at him a moment, then laughed delightedly. "Good! I
warm to him already." They
went through, Visak leading the way, Whiskers Lu's runners kneeling,
bowing low before him as he approached. The door to the audience room
was barred by two of his best men, Meng Te and Huang Jen. "Okay,"
Lu said, looking about him and smiling. "Let's meet our special
friend." Inside,
the unexpected. A tall man dressed totally in white, his back to
them, his head tilted slightly, looking down, as if he was cradling
something. As he turned, they saw what it was. A baby. Whiskers
Lu glared at Visak, angry that he'd not been prepared. "What is
this?" The
tall man looked down at the baby, then, looking back at Whiskers Lu,
threw it at him. Lu
Ming-shao, taken totally by surprise, raised his arms in reflex,
catching the child. As he did, the man drew his gun and fired twice.
Whiskers Lu heard the choked cries and felt the floor shake as the
bodies fell either side of him, but he himself still stood there,
untouched. The
stranger put the gun away. "The unexpected is a powerful tool,
don't you think, Lu Ming-shao?" Lu
Ming-shao swallowed, his anger something cold and hard. "What
the fuck do you think youVe doing, friend?" "Those
two were traitors," the tall man answered calmly. "They
made deals behind your back. They sold you to another." Lu
Ming-shao turned, looking down at the fallen bodies of Meng Te and
Huang Jen. Was it possible? Yet even as he asked the question he knew
that it was perfectly possible. After all, he was the outsider here.
There were no blood ties as existed between the other 4893 and their
men. They were his men through force alone, not loyalty. He
looked down at the child that rested, strangely silent in his arms. A
Hung Moo, it was. An ugly little brat, weeks old at most. He lifted
it slightly, as if to test its weight, then threw it back at the
stranger. The
tall man stepped back, letting the child fall, screeching, to the
floor. He had a knife in his hand now. A huge, wicked-looking thing
with a white pearl handle. Whiskers
Lu drew his own knife and, bellowing loudly, lunged at the other man,
knowing now that he had been set up. But he had taken only two steps
before he sank down onto his knees, his breath hissing painfully from
him, Visak's knife buried to the hilt in his upper back, Visak's
weight bearing him down. The
baby was silent now. It lay beneath Lu Ming-shao, crushed by the
weight of the two men. Visak
got up and moved away, leaving the knife embedded in his former
Master's back, his eyes going to the tall man. The
stranger moved closer, standing above Whiskers Lu, listening to the
pained wheezing of his final breaths, the soft gurgle of the blood in
his pierced and damaged lung. Then, with the sole of his left boot,
he forced Lu's head down brutally into the floor, turning his foot,
the heel gouging into the melted, masklike face of the dying man,
cracking open the brittle mottled plastic of his flesh, as if he were
crushing an insect. Lehmann
looked up past the dying man, meeting Visak's eyes. "Summon the
Red Pole, Po Lao. Bring him here at once. And if he asks, tell him
only that things have changed. That he has a new Master." MAIN
HAD BEEN EMPTIED. Beneath the clock tower, the decapitated bodies of
those who had opposed Lehmann were laid in rows, more
than three hundred in all, their severed heads stacked in a huge pile
close by. Lehmann
stood there, gaunt yet imperious, looking about him at the heartland
of his new territory, his face betraying nothing at that moment of
triumph. Twenty ch'i away, in the shadow of the tower, stood Soucek,
Visak at his side. The two men had fought hard these last few hours,
quelling the last pockets of resistance; making sure no news of this
got out before its time. Now it was done, Lehmann's rule made
certain. At a signal from the albino, Visak bowed and went across,
calling the men in from the main corridor. The
runners crossed the great floor slowly in a great tide, approaching
the tower timidly, their eyes wide, staring at the rows of headless
corpses, the gruesome stack of bloodied skulls nearby. Then, at
Visak's shouted command, they went down onto their knees, lowering
their foreheads to the floor. More than four thousand men in all.
Kuei Chuan, every one. Lehmann
stood there a moment, looking out across their lowered backs, then
went among them, lifting this man's chin and staring into his face,
and then another's, moving between them'all the while, fearless and
magisterial, like a T'ang, his every movement emphasizing his
command. For
long minutes there was silence; a silence in which, it seemed, they
dare not even breathe, then, coming out from their midst, Lehmann
went over to the stack of heads and, taking one in each hand, turned
to face the watching mass. "These
were my enemies," he said, his voice calm and cold and measured.
"And this will be the fate of all my enemies, from this day on.
But you . . . you have the chance to be my friends. My men." He set
the heads down and took a step toward them. "There
is a price for disloyalty. So it is. So it has always been among our
kind. But loyalty . . . how do you earn that? What is its price?"
Lehmann turned his head slowly, his pale pink eyes encompassing them
all. "I understand your shock, your confusion over what has
happened. But I know that many among you were unhappy with how things
were under Lu Ming-shao. That many of you welcome change. As for me
... well, you do not know me yet. Only, perhaps, by reputation. That,
too, I understand. You might fear me right now, but
there is no reason for you—any of you—to owe me
any loyalty. Not yet. But in the months to come I shall ask much of
you. Things Whiskers Lu never dreamed to ask. And in return?" Lehmann
paused and nodded slowly, thoughtfully, as if in reverie; yet when he
spoke again, his voice was suddenly powerful, echoing across the
great open space. "In return I will give you everything.
Everything you ever dreamed of." kim
removed the jack from the face of the terminal, letting the wire coil
back into the stud beneath his ear, then sat back, breathing
shallowly. "It's good. Very good. And easy to use. I thought it
would take a while to get used to." The
surgeon smiled. "Everyone thinks that. And there's a degree of
truth to it. What you've just experienced—that's just the
beginning. You see, while it uses the same skills you've always
had—you can't, after all, slow down the speed that messages
travel at in the nervous system—you're used to limiting your
thought processes to the speed at which you can read or speak
language. Once those limitations are removed, the brain can process
raw data at phenomenal speeds. Anything up to a thousand times as
fast as it could unaided. But it takes a while to adapt." Kim
nodded, his eyes looking inward. He was remembering how it had felt:
the power of that feeling. Information had flashed into his
head at an almost frightening speed. He had had a feeling of
exultation, of tightness—of utter clarity. He had felt himself
grow by the moment, achieving a degree of sharpness he had never
experienced before. Sparks of pure insight had flickered between
points in his head, like electrical discharges, and he had struggled
to hold on to them as others filled his head. He
looked at the surgeon again. "You should do this yourself. It
would help you, surely?" The
surgeon laughed. "They all say that. We call it conversion
syndrome. Those who haven't got it, fear it; those who have, have a
proselytizing urge to make others have the operation. But I don't
have it because I can't." "Why?"
Kim's fingers traced the shape of the stud unconsciously. It
was a gesture that betrayed the newness of the implant. The
surgeon saw it and smiled. "For
you there are no drawbacks. You're a theoretician, not a
practitioner. But experiment has found that there's a slight decay of
motor control. A loss of sharpness in that area. As if the increased
use of the memory draws upon other sections of the brain and weakens
their functions. A sort of compensatory effect, if you like. As a
surgeon I can't risk that. My work is with my hands as much as with
my knowledge of the mind's workings. I can't afford to impair my
motor responses. Besides, they'd not allow me to." Kim
nodded, considering. "There would be other difficulties, too,
wouldn't there?" The
surgeon smiled. "Interfacing," he explained quickly.
"That's the term we have for it. From old computer jargon.
Interfacing is the difficulty you experienced moving from one state
to another. Why you couldn't say anything for the first few seconds.
The mind has grown accustomed to responding at what is, for it, a
more natural speed. Dropping down from that it stumbles and finds
great difficulty in adjusting. The effect lasts only five to ten
seconds, but it would be utterly debilitating for a surgeon. "You
only get that effect when you cut out, and there seems no way of
preventing it. When you plug in, the mind speeds up gradually. It's
almost two seconds before it reaches its full operating speed.
Cutting out, there's no gradual assimilation. The change of state is
immediate and, to an extent, shocking." "Harmful?" The
surgeon shook his head. "The mind's a resilient machine. It
defends itself against damage. That's what the interfacing effect
is—a defense mechanism. Without it there would be
damage." There
was a knock on the door. A moment later an orderly entered and, after
bowing to the surgeon, handed Kim a "sealed" notecard, the
tiny slip of plastic winking blankly in the overhead light. "Excuse
me a moment," Kim said, getting up from the chair and moving
away from the terminal. "Of
course," the surgeon answered. "I'll make my other calls,
then come back later, if you like." Alone
again, Kim placed his thumb to the seal and activated the
release. At once a message appeared on the blank plastic card.
He read it slowly, moving his lips to form each word, realizing, even
as the message sank in, how painfully slow this normal way of doing
things was. Then that was forgotten. He read it through again,
astonished, his mind struggling to understand what had happened. "He
can't. . ." he said, turning sharply to face the door, his whole
stance suddenly changed; his body tensed now, crouched like a
fighter's. "No . . ." The
message was brief and to the point, signed with Tolonen's personal
code. SWiWard, You
are not to see my daughter, nor should you try to see her. There is
no future for the two of you, and certainly no possibility of a
match. You will keep away from my living quarters and deal with me
only through my office in future. Finally, let me warn you. If you
persist in this matter, I shall do all in my power to break you. —Knut
Tolonen. The
hairs on his neck bristled as he read the note again. He threw it
down and went to the terminal. Sitting there, he tapped in the
"Reach" code she had given him. Her private code, known
only to her and him. He waited, anger and fear and something
else—something he knew but could not put a name to—churning
in his stomach. For a long time there was nothing. The screen
remained blank, the delay pulse the only sign that the machine was
attempting to connect them. Then, almost imperceptibly, the screen
changed, showing not her face, as he'd hoped, but a message. Briefer
than Tolonen's and less personal, but something: a sign for him that
she had no part in this. Nanking.
South Port 3. Meridian. Nanking
was the great spaceport that served the colonies. South Port 3 must
be the departure point, the Meridian the ship. But why had she
given him these details? Unless . . . He
went cold. Quickly he signed off, then summoned up details of
departures from Nanking, South Port 3, and found the Meridian listed
on the second page. He shivered. Seven hours. Less than seven
hours, in fact. That was all the time he had to get to her and . . . And
what? He sat back, his heart hammering in his chest, his hands
trembling. He could do nothing. Tolonen would make certain of that.
Even now, perhaps, he was being watched. But he would have to try. He
would never forgive himself unless he tried. He
stood up slowly, feeling weak. Turning, looking down at the tiny slip
of card where it lay on the floor across the room from him, he
recognized at last what the feeling was he had failed to put a name
to. It was dark and vast and empty like a pit; a feeling so
dreadful and debilitating that it seemed to drain him even as he
stood there; making him feel hollow and close to death. It was loss.
He had lost her. But
even as it swept over him, another feeling grew—of anger, and
determination. No. He would try. He would go after her, Tolonen's
threats notwithstanding. He would try. Because nothing else mattered
to him as much as Jelka. Nothing in the whole vast universe. SOUCEK
WAS WALKING beside the sedan, Po Lao and Visak several paces in front
of him at the front of the procession as they approached the end of
the corridor and the rendezvous point beyond. Lehmann had handpicked
the tiny force that marched along beneath the black dog banners, yet
there were only two dozen of them, including the pole men, and Soucek
felt uneasy, hideously exposed, here in Red Gang territory. The
meeting had been rearranged at short notice. The note sent to Fat
Wong had stated bluntly that the Big Boss of the Kuei Ckuon would
meet him on Red Gang territory or not at all. It had specified a time
and a place, and had informed Wong Yi-sun that copies of the note
were being delivered simultaneously to each of the other four Bosses.
That last was an elementary precaution, yet if Fat Wong was
contemplating a move against the Kuei Chuan, this seemed
as good a place as any to make it. If what Visak had said were true,
the last six months had seen Fat Wong's United Bamboo Triad grow very
close to Dead Man Yun's Red Gang. Why, they had even gone so far as
to support Red Gang encroachments on Kuei Chuan territory. To
Soucek, then, this seemed a strange thing to do—tantamount
to putting one's head in the tiger's mouth. But Lehmann had ordered
it. They
slowed, Soucek not alone in counting the guards on the barrier up
ahead and noting the great array of banners beyond. They were all
here—i4K and Yellow Banners, United Bamboo, Red Gang, and Wo
Shih Wo—and here in some force too. The Kuei Chuan, a
meager two dozen fighting men, were clearly the last to arrive. He
felt his pulse quicken, his chest tighten at the thought of the
encounter ahead. For once he felt a slight uncertainty about what
Lehmann was doing. This was a different league. A different league
entirely. It was one thing to kill a Big Boss, another to establish
oneself in his place. And yet Po Lao, like Visak, had bowed to
Lehmann, accepting the inevitable. So maybe . . . A
figure appeared at the barrier. A smalt, dapper-looking Han in
cream-and-lilac silks. Behind him four other middle-aged Han waited,
watching the sedan come on. "That's
Fat Wong at the front," Visak said quietly, talking from the
comer of his mouth. "The bald one to his left is Dead Man Yun,
our host. The pop-eyed one next to him is Li Chin, Boss of the Wo
Shih Wo—Li the Lidless as he's known. The starchy old man is
General Feng, Boss of the i4K. Beside him—the tall one with the
crippled hand—is Three-Finger Ho, Boss of the Yellow Banners." Soucek
narrowed his eyes, taking it all in. He had never thought to see
these men, not separately, let alone together like this, but here
they were, gathered at his Master's summons. His fear now was a solid
thing at the pit of his stomach and part of him wondered if he would
ever see another morning, but the thought of letting Lehmann down
made him keep his fear in check; made him look about him with cold,
clear eyes. They
were powerful men, there was no doubting it. He could see it in their
stance, in the calm aura of superiority that hung about them as they
waited, and in the cold, passionless depths of their eyes. Men died
at their slightest whim, at their smallest gesture. And yet they were
men, for all that. They could be killed. As Whiskers Lu had been
killed. And Lehmann? He too could be killed, for he was simply a man
when it came down to it. And yet the thought of someone bettering
Lehmann seemed wrong somehow—almost an impossibility—and
that sense of wrongness gave Soucek new confidence, for at bottom he
believed in Lehmann. They
stopped ten paces from the waiting group. Slowly the sedan set down.
Soucek tensed, seeing how Fat Wong's hands were clenched, how his
eyes were hard and cold. Lehmann's counter-summons—that terse,
unsigned message—must have angered Wong Yi-sun greatly. Coming
here was, in itself, a kind of loss of face. And yet he had come. There
was the rustle of heavy silks as the plain black curtain was lifted
by the two attending pole men, and then Lehmann stepped out from the
darkness within, straightening up slowly, his tall, emaciated figure
ghostlike in the glare of the overhead lights. As ever he was dressed
from head to toe in white. White,
the color of death. A
great gasp went up from the men manning the barriers. A gasp of fear
as much as surprise. In front of them Fat Wong, his mouth fallen
open, shook his head slowly in disbelief. For a moment he was at a
loss, then he turned, looking to the Red Pole of the Kuei Chuan
for an explanation. "What
in the gods' names is going on, Po Lao? Where is your Master? And who
the fuck is this?" But Po
Lao held his tongue. He merely turned, his head bowed low, facing his
new Master, his whole manner subservient. "Our
good friend, Whiskers Lu, is dead," Lehmann said, stepping
forward, Wong's slur seemingly ignored. "So let me introduce
myself. My name is Stefan Lehmann and, as of two hours ago, I became
the new Big Boss of the Kuei Chuan brotherhood." He
turned slightly, meeting Fat Wong's eyes from no more than an arm's
length away, his voice soft, his face unsmiling. "Fat Wong . . .
it's good to meet you at last." His eyes held Wong's a moment
longer, then he looked past him at the others gathered there. "And
you, ch'un t%u. It's good to meet you all. IVe heard so much
abo^it you . . ." Moving
past Wong Yi-suh, Lehmann joined the circle of the 4895, looking
about him coldly, imperiously, defying them to contradict his claim
to power. And Soucek, looking on, saw how they stared back at
him, impressed despite themselves, maybe even awed—even
the great Wong Yi-sun. In a few moments he had won through sheer
audacity what no force of arms could ever have achieved: their
respect. Soucek
shivered. It was done. Lehmann, the Hung Moo—the usurper—was
one of the Six now. A Boss. A 489. One of the great lords of the
underworld. And in
time he would be more. Yes, Soucek burned now with the certainty of
it. In time he would be more. THE
BARRIERS were down, the ship sealed. Kim stood there, staring up at
the departures board, the figures on the clock, his stomach falling
away as he realized that he was too late. Then, forcing himself to go
on, to carry things through to the very end, he crossed the big
lounge quickly, making for the Security desk in the corner. The
young guard looked up at him as he approached and frowned. "What
do you want?" Kim
held out his all-levels pass. "IVe got to get a message
through!" he said breathlessly. "It's vitally important." "What
ship is it?" the guard asked, studying the pass a moment, then
looking back at Kim, eyeing him curiously; clearly recognizing him
for a Clayborn. "The
Meridian. South Port 3." The
guard smiled and sadly shook his head. "I'm sorry, Shih Ward,
but it's too late. The Meridian is already sealed." "I
know," Kim said, impatient now. "But I have to get a
message through. It's terribly important." "I'm
sorry," the guard began again, all politeness, "but that's
simply not possible. Not until the ship is in orbit." Kim
looked away, wondering what he could do, what say, to persuade the
guard to help him, then turned back, leaning across the barrier,
deciding to confide in the young officer. "The
truth is that the girl I love is on board the Meridian. Her father
wants to prevent us from getting married, so he's sending her off to
the Colonies. I only heard about it a few hours back, so I must speak
to her before she goes. I simply muct-" The
young guard sat back slightly. His chest patch showed that he was a
lieutenant, but from his manner Kim could tell he was not long out of
cadet school. "I'd
like to help you, Shih Ward, really I would, but I can't. The
communications of the Meridian are locked into the launch
sequence now. Even the great T'ang himself couldn't communicate with
the Meridian right now—not unless he wished the
countdown canceled." "I
see." Kim turned away, a sense of futility sweeping over him. It was
loss. He had lost her. "Shih
Ward. . ." Kim
turned back, staring at the guard, hardly recognizing him. "Yes?" The
young man came from behind the barrier, his eyes sorter than before,
strangely sympathetic. "I'm off duty here in five minutes. If
you want, I can take you up into the viewing tower. You can watch the
ship go up from there. As for your message, well, maybe I can pass
something on for you. Among the technical stuff. Fifty words maximum,
mind you, and I can't guarantee it'll get through, but it's the best
I can do." Kim
shivered, then bowed his head, a feeling of immense gratitude
flooding through him. "Thank you . . ." Twenty
minutes later, watching the tiny point of flame disappear into the
upper atmosphere, Kim shivered and looked away, touching his top
teeth with his tongue thoughtfully. Seven years. Seven years he'd
have to wait until she could be his. Yet even as he thought it, he
knew what he would do. Knew just how he would fill those seven long
years of waiting. They would be hard, but he would get through them.
And then she would be his, meddling old men or no. His. PART
2 SUMMER 2209 The
Interpreted World
Who, if I cried, would
hear me among the angelic orders? And even if one of
them suddenly pressed me against his heart, I should fade in the strength of his stronger existence. For
Beauty's nothing but beginning of Terror we're still just able to
bear, and why we adore it so is because it serenely disdains to
destroy us. Every angel is terrible. And so I repress myself, and
swallow the call-note of depth-dark sobbing. Alas, who is there we
can make use of? Not angels, not men; and even the noticing beasts
are aware that we don't feel very securely at home in this
interpreted world. —Rainer Maria Rilke,
Dw.no Elegies; First Elegy
CHAPTER TWELVE The
Beginning of Terror 0N
THE QUAY SIDE of the old town two knots of men stand before the Blind
Dragon Inn, drinking and laughing, a space of twenty ch'i separating
them, their voices carrying in the still early evening air. Out in
the center of the broad estuary three large junks are moored, their
quilted sails furled, their familiarly rounded shapes bobbing gently
in the strong tidal current. Downriver, two hundred ch'i out from the
enclosed square of the fishing harbor, a large three-masted Hung Mao
merchantman rests, heavily laden, its long hull low in the water. For a
moment the sea breeze drops. There is an instant's perfect stillness;
a stillness filled with the sun's late warmth. Then, as the wind
picks up again, the high, tormented calls of seabirds rend the air,
echoing across the old stone houses of the town. At
the edge of the farther group, a young Han turns, shielding his eyes,
looking out past the party of Hung Moo sailors crowding the
nearby quayside, his gaze traveling across the cobbled square toward
the streets that climb the hillside, searching out the pale-cream
facade of one particular house: a small, terraced cottage with a
tiny, enclosed garden in which the moonlight dances in his memory and
the smell of jasmine is strong. "What're
you staring at, chink?" The
Hung Moo is a big, barrel-chested man, the muscles of his arms like
the thickly corded ropes that secure a ship at anchor. He stands
over Tong Ye menacingly, his bearded face dark with mockery
and loathing. Behind
Tong Ye there is a low murmur. Wine cups are set down hastily. There
is the rustle of cloth and cheap silk as weapons are drawn from
hidden places. All other talk is forgotten. There is a tension in the
air now, like the moment before a storm finally breaks, and at the
eye of that storm is Tong Ye, his eyes staring back
uncom-prehendingly at the big man, his mind still half in reverie. "Beg
pardon?" The
tar, gap-toothed and pugilistically ugly, his red hair tied in a
pigtail at his unwashed neck, leans forward, placing a calloused hand
firmly on the young Han's shoulder. "You
know fucking well what I mean, you slanty-eyed little scumbag. WeVe
seen you, sneaking about after dark. And we know who you've been
calling on. But you're going to stop that, understand me, boy? You're
going to keep to your fucking ship from now on, or you'll be missing
the means to piss on your boots." The
young Han swallows, then moves back a pace, shrugging off the hand.
He is frightened—shaken by the revelation that his visits to
his lover have been observed. Even so, he brazens it out, facing the
big man unflinchingly. "Forgive
me, ch'un tzu, but there is no law against it, surely? And the
young lady ... if she does not object to my calling on her . . . ?" The
tar turns his head and hawks a fat gobbet of phlegm onto the cobbles.
His head comes round, his eyes half-lidded now, his body tensed. One
fist is already clenched, the other feels among the padded cloth of
his jacket for the spike concealed there. "Maybe
not, but I do. The very thought of one of our own being touched by
one of you . . . a/i-ni-mak." The
word is barely out, its rounded, nasal tones, heavy with a lifetime's
stored resentment, still lingering in the air, as the first Han
sailor throws himself at the big man, a thick stem of bamboo making
an arc in the air toward the big man's head. A moment later, all hell
has broken out. On
the cobbles before the inn, a single group of men are locked in
struggle, their angry voices carrying in the still evening air. Out
in the estuary the lookouts on the junks have paused in their task of
lighting the mooring lamps and
stare out across the water anxiously. On the merchantman there is
frantic activity as a boat is prepared for lowering. A tall, dark
figure sporting a tricorn hat stands briefly at the prow of the
merchantman, a telescope raised to his eye, then he turns, making
hurriedly for the boat. On
shore, the young Han is down, a steel spike embedded deeply in his
guts. Beside him lies the red-haired tar, his skull split like an
eggshell. Others lie on the cobbles as the fight continues, its
viciousness unabated, long centuries of hatred fueling every blow.
With a piercing shriek one of the Han falls backward from the quay
and tumbles, slowly it seems, into the glassy water. There
is the blur of arms, fingers clenching and unclenching, the steady
grunt and moan of blows given and received. And then there is a
moment's stillness as the Han break off and, one after another,
launch themselves from the high stone wall of the quay and into the
water. And as they clamber aboard the shoreboats, they stare back at
their adversaries, wide-eyed with shock and excitement, their hatred
mixed with a strange, inexplicable longing. There
is a moment's silence, a moment's utter stillness as the android
mannequins go limp, their programs ended, and then, from behind the
barrier, applause. From
where he stood, half hidden behind the bank of monitors on the roof
of the Inn, Ben Shepherd turned in the bulky VR harness, the faintest
hint of a smile on his lips, and gave a small bow of acknowledgment
to the four soldiers seated just beyond. It was the best take yet.
Those last few adjustments—that tiny change of emphasis and the
decision to focus on the single red-haired sailor—had made all
the difference. Beside
him, his sister, Meg, looked up from the replay monitors. "Well?"
he asked, "did we get it all?" She
nodded, but he could see that she was still unhappy. She wanted Tong
Ye to live. Wanted a happy ending, the lovers reunited. Whereas he... "Maybe
she can nurse him," she said quietly. He
shook his head. "No. We have to experience all that built-up
anger and resentment. To feel it in our blood and understand exactly
what it means—what all of this results in. If Tong Ye lived it
would take the edge off things.
We would have no sense of tragedy. As it is..." "As
it is, I feel angry. Denied something." He
stared at her a moment, then gave a single nod. "Good. We'll
build on that. Feed that tiny spark until it's a roaring flame. We'll
start tonight, after dark, while we're in the mood." She
watched him as he struggled out of the silvered harness. Ben had
filled out this last year; had gained weight to match his height,
shrugging off the last vestiges of childhood. Now he was a man,
sun-bronzed and tall, his movements easy, confident. Even so, he
still lacked something. Was still somehow less than his dead father.
But what was it? In what did that crucial difference lie? Ben
hung the exoskeleton on the rack, then turned back. There, stacked on
their sides in a long, reinforced metal frame, were his
notebooks—thirty huge, square-shaped, leather-bound volumes
that he called his "roughs." Embossed into the spines, as
in the center of each cover, was a single word in an ancient gothic
script, Heimlich, followed by a number. Unerringly, he reached out
for the volume numbered fourteen and lifted it from the rack, his
artificial hand coping effortlessly with the book's weight. They
had worked hard these past six weeks, taking advantage of the long
days, the perfect light. Most of the "internals"—the
sensory matrices that constituted the major part of Ben's Shell
experience— had been completed long before. These
"externals"—brief, carefully choreographed scenes
which owed much to the ancient cinematic art—were the final
stage, providing a backdrop to the rich, sensory data flow. When the
two were paired the work would be complete. That was, if Ben was
satisfied. It was
a big if. "Here,"
he said, setting the book down beside the storyboard he had been
working from and opening it up. "I reckon we can simplify
things." Meg
moved closer, leaning over him to see. The
open pages of the rough were covered in a jumble of brilliantly
colored lines and symbols, Ben's neat, tiny handwriting boxed-in in
places where he had made subtle changes to his scheme. She
smiled, realizing how familiar all of this had become. Until a
year back he had not let her share this, but now she was his
constant helper, there at his elbow at every stage of the work. She
studied the rough. Eighty-one lines crossed the page, each
representing one of the eighty-one input nodes in the brain and body
of the ultimate recipient of this artificial reality "experience." "The
experiencing viewpoint is predetermined," he said, tapping the
page. "We can't change that without restructuring the whole of
the internal for this section. But we can cut things to the nub when
it comes to the external. Have one man set the fires, not three.
Likewise, we can cut the number of guards. It'll save time setting
up. We'll only have the seven morphs to program, not twelve." She
nodded. "I agree. It'll make things tighter, more direct. And
why not make Tong Ye's friend our focus—the fire-setter?" Ben
looked up. "Yes. I like that. Maybe we can add something
earlier. A small moment between the two just to emphasize things." "And
the girl?" Ben
shook his head. "I know what you think, Meg, but what happens to
her has to happen. Without that. . ." He shrugged, staring away
across the twilit estuary, touching the black pearl that hung on a
golden chain about his neck, then looked back at her, his green eyes
dark, thoughtful. "Just wait, my love. You'll understand. I
promise you. You'll see why I did it like this. Why it had to
be like this." STILLNESS.
Silence. Moonlight on velvet blackness. And then the surface
breached. A head, its fine dark hair slicked back. The inverted image
of flame in a bright, black-centered eye. And gone. The surface dark,
still. Footsteps on stone cobbles. Booted feet in movement, patterns
of light and shadow on the folds of leather, gold and midnight black.
The flutter of naked flame in a metal brazier. Shadows dance,
revealing the whorled grain of ancient oak. Silence, then the creak
and slow groan of a heavy door opening. A sudden spill of light,
golden and warm. Laughter. A chapped and pudgy hand, the flesh pale,
blotchy, plain silver ring on the index finger, wiped against a
beer-stained apron. The scent of jasmine. Darkness. A head surfacing,
fish-mouth gasping for air. And gone. The slosh of water against
the stone steps of the quay. Booted feet turning. The brief
flash of lamplight on a musket stock. And laughter. Uneasy, guilty
laughter. The
camera eye draws back. The
landlord stands there a moment, hands on his ample hips, half in
shadow, watching the woman leave, her long skirts rustling,
whispering in the early morning silence. He turns, looking out across
the water toward the distant hills. Out in the center of the estuary
the junks rest silently, their mooring lamps reflected in the
darkness of the water. Downriver, the merchantman is quiet, the shape
of a guard silhouetted against a bulkhead lantern. He
yawns, stretches his arms. Behind him the brightness of the doorway
darkens with a second presence. The constable leans languidly against
the solid oak beam of the doorpost and points out toward the junks,
his words a low, indistinguishable murmur, heavy with insinuation.
The landlord laughs quietly and nods, then turns away, returning
inside, pulling the heavy door closed behind him. There is darkness,
the click of a latch being lowered, then silence. A moment later
footsteps sound on the cobbles. The moon is high. It is an hour
before the guard will be relieved. The
camera angle changes, giving a view of darkness. Slowly the dark
resolves itself. A young Han crouches on the smooth, worn stone of
the Pilgrims' Steps, his slender form concealed from the guard by the
stone lip of the quay. Behind him lies the still, black surface of
the water. For a moment he seems frozen, carved from the darkness,
then, as the footsteps recede, he draws the oilskin bag from about
his neck and unseals the pouch. Something small and bright gleams
briefly in the moonlight, then is gone inside the sodden cloth of his
shirt. The
camera draws slowly back, revealing the steps, the nearby inn, the
pacing guard. A patch of quartered light reveals an unshuttered
window in the narrow alleyway beside the inn. All is stillness, then,
to the left of the picture, a shadow slips over the stone lip of the
quay wall and melts into the darkness beyond. Farther along, the
guard has stopped and stands at the edge of the quay, staring out
across the water at the junks. The
remote tide drifts slowly in. There is the flicker of light on a
musket stock, a glimpse of wide, curious eyes, a smoothly shaven
cheek, and then it is past, skirting the wood-and-plaster frontage of
the inn. The
alleyway seems empty: a narrow length of blackness framing a
rectangle of yellow light. But then the darkness grows, sheds a form.
A head bobs into the light beneath the sill. There is the glimpse of
dark, sodden cloth, of slightly built shoulders and the sleek curve
of a back. The
camera eye moves inward, taking a line into the darkness, then turns,
looking past the crouching figure into the lamplit room. Six
pale, naked bodies lie on a trestle table. The constable, his back to
the window, quaffs deeply from an ale pot. Beyond him sits the
landlord, talking, one plump, pasty hand resting on the thigh of the
dead Tong Ye. It is
time. There
is a click, the brief flare of a tinder. Inside, the constable half
turns, disturbed by the noise. Then, from the quayside, comes a
shout. The
landlord starts up, spilling his beer. "What in the gods' names
is that?" "Fuck
knows! We'd best go see, neh?" And, setting down his mug, the
constable follows the landlord through the open door. The
room is empty now. From beneath the sill comes a gentle, crackling
hiss as the oil-soaked cloth ignites. And then the crash and tinkle
of breaking glass, the sudden flare of oil as the bottle shatters on
the stone flags inside the room. At once the legs of the trestle
table catch. Flames lick the frayed edge of grease-spattered
curtains, gnaw hungrily at the dry timber of the door frame. In a
moment the room is ablaze, the pale skin of the corpses gleaming
brightly in the garish, unnatural light. As the camera closes in, the
flesh of the nearest begins to sweat and bubble. The
camera moves back, clearing the blackening sill, then climbs the
outer wall, up into darkness. Here, in the upper rooms, more than
forty men are sleeping; half the crew of the merchantman, spending
their last night ashore. The
camera moves out, over the smoldering inn. Farther along the quay the
guard has turned, facing the innkeeper and the constable. "The
junks!" he cries. "The junks are leaving!" Out in
the center of the estuary the three Han vessels have doused their
mooring lights and are moving slowly toward the mouth of the
river. There is the noise of oars being pulled through the
water, the sound of singsong Han voices calling encouragement to the
rowers. For a
moment the three stand there, staring outward, then, as one, they
rum, conscious of the growing light at their backs, the sharp hiss
and pop and crackle of burning. The heat. The sudden stench . . . The
landlord, his mouth agape, takes a step toward the burgeoning light.
As he does, a figure dashes past him, black cloak flapping, a spill
of golden hair gleaming, flashing in the infernal light. "No!"
he cries. "For the gods' sakes, woman, don't! The bugger's dead.
. ." He
takes two faltering steps toward the heat, then stops. It is too
late. For an instant the black of her cloak is framed against the
brightness of the opening, then she is gone. Thick
smoke drifts across the water. The whole of the inn is on fire now,
flames leaping from the timbers of the roof, piercing the restful
dark above the town. There are screams—high-pitched, agonized
cries—and then nothing. Nothing but the furnace-roar of air and
flame, of cracking beams and the splintering of glass. In the
alleyway, a tall, silvered figure moves slowly through the haze, like
something glimpsed in dream, its smooth, high-domed head gleaming
like a mottled egg, its torso smooth, sexless, veined like polished
marble. And its face... its face is featureless save for two tiny
button eyes that gleam amid the swirl of smoke and light. At the
charred window it stops, leaning across the sill to stare through
layers of thick, choking smoke into the fire-blackened room, then
climbs inside, bare feet sizzling on the red-hot flags. A moment
later it returns, a limp, dark figure in its arms. At the
front of the inn a crowd has gathered. As the figure emerges from the
alley a great gasp goes up. Of surprise, and disbelief, and awe. It
is the crippled man. John Newcott's boy. The loner. They watch him
come on, stumbling now, close to collapse, his clothes smoldering,
the limp form of the woman cradled in his arms. As he
reaches the edge of the crowd, two men come forward, taking his
burden from him. The
camera eye moves closer. A man's lined and bearded face winces,
pained by what he sees. He looks up, tears in his eyes, meeting his
fellow's gaze, then shakes his head. The camera turns, looks
down into the ruined face of the woman. Slowly it moves inward, until
the charred and blistered surface of her flesh fills the screen. And
then darkness. ON THE
FAR SIDE of the estuary a lone figure crouched in the deep shadow
beneath the trees, staring across at the happenings on the
waterfront. For a moment he was still, concealed amid leaf and long
grass, then, with a strangely decisive movement, he started down the
steep slope, making his way between the trees to the water's edge. There
he paused, staring out again, his large, dark eyes filled with the
light of the distant fire. Then, with the faintest shudder, he
reached down, untying the rope that secured his boat, and stepped
into the hollowed trunk, pushing out from the bank with a quick,
practiced motion. For a
moment he did nothing, letting the boat glide out into the current,
his head turned, his eyes drawn to the distant blaze, a mixture of
fear and fascination making him crouch there like a frightened
animal, the short wooden paddle clutched defensively against his
chest; then, stirring himself, he dug the paddle into the flow and
turned the boat, steering a course parallel to the bank. This
changed things. Up ahead of him, out in the central darkness of the
river, the junks were leaving. What's more, the merchantman was
making no attempt to pursue them. It was still there, at anchor in
the offing, its load untouched. The
man grinned crookedly. His scarred fingers scratched at his neck,
then combed long, lank hair back from his face. Satisfied, hedug the
paddle deep into the flow, once and then again, switching from side
to side, hastening his strokes, knowing that it was urgent now. IT was
LATE. Ben stood there at the water's edge, looking out across the
bay, the satisfaction of a solid day's work like a physical presence
in his blood. He closed his eyes, relaxing. For a moment it was
perfect. For one brief yet timeless moment he lapsed out of himself,
melting into the eternal blackness of the night. Then, with a
tiny shudder, he returned to himself, conscious of something
lost. Of something denied him. He
turned, looking back at the low, familiar outline of the cottage,
embedded in the hillside. A light was on upstairs, in Meg's room.
From where he stood he could see her, moving about inside, brushing
out her dark long hair, then turning to study herself in the mirror.
He smiled, then let his gaze move upward, over the thatched roof of
the cottage, following the narrow road that climbed the hillside.
Beyond the line of cottages—dark now; sensed more than properly
seen—the land climbed steeply. At its summit, silhouetted
against the paleness beyond, was the old church of St. George's.
Beyond that, less than half a Zi distant, the City began again, a
huge wall of whiteness, vast and monumental. Ben shivered, then
turned full circle, aware suddenly of its presence, there on every
side of him, encircling and containing the valley—containing
him—like the walls of a giant box. Reducing
cottage, town and trees, roads, walls and human figures. Reducing all
to toys. Toys in a giant playbox. The
moon had sunk beneath the edge of the wall. For a moment his eyes
traced the silvered line where the whiteness of the wall met the
black of the sky, then he turned back, facing the bay. Out on
the river it was dark, the surface smooth, like a mirror; a huge
lens, reflecting the vastness of the star-filled night. What
was it like, that immensity? What did it feel like? Was it
just a simple nothingness, a lapsing out? Or was there something
beyond that brief moment he had experienced just now? Something more
to be had? He
turned from the water, climbing the hill, making his way across the
lower meadow, away from the cottage, toward the sapling oak that
marked his father's grave. Today
he had felt close to it. Had felt at moments almost as if he could
reach out and touch it. Standing there among the figures on the
waterfront, he had caught the briefest, most transient glimpse of it,
there in the raging fire's heart. And for a moment the unnameable
thing had been there, on his lips, almost articulate, like a scent.
But when he had opened his mouth to utter it, it had flown, ineffable
as ever, evading all attempts of his to bring it back. Ben
sat, the young tree at his back, looking out across the bay to the
river beyond. It had gone well today. For the first time in weeks his
inner doubts had been silenced, his imagination caught up in the play
of images. This was his tenth month working on the Shell, his two
hundred and ninety-seventh day spent struggling with the material,
and finally he felt close to capturing what he had first envisaged,
all those months back. He
smiled, remembering where this had begun, back there in those few
months before his father, Hal, had died. Hal had wanted to create
something for his wife—something she could remember him by. Ben
had proposed a "sense-diary"—a "within the skin"
kind of thing— but Hal had wanted more. "No.
She has to see me too. From the outside. She'll need that, Ben. It'll
comfort her." And so
he had broken with habit, switching from intense sensory
fugues—moments which captured the experience of what it felt
like to be Hal Shepherd—to colder, sense-distanced extemals,
using older, more conventional techniques. He had
expected to be bored by it, at most disappointed, yet from the first
it had been different, unexpectedly challenging. Exciting. In the
three months he had worked with his father on the Shell— months
in which he had seen Hal transformed, hollowed out by the cancer that
had been planted in him by Berdichev's assassin—he had learned
more about his craft than in the previous three years. He had
had to make compromises, of course. Had had to let go of his vision
of making it all realer-than-real. The cuts, for instance, between
the internals and the externals—those mind-jolting leaps of
perception he had termed the "discontinuity effect"—had,
until then, always been a stumbling block. Before then, he had always
argued that by drawing the viewer's attention to the artificiality of
the medium, one destroyed the power of the illusion. Forced by his
father to confront the problem, he had discovered otherwise; had
evolved all manner of ingenious and subtle ways of using that moment
to make the illusion stronger, more powerful than before. It had
surprised him. He had always thought that jolt—that moment when
one went outside one's body and turned, looking back;— destructive.
And so it was if one thought in pure terms. Yet if one cheated—if
one made the fiction work for you—if one embraced the
suprareal. . . He
laughed softly, remembering those days, recalling how his father
would watch him, fascinated, his eyes burningly alive in that wasted
face. His father-brother. Amos's seed. "Ben?" He let
the moment fade—let the intensity wash from him—then
turned, looking up at his sister's shadowed form. "I
thought you were tired?" She
sat beside him, leaning back, her arms out behind her. "1 was,"
she said quietly. "But then I saw you out here and I thought. .
." He
turned, looking at her. It was dark, her face in deep shadow, and yet
he had no need for light to see her. He had only to close his eyes
and he could see her, as a child, a girl, and now—these last
few years—a woman. "You're
tired, Ben. All this . . . it's too much. You need help. More than I
can give you. Technicians. Someone to help you with the setups.
Someone to take some of the basic programming work off your hands."
She paused, then, exasperated by his silence, added, "You think
you can do it all, Ben, but you can't! It's wearing you down. I see
it day by day." He
laughed, but as ever he was touched by her concern. "I'm all
right, Megs. Really I am." Ben
lifted his face to the night. From where he sat he could smell her;
could almost taste the salt-sweet scent of her skin, feel the
silk-smooth warmth of her beneath the soft cotton of her dress. He
turned, kneeling, facing her, for a moment content simply to be there
in the darkness with her. Then, gently, he pushed her down, onto her
back, one hand lifting her dress, his fingers tracing the smooth
length of her inner thigh until they met the soft warmth of her sex,
the small noise she made, the tiny shiver in her limbs, enflaming
him, blinding his senses, making him jerk like a puppet and push down
against her urgently, thrusting at her even as she struggled to
unfasten him. And
then darkness. Violent, searing darkness. IN THE
FAINT LIGHT of dawn he woke. The house was still, silent, and yet he
lay there stiffly, as if alerted, not knowing why. He
went out, into the corridor, standing in the deep shadow, looking
toward the far end of the long, low-ceilinged space. The door to his
mother's room was closed. To the right, beside it, light from the
casement window fell onto the wall, illuminating the portrait there. Slowly
he went toward it. Every
day he passed it. Every day he glanced at it, giving it no more
thought than he would a blade of grass or a leaf fallen on the path.
But now he stood, studying it intently, trying to see beyond its
familiar shapes and colors to the feelings that had formed it—that
had here been channeled into canvas, oil, and brush. He closed his
eyes, letting his fingertips explore the surface of the canvas, then
stood back, squinting at it, trying to see it fresh. It was
himself. Or, rather, Catherine's vision of him. He stared at the
dark, fragmented face, at the flecked and broken flesh and nodded
gently. She had seen the doubleness in him. Had seen and captured it
perfectly. For a moment he let his vision dissolve, admiring the
abstract play of red and green and black, deriving a rare aesthetic
thrill from the composition; then, focusing again, he saw it whole
once more. No. Even Meg didn't know him this well. Even Meg. Catherine
. . . They had been students together at Oxford. Friends and,
ultimately, lovers. He had not thought of her in some while; had shut
her out, choosing not to remember. But now it all flooded back. The
way she rested, like a cat, in her chair, her legs drawn up beneath
her. The way her hair fell, a cascade of golden red, each strand a
fine, clear filament of flame. The touch, the taste, the smell of
her. He closed his eyes, the memory perfect, overwhelming, then,
shivering, he turned, going down the narrow twist of stairs. Downstairs
the curtains were tightly drawn, the darkness intense. He made his
way blindly to the door and raised the latch, stepping out into the
freshness of the new day, his bare feet treading on the dew-wet
grass. Bird
calls sounded from the trees across the bay, and then silence. He
moved out across the close-cut lawn, then turned, looking up at the
window to his mother's room. The quartered space was dark, the
curtains drawn, like a lid over an eye. For a
moment he stood there, thoughtful. She had seemed much happier these
past few days, as if, at last, she had come to terms with Hal's
death. No more did he wake to hear her crying in the night. And at
breakfast yesterday morning he had been surprised to hear her singing
softly in the garden. He
turned suddenly. There had been a noise. A high, keening noise that
came from the darkness on the far side of the bay. It could have been
an animal, but it wasn't. No, for there was nothing in the Domain
that made a sound like that. He
shivered, a strange excitement filling him. It was the sound that had
woken him, he realized. A strange, unearthly noise. "Intruders
. . ." he said quietly, a faint smile lighting his features.
There were intruders in the valley. CHAPTER
THIRTEEN
Intruders HE
SAT at his father's desk, his great-great-grandfather Amos's
keyboard—a strange, semicircular design—resting in his
lap. The curtains were drawn, the door locked. Across from him,
pulled down in front of the crowded, untidy bookshelves, a huge
flatscreen showed a view of the lower valley; of a tree-covered
hillside, a wide expanse of sunlit water. Ben
had sent out the remotes an hour ago; a dozen tiny, insectile "eyes"
that even now scoured the valley from the creek in the far north to
the castle at the river's mouth, searching for signs of intrusion. On
one of two small, desk-mounted screens to Ben's left the remotes
appeared as pinpoint traces on a map of the Domain, following
preprogrammed search patterns. Ben sat there patiently, switching
from view to view, alert for anything unusual, but as yet there was
nothing. As if
he'd dreamed the sound. But he hadn't dreamed it. And that meant one
of two things. Either there'd been an unprecedented breach of
security, or someone high up in Security had let the intruders in. The
obvious course of action was to call Li Yuan and ask him to send
someone in. Karr, perhaps. But that was the last thing Ben wanted,
because it would be a shame if he didn't find a way to use this—to
harness it for his art. Behind
him the brass doorknob half turned, then rattled. "Ben?
Are you in there?" It was
his sister, Meg. He glanced at the timer. Six fourteen. She was up
early. Very early, considering they had been working so late. "I'm
working," he called out, knowing even as he said it that it
wouldn't satisfy her. "Make breakfast. I'll be down in a while." He
could sense her hesitation, could almost feel her curiosity through
the wooden door, then there was the creak of floorboards as she made
her way back down the passage. He sat
back, considering his options. If Meg knew what was going on she
would want to call in the troops. She would be frightened, concerned
for their safety. And there was no need. He could take care of this
himself. He
stared at the map a moment, then, looking back at the keyboard, began
reprogramming the remotes, one by one sending the tiny eyes shooting
southward, out over the town and its tiny harbor, out past Warfleet
Cove and the ancient castle, and on, toward the sea. Out
there, they'd be. Somewhere out there. At the Blackstone, maybe, or
Castle Ledge, or sheltering by the Mew Stone . . . No. He
dismissed the thought. There wasn't shelter for a family of mice out
there, let alone a human settlement. Not a single island or outcrop
from Start Point in the south to Exmouth in the north, only the
smooth, white walls of the City, towering over the land and dropping
sheer into the sea. There was the odd rock, of course, jutting a
dozen yards or so above the rough waves' surface, but there was no
chance they might have settled one of those. The first high tide
would have washed them away. Even so, he had to look, because the
intruders must have come from somewhere. He
looked up at the screen once more, watching as the remote skipped
above the surface of the wind-ruffled water. Slowly, like a shadow
looming at the back of things, the great Mewstone grew, its jagged
spine silhouetted sharply against the morning sky. For a
moment he was struck by the simple beauty of the scene; by the
interplay of light and dark; the exhilaration of pure movement. He
could use this, maybe. Tie it in somehow. Sunlight
winked, winked again, then flooded the screen with light. And then
darkness. Sudden, absolute darkness, as the remote went beneath the
wall of rock that rose forty yards above the water. He
slowed the eye, widening the aperture to let in as much light as
possible, getting the computer to enhance the image, but there was
nothing. Nothing but sea and rock. He
switched, impatient now, picking up one of the remotes he had sent
south past the Dancing Beggars. At once he saw it, there, some two or
three hundred yards off, slightly to the left. A boat. A strange,
incredible boat. The
deck was a broad, ungainly raft of railway sleepers lashed tightly
together, the weight of the hull—more a decorative border than
a true hull—making the craft dip dangerously low in the water. He
moved the remote closer, scanning its length. Broken TV sets and car
fenders, refrigerator doors, hubcaps and radios, their innards
gutted, had been tied together with electric cable. Computer
keyboards and anglepoise lamps, vacuum cleaner hoses, video machines
and coffee percolators, satellite receiver dishes, steering wheels
and electric toasters, all had been welded into a single mass that
formed a low wall about the raft. It was
like a collage, a great collage of once-familiar things. Things from
that great, sprawling, dynamic, intensely technological world that
had existed before the City. Ben
laughed softly, delighted, then, with a grunt of satisfaction, he
gave the eye full power, skimming it quickly past the raft and on. Out
here it was. Somewhere out here. But what? A man-made island,
perhaps? An ancient sailing vessel? Or was it something else? To his
right the City dominated the skyline, a smooth wall of whiteness
following the coast in a long, staggered zigzag, its unnatural cliffs
towering two li above the breaking waves. To his left the sunlit sea
was calm and empty. As the seconds passed, excitement dulled to
uncertainty. What if there were nothing but the raft? And
then he saw it, low and far to the left, its outline glinting in the
sunlight, a faint wisp of smoke going up into the brightness. He
slowed the remote, changing its direction, sending it out on a path
that would skirt the vessel to its south. Again
he felt his heartbeat quicken, his mouth grow dry with anticipation.
A raft, it was—a raft! But bigger, much bigger than the other.
So big, in fact, that he sat back with a small laugh of surprise. And
not just one, but several. Huge things, bigger than anything he'd
ever seen or imagined could exist. Slowly he lifted the
remote, climbing the sky, until he was hovering high above the
strange armada, looking down. There
were five of them: massive constructs, perfectly hexagonal, like
patches from a giant quilt, a li to each side, loosely
stitched together by rope bridges in a dozen places. Moored here and
there at the edges were a number of smaller rafts, like the one he
had seen in the estuary. Ben
stared, fascinated, at the nearest of the rafts, taking in its
details. Earth had been piled onto the raft, covering its surface to
some depth—tons, thousands of tons, of earth. Dark, fruitful
earth that was covered now in places by lush green grass, in others
by orderly rows of plants and vegetables. At the center was a tiny
settlement of thirty huts, clustered in a circle about a central
meetinghouse. Paths went out from the settlement; paths dotted here
and there with storehouses and water storage towers. He
tilted the remote, looking. All five of the rafts were organized on
the same ancient principle, the only distinguishing feature being the
size of the meetinghouse of the central raft. There,
he thought; that's where I'll get my answers. And, moving
his hand gently, carefully over the controls, he sent the remote
down, in a long, lazy spiral, toward the broad, low ceiling of the
meetinghouse. MEG
STOOD on the bottom lawn, looking out across the bay, angry with him.
Two hours had passed since he'd said he'd come and still there was no
sign of him. The
tide was in. Beneath her feet, at the bottom of the tiny runged
ladder that was set into the concrete bank, the tiny rowboat bobbed
gently. She had been tempted to take it out and damn him, but beneath
her anger was a burning curiosity. For almost a year now he had
included her, at every stage and in every decision, but now—for
no apparent reason—he had locked her out again: physically,
the door barred against her entry. She
looked about her at the wooded slopes, the cottages, and beyond them
all the Wall. Some days she felt so lonely here, so isolated, and yet
it never seemed to touch Ben. Never. It was as if he
enjoyed the empty streets, the lifeless simulacra that, apart
from the three of them and the guards, were the sole inhabitants of
the Domain. As if this were enough for him. But she had realized,
long ago now, that she was missing something. She
touched her top teeth with her tongue, then shook her head. It was as
if she couldn't even think it, for to think it would be close to
saying it, and saying it would seem a betrayal of Ben. And yet the
thought remained. She
wanted someone else to talk to. Someone less harsh, less forbidding
than her brother. Someone to share things with. A tiny
shudder passed through her at the thought. Someone to share things
with. She had been sharing things with Ben all her life. Had
learned to see the world through his eyes. But suddenly it wasn't
enough. Not that she was unhappy as things were. She enjoyed Ben's
company and loved to see him working. It was just. . . She
smiled, realizing that she had come to the edge once more, both
literally and metaphorically. Beneath her naked feet the ground fell
away sharply, the water ten feet below where she balanced. Another
step and she would have fallen. The
thought of it brought back to her the day he'd saved her life; the
day he had dived into the cold, incoming tide and dragged her
unconscious body from the waves, then had breathed the life back into
her. Without him, she realized, she was nothing. Even so, she wanted
something more than him. Something different. She
turned, walking back slowly to the cottage, enjoying the sun on her
back, the faint, cooling breeze on her neck and arms. Back in the
kitchen she cleared the table, scraping Ben's breakfast into the
garbage, then busied herself tidying the place up. She was preparing
the dinner, peeling the potatoes, singing softly to herself, when Ben
finally appeared. She
didn't hear him. The first she knew was when he put his arms about
her and turned her to face him. "I'm
sorry," he said, kissing her brow. "I wanted to try
something out, that's all. A new idea ..." She
smiled, relieved that he was back with her; yet at the same time she
knew he was withholding something from her. "And
the next scene? I thought we were going to start on it early." "Ah.
. ." He looked past her; out through the latticed window toward
the bay. "I thought we might leave that for a while. This new
thing . . ." He looked back at her, then kissed her nose. "Let's
go out, huh? On the river, maybe. It's been some while since we took
the boat out." "I'd
like that," she said, surprised how, as ever, he seemed to
anticipate her mood; to read her better than she read herself. "Good.
Then leave that. I'll help you later. Let's pack a picnic. We can go
to the old house." She
looked at him strangely. "Why there, Ben? It's an ugly place.
There's nothing there now. Even the foundations . . ." She
stopped, realizing that he wasn't listening; that he was staring past
her again, his mind elsewhere. "Why
there?" she asked again, softer this time. "Because,"
he answered quietly, then laughed. "Just because." BEN
STOOD in the brilliant sunlight, his feet on the dark and glassy
surface where the old house had once stood, looking about him. On
every side of the broad, dark circle nature had proliferated, but
here the green had gained no hold. He crouched, then brushed at the
surface, wiping away the layer of dirt and dust. It was over eight
years since he had lost his hand, here, on this spot. Beneath him the
fused rock was mirror smooth. He stared into the polished darkness,
trying to see his face, then turned, looking across at Meg. Meg
had laid the cloth down on the edge of the circle nearest the river,
beneath the overhanging branches. She moved between sunlight and deep
shade, the dark fall of her hair and the mottling of leaf shadow on
her arms reminding Ben of childhood tales of wood nymphs and dryads.
He stood there a while, watching her, then went across. She
looked up at him and smiled. "I was thinking of the last time we
came here . . . before the accident." "The
library," he said, anticipating her. "And the secret room
beyond." "Yes."
She looked about her, frowning, as if surprised not to find it all
there, surrounding them. "Where
does it go, Ben? Where does it all go?" He was
about to say, "Up here," and tap his skull, but
something in her manner stopped him. It was not a rhetorical
question. She wanted to know. "I
don't know," he answered. Into the darkness, maybe. She
was still looking at him, her brown eyes wide with puzzlement. "Is
it all just atoms, Ben? Atoms, endlessly combining and recombin-ing?
Is that all there is, when it comes down to it?" "Maybe."
But even as he said it he realized that he didn't really believe it.
There was something more. That same something he had felt only
last night, in the flames and afterward in the darkness beside the
water. Something just beyond his reach. He
shivered, then looked about him again, conscious of the old house,
there, firm in his memory. He had only to close his eyes and he was
back there, eight years ago in the spring—there in the room
with the books; there in Augustus's secret room, reading his journal,
and after, in the walled garden, standing beside Augustus's tomb. His
brother, dead these eighty-eight years. Part of old man Amos's
experiment. Amos's seed, his son, like all of them. "Oder
jener stirbt und ists." Meg
looked up at him, curious. "What was that?" "It's
a line from Rilke. From the Eighth Elegy. It was carved on Augustus's
gravestone. 'Or someone dies and is it.'" He nodded, finally
understanding. Augustus saw it too. He too was in search of that same
something—that terrible angel of beauty. Ben
sat, facing his sister, then reached across and took a bright green
apple from the pile. As he bit into it, he thought back over what he
had seen that morning, remembering the dark, wind-tanned faces of the
raft-dwellers. Savage, barbarian faces, the teeth black or missing in
their mouths, their long hair unkempt, their ragged furs and leathers
greasy and patched. Some had worn ancient metallic badges with faded
lettering, like the names of ancient tribes. He had
assessed the speed of the raft armada and estimated that it would be
at least eleven hours before they reached the headland at Combe
Point. That would bring them there roughly at sunset. Until then he
could relax, enjoy the day. He
finished the apple, core and all, then reached across to take
another. "Ben.
. ." Meg's
look of admonishment, so like his mother's, made him withdraw his
hand. For a moment he was silent, watching her, then he laughed. "IVe
decided to change things," he said. "I've been thinking
that maybe you were right. Maybe the Han should live." Her
face lit with delight. "Do you think so? Do you really think
so?" He
nodded, then leaned closer, conspiratorially, including her again.
"IVe been thinking through a whole new scenario. One in which
Tong Ye is kept prisoner in the inn after the fight. He's badly
injured, close to death, but the girl nurses him. And afterward. . ." SHADOWS
WERE lengthening in the valley as Ben sat down at his father's desk
once more, the curtains drawn, the door locked tight behind him. It
was dark in the room, but he had no need for light. Memory guided his
fingers swiftly across the keyboard. At once twin screens lifted
smoothly from the desktop to his left, glowing softly. He
called up the map of the Domain, homing in on the four grid squares
at the mouth of the estuary. As he'd thought, the raft armada had
anchored off the Dancing Beggars, just out of sight of the guard post
at Blackstone Point. He
turned, facing the big screen as he brought it alive. It brightened,
then settled to a dull reddish-brown, littered with small,
ill-defined patches of darkness. The camera eye of the remote was
looking directly into the portico of the meetinghouse, but in the
late evening shadow it was hard to make out what, if anything, was
happening. He
switched between the three remotes quickly, then returned to the
first image, widening the aperture and enhancing the image until the
dull orange haze to the right of center resolved itself into an
ancient iron brazier filled with coals, the long, dark-barred shape
behind it into the struts and spars of the meetinghouse. In the last
of the daylight a dozen elders stood about the darkened doorway,
talking animatedly. In the space before them, a large crowd had
gathered, waiting cross-legged on the dark, smooth earth. Ben
eased back, breathing shallowly, his eyes taking in everything. It was
perfect. Just perfect. His fingers moved over the surface of the
keyboard. There was the faintest click as the tape began to run. At
the top left corner of the screen the "record" trace began
to wink redly. The
sun was low now, to the west, above the hills of Combe Point. Moment
by moment the light decayed, until, at a signal from one of the
elders, torches were brought—ancient oil-soaked rags on poles—
and lit from the brazier. At once the scene took on a different
aspect. In the
unsteady flicker of the torchlight, the faces in the crowd seemed
suddenly strange, almost demonic. Turning the remote slowly, he
panned across the sea of faces, noting how drawn, how emaciated each
seemed. Thin lips parted like a wound, neck muscles tensed. An eye
moved shiftily, uncertainly in a sunken orb, the pupil flickering
darkly like an insect on a pale egg. Beyond it a jaw lowered,
exposing blackened canine teeth that snarled and then laughed. Ben
stared, fascinated. It was as if the half-light brought out the truth
of these faces. Reduced them to a cipher to be read. Again he was
conscious of how unlike the faces of the City-dwellers these faces
were. Inside, the face was a mask, a wall, built to conceal. Here, in
these savage, simple faces, all was offered at a glance. One had only
to learn the language. He was
panning back across the crowd when the picture swung about violently.
A moment later the screen went black. At once Ben switched to the
second remote, turning it to focus on the malfunctioning eye. For a
moment he searched fruitlessly, then he saw it, there in the hand of
one of the guards. The man had plucked it from the rafters of the hut
where Ben had set it; had crushed the soft-cased machine as one would
crush an insect. Now, however, he was staring at the thing in his
hand, realization dawning in his savage, bearded face that it was not
a living creature. Cursing
softly, Ben tapped out the auto-destruct sequence. As he watched, the
remote glowed hotly in the guard's hand. With a small cry, the man
dropped it, then went to tread on it. But even as he did, the remote
caught fire, scattering sparks like a falling cinder. For a
moment there was commotion. A small crowd formed about the tiny,
melted shape, their voices briefly raised, before one of the elders
shooed them back to their places. Ben
sat back, relieved. If, even for a moment, they suspected he was
watching them, it would all be undone. His whole plan depended
on the advantage his eyes gave him; on his superior information. It
was the only real edge he had. He
switched between the two remaining remotes, testing each in turn,
boosting the image, the sound, almost to distortion. It was too late
to reposition them. He would have to trust now that whatever happened
next took place within sight of them, which meant outside, in front
of the meetinghouse. He daren't risk a second incident. He had
barely finished when there was a faint humming in the air—a
sound which grew by the moment. It was an aircraft; a Security
cruiser by the sound of it. He tilted the first remote, searching the
darkness above Combe Point. He saw
it at once, there, coming in from the east, flying low, its headlamps
cutting a brilliant path across the dark waters. He cut to the now
standing crowd, to the elders gathered on the portico—seeing
the awe, the feverish anticipation in every face—then switched
back. The cruiser was coming in noisily, ostentatiously it seemed,
making enough of a display to be seen clearly from the guard post. Ben
glanced at the empty screen to his left, then keyed in his father's
access code. All was ready now. He had only to see who it was. To
find out why and what they wanted. Then he could act. The
cruiser slowed, passing over the raft armada once and then again, its
searchlights playing on the crowd below, figures peering down from
within the craft. Then, slowly, it descended. As it
came down, the crowd moved back, away from the sleek black shape that
settled in their midst. A gun turret swiveled about, then was still.
A hatch hissed open skyward, like a wing unfolding. A moment later,
six masked and suited guards came down the ramp, heavy automatic
weapons held close to their chests. Whoever
it was, he was taking no chances. He knew better than to trust this
rabble. His men fanned out, taking up defensive positions about the
ramp, eyeing the crowd warily, as if expecting an attack. A moment
later he appeared at the top of the ramp. As he paused, looking about
him, Ben focused in, until the man's head filled the screen, his
features so close that the image had almost begun to break up. Ben
clicked, taking a copy of the image, then clicked again, transferring
it. The computer search took less than a second. On the screen to
Ben's left, the boxed image from the large screen was relocated at
the top right of the picture, a second image—the official file
copy, updated only eleven weeks back—dominating the screen, the
name of the officer printed underneath in English and Mandarin. Major
Per Virtanen. Virtanen.
Ben nodded, understanding. The face had meant nothing to him, but
the name . . . Ben
returned his attention to the big screen, watching the man come down
the ramp, then turn, looking about him, conscious of the impression
he was making. He was a tall, silver-haired officer in his
mid-fifties, his features strong, decisive, his eyes a penetrating
blue. His magnificent azurite-blue dress uniform was cut elegantly,
the embroidered silk patch on the chest—that of a third-ranking
military officer—depicting a leopard snatching a bird from the
air. All in all, he seemed the very picture of refined strength—the
perfect representative of the T'ang's authority—but Ben knew
better. Eight
years ago, when Virtanen had first come before the Appointments Board
to be considered for the post of Major, only one man had opposed his
promotion, Ben's father, Hal. In normal circumstances, Virtanen would
have been appointed, for there was no need for the Board's decision
to be unanimous. But Hal Shepherd had gone directly to Li Shai Tung,
the present T'ang's father, and had the appointment nullified. Ben
remembered it vividly. Remembered how angry his father had grown when
telling his mother of it. How he had stood there in the kitchen, his
fists clenched, his dark eyes blazing. It was
not unheard of for officers to "buy" their appointments—
indeed, it was more the rule than the exception—nor was the use
of family connection really frowned upon. No. What made Virtanen's
case exceptional was his use of Triad connections, the illicit drug
money, to buy influence. That and the suspected "murder" of
a rival for the post, hacked to pieces in his sedan by a tong
assassination squad. Nothing could be proved, of course, but the
circumstantial evidence against Virtanen was considerable. In the
words of the old Han saying, Virtanen was a toad masquerading as a
prince. A man unsuited for the task of upholding the T'ang's law. Accepting
Hal's advice, Li Shai Tung had upheld the objection and refused the
appointment, giving no reason. For Virtanen, confident of his
promotion, it had been a severe loss of face—not to speak of
the expense—and it was rumored that he had raged for days,
cursing Hal Shepherd to anyone who'd listen. And
now, eight years on, Virtanen had finally been appointed Major.
Eleven weeks ago, to be precise, in the wake of Li Yuan's deal with
the Triad boss, Fat Wong. Ben
scrolled the file quickly, scanning Virtanen's orders for the past
eleven weeks. Under the guise of restructuring his command, he had
removed all of those officers familiar with the running of the Domain
and replaced them with his own men, leaving the foot soldiers—the
actual guards who served in the Domain—until the very last. At
the same time he had had all Security reports for the Western
Isle—for what was once called Great Britain—routed
through his office. Ben
let his breath out slowly, watching the elders come on, their heads
bowed, their eyes lowered before the great man. Everything
made sense. All but one thing. Were Virtanen successful then there
was sure to be an inquiry; an in-depth investigation under Li Yuan's
direct control. And, as things stood, the finger would point directly
at Virtanen. And
that didn't make sense. A man like Virtanen, used to dealing with
snakes—to making deals and covering his ass—had to have
some kind of get-out. Ben
sat back, pondering the problem; considering what he would do
in Virtanen's place. The man looked so confident, so totally at ease.
He had to have a plan. He wasn't the kind to sacrifice himself simply
for revenge. No, not after waiting so patiently to bring it about. He
had had eight years now to brood on the question, so what had he come
up with? What devious little scheme was he hatching? Ben
waited. One moment there was nothing, the next. . . Of
course, he thought, his eyes widening as, up on the screen, the
elders knelt before Virtanen. Two of
the guards came across, moving between Virtanen and the elders, their
guns raised threateningly. There was a moment's angry murmuring and
then the elders backed off. As they did so there was a movement
behind them, in the doorway of the meetinghouse. A
man emerged, half hidden in the shadows; a tall man, maybe a
full foot taller than Virtanen and broad at the shoulders. He wore
dark silks and his hair was braided. In his hand was a slender silver
rod. Ben
smiled, recognizing what it was. It was a piston. A piston from an
old combustion engine. As the
man stepped down, a chant began from among the crowd. A low, almost
bestial sound that filled the flickering darkness. "Tewl.
. . Tewl. . . Tewl. . ." Ben
switched between the remotes, setting one to track Virtanen's face,
the other to focus on the newcomer. Halving the screen, he watched as
the two approached each other. Finally they stood there, face to
face, no more than an arm's length between them. The
chant died. Seen
from close up, Tewl was an ugly bastard. His broken nose seemed
overlong, while his mouth, paralyzed on the left side, seemed to form
a perpetually crooked smile. His eyes, however, were hard, and the
look he gave Virtanen was like the cold, calculating gaze of a deep
ocean predator. Virtanen,
clearly unused to such fierceness, looked aside momentarily, then
forced himself to meet that unflinching stare. "Tewl.
. ." The
crooked smile widened, and then Tewl moved closer, embracing
Virtanen. "You
came," Tewl said, moving back. And Ben, watching from the
darkness miles away, mimicked the sound, the shape that twisted mouth
made. Virtanen's
smile was forced. "Your people are ready, Tewl? They know what
they have to do?" Tewl
looked past Virtanen at the crowd and nodded. "We know what we
have to do. But you? You will keep your promise to us? There will be
no more trouble from your forces?" Virtanen
lifted his chin slightly, clearly put out. "You keep your part
of the bargain, Tewl, and I give my word. No one will trouble you.
The valley will be yours." Ben
nodded. Yes, and as soon as Tewl and his people had taken the Domain,
Virtanen would send in his troops. Too late to save the
Shepherds, of course, but the intruders would be punished.
Conveniently eradicated, down to the last man, woman, and child. There
would be "suicides" among the ranks of those who had served
in the Domain; a serious fire at the Central Records Office. Crucial
pieces of information would go missing. And a culprit from among the
staff of Security would be found, his records conveniently doctored.
And he too would be found to have swallowed cyanide rather than face
questioning. And in
the end, the T'ang's inquiry would show that Virtanen had acted
swiftly and correctly. That he had done all he could to try to save
the Shepherds. A slight taint of suspicion would remain, but not
enough to spur the T'ang to action. At least, not now when Virtanen's
connections with the Triads were so important. Ben
studied the man. There were small signs of tension and unease, but no
more than would be natural in such a situation. No. You might take
Virtanen at face value. If you knew no better, you might even believe
that his word was worth something. If you
knew no better. Leaving
the first remote focused on Virtanen, he switched to the second,
turning it slowly, panning across the crowd, the guards, the elders.
He was about to pan back when a movement on the far side of the
clearing—in the doorway of one of the surrounding huts—caught
his attention. He zoomed in. The
girl was standing just inside the door, one pale and slender hand
resting on the upright. For a moment he wasn't sure whether it had
been a trick of the light, but then, as she emerged again, he saw
that he had not been mistaken. That same flame-red hair. Those same
green, catlike eyes. He
caught his breath, astonished by the likeness. She was thinner and a
good few inches shorter; even so, she could easily have been her
sister. "Catherine
. . ." he whispered, staring into her face as if he stood
directly before her. It was
as if she was staring past him. Looking out past his shoulder at what
was happening on the far side of the clearing. Then, as if dismissing
it from her mind, she turned away. For a
moment Ben stared at the empty screen, then he leaned forward,
activating the remote, lifting it high above the clearing, then
settled it, there on the upright of the doorframe where her hand had
rested only moments before. Across
the clearing the two men were still talking. As the tiny, insectlike
remote crawled slowly into the dark interior of the hut, Ben tapped
into the audio output from the other eye. Virtanen's
voice seemed calm, but there was a tightly restrained anger
underlying the words. "You
shouldn't have done it, Tewl. Sending in the raft ... It could have
been dangerous. If you'd been seen . . ." "I
had to see," Tewl answered gruffly. "I had to be sure.
Besides, my men were careful." "Maybe
so, but you must do what I say in future. One wrong move and all is
undone. You understand me, Tewl?" Inside,
the darkness was intense. Ben boosted the image. Slowly the shadows
took on a grainy, reddish form. The girl was in the far comer, seated
on a low camp bed, her hand up to her neck. As he watched, she shook
out her hair and, stretching her head forward, began to comb it
through. Silence.
As the comb draws through the flamelike hair, Ben sits there in his
father's study, watching, the past alive, vividly alive—in him. And
then darkness. A violent, searing darkness. the
BANGING woke him. Ben turned his head, then winced, the pain intense
just above his left ear. Slowly he raised himself, letting his eyes
grow accustomed to the darkness. The chair lay close by, the keyboard
dangling from its arm. He pulled himself up, conscious of the tart
smell of sickness in the room, the hiss of static from the neglected
screens. Like
Time, bleeding from the darkness. It was
late. After eleven. He had been out for over two hours this time. It
was over two weeks since the last fit, and then he had blacked out
for two, three minutes at most. But this had been quite different. Ben
shivered, then put his fingers gently to the wound. The gash was
deep, almost an inch long, but there seemed to be no real damage. The
blood had clotted well. It felt more tender now than painful. The
banging came again. "Ben! Open up! Please!" "Coming.
. ." He
straightened up the chair and set the keyboard down on the desktop,
then cleared the screens. He had no idea whether the remotes were
still functioning, or whether anything had been recorded after his
fall, but that would have to wait. First he had to see to Meg. He
unlocked the door and tugged it open. Meg was standing there, her
face anxious. "Ben!
It's Mother. I don't know . . ." She stopped, seeing the blood
matted in his hair. "God Almighty, Ben . . . what happened?" "I
had a fall," he said, coming out into the hallway and pulling
the door closed behind him. "I blacked out a while, that's all.
Now what's all this about Mother?" "I
can't find her, Ben. IVe looked everywhere. IVe even been down to the
meadows and called, but there's no sign of her. And that's not like
her, Ben, is it? I mean, she always says where she's going." "Okay
. . ." He put his arms about her, drawing her close, reassuring
her by his touch. "Okay. Now tell me when you last saw her. She
was there when we got back from the old house, wasn't she?" Meg
looked up at him. "Yes. In the rose garden." "Right.
And that was shortly after seven. So she can't have gone far, can
she? You say you've looked everywhere?" "Three
times at least. I even took a torch down to the bay." "Okay."
He kneaded her shoulders. "There's probably a perfectly good
explanation. Look, why don't you go down to the kitchen and make us
some supper while I check the house again. And don't worry, Meg.
It'll be all right." She
nodded and turned away, happy to have something to occupy her mind,
but Ben, watching her go, felt a tightness at the pit of his stomach.
What if he was wrong about Virtanen? What if he'd miscalculated and
the man had taken her? What if he had her now? He
began, searching the upper rooms. In his mother's room he stood there
a long time, staring into her wardrobe, trying to work out
what it was that was missing. Her robe. The red silk
ankle-length bathrobe that she used to wear before his father's
death. Everything else was there. All of her dresses, every one of
her coats and long jumpers. He
turned, looking about him at the smooth white surface of the quilt,
the jars of creams and perfume bottles on the dressing table,
surprised by how tidy, how orderly the room was. If Virtanen had
taken her there'd be some sign of a struggle, surely? Unless he'd
come upon her in the meadow. But then, why would she be wearing her
bathrobe in the meadow? He
went down. Down, past the old dresser in the hallway, and left,
ducking under the low lintel and into the lounge where he and his
father had entertained Li Shai Tung on that spring evening eight
years past. On the
far side of the long oak table was a small, black-painted door, set
back into the whitewashed wall. Ben went across and put his ear to
it, then gave it a gentle push. It
swung back noiselessly, revealing a flight of steps, leading down. It
ought to have been locked. In fact, it had been locked. He had locked
it himself, only yesterday. He
turned, listening, hearing Meg at work in the kitchen, then turned
back. He went down five steps, then reached back to pull the door
closed behind him. Ahead was the faintest glow of light, like a mist
over the blackness. At the
foot of the steps he stopped, his pulse racing. He had known. Yes,
even as he had been entertaining those absurd notions about Virtanen
kidnapping her, somehow he had known she would be here. He
looked about him at the shadowy rows of standing shelves that filled
the cellar workplace; at the crowded racks and gaunt machinery that
stood untended on every side. She
was here. Her scent was in the air. He walked on slowly, silently,
moving between the shelves toward the source of light at the far end
of the cellar. Turning the comer, he stopped, taking in the scene.
Ten feet away, the morph was slumped in its metal frame, just as Ben
had left it yesterday. But about its shoulders now Was draped a red
silk bathrobe. Ben
moved on, slower now, more reluctantly, knowing now what he would
find; knowing, even before his eyes confirmed it, why his mother had
been so happy these past few days. Why she no longer cried in the
night. He
stopped, letting his fingers move absently across the smoothly
lacquered surface of the Shell. He had made changes to it since his
father's time, but it still looked like a giant scarab beetle, its
dark, midnight-blue lid not quite opaque. Peering close, he could
just make out her form, there inside the coffinlike interior; could
see from the rise and fall of her breasts as much as from the flicker
of the control panel just below the catch, that she was living out
the dream. He
looked down at the panel. She was more than halfway through the
three-hour sequence. It would be another hour, maybe more, before she
was back with them again. Ben
turned and went across to his desk. Seated there, he took a notepad
from the drawer and tore two sheets from it. The first note was to
his mother. "I'm sorry," it read. "I didn't realize. I
hope it brings you comfort, Love, Ben." He
folded it and set it aside, then began the second. On one side of the
paper he wrote "Ben &. Meg" in a small, neat hand that
was unlike his own. On the other side he quickly penned a note from
his mother, telling them that she had gone to see an old friend and
that she would be back after midnight. He signed it with a flourish,
then folded it lengthwise, the way his mother always folded her notes
to them. Satisfied,
he got up and, setting the fake note in his pocket, he took the other
across and slipped it into the pocket of the bathrobe, ensuring it
would be seen. He had
never told his mother about the Shell he and his father had made for
her. In the wake of Hal's death he had thought it best to keep it
from her, lest it upset her even more. But he had been wrong. Just
looking at her through the darkness of the glass, he could see how
happy she looked, how at peace. Ben
stood there, staring at the Shell, understanding, perhaps for the
first time, just how powerful this was. The Shell could heal. Could
turn misery to song and make whole the wound of death. It was a
powerful medium—the most powerful the world had ever seen—and
it had been trusted to him to make it work. He
touched his tongue to his top teeth, the way his sister Meg did,
then, with a tiny laugh, he went back up, pulling the door to behind
him. As he came out into the dining room, he called out to her. "Meg!
Meg! IVe solved the mystery!" She
came to the kitchen door, her face half smiling, half anxious, then
took the note from him. "Thank
God!" she said, looking back at him. "I knew it had to be
something like that. Even so, it's odd, don't you think? I mean, it's
not her way to go off without telling us." "Maybe
she's got herself a lover," Ben said mischievously. "A
dark-eyed soldier with a waxed mustache." Meg
looked at him, surprised. "Ben!" He
laughed. "No. I'm serious, Megs. I mean, haven't you noticed how
she's been these last few days? Haven't you heard her singing in the
garden?" Meg
went silent for a moment, her eyes thoughtful. "Yes, but. . ." Ben
reached up and lifted her down the four steps, twirling her about.
"Besides, while she's away, I could make love to you. Upstairs.
In her bed. She'd never know. She'd never ever know." CHAPTER
FOURTEEN
The
Hole in the Dark HE
ROSE EARLY and went to his father's room to survey the tapes. The
meeting was interesting, but it was what had happened after Virtanen
had left that had Ben on the edge of his seat. The
elders, silent throughout the exchange between Tewl and the Major,
had gathered about the big chieftain, gesticulating wildly, their
faces filled with a fierce passion. But it was not their animation
that fascinated Ben, so much as the language they used; a crude,
alien tongue that he had never heard before. For a while he had sat
there, letting the strange music play in his head, sending ripples
down his spine. Then, calling up Amos's Universal Lexicon, he
requested an aural trace on four words that had cropped up often
during their exchanges: Omma, Gwayteea, Nans, and Golaw. At
once a list of close matches in more than fifty languages appeared
beneath each word, the spellings as varied as the meanings given, but
in only eight instances did all four appear within a single language
set. He cleared all but those, then fed in a fifth: the word the
crowd had chanted; the word engraved on the pendant that hung about
the chieftain's neck. Tewl
Ben smiled. Of course . . . For
the next hour he worked patiently through the file, learning the
basics of the language, giving himself enough of a vocabulary to go
back to the tape again and listen, this time with an ear
attuned to what the elders were saying. Today.
They wanted to attack today. This very afternoon. To go from
here—ammo,—into the valley—nans—while
it was still bright—golotv. But there were those who wanted to
wait—gwaytya— until it was dark—tewl. And
Tewl, the dark man himself, what did he want? Ben
watched the chieftain consider what had been said—watched him a
second time, understanding this time why his eyes narrowed, why his
frown intensified. And then that tiny, hesitant nod of the head. They
would go in early, before Virtanen's men, and consolidate their
position, because Tewl, like many there, did not trust the Major. And
because they were warriors, unbowed beneath the sky; ashamed to skulk
like rats beneath the cover of darkness. Meg
touched his arm, drawing him back from his reverie. "And the
Shell, Ben? Are we going to work on it today or not?" He
looked up at her, the image of the tall, dark-robed chieftain still
vivid before his eyes, then nodded. "Yes,"
he said, a smile forming on his lips. "But there are a few
things I have to do first. Some preparations." "Preparations?"
she said, eyeing him warily. "Trust
me," he said, his smile suddenly like the Cheshire Cat's, dark
and enigmatic. "Just trust me." MEG
SAT on the turn of the stairs, eating an apple while she slowly
turned the pages of the book. Beside her, the tiny casement window
was open, the late morning sunlight filtering down through the leaded
squares, misting the dark fall of her hair with gold. It was a warm,
still day, the air filled with birdsong and the low hum of insects,
while from below came the sound of Ben, moving from room to room. It was
a perfect day. A day for thoughtless dreaming. But in that instant
Meg was unaware of it. For a moment she was there, outside herself,
the weather cold and bleak, the hillside bare, exposed to the
harshness of the elements. For a moment she saw the faces of the
villagers clearly, etched starkly in the fierce light of the great
bonfire, like wooden masks, moving from dark to light, from light to
dark. Catching
her breath, she looked up, one hand resting briefly in her tightly
braided hair, then called down to him. "Ben?" There
were footsteps, and then his face appeared at the foot of the stairs.
"What is it?" "This
book IVe found. It's wonderful. Listen." She
looked down at the page, then began to read, tracing the words with a
finger. "Not
a plow had ever disturbed a grain of that stubborn soil. In the
heath's barrenness to the farmer lay its fertility to the historian.
There had been no obliteration, because there had been no tending." His
voice cut in, low but resonant. "It
seemed as if the bonfire-makers were standing in some radiant upper
story of the world, detached from and independent of the dark
stretches below. The heath down there was now a vast abyss, and no
longer a continuation of what they stood on; for their eyes, adapted
to the blaze, could see nothing of the deep beyond its influence." She
stared at him, then nodded. "You know it, then." "And
the rest," he said, smiling up at her. "But it does give me
an idea. Maybe we could use Hardy's scene. Rework it and use it as a
kind of counterpoint to the burning of the inn." She
looked down. Something was going on. The very vagueness of his
suggestion told her as much. Why else would he want to distract her? "The
preparations ... are they done?" He
laughed. "No. Not all of them." "So
what were they for? What's going on?" She
saw his lips begin to form the shape of the word; saw him hesitate,
then look away, and knew she had been right. Nothing, he'd been about
to say, but, faced by her, he had been unable to lie to her. She
looked down, smiling. "It's
like this . . ." he began. Yet even as he said it, the air was
rent by the sound of an explosion; a low, reverberating noise that
shook the house and rattled the casement window. She
stood, dropping the book. "What in God's name . . . ?" But
Ben was smiling, grinning almost, with delight. "It's begun,"
he said, turning away from her. "It's finally begun." BEN
STOOD in the sunlit meadow, the glasses to his eyes. To the far left,
where the valley tapered to a point, a plume of smoke rose slowly,
dark against the pearled whiteness of the City's walls. "What
is it?" Meg asked, leaning gently against his back. "The
seal," he answered. "TheyVe blown the seal." "Who?" Ben
shook his head, then laughed. "I'm not sure. But I'm going to
find out." She
watched him turn and walk back toward the house, knowing he was
holding something back. But why? She looked back at the slowly
climbing coil of smoke, frowning at it, then, knowing she had no
choice, she turned back, running up the slope after him. Ben
was upstairs in their father's old room, staring down at the
flatscreen, his fingers flying across the console. She
stood there a moment, looking across at him, conscious of a strange,
almost feverish excitement in the way he crouched there over the
keyboard, then went across. "What's happening, Ben? Come on, you
have to tell me!" He
turned. "It's happened, Megs. After all these years, it's
finally happened. Someone's come for us." "Come
. . . What do you mean, come?" "WeVe
been invaded, Megs, that's what. The communication lines to the guard
houses are dead, the seal's been blown, and there are intruders at
the river's mouth." She
stared at him, appalled. "Then you must let the General know. He
must get someone here, at once." "No."
He said it clearly, firmly, then turned back to the screen, beginning
to tap out a new sequence on the keys. "I want to deal with this
myself." She
let out a tiny moan. "For God's sake, Ben, what do you mean?
There are intruders in the valley. They have to be dealt with. We
can't do that. We don't know how!" "1
didn't say 'we.' I want you to lock yourself in the cellar." "You
want. . ." She stopped suddenly, another thought dislodging
what she'd been about to say. "Where's Mother, Ben? Where
in God's name is she?" "IVe
sent her away," he said, concentrating on the message he was
typing onto the screen. "I asked her to get me something from
the City. She left two hours back. So you don't have to worry . . ." "Don't
have to worry?" She gave a high-pitched, nervous laugh,
horrified by what he was saying. "Don't you understand what's
happening, Ben? We're being attacked! The Domain is being invaded!" "I
know," he said calmly. "And I promise I'll be careful. But
you needn't worry. I'll deal with it." She
shuddered, looking at him as if she didn't recognize him, then shook
her head, for the first time in her life surprised, genuinely
surprised at him. "So what are you going to do?" He
turned slightly, tapping the SEND button as he did so. "I'm
going to fight them, Meg. That's what I'm going to do." "Fight
them? How?" He
looked away, a gleam of excitement in his eyes. "Something like
this doesn't happen every day. IVe got to take advantage of it." She
stared at him, sudden understanding dawning on her. So that was it.
He was going to film it all. To make a great adventure of it. She
shook her head. "No, Ben. You can't." "No?"
He cleared the screen, then turned back to her, his eyes piercing her
with their intensity. "Just watch me." For a
moment she thought of fighting him, of going behind his back on this
and letting the General know, but standing there, looking back at
him, she knew she wouldn't. "Okay,"
she said quietly. "Fight them, if you must. But you have to let
me help you, Ben. You have to." "Good,"
he said, smiling, squeezing her arm gently, as if that was what he
had wanted all along. "Then come quickly now. WeVe a lot to do." THEY
LAY in the long grass, a hundred ch'i from the opening in the
wall, the ground firm beneath them. Where the seal had been was now a
perfect circle of darkness, five times a man's height, the
pearl-white wall surrounding it smoke-blackened and misted. The seal
itself was broken. It lay on
the grass beneath the great hole, its perfect circularity shattered
like a broken mirror, long shards of pure white ice fanned out upon
the green. It was
still and warm. From the woods on the far side of the creek a
blackbird called, its piping song echoing out across the open space
between the walls. But from the hole itself there came no sound, no
sign of movement. The
field glasses lay on the earth beside Ben's elbow. For the past few
minutes he had been silent, listening to the receiver he had cupped
against his right ear. Meg
watched him a moment, then leaned closer, whispering. "What are
they doing, Ben? Why aren't they coming out?" "It's
too bright for them," he whispered. "Tewl wants them to
come out, but they won't. It hurts their eyes, so they're going to
wait until it's dark." She
stared at him, bewildered. "Who, Ben? Who are they?" "The
Clay," he said, pronouncing the word as if it had some
mysterious significance. "The men from the Clay." She
looked down. The Clay! Wild savages they were. Vicious, ugly little
brutes. And they were coming here! "How
do you know?" He
handed the small black cup of the receiver to her. She stared at it,
reluctant to place it to her ear, hearing the tiny, growling voice
that buzzed like an insect in the dark interior. "TheyVe
been talking," Ben said quietly. "Communicating back and
forth. Tewl. . . he's the chief of the raft people... he wants them
to attack at once. But they're refusing. And without them he won't
commit his own forces. Which is good. It gives us time. Another
twelve hours. It ought to be enough." "Sure,
but what's happening, Ben? I mean, why don't they just come in
anyway? If there's only us . . ." He
smiled. "They're not interested in us. We're only small fry. No.
They want to take the town." "The
town?" She almost laughed. "But there's nothing in the
town." "You
know that. And I know that. But they don't. Don't you understand,
Meg? They think it's all real." Real.
She shivered. Never had anything seemed so unreal as at that
moment. "Meg
. . ." He nudged her, pointing toward the seal, then handed
her the glasses. "Look!" She
looked. Two of the creatures could be seen now, leaning across the
lip of the seal, their dark, misshapen forms like something glimpsed
in a nightmare. She shuddered and handed the glasses back to Ben. "So
what are we going to do? How are we going to fight them?" Ben
lifted the glasses to his eyes, focusing on the naked figures that
crouched there, shading their eyes, peering reluctantly into the
brightness of the valley. Compared to the men from the raft, these
were smaller and more wiry, their bodies flecked with scars, their
eyes large and bulging in their bony heads. He had seen their like
before, fattened up and dressed in the fine silks of the Above, but
never like this; never in their natural state. Even
so, it was not that that excited him, looking at them. It was
something else. Ben shivered, then nodded to himself, knowing that it
was true what had been said. Sealed into the darkness, the Clay had
reverted, its inhabitants regressed ten, twenty thousand years, to a
time before cities and books. In these Clay-men there was no
refinement, no culture, unless pure instinct was the ultimate
refinement. They
were like animals. Thinking animals. Or like some strange genetic
throwback. Ben grinned, the old words coming to his lips. Man .
. . who trusted God was love indeed
And love Creation's final law— Tho'
Nature, red in tooth and claw With ravine, shrieked against his
creed. "What
is that?" Meg asked, pulling him down, afraid he would be seen. "Tennyson.
Though what the old bugger would have made of this. . ." His
voice trailed off. "Look. They're going back inside. Good. For a
moment I thought Tewl might have persuaded them, but they're going to
sit it out after all." He
turned his head, smiling at her, then began to get up. "Come
on, then, Megs. There's no time to lose. Twelve hours weVe
got. Twelve hours to do it all!" THE
GRASS had grown tall before the old barn. Huge swaths of nettle and
wildflowers blocked the entrance, forming a barrier fifteen feet wide
in front of it. Ben threw the sack down and knelt, pulling out the
ancient scythe and testing its edge on a nearby blade of grass. Then,
stripping to the waist, he set to work. Watching
him, Meg was reminded strongly of her father. How often she had
watched him standing there, just so, his body moving effortlessly
from the hips, like one of Adam's sons in the early morning of the
world. She
studied him, seeing how he moved, like some mindless, perfect
automaton. Saw the green fall before the silver, and frowned. He
turned, throwing the scythe down, a broad path cleared in front of
the big double doors. "I
don't understand," she said, looking past him at the dilapidated
old building. "If weVe only got twelve hours . . ." "Illusions,"
he said, meeting her eyes. "Surely you of all people should know
how fond old Amos was of illusions. This. . ." he turned,
indicating the barn, "is just another of them. Come . . ." Ben
went up on tiptoe, placing his eye against a dark whorled knot in one
of the wooden planks, as if trying to see inside. There was the
faintest sound, like the soughing of the wind through the grass, and
then he stepped back, lifting the rusted latch and easing one of the
huge doors back. Inside
was brightness, cleanliness. She stepped past Ben, wide-eyed with
astonishment. It was a storehouse, a huge storehouse, packed with all
manner of things. Six broad shelves lined the wall opposite, while at
the far end, to her left, a number of large machines squatted on the
white-tiled floor. She
went across, the smell of machine oil and antiseptic strong in that
big, high-ceilinged room. Under the glare of the overhead lights she
pulled one of the plain white trays from the second shelf. Inside,
sealed in see-through plastic and neatly labeled, were a dozen mortar
bombs. She glanced at one of the labels, noting the familiar oak tree
logo and the date, then looked closer, surprised to find Ben's
handwriting on the label. Ben's?
No. She noted the initials—"A.S."—and
understood. Amos. Great-great-great-grandfather Amos. Quickly
she looked, going from tray to tray. Rope ladders, absailing
harnesses and power-packs, land mines, mortars and ammunition,
handguns and rifles, rocket launchers, flash bombs and hunting
knives, decontamination suits, bulletproof vests and gas masks. And
more. Much, much more. The supplies of war, all of it neatly parceled
in see-through plastic with Amos's neat handwriting on the label. She
turned. Ben was standing by the door, looking through a hard-covered
file marked "Manifold." "What
is this, Ben?" He
hung the Manifold back on the peg by the door, then looked across at
her. "This? This is the intestines of the beast." He
walked across, his boots clicking on the dust-free tiles, and pulled
down two sleds from where they hung on the end wall, bringing them
back across. "Here,"
he said, handing her the smaller of the two. "1 want a rocket
launcher, a dozen shells, two handguns, one rifle with
ammunition—better make it two hundred rounds—two
lightweight gas masks, a dozen flash bombs, and two of those vests." She
stared at him in disbelief. "What are we doing, Ben? What in
Christ's name are we doing?" "We're
being Shepherds, Meg, that's all. Making preparations. Now come on.
You said you'd help." She
watched as he drew the big sled across and began to load it, pulling
down things from the shelves as if he knew where everything was. "YouVe
been in here before, haven't you?" "No." "Then
how did you know about all this?" He
reached up and took a long, dark package from the shelf, placing it
in the sled, then looked back at her. "This place has defenses
no one knows about but us. We Shepherds have been preparing for this
for near on two hundred years now." It was
not the words so much as how he said them. That "us" seemed
to exclude her. Seemed somehow masculine. "We Shepherds . .
." She
turned away from him, facing the shelves once more, doing as he'd
asked, filling the sled with guns and bombs and bullets, her mind
strangely detached from what she was doing. She had read the passages
in Amos's journal: had read about his preparations for the Great
Third War he believed was coming, but never for a moment had she
thought all this existed. The
intestines of the beast. . . She
shuddered, then looked down again, checking the handwritten label,
ensuring she had the right ammunition for the rifle. THE
CUT TURF was laid neatly on its back, beside the dark square of
earth. Nearby, forming a staggered line across the lower garden, a
further five patches showed black against the green. Meg
stood over Ben, watching him take two of the small devices from the
bag at his shoulder, noting how carefully he embedded them in the
earth. Earlier he had shown her how the flash bombs worked, going
through the remote-trigger sequence twice, to make sure she
understood. "Hopefully
we won't have to use them," he said, setting the turf back
firmly and looking up at her. "The speakers should do the trick.
But if you have to, don't hesitate. And remember, the object is to
take the little buggers alive. We use force only as a last resort." She
looked back at the cottage. It was late afternoon now, but most of it
was done. Using special panels from the storehouse, they had sealed
the kitchen end and the dining room, and blocked the stairway,
leaving only the entrance to the living room free, the door down to
the cellar open. Helping Ben fix the screens over the doors and
windows, she had understood for the first time what all the
fastenings on the frames were for. From childhood she had thought
them merely decoration, but now she knew. It was as Ben had said.
Amos had prepared thoroughly for this day. We
Shepherds. . . He
handed her the bag. "Here. You do the rest. I'll finish off in
the cellar." She
nodded, standing there a moment, watching him return inside, then
turned back, facing the water. It was only three hours now until
sunset. The thought of it made her throat constrict, her stomach
muscles tighten with fear, but she had said nothing to Ben. Not that
it would have made any difference. "Well,
fuck you, Ben Shepherd," she said quietly, moving across to the
next of the cut squares and kneeling down, the awkward shape of the
handgun pressing into her side. "Fuck you and Amos and all your
pigheaded breed." "Ben?" He
turned, looking back at her from the saddle of the old green bicycle.
"What?" "What
if they come while you're gone? What should I do?" "They
won't," he said, reaching back to check the towrope. "Besides,
I'll be back before it's dark. But if it makes you feel any better,
why don't you go up to the old church and sit on the wall. You get a
good view of things from there. And if they do come, you can
hide in the tower until I get back. Okay?" She
nodded reluctantly, watching him draw the pedal back, preparing to
set off. "Ben. . . ?" He
laughed. "What now?" "Take
care." He
smiled, then was gone, his strong legs powering him up the steep
slope between the hedges, the tightly packed sled rattling along
behind him on its casters. Ten
minutes later he was on the level above the ferry road. Resting the
bike against the wall by the old postbox, he unfastened the sled and,
letting it run on in front, made his way down to the landing stage. The
rowboat was where he had left it ten days before. Loading the sled
into the middle of the long, narrow boat, he pushed it out into the
shallow water, then jumped aboard, picking up the oars and setting
to, pulling himself across the narrow strait. The
path up to the old railway track was difficult, the stone steps
slippery, overgrown in places. The sled seemed to grow heavier
as he climbed, more awkward, but finally he was there, fifty feet
above the river, the ancient track stretching away between the trees. He set
the sled down, slotting the groove in its base onto the rail, then
squatted down, taking the slender case of the comset from his back
and unfolding it. Activating the screen, he quickly checked on the
remotes. In front of the breached seal there was no activity. Out on
the raft armada, however, there was plenty. Five of the smaller,
steam-powered rafts were being prepared, stockpiles of precious fuel
being loaded on board, along with great stacks of weapons—crude
spears, swords, and clubs for the main part. Satisfied,
he switched the comset off and secured it to his back. Then,
attaching the towrope to his belt, he set off once more, running
between the tracks, heading south toward the guardhouse, the sled
sliding smoothly along behind him. THESLEDLAYto
his right, hidden in the dense undergrowth. Above him, some
twenty-five feet up the embankment, was the blockhouse, its windows
lit up brightly. From where Ben lay, the assault rifle held against
his chest, he could see that one of the windows was open. From
within, music spilled out into the air. It was the Yueh Erh Kao,
"The Moon on High." For a
moment he found himself distracted; found himself wondering what it
was like to be a guard—a Han—here in this strange land,
listening to this most Chinese of melodies, and thinking of home. Of
China, half a world away. What did that feel like? He
listened, knowing that he was wasting time, but unable to move, the
music touching him as it had never done before. Breaching him. He
looked up, his eyes finding the pale circle of the moon, there, like
a ghost in the early evening sky. The
moon. He closed his eyes and saw it, full and bright, like a hole in
the darkness, and saw, at the same moment, its negative, there at the
valley's far end, the Clay-men huddled beyond it, waiting to emerge. The
moon... Opening
his eyes, he felt a pain of longing pass through him. A longing to be
something else—something other than he was. To be a Han,
a river pirate, a Clayborn. To be ... To be
other than he was . . . Yes, that was it. That was what drove him
on. He
turned slightly, looking out across the valley, for the briefest
moment held by the beauty of what he saw. In the fading light, a
flock of birds seemed to float in the air above the river, the tiny
specks of their bodies folding back upon themselves time and again,
like a veil fluttering in the breeze. How many times had he seen
that? How many times had he looked and not seen the beauty in it? The
music ended. He turned back, beginning to climb. In the sudden
silence he could sense the stillness of the valley all about him.
Could feel it waiting, like a lover, for the darkness. There
was the murmur of voices from above. Han voices. And then music, the
sound of strings and flutes—of p'i p'a, yueh ch'rn, ti
tsu, and erhu—echoing out across the English valley,
reminding Ben of that moment, eight years before, when Li Shai Tung
had sat at table with them, his carved ivory face in strong contrast
with the simple English-ness of everything surrounding him. The
world we've made, he thought, edging toward the open window. He
pulled himself up, slowly, carefully, until he stood there, his back
to the wall, the window to his right. Again he waited, listening,
letting the song play itself out. Then, in the silence that followed,
he moved closer, looking in at an angle through the open window. The
voices came again, but he understood now. A radio rested on the
cluttered desk beside the window. Beyond it the room was empty. Slowly
he moved his head around, looking in, searching the big room with his
eyes, the gun raised, ready. No,
not empty. There, on the floor in the far corner, lay one body, and
there, behind the table to the right, was another. But there were
five guards in all. Where were the others? Coming
around the comer of the blockhouse, he had his answer. A trestle
table had been set up in front of the main doors. A jug of wine
rested at its center. Chairs and broken wine bowls lay scattered all
about it. One
guard lay slightly down the embankment, on his back, his mouth open
in surprise. Another still sat in his chair, a neat hole through his
forehead. Nearby, in the doorway itself, a third was slumped against
the wall. Ben
walked toward the scene, his eyes taking in everything. He had known
these men. Only yesterday they had sat behind the barrier and
applauded him. And now they were dead. He
stood before the man in the chair, looking down at him. His name was
Brock and he had been shot from close range. Ben put the rifle down
and crouched, studying the wound, then moved behind the dead man,
examining the mess the bullet's exit had made, putting his fingers
into the shattered cranium. The flesh was cold, the blood congealed. He
went through, examining the bodies in the guardhouse, then came out
again, looking about him, picturing it in his mind. The duty guard,
Cook, had been strangled at his desk, the other, Tu Mai, had been
knifed in the back. Had one man done that? An officer, perhaps?
Someone they had no reason to suspect? Whoever it was, he would have
had to have killed the duty guard first, quickly, silently, and then
Tu Mai, gagging the young Han with a hand, perhaps, as he dragged him
down. Ben
turned. Yes, and he would have needed to have had the door closed
while he did it, too, else he'd have been seen by the men at the
table. He
closed his eyes, seeing it clearly. The officer had come out and
turned, facing Brock, drawing his gun, giving Brock no time to get up
out of his chair. He had fired once, then turned to shoot the second
guard, Coates. The last of them, the young lieutenant, Mo Yu, had
backed away, stumbling back over the embankment. He had been shot
where he fell. Ben
frowned, wondering why he had not heard the shots, then understood.
He and Meg must have been down in the cellar, getting things ready.
Which meant this had happened two, three hours ago at most. But
why? Unless, perhaps, Virtanen knew that Tewl planned to go in early.
Knew and was using that to firm up his alibi. Ben had
checked. These five were all that remained of the old guard.
The others—in the guardhouses in the town and at the mouth of
the river—were Virtanen's men. Yes,
it all made sense. This was the communications post for the valley:
the Domain's main—if not only—link with the outside.
Vir-tanen, questioned by an inquiry, would claim that Tewl's men had
attacked and overrun it. Which meant in all probability that Virtanen
intended to delay only long enough for Tewl's men to be successful
before he counterattacked, sweeping the intruders from the valley,
strengthening the evidence in his favor. AH of
which put pressure on Ben to tie things up quickly. The question was,
how long would Virtanen delay? An hour? Two? He
went back inside. The duty officer's log lay there on the
communications desk in the comer. It was open, the last entry noted
but not initialed. Frowning, Ben scanned the record quickly. It was
as he'd thought. They had to call in every four hours. Every
four hours . . . And yet the last message had been sent out thirty
minutes back. Virtanen?
Had Virtanen himself been here? It was unlikely. No, in all
likelihood Virtanen was at dinner right now, somewhere public and in
the company of important people—ch'un tzu of the first
level. Some place where he could be reached "urgently" and
summoned back to deal with this. Where he might make a great show of
his concern, his "anxiety" for the Shepherds. No.
Not Virtanen, but one of his servants. One of his Captains, perhaps.
Someone who could sit there for two hours with the bodies of the men
he'd butchered, waiting to send a signal. Ben
closed the log, then set to work, doing what he'd come to do. Moving
back and forth between the sled, he positioned a dozen of the big
flash bombs along the shore beneath the guardhouse, setting their
remote-trigger combinations. Then, climbing up onto the roof of the
blockhouse, he set up the two wide-angle cameras, focusing one upon
the quayside, the other on the mouth of the river, looking out beyond
the anchored junks. Finished,
he looked up, noting how high the moon had climbed since he'd last
looked, how bright it had become. The light was dying. In thirty
minutes it would be dark. He
turned, looking back at the silent figures on the terrace outside the
blockhouse. It was strange how little he felt. He had liked the men,
enjoyed their company, but now that they were dead he felt no
sadness, no sense of outrage. It was almost as if ... well, as if
they were merely machines now, like the morphs he used, or like
Amos's automatons that peopled the town across the river. Whatever
had animated them was gone. Had flown, like frightened birds. No,
what he felt wasn't sadness, or pity, but a fascination with their
newly transformed state. A curiosity that was as powerful as it was
new. What
was it like to be dead? Was it simple nullity? Or was there more to
it than that? Placing his fingers within the guard's shattered skull,
he had felt something wake in him; something dark and ageless. He
laughed, a strange, uncertain laugh, then bent down, picking up the
rope. Darkness, he thought, setting off once more, making his way
back down the slope toward the track. Ultimately there is nothing
but the dark.
>
. , - THE
MOON was high. Ben stood among the gravestones in the churchyard,
looking out past his sister at the broad sweep of the valley. Beneath
them, the houses of the village fell away, following the steep curve
of the road in a jumble of thatched roofs and chimney pots, their
pale white walls gleaming brightly beneath the circle of the moon.
Beyond lay the river, a broken sheet of silvered blackness, flanked
by the soft roundness of the hills. Hills overshadowed by the vast,
glacial presence of the City. Meg
sat on the old stone wall, her feet dangling out over the drop, her
dark hair lustrous in the moonlight. It had been dark now for almost
fifteen minutes, but still there was no word from Tewl, no sign of
the intruders in the valley. "What
do you think it's like in there?" "I
don't know," he answered quietly. "Like hell, I guess." She
half turned, looking back at him. "I mean, what do they eat?
Nothing grows in there. So how do they survive?" "Insects,"
he said, smiling at her. "And slugs and other small things that
crawl in from the outside." And one another, he thought,
but didn't say it. "It
must be awful," she said, turning back. "The most awful
thing there is. To be trapped in there. To know nothing but that." "Maybe,"
he said, but her comment made him realize just how much the Clay was
like his Shells. There, too, one was confined, cut off from normal
life. In such conditions the senses grew hungry for stimulation—for
the sweet water of dream and illusion. The mind was thrown inward.
Untended, it fed upon itself, like the monsters of the deep. He
rested his good hand on the stone beside him. A tall, leprously pale
stone, its tapered surface spotted with mold. "I wonder what
they dream about?" "Do
you think they dream?" He
nodded, his fingers tracing the weathered lettering on the ancient
stone. "I'm sure of it. Why, the darkness must be filled with
dreams. Vivid, lurid dreams. Imagine it, Meg. Eternal night. Eternal
blackness. Waking they must see their dreams. Live them." "I'd
go mad," she said quietly. "Yes
. . ." But there were many kinds of madness. And was the City
really so different? In some ways the Clay seemed far healthier.
There, at least, they dreamed. Up above, in the glare of that eternal
artificial light, they had forgotten how to dream. Or when they did,
their dreams were pale and powerless; had shrunk to a ghostly
insubstan-tiality, worn down by the relentless onslaught of a
thousand cheap illusions, ten thousand bright distractions. One
needed darkness. One needed the respite of dream. Else life was but a
mechanism. He
shivered, Shakespeare's words coming suddenly to mind. If I must
die, 1 wiU encounter darkness as a bride, And hug it in mine arms. Meg
turned to him, suddenly impatient. "Why don't they come? What
are they waiting for? I thought you said they'd come when it was
dark." "Soon,"
he said, soothing her, his good hand reaching out to touch and hold
her cheek. "They'll come here soon." And even as he said it
he heard the insect buzz of voices in the earpiece, the gruff sound
of Tewl giving his instructions. "Wait,"
he said, his hand going to her shoulder and squeezing it. "At
last. They're coming out." Moving
past her, he jumped up onto the wall and, spreading his arms, leapt
out into the darkness as if embracing it, landing in the long grass a
dozen feet below. "Come
on!" he called, turning to her, his moonlit face alive with a
strange excitement. "Quickly now!" And, turning away, he
began to run full tilt down the steep slope of the meadow, heading
for the seal. CHAPTER
FIFTEEN
Nature
Red in Tooth and Claw HE
watched them come out from the darkness, a dozen tiny, hunched
figures, running across the short grass to the creek, their naked
bodies silvered by the moonlight, two crudely fashioned longboats
carried between them. As
they ran, they glanced up fearfully at the bright circle of the moon,
astonished to find it there, and, gritting their teeth, fought down
the urge to flee from its all-seeing glare. They
set the boats down at the water's edge, then crouched, huddled close
together in the space between the canoes, staring back at the hole. A
full minute passed and then a second, larger wave of Clay-men
emerged, slowly, hesitantly, looking anxiously about them at the
silvered darkness of the valley. Some turned and tried to flee, back
into the dark, but one of their number stood before the hole, a
dagger in one hand, a whip in the other. "There,"
Ben said softly, pointing him out to Meg, who was crouched beside him
behind the low stonewall, the glasses to her eyes. "That one
there. He must be the chief. Look how he's gathering them up. And
see, at his waist. There's the handset he was using." "They're
all so ugly," Meg whispered, lowering the glasses. "There's
one there has had half his face eaten away. You can see the shape of
the skull. And there's another who's got only a stump for an arm." Her
voice fell silent. In the silvered dark below, the Clay-men
moved slowly across the open ground between the wall and the
creek, their shadowed forms like broken fragments of the darkness. For a
moment the silence was complete. Then, from the center of that
shadowy host came the crisp chatter of the handset. Standing toward
the back of the group, the chief froze, surprised by the voice at his
waist. He twitched, then, looking about him, lifted the handset to
his ear, holding it there as if, at any moment, it would bite. All
about him, his men had stopped, crouched low, as if to press
themselves into the earth. There was a moment's silence, and then the
chief answered, his voice low and guttural. "It's
Tewl," Ben whispered, leaning toward his sister, translating
what he could hear of the exchange. "He's telling the Clay-men
to get a move on. But the chief's not budging. He's saying they
didn't know there'd be a moon. It's spooked them. They thought it
would be black, like inside. He's telling Tewl his men need time, to
get used to it." "So
what's going to happen, Ben? Are they going to attack?" "Yes.
But this makes things tight. It looks like Tewl's boats have set off
already. The tide's against them, fortunately. Even so, unless we
deal with this end of things quickly, we won't get to the harbor in
time." "In
time for what?" she asked, staring at him, curious now. "For
the show," he said, looking back at her, the moon's bright
circle reflected clearly in the liquid darkness of his pupils. - "The
show?" "I.
. ." Ben fell silent. Down below, the chief had finished talking
and had tucked the handset back into his belt. Looking about him, he
picked out six of his men, then pointed up the hill toward the
cottage. "A'Uiarthal"
he said fiercely, thrusting his hand out once again, as if to
emphasize what he was saying. "An chy. Kherdes! Tenna dhe an
chy!" "What
is it?" Meg asked, a ripple of fear passing down her spine at
the sound of that awful, bestial tongue; at the threat implicit in
that thrusting, grasping hand. "What did he say?" But
it was as if Ben hadn't heard her. "Come on," he said,
touching her arm. "Quick now. We've work to do." And,
ducking down, he turned and started back toward the cottage, his body
hunched, his movements almost
furtive, mimicking the figures who, even as Meg looked back, peeled
off from the main body of the Clay-men and started up the slope
toward her. THEY
CAME ON slowly, sniffing the air like dogs, their short, wiry bodies
hunched low and twitchingly alert as they approached the cottage. In
the shadows of the lower garden they stopped, huddled together, the
low growl of their voices carrying to where Meg lay in her perch
above the potting shed, watching. Like
a pack, she thought, as one of them—a bull terrier of a
man— leaned over one of the others, his head twisted slightly,
as if to bite the neck of the creature. Nearby, the rest looked on,
making cringing gestures of abasement, like the young wolves she had
seen in the film Ben had shown her. She
shivered, her hands trembling as she widened the angle of the shot.
It was a wonder they still used language, their gestures were so
eloquent. It was just as Ben had said. Their bodies spoke. Do as
I say, the leader seemed to be saying. Don't have any ideas
of your own. She
watched the other stoop and lick the creature's hand subserviently,
then straighten up, his face filled with a pathetic eagerness. "Ena.
. ." The terrier-man said, pointing at the cottage. "Ena ha
ena!" There
was a moment's hesitation, and then they came on again, spreading out
as they approached the earth border of the rose garden. Two more
steps, she thought, remembering what Ben had said. Two more steps
. . . The
whispering began. At
first it was like the wind rustling through the leaves of an ancient,
autumnal forest; a dry, soughing noise that seemed half-articulate.
Yet if there were words amid that sound, they were as much imagined
as discerned. Then, as the noise grew slowly louder, the clear hard
shape of words formed from the confusion, like seeds falling to the
earth. "Ofanccw.
. ." The
Clay-men froze, half turned toward the sound, their eyes wide with
sudden fear. "Ofancow.
. ." A low
moan rose from the dark, huddled shapes on the slope. Yelping, they
threw themselves down, burrowing into the earth, as if to merge with
the darkness, but the moonlight was unrelenting; it beat down on them
mercilessly, pitilessly, forcing them to turn their heads and look
back at it. "Gwelafwhy
gans ow onen lagas . . ." the voice whispered, as if from
the air itself. "Ow golow lagas dewana why!" There
were barks of fear and whimperings and a long, low moaning that was
horrible to hear, like the sound of an animal in pain. "On;
enawy a-vyn podrethes agas eskem..." At
that the whimpering grew frantic. The Clay-men were baying now, in
tonnent, their fear so great that Meg could sense it from where she
lay; could smell its sharp, distinct odor in the air. Their squat,
ugly faces were distorted now, like the faces of the mad she had
glimpsed in her brother's sketchbooks. Fear had given way to
something else—to some darker, more primeval force. For
the briefest moment she hesitated, filled with a sudden, unexpected
sympathy for the creatures, then, quivering slightly, not knowing
what to expect, she pressed the switch. The
air beyond the Clay-men shimmered. And then, as if forming from the
air itself, four massive figures stood there, palely outlined against
the dark. Four ancient, ghostly warriors, their armored breastplates
glinting in the moonlight, long, wicked-looking blades in their
mailed fists. And their faces . . . Meg
shuddered, recognizing them. Ox and lion, they were, man and eagle,
their features harsh and unforgiving. AngeZs, she thought, glimpsing
the great wings—six in all—that rose from their broad,
muscular backs. Ben has conjured up the angels . . . Briefly
they stood there, powerful and malevolent, and then, as one, they
stepped forward, raising their swords. "Dyesk'ynnal"
said the Ox-faced angel, beckoning the Clay-men, his voice
booming like thunder in the silence. "Dyesk'ynna!" Until
that moment the Clay-men had crouched there, paralyzed by
the sight, but now, their nerve broken, they turned and ran,
shrieking, toward the safety of the cottage. And
Meg, watching, ran with them in her head, her spine tingling with a
fear she had never, ever thought to feel. "I
know your works," she said softly, fearfully. "You have the
name of being alive, and you are dead." MEG
sat at the bottom of the cellar steps, watching through the
tight-fitting mask as her brother bound the last of the unconscious
Clay-men. Beyond him stood the morph, inactive now, the nozzle of the
empty gas cylinder dangling loosely from its polished hand. Ben
turned, smiling up at her through his mask. "There," he
said, the words muffled. "All we have to do now is get them
upstairs, into the small barn, then we can get down to the town." "Upstairs?"
She shivered. Even the thought of touching one of the grotesque,
childlike creatures horrified her, let alone lifting and carrying
one. "Can't we leave them here?" He
shook his head. "I can't risk it, Megs. Think of the damage
they'd do down here if one of them got loose. Up there it doesn't
matter. The small barn is secure, and there's nothing they can
damage." "Isn't
there something you can give them to keep them out a bit longer? You
know ... a drug or something?" "And
if it killed them? No, Megs, I can't risk that. I want these . . .
these men, I need them for my work. That's why I bothered with
all this, so as not to harm them." She
looked away, finding no words to explain her aversion. He
smiled. "Look, I'll put them in sacks, if you like. If that
makes it any easier. But it has to be done. And the sooner the
better. Now, are you going to help me, or do I have to do it all on
my own?" "I'll
help," she said, finally, meeting his eyes again. "But not
this, Ben. I can't. I simply can't." He
studied her a moment, then, with the tiniest little nod, turned away.
Bending over one of the limp Clay-men, he lifted it, balancing it
over his left shoulder. Then, stooping to lift another, he draped its
wiry frame over the other shoulder before turning to face her again. "The
keys are hanging by the door. Go ahead and open up, then get your
brown waist-length coat and a bicycle from the shed. Wait for me by
the postbox above the ferry road. I'll be there as quickly as I can." She
nodded, knowing he was disappointed in her, but for once there was
nothing she could do. Nothing in heaven or earth would make her touch
one of them. Nothing. Not even Ben's disapproval. "Okay,"
she said. "But don't be long, Ben. Please. I couldn't bear it if
they attacked me. I just couldn't." "No,"
he said, his face softening. "Nor I." MEG
stood there on the veranda of the old naval college, looking out
across the river. At the foot of the hill, the water stretched away
to either side, a broad, uneven sheet of moonlit darkness, its
reflective brightness framed by the solidity of the hills. To her
left, beyond the scar of the Old Mill Creek, the dark flank of the
land hid any sign of the village and the cottage beyond. It was
there, on the far bank, that the darkness was most intense, the
primal blackness of the woods pressed against the water's edge
threateningly. To the south—to her right as she turned, looking
out across its sprawl—the lamps of the old town glowed in the
dark, each point of light distinct. Beyond it the castle was dour and
solid on its rock foundations, guarding the river's mouth. Fishing
boats were clustered in the old harbor, their masts like winter
saplings. Close by, lying alongside the cobbled quay, the big
merchantman rested at anchor, its sails furled, the oil lamps that
ringed its hull forming a necklace of light in the surrounding water. All
seemed well. All seemed . . . familiar. And yet, just beneath
where she stood, on the far side of the river, the Clay-men were
waiting, their log canoes tucked in against the bank, beneath the
overhanging trees. She
turned back, looking to see how Ben was getting on. He was standing
before the middle of the three big control panels, the portable
harness he was wearing making him seem strangely inhuman— more
machine than man. To his right, concealed from the river by the wall
of the veranda, a bank of screens—four wide, three deep—gave
a dozen different views of the valley. In
many ways it was all as before. The cameras were in place, the
tapes rolling. Lights winked and flickered on the boards.
Nearby, on the flat top of the tape-storage unit, one of the big
notebooks lay open, Ben's neat hand covering the pages. Outwardly
there seemed little difference between this and other times. Yet what
she felt was different. Was as distinct as it could possibly be. And
why was that? Why was the thought of this—of using this
situation—so disturbing? Was it simply personal fear, or was it
something much deeper than that? Something she couldn't face without
questioning all that Ben did, all he was1. She
studied her brother, as if to discern some difference in him,
something she had never noticed before that moment, but there was
nothing. He had always been like this: a lens, taking it all in.
Assimilating and transforming it. Recasting the world in his own dark
image. As
now. "That's
it," he said, straightening up. "All we need now is to
position the cameras properly and we're ready." She
nodded, yet for once she felt herself distanced from him, out of
sympathy with what he did. Before it had all been a game: endlessly
fascinating, yet a game for all that. Now it was real. Real men would
be hurt down there. Real blood spilled. And yet Ben acted as if the
game went on. As if there really was no difference. "Take
number three," he said, not even glancing at her, his eyes fixed
on what was happening on the screens. "I want a tight focus on
the quay in front of the inn." She
went across, adjusting the position of the camera until she heard him
grunt his satisfaction. "Good.
Now two." "Ben?" He
looked across at her, distracted. "What?" "What
are we doing, Ben? Why do you need this?" His
eyes met hers, then quickly moved away. It was the briefest of
contacts, but it was long enough for her to understand. He didn't
know. And the not-knowing was why. Was a reason in itself. She
shivered, then looked past him, noticing for the first time the
rocket launcher that lay on the grass beside their bicycles, its
brutal heaviness emphasized by the thick leather strap. "Two,"
he said again. "Please, Meg. We don't have much time." She
did as she was told, focusing in on the tiny crowd that stood in
front of the old Castle Hotel, drinking. Drinking...
Or pretending to drink. Just as they pretended to think and breathe
and talk. It was all one vast pretense. And Ben behind it all,
working his dead puppets for all he was worth. Dead,
she thought. It's all dead. And maybe that's why he needs
this. To bring it alive. To give it breath, and substance. But
somehow the explanation didn't satisfy. Her unease remained, and with
it a growing feeling that she should have defied Ben and called
Tolonen in. But now it was too late. "Look,"
Ben said quietly, pointing up at the top right-hand screen. "There,
beyond the junks." She
went and stood behind him, watching as the first of the steam-powered
rafts came into view, laboring through the water, its deck packed
with dark and threatening shapes. Seeing it, she felt her fear
return; a sharp, cold thing that seemed to sap her will. How could
they fight these creatures? How prevail against such odds? "Let's
hear what they're saying," Ben said, reaching out to touch one
of the pads on the panel beneath the screens. At once a soft,
guttural murmuring began. Hearing it, Meg shivered and turned her
head, looking up at the moon. What if it all ends here? she
thought. What if it all goes wrong7. But
Ben was clearly harboring no doubts. "Okay," he said,
turning to her. "It's just as I thought. They're going for a
frontal assault on the town. The Clay-men have been told to land just
upriver of the merchantman, the raft people farther down, by the
steps of the old Customs House. Tewl plans a pincer movement. He
wants to herd all of the townspeople into one place, then deal with
them there." "So
what's going to happen? What will you do?" Ben
smiled. "My morphs are going to fight." "Fight?
But how can they? They're not programmed to fight!" "Of
course they are. WeVe choreographed more than eighty different
moves." She
stared at him, astonished that he couldn't see it. "Yes, but. .
. well, those others won't be programmed, will they? They'll do
things that are ... unexpected." "That's
right." "But
they'll cut them to ribbons!" "Maybe.
Some of them, anyway. But not all. I'll be working some of them
through the harness here. The big tar, for instance, and the Han with
the limp. And others too. Switching from body to body. Hitting back
where they least expect it." Meg
frowned, trying to understand, to work out what he wanted from this
madness, but there wasn't time. Ben had turned and was leaning across
the central board, making minuscule adjustments to the settings,
while across the river, in the deep shadow beneath the overhanging
trees, two canoes were pushing off from the bank, moving with
silvered quickness across the darkness of the water. THERE
WERE SHOUTS in the valley. Hideous, unearthly sounds. On the cobbles
outside the ancient coaching inn, the crowd fell silent, looking
across the harbor toward the quay beyond. There, in the shadow of the
three-masted merchantman, two figures were struggling beneath the
lamp, as if locked in an embrace. For a moment there was only that,
and then, like demons crawling from a gap in hell itself, a dozen of
the Clay-men appeared over the lip of the river wall, whooping and
screeching, their dark, stooped figures making for the town. There
were shouts, the first murmurings of panic, and then the crowd broke,
some running toward the merchantman, but most to the right and the
safety of the Customs House. These last had not gone far when a group
of savage-looking creatures—maybe half a dozen in all—burst
from the shadows of one of the seafront houses, confronting them.
Big, crudely armored men with notched swords and vicious-looking
clubs. "Back!"
someone shouted. "Get help from the inn! There's weapons there!"
But even as the shout went up, the invaders rushed the front of the
crowd, laying about them savagely. Screams filled the air. Awful,
pitiful screams, like the sounds of real men dying. At
first the crowd was forced back by the viciousness of the onslaught,
several of them falling beneath the rain of blows, their limbs hacked
from their bodies or their skulls crushed by hammer blows, but then,
encouraged by the efforts of the young watchman from the
castle, they began to fight back. Using whatever weapons they
had at hand, they began to push the raft-men back step by step toward
the Customs House. Yet even as they did, more of the raft-men joined
the raiding party, swarming up the steps and out onto the lamp-lit
quay. Observing
it all from the safety of her vantage point above the town, Meg set
the glasses down and turned, facing her brother. For a
moment she watched as Ben kicked and swung, then ducked and came up
sharply, aiming a vicious punch into the air, his eyes never leaving
the screen in front of him. Down below, she knew, on the cobbles
before the Customs House, the morph of the watchman would have kicked
and swung, then ducked and come up quickly, aiming a vicious punch,
his movements the perfect duplicate of Ben's. She
shivered, frightened by the sight; by the sheer physicality of it,
the uncompromising violence of each movement. "There's too many
of them," she said quietly. "Your plan will never work,
Ben. They'll overwhelm the morphs before there's time." "Wait,"
he answered, moving back slightly, his eyes never leaving the screen
even as his hands made small adjustments to the control panel at his
side. "It's far from over yet." She
saw him lift his arm, as if to ward off a blow, then duck and twist,
as if he threw a figure through the air. From the town below, the
shouts and screams continued. The
screens were alive with activity. Close-ups of flailing arms and
agonized faces were juxtaposed against long-range shots of tiny
figures struggling beneath the harbor lamps. Metal bit deep into
flesh—some real, some made—while blood flew like
the spray of some dark fountain. Close
up and context, she thought, swallowing, recalling the number of
times they had done this kind of thing with the morphs. But this time
it was different. This time it was real. Or half real, anyway. She
studied the varied images of the struggle. The Clay-men had been held
on the quay beside the merchantman. In the opening moments of the
fight, Ben had had the crew pour down the wooden ramps and throw
themselves at their attackers, the morphs lashing out in a frenzy. At
first they'd been successful and several of the Clay had gone down,
badly hurt, but things were turning fast. More than thirty of the
morphs lay there on the quay now, inert or badly damaged, while
a dozen or more floated facedown in the water below. Less than half
their number remained standing. In a minute or two, they would be
overwhelmed, the left flank lost. Meg
turned back, lifting the glasses to her eyes, trying to make out what
was happening elsewhere. One of the strange, steam-driven rafts was
docked beside the Customs House steps. Out on the river, four more of
the rafts formed a staggered line across the water, their dark shapes
drifting slowly in toward the shore. The second was no more than
fifty yards out now, yet unless the first raft moved it would be hard
for the raft-men to disembark. Unless
they used the ferry ramp. She
turned slightly, focusing on the raft. There was feverish activity on
board; a great deal of pointing and shouting. As she looked, one of
the warriors—the steersman, maybe—slapped one of his
fellows down, then, jabbing his finger in the direction of the ramp,
forced the two rudder men to bring the unwieldy craft hard about. She
watched as the raft swung slowly around, avoiding the moored craft
narrowly as it made for the gap in the wall. For a
moment it glided in, the prow perfectly positioned for the ramp,
then, suddenly, there was a huge explosion. Meg
felt her chest tighten. In the echoing silence that followed she
could hear the splashing of things falling back into the water. Could
see the tiny shapes of stone and metal, flesh and splintered bone,
falling, tumbling through the broken darkness. On the
quay beside the Customs House the fight had stopped. The raiders
staggered back, staring out at the falling wreckage, horrified. "What
happened?" Meg asked, thinking for a moment that the raft's
boiler must have gone up. But when she turned, she saw that Ben was
smiling, and understood. He had mined it. Mined the ferry ramp. Sympathy,
that was it. That was what he lacked. That was the thing her
father, Hal, had had, and he, Ben, did not. The thing she had looked
for and not found in him, that moment before the old bam, watching
him use the scythe. Simple human sympathy. Ben
clenched his palm, briefly breaking the circuit that connected him to
the watchman as he took three paces back. Then, unclenching, he let
out a bloodcurdling yell, and half ran, half lunged at the screens. From
the town below, she heard the echoing yell the watchman gave, the
high, chilling scream of a badly wounded man, and turned to look. One
of the raft-men was down, on his knees, the watchman's sword embedded
to its hilt in his chest. "Ben
. . ." she whispered, feeling a shiver of pain pass through her.
"What in God's name are you doing, Ben?" But he
was unaware of her. As she watched, the sky lit up again. The junks
moored in the middle of the river had burst into flames and were
swinging around into the path of the last of the rafts. She heard the
shouts of panic, the splashes as some of the raft people threw
themselves over the side, but for most of them it was too late. As
the first of the junks collided with the raft, a rain of embers and
burning cloth fell over it, smothering the craft in a great sheet of
roaring flame. Meg
groaned, appalled. On all
sides the morphs were getting up from where they lay, crawling and
limping, hobbling or simply dragging themselves toward their foes,
ignoring the blows that rained down on them as they threw themselves
at their attackers, struggling to subdue them. In
front of the Customs House, the young watchman had sunk to his knees,
his head hacked cleanly from his shoulders. Yet even as he toppled
over, another of the townsfolk took his place—a big,
corpulent-looking fellow that Meg recognized instantly as the
innkeeper. With a bellow, the innkeeper swung his sword about his
head and brought it down savagely, an inhuman strength cleaving the
astonished raft-man from temple to waist. At
that a great cry went up. Until moments before it had all been going
well for the attackers, but now two of their rafts were lost, and
instead of timid townsfolk, they found themselves faced by demons.
Men who did not lie there, as the dead were supposed to, but stood
and joined the fight once more, not heeding the frightful wounds
they'd suffered. Out on
the river, the rafts were turning, heading back toward the river's
mouth and the safety of the sea. They had seen with their own eyes
how things were shaping. Even Tewl, who had stood there on the prow
of the third raft watching, gave a small shudder and turned away.
"Nog-us genys," he was heard to mutter. "Ny
harth o rnlath nag'iis genys." The
unborn . . . We cannot fight the unborn . . . "Enough!"
Meg said, angry with him suddenly. "For God's sake, Ben,
enough!" But
Ben could not hear her. Ben jumped and kicked and spun, fighting the
air, his eyes transfixed, chained to the images on the screens. IT was
over. The captives were huddled in the space before the ruined inn,
sixty or so in all, a cordon of battle-scarred sailors forming a
loose circle about them. Coming this close to them, Meg shivered. The
scent of them was strong, almost overpowering. A musty animal smell.
Looking down at the dark, painted faces of the raft-men, the bowed
heads of the Clayborn, she could remember how hard, how viciously
they had fought. Just now, however, they were frightened and subdued,
especially the Clay among them. The sight of the scarred and
mutilated dead rising from the ground had unnerved them. As well it
might. Ghosts they had been fighting. Yes, and one dark,
form-shifting spirit, who had fled each time they'd tried to cut him
down, only to return, renewed and twice as deadly. And
now that spirit stood before them, his human form encased in a
shimmering, silver mesh. A powerful magician, who commanded the
unborn and spoke their language with a skill not one of them
possessed. Ben
leaned toward them, his voice soft, conciliatory now that he had won,
their strange and ugly language transformed in his mouth so that it
was almost beautiful. Above his head floated three of the remotes,
their lens-eyes taking in each detail of this scene, each twitch and
furtive gesture of his captives. On
tape, she thought. You'd have it all on tape if you could,
wouldn't you, Ben? Yet the sourness she had been feeling earlier
had drained from her. What she felt now was a kind of tiredness, a
dreadful weariness that was in the bone itself. She had to get away.
Far away from all of this. It
began to rain. Out on the river there was a loud hissing as a mist of
steam rose from the smoldering junks. A low, fearful moan rose from
the Clayborn, who hunched even tighter into themselves, trem- bling,
but the raft people merely looked up, as if greeting an old, familiar
friend. It was
only then, as they looked up, their faces tilted to the night sky,
their weather-sculpted features revealed in the lamplight for the
first time, that Meg noticed. There were women among them. And not
just one or two, but a number of them, maybe eight or nine in all.
Meg narrowed her eyes, the shock she felt profound. Her
brother had been fighting women. Killing and maiming women. She
wondered if he had known that. And if
he had? She
looked down, suddenly frightened by what she was thinking, what
feeling at that moment. There
was a noise. A grunt of surprise. She looked up, and saw that Ben had
moved, had gone right up to the captives and was crouched there, his
hand reaching out to lift one of their chins and turn the face toward
him. "Jesus!"
he said, lifting the strap and tugging the battered helmet from the
warrior's head. Long,
red hair spilled out from within the helmet's crest. Green eyes
looked up past him, meeting Meg's. Green eyes in a pretty, Slavic
face. Meg
caught her breath. Catherine! It was Catherine! Or someone so like
her as to be her twin. Ben
stood, shaking his head, then turned, looking back at Meg. "I
saw her," he said, frowning, trying to piece things together. "I
picked her up on one of the remotes. In the village on the big raft.
But I never thought. . ." He
turned back, staring down at her, then put out his hand, as if the
woman should take it. But she drew back, her fear of him mixed with a
natural defiance. "Dos,
benen!" he said, ordering her. But the words were barely
uttered when the sky to the south of them lit up, the old castle
silhouetted briefly against the brilliance. A moment later, two loud
explosions rent the air. "The
rafts," Ben said, facing the fading glow. "Virtanen has
destroyed the rafts." How
do you know? she wanted to ask, but she was sure he was right. Besides,
she could hear die cruiser's engines now, could feel the faint
vibration in the air. "Over
there!" Ben said urgently, pointing past her toward the steps.
"In the gap . . . the ferry ramp!" And, not waiting to see
whether she obeyed, he went across, lifting the rocket launcher from
where he'd left it on the wall and slipping it over his shoulder. He
turned back, facing the captives. Some had stood. Others were
glancing nervously at the sky, as if they knew what was to come. From
the look of them, they would try to run at any moment. "Tryga!"
Ben said, his voice powerful, commanding. "Tryga amma!"
Yet even as he said it, there was a shadow on the moon and the
dark shape of a cruiser swept across the sky above the river, the
sound of its engines reverberating in the sudden stillness. There
was a murmur of fear from among the captives. The cruiser had been
unlit; had been like a giant beetle, whirring across the sky. A dark,
malignant thing, heavy with threat. "Go!"
Ben said, turning to her again, and shooing her away. "For God's
sake get out of sight! It'll be back any moment!" This
time she went, crouching between the sloping walls, halfway down the
cobbled ramp, the dark edge of the river only yards below. But what
about Ben? What was he going to try? To bargain with Virtanen? To
make him confess to what he'd done? Madness,
she thought, not for the first time that day. Ail of this is
madness. Our lives are in danger, and all because my brother wants
excitement! It was
not strictly true. Virtanen had started this. But Ben could have
wrapped things up much quicker if he'd wanted. If what she suspected
were true, he had gotten his evidence against Virtanen long ago. All
this was simply games. The
murmur of the cruiser's engines had faded, now it came back, stronger
than before, and, from the disturbance of the water below her, she
could tell that it was hovering out there, above the river. Slowly
she crept up the ramp again, until she could poke her head above the
brickwork and look across. The
captives were still there, huddled together tightly now, every head
turned to face the threat of the cruiser. All about them, the
morph-sailors stood impassively, their weapons raised, their
faces vacant. There
was no sign of Ben. She
turned her head, trying to make out the cruiser. At first she
couldn't see it, then, with a suddenness that surprised her, it
turned its searchlight full on, the beam's brilliance startling her,
making the captives cry out with fear. For a
moment everything seemed superreal, picked out in stark relief, heavy
with shadow. "Shepherd!"
a voice boomed down. "Ben Shepherd! Are you there?" Don't
answer, she pleaded silently, staring across at the cruiser as
if mesmerized. For God's sake, Ben, don't answer. "I'm
here, Major Virtanen!" came a voice from the far side of the
river. "Down here at the water's edge!" She
watched, her heart hammering, as the cruiser slowly turned, its lamps
sweeping across her and out, searching the far bank. And as it did,
she noticed a tiny speck—one of Ben's remotes?—float up,
away from the passageway beside the Customs House, lifting rapidly
toward the hovering cruiser. Slowly
the cruiser turned back, the brilliant light from its searchlight
scouring the quayside. "Why the games?" the voice asked
from within that glare. "We came to help you, Shepherd. To save
you from the raft-men." There
was a moment's silence, a moment's utter stillness, and then
laughter. Laughter that grew in volume until it seemed to fill the
Domain, echoing back and forth between the hills. Ben's laughter. The
detonation was unexpected. She felt herself thrown back; found
herself rolling, tumbling down the slope until she hit the coldness
of the water. Heat... the air had been full of heat. And the light.
For the briefest moment the light had intensified, as if... Her
ears were ringing. She sat there, waist deep in the water, and
understood. Virtanen had fired a missile. And
Ben? Where was Ben? She
pulled herself up and hurried up the slope. Through the swirl of
smoke she could see that the quayside was a ruin, as if a great chunk
had been bitten from the stone. Beyond that, where the
captives had been, was nothing. Nothing but a charred depression. She
stared at it, numbed, then sank down, her knees giving way beneath
her. "God
help us. . ." Smoke
swirled in the beams of the cruiser's lights. From the darkness
beyond that great circle of light, a figure emerged, moving slowly
through the veils of smoke until it stood there, at the center of the
charred and smoking depression, its arms and legs, its chest and
head, encased in shimmering silver. It was Ben, the rocket launcher
held loosely in his artificial hand, as if it weighed less than an
old man's cane. No.'
she wanted to scream, but her mouth was dry, her throat constricted
with fear. No! She could barely look she was so afraid for him. "Virtanen!"
Ben called, his voice cold, unlike she had ever heard it before. "Why
don't you come down here and face me? Or are you afraid of that? Do
you always prefer to kill people without warning?" There
was silence, and then a background muttering, which cut out quickly. "Rockets
not working?" Ben inquired, coming forward a few paces, and
hefting the launcher. "I wonder why that is?" From
the craft there was silence. A heavy, brooding silence. Ben
was looking down, studying the launcher, then, slowly, almost
lovingly, he lifted it to his shoulder, eyeing along the sights.
"It's a little trick of mine. Or should I say ours. You see, we
Shepherds have been expecting this for years now. Preparing for some
evil-minded bastard like you to come along." Meg
stood, knowing what he was about to do, knowing also that even if it
were justified, it was wrong to do it this way. Trying to keep calm,
she began to walk toward him. "Ben!
You can't!" "Stay
there," he said, raising a hand to stop her. "I wasn't
going to do this. But the bastard killed her. Without a moment's
thought. He just went and killed her." She
stood there, in the shadows, looking across at him, surprised by the
intensity of emotion in his voice. It was as if Virtanen had killed
the real Catherine. As if... She
licked at her lips, then spoke again, trying to keep her fear for him
out of her voice; to bring him back from the darkness where he
suddenly was. "Maybe so, Ben, but this isn't right. Let Li Yuan
sort this out. Let him make the decision." He
looked at her, meeting her eyes in a long, clear gaze, then returned
his left eye to the sight, tilting the mouth of the launcher up
toward the cruiser. "Be-enn!!" The
explosion knocked her off her feet, throwing her back against the low
wall that surrounded the ferry ramp. No, she kept thinking as she lay
there. No, it wasn't the way. But in that last clear meeting of their
eyes she had understood. He was mad. Her brother Ben was mad. PART
3 SUMMER 2210 The Coast
of Darkness
Thither
he plies Undaunted,
to meet there whatever Power Or Spirit of the nethermost Abyss Might
in that noise reside, of whom to ask Which way the nearest coast of
darkness lies Bordering on light; when straight behold the throne Of
Chaos, and his dark pavilion spread Wide on the wasteful Deep!
With him enthroned Sat sable-vested Night, eldest of things, The
consort of his reign; and by them stood Orcus and Ades, and the
dreaded name Of Demogorgon; Rumour next, and Chance, And Tumult, and
Confusion, all embroiled And Discord with a thousand various mouths. —John
Milton, Paradise Lost, Book II [^954-67]
CHAPTER SIXTEEN Circles
of Light IT
WAS DAWN in Kamak and Wang Sau-leyan, T'ang, mler of City Africa,
stood on the broad and deeply shadowed balcony, his back to his two
companions, looking out across the wide, slow river toward the Valley
of the Kings. Early sunlight lay like a stain on the clifrtops
opposite, a band of reddish-gold atop the blackness below. To the
south lay Luxor, ancient Thebes. There the City began again, its
walls, smooth white cliffs of ice, lifting two li into the morning
sky. On the river a bird circled low above the surface, dark against
the dark, then dropped soundlessly into the water. Wang
Sau-leyan turned, leaning lazily against the rail. Chi Hsing, T'ang
of the Australias, was to his right, staring downriver toward the
City. Hou Tung-po, T'ang of South America, stood in the arched
doorway, looking back at him, smiling. They had been talking all
night, but now it was done; the matter agreed among them. Tomorrow
they would begin their campaign. Wang
returned Hou's smile, then tilted back his head, enjoying the
freshness of the morning. It was simple really. Li Yuan had begun the
process a year ago, when he had presented his package of changes to
the Council. Now he, Wang Sau-leyan, would push things farther,
letting his "friends" in the Above know that he supported
their demands for new, more extreme changes to the Edict. At the same
time, Chi Hsing, Hou Tung-po, and he would finance a faction in the
newly reopened House to press for those changes: changes which
Li Yuan could not afford to grant. "What
will he do?" asked Hou, coming out onto the balcony. Chi
Hsing turned, looking back at them. They were all equals here, yet it
was to Wang Sau-leyan that they looked for guidance. Wang's
moon face looked away as he spoke. "Li Yuan will oppose us."
Then, turning back to face them, he added, "He and his friends
Tsu Ma and Wu Shih." "And
then?" Chi Hsing asked, concerned. They had gone over this
ground three times already, and yet still he wanted it fixed. "With
Wei Chan Yin sure to support them in Council, they could simply
overrule us, four to three." "Maybe
so. But I think our cousins will think twice before being so hasty.
Much has been said about the autonomy of the new House—of it
not being an instrument of the Seven. Well, we can use that, neh? The
people will be watching things closely in those first few weeks. They
shall want to see whether the Great Promises will be fulfilled, the
bargain between People and Seven properly made. The last thing our
cousins want is for their words to seem empty. A demand for further
changes, made publicly—constitutionally—in the House,
will be a great embarrassment to them. They will have to oppose it,
of course—they have no choice but to oppose it—but they
will find it awkward doing so." Wang
smiled, looking from one to the other. "Our purpose is not so
much to oppose Li Yuan as to make him show his hand in public. To
force him to intervene. For our part we must cultivate a reasonable
air, conceding the difficulty of change while acknowledging its
necessity. That way we might, at first, lend tacit support to the
idea while not committing ourselves to it." He
paused, then pushed away from the rail. "As for Li Yuan, we must
find other ways of isolating him from his allies in Council. We must
make him seem unreasonable, his schemes harebrained, disastrous in
their consequences. Tsu Ma, perhaps, might stay with him, but Wu Shih
is his own man and might be swayed. As for Wei Chan Yin, he is his
father's son and, like his father, will vote to maintain the stasis.
Within the year things will have changed. It will no longer be
four against three, but two against five. And then we shall
use the Council itself to bridle our young cousin." Hou
nodded enthusiastically, but Chi Hsing was still hesitant. In spite
of his fears he liked and respected the young T'ang of City Europe,
and his blood had sung with satisfaction when Li Yuan had acted
against the rebellious sons of the Above. Yet what he wanted most of
all was peace. Peace, so that his sons might live and grow to be men.
And Li Yuan, for all that he liked him, threatened that peace. Chi
Hsing met Wang's eyes and nodded. "So be it," he said. Wang
smiled. "Good. Then I shall begin at once, wooing our cousin
Wei. Rumor has it that something has been eating at him. Some secret
inner grief, connected to Li Yuan. Perhaps a private meeting between
us will reveal just what seed of bitterness he nurtures." "And
Wu Shih?" Chi Hsing pushed out his chin as he spoke. It was an
almost belligerent gesture, one Chi Hsing himself was entirely
unaware of, but to Wang Sau-leyan it was revealing. He knew that Chi
Hsing disapproved of his lifestyle—particularly of the Hung Moo
concubines he kept—but this was rooted elsewhere. Seeing that
gesture, he understood that he would not be able to trust Chi Hsing
completely. If it came to a crucial choice Chi Hsing might yet side
with Li Yuan. Again
he smiled. "As I said, Wu Shih is his own man. He will vote as
before. For tradition. And to preserve the functions of the Seven."
He shrugged. "As for Tsu Ma, he is Li Yuan's shadow. But two
against five cannot carry policy. Li Yuan will see this and, in his
frustration, seek to circumvent us." Wang
Sau-leyan looked from one man to the other and smiled, a great
feeling of satisfaction washing over him. Each had their role to .
play. Hou Tung-po would placate the Minor Families, wooing them with
new concessions—concessions that Wang Sau-leyan would draft and
present to the Council of the Seven as legislation, principal among
them a guarantee of posts in all the major Ministries—posts
they had, in effect, been denied this last half century. And
Chi Hsing? He was to penetrate the higher levels of Li Yuan's
administration—to buy and blackmail those nearest the young
T'ang. For they must know for certain what he was
thinking, what planning in the months to come. Only
reluctantly had Chi Hsing agreed. Yet he had agreed, and his
agreement bound him to this conspiracy. As time passed, circumstance
would bind him much closer to their cause. He would be shaped by his
actions until he became what he acted. And all the time his actions
would be against Li Yuan. "Come
inside," Wang said, embracing the two men. "Let's drink to
peace. And to a freer, happier world than this." Chi
Hsing smiled and nodded, but before he went in, he turned, looking
back at the darkness of the river, wondering. LI
YUAN leaned forward, spreading his hands along the cool wooden
balustrade, and looked across the lake toward the distant hills. He
had thought never to come here again, but here he was, not three
years passed since his last visit, his heart hammering in his chest
at the thought of the meeting to come. The
day was hot and still, unnaturally so, even for this southern
climate, but where he stood, on the north balcony of Yin Tsu's summer
palace, there was shade of sorts. Two body-servants stood behind him,
their heads bowed, the long-handled fans moving slowly, indolently in
their hands. Li
Yuan breathed deeply, trying to prepare himself, but there was no
preparing for this moment. He heard her soft footsteps coming down
the broad twist of steps behind him and turned, suddenly awkward,
moving between his servants to face her. Fei Yen had stopped, six
steps from the bottom, her head lowered. "Chieh
Hsia, I..." Her
hesitancy was a new thing. When she had been his wife there had been
a natural arrogance about her which had somehow awed him. Back then
he had always; felt inferior to her, but the years had changed that.
He was older now and T'ang. And she was a cast-off wife, exiled from
the Court. Twice exiled, he thought, remembering the two years
mourning for his brother. He
took a step forward, holding out his right hand to her. She came down
the last few steps and knelt, taking his hand and pressing her
lips to the great Ywe Lung ring, her small, dark head
bowed beneath his gaze. He bade her get up, then stood silently,
staring down at her. She
was still as beautiful as ever. That same porcelain delicacy he
sometimes dreamed of was still there in her, undiminished. "How
have you been?" She
had been looking down all this while, her eyes averted. Now she
glanced up at him. "I am well, Chieh Hsia." "Ah
. . ." But he had heard otherwise. The man who had been here
when he arrived was but the latest of a long line of lovers she had
taken. As if there were some lack in her that she could keep no man
for long. "And
Han?" "He
has grown, Chieh Hsia." She paused, then. "He is with his
nurses just now." Li
Yuan sighed. This too he had heard. As if the mother shunned the son
who had brought her fall from grace. The last time he had seen the
child, Han had been barely nine months old. And now the boy was
almost three. For a moment old feelings stirred in him. Looking at
Fei Yen he frowned, wondering where he had gone wrong with her. But
he had thought this through many times. The blame was not hers. The
mistake had been marrying his dead brother's wife. All wrongness
flowed from that. He had
come with no intention of seeing her, thinking her at Hei Shui in the
north, but she had come here with the man only hours before his craft
had landed, and so his scheme of seeing the boy without her had come
to nothing. "Can
I see him?" She
tensed, silent a moment, then answered him. "I would rather not,
Chieh Hsia . . ." It was
said softly, deferentially, but with a firmness that said much about
her feelings on the matter. It was as he'd expected. Despite her
unchanged looks, the last two years had hardened her. This new exile
wore at her worse than the last. For her it was a kind of death, and
she blamed him for it. He
looked away. "I have a gift for him." "Leave
it, then. I'll see he gets it." He
noted the impoliteness and turned on her, suddenly angry. "You
will bring him here at once. I wish to see the boy, and I
shall." He drew a breath, then, more gently, "I'd like to
see him, Fei Yen. To meet him." She
looked up, her eyes burning, their relative status momentarily
forgotten. "Why? You have your son, Li Yuan. What's my child to
you?" He bit
back the words that came to mind, turning from her sharply, his hands
clenched with anger and frustration. Finally, he looked back at her,
his chin raised commandingly. "Just bring him. Down there,
beside the lake. I'll see him there." "As
my T'ang commands." The
words dripped with bitter irony. Turning from him, she ran back up
the steps, her own anger evident in her every movement. He
watched her go, touched strangely by the familiarity of that anger,
then went down and waited at the lake's edge, looking across at the
ancient orchard. It was some while before the child came. He had been
changed and groomed. A nurse brought him down the steps, then left
him there, at the edge of the grassy slope that led down from the
summer palace to the lake. Li
Yuan turned, facing the boy squarely, and raised a hand, summoning
him. The child came slowly, but not hesitantly. Despite his age, he
carried his head proudly and walked like a little prince. His fine
dark hair was neatly cut and combed, and he wore fine silks of gray
and blue and black. Two ch'i from Li Yuan, he stopped and
bowed low, then looked up again, not certain what was required of him
beyond this formality. The
boy's dark eyes were proud but curious. He met Li Yuan's gaze
unflinchingly and when the T'ang smiled, his lips formed only the
faintest echo of a smile, as if maintaining seriousness were the
greatest art. A lesson he'd been taught. "I
am Li Yuan, Han. Your T'ang." "Yes,"
the boy said clearly. "Mama said." "You
know it is your birthday soon?" The
boy nodded, then waited, moving slightly on his feet. "Good.
And did your mama tell you that I've a gift for you?" Again
he nodded; a strong, definite movement of his neat and perfect head.
Seeing it, Li Yuan shivered and pressed his teeth
together. This was harder than he'd thought. Simply to see the
boy was painful. So perfectly named. So very much like his murdered
brother. He
nodded to himself, then took a pouch from the inner pocket of his
jacket. Tugging open the leather cord, he spilled the tiny object
into his other palm, then knelt, indicating that Han should approach
him. The
boy stood close. Li Yuan could feel his breath on his forehead as he
took the warm and tiny hand and slipped the ring onto the second
finger. Moving back, Li Yuan noted how the boy was staring at the
ring, puzzled by it. "What
does it mean?" Han asked, looking directly, frighteningly into
his eyes from only a hand's width away. For a
moment Li Yuan felt overwhelmed by the depth of the child's eyes, by
his closeness, the warmth of the tiny hand that rested in his own. He
wanted to hold the boy close and kiss him. Wanted, for one long,
almost unbearable moment, to pick him up and carry him from that
place. To take him back with him. The
moment passed. The boy stood there, watching him, awaiting his
answer. He
sighed, staring at the ring. "It's a kind of promise, Han. A
promise I made myself. Each year I shall bring you such a ring.
Until, when you're a man, full grown, there will be one final ring to
keep. One final token of that promise." Looking
up, he saw that the boy had made nothing of what he'd said. Li Yuan
smiled and patted his head. "Never mind. One day I'll explain it
better to you." He let
go of the tiny hand and stood, looking back across the lake. "It's
strange," he said, talking as much to himself as to the child.
"It reminds me of the orchard at Tongjiang. I used to play there
as a child, with my brother, Han." For
the first time the boy looked up at him and smiled. "Han? Like
me, you mean?" Li
Yuan looked down and nodded, letting his left hand rest gently on the
crown of the boy's head, his fingers in the dark, fine hair. "Yes,
Han. Like you. Very much like you." THE
TWO visiting T'ang were about to depart when Wang Sau-leyan's
Chancellor, Hung Mien-lo, appeared at the doorway, the Captain of Chi
Hsing's elite guard two paces behind him. "What
is it, Chancellor Hung?" Wang asked, turning to him. "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia," Hung answered, lowering his head first
to his own T'ang and then to the others, "but it seems there is
some trouble with the great T'ang, Chi Hsing's, craft. The preflight
checks have shown up faults in the computer backup systems. I am
advised that it would be unwise for the great T'ang to attempt the
return flight until such faults have been rectified." Wang
turned, looking back at Chi Hsing. "Well, cousin, what would you
like to do? You are more than welcome to stay here until the repairs
are made." Chi
Hsing stroked his neck with one hand, considering, then shook his
head. "No, Sau-leyan. It would be pleasant, most pleasant
indeed, but I must get back." "Then
why don't you use one of my craft?" Chi
Hsing smiled broadly, delighted by Wang's offer. "I would be
most honored, cousin. But what about my own craft?" Wang
turned, looking past Hung Mien-lo at the Captain. "I shall have
a team of my best technicians aid your crew, cousin. As for the
security aspect, your man, here, might stay, perhaps, to oversee the
work?" Chi
Hsing beamed. "Excellent! But you are certain you can spare a
craft, Sau-leyan? I can always send for my second ship." Wang
reached out and took his arm. "And waste four hours? No, dear
cousin. You are right. I have already kept you from your business far
too long. You will be missing your sons, neh?" Chi
Hsing laughed and nodded. "Even one night away from them seems
too long, sometimes." "Then
let us part. Come, cousins, I will see you to your craft . . ." HE was
saying his farewells to his onetime father-in-law, Yin Tsu, when Fei
Yen burst in at the far side of the hangar. "Li
Yuan!" she called angrily. "What is the meaning of this?" Yin
Tsu turned, aghast, trying at one and the same time to apologize to
his T'ang and remonstrate with his daughter, but she swept past him
imperiously, standing at arm's length from Li Yuan, her hands on her
hips, glaring up at him. "Come
now, Li Yuan! I demand an explanation!" He
laughed coldly, taken aback by her outburst. It was years since
anyone had spoken to him like this. "An
explanation? For what?" "For
what7." She laughed scornfully. "Why, for
the guards, Li Yuan! Am I to be a prisoner in my own father's house?
Am I to be followed and hounded every second of the day?" Li
Yuan looked to Yin Tsu, then back at her. "I have already
explained to your father why the guards are here, Yin Fei Yen,"
he said patiently, but she would have nothing of his reasonableness.
She moved closer, almost shouting the words into his face. "Have
I not been humiliated enough, Li Yuan? Have you not made me suffer
enough for my mistake? Must you continue to hound me and meddle in my
affairs?" The
word was unfortunately chosen, but still Li Yuan was patient. He
would not, at this last moment, be drawn by her. "You
misunderstand me, Fei Yen," he said, leaning close, letting his
voice carry only to her. "I know all about your lovers. But that
is not why I am doing this. We live in troubled times. The guards are
there for one reason only—to keep Han safe. As for you, my
once-wife, I have no wish to meddle in your life. And you are quite
wrong if you think I want you to suffer. No. I wish you only
happiness." For a
moment she stood there, her dark eyes watching him. Then, with the
faintest rustle of her silks, she turned away, walking quickly across
the hangar and out into the early afternoon sunlight. And Li
Yuan, watching her go, felt a part of him drawn out after her, as if
on a fine, invisible line, and knew, as he had not really known
before, that he was not quite over her. THE
captain sat at a table, a bottle of Wang Sau-leyan's best wine open
before him. A serving girl stood behind him, her fingers gently
massaging his shoulder muscles while he watched the men at
work on the far side of the hangar. The two craft looked identical
from where he sat and, not for the first time, he found his thoughts
turn uneasily to the question of why the T'ang of Africa should want
a perfect copy of Chi Hsing's craft. While
servants set out the meal, the Captain turned his head, looking
across to where Wang Sau-leyan was deep in conversation with a tall,
odd-looking Han. The Han seemed central to all of this somehow. It
was to him that the technicians came with their queries, and it was
to him alone that they would defer, as if the great T'ang were
invisible to them. That intrigued him—that absence of any mark
of respect for Wang Sau-leyan. When he'd first seen it, he had been
shocked, for it went against all instinct. But now he thought he
understood. He
returned his eyes to the men, busy at work inside the right-hand
craft, Chi Hsing's original. They had been at work now for over three
hours, and in that time they had been most thorough. A team of six
technicians had taken the control panels apart and painstakingly
rebuilt them. Meanwhile, two of their colleagues had broken down the
access codes to the craft's computer records and stripped them bare,
making copies of everything—of security keycodes, pilot
transmissions, field distortion patterns, and all. He had listened to
their excited chatter and felt his unease grow. The copy craft would
not simply look like Chi Hsing's, to all intents and purpose it would
be Chi Hsing's. And Chi Hsing himself would know nothing of
its existence. Unless.
. . He
felt the tension return to his muscles and tried to relax, to let the
young girl's fingers work their magic spell, but it was difficult.
Too much was going on inside. He looked at the bowls of delicacies
that had been set before him, conscious of how, at any other time, he
would have fallen upon such rare culinary delights, but just now he
had no appetite. When Wang's agent had brought him, he had not
expected any of this; had not really asked himself why Wang Sau-leyan
should wish to delay his cousin's craft, accepting the man's
reassurances. But this... He
shivered, then reached out to take some of the duck in ginger,
forcing himself to eat; to act as if nothing were wrong. But beneath
the outward mask of calm, he felt a sense of panic, knowing he
had got himself in out of his depth. Why should Wang Sau-leyan go to
such lengths to copy his cousin's craft unless he wished to use it?
And why should he do that? Moreover,
the presence of these men—political terrorists, he was certain,
if only from the way they pointedly refused to bow to the great
T'ang—added a whole new dimension to things. To find such men
here, at the heart of the T'ang's palace, what did that mean? Across
from the Captain, Wang Sau-leyan leaned back, nodding his
satisfaction, then turned and came across. The Captain rose at once
and bowed low, keeping his eyes averted. "You
have everything you need, Captain Gustavsson?" He
kept his voice calm, clear of the fear he felt deep down. "All
is well, Chieh Hsia. I am honored to be of service to you." It was
not what he had meant to say, but it would do. Moreover, it reflected
something true about the situation. He had not understood before,
but, in taking Wang Sau-leyan's money, he had become Wang's man.
There was no turning back from this. No way of excusing himself.
Inadvertently he had committed himself to whatever was being done
here. If
I had known . . . But it
was too late now for such thoughts. And when Wang put out his hand,
he took and kissed the great ring of power, knowing that it was this
or death, and there was his family to think of—his sons and
baby daughter, his wife Ute, and his invalid mother. Wang knew that.
He was sure to know it. It was why they had chosen him. Why it was
even possible that Wang's agents had been in some way responsible for
his money troubles. Certainly, he had never had so bad a night at
Chou as that session six weeks back when he had lost eight
thousand yuan at a single sitting. Even so, it had been his
decision, and now he must live with it. "If
there is any further service I might offer, Chieh Hsia." Wang
smiled, his plump, moonlike face taking on an air of great
benevolence. "Maybe there is something. For now, however, you
have my gratitude, Captain. And my protection." The
Captain looked up, surprised, then quickly lowered his head once
more. "I am deeply honored, Chieh Hsia." "Well...
let me keep you no more. Enjoy your meal while it is hot, Captain.
Such pleasures are rare in life, neh?" Rare
indeed, he thought, looking through his lashes at the back of
the retreating T'ang. He sat, his skin strangely cold, a new
tightness at the pit of his stomach. Eat, he told himself.
Enjoy the feast that's spread before you. But though there
were dishes there he had never dreamed he would taste, things that
only a T'ang might afford, he found himself picking at them
dispiritedly, chewing the richly flavored foods listlessly, as if
they were but tasteless copies of the things they purported to be. He
looked about him, as if waking, seeing the men working on the craft,
the odd-looking Han standing nearby, supervising them, and nodded to
himself, understanding. Lifting one hand, he put the fingers gently
to his mouth, feeling once more the cold, hard pressure of the Yu>e
Lung—the Wheel of Dragons—against the warm softness of
his lips, then drew them back, as if the flesh were bruised. WANG
SAU -LEYAN stood at the rail, the dark stillness of the Nile beneath
him, and looked up at the full and shining circle of the moon. For so
long now he had held himself in check, containing his natural impulse
to oppose and destroy. But now—finally—his patience would
be rewarded. He
smoothed his hands over his ample stomach, then smiled broadly. It
was strange how far he had come these past few years. Stranger still
that he had not seen this in himself from the first. But it had
always been there, since his first conscious moments. They
had never understood him. Not one of them. His father had disliked
him from the start, repulsed by the pudgy little creature he had
sired. His mother had persevered for a time, but had thought him a
stubborn, willful child. Dismayed by his behavior and unable to
control him except by the strictest measures, she had cast him from
her side before he was three, having nothing further to do with him.
Her sudden death, when he was seven, had left him curiously
unaffected, unable to share in the general grief, but it had given
him a strange, unchildlike understanding of his nature. From that
moment on he had known it was
his fate to stand outside that bright circle of human connectedness;
to be an onlooker, cut off from kith and kin. A Han, a son, but
really neither; more some alien creature born into a fleshy form. And
from that moment's realization had come the urge to oppose, the
impulse to destroy all that he touched. No,
and no one, not even Mach, understood how deep that impulse ran in
him; how strongly that urge to destroy tugged at him, sweeping him
along, like a smooth white stone caught in the dark ocean's undertow.
It was not power he wanted, but the opportunities that power brought:
the chance to meddle and corrupt, to smash and overturn. To break . .
. well, a whole world, if he so wished. A
whole world . . . No, not even Mach wanted that. Even he would stop
short at some things. The
oxygen generators, for instance. Those huge pumping stations that
reached down deep into the earth's mantle to tap the reservoirs of
energy and convert the basic building blocks of life into the most
precious thing of all—air. Mach knew of them, secret though
they were. He knew that, since the destruction of the rain forests,
life on Chung Kuo would have been insupportable without them—as
intolerable as the icy wastes of Mars. But never—not even for a
passing moment—would he have considered acting against them.
Destroying them. It was unthinkable. No, what Mach wanted was
an end to the old—to Seven and Cities and the stifling world of
levels. And afterward? Well, to be blunt about it, Mach hadn't really
thought it through. His vision of the new order was vague; a thin
tissue of ideals, with no more substance than the words he breathed
into the air. Necessarily so. For had he pictured what it would be
like—what it would really be like—when the Cities
fell, he would have quailed at the thought of the misery and
devastation to come. But
he—Wang Sau-leyan, T'ang of Africa—had thought long and
hard on the matter. Had pictured in his mind the long, straggling
lines of skeletal figures stretching out across that bleak, unending
wasteland. He had seen them, there in the clear, gray light of dawn,
trudging from nowhere to nowhere, tongues black in their wizened
heads, blank eyes staring straight ahead, while to every side, the
dead were heaped in rotting piles, all trace of human warmth, of
human connectedness, leached
from their wasted forms. And at such moments his nostrils would
twitch with distaste, as if sensing the overwhelming stench of
putrefying flesh. And he would smile. Yes.
He saw it clearly. A dying world, its foul, unregenerated air filled
with the darkness of corruption. And afterward, nothing. Nothing but
rock and wind and salted oceans. Nothing for a million years. He
lowered his eyes, looking out across the dark surface of the river
toward the ancient Valley of the Kings. Here death was close at hand.
Was a dark companion, ever-present, more intimate than any lover. He
could feel its breath upon his cheek, its hands caressing his softly
rounded flesh, and shivered at the touch, not from fear but from a
strange, inexplicable delight. No.
Not one of them knew him. Not one. Hung Mien-lo, Li Yuan, Jan
Mach—each saw but the surface of him; the softly rounded mask
of flesh. But beneath that—beneath the tissue of his physical
self— was something hard and unyielding; something wholly
inimical to life. He
turned, hearing the rush of wind, the beating of wings overhead, then
laughed, delighted. Birds filled the air suddenly, returning to their
nests on the far side of the river, their long, dark shapes swooping
and circling high above the moonlit darkness of the Nile. And then,
one by one, they plunged into the dark water, exploding in sudden
circles of light. Like
messengers, he thought, and felt a strange unearthly thrill pass
through him. Messengers. it was
a place of pools and paths and ancient stones, of pleasant bowers and
gently flowing streams. Birds sang in the sunlit branches of
time-twisted junipers while below, amid the lush green covering,
cast-bronze statues of long-extinct animals—bright red
pictograms cut into their flanks—lolled peacefully, as if
shading themselves for the fierceness of the late afternoon sun. It
was a scene of great tranquillity, of a long-cultivated harmony that
was almost indolent in its nature. But today, the Garden of
Reflective Quiescence gave Li Yuan no sense of inner peace as he
walked along its paths. For once, his eyes skirted the surface of
things, seeing nothing of the delicate
balance of form and color and texture the garden's designers
had striven so hard to create, focused only on the hard nugget of
unrest deep within him. Returning
from T'ai Yueh Shan, he had ridden out, urging the horse on madly, as
if to purge what he felt from his blood, but it had been no use. At
the ruined temple he had turned, looking about him, seeing her image
everywhere he looked. And
the child? He
stopped, realizing suddenly where he was. He had strayed from the
path and was among the flower beds. Earth clung dark and heavy to his
pale kid boots while his hand had closed upon a flower, crushing it,
scattering the bloodred petals. He looked down, appalled, then backed
away, turning, his hurried steps echoing off the flagstones as he ran
back down the path toward the Southern Palace. Li
Yuan leapt the steps in threes, then ran across the grass toward the
open doors of the Great Library. The ancient, Chu Shi-ch'e, looked
up, startled, from behind his desk as Yuan burst into the room, and
began to get to his feet. "Sit
down, Master Chu," Li Yuan said breathlessly, crossing the
broad, high-ceilinged room. Behind, Chu, his assistant, twenty years
his junior, looked on, wide-eyed, as the young T'ang dragged the
ladder along the rail, then began to climb. "Chieh
Hsia . . ." protested Chu, coming around his desk. "Let
the boy do that. . ." "I
am grateful for your concern, Master Chu, but it is a T'ang's
prerogative to do exactly as he wishes." "That
may be so, Chieh Hsia," the old man answered, tugging at
his long white beard, "but of what use is a servant who is not
allowed to serve?" Li
Yuan turned on the ladder, looking across at the Pi-shu chien. Chu
Shi-ch'e had been appointed Inspector of the Imperial Library by his
grandfather Li Ch'ing, more than sixty years earlier, and in all that
time he had never missed a day's service from ill health. Moreover,
it was said that Chu Shi-ch'e's knowledge of the archives was
encyclopedic. If his movements had grown slower with time, his mind
had remained as nimble as ever. Li Yuan hesitated a moment longer,
then relented, coming down, letting Chu's assistant—the
"boy," a stoop-backed old fellow of a mere
sixty-four years—climb in his place. "What
was it you wanted, Chieh Hsia?" Chu asked, coming
alongside, his bent head a sign as much of age as of respect for his
T'ang. Li
Yuan drew a long breath. "There is a tape I saw once, years ago.
It was of my brother Han, when he was a child. A very young child. In
the orchard with my mother, Lin Yua." Chu
stared at him a moment, his eyes narrowed, then turned away, firing
two rapid phrases of Mandarin at his assistant. Almost at once the
"boy" was clambering down the steps again, a long, narrow
case with a golden cover in one hand. The
case was part of the official archives—the daily record of the
Li Family, dating back more than two hundred years. Here, stacked
floor to ceiling on these walls, were the complete holographic
records of the Family, each case embossed with the great Ywe Lung,
the Moon Dragon, symbol of the Seven. Li
Yuan watched as the assistant handed the case to Chu Shi-ch'e, then
backed off, bowing deeply. Chu opened the case, checking the
contents, then, clicking it shut, turned, offering it to Li Yuan. "I
think this is what you want, Chieh Hsia." Again the old
man's eyes seemed to pierce him; to see through to the innermost
depths of him. And maybe that was so, for of all the Family's
retainers, no one knew half as much about his masters as Chu
Shi-ch'e. The old man gave a wintry smile. "If you will forgive
us, Chieh Hsia, we will leave you to view the tape." "Thank
you, Master Chu," Li Yuan said gratefully. "I will summon
you when I am done." He
watched them go, then turned, facing the black, lacquered platform at
the center of the room—a big circular stand six ch'i in
width, its surface carved in the form of a huge Ywe Lung, the
whole thing resting on seven golden dragon heads. Here he had come,
long years ago it seemed, to sit at his father's feet. And, as his
father talked, telling him of his long and dignified heritage, the
ghostly images of his ancestors would walk the earth once more, their
words as strong and vibrant as the hour they had uttered them. It had
always seemed a kind of
magic—much more so than the computer-generated trickery of the
ancestral figures in the Hall of Eternal Peace and Tranquillity, for
this was real. Or had been. Yet it was some while since he had come
here. Some while since he had let himself be drawn back into the
past. It was
a weakness, like the business with Fei Yen, yet for once he would
indulge it. And then, maybe, the restlessness would go from him, the
dead mouth of the past stop speaking in his head. He
looked down at the case in his hands, studying the date embossed into
the hard plastic beneath the Ywe Lung, then flipped the catch
open, taking out the hard green disc of plastic that held that day's
images. For a moment he simply stared at it, reminded of that moment
in the tomb, twelve years before, when he had carried the first of
the ritual objects to his father. That had been the pi, symbol
of Heaven, a large disc of green jade with a small hole bored at its
center. This here was like a smaller pi, lighter, warmer to
the touch, yet somehow related, even down to the tiny hole at the
center. Li
Yuan looked about him at the layers of gold-bound cases that lined
the walls, a tiny shiver passing through him at the thought of all
that time, all those memories, stored there, then crossed to the
garden doors. He pulled them closed, then tugged at the thick silk
cord that hung from the ceiling, drawing down the great blinds that
shut out the daylight. He
went across, leaning across the platform to place the disc onto the
spindle at the hub of the great circle of dragons, then stepped back.
At once the lights in the room faded, a faint glow filling the air
above the platform. "I
am Li Yuan," he said clearly, giving the machine a voice
recognition code, "Grand Counselor and T'ang of Ch'eng Ou Chou." "Welcome,
Chieh Hsia," the machine answered in a soft, melodious
voice. "What would you like to see?" "The
orchard," he said, a faint tremor creeping into his voice. "Late
morning. Lin Yua with my brother, the prince, Han Ch'in." "Chieh
Hsia. . ." The
air shimmered and took shape. Li Yuan caught his breath. The image
was sharp-edged, almost real. He could see the dappled shadow of the
leaves on the dark earth, the dust motes dancing in the
sunlight, yet if he reached out, his hand would pass through
nothingness. He walked about it slowly, keeping to the darkness,
looking through the trees at his mother, her skirts spread about her,
her face filled with sunlight and laughter, his brother Han, nine
months old, crawling on the grass beside her. As he watched, she
leaned out and, grabbing Han's tiny feet, pulled him back to her,
laughing. She let Han get a few ch'i from her, then pulled him
back again. Han was giggling, a rich baby gurgle of a laugh that
brought a smile to Li Yuan's face even as his chest tightened with
pain. No, he had not been mistaken. This was what he had remembered
earlier, deep down, beneath the level of conscious thought. This
moment, from a time before his time, and a child—his brother—so
like his own that to call them different people seemed somehow wrong. He
stared into the magic circle of light, mesmerized by this vision of
that distant yesterday, and felt a kind of awe. Could it not be so?
Could not a person be reborn, a new vessel of flesh fashioned for the
next stage of the journey? Wasn't that what the ancient Buddhists had
believed? He closed his eyes, thinking of the ruins in the hills
above the estate, then turned away. Weakness,
weakness ... He
shook his head, bewildered. What was he up to? What in the gods'
names was he doing? Yet even as he turned back, meaning to end it—to
kill the image and get out—he stopped dead, staring into the
light, bewitched by the image of his mother cradling his brother, by
that look of love, of utter adoration in her face. He groaned, the
ache of longing so awful, so overpowering, that for a moment he could
not breathe. Then, tearing himself free of its spell, he breached the
circle of light and lifted the disc from the spindle. As the
room's lights filtered back, he stood there, trembling, horrified by
the ease with which he had been seduced. It was as he had reasoned
that time, in those final moments before Ben Shepherd had come. This
longing for the past was like a heavy chain, binding a man, dragging
him down. Moreover, to succumb to that desire was worse than the
desire itself. Was a weakness not to be tolerated. No, he could not
be T'ang and feel this. One had to go on, not back. He let
the disc fall from his fingers, then turned, going to the door. There
was work to be done, Ministers to be seen. The unformed future
beckoned. And was he, its architect, to falter now? Was he to
see it all come to nothing? He
threw the doors wide and went out, hastening down the corridor,
servants kneeling hurriedly, touching their heads to the floor as he
passed. Back in his study he took his seat behind the great desk
while his servants rushed here and there, summoning his senior
officials. But it was neither Nan Ho nor his secretary, Chang
Shih-sen, who appeared in the doorway moments later; it was his
eldest wife, Mien Shan. He
looked up, surprised. "Mien Shan. . . What is it?" She
came two steps into the room, her head lowered demurely, her whole
manner hesitant. "Forgive me, husband, but might I speak with
you a moment?" He
frowned. "Is something wrong, Mien Shan?" "I.
. ." She glanced up at him, then, lowering her head again, gave
a small nod. There was a faint color at her cheeks now. She swallowed
and began again. "It is not for myself, you understand, Chieh
Hsia. . ." "No,"
he said gently. "But tell me, good wife, what is it?" "It
is Lai Shi, husband. This hot weather . . ." He
leaned forward, concerned. Lai Shi, his Second Wife, was four months
pregnant. "Is she all right?" "She
. . ." Mien Shan hesitated, then spoke again. "Surgeon Wu
says that no harm has been done. She was unconscious only a short
while. The child is unaffected." "Unconscious?"
He stood, suddenly angry that no one had told him of this on his
return. Mien
Shan glanced at him again—a timid, frightened look, then
lowered her head once more. "She . . . fainted. In the garden.
We were playing ball. I..." Again she hesitated, but this time
she steeled herself to say what she had to say, looking up and
meeting his eyes as she did so. "I begged Master Nan not to say
anything. You are so busy, husband, and it was such a small thing. I
did not wish you to be troubled. Lai Shi seemed fine. It was but a
moment's overexertion. But now she has taken to her bed ..." Li
Yuan came around the desk, towering over the tiny figure of his First
Wife. "You have called Surgeon Wu?" She
bowed her head, close to tears now; afraid of her husband's anger.
"He says it is a fever, Chieh Hsia, brought on by the
air, the heat. Forgive me, husband. I did not know . . ." "I
see ... and this fever—is it serious?" "Surgeon
Wu thinks it will pass. But I am worried, Chieh Hsia. The days
are so hot, and the air—the air seems so dry, so lacking in any
goodness." Li
Yuan nodded. He had noticed as much himself. For a moment he stared
at her, conscious of the simple humility of her stance; of how
different she was from Fei Yen in that. Then, touched by her concern,
he reached out and held her close, looking down into her softly
rounded face. "Go
now, Mien Shan, and sit with Lai Shi. I shall finish here and come as
quickly as I can. Meanwhile, I shall give instructions to Nan Ho to
have the Court removed to the floating palace. I cannot have my wives
troubled by this heat, neh?" Mien
Shan smiled broadly, pleased by the news. Yet her smile, which ought
to have warmed him, merely made him feel guilty that he could not
return it with a matching warmth. He
sighed, suddenly tired of everything. "Forgive me, Mien Shan,
but there is much to be done." She
drew back, bowing her head. "Husband . . ." He
watched her go, then turned, shaking his head, angry with himself.
Why was he so cold with them? Weren't they, after all, the best of
wives—kind and loving, solicitous of his health? Why then
should he show them such disrespect? Such indifference? Or was
it simpler than that? Wasn't it just as Ben had said that time?
Wasn't he still in love with Fei Yen? For a
moment he stood there, breathing deeply, conscious that, for the
first time since he had cast her from him, he understood. He loved
her, yes, but that meant nothing now. His duty was to his new wives.
He had not faced it before now. Not properly. He had let things
slide, hoping that time would cure him, that things would come good
of their own accord, but they never did. It was that simple—he
had not worked at things. He had lacked the will. But now . . . He
nodded, determined. From now on it would be different. From
this moment on he would work at things. Would make them right
again. Beginning this evening, at Lai Shi's bedside. And in time . .
. in time these feelings would subside and the dark, hard stone of
pain would be washed from him. He
unclenched his hands, letting the past go, letting it fall from his
fingers, then went back behind his desk, making a start on the pile
of documents; selecting only those that needed his urgent attention. FEI
YEN stood on the terrace beside the lake, barefoot and alone. It was
late now and the day's heat had finally dissipated, but the air was
still warm and close, and as she paced the cool, lacquered boards,
she gently fanned herself. His
visit had disturbed her deeply. At first she had thought it simple
anger and irritation at his meddling, but it was more than that. Even
after she had calmed herself—after she had bathed and had her
serving maids rub scented oils into her back and legs to relax
her—she had felt that same strange tension in her gut, and knew
it had to do with him. She had thought it finished, all emotion spent
between them, but it wasn't over yet; she knew that now. She
turned her head. To her right, on the far side of the lake, there
were lights on in the hangar. Faint noises carried across the dark
and silent water, the sounds of her father's servants preparing the
craft for her departure in the morning. She
sighed and, pushing away from the rail, descended the narrow steps
that led down to the shoreline. There, beneath the brilliant circle
of the moon, she paused, staring down into the dark mirror of the
lake. Beneath her feet a huge, white polished stone gleamed in the
moonlight, making her reflection—darker, less discernible than
the stone—seem almost insubstantial. Fading
away, she thought. I'm slowly fading away, like a hungry
ghost. She
shuddered and turned, trying to push the thought away, but it
persisted, nagging at her until she had to face it. In a sense it was
true. The life she should have had—her "real" life,
as wife to Li Yuan and mother of his sons—had ended years ago.
She had killed it, just as surely as if she had taken a knife and
slit her throat. And this life she now
had—this succession of empty days, which she filled with
passing lovers and idle pursuits—was a kind of afterlife,
lacking all purpose and all reason. A pang
of bitterness—pure and unalloyed—struck her at the
thought. It was all her own fault. And yet, what would she have
changed? What would she have done differently, given the choice? She
took a long breath, then turned, confronting her reflection once
again, leaning forward to study the image closely. She
had changed a great deal these past few years. Gone were the excesses
of former years. She wore no jewelry now. Likewise her clothes were
simpler—a plain chi poo was all she ever wore these
days. As for her hair, that was brushed back severely from her face;
plaited tightly and secured in a tiny bun on either side of her head. I look
like a peasant girl, she thought. Yes. And so she had dressed that
morning, three years ago, when she had broken the news to him. For a
moment she was still, remembering. What would you say if I told
you 1 had fallen? she had asked him, thinking he would
understand. But he had looked back at her blankly, puzzled by her
words. And she had had to make it clear to him. A child. A son. And
for a time they had been happy. But that time had been brief. As
brief, it seemed, as an indrawn breath. She
knew now she had been wrong to take Tsu Ma for a lover. But it had
been hard being alone all that time; hard to be a woman and to be
ignored. In any case, she had been beside herself. Tsu Ma . . . just
the thought of him had swayed her from her senses. Those afternoons,
stretched out beneath him, naked on his blanket in the ruins of the
ancient temple . . . that had been sweetness itself. Had been a taste
of Heaven. Yes,
and though it had been wrong, it was as nothing beside what Yuan had
done. To kill his horses . . . She shivered, the memory of it still
fresh. How could he have done that? How could he have killed those
wonderful, sensitive beasts? She had never understood. And
now he had returned; older and more impressive than he had been. A
T'ang in every word and action. Yes, it was true. The child she had
known was gone; dead, almost as if he'd never been. And in his place
was a stranger. Someone she ought to know but didn't. She
turned, looking back toward the terrace. A figure was standing
there; a small, hunched figure that she recognized after a
moment as her father. "Fei
Yen?" he called softly. "Is that you down there?" He
came down the steps and joined her beside the water. "Father,"
she said gently, embracing him. "I thought you had gone to bed." "And
so I shall, but not before you, my girl. What are you doing out here?
It's late. I thought you were leaving early in the morning?" "I
am. But I had to be alone a while. To think." "Ah.
. ." His eyes met hers briefly, then looked away. "I too
was thinking. Han needs a father. This life is no good for him, Fei
Yen. He needs a stronger hand. Needs balance in his life." It was
an old, familiar lecture, and as ever she smiled, knowing that her
father wanted not to judge her, but only what was best for the child.
She studied him a moment in the moonlight. He was old now, his gray
hair receding, his powers as a man waning, yet when he was with Han
it was as if the years fell away. No, she had never seen him laugh so
much as in the past few weeks. She
leaned close, kissing his brow tenderly. No one else in the world
loved her as her father did. No, and no one else forgave her,
whatever she did. "He
has his uncles," she said, as if in answer, but Yin Tsu gave a
dismissive snort. "And
a fine lot of good they are." He laughed; a short, sharp sound,
full of disappointment. "I had such hopes, Fei Yen. Such plans
for them. And what have they become? Drunkards and wastrels. Drains
on the family purse, one and all." It was
harsh, and, to a degree, unfair, but she let it pass. Her brothers
could fight their own battles. Right now there was Han to think of.
Han and herself. "And
these guards?" she asked tentatively. "You think Li Yuan
was right to do that?" Yin
Tsu considered it a moment, then shrugged. "I do not know, nu
er. It is ... unusual. But Li Yuan has his reasons, I am sure,
.and if it helps set his mind at rest, then that must be good, neh?
He carries a heavy burden, that young man, and carries it well."
His eyes shone with admiration. "Would that he were a son of
mine. . ." Then, realizing
what he had said, he looked away again, but not before she saw the
regret, the brief flash of bitterness that had crossed his features. She
looked up. In the distance, above the hills, two geese flew slowly
across the sky, their wings beating silently as they headed south,
toward the sea. The sight made her clench her fists, remembering that
time on the lake at Tongjiang with Li Yuan, Tsu Ma, and her cousin Wu
Tsai, on the tiny island, beneath the colored lanterns. The night she
had played the p'i p'a for them and sang the refrain from "Two
White Geese." And
now she was alone. Like grass on a lonely hill, knowing it must
wither and die. The words made her shudder, then turn back,
facing her father. "Come,"
she said, laying her hand gently on his arm. "Let us go back
inside." After
kissing him good night, she returned to her rooms; to the faint,
enchanting flicker of aromatic candles and the sight of her maids
busying themselves, finishing the packing for the morning. Waving
them aside, she went through to where Han slept and stood there,
looking down into the cot. It was
only at moments like these, when Han lay there, his limbs spread idly
in sleep, his dark hair tousled, that she realized just how much she
loved him. Not mildly, or casually, but with a fierce mother love
that was as protective as the mother wolf's for her cubs. She
reached down, brushing the hair back gently from his eyes, then
pulled the blanket up about his chest. She was selfish, she knew. The
men who came to pay court to her—hollow clowns and dandies
all—took up too much of her time. Kept her from him. But that
would change. She would spend more time with him. She
took her hand back, slowly, reluctantly, then blew a silent kiss. Let
him sleep, she thought. Let him dream his pleasant, childish
dreams. For tomorrow would be a long day. A long, long day. CHAPTER
SEVENTEEN
Distant
Thunder Kim
reached across and took the ink brush from the stand. Inking the
brush, he drew the document toward him and signed his name at the
bottom of the final sheet. "There," he said, sitting back.
It was the final touch; the last of the formalities. Now he was
theirs. He
looked up and saw how Reiss was smiling. SimFic's Chief Executive,
more than any of them gathered there, had wanted this. To rebuild the
Company's reputation and put it back up there among the Hang Seng's
top ten. Yes, and he had paid more than twice what Kim's broker had
estimated to bring Kim back into the fold. And so
here he was again. In Berdichev's old office, nine years later and
ninety-nine years wiser. Or so it felt. "Welcome
back to SimFic, Shih Ward," Reiss said, bowing his head and
offering Kim both his hands. "I am delighted that we've signed
you." Kim
stood, forcing himself to smile and take the man's hands. Two
years, he was thinking, was that it all it was1.
And yet, strangely, it didn't feel like it had before. Back then,
he had had no prospect of being free, whereas now, at least, he had a
contract. Five years—six, if he took up the bonus option—and
he would be free again. And rich. He
turned back, watching as one of Reiss's men "sanded" his
signature, then removed the papers into a special folder. It was a
long document, twenty-four
pages in all, and he had gone through it carefully with his broker
yesterday, but in essence it was simple. He was their slave now. For
the next five years he would do what they said when they said. That
was, as long as it did not endanger his life or seriously threaten
his health. And providing it was legal. Not that they had any
intention of placing him in any danger; not after the fee they had
paid to sign him. He
touched his tongue to his lower teeth thoughtfully. Twenty-five
million yuan had been placed in an account in his name
already. And there was more to come. Much more. Fifteen million a
year, for five years, and a further twenty-five if he stayed on that
extra year. And then there were the performance bonuses, the two
percent cut on any inventions subsequently manufactured from his
original patents, and the sliding scale payments for developing any
of SimFic's existing patents to "manufacturing standard." All in
all, he could come out of this exceedingly well. Rich enough, if
things worked out, to start again; older, wiser, and with the
capital, this time, to expand. Rich enough, perhaps, to marry a
Marshal's daughter. He
looked back at Reiss and smiled; a gentler, more relaxed smile. "I'm
pleased to be with you, Shih Reiss," he said, conscious of the
dozen or so senior executives ranged at the far end of the office,
watching their exchange. "I hope our partnership will be a
fruitful one." His
echo of Reiss's words from earlier that day brought a smile to the
Chief Executive's lips. "I hope so, too, Kim. I really do. But
come, let's go through. It's time." Kim
nodded, then allowed himself to be turned about, a faint sensation of
heaviness in his limbs. In the next room the technician was waiting
beside his machine. Kim, entering the room, studied it with a
detached interest, conscious of the sudden feeling of
hollowness—maybe even a trace of fear—at the pit of his
stomach. The machine was a kind of gantry, attached by a thin coil of
wire to a slim, black-cased comset. On the surface it looked fairly
harmless, yet it would provide them with the means of controlling him
for the next five years. A
slave, he thought. I'm going to be a slave again. A thing that
thinks. A puzzle-solver. Not a person but a commodity. To be
used as the Company desires. He
shivered, then stepped forward, letting the technician help him into
the brace. It
took only seconds. Then he stepped back, the collar pulsing gently
about his neck. He could feel its warmth, its energy, almost as if it
were alive, and, though he had meant not to, he found his left hand
had traveled up, unbeknownst to him, to touch and gently tug at it. "It'll
not harm you in any way," Reiss said, as if to reassure him.
"We'd have preferred not to, but the legal formalities . . ."
His voice trailed off, then, "Look on it as a safeguard. Company
life can be hard and very competitive, as you know." He laughed
awkwardly. "Well. . . it'll help us take good care of you. That
way we'll all be happy, neh?" Kim
nodded, giving Reiss the best smile he could manage; but suddenly the
reality of it was on him. This was his life for the next one thousand
eight hundred and twenty-six days. This . . . Reiss
turned and took a folder from one of his assistants, then turned
back, handing it to Kim. "Here are the details of your first
assignment. We thought we'd give you something familiar to begin
with. Something you can get your teeth into straightaway." Kim
took the folder and opened it. Inside were four flimsy sheets of
paper. On the first were four handwritten equations. On the second
was a tiny, neatly drawn diagram, the notations in a different hand
from the first. The third sheet was filled with notes, some by the
author of the equations, but most of them by whoever had drawn the
diagram. "Molecular
switches," Kim said quietly, feeling a pulse of excitement pass
through him. "It's what I've been working on." "I
know," Reiss said, watching him carefully. "We've been
working on the same lines for some time now. And this is the closest
weVe got. They're unstable . . ." "Yes,"
Kim flicked back, studying the equations a moment, then looked at the
final sheet. It was headed up with SimFic's double helix logo.
Beneath it, in a neat printer face, were the details of his
assignment. "Sohm
Abyss," he said, looking up at Reiss, wide-eyed. "You're
sending me to Sohm Abyss!" THE
PHILADELPHIA NIGHTCLUB was almost empty. It was just after seven in
the morning and the four young men sat about one of the central
tables, the top buttons of their pan loosened, their jackets
on the backs of their chairs. It had been a long night but a
successful one and they had raised more than a million -yuan.
Enough, for now, to keep the movement from bankruptcy. Kennedy
had left more than two hours back, more tired than usual, the new
security men he'd hired shadowing him closely. That was but one of
the changes they had noticed. Small things that made them think back
to what Kennedy had said to them that first time and reassess.
Overnight, it seemed, the mood of things had changed. It was
four days to the first round of voting and things looked good.
Michael Lever was up even on the more dubious EduVoc polls, and talk
was that his father's man, Edward Gratton, would be lucky to pick up
more than a third of the vote. All night people had been coming up to
Michael and slapping his back, congratulating him, as if the count
were a formality. It had made him uneasy. It felt like tempting the
gods. "You
worry too much, Michael," Kustow was saying. "What can
Gratton do in four days? TheyVe flung every last bit of dirt at you
they could find and it still wasn't enough. It's our time, and
nothing can prevent it. The tide has turned against the old men.
People want change. And by the gods, they're going to get it!" Parker
and Fisher laughed, but Michael was silent, brooding. His own seat
looked safe, it was true, but things weren't going quite so well
across the board. Indeed, if things didn't improve, they'd be lucky
to take four of the thirty seats they were contesting. But he was
also thinking of something Kennedy had said—something he had
whispered to him earlier that evening—about the possibility of
a deal. He had warned Michael to be careful. To be very careful. "A
lot hangs on this one, though," said Fisher. He turned in his
seat to summon a waiter for more ch'a, then turned back. "You
know, there's a whole clutch of seats that are vulnerable in the
second round. Forty or more, I reckon. And each and every one ripe
for the picking." "That's
provided we get a good vote first time out," Kustow added more
cautiously. "Sure
. . ." Fisher leaned forward, looking from one to another. "I
think we will. I think we'll do better than the poll showings. Much
better. That's why I've asked Kennedy if I could run for one of those
seats." Michael
looked up. "That's good, Carl. What did he say?" Fisher
laughed. "He said yes." All
three congratulated him at once. "Damn the ch'a," Kustow
said, getting up unsteadily from his chair. "This calls for
another bottle of that special wine!" "Where
are you going to run?" Michael asked, pulling Kustow down from
his feet. "Miami
Hsien. Against Carver." Miami
was Fisher's home stack. The place where his father's Company was
registered. Like Michael, he was going to be running directly against
his old man's candidate. Michael
looked down. "Is that wise?" Parker
and Kustow were watching Fisher closely now. Both knew what Lever
meant. The day after Kennedy had been nominated to run in Boston,
Fisher's father had disinherited him: had frozen the funds to all
three of his son's companies. Fisher had been forced to lay off his
work force. Some had found other jobs, but more than a hundred
families had "gone down." The local media had had a field
day, and Representative Carver had returned from a business trip in
City Europe to fly back and be interviewed in the home of one of
those families that had suffered through, as he termed it, "the
irresponsible management of a young and untried man." Going
down—with all its social stigma—was the one thing all
voters feared in common, and in the minds of the voters of Miami,
what Carl Fisher had done was unforgivable. "I
want the chance to put my case," Fisher said. "I want the
opportunity effacing Carver and telling him to his face that he's a
liar and a cheat. That for eighteen years he's been in the pocket of
my father." Kustow
whistled. "You'll say that to his face?" "He'll
sue," said Parker. Fisher
smiled. "Kennedy's hoping he will. He wants to fight the case
himself. I've given him all the stuff I had. Accounts books, file
numbers, memory copies of conversations." For
the first time since the crowds had left the club, Michael sat
forward and smiled. "YouVe got all that stuff?" Fisher
nodded. "I got it all together first thing. After I'd first met
Kennedy. Thought I might need some insurance." Slowly,
but with gathering force, Michael began to laugh. And in a few
moments they were all laughing. The waiter, when he brought the ch'a,
looked around at them, then shrugged and walked away, keeping his
thoughts to himself. EMILY
TURNED, looking about her, trying to estimate the scale of the
problem at a single glance, but it was hard to take it all in. The
eye was drawn constantly to the smaller details: to the distressed
face of a wheezing ancient, or the empty, hopeless eyes of a silent,
uncomplaining child; to the weeping sores of a young blind beggar or
the mute suffering in the face of a mother who yet cradled her cold,
long-dead baby. In the face of all this individual misery the greater
picture just slipped away. This much suffering was, quite literally,
unimaginable. She had thought Europe bad, but this . . . She
was down at Level Eleven, immediately above the Net, at the very foot
of Washington Hsien, here to publicize the newly launched "Campaign
for Social Justice." It was their plan to fund and build fifty
"Care Centers" across the City to try to deal with the
problem of low-level deprivation, but from the moment she had stepped
out into Main here, she had known how pathetic, how woefully
inadequate their scheme was. It would take a hundred times what they
proposed even to scratch the surface of this problem. Why, there were
more than fifty thousand people crammed into this deck alone—fifty
thousand in a deck designed to hold eighteen thousand maximum! When
she had been voted Chairwoman by the committee of Young Wives, she
had thought that this might^just might—be a way of getting
something done. For the past six months she had thrown herself into
the task of organizing meetings and raising funds. But
now, seeing it for herself, she understood. She had been
fooling herself. There was only one way to change all this. From the
top. By destroying those who allowed this to go on. She
walked among the crowds, feeling a thousand hands brush against her,
or tug briefly at her silks, a thousand eyes raised to her in silent
supplication. Feed me! Relieve me! Free me from this Hell! Above
her the tiny media cameras hovered close, capturing the scene,
focusing in on the expression in her face. And as she returned to the
great platform, with its banners and waiting guests, a reporter
pressed close, clamoring for a statement. "Just
show it," she said. "And let everyone in the Mids know that
this is how the people down here have to live. Every day. And"—she
steeled herself to say the lie—"and that they can help.
That if they give only a single yuan to the Campaign, it'll
help relieve some of this suffering." She
turned away quickly, lest her anger, her bitterness, made her say
more. No, It would help no one for her to speak out in public. Least
of all these people. What it needed now was action. Action of the
kind she had held back from until now. It was
time for her to organize again. To adopt the false ID DeVore had
prepared for her all those years back and become someone new. Rachel
DeValerian. Terrorist. Anarchist. Leveler. Yes,
it was time for the Ping Tiao to be reborn. FROM
WHERE KIM STOOD, high up on the viewing gallery, two U above
the great ocean's surface, the events of the great world seemed far
off, like the sound of distant thunder. The night was calm, immense,
the darkness stretching off in all directions. Without end.
Literally, without end. He could move forever through that darkness
and never reach its limit. Darkness,
he thought. In the end there's nothing but darkness. And yet,
all his young life, he had sought the light. Had striven upward
toward it, like a diver coming up from great depths. Far
off, the waves broke in a staggered line of white along the
encircling breakwater. That line seemed frail and inconsequential
from where he stood, yet he had flown over it earlier and seen the
great ocean's swell; had seen waves fifty ch'i in height smash
with ferocious power against the angled breakwater, and had felt more
awe in him at that than at the sight of the great mid-ocean City they
had built here over Sohm Abyss. He
turned. Above him, beyond the great spire of the central block, the
night sky seemed dusted with stars—a billion stars that burned
incandescently, like nothing he could ever have imagined. That too—so
different somehow from the simulations—awed him. The reality of
it. Until now it had all been in his head, like some complex
three-dimensional chart. But now, seeing it with his own eyes, he
understood what had been missing. Its vastness; its awe-inspiring
vastness. It was something he had known but never grasped. Not until
now. He
turned back, conscious of the faint yet discernible motion of the
viewing platform. Down below, among the levels, one felt nothing,
almost as if one were on dry land, but here the tidal swell of the
great ocean could be sensed, despite the breakwaters, the huge chains
of ice that kept the City anchored to the ocean's floor, ten ti
down. He
looked down thoughtfully. Something in him responded to that: to the
thought of those vast, unlit depths beneath the fragile man-made raft
of the Ocean City; to all that weight and pressure. Something dark
and antithetical to his thinking self, that looked back at him
sometimes in the mirror, sharp-toothed and snarling. He
placed his hands flat against the thin layer of ice that separated
him from the vastness outside and shivered. Darkness and Light. How
often it came back to that—the most simple of all oppositions.
Darkness and Light. As in the great Tao. And yet, ultimately, he did
not believe in the Tao. Did not believe that dark and light were one
and the same thing. No. For it seemed to him that the dark and light
were locked in an ageless, unending struggle for supremacy: a
struggle that could end only when one canceled out the other, in a
blinding flash of searing light or in the abnegation of total
nothingness. And
then? He
stepped back, amused. So what had existed before the universe?
And what would be there after it was gone? These seemed logical
enough things to ask, and yet, at the same time, they were nonsense
questions. A grasping after straws. What pertinence did they
have on the here-and-now of daily life? What use were they as tools? No use
at all. And yet he felt the need to ask them. "Shih
Ward?" Kim
turned. A Han was standing in the shadows beside the open door to the
service elevator, his shaven head slightly bowed. His green SimFic
one-piece was emblazoned with the number four, indicating his status
within the SimFic hierarchy at Sohm Abyss. "Is
it time?" Kim asked, finding himself suddenly reluctant to leave
the safety of the darkness. The
Steward looked up, meeting his eyes. "They are waiting below,
Shih Ward. You must come now." Kim
bowed, then went across. Yet at the safety gate he stopped, looking
down into the brightly lit heart of the Ocean City. Sohm Abyss was
typical of the mid-Atlantic Cities. The thick outer wall formed a
giant hexagon, linked by flexible walkways to a central hexagonal
tower, topped by a slender communications spire. From above it had
seemed like a bright and gaudy brooch cast thoughtlessly upon the
darkness of the waters, but from where he stood it was more like a
vast cat's cradle, the silvered walkways like the threads of a giant
spider's web . . . "Shih
Ward!" The
slight sharpness in the Steward's voice reminded him of what he had
become that morning. A thing. An entry on the SimFic Corporation's
balance sheet. Turning back, he bowed apologetically, then stepped
into the narrow cage. Obedient. Their servant. Yet
even as the gate irised shut, he realized suddenly that what they had
purchased was but a part of him, and that that same unknown,
uncharted darkness that lay beneath this great man-made artifact lay
beneath all things, large and small alike. Yes,
and as for consciousness itself, what was that but a brightly lit
raft, afloat upon the dark waters of the subconscious? A tiny,
fragile edifice of man-made reason. As the
elevator began to descend, Kim turned and, looking up, studied the
smooth curve of the Steward's shaven head, the folds of the green
cloth covering his back, and wondered briefly whether the
man was ever troubled by such thoughts, or whether status and
material standing were his only measure of things. If so,
what was it like to be like that? To be content with how things
seemed and not to question how things really were? What deep pool of
inner stillness did one have to tap to become so inured to the
greater mysteries? How did one let go of thinking and just be1.
Or was it that? Was it not so much "letting go" as
never properly grasping hold? For a
moment longer he picked at the problem, like a monkey poking inside
an ant's nest with a twig, then he relented. Curse
or blessing, it was what he was. What SimFic had paid him for. To
question it was pointless. No, what he had to do over the next five
years was to find a way to use it without using himself up. To keep
from becoming the thing they thought he was—a mere
puzzle-solver and generator of ideas. In doing so, he would have to
give them what they wanted, but at the same time he would also have
to keep back something for himself. One thing, perhaps. One pure and
singular vision. The
elevator slowed, then stopped. As the door irised open, admitting the
babble of conversation from the room beyond, Kim recalled the silent,
star-spattered darkness up above and smiled, knowing what it was. KUSTOW
walked back with Michael to the apartment he had hired on the south
side of the stack, overlooking the fashionable Square. On the way
they talked of many things—of Kennedy's new bodyguards and the
significance of the new set of changes to the Edict—but mainly
about whether Kustow too should run. "Is
that what you want, Bryn?" "I
guess so," Kustow answered. "Anyway, it doesn't look like
there's much else open to me now. We're all out of favor as far as
the Market is concerned, and we can't live off moonshine." Michael
turned, facing him. "That's not what I asked, Bryn. Is it what
you really want?" Kustow
looked down, considering. "If I hadn't wanted to get involved, I
guess I wouldn't have taken the first step, would I?" He
looked up at Michael ruefully. "I think we both knew
where this would lead. And Joseph Kennedy didn't pull any punches or
tell any lies, did he?" "I
guess not." "So
that leaves me two options, to be precise. Both of them political. I
can remain behind the scenes, as a shaper, or I can put myself up
front." "And
you want to be up front?" Kustow
took a deep breath. "I'm not sure. IVe liked what weVe been
doing. I mean, IVe enjoyed working with you and Carl and Jack. We
make a good team. But going it alone, with a new team . . ." He
shrugged. "I just don't know." Michael
was silent a moment. "People will expect you to run. As the
party grows you'll lose status unless you're a Representative. You'll
lose whatever you currently have. No, if you don't run you might find
yourself muscled out, Bryn. At least, that's how I see it." Kustow
dropped his head, then nodded. He was frowning, looking down at his
feet. When he looked up again there was a painful indecision in his
face. "You know what it is, Michael? I'm afraid." Michael
laughed shortly, then frowned. Kustow was the biggest of them. The
strongest. The most extroverted. It wasn't possible that he could be
afraid. "Afraid of what?" "Of
the whole business, I guess. Of power and politics. I don't want to
become another Carver, or Gratton, or Hartmann." Michael
shook his head. "You won't! Goddamnit, Bryn, isn't that what
we're about? To get rid of the old guard and bring in new ways—
better ways?" Kustow
shivered. "Maybe. I don't know. I just looked at things from the
outside tonight, that's all. Looked at all that backslapping and
fund-raising and the bodyguards and the whispering between friends,
and I wondered if we were really going to be any different from the
rest." There
was a moment's silence between them, then Michael took his old
friend's arm. "Come on. My apartment's only up the corridor.
Let's get a few hours' sleep, then talk again." Kustow
smiled gently and nodded. "Okay. Lead the way." Outside
his door, Michael turned and looked at Kustow again. Maybe
Bryn was right. Maybe it would turn out just as he feared. But if
they didn't try, if they just left it, that, surely, would be just as
bad? Michael
thumbed the lock and touched out the combination with his other hand.
As the door began to open, Kustow smiled drunkenly at him and
stumbled past. The
explosion was deafening. Michael was thrown back across the corridor
and fell awkwardly, blacking out. When he came to, what seemed only a
moment later, there were Security guards everywhere and two medics
were leaning over him, doing something to his legs. His legs were
numb. "Where's
Bryn?" he asked, trying to sit up. But he couldn't sit up and
the words came out as a kind of dry cough. He realized then that his
chest hurt. One of the medics leaned close to his face and told him
to relax, it would be okay. What would be okay? he wanted to ask, but
his hold on consciousness was weak. He kept slipping back into
blackness. Each time he woke things seemed to have jumped. Bit by bit
he began to piece things together. He was strapped to a trolley, his
head propped up slightly by cushions. To his right a big blunt-faced
man was talking into a handset and listening to the responses. He was
muttering something about a bomb. Someone had been killed. It was
only later that it hit him. Someone had been killed. Bryn. But
by that time he was lying in a hospital bed, under armed guard, and
there was nothing he could do. Again and again he saw Bryn smile and
stumble past him, unsteady from the wine he'd drunk. He wanted to put
out his arm and stop him. To call him back. To warn him somehow. But
there was nothing he could do. Bryn Kustow was dead. KIM
STOOD at the head of the steps, looking out across the sunken floor
of the reception hall, surprised by the sight that met his eyes. The
air was cool, the lighting a subdued shade of blue that seemed to
fill the huge, high-ceilinged room with moving liquid shadows. He
smiled, amused by the effect. It was like being at the bottom of a
pool. A huge pool filled with the soft, slightly echoing murmur of
voices. There were three, maybe four hundred people down there,
gathered in groups between the pillars. The Steward, two steps down
from Kim, turned and looked back at Kim impatiently, then
continued down the steps. A moment later, Kim followed. A
group of about thirty people—men for the main part—were
gathered beside what seemed like a large glass table set into the
floor. The Steward made his way across to them, then stepped back,
beckoning Kim to come forward. At the
center of the group stood a big, bearlike man in his early sixties
with an unfashionable goatee beard, neatly trimmed ash-white hair,
and an elegant cut in silks. He was William Campbell, SimFic's
Regional Controller for the North Atlantic Cities and, as he greeted
Kim, he leaned toward the young man. "Forgive
the informality, Kim, but it's how I like to do things. You see, out
of all eleven of SimFic's Regional Controllers, I have the biggest
administrative area and the smallest staff. Like the plankton,
there's a lot of me, but I have to spread myself very thin!" Kim
smiled, then took Campbell's offered hands, shaking them firmly. He
stepped back, looking about him, conscious of how all eyes were on
him. "I'm
delighted to meet you, Controller. And your friends, the ch'un tzu
here ... are they all SimFic employees?" Campbell
looked about him, his casual ease contrasting strongly with the
tenseness of the men surrounding him. "Not at all. We have these
evenings 'once a week. Anyone who's anyone in Sohm Abyss comes along.
But quite a number here are SimFic. I'll take you around in a moment.
Put names to faces." "Thanks,"
Kim smiled, warmed by Campbell's manner. Yet at the same time he was
conscious of a strange tension in the air about him, as if things
weren't quite as they seemed. He set the thought aside, determined to
be sociable. "I was up on the viewing gallery just now. It's a
beautiful place. I don't know why they don't build more of these
Ocean Cities." Campbell
laughed. "Economics, Kim. Pure economics. The cost of the City
itself is fairly negligible, but to site one of these little
beauties—to carry out all of the necessary surveys and secure
the seven great tether-cables—that costs a phenomenal amount.
We just couldn't justify it these days." Kim
nodded thoughtfully. "And yet it^ias done." "Oh,
sure. But as far as SimFic is concerned we've a different strategy
these days. I mean, why build these things new when you can acquire
them? Take Sohm Abyss, for instance. Right now we own twenty-five
percent of the facility. It's the most we can own under present
legislation. But things are changing." Campbell looked about
him. "It would be nice to fly the SimFic flag over one of these
Cities, don't you think?" There
was a nodding of heads, a strong murmur of agreement. "But
enough of that." Campbell reached out, laying one large,
bearlike hand familiarly on Kim's shoulder. "Let me take you
around. Introduce you to the people you'll be working with." Kim
let himself be turned and led away. "Who were they?" he
asked, glancing back at the group they had left. "Company
men," Campbell said quietly, stroking his goatee thoughtfully.
"Administrators for the most part. By the way, would you like a
drink?" Kim
hesitated. "I. . ." Campbell
stopped one of the waiters and took a wine cup from his tray. "Oh,
that's right. You don't drink. That's good. Some of them out here
drink far too much. And other things besides. They think I don't know
what goes on, Kim, but IVe my own sources. Take the guy in the gray,
for instance." Kim
turned, looking back, noting a tall, thin-faced man in gray silks. "YouVe
got him. Good. That's Bonnot. Alex Bonnot. He's the Scientific
Supervisor here. Your direct boss. A good man according to the
records. Reliable. Honest. But I've my doubts. So watch him, eh, Kim?
And let me know if he oversteps the bounds." Kim's
eyes flicked up to Campbell's face and then away, not quite
understanding what was meant. But this whole thing felt odd. Why, for
instance, hadn't Campbell introduced him to them? "I don't
follow," he said after a moment. "I thought you were
in charge of things here." Campbell
smiled. "Overall, yes. But Sohm Abyss is Bonnet's. At least, the
science side of things. The fish-farming, cold-storage, and
star-gazing part, as we like to call it. The administrative side is
run by the man standing next to
l»iih, Schram. Dieter Schram. He fancies himself as a bit of a
scholar, but he's hardly in your league, Kim. Dull, too,
unfortunately. Which is probably why he got this posting. As for
myself, I spend most of my time traveling between the Cities. I've
eight in my region, though I'm actually based at Cape Verde." "So
I take my orders from Bonnot?" "And
Schram. But they take their orders from me." Campbell turned
slowly, relaxedly, drawing Kim on through the crowd, ignoring the
staring faces, moving toward a group who were standing beside one of
the pillars. "Oh, I know what goes on in places like this. I
also know what's happened to you in the past, Kim. IVe read your file
thoroughly. But you can be sure that nothing like that will happen
here. In fact, you have my word on it." He slowed, looking down
at Kim. "Oh, I'll work you hard enough, Kim Ward, but I'll be
fair with it. And if we get results, I'll be generous to you. Outside
the terms of your contract, understand me?" Again
Kim wasn't quite sure that he did, but he nodded and, responding to
Campbell's broad, generous smile, grinned back at him, reassured. "As
I see it," Campbell continued, "if I can keep you happy,
you'll produce the goods. If you produce the goods, SimFic makes
profits. And if SimFic makes profits we all grow fat. So it's in my
best interest to keep you happy, neh?" "I
guess so." They
had stopped just before the group. The five men had turned to greet
Campbell as he approached and now they stood there, their heads
slightly bowed, waiting for the Controller to introduce them. "This
here is Hilbert, Eduard Hilbert. He's Head of Cryobiology and an
expert in biostasis procedures. . . cell repair and the like. Our
experiments are at an early stage, but we're hopeful, neh, Eduard?" Hilbert
bobbed his head. He was a thin, dark-haired man in his mid-thirties
with the slightly haunted look of a man who preferred the laboratory
to social gatherings. Kim extended his hand. "It's good to meet
you." "And
you." Hilbert looked away, embarrassed, yet his brief smile had
been friendly enough. Moreover, in turning he had revealed the
pulsing collar about his neck. He too was a commodity slave. "And
this," Campbell continued, introducing a young Han in his early
twenties, "is Feng Wo-shen. His background is in protein design,
but he'll be working with you, Kim, as one of your assistants." Feng
bowed his head low in what was a very formal way. Straightening up,
he met Kim's eyes, a natural enthusiasm burning in his own. "I
am delighted to be working with you, Shih Ward. We are all
very excited about the work ahead." Kim
returned his bow, then looked up at Campbell. "Assistants?" The
big man smiled. "Of course. We don't expect you to do all the
experimental work yourself. You'll need assistants for that. To start
with IVe allocated you four. If you need any more . . ." Kim
laughed. "No, no ... four's quite enough. It's just that. . .
Well, I didn't expect to be treated quite so well." Campbell
looked genuinely surprised. "Why the hell not? Look, Kim, we've
made a huge investment in you. It would be downright stupid not to
get the best out of you. You're a theorist, right? That's what we
bought you for, neh? Well then, it makes sense surely to free you to
do what you're best at. To utilize your talents to their maximum
capacity." Kim
thought briefly of geese and golden eggs, but merely smiled and
nodded. "I take your point, Controller. Yet a great deal of my
work is, of necessity, experimental. Feng Wo-shen and the others . .
. they'll be of great help, but you must understand . . ." Campbell
raised a hand. "Whatever you want. And whichever way you want to
do it. Just get me results, eh? Results." He turned back,
putting out an arm to indicate the next in line. "Now, this here
. . ." For
the next half hour Kim moved about the reception hall, meeting the
people he was to work with, coming back, finally, to the group about
the glass-topped table—a table which he saw, suddenly, was no
table at all, but a huge display tank, its occupant, if occupant it
had, hidden beneath a screen of greenery and rock. While Campbell
went through the business of introducing him formally to Bonnot and
Schram, Kim thought of the task ahead. At last he was to be given
everything he'd been denied before: good equipment, well-trained
staff, and whatever was needed to develop and manufacture a
marketable product. The only real difference was in how the profit
from the venture was distributed. He
smiled inwardly. What Campbell had said earlier was true. If he did
well, they would all be happy. And who knew, he might even enjoy the
work. Yet it wasn't quite as simple as that. He could see it in the
way Bonnot and Schram looked at him, with a jealous hostility and a
deep-rooted contempt for his stunted Clayborn body. Well, he could
live with that. Besides, there was always Campbell's promise of
protection. As
soon as was polite, he moved to one side of the group and leaned over
the tank, looking down into its depths, his fingertips resting gently
against the glass. The surface of the tank was cold, the ice thick,
reinforced, as if the water within were being kept at a different
pressure from the room. For a
time there was nothing, then, as if it had been waiting for him, it
appeared, slowly at first, one appendage coiling like a snake about
the rock, blindly searching with its tiny suckers. And then, with a
dreamlike slowness that was mesmerizing, it hauled itself up through
the concealing layers of weed, until its vast bulk seemed to fill the
tank. . . He
stared at it, fascinated. It was like a spider. A giant aquatic
spider, its long arms coiling sinuously along the restraining walls
of the tank. As he watched, the mottled dome of its head turned
through the shadows until it faced him, its huge eyes blinking
slowly, then meeting his own in a cold, incurious stare that seemed
to sum him and dismiss him. Kim
moved back, shivering. Once more mere knowing had failed him, for to
be in the presence of such a creature—one of the ancient
monsters of the deep—was to experience a sense of primal fear.
Yes, simply to meet those eyes was to stare into something vast and
dark and eternally alien, eternally withheld. It was
a deep ocean creature. How, then, had they trapped it? How brought it
here? How kept it? As it turned, slipping back beneath the masking
layers of weed and rock, he tried to estimate its length. Fifty,
maybe sixty ch'i it was. Huge, even by the measure of its
kind. Kim
turned, sensing another presence just behind him. It was Campbell. He
stood there, one hand tugging at his goatee thoughtfully. The
Controller looked past Kim at the disappearing monster, then
met his eyes again. "Well? What do you think of our pet?
Impressive, neh? One of the deep-level units found him, more than a
year back, some six li down in the center of the Abyss. They
stunned him, then put him in a temporary capsule with a few tidbits
while they decided what to do with him. In the end we had to build a
special pressure chamber. Even then it took us almost two weeks to
bring him up—a ch'i at a time, it seemed. But here he is. Our
pride and joy." Campbell turned, looking back at Kim. "You're
very fortunate, Kim. He doesn't deign to visit us that often. Most of
his tank's down there, beneath the City. A huge thing it is. You can
visit it sometime, if you want." Kim
gave a vague nod, then looked away. Six li. . . Which meant that the
pressure in the tank had to be phenomenal. "Has
he a name?" Campbell
nodded. "We call him Old Darkness. Among other things. But look,
let's talk about it later, eh? There's someone else I'd like you to
meet. She'd have been here earlier, but her flight was delayed. Come,
she's waiting over there." Kim
stared at the tank a moment longer, then followed Campbell across,
giving the briefest nod of acknowledgment to Schram and Bonnot as he
passed. "Here,"
Campbell said, ushering him into a circle of people. "Bar-ratt
and Symons you met earlier, but I'd like to introduce you to our new
Commercial Advisor. I understand you know each other already . . ." But
Kim was no longer listening. At the first sight of the short,
dark-haired woman, he had moved past Campbell and embraced her,
holding her against him tightly, fiercely, his eyes brimming with
tears. "Rebecca . . ." he said, amazed, moving his face
back to stare at her, as if at a long-lost sister. "The gods
forgive me, I thought you were dead. . ." THINGS
happened FAST. Within an hour of the attack, Gratton was on all
channels, coast to coast, expressing his shock and sadness. His image
was intercut with pictures looking down on the operating table as the
surgeons tried to put Michael Lever back together again. Only the
intercession of Kennedy got the floats out of there—under
threat of expensive legal actions. Then, before three hours
had passed, Kennedy himself spoke to reporters—calling a news
conference in the anteroom at the hospital, a white-faced Carl Fisher
standing at his shoulder as he talked. Various
terrorist organizations had been quick to disclaim the incident. The
Black Hand had even gone so far as to condemn the action. A MedFac
poll, taken half an hour after Kennedy's abrasive statement,
expressed the general attitude: Gratton was sunk ... if Lever lived. Kennedy
had accused no one. He had stood there, red-eyed, genuinely moved by
what had happened, and denounced violence as a political means.
Eloquently, he had outlined what had happened to these young men who
had only stood up for what they believed in. The disinheriting, the
double-dealing, the embargoes by the old men. And now this. He
phrased it cleverly, so that no one could accuse him of making too
direct a link between the attack and the old men who were out to stop
them, but the mere fact of juxtaposition gave his words a power that
forced his listeners to consider whether this act had come from the
same hands that had shaped the rest of it. Charles
Lever's writ against Kennedy was served an hour later. The floating
cameras, following him all the while now, caught the moment and
broadcast it, along with Kennedy's sad, regretful smile and his few
words. "Tell Mr. Lever I'm sorry he's more concerned for his own
political hide than for his son's life." Those
channels that hadn't had a camera there bought tapes and showed them
repeatedly throughout the remainder of the night and for the whole of
the next day. But by then they had fresher material to work on. Security,
conscious of how sensitive the matter was, had put two Special
Services units onto the case and results were already coming in.
Representative Hartmann had been taken in to Security Headquarters in
Washington for questioning, and three men from his political
entourage—all ex-Security—had been making statements all
afternoon. Hartmann had smiled at the cameras gathered overhead, but
the smile had been sickly—the smile of a man who knows the trap
has been sprung. News soon leaked out that they had taken him from an
off-planet shuttle in Denver. After
Kennedy's response to the writ, Charles Lever had locked his doors
against the media. At the Cutler Institute, they refused to comment
on the situation. Meanwhile, a southern network had followed up the
Bryn Kustow connection and was showing an hour documentary on the
dead man's life, together with an interview with his grieving mother.
His father had shut himself away and was refusing to comment. At
eight thirty, three hours after he had come out of the operating
theater, Michael Lever opened his eyes. Emily was seated at the
bedside, leaning over him. On the far side of the room, Kennedy,
Fisher, and Parker sat on hospital chairs, waiting. Overhead, a
single camera captured the moment for later transmission. At
first there was nothing in Michael's face, only a vague
disorientation. Then, as memory came back, he began to sob. Emily
leaned closer, whispering words of comfort and holding his hand
tightly. Behind her, the three men were standing now, tears streaming
down their faces. The camera's second lens caught this also. After
a moment Kennedy came across and stood beside Emily, looking down
into Michael's heavily bandaged face. He wiped his eyes and cheeks
with a surgical rag, then moved back slightly, giving the camera a
better view. Michael
shuddered. "Who did it, Joe? Do they know who did it?" Kennedy
shook his head. "Not yet." He said nothing about Hart-mann.
Nothing about his father's writ. Michael
closed his eyes and swallowed. When he opened them again they were
moist with tears. "I feel numb, Joe. From the waist down." Kennedy
glanced at Emily, then looked away. From above it seemed as if
Kennedy were finding it hard to say what he had to. He turned his
head to the side, his shoulders giving a tiny shudder; then he faced
Michael again, bracing himself. "They say that there's nothing
they can do about that, Michael. Fragments of the device passed
through your chest and lodged in the base of your spine. You're
paralyzed, Michael. From the waist down." Michael's
face was blank a moment, then he nodded. It was clear he was still in
shock. "They
say you were lucky," Kennedy went on. "You'd be dead if
you'd been alone." Again
Michael nodded, but this time a flicker of pain crossed his face. "I
loved him . . ." he said softly, his voice ending in a tiny
sound that tore at the listener like a barb. Then he turned his face
aside. A single tear traced its way down his cheek, the camera lens
switching to close-focus to follow its progress. Bryn
Kustow had taken the full brunt of the explosion. It had, quite
literally, torn him apart. But his body had shielded Michael from the
blast. Even so, the explosion had broken both of Michael's legs,
cracked his skull, and caused extensive internal injuries. Fragments
of hot metal as well as bone from Kustow's right arm had lodged in
Michael's flesh, severing blood vessels, musculature, and nerves. His
most serious injury, however, was his damaged spine. It was not
impossible that he would walk again—bioprosthetics could cure
almost anything but death itself these days—but it would be
some while before he would be on his feet. And the election was only
three days away. One
enterprising channel, having shown a diagram of the relative
positions of Kustow and Lever, gave their viewers a full hologrammic
reconstruction of the explosion. Billions watched as computer
simulations looking remarkably like the two short-haired and handsome
young men were blown apart by the explosion. Then, moments later, it
showed it once again, varying the viewpoint and slowing the action. Another
channel, deploring the taste and, maybe, regretful that they had not
had the idea first, set up a fund to pay for Michael Lever's
bioprosthetic treatment, taking the opportunity to comment on the
fact that, by rights, a certain Charles Lever should be footing the
bill. They, too, found themselves served with a writ within the hour. Hartmann
was charged with conspiracy to murder on the morning of the election,
but by then the damage had been done. Gratton had pulled out the
night before. When the polls closed, Michael Lever had been elected
almost unopposed, collecting ninety-seven percent of the votes cast.
More significantly, the New American Party, buoyed up by the sympathy
vote, had won no less than twenty-six of the thirty seats they had
been contesting. The
cameras were allowed briefly into Michael Lever's hospital room to
get his reaction. From his bed he smiled dourly up at the cluster of
floats and made a short speech of thanks. Then, clearly tired, he lay
back with the help of a nurse and, even as the cameras watched, he
closed his eyes and slept. It was left to Representative Joseph
Kennedy to read the prepared speech on Lever's behalf. A
thousand li northeast of where Michael Lever lay sleeping, Charles
Lever stood in a darkened room, watching the image of his son. It had
been a bad week, not least in the markets. But now, looking at his
son lying there, so vulnerable, so badly hurt, the old man softened.
"I didn't mean . . ." he said, in a whisper. At least, he
hadn't wanted to push things quite this far. He
reached out to touch and trace the image on the big screen, his
fingers following the strong line of Michael's cheek, just as once
he'd touched the sleeping child. Things
change, he thought, turning away. And maybe there was a reason for
that. A lesson in it. He shivered and stood there, facing away from
the screen, then turned back, hearing the commentator mention his
name. ".
. . whose silence has been taken by many to be, perhaps, more
meaningful than any words he could have offered." He
felt that same tightening in his chest, the anger coming back. None
of them had the guts, the balls, to come out openly and say it. But
the innuendo was clear enough. Lever spat out his disgust and took a
step toward the screen. As he did so, the image changed and in place
of his son's sleeping face was his own: a hard, uncompromising face;
the face of an old man. He breathed in sharply, as if stung, then
stormed across the room to the comset. Grunting with anger, he tapped
out the code for his lawyer. Then, while he waited for the
connection, he turned to listen to the commentary again. ".
. . and while Hartmann's confession makes no explicit allegations,
many leading figures on the Index are surprised that the Security
investigations have ended with Hartmann and his close associates. Is
vengeance the motive, as Hartmann claims? Or is there something
deeper and darker behind this whole business?" Even
as the commentator finished, Lever was through. "Dan?
Is that you? Good. . . Look I want you to arrange an exclusive
interview with EduVoc. Usual terms. We have the right of veto . . ."
He listened a moment, then huffed out irritably. "You think
that's wise?" Again he listened. "No. Of course not!
There's no link whatsoever!" He took a deep breath, calming
himself. "Look, Dan, all I know is that I'm sick to death of
this shit . . . this innuendo. I want it ended, right? If you can't
get veto, we go ahead without and sue the bastards if they play any
tricks on us." Kennedy's
face was on the screen now, a kind of sad dignity in his expression
as he read out Michael Lever's speech. But all the old man saw was
its smug self-righteousness, its falseness. You, he thought. You're
the bastard who did all this! Yes . . . the more he thought
about it, the more he realized what had happened. And maybe . . .
well, maybe Kennedy had even arranged this little stunt. To win
support. To make martyrs of his young men and turn a losing position
into a winning one. As
soon as he'd had the thought he was convinced of it. It made perfect
sense, after all. Michael's death—like Kustow's—served no
one but Kennedy. Finishing
his call, Charles Lever put the comset down, laughing sourly. He
could prove nothing yet, but given time he'd make the charge stick.
First, however, he had to clear his own name and turn opinion around.
And if that meant canning his feelings of betrayal, he would do that.
He'd act a part. And in time, maybe, he would get his son back. Not
the son he'd had. No, nothing could bring that back now. But
something. A son in name. Yes, he'd have that much. KIMWOKESUDDENLY,
kicking the coyer away from him, his naked body sheened in sweat. He
had been dreaming. Dreaming of his time in Rehabilitation. He had
been back there, in the Unit, the night that Luke had died, feeling
that same tightness in his chest, that same awful, devastating sense
of loss. He sat
up, setting his feet down on the warm, uncarpeted floor, then took a
long, shuddering breath. The memory was so powerful, so
vivid, that he had to remind himself where he was. Rebecca.
Meeting Rebecca again had brought it all back. She had been there
that night, along with Will and Deio. And the bird. The dead bird . .
. Five
of them, there'd been. Claybom. Escapees from that vast, uncharted
darkness beneath the City's floor. Each one of them a product of the
"Program"; an argument against the old saying that Clay was
Clay and could not be raised. Yes,
he could see them even now as if they sat about him in the darkness.
Deio, dark-eyed and curly-haired, to his left; the big, North
European lad, Will, lolling beside him, the fingers of one hand
combing through his short blond hair. Across from them sat Luke, his
strong Latin looks reminiscent of an ancient Ta Ts'in emperor,
a restrained, almost leonine power in his every movement. And finally
Rebecca, silent, thoughtful, defensive, her oval face cupped between
her hands as she stared back at Kim. Slowly
his breathing calmed. Slowly the ghosts faded from the room, until he
alone remained. He leaned across, switching on the bedside lamp, then
stood, looking about him, refamiliarizing himself with the tiny room.
Anchoring himself to the here and now. It was
some time since he had dreamed so vividly. Some time since he had
felt such fear, such loss, such longing. It was four years now since
he had left the Unit, and in all that time he had never once looked
back. Not that he'd forgotten those times. No, for it seemed he was
incapable of forgetting. Rather, it was as if he had built a wall
about them. A wall his conscious mind refused to climb. Until
now. He
went across to the tiny galley and stood at the sink, sluicing
himself down, letting the cold water run down his face and chest and
arms. And as he did he looked back again, remembering. Rebecca.
What did he remember of Rebecca? Mostly
her intensity, and the way she used to look at him, her dark eyes
staring relentlessly, her whole face formed into a question. She had
such a strong, intense face. A face perfectly suited for austerity
and suffering. She was always the last to understand Deio's jokes;
always the last to smile or laugh. One
would have thought that their shared experience would have bound them
tight, yet she had always been the outsider among them, even
after what had happened. And yet he had felt drawn to her even
then—to the vulnerability he had sensed beneath that facade of
imperturbability. Forgetting nothing, he remembered her words
clearly, as if she had spoken them only yesterday. Recalled how angry
she had felt at being "cheated": "It's
all just as Luke said. A trade. A crude exchange. Our lives for what
we can give them. And the rest—all that pretense of caring—is
nothing but hollow words and empty gestures." Did
she still believe that? Or had she forgotten what had happened back
then? Last night, talking to her, it had been hard to tell. She had
seemed so different; so outward and self-assured. But was that simply
another mask? After
Rehabilitation she had signed on for three years with the giant Cos
Vac Company as a commodity slave, working as a Technical Design
Consultant, but had bought out her contract six months early to take
up an offer from SimFic. She had worked for fifteen months in their
East Asian arm, then had moved here three months back, reporting
directly to Campbell. She
had done well for herself. To all intents and purposes she was her
own boss; a free woman, defining her own aims, carving her own path
up the levels. Yet standing there, listening to her, watching her
laugh and smile, Kim had felt that, beneath it all, something was
missing. Or was it memory playing tricks? Was it simply that he
remembered how vulnerable she had been that day they had taken Will
and Deio? Was it simply that he could see her still, sitting there
alone in the common room, desolate, her tiny, doll-like hands
trembling, afraid that they would come for her too? Kim
straightened up, studying himself in the mirror above the sink. Maybe
he was wrong. After all, he himself had changed a great deal since
those days. Four years. It wasn't long, but a lot could happen in
that time. He
turned slightly, frowning. Something, perhaps the play of light on
the water, reminded him suddenly of how the dream had begun. He had
been in the pool, floating on his back, staring up at the ceiling, at
the red, black, and gold of the ancient Tun Huang star map. He
narrowed his eyes, remembering. Slowly the colors melted, fading into
black, while all about him the edges of the pool misted
into nothingness. And suddenly he was alone, floating on the
surface of the great ocean, a billion stars dusting the darkness
overhead. There
was a moment's peace, of utter, perfect stillness, and then it
happened. With a
noise like a vast sigh the surface of the water shuddered and became
a massive field of earth; of moist, dark clay that stretched to the
horizon. He began to struggle in the soft, dark earth, but the more
he struggled the more the clay clung to his limbs, tugging at him,
slowly sucking him down into its black, suffocating maw. He
cried out, and woke, on his back at the bottom of a deep, dark well.
It was still and silent. Far above him the moon sat like a blinded
eye in the center of the sky. Lifting his hand, he saw it appear far
above him, like a vision, floating there in the darkness, the fingers
groping for the light. There
was a noise nearby. A scrabbling, scratching sound. Turning, he saw,
part embedded in the curving wall of the well, the faces of his
friends Will, Deio, and Luke. From the clay beneath each face a pair
of arms extended, hands clawing blindly at the clay that filled each
eye, each choking mouth. He
looked back. His hand had floated free, beyond his grasp, but it
didn't matter now. Lifting his bloated body, he began to climb,
flexing his eight limbs quickly as he climbed the wall. Up, into the
light. At the
top he turned, looking back. His friends had freed themselves. They
lay there now, exhausted, at the foot of the well. Seeing him, they
called out plaintively. Save us, Lagasek! Save us from the
darkness.' He
turned his great abdomen about, meaning to help them, to cast a
silvered thread down through the darkness and let them climb to
safety, yet even as he turned the earth heaved like a great sack and
folded in upon itself. And they were gone. He
cried out . . . and woke a second time, back in the room, in
Rehabilitation, himself again, listening to Will describe what he had
seen on the plain below the ruins of Bremen. A tribe of men. Of
blue-black men with teeth of polished bone. Kim
shuddered, remembering, then pushed back, away from the sink. He
looked up, meeting his eyes in the mirror, conscious suddenly of a
faint pulsing glow from the other room. He turned. The
comset in the far corner of the bedroom had come on-line, the
RESPOND key flashing a dull, insistent red. He
went through, leaning across the chair to tap in his personal access
code. At once the message spilled out onto the screen. Meridian.
Departing Titan: 15. 10. 2210 CKST Can route messages via SimFic's
Saturn Rep. [Campbell] He
pulled out the chair and sat, the dream forgotten. Jelka . . .
Jelka was on Titan! He imagined her out there and laughed,
astonished. The gods alone knew how Campbell had found out, but he
had. Kim shivered, a moment's doubt assailing him, then shook his
head. No, he would grab this chance to speak to her—to let her
know what had been happening. And to tell her that he would wait for
her. However long it took. CHAPTER
EIGHTEEN
East
Winds You'RE
FAMOUS now," Kennedy was saying. "People expect things of
you, Michael. Big things. You've been close to death, and that means
something to them." Michael
Lever smiled faintly and looked away. He was propped up in bed, a
small hill of pillows behind him. It was a large, private ward and on
tables to one side were dozens of sprays of flowers from
well-wishers. He looked back at Kennedy, a warmer expression on his
face. "I appreciate what you're saying, but. . . well, it's just
that I don't want to think too much about it yet." He looked
down. "Not yet. . . okay?" Kennedy
sat back. "I understand, Michael. I'm not here to push you. Just
to let you know how things stand. Right?" "Right." Later
that afternoon Kennedy was flying off to Chicago. There, this
evening, he would be making a speech on the matter of the proposed
new population legislation—in particular on what they were
calling the "Euthanasia Bill." The attack on Lever had
meant that more than the normal media attention would be on the
speech. Already several channels had been clamoring for Michael's
reactions and comments. Thus far Kennedy had fended them off, but
they both knew that, denied some kind of response, the media could
well turn hostile. Kennedy was here to try to persuade Michael to
make a limited comment. "I'm
sorry that it had to happen this way, Michael. This kind of life. . .
it's hyperreal. They want you to live every second in the lights. And
they're hungry. Like sharks. Feed them some blood—the other
guy's blood, if you can—and they're happy. But you can't keep
them out of the water. And you can't make friends with them. Not in
any real sense. So you have to deal with them on their own terms." Michael
looked up. He was less pale than he had been, but he still looked
drawn. "I understand, Joe." He sighed and reached out to
scratch at his useless legs. "Let's compromise, huh? Tell them
I'm tired now—sedated, maybe—and that I'm going to see
the playback of the speech in the morning and speak to them then. How
about that? That way you could get back here, maybe . . ." He
leaned back again, looking up hopefully at the older man. Kennedy
smiled. "Okay. We'll do it your way. And I'll try and get back
for the conference." "Try?" "I'll
be here, Michael. Okay?" Michael
nodded and let his head relax, closing his eyes. Kennedy, watching
him, felt the weight of all the unsaid things press down on him
briefly. The last week had been the hardest he had known, the demands
on him exhausting; but it would all be worth it in the long run. For
a moment he sat back and closed his eyes, pressing at his face and
yawning. He needed sleep, a whole week's worth of sleep, but there
wasn't time just now. This was a crucial moment: make or break time. Only
two days ago Charles Lever had come out of his self-imposed isolation
and spoken to the media about his feelings of grief and anger at what
had happened to his son. Kennedy had made sure that Michael hadn't
seen it, nor heard anything of the rumor circulating that Charles
Lever had organized the attempt on his son's life. But things were in
flux. The bombing had acted as a catalyst— fragmenting popular
opinion into two diametrically opposed camps. They had benefited from
the initial public outcry, and their fortunes had risen dramatically
on a tidal wave of emotional reaction, but in the week that followed
the old men had fought back. The media stories about Kennedy and the
other young men were vicious and often quite unabashedly libelous. To
even try to answer some of the grosser
charges was impossible. Cornered, their opponents were throwing mud.
And some of it would stick. Strangest
of all that had happened that week were two separate and quite
unexpected developments. First, two days back, at the same time that
Charles Lever was talking to the media, Kennedy had been approached
by an old acquaintance, a young man who claimed to be representing
the "Sons"—the group formed from the old
Dispersionist faction. Michael Lever and his friends had once been
members of the group, but had broken with them when they had linked
up with Kennedy. Now, it seemed, the Sons wanted to meet and come to
some kind of arrangement. Only
an hour after that visit, someone else had come to see Kennedy—Fen
Cho-hsien, Wu Shih's chief minister. He had
sat there for a long time afterward, wondering if the two events were
somehow connected—were an elaborate setup, designed to trap and
expose him to the media—but eventually he decided that it was a
genuine coincidence; one of those tiny twists of fate that made life
both unpredictable and interesting. The Sons had not said what they
wanted, and he had committed himself only to a meeting. But Fen
Cho-hsien had been specific. Wu Shih wanted a deal. He had
hoped to talk to Michael of this. To sound him on it. But Michael
wasn't ready yet. Bryn Kustow's death was too close. He was still
shocked; horrified by how personal this business was; astonished that
someone—anyone—should want him dead. A veil had been torn
aside and he had glimpsed what all of this was really about. Kennedy
opened his eyes and looked at the now sleeping Lever. He would be a
better man for this personal knowledge. Harder, less easy to fool.
Though the loss of Bryn was tragic, what they had gained might yet
make up for it. And
for himself? As a
Kennedy he had always known how things stood. He had been taught,
from his family's long history, how naked power was, and how frail
the flesh that wielded that power. And now Wu Shih had made that
history personal. If he said, "Come, make a deal," then he
would need to go and do as he was told. What other choice was there? He
shivered and stood up, leaving Michael to sleep. Perhaps it was
best that things were as they were. That way he alone could be
blamed. He alone take the responsibility. DEAD
MAN YUN pulled a piece of steaming pork from the pot and popped it
into his mouth, then turned, facing Fat Wong. "Aren't
they beautiful, Wong Yi-sun? Aren't they just peaches?" Fat
Wong smiled, looking across to where the three young boys sheltered
in the skirts of their mother, Yun Yueh-hui's daughter. "They
are little emperors, Yueh-hui. If they were my grandsons I would want
no more from life." Dead
Man Yun's face creased into a rare smile. He laughed, then slapped
Fat Wong's back robustly. "That is so, Wong Yi-sun. I am a
blessed man. The gods have truly smiled on me." Fat
Wong reached out, embracing his old friend briefly, touched by his
words. One could not count on much in this life, but Yun Yueh-hui had
been a staunch ally these past ten years. As safe as T'ai Shan. "You
know what to say?" Yun
nodded, his face impassive. "I know my part in this, Yi-sun, and
I am happy with it. We have no choice. We must cleanse ourselves of
this scourge before it overwhelms us." "Indeed."
Fat Wong moved back, watching as Yun turned, giving final
instructions to his servants. Then, at Yun's signal, they went back
into the dining room, the two of them following the servants and
their heaped trays. The
others were waiting for them there: Ho Chin, Feng Shang-pao, and Li
Chin, the three Bosses looking up from their places at the great oval
table. It was a long time since they had met like this, and Fat Wong,
looking about him, felt a vague sadness that this should pass. But
pass it must. The Great Wheel had turned. Change was inevitable. And
he could not let old friendships stand in the way of that. Not unless
he wished his family's banner to hang in another's hall. Fat
Wong sat, smiling at each of his fellows in turn, then watched as the
servants set out the bowls—thirty courses in all—at the
center of the table. "Why,
this is excellent," Three-Finger Ho said, speaking for them all.
"It is many years since I ate snake and monkey-brains." Yun
lowered his head slightly. "I am honored that you like my humble
fare. But come, ch'un tzu. Let us begin. Before the rice grows
cold." They
had met tonight to deal with Lehmann, to settle things, once and for
all, but for a time their talk steered clear of the matter, as if it
were a jagged rock. Fat Wong was happy with this, savoring the meal,
the flow of casual pleasantries, but as the servants began to clear
the bowls, he turned the conversation, bringing it directly to the
point. "So
what are we to do about this upstart? How are we to rid ourselves of
this pai nan jenl" The
term brought smiles from about the table; but they were tense,
nervous smiles that faded quickly. "The white man." It was
how they had come to talk of Lehmann among themselves, as if the term
distinguished him from the other Hung Moo. Moreover, it was apt. For
everywhere he went, death—the White T'ang—seemed to
follow. "Let
us kill him," Three-Finger Ho said bluntly. "Hire a shoo
lin to assassinate him." "It
has been tried," General Feng said, wiping his fingers on the
wet cloth, then handing it to the servant behind him. "Whiskers
Lu tried it, but our friend was too clever for him. No, if we are to
strike, it must be through someone close to him. Someone he trusts." "Difficult,"
Li the Lidless interjected, sucking at his fingers noisily. "He
lets few come close to him, and those are fiercely loyal. I doubt we
would find one among them who would take our blood money. No. We
would be better off fighting him." "A
war?" Fat Wong asked, eyeing Li from across the table. "An
all-out war, to the death?" Beside
him, Dead Man Yun looked down. "Exactly,"
Li Chin said, leaning across to take the last few cashews from one of
the bowls before the servant cleared it. "Five against one. How
could we lose?" Fat
Wong looked down, suddenly apprehensive. If Li Chin's idea took hold
he was in trouble. The agreement he had reached with Li Yuan—whatever
its merits in the long run-—depended in the short
term on him maintaining peace down here in the Lowers. Were he
to break that agreement, who knew how Li Yuan might react? Had his
preparations been more advanced he might have risked it. But he was
not ready yet. He could not afford to antagonize Li Yuan. "Is
that wise?" he asked quietly, meeting Li's staring, egglike eyes
with a show of apparent openness. "I have some sympathy for your
view, Li Chin, but think of the cost, the disruption to our
enterprises. Have we not always said that it is better to make money
than fight wars? Is that not why we have thrived while others have
gone under?" "Maybe
so," Li answered. "But when the east wind blows, the wise
man bows before it. We must bow to the inevitable, Wong Yi-sun. We
must fight the pai nan jen, before it is too late." "Is
war the only course left to us, brother Li?" Dead Man Yun asked,
gesturing for his servants to leave the room. "Have we exhausted
every other option?" Li
Chin turned, facing Yun. "Every day that passes makes him
stronger. Can you not see it, Yun Yueh-hui? We can delay no longer.
We must act. At once." Yun
nodded. "Of course. That is why we are here tonight, neh? To
deal with this problem before it becomes insoluble. But we must think
hard before setting out on such a venture. War is like a fire, easy
to start, but hard to control. I do not rule it out. No. But we must
save it for our final option, when all else has failed." Li
looked about him, seeing how the others were nodding in agreement and
sat back, shrugging. "So what do you propose?" Yun
glanced briefly at Wong Yi-sun, then looked back at Li, his dark eyes
staring back unblinkingly from his death-mask face. "I say we
starve him out. Destroy his markets. Attack him indirectly, through
his middlemen. Undermine him and make his rule untenable." "And
if that fails?" "Then
we fight him." Li
considered a moment, then nodded. "Okay. But how long do you
propose we give ourselves? Six months? A year?" "Six
months," Fat Wong said, hiding his satisfaction. Yes, and then
there would be war. But not against Lehmann. No. For by that
time he would have swallowed Lehmann up, pearl-handled knife and all.
"East winds . . ." he said, lifting his wine cup and
looking about the table. "Here's to east winds!" FROM
WHERE THEY STOOD, high up on a Fourth Level balcony, overlooking the
busy thoroughfare, the two men could see the loaded carts being
wheeled back toward the interdeck transit elevator. Lehmann's men
were everywhere, keeping the inquisitive at bay, making sure the
operation went smoothly and without a hitch. "You've
covered yourself?" Lehmann said, not looking at the man beside
him, his eyes taking in everything that was happening down below. "Naturally,"
the Major answered casually. "It'll be weeks before they sort
out the mix-up. And even then they won't be certain just what
happened." "And
your Captains know nothing?" The
Major smiled broadly. "No more than the men. As I said, it's all
a question of overlays. Of contradictory information. My man's good.
One of the best when it comes to manipulating the records. When the
T'ing Wei come to investigate the matter, they'll find two
sets of information—two versions of events—and both will
be corroborated." Lehmann
glanced at the officer. "And the money?" "Don't
worry, my friend. It's salted away where no prying eyes will find it.
As I said, I'm a patient man. Six years from now I can take early
retirement, if I want it, that is. When I do, I can look forward to a
nice little nest egg, neh? And all this will have been forgotten by
then. No one will notice if I live like a T'ang. They will think
merely that I have invested wisely over the years." He
laughed, but Lehmann, beside him, was silent, thoughtful. He had paid
the Major two and a half million to set this up. A further two and a
half was due once this was done. In return he got munitions worth
half that much, maybe even less. But it was worth it. Because this
way no one would know they had them. This way no rival Boss would get
to hear what he was up to. Lehmann
turned from the balcony. "Let's go," he said, touching the
Major's arm. "I want to be out of here before those alarms start
sounding." The
Major nodded, studying Lehmann a moment, an unasked question on his
lips, then turned, following the albino back down the stairwell
toward the waiting lift. THE
CROWD in the great hall had fallen silent. Only a faint murmur of
silks could be heard as heads turned to see who it was had come among
them. A thousand faces, Han, aristocratic, looked toward the giant,
jade-paneled doors at the far end of the hall. Two men stood there. The
Hung Mao stood between the towering doors, looking about him.
There was the faintest trace of a smile on his lips, but his eyes
were keen, sharply observant. For a min he held himself well;
proudly, as if he too were ch'un tzu. Beside him was the
Chancellor, Fen Cho-hsien, looking impatient, clearly put out by the
fact that he had to accompany the man. "Come," he said
distinctly, and started forward, moving between the lines of guests.
The Hung Moo walked behind him, looking from side to side quite
openly, his head making small bows, his face lit by the mildest, most
innocuous of smiles, as though he realized his presence was offensive
and wished to minimize that insult. When
Chancellor Fen reached the smaller doors on the far side of the hall
he turned abruptly, and signaling to the musicians, whose instruments
had fallen silent with the rest, he spoke a few words in the mother
tongue to those nearest him. At once heads turned back and
conversation began to pick up. The orchestra started up a moment
later. "I
am sorry to come among you thus," said the Hung Mao quietly. Fen
Cho-hsien studied him a moment, then nodded, placated by the modesty
of the man. He was not like most of the others. There was a subtlety,
a grace about him that was rarely found among them. Most were like
apes, crude in the expression of their needs. But this one was
different. Fen Cho-hsien bowed slightly and turned to face the doors
again, knocking firmly on the carved and lacquered panel. Two
guards opened the doors and they went through, into an
anteroom, then down a narrow corridor where a ceiling scanner
rotated in its flexible cradle, following them. At the far end of the
corridor, more guards were waiting. The Hung Moo had been searched
already, but now they repeated the process, checking him thoroughly
while the Minister waited, his eyes averted. Satisfied, one of them
spoke into a handset and pressed out a code. Behind them, the doors
to the inner sanctum opened. Wu
Shih came forward, hands extended. "Representative Kennedy, it
is a delight to meet you at last. I have seen much and heard much
about you." He took the American's hands and pressed them
firmly, his eyes meeting Kennedy's with an expression partway between
greeting and challenge. "I felt it was time that we met. . . and
talked." The
room was a delicate blue, every piece of furniture chosen to
complement its soft, relaxing shade. When they sat it was on low
chairs with silk cushions of a rich, deep blue, speckled with petals
of peach and ivory and bronze. Kennedy's dark business silks seemed
intrusive, a foreign element. He sat there, trying not to feel
discomfort. There had been no time to change. The summons had said
"At once," and you did not argue with the word of a T'ang.
Not yet, anyway. Wu
Shih leaned forward, the silk folds of his long, flowing gown
whispering softly. He seemed soft, almost effeminate beside the big,
hard-featured Hung Mao, but his eyes were like the eyes of a
hunting bird and his hands, where they showed from the soft blue
silk, were hard and dark and strong. "I
am sorry I gave you so little time. In such matters it is best to act
quickly. This way no one knows you are here." Kennedy
made a small, turning movement of his head, as if to indicate the
crowded hall outside, but Wu Shih simply smiled. "No
one but you and I. What I tell my people not to see they do not see." Kennedy
smiled, understanding, but remained on his guard. "You
wonder what I want. Why I should ask you here today." "You'll
tell me," Kennedy answered matter-of-factly. Wu
Shih sat up a little, reassessing things. Then he laughed. "Indeed.
I am forgetting. You are a realist, not an idealist. You deal with
real things, not dreams." There
was truth as well as irony in the words. Wu Shih had been doing his
homework. But then, so too had Kennedy. "The
attainment of real things—that can be a dream, can it not?" Wu
Shih gave a small nod. "Not like other dreams, neh?" He was
referring clearly to the Cutler Institute. To the dreams of the Old
Men. "Yu
Kung!" Kennedy said. Foolish old men. Wu
Shih laughed and clapped his hands. "You know our tongue, then,
Shih Kennedy?" "Enough
to understand. Perhaps enough to pass." The
T'ang sat back, studying him. "There's something that was not in
your file. Where did you learn the Kuan hua?" "My
father had many dealings with your servants and your father's
servants. A little knowledge of your ways was helpful. It was one of
the great secrets of his success." "And
your father taught you?" Kennedy
smiled and nodded. At that moment he seemed his most boyish and
charming and Wu Shih, looking at him, felt some element of warmth
creep into his calculations. He liked this particular American. So
unlike the crabby old men and their shriveled dreams of forever. "Then
perhaps my intuition is better than I first thought." Wu
Shih hesitated, then stood and turned away from the American.
Kennedy, aware of protocol, got to his feet, waiting silently to find
out why Wu Shih had summoned him. After a minute or so, the T'ang
turned back to face him. "I
must choose to trust you, Shih Kennedy. And that is no light thing
for a T'ang to do. We trust few to know what lies within our minds,
and you are a stranger here. Even so, I will trust you." Kennedy
gave the slightest bow, his eyes never leaving the other's face. "You
are a clever man, Joseph Kennedy. You know how things are. Where the
power lies in this City. And you know how to use power, how to
manufacture the raw stuff of which it is made." The T'ang
allowed himself a smile. "And no, not money. Not just
that. Something deeper, more dependable than money. Loyalty. I see
you and I see those about you and I recognize what it is that binds
them to you." He paused. "You are a strong man, Shih
Kennedy. A powerful man. My ministers have told me I should crush
you. Find ways to dishonor you. To entrap you and buy you. They have
proposed a dozen different schemes to break you and humiliate you." Kennedy
said nothing. He stood there, his head slightly lowered, listening,
his watchful eyes taking in everything. Wu Shih, noting this, smiled
inwardly. Kennedy was no fool. His strength came from deep
within—from a self-confidence that, like his own, was innate. "However,
what I see of you I like. I see a man who thinks like a man ought to
think. Who puts his people before himself. And I like that. I respect
it. But as a practical man I must ask myself a question. Can
there be two Kings in City America? If I let this man—
yourself—continue thus, will I not, in time, fall prey to his
success?" He was
quiet a moment, then, "Well?" "I
am the T'ang's man," Kennedy answered, no hesitation or trace of
uncertainty in the words. "I speak not against the Seven, but
against the Old Men." Wu
Shih narrowed his eyes a moment, then nodded. "So you say now,
Joseph Kennedy. But what when America is yours? What when the people
come to you and say, 'You, Representative Kennedy, are the man who
should be King. You are American. Let us be ruled by an American!'
How will you answer them? Will you turn to them and say, 'I am the
T'ang's man'?" He laughed. "I like you, and I do you the
honor of trusting you with these thoughts, but I am no yu kung,
Shih Kennedy. I too am a practical man." Kennedy
was silent a moment. Then, with what seemed almost a sigh, he spoke
again. "What do you want from me, Chieh Hsia? What can I
give you to ensure my loyalty?" Wu
Shih came closer until he stood almost face to face with the
American. "I want a hostage." Kennedy
frowned, not understanding. "There
is a new technique my friend Li Yuan has been perfecting. A means of
control." "Control?" "It
is a simple technical device. It does no harm, I assure you, and the
operation is perfectly safe." "And
you want me to ... to undergo this operation?" Wu
Shih shook his head. "No, Shih Kennedy. I see you still don't
understand. I want no martyrs. No, nothing like that." He smiled
and reached out to lay his hand on the American's shoulder. "I
mean your wife, your sons. That's who I mean." EMILY
CLOSED THE DOOR and turned, facing Michael, alone with him at last.
She felt raw, her nerves exposed by all that had happened these past
few days. The pace of events had left her no time to come to terms
with what she felt, but now, facing him, it all came welling up; all
the grief and hurt and naked fear. She
went across and stood there, looking down at him. He was asleep, his
face pale and pinched, his left hand, where it lay above the cover,
flecked with tiny scabs. She had seen the detailed pictures of his
injuries, of the horrific damage to his legs and lower back; had
stood there in the background while First Surgeon Chang had explained
to Kennedy what needed to be done. And had felt nothing, only a sense
of numbed unreality. Of shock that this should have happened now. Now
when she had finally decided to commit herself. She
took a long breath, then shook her head, reminding herself that all
of that had ended. To organize one needed anonymity, and in the space
of twenty-four hours she had become famous coast to coast, a "face,"
"Michael Lever's wife." So now that option was denied her.
If she wished to do something—to shape this god-awful world for
the good—she must find another way. She
looked down at him and sighed, then put her hand out, touching his
brow gently, reassured to find it warm. His
wife. But what had that meant so far? That she shared his bed. And
beyond that? Beyond
that it had meant nothing. Kennedy had made sufe of that. Yes, for it
was Kennedy who had made sure she stayed at home whenever Michael
traveled about the City; Kennedy who had insisted that she sit with
the other wives and girlfriends while the men
discussed matters of moment. For, after all, wasn't this a
man's world? And wasn't that her role—to be the quiet, dutiful
wife? She
shuddered, realizing that she had been lying to herself this past
year. Oh, she had been happy enough, even when Michael had been away,
for their reunions were moments to savor, to look forward to with
sweet anticipation. Yet it had never been enough. And now, faced with
the prospect of living without that, she understood the price she had
paid for her happiness; how much of herself she had denied. Kennedy.
It all came back to Kennedy. Since
the day she had married Michael he had made sure that she was shut
out of things; her voice silenced, her views ignored. Almost as if he
sensed that there was something that distinguished her from the women
of his own social circle, his level. Something more than a simple
question of breeding. And
Michael? Michael had accepted it all, as if there were nothing wrong
with it. And maybe, in truth, he really couldn't see it, for he too
had been bred to accept things as they were. But all that must
change. She was determined on it. From now on she would be at his
side at all times, offering advice and support, discussing each issue
with him as it arose, challenging his inbred notions of the world and
its ways, whatever Kennedy and the others thought of it. She
shivered, suddenly indignant, recalling all the times that Kennedy
had snubbed her. "My dear," he called her condescendingly.
Well, she would show him from here on. "Fm
?" L~>111
• * • • Michael
was looking up at her, a weak yet somehow radiant smile lighting his
features. Seeing it, all thought evaporated. She reached down and
hugged him, gently, carefully, laughing as she did. "How
are you feeling?" she said, kneeling beside him, her face close
to his own, her hand clasping his. "Tired,"
he said, "and a little numb. But better, much better than I was.
I'm glad the cameras have gone, that's all. It was hard. Bryn's
death. . ." She
smoothed his brow. "I know. Don't talk about it now. Let's talk
about us, eh? About what we're going to do about all this." There
was a flicker of pain in his eyes, a moment's uncertainty, and then
he spoke, his voice strangely quiet. "If you want a divorce . .
. ?" She
shook her head, strangely moved by the directness of his words, by
the blunt honesty of the man. "It's
still there, isn't it?" she said, a faint smile on her lips.
"They didn't blow it off, did they?" He
smiled grimly. "Not that I know of." "Shall
I take a look?" "Em!"
He laughed, his laughter shading into a cough. "Behave yourself!
The cameras!" "Bugger
the cameras," she said quietly. "Besides, it might give the
bastards something to smile about, neh?" For a
time they were silent, looking at each other, then Michael turned his
head aside, a slight bitterness, or was it self-pity, registering in
his face. "It'll
be hard," he said. "Harder for you, perhaps, than for me.
I've only got to get better. You . . ." "I'll
survive," she said, squeezing his hand. "Besides, I've
something to do now, haven't I? Something to take my mind off
things." He
looked back at her. "What do you mean?" She
smiled. "I'm your wife, Michael. That means something now. Much
more than it did before this happened. It gives me a voice." "And
you want that?" She
considered a moment, then nodded. "I've seen things," she
said. "Down there in the Lowers. Things you wouldn't believe.
Suffering. Awful, indescribable suffering. And I want to do something
about it. Something positive." He
stared at her a moment, then nodded, a smile coming to his face.
"You're a good woman, Em. The best a man could have. And if
that's what you want, then go ahead. Besides, I think you're right.
Joe's looking at how this affects the elections, but it's bigger than
that, isn't it? IVe been thinking, Em. Bryn's death ..." A flash
of pain crossed his face. "Bryn's death has got to mean
something. Something good has got to come out of it. So maybe you're
right. Maybe we should use this opportunity. You in your way, me in
mine." "And
Joseph Kennedy?" "You
don't get on, do you? I've noticed it. From the first, I guess. But
it didn't seem to matter before now. He's a good man, Em. I'd vouch
for it. But you do what you have to. And if he opposes you, tell me.
I'll back you. You know I will." She
smiled, then leaned closer, kissing his brow. "I know. In fact,
IVe always known it. But as you say, it didn't matter much before
now." LI
yuan CROUCHED there in the shallows of the lake at Tongjiang, his
silks hitched up to his knees, facing his fifteen-month-old son. Kuei
Jen was leaning forward as he splashed his father, giggling
uncontrollably, his chubby arms flailing at the water, his dark small
head beaded with bright droplets. A
ragged line of servants stood knee-deep in the water close by,
guarding the deeper water, the sunlight gleaming off their shaven
heads, their faces wreathed in smiles as they watched their T'ang
playing with the young prince. On the
bank, a picnic had been set up. From beneath the gold and red silk
awnings, Li Yuan's wives looked on, laughing and smiling at their
husband's antics. Lai Shi and Fu Ti Chang were sitting at the back,
on a long seat heaped with cushions, but Mien Shan, Kuei Jen's
mother, stood almost at the water's edge, her laughter edged with
concern. Kuei
Jen turned, looking across at his mother, then jumped, a funny little
movement that brought laughter from all about him. The infant looked
around, wide-eyed with surprise, then, seeing the smiles on every
face, clapped his hands and, giggling, jumped again. "That's
right!" Yuan yelled delightedly, encouraging him. "Wriggle,
my little fish! Wriggle!" And, throwing back his head, he roared
with laughter. But
Kuei Jen was beginning to get overexcited, and this time, when he
jumped, he stumbled, throwing out his tiny hands as he fell, a brief
cry of surprise escaping him before he went under. Quickly, Li Yuan
bent down and scooped the spluttering Kuei Jen up, holding him close
against his chest, there-there-ing him, and kissing his face. For a
while Kuei Jen howled and howled, but slowly Li Yuan's gentle words
had their effect and the child calmed, nuzzling in close to his
father's chest. "There!"
Li Yuan said, lifting him and holding him up, above him, at arm's
length. He laughed softly. "No harm done, eh, my little fish? No
harm." For a
moment longer he hugged his son, kissing the dark crown of his head.
"You're a good boy, neh?" he murmured. "A good boy."
Then, turning in the water, he waded across to the shore and handed
Kuei Jen to his mother. Mien
Shan took her son, looking past him at Li Yuan and smiling broadly.
"Thank you, Yuan," she said quietly. "And you are a
good father to your son. The very best of fathers." She
turned, summoning her maids. At once they were at her side with
towels and dry clothing, tending to the child. Li
Yuan smiled, touched by her words, then stepped up onto the bank,
letting one of his body servants towel down his legs while another
brought a fresh tunic and fussed about him, dressing him. As they
finished, he turned and looked across. Lai Shi and Fu Ti Chang were
watching him, their heads close, talking. He smiled, then went
across, planting himself between them, putting his arms about their
shoulders. For a
moment he sat there, silently enjoying the day. Out on the lake the
men had begun to play a game with a stuffed ox's bladder, batting it
about and diving to catch it, throwing up great sprays of water, to
the amusement of all. Even Kuei Jen had stopped whimpering and had
turned to watch them, a smile of amusement lighting his tiny
features. Watching
it all, Yuan felt a shiver of contentment pass through him. This was
enough, surely? Enough for any man. To have this day, this sunlit,
happy hour forever, that surely was enough? He
waited, silent within himself, but for once there was no dark voice
to counter that first strong feeling of contentment. So maybe this
was it—the balance he had been seeking all these years. Maybe
it was simple after all. A matter of relaxing. Of letting go. "Yuan?" He
turned his head, looking into the dark and pretty eyes of his Second
Wife, Lai Shi. "What
is it, my love?" Her
eyes slipped away, meeting Fu Ti Chang's on the other side of him,
then returned to his. "It's just that we were talking. Wondering
. . ." Something
in her face, maybe the slightest hint of mischievousness in her
mouth, told him at once what they had been talking of. "Wondering
whose bed I would come to tonight, is that it?" Lai
Shi nodded. For a
moment he studied her. Lai Shi was not the prettiest of his wives.
No, for there was something about her features—some
irregularity in that long northern face—that did not quite meet
the conventional standard of beauty. Yet when she smiled, when her
eyes sparkled with mischief, there was a sensuality to her face, a
voluptuousness, that made her by far the most attractive of his
wives. Saying
nothing, he turned, facing his Third Wife, Fu Ti Chang. She was the
tallest of his wives but also the youngest; a long-legged willow of a
girl with breasts like tiny pears and an elegance that, at times, he
found intoxicating. She sat there, letting him study her, her large
eyes meeting his openly, that modesty that was so ingrained a part of
her character staring out at him. "You
wish for a decision?" Fu Ti
Chang nodded. He
turned. "And you, Lai Shi?" "Yes,
husband. But before you do, let me say something. That ten days is a
long time for us to be without you. Last night you went to Mien
Shan's bed. And before that..." "Before
that I was away." He laughed. "I understand, Lai Shi. A
woman is a woman, neh? She has her needs." Lai
Shi smiled, while Fu Ti Chang looked down, a faint blush at her neck. "Well,
a decision you shall have. But first let me say what it is I most
like about each of you. Why the choice is such a difficult one." "Husband
. . ." Lai Shi protested, but Li Yuan shook his head. "No.
You will hear me out. And then I shall tell you my decision." He lay
his head back on the cushions and stared out across the lake,
considering a moment. Then, with a brief laugh, he began to speak. "If
we are to believe, as the ancient Buddhists once believed, that every
soul has been upon this earth before, then Fu Ti Chang was once, I am
convinced, a horse. A beautiful, elegant horse, with a good, strong
rump, long, fine legs, and the stamina of a Thoroughbred. Many a
night have I had her in the saddle until dawn, and never once has she
complained of tiredness!" There
was a giggle from Lai Shi, but Fu Ti Chang herself was still,
listening to his every word. "But
what I like most about my sweet Fu are her hands. For my youngest
wife has the gentlest hands under Heaven. If Kuan Yin ever made love
to a mortal man, then I am certain it was in the form of my darling
Fu Ti Chang." Fu Ti
Chang gave a slight bow of her head, clearly touched by his words. "Now,
as for Lai Shi, well, what am I to say? That she is the naughtiest of
my girls, the most willful?" "Tell
me what creature I was, husband. In my former life . . ." He
laughed. "Why that's easy, Lai Shi. You were a bird. A
mischievous magpie, the bringer of good news and joy." "A
magpie!" She laughed delightedly. "Yes,"
he said, smiling broadly, enjoying the game. "With a wicked,
teasing mouth that, many a night, has settled in my nest." ' , She
smiled, her dark eyes sparkling. "Can I help it if little niao
needs to be fed . . ." He
roared with laughter. "Maybe so, Lai Shi. But eaten?" He
stood, then turned back, looking down at them. "Nan Ho chose
well for me, neh? Too well, perhaps, for how am I to choose?
Thoroughbred or magpie, which is it to be ? I feel as if I ought to
have a copy made of myself." "Two
copies," Fu Ti Chang said, ever practical. He
turned, looking across to where Mien Shan was standing at the lake's
edge, the now-sleeping Kuei Jen cradled against her shoulder. "Of
course. I had not forgotten Mien Shan. But as for tonight . . . well,
why don't you both come to my bed?" "Both?"
Fu Ti Chang stared back at him, shocked, it seemed, but, beside
her, Lai Shi was grinning broadly. She leaned close, whisper-ing
something to Fu Ti Chang. For a moment Fu Ti Chang looked puzzled.
She frowned intently. Then, unexpectedly, she let out a peal of
raucous laughter. "Yes,"
he heard her whisper, and found himself intrigued. They
turned back, facing him again, suddenly very formal, sitting up
straight-backed in the long seat. "Well?"
he asked. "Is it a satisfactory answer?" "Whatever
our husband wishes," Fu Ti Chang said, bowing to him, her face
cracking as Lai Shi began to giggle at her side. "Whatever
our husband wishes." He was
about to comment, to ask them what was going on, when a movement to
his right distracted him. He looked across. His Master of the Inner
Chambers, Chan Teng, was standing there, his head bowed. "What
is it, Master Chan? Is something wrong?" "No,
Chieh Hsia. All is well." "And
the packing? That goes well?" "We
are almost done, Chieh Hsia." "Good.
Then it is something else, neh?" Chan
Teng bowed. "That is so, Chieh Hsia. Marshal Tolonen is
here, for your appointment." Li
Yuan shook his head. "I did not expect him until four. Is it
that late, already?" "I
am afraid so, Chieh Hsia." Ah, he
thought; then the afternoon is almost done. He looked about
him, savoring the sights that met his eyes; the servants playing in
the lake, his wives, his sleeping son. There must be more days
like this, he thought. Days of ease and happiness. For without
them, what is K/e? Nothing,
came the answer. Less than nothing. He
turned back, facing his Master of the Inner Chambers. "Thank
you, Master Chan. Go now and tell the Marshal that I will be with him
in a while. I must have a final word here." Chan
Teng bowed, then backed away, turning and hurrying off toward the
great sweep of steps and the palace beyond. Li Yuan watched him go,
then turned back, looking at his wives. It would have been nice to
have gone with them tomorrow, to spend a few more days
with them before duty called him back, but that was not to be.
There was far too much to do, down here on Chung Kuo: the GenSyn
Hearings were due to start shortly, and then there were the
preparations for the reopening of the House. A copy
... He laughed, remembering what had been said. Yes, it would
have been good to have had a copy—a twin—of himself these
past few years. One to work and one to play. Two selves to share the
joys and burdens of this world. He
turned. Mien Shan was watching him, smiling, real love there in her
eyes as she held the sleeping child. He went across and held her,
kissing her brow, then, bending down, carefully took Kuei Jen from
her. For a
moment he closed his eyes, lulled by the gentle warmth of his son
pressed close against him, then, with a final, tender kiss on the
infant's cheek, he handed him back, smiling at Mien Shan. "Ten
days," he said, a faint sigh escaping his lips. "Ten days,
that's all, my love, and then I'll join you up above." THIS
far into United Bamboo territory, Fat Wong's runners seemed to
outnumber the common people by two or three to one. Young men wearing
the emerald-green headbands of the Triad moved past Lehmann
constantly as he walked the packed corridors, while in the great
thoroughfare of Main, groups of young affluent-looking Han, their
green silks displaying the hand and bamboo cane symbol of the United
Bamboo, sat around tables, relaxed, drinking and playing Chou or
Mah'Jongg, for all the world like young aristocrats. He had
heard that Fat Wong was the biggest of his rivals and now, through
the false lenses he wore to mask his true identity, he could see it
was so. Here, in the cluster of stacks that formed the heartland of
the United Bamboo, the wealth of the brotherhood was on open display.
A dozen great cinnamon trees rested in massive ornamental bowls along
the central aisle of Main, while to either side the balconies were
festooned with bright red slogan banners and garlands of colorful
flowers, as if in celebration. The shops along the central mall were
full, the products cheap—a fifth the price you'd find anywhere
else in the City—while everywhere he looked there was an
underlying sense of orderliness
he had seen nowhere else in the City at this low a level. Indeed,
if he had not known better, he might have thought himself a good
twenty decks higher, up near the top of the City. Lehmann
looked about him as he went, his eyes taking in every-thing, the tiny
cameras, implanted into the cornea of the lenses, recording every
detail. He had
read the secret Security report the Major had obtained for him. At
the last reckoning Wong Yi-sun's annual turnover had been more than
one hundred and twenty billion yuan. It was a massive sum; one
that, to be frank, had surprised him, for it dwarfed his own turnover
by a factor of twenty to one. That was worrying, true, but no cause
for despair. No, for if anything it made his task easier. Only the Wo
Shih Wo and Dead Man Yun's Red Gang could compete with the United
Bamboo in terms of market share and the two of them combined were
only half Fat Wong's size. It was little wonder, then, that his spies
had reported back that the other Bosses were growing a little wary of
their erstwhile friend. Indeed, after what had happened to Iron Mu,
they were right to be suspicious of Wong Yi-sun's motives. So
much so, in fact, that, after their dinner at Dead Man Yun's, three
of the Bosses had met again, hours later, to discuss their own secret
agenda. An agenda that, had he known of it, would have outraged the
birdlike Wong. At the
gateway between the stacks, Lehmann waited at the barrier to show his
documentation to one of the guards. As before, the regular Security
men were shadowed all the while by United Bamboo officials who
checked their work and made their own unofficial checks on who went
through into their territory. Thus far Lehmann had passed through all
five gates with only the minimum of fuss, but this time, as the guard
made to hand him back his card and pass him through, one of the
officials—a bald-headed Han with a deeply scarred chin and a
short, slightly corpulent figure—took the card from the guard's
hand and, pushing him aside, placed himself directly in front of
Lehmann. He
glanced down at the card, then looked back at Lehmann, his whole
manner hostile. "What are you doing here, Shih Snow? What is
your business in this stack?" Lehmann
lowered his head, as if in respect, and held out the papers he had
had prepared, offering them to the Triad official. "Forgive me,
Excellency, but I have a routine maintenance call to make. The
documents will explain." From
beneath his lashes, he saw how the man deliberately ignored the
papers, disdaining to take them. "Who
asked you to come? Which official did you speak to?" "It
was Yueh Pa. He informed our office two hours back that there was a
malfunction in one of the junction boxes. In the east stack, Level
34." That
much was true. Indeed, he had been waiting three weeks for something
to go wrong so that he might pay this visit. But once in, he had no
intention of putting the fault right. At least, not in the sense they
wanted it done. "Yueh
Pa, eh?" The Han turned, offering a few words of Mandarin to his
colleague, then turned back to Lehmann, letting the card fall from
his fingers. "You can pass through, Shih Snow, but I will have
one of my men assigned to you all the while you are here, understand?
I do not like strangers. Especially Hung Mao. So keep your eyes to
yourself, do your job, and go." I
understand, pig's ass, Lehmann thought, bowing low to retrieve
his card, then maintaining the bow as he circled the man and ducked
under the half-raised barrier. Not that it would help them, even if
they attached a dozen runners to watch him. He
waited there, head lowered, while the official called across a young
thin-faced runner and gave him his instructions. Bowing low to his
Master, the young Han turned and, coming across to Lehmann, barked at
him in Mandarin, showing him the same contempt his Master had shown.
With a bow, Lehmann handed his papers across to the young brute,
showing nothing of what he felt, then followed on behind the man. On
into the very heart of Fat Wong's territory. "Shih
Kennedy! Shih Kennedy! Is it true what you said in your speech
tonight about the so-called Euthanasia Bill?" Kennedy
stood on the rostrum of the Press Room, elegant and powerful, facing
the crush of media men and reporters. Remotes
buzzed about his head like giant bugs, hovering in the bright,
overhead lights, their hungry lenses capturing his every word, his
every gesture, but it was to the men below that he played, addressing
them by name, leaning toward each questioner as he framed his reply,
as if confiding in them. "It's
true, Ted," he said, his features stem, responsible. "They'll
deny it, naturally, but we have copies of the study documents.
Fascinating stuff it is too. Like I said, this is no brief memorandum
we're talking about here, but a report of near-on six hundred pages,
detailing every little circumstance. Moreover, they've costed the
exercise down to the last fen. And why do that if it's
merely—and I quote—'an option we're considering'?" The
reference was to the statement issued by the T'ing Wei, the
Superintendent of Trials, immediately after the speech. Stung by
Kennedy's accusations—or "caught out" as some
commentators had put it—the T'ing Wei had backpedaled
furiously, at first denying that there was any such document, and
then, when it became clear that no one was going to accept that,
putting out a revised statement, admitting the document's existence,
but denying that it was anything more than a study. As for
the speech itself, that had been a sensation. A revelation. Not in
living memory had an audience responded so enthusiastically, so
passionately, to anyone. Kennedy had had them eating out of his hand.
Throughout the ninety minutes of the speech there had been a kind of
buzz in the great hall, a sense of something new happening right
there before their eyes. Kennedy had stood there at the front of the
stage, handsome, charismatic, like a king in exile. Scorning notes,
he had addressed the great crowd from memory, his deep, resonant
voice washing like a tide over their heads. And his words, simple yet
powerful, had touched a raw nerve. You could see that. See it on the
faces in the crowd; faces that filled the screens throughout the
great City of North America. This was his moment. The moment when he
came of age. And
afterward, the crowd had stood there, cheering wildly, applauding
Kennedy for more than twenty minutes, bringing him back time and
again to the stage, a great roar going up each time he reappeared,
followed moments later by the chant: "Ke-ne-dy!
Ke-ne-dy! Ke-ne-dy! Ke-ne-dy!" And
all the while he had stood there, smiling and looking about him,
applauding his audience just as they applauded him, his boyish
modesty there for all to see. "Shih
Kennedy! Shih Kennedy!" Kennedy
leaned forward on the rostrum and pointed down into the crush of
media men, singling out one of the many who were calling him. "Yes,
Peter. What is it?" "Are
you aware that a number of surveys done over the last six months have
revealed that quite a large percentage of people are actually in
favor of limited euthanasia proposals?" Kennedy
nodded somberly. "I think limited is the word, Peter.
I've seen those surveys—you're talking about the Howett Report
and the Chang Institute paper, I assume . . . Yes? Well, all I can
say is that one should look very carefully at the questions that were
asked in those surveys and see how they actually relate to these new
proposals. I think you'll find that there's very little correlation
between them. What the new 'Study1 reveals is that the
actual proposals are far more radical, far more deep-reaching.
Besides, there's a hell of a difference between thinking that
something might just possibly be a good idea and actually going out
and doing it. A hell of a difference. I mean, what we're talking
about here is killing people. And not just one or two, but millions.
Tens of millions." Kennedy
put his hand up to his brow, combing back a lock of his dark hair, an
expression of deep concern in his steel-gray eyes. "No,
Peter, what I think those surveys show is that most people recognize
that there's a problem. But this isn't the solution. At least, not
one that any decent person should be contemplating." There
was a buzz of sympathy from the floor. But at once the clamor began
again. "Shih
Kennedy! Shih Kennedy!" "Yes,
Ho Yang . . ." The
young Han, a reporter for the all-Han station, Wen Ming,
glanced at his hand-held comset, then looked up, addressing Kennedy,
an immediate translation going out across the airwaves. "In
your speech you seemed to imply that, as far-reaching as the Study
document was in terms of the upper age group, this was merely
the thin end of the wedge, and that we might expect such
preliminary measures to be followed by a whole package of population
controls. Could you amplify on that?" Kennedy
smiled. "Certainly. And, once again, this is not a matter of
mere speculation. These discussions are going on right now, in secret
rooms throughout the seven Cities. Deals are being made, proposals
drawn up. Proposals that, if we're not careful, will be presented to
the House and voted on by men whose interests are not necessarily
ours." "And
what exactly do you mean by that, Shih Kennedy?" Kennedy
leaned forward slightly. "I mean that there are men— rich,
powerful men, if you like—who put profit before family,
individual gain before the common good. And it's these men—these
hsiao jen, these 'little men'—who are at present
dictating things. I don't know about you, Ho Yang, but I think that's
wrong. I think that a matter of this importance should be debated
publicly and decided publicly. Something must be done, yes. We all
recognize that now. But it must be done openly, in the light, where
all can see." And so
it went on, for almost two hours, until, with a smile and a wave,
Kennedy stood down. But even then—even after the lights had
gone down and the remotes had been packed away—Kennedy wasn't
finished. After speaking with his advisors, catching up on the latest
news, he went out among the media men, shaking hands and stopping to
say a word or two here and there, suddenly informal, a friend, not
just a "face." "How's
Jean?" one of them asked. Kennedy
turned. "She's fine, Jack. Fine. In fact, she's going off with
the boys for a week or so, to escape all of this politicking. She's
always complaining that I work her too hard, so I thought I'd give
her and the boys a break, before things get really hectic." There
was laughter at that. All there knew just how hard Kennedy worked.
Phenomenally hard. In that he was like his father. "Okay,
boys, so if you'll excuse me now . . ." Kennedy
went through, into the anteroom. There, in a great cushioned chair on
the far side of the room, sat Jean, his wife, her arms aboufctheir
two young sons. They were looking away from him, unaware
that he had come into the room, staring up at the big screen in the
corner of the room. He
stood there a moment, looking across at them, torn by the sight.
There was such pride in young Robert's face as he stared at his
father's image. Such undemanding love. And Jean... He could barely
look at her without thinking of the deal he had made with Wu Shih. For a
time out there he had almost forgotten. The deal had seemed as
nothing. But now, facing his family once again, he felt the
hollow-ness flood back into him, leaving him weightless, like a leaf
in the wind. He
shuddered. What was it they said? When the east wind blows, the
wise man bows before it. Well, he had bowed, sure enough. But not
like a reed. More like a great tree, its trunk snapped and fallen in
the face of the storm. "Joe!"
Jean saw him and came across, embracing him. Moments later he felt
his two sons holding tight to him, one on either side. "Dad!"
they were saying. "Dad, it was wonderful! You were brilliant!" He
steeled himself. "I'm sorry, Jean. If there was any choice . .
." She
drew her head back, looking at him, then reached out to wipe the
tears that had come, unbidden, to his eyes. "It's all right. I
understand. You know I understand. And I'll stand by you, Joseph
Kennedy. Whatever you do." "I
know," he said. "Maybe that's what worries me most. That
you're so understanding. If I could only . . ." She
put a finger to his lips. "There's no alternative. We both know
that. Remember what you said, all those years ago, that night in your
father's house, that year we first met? You said . . . that it didn't
matter how it got done, only that it got done." She smiled.
"That's still true, isn't it, Joe? And what you did tonight . .
. that's a big step toward it." "Maybe
..." "No.
No maybes about it. Tonight you started something. Something that
even Wu Shih can't stop." He
looked down. To either side of him his sons were looking up at him,
trying to understand what was going on. "It's
all right," he said to them, holding them tightly against him.
"Everything's going to be all right. You'll see." There
was a knock. He freed himself, then turned and went across, pulling
back the door. A tall
Han waited there. One of Wu Shih's men, the number
seven—ch'i—embroidered in Mandarin on the chest of his
powder-blue silks. Beyond him the press room was empty, except for
two shaven-headed Han. "Are
they ready?" the tall Han asked. Kennedy
turned, looking at his wife, his sons, then turned back, giving a
nod. "They're ready," he said, trying to keep the pain, the
anxiety he suddenly felt, out of his voice. But the tears betrayed
him. He had
had his moment. It was gone now. Ahead lay only hol-lowness. CHAPTER
NINETEEN
Weimar NINE
YEARS . . ." the ancient murmured, tears forming in his watery
eyes. "Nine long years I've waited for this day." His
companion, a distinguished-looking graybeard of seventy-five years,
nodded somberly. He looked about him at the tiers of empty or
sparsely populated benches that stretched away on every side of the
House, then leaned closer to his fellow, placing a thin, fly-speckled
hand on his friend's arm. "Do you remember the last time we were
here, Johann?" "Like
yesterday," the ancient replied, a faint light appearing in his
eyes. "That was the day we voted down the Seven's veto, neh? The
day Secretary Barrow indicted the tai. . ." He sighed
heavily, his deeply lined face filled with a sudden pain. "Ach,
had we but known what sadness would follow . . ." "Had
we but known . . ." For a
moment the two were silent, watching as, below them, at the center of
the Great Hall, the officials of the Seven prepared the central
rostrum for the ceremony to come. Then, clearing his throat, the
younger of the two spoke again, drawing his powder-blue silks about
him as he did. "They
were sad years, true enough, but maybe they were meant to be. Maybe
that day and this were foreordained." He smiled morosely and
patted his companion's hand. "You know, the more I think of
those times, Johann, the more I feel that the conflict was
inevitable. That the War . . . well, that the War was necessary." The
ancient shrugged, then laughed; a dry, asthmatic sound. "Maybe
so. But we survived, neh? We few." The
graybeard looked about him again, conscious that, of the three and a
half thousand Representatives who had packed the House that day, nine
years before, a mere handful—two hundred at most—had
lived to see this day. "Few
indeed," he said, feeling a sudden weight—not bitterness,
but a mixture of regret and the inexorable workings of fate—descend
on him. Once
more silence fell. Far below them, out on the central rostrum where
the Upper Council sat, a group of gray-haired dignitaries were
seating themselves. There
was a moment's brief delay and then the ceremony began. At the
central lectern the elderly Representative for Shenyang Hsien, Ho
Chao-tuan, cleared his throat and began to read from the prepared
statement, formally dissolving the House. Overhead, a dozen remotes
hovered in the air, relaying their images back to the watching
billions. With
the faintest rustle, Ho Chao-tuan set the statement aside and began
to read from the list of standing members. As each name was read, a
shouted "Yes" would come down from one or other of the
elders scattered about the massive chamber. Eventually, all one
hundred eighty-three surviving members had responded. With a terse
nod, Ho backed away from the lectern, his part in the ceremony
concluded. As Ho
Chao-tuan moved back, a tall, middle-aged Han with a plaited white
beard stepped forward. This was Ch'in Tao Fan, Chancellor of East
Asia. Looking all about him at the near-deserted tiers, he thanked
the members, then, with a dramatic flourish, unfurled the official
scroll and began to read. On the
benches high above Ch'in Tao Fan, the ancient placed his hand on his
friend's arm and smiled sadly. "Our day is done," he said
quietly. "It is up to others now to finish what we began." "So
it is," the graybeard answered, sighing, helping his fellow to
his feet. "So it is." Down
below them, Ch'in Tao Fan spoke on, talking of the days to
come, and of the great step forward, while behind him, on the
far side of the great chamber, in the broad ceremonial corridor
beyond the great double doorways, the first of the newly elected
Representatives, more than eight hundred in all, waited silently in
their powder-blue silks, ready to take their places at the empty
benches. THREE
HOURS LATER, their business in the House done, three of the new
Representatives stood in the doorway of the private dining rooms
above the Great Hall. At their appearance one of the House Stewards
came across, his maroon silks embossed with the number thirty-five. "Ch'un
tzu," he said, bowing deeply. "You are most welcome
here. Your guest has asked me to apologize on his behalf. He has been
delayed, I fear, and will be a few minutes late. Refreshments,
however, have been provided. So, please, if you would come in." They
entered, looking about them and exchanging glances. The
room was large yet not imposing, the decor and furniture clearly
chosen with great care and with the most exquisite taste. Four tall
Ming dynasty officials' chairs dominated the left-hand side of the
room. Close by, on low Ching dynasty tables, bowls of lychees, plums,
and strawberries had been laid out. At the far end, in front of a
huge picture window that overlooked the formal gardens, a high
scroll-legged table was laden with porcelain jugs and bowls, while to
the right of the room, beyond a long, head-height screen of carved
mahogany, a table had been set for six, western silverware set at
each place beside the cloth-wrapped chopsticks. "What
will you drink, ch'un tzu?" the Steward asked, turning to
face them again. "Will it be your usual, Representative
Underwood? Or would you prefer a cordial?" Underwood
laughed, intrigued. "I'll have my usual," he said after a
moment. "And
you, Representative Hart? A cool black dragon wine? Or is it too
early in the day?" Hart
lowered his head slightly, both amused and impressed. "That
would be fine, thank you. But tell me, Thirty-five, is it normal for
the Stewards to know what each member drinks?" The
Steward looked at them, smiling politely. "It is not always so,
no. But my master is a meticulous man. He likes to do things
properly." "Your
master. . . ?" Hart looked to the other two. This grew more
curious by the moment. The
man had contacted them a week back, using an intermediary, and had
"bought" a meeting with them. Each had been informed that
the other two would be present, but beyond that they had been told
nothing. Nothing but the man's name. Li Min. The
Steward brought their drinks, then bade them sit. He smiled and bowed
to each in turn, then took two small steps backward. "As I said,
ch'un tzu, my master will be a little delayed. But please, be
at your ease until he comes. I must leave you for a short while to
supervise the meal, but help yourself. The fruit is fresh from the
Plantations this very morning." With a
final bow, the Steward turned and went. "Well.
. ." Underwood said, sipping at the ancient malt whiskey the
Steward had handed him. "If that doesn't beat it all! What do
you think our man, Li Min, wants?" Munroe
laughed. "What do they all want? Advantage. Someone to make
deals for them. To give them face." "And
is that why we're here?" Hart asked, reaching down to take one
of the large, blue-black plums from the bowl beside him. "To
make deals? And to give some Han merchant face?" "I'm
told it's what politics is about," Munroe said, straightening up
again. "But what do you think this one wants? I mean, it's odd,
don't you think? A Han, asking three Hung Moo Representatives to a
meeting on the morning that the House reopens. You'd think he'd
choose three of his own kind, neh? You know what they're like, these
Han." "Only
too well," Underwood said, setting his drink down. He picked up
one of the lychees and sniffed at it, then bit deep, lifting his
pocket silk to his chin to dab at the trickle of juice. "That's
exactly what I meant. I mean, I've heard there's been a lot of this
kind of thing going on these past few months, but this feels
different. The fact that he went out of his way to buy our time, for
instance. Now why should he do that?" "To
make sure we came?" Hart said thoughtfully. "Yes,
but why?" Underwood
had barely uttered the words when the door swung open and a tall,
extremely pallid-looking Hung Moo came into the room, followed
closely by two soberly dressed assistants, both of whom wore the
telltale flashing collars of commodity slaves. "Gentlemen,"
the Hung Moo began, putting out his hands to beg them to remain
seated. "Thank you for coming here. I am Li Min." Underwood
set the half-eaten lychee down. Across from him Hart and Munroe
looked equally stunned. Munroe
sat forward. "You? Li Min?" He shook his head. "But we
were expecting . . ." "A
Han? Yes, well, forgive my little subterfuge, gentlemen. It was. . .
necessary, let's say." The man turned, giving a curt hand signal
to one of his assistants who proceeded to close and lock the door. Underwood
was on his feet. "Is that really necessary, Shih Li?" The
man turned, facing him. "If you wish to leave, Representative
Underwood, you may, of course. I have locked the doors not to keep
you in, but to keep others out." "Then
what the hell is going on?" Munroe asked, on his feet beside
Hart and Underwood. "I want to know who you really are and why
we're here, and I want to know it right now or I'm walking." "That's
right," Hart said. "Please,
gentlemen. I shall do as you ask. But be seated. You are at Weimar.
In the great House itself. No harm can come to you here." Mollified,
the three men sat again, the tall Hung Moo taking the vacant seat
facing them. "All
right," he said, looking from one to the next, his frost-white
face expressionless. "You wish to know who I am and why I have
asked you here today. Well, the answer to the first is that I am
Stefan Lehmann, only son of Under-Secretary Lehmann." Hart
laughed, astonished. Beside him Munroe shook his head slowly.
Underwood just sat there, his mouth open. At
Lehmann's signal, one of his assistants brought & case and
handed it to him. He opened it and took out three files, offering one
to each of the men. "Inside
those files you will find genetic charts and other material
that will verify my claim. But as to what I want from you,
that depends very much on what you yourselves want." Lehmann
fell silent a moment, watching the three men study the material;
then, when it seemed they were convinced, he began again. "You
wondered earlier how it was that the Steward knew what each of you
drank. Well, he knew that because I have made it my business to find
out about each of you. Oh, you were no strangers to me, or at least,
your fathers weren't. But I wanted to know a great deal more about
each of you before I came and sat here facing you. I wanted to be
sure." "Sure
about what?" Hart said, his composure regained somewhat now that
he had had a little time to digest what was happening. "About
whether I could trust you." Lehmann paused, then, lifting his
left hand casually, pointed at Munroe. "You, Wendell. Your
father was disbarred from the House eight years ago and your whole
family sent down fifty levels. He never got over that, did he? He
died eight months later, some say of shame, others of poison."
Lehmann turned slightly, his hand swinging around until it pointed at
Underwood. "And you, Harry. All of your family property was
confiscated, neh? If it hadn't been for friends, you'd have ended up
below the Net. As it was, your father took his own life." Lehmann
let his hand fall back into his lap, his eyes on Hart once more. "As
for you, Alex, you had to suffer the humiliating indignity of a
pardon. Or at least, your father did. But it rubs off, neh? In this
world of ours, what happens to the father happens also to the son."
He paused again, nodding slowly to himself, knowing he had their full
attention now. "But when I look at the three of you, what I see
is not the sons of traitors but good, strong, hardworking young men.
Men who, through their own efforts, have regained the positions of
preeminence taken from them by the Seven. There is no doubting it.
You are Great Men once more. And yet the taint remains, neh?" Munroe
let out a long breath, then leaned toward Lehmann, his hands clasped
together in front of him. "So what's your point, Shih Lehmann?
What do you want from us?" To
either side of him, Hart and Underwood were staring openly at Lehmann
now, an intense curiosity burning in their eyes. "As
I said. It's not so much what I want, as what you want." He sat
back slightly, looking from one to the next. "You are
Great Men, certainly. Representatives. It would seem, to the outward
eye, that each of you has everything he needs. Status. Riches. Power.
Together with the Seven, you plan to make this world of ours great
again. Or so the media tells us. But knowing you—knowing each
of you as well as 1 do—1 would not have thought that there was
any great love in your hearts for the Seven." Munroe
stared back at him a moment longer, then looked down. "So?" Lehmann
paused. "So this. I wanted to let you know that it's not over.
That the War didn't end. That it's still going on, DeVore or no,
Berdichev or no. That I am my father's son and that the things he
stood for live on in me." "Dispersionism
. . ." Hart said, in an awed whisper. Lehmann
nodded. "Yes, Dispersionism. And something else. Something
wholly new." IT WAS
DONE secretly, quietly. In the media the news was that his wife and
children had gone away on a brief vacation while Kennedy worked on
campaign details. Then, for a week, there was nothing. When Kennedy
saw them again it was on the afternoon of the elections, at Wu Shih's
private clinic on the West Coast. They had been treated well—like
royalty—and he found them in the solarium, beneath the tiny
artificial sun, the two boys playing at the pool's edge. He
went across and knelt beside her chair. "How are you?" he
asked, kissing her, then searching her eyes for some sign of
difference. "I'm
fine, love. Really. IVe never felt better." She laughed, and for
a moment there really did seem nothing wrong, nothing intrinsically
different about her. Her skull was shaved, yes, but otherwise she
seemed her normal self—perhaps even bubblier than usual.
"They're going to give me some injections to speed up hair
growth. In the meantime I've been given the most delightful selection
of wigs. I've spent the whole morning just trying out different
colors and styles." He
smiled bleakly. "You're sure you're okay?" She
nodded. "Really. And the boys too." But now, in her eyes,
there was the faintest intimation that she understood what they had
done. "Don't. . ." she said softly, seeing the pain
in his eyes. "It's better than having you dead. Much better." He
nodded and smiled, as much to reassure himself as her. Then, after
kissing her again, he went and sat with the boys at the poolside, not
fussed by the fact that their small hands left dark, damp patches on
his silks, delighted simply to see them again. Robert,
the eldest, was babbling happily to his father, showing him the new
scar beneath his ear where the input socket sat, more proud than
fearful of its meaning. "Just wait till the other boys see
this," he said. "I betcha they'll all want one! And the
doctor says I could have a special unit put in so's I can see all the
vids direct." The youngster looked away, laughing, then launched
himself into the pool, not seeing the strange look of unease that
crossed his father's face. "Maybe
. . ." Kennedy said to himself, hugging his youngest boy's head
against his leg. But his heart was strangely heavy and, for the first
time in his life, he was uncertain. OLD
DARKNESS stretched sinuously at the bottom of his tank, his great
eyes closed, his long, gray-green tentacles coiling lazily in sleep.
About the tank, a scattering of rock and plant gave the huge,
glass-walled enclosure a false air of normality, the look of some
giant display case. But things were far from normal here. Within the
tough, reinforced layers of ice, the water was kept at a pressure
that would crush a frailer, human form like powdered clay. Nearby,
looking into the tank at the vastness of the sleeping leviathan, Kim
drifted, suspended in the water, his thoughts dark. To his right,
some twenty ch'i distant, was Rebecca, her hands pressed tight
against the outer glass. Behind
them, the early morning sunlight filtered down through the shadowed
outline of the City overhead, forming broad shafts of gold in the
pale blue water, while below them the endless depths stretched down,
into dark, unseen realms of perfect blackness. "He's
beautiful," Rebecca said, her eyes, half glimpsed behind the
face-plate of her mask, gleaming with a strange delight. "So
strong and graceful, don't you think?" Kim
half turned in the water, moving back, away from the menace of the
slumbering form. Powerful it was, and strong. But beautiful? He
turned, looking back at it, then shook his head. No, even in sleep,
Old Darkness was inimical. A deadly, hostile thing, lacking all
warmth, all sympathy with human life. Looking
at it, at the dark, repulsive bulk of it, he felt the deep stirrings
of unease. Inimical it was, and yet connected. The first time he had
seen the creature he had recognized it, but here, alone in the water
with the beast, that feeling was much stronger. Old Darkness ... it
was aptly named, for the light of intelligence, of love or
connectedness, had never touched this creature. It was a thing of
nightmare. And yet... He
shuddered, then forced himself to formulate the thought. It was as if
he were staring back at himself. Or not himself exactly, but a part
of him: that part that was forever hidden from the light. Here, in
the figure of Old Darkness, it was given solid form, cold and
gargantuan. Its
hideous, he thought, and yet the thing exists. It has a
purpose in the scheme of things. Like darkness itself, it
exists because, without it, there would be no light, no warmth.
Because, without it, there would be nothing. "What
does it eat?" Rebecca's
laughter came ringing through the earphones of his mask. "Anything
we give it," she answered, turning toward him, smiling through
her mask. "The deep survey teams bring it back tidbits from the
deep. Strange things with glowing eyes and spiny fins, bloated things
with heavy, scaly bodies and huge, hinged mouths." Again
he shuddered, imagining it down there in its natural element, and
wondered whether it was like that in the deepest recesses of the
mind; whether there were creatures there like Old Darkness, vast
leviathans of the imagination, gliding silently, dark against the
darkness, their long tentacles coiling and uncoiling as they preyed
upon the deformed progeny of the undermind. "Seen
enough?" Rebecca asked, kicking up toward him, her right hand
trailing lightly along the surface of the glass. He
nodded. Enough for thirty lifetimes. "You're right," he
said. "In a strange way he is beautiful. But frightening too." For a
moment she was close, beside him in the water, her hand on
his ami. "Maybe that's what beauty is. Something that
frightens us." And then she was gone, moving up, past him,
toward the hatch, some fifty ch'i above. REBECCA
SHOWERED and dressed, then came through to where Kim sat on the bench
in the men's room, cradling a bulb of ch'a between his cupped
hands. It was quite early—not yet nine—and they were
alone there in the big, echoing room. "Well?"
she said, sitting on the bench across from him. "How's it
going?" Kim
smiled. "Fine," he said. "Bonnet's a bit of a pain.
Schram too. He can't keep his nose out of things, can he? Whatever I
do, he has to know about it. But I've known worse." She
nodded thoughtfully. "You and I both." "Yes
. . ." For a moment he looked at her, realizing how lonely he
had been, how pleased to see her familiar face. But it was more than
that. They had come from the darkness of the Clay, he and she; had
struggled to make their way in this world of light, failing once and
yet surviving. Coming through. They both knew what it was to be a
"thing," owned bone, blood, and flesh by another, their
very existence subject to the whims of petty men. And that had formed
them, just as much as their experience of the Clay. Yes, and made
them different, separate from the rest. Physically and mentally
different. "Do
you ever think of those times?" he asked quietly. "You
know, back in Rehabilitation?" "Sometimes."
She looked down. "Do you remember the bird?" He
nodded. After Luke had defied them—after they had taken him
away that first time—the powers-that-be had given the four of
them that remained a bird. A strange, artificial thing, he realized
now. Something made, not born. A product of GenSyn's labs. The
bird's eyes had been amber, the pupils black. It had gazed into the
far distance, proudly, arrogantly, barely deigning to acknowledge
their presence there outside its cage. Strong, three-toed claws had
gripped the metal perch, the talons stretching and tightening as if
impatient. And when it had spread its wings, the vivid emerald
feathers unfolding like twin fans, it had seemed a gesture of
dismissal. Kim
shuddered, remembering that first moment. Will, like himself, had
thought it beautiful, and Deio had likened it to a song made flesh.
Only Rebecca had not been moved by it. "It's too bright,"
she had said, and he had turned, staring at the bird, wondering how
anything could be "too bright." From
that day on, Will had been obsessed. Each morning, the big North
European lad had fed the bird, talking to it through the bars of its
cage. And
each night he had pressed close to the cage, whispering to it. Always
the same. Four lines of poetry in the ancient guttural tongue of his
part of the Clay. Closing his eyes, Kim could still hear him saying
it, even now, four years on. Mit
alien Augen sieht die Kreatur das offene. Nur unsere Augen sind wie
umgekehrt und ganz un sie gestellt als Fallen, rings um ihren Freien
Ausgang. The
words had moved him, thrilled him, long before Will had told him what
they meant. \ With
all its eyes the creature-world beholds the open. But our
eyes, as though reversed, encircle it on every side, like
traps set round its unobstructed path to freedom. So it
was, for all of them, bird and Clay alike. And then Luke had died.
Suddenly, awfully. Will
had been devastated. Kim remembered that too. Remembered the sight of
him sitting on Luke's empty bed, still, dreadfully still, hunched
into himself, his big, changeling's body forced into a much smaller
area than it was used to, as if he was trying to fit himself into
Luke's skin, into his smaller, subtler form. Kim
looked up, his eyes moist. Rebecca was watching him, her eyes wide,
as if she too saw what he saw. "Why did he do it, Kim?" she
asked. "I thought he loved the bird?" He
shrugged, but the memory was so strong, so vivid, it was as if he
could see it there before him. The
bird lay at the bottom of its cage, its golden eyes dulled, unseeing,
its soft neck broken. Emerald wing feathers littered the floor beside
the damaged cage, evidence of a struggle, while in a chair nearby sat
Will, dull-eyed yet breathing, his hands resting loosely in his lap. "I
don't know," he said, the image slowly fading. But it was
untrue. He knew why Will had killed the bird. She
came close, crouching beside him, looking up into his face. There
were tears in her eyes now, pain in the lines of her mouth. "I
never understood it. Never. Luke, Will, Deio . . . there was no
reason for their deaths. No point." "No,"
he said, putting his hand over hers comfortingly. "It was
awful." He shivered, the pain raw in him, as if it had been
yesterday. "You know, I've blanked it out since then. I couldn't
live with it. Couldn't face it until now. I feel guilty, you know
that, Becky? Guilty that I survived and they didn't." "Yes,"
she said, looking up at him again, grateful that he had said it, her
hand squeezing his gently. "I know. I understand." "Yes
. . ." He wiped a tear away, then stood, pulling her up, holding
her a moment. "But here we are, neh? We came through." Her
dark eyes stared back at him, momentarily intense, looking through
the surface of him, it seemed, into the raw darkness beyond. "We
did, didn't we?" she said quietly, resting her head on his
shoulder. He felt the shudder that ran through her, the warmth of her
lips as they gently brushed his neck. She
moved back, away from him, offering him a small, apologetic smile.
"What are you doing tonight?" "Tonight?"
He shrugged. "My shift ends at eight, but after that, nothing.
Why?" Her
smile broadened. "We're having a party, that's why. Election
night, and all that. Why don't you come? It won't start until ten.
You could pick me up then if you like. It should be fun." He
stared at her a moment, thinking once more how different she was, how
assured this older Rebecca was, then nodded, smiling back at her. "Why
not?" ALL
day, right across City America, people had been voting to send
Representatives to the newly reopened House. Almost a tenth of the
seats were up for grabs in this round and there were already signs
that the old status quo was about to be shaken. In Miami central
stack a huge MedFac multiboard filled one end of the crowded, buzzing
Main. Below it, more than twenty thousand people were packed in,
staring up at the eighteen large screens. The scenes on most differed
little from that in Miami. Large crowds jostled noisily beneath a
thick mass of banners, and, from time to time, a huge cheer would go
up as another local stack declared. Over
each screen was the name of the Hsien being contested, and at the
bottom, superimposed on the screen, was a list of candidates and the
number of votes polled for each. As the evening drew on these figures
built up, and as they did the excitement in the crowd increased
accordingly. Change was in the air. Two
central screens showed something different. On the left was a map of
City North America, its distinctive, lopsided face divided up into
the four hundred and seventy-six Representative districts, colored by
party. To its right was a pie chart showing the relative strengths of
the seven parties that currently dominated North American politics.
Largest of these by far was the Reformers, who held eighty-seven
seats. But all eyes were on Kennedy's New Republicans, who had begun
the contest without a single seat in the old House and had won thirty
in the first round of voting. The
campaign had been harder and, in some ways, dirtier than anyone could
remember. Early on, Kennedy had declared that he would not put up
candidates for the three seats held by Evolutionist incumbents. It
was an unexpected but greatly popular move. Though the Evolutionists
were a long-established party, they were a steadily diminishing
power, and the New Republicans could have won the seats. Within a
week, however, Evolutionist candidates for nine of the remaining
contestable seats had withdrawn and urged their supporters to vote
for New Republican candidates. The
Reformers had hit back hard. Questioning the reliability of the
"new alliance," they had launched a campaign to
discredit Joel Hay, the Evolutionist leader, using material they'd
been holding for some time. It was vile stuff that struck at Hay's
most intimate behavior. Even so, for a day or two Hay fought back.
Then, realizing the damage he was doing to his party, he announced
his resignation. There
was jubilation in the Reformer camp, but, only a day later, their
smiles turned to frowns as Kennedy, who had maintained a strict
silence on the matter, now stepped forward to announce a formal
merger of the two parties under his own leadership. The press
conference, with New Republican and Evolutionist candidates lined up
behind Kennedy as he made his speech, went out worldwide. Overnight,
without the need for an election, the New Republicans had become City
America's third largest power, with forty-two seats. It had
not ended there. The next day the campaign against Carl Fisher had
begun in earnest with the appearance on a nationwide network of two
of Fisher's school friends, accusing him of homosexuality and a whole
string of other perversions. Fisher, shaken and angry, had reacted
with an unexpected bluntness that had done him no harm. "Let
them say it again to me, face to face, and I'll bust their jaws!" Overnight
it became his campaign slogan. Carl "Jaw-Buster" Fisher
went up five points in the polls, while Carver, the Reformer
incumbent, found himself the butt of a thousand cartoons, all
depicting him rubbing at a loosened jaw. Few, looking at the
athletically built and handsome Fisher, paid attention to the
accusations. He was pictured everywhere, surrounded by good-looking
women, punching a bag, knocking back a glass of beer after exercise.
Carver, older, flabbier, showed poorly by comparison. Reformer
claims of inexperience and political naivete carried little weight,
it seemed. Change was in the air, and the young men of the New
Republican and Evolutionist Party, the NREP, were an attractive
alternative to the old style Representative people had grown
accustomed to. But it wasn't only image. Kennedy picked his
candidates well. These new young men were the very cream of the
emergent ruling caste; the sons of powerful men and bred to power
themselves. They were well educated and quick in argument. And
backing them up was an elite of
political researchers and writers attracted by the promise of power.
Reformer money couldn't buy such backing, try as it did. As the
night drew toward its climax, it grew clear that a minor political
sensation was happening. With five seats still to be settled, the
Reformer vote was in tatters. The NREP had gained nineteen districts.
They needed only three of the four remaining Reformer-held seats to
become the second biggest party in North America, passing the On
Leong and the Democrats. In Carl Fisher's campaign suite, the Party
leaders gathered, watching the EduVoc channel, excitement like wine
in their blood. At the center of this small, select group, Michael
Lever leaned forward in his wheelchair and pointed at the screen. "Who's
he?" To the
left of the picture, behind Greg Stewart, their candidate for Denver
Hsien, stood a gaunt-faced, steely-eyed young man, some inches
taller than Stewart. He was shaven-headed and had the look of a paid
assassin. Kennedy
bent down beside Michael, speaking softly to him. "That's a guy
named Horton. Calls himself Meltdown." Michael
narrowed his eyes, then nodded. Now that Kennedy had given him a
name, he recognized him. "He was incarcerated, right? I never
met him but I heard about it. He was on a hunger strike, wasn't he?" Kennedy
nodded. "That's right. His father is a friend of your father." "And
he's working for us now?" "We've
come to an agreement, let's say. They'll be working closely with us
from now on." Michael
frowned. He wasn't sure about this. When Wu Shih had rounded them all
up—that evening of the Thanksgiving Ball—they had all
been outraged, but he saw now how dangerous the "Sons" had
been. He had wanted change, but not by such means as some of them had
subsequently proposed. Their tactics were the same as thpse that had
killed Bryn. And he wanted no more of that. "Are
you sure we want this?" he asked quietly. Kennedy
smiled. "I'm sure, Michael. And listen, I know what I'm
doing. We're in charge, not them. They need us, so they play
by our rules." "And
if they don't?" "They
will. Don't worry." Kennedy
straightened up. On the screen there was news from two of the last
five seats to declare. They had won Mexico City. Vancouver had stayed
On Leong. Parker,
standing behind Michael, laughed. "So not a rout, then!" Michael
half turned and looked up at him. "No. And it'll be harder next
time. They're learning from us all the time. There'll be new
candidates next time around. Younger men. And they'll be tailoring
their campaigns to look like ours. WeVe had it easy so far. They'll
not be so arrogant in the future." "And
we will?" There
was a faint hint of annoyance in Parker's voice, and a number of
people were looking down at Michael strangely, as if he were an
uninvited guest. But Kennedy spoke up, calling for order. "Michael's
right. First time out we got the sympathy vote. This time we took
them by surprise. They'd written off our first-round victories as a
sentimental anomaly—a flash in the pan. But from now on they'll
be on their guard. As Michael says, they'll change their ways. Same
old policies, but new ways of presenting them. New faces too. Maybe
even men who might have served us well. They'll be buying heavily." He
paused and looked around. The room had gone quiet. Only the sound
from the screen went on. They were all watching Kennedy now as he
stood at Michael's side, his hand on the invalid's shoulder. "But
we're not going to be stopped. The mood for change is genuine, and
change itself is long overdue. It'll be harder to win in the future,
and the contest will be much closer than tonight. But we'll win. And
we'll keep on winning, because those we oppose are a dead force—an
old, stinking corpse. WeVe got to show people that. But it'll get
harder to do, I warn you, because the harder we push the more devious
they'll get, the more disguises they'll use." Again
Kennedy stopped and looked around, nodding slowly. "We'll strip
them naked, neh? To the bone. . ," And then he laughed^ showing
his strong white teeth, and the suite was suddenly full of laughter.
From the far side of the room came the sound of popping
corks, and on the screen the news that they had won the last
three seats. Michael
looked up at Kennedy. "And what of us, Joe? Will we be
young forever? Will no one strip us bare?" He
said it softly, so that it carried no farther than Kennedy. For a
moment Kennedy seemed not to have heard, then he looked down at
Michael, his face different, more serious, perhaps more tired than
Michael had ever seen it, and nodded. "To the bone." And
his eyes, so dark and normally so strong, seemed filled with the pain
and certainty of his words. As if he saw and knew. KIM
SAT at a table in the restaurant, his empty ch'a bowl set to one
side, the letter he had been writing held loosely in his left hand as
he read it through a second time. It was
an hour since he'd come off shift and he really ought to have gone
back to his rooms to shower and change, but he had put off writing to
Jelka far too long now. So first this. Even if he had to start it all
again tomorrow, trying to get the words down right. To say all those
things that kept bubbling up from deep within. The
restaurant was filling up. Already the tables nearest Kim were full,
the talk alive with the news of what was happening in City America,
but Kim's attention was elsewhere, thinking of Jelka out on Titan. In
a year she would be on Mars, heading back in toward Chung Kuo. If he
sent the letter there, it might reach her quicker, perhaps, than
trying to get a message out to Titan in time. But first he had to get
it right. He sat
back, thinking suddenly of Rebecca, and of that moment in the
changing rooms earlier. He had said nothing of that to Jelka. Nothing
of what he'd felt; of the pain he'd suffered at the reopening of that
wound . . . nor of the catharsis. But why? Maybe
it was because it confused things. Because it would give her the
wrong idea. He huffed, annoyed at himself, his fingers going to the
pulsing torque about his neck, then, flipping back to the start of
the letter, he began to read it through once more. "Excuse
me . . ." The
voice was soft-spoken, very polite. Kim looked up. A tall Han
was standing there, holding a tray, his head slightly bowed.
The man smiled, the smile vaguely reminiscent of T'ai Cho, then
tilted his head, indicating the empty seat across from Kim. "Would
you mind?" Kim
shook his head, smiling back at the man. "No. Please do ... I'll
be going in a while, anyway." "Ah
. . ." The Han bowed again, then began to set out his meal. "It
is very kind of you. Some people, they. . ." He stopped, his
face suddenly apologetic. "Forgive me. Am I disturbing you?" Kim
laughed, then folded the letter and slipped it into his pocket. "Not
at all. Kim Ward," he said, offering his hand across the table. "Tuan
Wen-ch'ang," the Han answered, bowing a third time. He took
Kim's hand, shaking it vigorously. "I note we are both employed
by the great SimFic corporation, and yet I have not seen you here
before." Kim
nodded, noting for the first time the double-helix logo on the
shoulder of the Han's light-green tunic. "That's not
surprising," he answered. "I haven't been here long, and
I've spent most of my time in the lab." "Ah
. . ." Again the Han smiled. Again the smile reminded Kim of his
old tutor and guardian, T'ai Cho. "Where
do you come from, originally?" Kim asked, strangely drawn to the
man. "Originally?"
The Han laughed, showing slightly imperfect teeth. Again that was
like T'ai Cho, and the thought of it made Kim realize that he had not
contacted his old friend since he had been at Sohm Abyss. "Originally
my clan is from Ning Hsia, in the northwest. We are Hui, you
understand. Not Han." Again he laughed. A pleasant, warming
sound. "As for me, I was born on Mars. In Tien Men K'ou City, in
the south. My clan were settled there, you understand, after the
Third Colonial War. We helped build that City. That and many others." "Mars
. . ." Kim nodded, his thoughts briefly returning to the letter
and to Jelka. "It must be wonderful." Tuan
Wen-ch'ang shrugged. "Sometimes, yes. But mostly it is a
bleak and desolate place. Life is hard there. Very hard. Here
. . ." He laughed. "Well, let us say that life is much
easier here. One need not fear the cold, for instance." "No,"
Kim said absently, then, suddenly realizing what time it was, he
leaned forward across the table. "Look, Tuan Wen-ch'ang. I'd
like to talk more to you—it has been pleasant, most pleasant—
but right now I have to go or I'll be late. There's someone I
promised to meet." "Of
course." Tuan Wen-ch'ang stood, bowing low> as if to someone
high above him in status, then looked back at Kim, smiling his
imperfect smile. "I am here most nights, Shth Ward. If you see
me, come and sit with me. It is good to talk, neh?" "Very
good," said Kim, smiling, and with a final shake of the tall
Hui's hands, he left, stopping only at the door to glance back at the
man, reminded, even in the way the tall Hui sat, crouched forward
over his food, of T'ai Cho. TUAN
wen-ch'ang sat there a moment, waiting, watching the reflection in
the glass beyond the table. He saw the boy turn and look across at
him, then turn back, hurrying to his appointment. Tuan waited a
second, then, leaving the untouched plate of food, made his way
quickly to the door on the far side of the restaurant—the door
Ward hadn't taken. So far
so good, he thought, taking the cast from his mouth, and slipping the
false teeth into his pocket. It had been easy, winning the boy's
trust. The softness of his voice, the simple mimicry of the boy's
friend, had been enough. And the rest? Tuan Wen-ch'ang jabbed at the
buttons of the interlevel elevator, then, as the doors slid back,
went inside, a cold, malicious smile lighting his features. The rest
was simple. wu
SHIH sat back and breathed in deeply, pleased with the way things had
gone. The "State of the Parties" print-up was on the
screen, and he looked at it with a sense of deep satisfaction.
Reformers 94
NREP 65
On Leong 53
Democrats 42
Hop Sing 22
Innovators IO
Ying On 4
In the
last month Kennedy had come from almost nowhere to become the most
important man in North American politics. Wu Shih had read the
situation perfectly and had acted in good time. Now he might
congratulate himself. Li Yuan, he knew, would be delighted. Unlike
the Reformers and the Democrats, Kennedy was for Population Controls.
His success would soften the others' attitudes, and that would mean
that things would go much easier in the House. And that was good. Young
men, he thought. They think all things are new. Laughing,
he stood up and walked across to where he had left the draft of the
new Edict he had been working on. As if history were myth and men
could change their natures. Again he laughed, and this time a
servant came to the door at the far end of his suite, inquiring
dumbly if there were anything he needed, but Wu Shih waved him away. "We
are bom old," he said softly to himself, picking up the
corriset. "And perhaps that is bad. We do not hope for things
the way these young men do." It was
true. He thought them naive, even a touch ridiculous at times. But he
admired their hope, their optimism, their energy. Yes, the
last above all. Confucianism had never really touched them here in
North America. Elsewhere it had thrived, like some strange
debilitating bacillus, but in North America it had been grafted on
superficially. Like a mask, ready to be removed at any moment. Which
made them dangerous, though not uncontrollable. A
third time he laughed, thinking of what Li Yuan planned for them. To
make their desire for change the vehicle for stasis, that was a
stroke of genius! It was
crude as yet, and the tests were not yet complete, but it promised
much. If this worked then nothing was beyond them. Why, they might
yet spread out and take the stars. He
looked at the comset and smiled knowingly. The best designs were
always the simplest, the most direct. Like a well-glazed dish, they
pleased the eye immediately, yet satisfied more deeply with each
reacquaintance. So with this. Wu
Shih sat again, his smile widening. Americans! He'd wire them all! it was
fifteen minutes after midnight when, beneath a barrage of bright
lights, the leader of the New Republican and Evolutionist Party,
Representative Joseph Kennedy, emerged from the count, smiling and
waving to the crowds gathered in the Main below. Behind him, in the
long, high-ceilinged room, he had left a shocked and somber group of
people gathered about the losing Reformer candidate. Outside,
however, beneath banners and awnings that stretched across the wide
Main, there was no doubt of the popularity of the NREP's success. At
the first sight of Kennedy a great roar of approval and delight went
up from the crowd. To the
far right of the balcony, Kennedy's closest associates looked on
happily. Like the crowd below, they cheered and clapped
enthusiastically, carried away by the emotion of the moment. Kennedy
leaned over, looking out, shielding his eyes with one hand, the other
arm about the shoulders of his pretty wife, Jean. Turning to his
friends, he gestured for them to come across and share the spotlight.
As the young men slowly made their way to him, Fisher pushing Michael
in his wheelchair, a huge cheer went up, louder than the first.
Kennedy greeted each in turn, introducing each to the masses below,
hugging each of them to him delightedly. They
smiled, conscious of the floating cameras overhead catching every
word, every nuance of expression. They had grown accustomed to it
these past few weeks; even so, it wasn't easy, not knowing what was
to come. As Michael turned his chair, he saw how Kennedy's wife moved
back, out of the way, as if she understood. This
was the moment when they burned their bridges. The moment when they
started something new. Michael eased his wheelchair back, watching as
Kennedy stepped forward and, putting out a hand, indicated to the
crowd below that he wanted to speak. On huge
screens the length of Main, the cameras focused on his tall,
handsome figure, panning in on his by-now-familiar features. For a
moment the buzz continued, then, slowly, it subsided. Kennedy looked
about him, smiling, then leaned toward the crowd. "We
are all, here in this great hall, Americans. And proud to be
Americans. And Carl Fisher, our new Representative for Boston, is a
fine American, from a fine old American family." There
was a huge roar of approval at that. Kennedy waited for it to
subside, then carried on. "Today,
however, we did much more than elect a good candidate, though Carl
Fisher is certainly that. Today we launched a new campaign. A new
era. A new sense of ourselves as a people." The
cheering went on, beneath Kennedy's voice, greeting every sentence,
growing more and more enthusiastic by the moment as the crowd worked
itself up. Yes, and in tens of millions of households it will be
the same, Michael thought, looking up at Kennedy. They know
some' thing is happening here. And they expect something of him.
Something. . . different. Kennedy
put his right hand up to his brow, sweeping back his hair with that
characteristic gesture of his. "It might seem a small start,"
he said quietly. "A mere sixty-five seats in the House. But
there is still another round of voting. There are still one hundred
and eighty-six seats to be contested next month. And that's enough.
Enough, if we can take a good number of them, to give us a firm
foothold in government—to allow us to wield the kind of
influence we need if we're to bring effective change to this great
City of ours." For a
moment the cheering was deafening. Kennedy leaned forward again,
raising a hand for silence. "Carl
Fisher, your candidate, elected by you here tonight, is more than
just another Representative, however. He is one of the first of a new
breed of men—good, committed young men—who are set to
change the face of politics on this continent. Men who will kick out
the old gang and their tired old ways. Men who pledge themselves to
get rid of the wheeling and the dealing, the vested interests and the
power groupings, and return us to a sense of our greatness as a
people." Kennedy
smiled and, for the briefest moment, looked up into the
overhead camera, as if he could see Wu Shih and the Old Men
looking on. "This
is our time," he said, a sudden power in his voice. "A new
time. Time for us all to realize what was once great about our
country. What was truly great about America. It's time for us to call
it all back. To have back what weVe been denied all these years. To
grasp it and hold it and use it. For America. As Americans." He
paused, getting his breath. What he had just said had not been
uttered publicly before. Indeed, his words had been close to treason.
But no one made to gainsay him. He put out a hand, leaning out over
the balcony, looking about him at the great mass of people below. The
tension was palpable. When he paused this time he could feel all of
them there below him, waiting for his words, powered, just as he was
powered at that moment, by the great tidal flow of his rhetoric. "Americans,"
he said simply, and felt the great ripple of emotion that the word
conjured up roll out from him and roll back like a giant wave. "We
are Americans." He
stood there silently a moment, then raised both of his arms, palms
open, accepting the wild applause from below. Michael,
watching from his side, felt that great tide of wild emotion sweep
over him, and found himself crying suddenly, in love with the man;
with his sheer strength and vitality, and with the invigorating
spirit of change he had brought to them all. Change.
It was coming. At last, after all these years, it was coming. And
nothing—absolutely nothing—could stop them now. KIM
STOOD at the window, staring out across the bright-lit center of Sohm
Abyss, the music pounding in his head, merging, it seemed, with the
steady pounding of his heart. It was late and the celebrations were
growing wilder by the moment. There was a sense of exhilaration in
the air, a feeling that change had come at last, that a new age lay
ahead for everyone.' For
once he had joined in with the party mood, accepting the drink his
host—a plump, middle-aged Han he had met briefly that first
night—had offered him. Three refills later he was feeling
light- headed,
but also curiously lucid. Not that it mattered how he felt. Not now.
Campbell's "decree" had come two hours back, announcing
that tomorrow was to be a day of rest for all SimFic employees. In
celebration of that evening's momentous events. Kim
smiled, staring out through his reflection at the great web of
walkways that linked the outer hexagon of walls to the spirelike
inner tower, their graceful arcs beaded with lights, then turned
fractionally, sensing a movement just behind him. In the glass a face
appeared beside his own, the head overlarge, the eyes slightly too
big. A Claybom face. A moment later he felt a warmth against his back
and, closing his eyes, breathed in the scent of jasmine. "Becky.
. ." "I
wondered where you'd got to," she said, her mouth close against
his ear. "Don't you want to dance?" "I'm
tired," he said, turning his head so that she could hear him
above the music, her face only a hand's length from his own. "I
thought I might go soon." "Tired?
You tired?" She smiled, her eyes searching his own. "It's
early yet. Besides, you heard what Campbell said." "I
know, but..." "Here."
She took his left hand, then pressed something small into his palm. "What's
this?" "Something
to help you loosen up. Go on. Just pop it in your mouth." He
stared at the tiny blue tablet a moment, then shook his head.
"Thanks, but..." She
hesitated, then took it back from him. "Okay. But stay a little
longer, neh? Another hour. I mean, what's the harm?" "No
harm," he said, mirroring her smile. "But no drugs, eh? I
like to be in control." "I
know." She leaned close, kissing his cheek, then reached down
and took his hand. "I remember well." They
danced. For a while he lost himself in the music and the rhythm, the
flashing play of lights. Bodies crowded the center of the floor,
moving in a strange abandonment on every side, like particles in
violent motion. Later,
in a moment of lucidity, of sudden silence, he looked about him and
found that Rebecca had gone. He was about to go and look for her,
when she reappeared, two small, porcelain ch'a bowls held out
before her. "What's
this?" Kim asked, sniffing at the faintly opalescent liquid. "It's
ch'a," she said, laughing. "What did you think it
was? I thought you needed something to sober you up a bit before you
went." "Ah.
. ." He let himself be turned about and led toward a small table
in the far corner of the room. But even as they made their way
across, the music began again, the people all about them erupting in
a frenzy of sudden activity. He
squeezed through, holding the bowl up above his head, then sat
unsteadily. Setting the bowl down, he leaned toward her. "I
think IVe spilled some." "Never
mind," she said, moving around until she sat beside him on the
heavily padded sofa. "Here, have some of mine." He
watched her pour some of the sweet-scented ch'a into his bowl,
then, encouraged by her, lifted the bowl and drained it at a go. "Good,"
she said. "You'll feel better for that." "It's
good," he said, looking past her, his voice raised to combat the
assault of the music, the squeals and shouts of the celebrants. "I
don't think I've ever . . ." He
stopped, sitting back, then put his hand up to his throat. "What's
the matter?" she asked, concerned. "I.
. ." He felt the bile rise in his throat and swallowed hard. For
a moment he had felt nauseous, as if he'd eaten well and then someone
had gone and punched him in the stomach. "Are
you all right?" she said, her hand resting lightly on his thigh.
"Maybe you shouldn't have drained the bowl like that." "Maybe,"
he said, but the nausea was passing, a strange feeling of euphoria
washing over him. "I. . ." He laughed. "You know,
Becky, I think I'm drunk. I think . . ." She
put a finger to his lips, silencing him, then leaned close, speaking
to his ear once more. "I think I should get you home, that's
what I think." He
nodded. Home. Yes, but where was that? "Come
on," she said, pulling him to his feet, then turning him to
face her, her smile strange, enigmatic. "Now. While you
can still walk." he
woke, feeling strange, disoriented, a bitter taste in his mouth, the
scent of jasmine in his nostrils. It was dark where he lay. Whatever
light there was came from a doorway at the far end of the room, to
his right, while from beyond it came the sound of running water, the
hiss of steam. He
turned his head; too fast, it seemed, for the pain that shot from the
surface of his eyes to the back of his skull was fierce, as if a
spike had been driven through his head. He groaned and closed his
eyes, wondering what in the gods' names he had done to himself. Not my
room, he thought. This isn't my room. He made to grasp the
thought and push at it, but his mind refused to push. The thought
slipped from him and was gone. Dead, came the thought. It
feels like I've died and gone to hell. "Kim?" He
opened his eyes, slowly this time, turning his head a fraction at a
time, until he could see where the voice had come from. Rebecca
was standing in the open doorway, the light behind her. A towel was
draped loosely about her shoulders, but otherwise she was naked. In
the half-light he could see a thousand tiny beads of water covering
her flank, her breasts, the soft curve of her upper thigh. "Are
you awake?" He
made to answer, but his mouth was dry, his lips strangely numb. He
groaned and closed his eyes, but he could still see her, standing
there, her breasts small but prominent in the half-light, the nipples
stiff. For a
while there was nothing, only silence; a silence that before had been
filled with the sound of running water, the hiss of steam. Then,
suddenly, he sensed a presence beside him on the bed, felt a small,
cool hand brush his cheek. Gently, solicitously. The voice, when it
came, was soft, like the touch of the hand. It lulled him. "I
didn't realize you'd drunk so much, my love. I'd have not given you
it if I'd known." The
words passed him by. He felt himself gathered up, focused, in
the touch of her hand against his cheek, the sweetly perfianed scent
of her. "Here,"
she said, lifting his head gently. He
felt something small and hard being pressed between his lips. A
moment later, he felt the smooth edge of a glass against his lips. He
swallowed reflexively, letting the cold, clear water wash the tablet
down. "There,"
she said, letting his head fall back. "You'll be all right in a
while." He lay
there for a time, thoughtless almost, the warmth of her hand against
his chest comforting, reassuring him. And then, slowly, very slowly,
like waves lapping gently against the sand, thought returned to him. The
tablet. She had given him the tablet. He
opened his eyes, looking up at her, yet even as he did, the nausea
returned, stronger than before, making him retch. He
turned his head, leaning out, away from the bed, as the spasms came,
unable to help himself, the bile filling his throat, choking him
almost. Rebecca
moved back sharply, turning from him, hiding her anger, her momentary
disgust, listening to him retch. Then she turned back. "I'm
sorry," she said, collecting herself, one hand combing through
her short dark hair. "It's all my fault. I should have known." "Known?"
He stared at her, not understanding. There
was the strong, tart smell of sickness in the room. She
stood, looking back at him from the foot of the bed, then forced
herself to smile. But it was a faint, halfhearted smile. "It
doesn't matter. Look. Let's get you cleaned up. You can shower if you
want. I'll sort this out." Kim
sat up, wiping at his mouth. "I'd better go. I. . ." He
stopped, staring at her, mesmerized, it seemed, by her naked form, as
if he had not noticed it before that moment. He
looked down, suddenly embarrassed, but she had seen the movement in
his eyes, the uncertainty in his face. Letting
the towel fall from her shoulders, she moved up, onto the
end of the bed, moving toward him slowly, crawling on all
fours, her breasts swinging gently beneath her, her eyes watching him
all the while. "Becky
. . ." he said, the sound of it strange, almost pained, but it
was too late. His need betrayed itself. She leaned over him, slowly
unlacing his tunic. "It's
all right," she said softly, smiling down at him, her fingers
caressing the smooth warmth of his chest. "You're home now, my
love. Home." CHAPTER
TWENTY
Total
War 0UT
OVER THE GREAT northern ocean a storm was gathering. Air moistened
and made lighter by the unseasonable heat began to rise rapidly,
leaving behind it a low-pressure area that drew more air in along the
surface of the ocean. That air in turn was moistened and warmed,
rising in a great swirling chimney, spiraling in a counterclockwise
direction, heading east on the North Atlantic Current, toward the
great walled shores of City Europe. From
high above Chung Kuo, a satellite eye noted the buildup of cloud, the
ominous shape, and passed impersonal warnings down to its land-based
station. There, senior officials of the Ta Ssu Nung, the
Superintendency of Agriculture, studied the computer-enhanced
infrared images and consulted among themselves. It was a big storm,
true, even at this stage, but as yet there was no need for alarm. The
front was some two and a half thousand li out, approaching the
Biscay Abyssal Plain, and the computer prediction of its course
showed that it would in all probability strike the great uncharted
island to the west of the Western Isle. There was an objection to
this prediction. A very junior official suggested, in the most humble
terms, that the area of high pressure moving slowly down from Iceland
might push the great storm south. At the same time, a second area of
high pressure, over the Iberian Peninsula, was moving north. The
effect of this might be to channel the storm into a narrow
corridor between the two—a corridor of moist, hot air
that would serve only to feed the hurricane and increase its fury. In
the magnificently decorated offices of the Ta Ssu Nung there
was a moment's consultation among the senior officials and then a
decision was made. If the area of high pressure currently over
Iceland were to move south, the cold air that the storm would
entrain on its western flank might indeed add fuel to the developing
storm, but it would also induce the low to turn to the northeast,
thereby missing continental Europe. There were nods all around. All
agreed that the storm constituted no threat to the City. In all
likelihood it would spend itself over the uncharted island. And even
if it was forced south, there was little real chance of damage. The
walls of the City were sound, no agricultural regions lay in the path
of the storm, and the sea defenses of the great ports of Brest and
Nantes were adequate. A warning would be sent to the latter if
necessary, but otherwise no action need be taken. There was no need
to involve the T'ang or his staff. Out at
sea, however, the storm was gathering force. Six days of unrelenting
heat had created unprecedented conditions in the North Atlantic.
Moreover, the second area of high pressure, near the Iberian
Peninsula, was beginning to feed warm air into the storm system,
gradually strengthening the jet stream. Like a great mouth feeding
upon the hot, moist air, the great swirl of the hurricane grew,
increasing in speed as it went. And as it moved east, so too did the
area of high pressure over the Icelandic Basin, changing direction,
pushing the storm slowly, inexorably south. IT WAS
six MINUTES to four, and in the dimly lit silence of the corridors
surrounding Ujpest stack, Soucek crouched, surrounded by three
thousand of his men. Fifty ch'i along the corridor, out of
sight beyond the left-hand turn, was the barrier. At this early hour
only two men were manning this, the northwestern entrance to the
i4K's heartland. Beyond the barrier, eighteen thousand of General
Feng's best men slept on, unaware of what the dawn would bring. Soucek
looked about him and smiled, encouraging those nearest. They had
planned long and hard for this, and now it was almost time. Seventeen
hundred li to the west, Visak and four thousand men were
waiting, positioned about the Wo Shih Wo's heartland in Milan Hsien.
Three thousand seven hundred li beyond that, in the corridors
surrounding the Canton of Saragossa, Po Lao and a further three
thousand men waited to infiltrate the heartland of the Yellow
Banners. To the northeast, Lehmann himself led the largest of their
forces, an army of fourteen thousand men, crouched in the corridors
surrounding Metz, ready to take on Fat Wong and the United Bamboo. They
would hit at once. Four armies, taking on the full might of the Hung
Mun at one go, outnumbered eight to one, but with the advantage of
surprise. Surprise, and perfect planning. Communications
to the four heartlands would be cut at fourth bell. Minutes later,
hallucinogenic and disabling drugs—small capsules placed in the
ventilation systems weeks ago—would be pumped into the stacks. At
five minutes past four the first of the false broadcasts would be
made, using the taped voices of their enemies' most trusted men;
broadcasts that would override the local media stations, feeding
deliberately contradictory messages directly into the heartlands. At ten
minutes past, the first of the bombs would go off—the first of
many—spreading chaos and panic throughout the enemy stacks.
Five minutes later, a series of chemical fires would be set off.
Elevators would be shut down, exits blocked. Maximum
disruption, that was Lehmann's aim. Standing there yesterday, after
putting the final touches to the plan, he had turned from the map and
faced them, quoting Sun Tzu: "Speed
is the essence of war. Take advantage of the enemy's un-preparedness;
travel by unexpected routes and strike him where he has taken no
precautions." And so
it was, though the hours to come would tell just how unprepared their
enemies were. Soucek
looked down at the timer on his wrist. Three minutes to. He turned,
giving the signal for his men to put on their masks. Key
men had been bought in their enemies' camps. Men like the two on the
barrier; like the guards to General Feng's private rooms. Already
assassins were going about their work, creeping silently, stealthily
into forbidden rooms. Making it easier. Reducing the odds against
them. Even so, it would be hard. Lehmann had said as much. For this
was no skirmish, no simple test of strength, this was war, total war.
A war for survival. By the end of today things would be different
here below. Changed for all time. Soucek
shivered. And himself? Would he survive this day? Fifteen
seconds... He
raised his arm, tensed, looking about him hawkishly, his whole self
gathered in the gesture, then brought it down sharply, hurling
himself forward, a great wave of men following him down the corridor
toward the barrier. THIRD
OFFICIAL K'UNG sat back in his chair, heaving a sigh of relief. It
had been a tiring night tracking the progress of the storm, worrying
that the high pressure area moving down from Iceland would push it
farther south. But his worst fears seemed not to have materialized.
The Icelandic high had drifted east, and after a worrying three hours
the storm appeared to have stabilized, holding its course. Latest
estimates showed that it would make landfall somewhere out over the
southwestern tip of the Western Isle. K'ung
yawned, then looked about him, glad that he would be going off shift
shortly. All about him his staff had their heads down, making reports
and compiling information. But decisions. . . Well, he was glad he
had not had to make a decision this night. Leaning
forward again, he tapped through to the Ta Ssu Nung"s
office in the Western Isle and gave them the storm warning, quoting
the latest computer predictions for wind strength, sea height, and
time and location of landfall. That done, he stood, stretching his
weary muscles. His relief, Wu, would be here in ten minutes. In the
circumstances he might as well take advantage of his seniority to use
the shower first, while the water was still hot, and grab a bowl of
ch'a at the restaurant. He
looked up at the huge, wall-size chart once more, seeing the great
swirl of the storm, prominent in the upper left-hand corner of the
screen. In the hours since the crisis meeting, the storm had grown
considerably. Estimates of its size now put it at over two hundred
and fifty li from tip to
tip. But it was not so much its size as its direction that had
concerned K'ung. The front of the storm was now only three hundred li
from landfall, moving north-northeast at a rate of a hundred and
forty li an hour. He
went to move away, then stopped. In his tiredness he had almost
forgotten. Brest and Nantes were still on Code B alert. He would need
to give them the all-clear before he went. Wu, certainly, wouldn't
think to check. Seating
himself, K'ung keyed in the security code for the day, then tapped
out the message quickly, holding down both destinations at once. Done,
he thought, not waiting for the acknowledgment. It had been a
hard night. It would be good to shower the tiredness from his bones. FAT
WONG STOOD THERE, staring up at the empty bank of screens, then tried
the keyboard again. Nothing. The board was dead. "What
the fuck is going on?" Wong
Yi-sun turned, looking about him at the men who were crowded into the
compact space of his central control. These were his most trusted
men. His "sons." He studied their familiar faces a moment,
noting the fear—the real fear—in every face, and
understood its source. Word of mouth was that the attack had come on
three fronts; that runners from the Yellow Banners, the Wo Shih Wo,
and the Kuei Chuan were involved. Thousands of men, attacking
with heavy armaments and using gas. But the rumors were patchy,
unconfirmed. With the communications net down and bombs going off all
over the place, it was hard to say just what was happening. All he
knew was that he had woken to find two assassins in his room: men
they had later identified as Yellow Banners chan shui—Three-Finger
Ho's men. There
had been panic when he had first come into the room, but now they
were quiet, watching him expectantly. His children. "Hui
Tsin," he said, addressing his Red Pole, taking control of
things. "I want you to send a dozen of your best runners out to
each front. West, south, and east. They will be our eyes, our ears in
this battle. I want them masked and armed, each squad divided into
six teams of two: one
messenger, one guard. Each guard must be willing to lay down his life
to allow the messenger to get through, you understand?" "Yes,
Master." Hui Tsin bowed and hurried off. Wong turned, facing
another of his men. "Hua
Shang, I want you to get word to Yun Yueh-hui. Tell him that we are
being attacked and that the United Bamboo would welcome help from
their brothers of the Red Gang." "Master.
. ." "Oh,
and Shang . . . Send off a dozen runners, by different routes.
Instruct each one to contact Yun's headquarters by whatever means
they can. Speed is of the essence here." Hua
Shang bowed his head and was gone. Fat Wong turned, facing the
others. They waited, tense, yet almost content now that there were
things to be done, tasks to be accomplished, their faces open to him,
expectant. "Good,"
Wong said, beaming back at them. "You understand, my sons. The
day has come. It is war. So now we fight. Whoever comes against us." LI
CHIN LAY on his back, beneath the silken bedsheets, his eyes, which
had never closed in life, staring sightlessly at the ceiling mosaic.
His face was ash-pale, the pillow beneath his head dark, almost black
with his blood. The
eighteen-year-old, Li Pai Shung, stood there a moment, looking down
at his uncle. He had returned only yesterday, after a year at College
in Strasbourg Hsien, and had spent the night with his uncle and
friends, feasting until the early hours. And now Li Chin was dead,
murdered in his bed. And Li Pai Shung was suddenly 489. Boss of the
great Wo Shih Wo. He
shivered, then turned, summoning the Red Pole across to him. "You
have the men who did this, Yue Chun?" The
big Han bowed to his new master. "We cornered them, Master, only
fifty ch'i from here, but the assassins killed themselves.
Arsenic capsules, it seems." "Ah
. . ." Li Pai Shung looked away, his eyes returning once more to
the tiny stiletto wound at the side of his uncle's neck. "Then
we do not know who sent them." "They
were Fat Wong's men, Master. My lieutenant, Liu Tong, recognized
them." Li Pai
Shung turned, surprised. "Wong Yi-sun?" Then he laughed.
"No. Fat Wong wasn't ready. My honorable uncle was wrong about
many things, but not about that. Wong Yi-sun would never have moved
against us unless the odds were heavily in his favor. Unless he was
certain of victory. No, Yue Chun, this is something else." "General
Feng?" Yue asked, frowning. "It
is possible," Li Pai Shung said, recalling the intense rivalry
there had been with General Feng's I4K on their northeastern borders
over the past year. Possible but unlikely. There was a great deal of
difference, after all, between that kind of ritual muscle-flexing and
all-out war. And there was no doubting that, whatever else was
happening, this was a war. Already the Wo Shih Wo had lost six stacks
and more than three thousand men. He
turned back. Yue Chun was waiting with that perfect patience that
characterized the man. "All
right," Li Pai Shung said finally. "Whoever it is, let's
hit them back. And let's hit them hard." the
corridor ahead was blocked with the bodies of the dead. Here, at the
entrance to the central stack of Budapest Hsien, the i4K had made a
stand. More than a thousand men had died here in the last hour, in
hand-to-hand fighting that was fiercer than anything Soucek had ever
thought to see. He
stood there, getting his breath, while his men brought up the heavy
armaments. Despite this setback, things had gone well for them these
past six hours. The first assault had won them eight of the
twenty-six stacks controlled by the i4K. After that it had been
steady fighting, stack by stack, floor by floor. So
far, Lehmann's tactics had worked perfectly. Prisoners had been
taken, but they'd been bound and drugged, then left in rooms behind
their lines, freeing his own men for the fight. Those enemies that
had continued to resist had been shot out of hand. Where things had
been difficult—where
resistance had been particularly fierce—they had used bombs and
flamethrowers to clear rooms and corridors. Momentum
had been the secret. For four hours they had pressed forward
relentlessly, enclosing their opponents, panicking them, forcing them
to flee or surrender. But now they would have to fight a very
different kind of battle, for now they were on the death ground. This
was the final stack. Here the I4K either fought or ceased to exist as
a brotherhood. The
death ground. . . Soucek shivered, remembering the words Lehmann
had drummed into each of them. The words of the great Sun Tzu. Words
that were more than two and a half thousand years old. In
death ground I could make it evident that there is no chance of
survival. For it is the nature of soldiers to resist when surrounded:
to/ight to the death when there is no alternative, and when
desperate to follow commands implicitly. So it
was here, at this hour. Unless, as Sun Tzu suggested, he gave them
that small chance of escape—that narrow corridor of light
through the darkness—that would undermine their will to fight.
But first he must push them to the edge. Must make it clear to them
that there was no question of compromise; that it was his intention
to eradicate them, down to the last man. He
turned, watching as the two big guns were wheeled into place,
signaling his men to take up positions on either side of the
corridor, some twenty ch'i back from the barrier of corpses.
Then, when all was ready, he gave the order. FAT
WONG SAT DOWN heavily, staring at the note that had come. There
was no doubting its authenticity. It was Yun Yueh-hui's hand, and
the coded phrases were those they had agreed on long ago, should
this situation arise. But the words . . . He let
the note fall from his hand and looked up, searching the
faces of his men as if for explanation. "He
says he cannot come. Mei fa tzu, he says. It is fate." Wong
shook his head, numbed by what was happening. It was as if
T'ai Shan itself had fallen. In the last hour news had come of
the murder of General Feng, his
throat cut by his concubines in the bath, and of Li Ch'in, stabbed in
his own bed by two chan shih of his, Wong's, brotherhood. From
Three-Finger Ho in Saragossa there was no word, no answer to his
angry query about the two Yellow Banner assassins. Not that it was
important now. No, for he knew now who he fought. It was the pai
nanjen, the "white man," Lehmann. Already
he had lost more than two thirds of his heartland to the Kuei
Chuan. And though he had fought off the latest enemy offensive,
it had cost him dearly. Lehmann had only to keep on pressing and the
prize would be his. Which was why the news from Dead Man Yun was so
bad. With the Red Gang at their back, the United Bamboo would have
swept the Kuei Chuan from the levels. But Yun had betrayed
him. Wong
stood, his anger spilling over, and waved his men away, slamming the
door shut behind them. Alone, he let all of the hurt and bitterness
flow out, raging at the empty room. Then, feeling better for that
purging outburst, he sat again, letting his thoughts grow still. Was it
lost? Was all that he'd worked for gone? Or was there still a tiny
chance? Some way of turning things? Wong
Yi-sun closed his eyes, concentrating, clearing his head of all
sentiment, trying to see through the great swirl of events to the
clear hard truth at the center of things. Just why had Yun Yueh-hui
betrayed him? Why, in his moment of utmost need, had his brother
failed to come? He
opened his eyes again, staring down at his tiny, almost feminine
hands, using his fingers, like a child, to enumerate the facts. One.
Yun Yueh-hui's Red Gang, alone of the five brotherhoods, had not been
attacked by the Kuei Chuan. Two.
Dead Man Yun, his ally, who had given his sacred word to aid him if
attacked, had refused to come to his help. Three.
The Red Gang had not joined in the attacks, but had stayed within
their borders. Fact
one suggested a deal with the Kuei Chuan—an agreement,
perhaps, to share the spoils of war; maybe even to divide things up
after it was over. But if such a deal had been made, then surely the
Red Gang would have joined the Kuei Chuan in this venture,
attacking the United Bamboo
from the north? Indeed, an alliance in which one partner did the
fighting, while the other sat at home, made no sense at all. Yet if
it wasn't an alliance, then what in hell was it? As far as he could
make out, Lehmann had neutralized the Red Gang. But how in the gods'
names had he done that? What possible inducement could he have
offered Yun Yueh-hui to make him stay within his borders? Fat Wong
groaned, letting his head drop. He had been wrong last time they'd
met. He should have done as Li Chin said and destroyed the pai nan
jen. Now it was too late. Now there was nothing he could do. .
Nothing. Except to endure. LEHMANN
STABBED a finger at the chart, indicating where the fast-track bolt
ran through the center of Fat Wong's heartland, then looked back at
his two lieutenants. "That's
where you go in, along the track itself, even as our main force is
attacking the south entrance here. I want each of you to take in a
team at either end. Six of your best men. Men who are good with
knives and garrotes. The lights will be cut, so I want everyone
blacked up. You travel fast and silently. If a man falls, the rest go
on. The aim is to get to Fat Wong, and we won't do that unless we hit
him before he knows we're coming. The attack should distract his
attention, but don't count on it. Wong Yi-sun is a good fighter, an
experienced general. He will be expecting us to try at him again." "And
if we get him?" Lehmann
straightened up. "If you get him, weVe won. Wong is the head.
And without the head, the United Bamboo is nothing." There
were smiles at that, as if the thing were already done. "When
are we to go in?" He
glanced at the timer on the desk nearby. "In thirty-eight min'
utes. We hit them four minutes before tenth bell. You go in three
minutes later, so I want you in position well before then." There
were nods; then, when Lehmann said no more, both men bowed and left. Lehmann
turned, summoning the messenger across. Until
now things had gone well. Word from Budapest was that the
I4K were close to capitulation, while the news from Saragossa
was that only a handful of isolated stacks held out. Three-Finger Ho
had been taken, his Red Pole killed. But things were slowly changing.
In Milan, Li Ch'in's nephew, Li Pai Shung, had mounted a vigorous
counterattack, pushing Visak back and inflicting heavy losses. And
here, in Metz, his forces had found themselves bogged down in fierce
hand-to-hand fighting in the corridors, their progress slowed almost
to a standstill. It was time, then, to push things further. Lehmann
dismissed the messenger, then turned, studying the chart again. This
was his last throw. All of his reserves had been called up for this
attack. If it failed, that was it, for there was nothing more to call
upon. But it was close now. Very close. Leaving
the map, he went through, into the anteroom, then stood there,
looking through the one-way mirror into the room where Dead Man Yun's
daughter and her three boys were being held. The boys were in the
makeshift beds, sleeping; the woman sat in a chair beside her
youngest, her hand stroking his forehead gently, her face careworn,
prematurely aged by worry. Yun
Yueh-hui had been the key. If he had been there, at Fat Wong's back
with the full force of the Red Gang behind him, there would have been
no chance of success today. As it was, he, Stefan Lehmann, was within
hours of a famous victory, the like of which had not been witnessed
in the Lowers. Good planning had brought him within sight of that
victory, but planning could take you only so far: audacity—sheer
daring—was needed, if you were to go all the way. Audacity . .
. and luck. THE
STORM HAD TURNED. The high-pressure area to the north, which had been
dormant these past few hours, had begun to move south once more,
pushing the storm before it, channeling it into a narrow corridor of
warm, moist air over the north of Brittany. In the
central control room of the Ta Ssu Nung*s European office, a
red warning light glowed fiercely on the panel of the Controller's
desk, but for once there was no one there to see it. Third Official
K'ung had gone home and his replacement, Wu, had called in sick. A
replacement was on his way, but he would be an hour yet. Between
times the storm gathered speed and power, pushing a great wall of
water before it, heading now for the coast of France and the port of
Nantes. on THE
far side of Chung Kuo, at Tongjiang, Li Yuan sat in his study,
reading the handwritten message that had come an hour back. Scattered
on the desk nearby were the other contents of the package:
audiovisual files, a folded piece of lilac paper, a ring. He
looked up, his eyes straying briefly to the open doors and the garden
beyond, troubled by what he'd read, then turned, looking directly at
his Chancellor. "What
do you think? Are these documents genuine? Is it as this Li Min
claims? Has Wang's man, Hung Mien-lo, come to some arrangement with
Wong Yi-sun?" Nan Ho
considered a moment, then gave a sigh. "This troubles me, Chieh
Hsia. It troubles me greatly. As you know, latest reports
indicate that there is some kind of struggle going on in the lowers
of our City. The full extent of it we do not know as yet, though
first indications are that it is of some considerable scale. In the
circumstances, this message is of profound significance, for it
provides us with a much clearer understanding of what is happening." Li
Yuan drew the ring toward him, then picked it up between his
left-hand thumb and forefinger, studying it, troubled by something
familiar about the design inset into its face. "Maybe
so. But what do we know about this Li Min? Where does he come from?
And how has he come by the power to take on the rest of the
brotherhoods?" Nan Ho
hesitated, then gave a tiny shake of his head. "It is a great
mystery, Chieh Hsia. We have heard conflicting reports this
past year. One story tells of a tall pai nan jen—a pale
man—who killed one of the Big Bosses, Whiskers Lu, and usurped
his position. Certainly Lu Ming-shao has been killed, but how or why
has been hard to ascertain. As far as the usurper himself is
concerned, it has been difficult getting any word of who or what he
is. Either no one knows or no one wishes to say. Either way, our
investigations have drawn a blank. As
for this Li Min, we have no word at all. This is the first
anyone has heard of the man." Li
Yuan set the ring down, then picked up the handwritten paper once
again, his eyes drawn to the printed "chop" at the foot of
the page and the bright red signature to its right. The top
character, Li, was the same as that used by the son of K'ung Fu Tzu,
and denoted a carp. The underlying character, Min, meant "strong"
or "brave." "Brave
Carp," he said quietly, then set the paper aside. "An
adopted name, I would say, wouldn't you, Master Nan?" "It
is possible, Chieh Hsia" "If
so, then might this not be the kind of name our friend, the Hung Moo
who killed Whiskers Lu, would adopt?" Nan Ho
shrugged. "Again, it is possible, Chieh Hsia. But is this
significant? Does it matter who Li Miryis? Surely the important thing
here is Wang Sau-leyan's involvement? If it is true . . ." Li
Yuan raised a hand. At once Nan Ho fell silent. "As
you say, if our cousin Wang has tried to make a deal with Fat
Wong, then that is indeed significant. But not as significant,
perhaps, as what is going on right now in the lowers of the City." He sat
back, his eyes resting on the scattered files and papers a moment,
then got up and went across to the open doorway, standing there,
contemplating the afternoon sunlight, his back to his Chancellor. "I
must be honest with you, Nan Ho, I have never been entirely happy
dealing with Wong Yi-sun and his "brothers." Given the
circumstances it was a necessity, and yet my instinct has been
against it from the first. I recall only too well my father's
attempts to come to terms with the Hung Mun. And his failings in that
regard. Failings which, to be frank, have colored my own endeavors." Li
Yuan turned back, looking at his Chancellor. "Which is to say, I
suppose, that Hung Mien-lo's advances do not surprise me. I do not
trust our friend, Wong Yi-sun. Moreover, I have known for some time
now that my cousin Wang seeks to undermine me by whatever means
possible. In the circumstances, some kind of alliance of
self-interest has seemed to me not merely possible but inevitable. "All
of which is worrying, I agree, but not half so worrying as this
matter with Li Min. I mean, why should a man we have never
heard of before today go out of his way to attack a vastly superior
enemy? And why should that same man, confidently assuming that he
will emerge from this conflict triumphant, write to me in such terms,
pleading necessity and assuring me of his loyalty? It makes little
sense, wouldn't you say, Master Nan? That is, unless there is much
that we do not know." Nan Ho
bowed his head. "It is strange, I agree, Chieh Hsia, but
for myself I had put little store by the man's words. It was solely
their context that interested me, and the light they seemed to throw
upon a murky situation." He cleared his throat, then moved a
little closer to his T'ang. "It might well prove that I have
misread the situation, Chieh Hsia, but from what we know, it
seems most unlikely that Li Min will prevail." "Then
what does he want?" "To
draw you into this conflict, Chieh Hsia. To win you over to
his side and—by providing you with evidence of Fat Wong's
duplicity— to get you to throw in your Hei against the
United Bamboo, as you did once before against Iron Mu and the Big
Circle." Li
Yuan laughed. "Then why does he quite explicitly beg me not to
intervene?" He went across to the desk and picked Li Min's
letter up, quickly locating the passage. "Here! I quote you,
Master Nan. 'I most humbly beg His Most Serene Highness not in any
way to be drawn into this conflict. . .'" He looked up at his
Chancellor. "Is that not clear? Or am I to read his words some
other way?" "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia. I know how it reads, yet it makes no sense
unless one interprets it otherwise." "Unless
Li Min really does think he can defeat his enemies. Unless he
really is concerned that I might intervene on Fat Wong's behalf and
turn the tables against him." "But
Chieh Hsia. . ." Again
the young T'ang raised a hand. "I am loath to contradict you,
Master Nan, but for once my instinct is strong. Something is going on
down there that we do not understand as yet. Something of profound
and lasting significance to the future of my City. My gut instinct is
to act, and at once, but without further information it would be
foolhardy to commit myself. So that must be our priority: to
gather information; to find out all we can about this Li Min—
whatever it costs—and to monitor the situation down
there closely. To that end I want you to instruct General Rheinhardt
to mobilize a special force to go down there and find out what they
can. And I want Rheinhardt to report back to me, personally, every
hour on the hour." Chancellor
Nan bowed low. "As you wish, Chieh Hsia." "Then
go. There is no time to lose." Li
Yuan stood there a moment after Nan Ho had gone, deep in thought,
staring at the lacquered surface of the door, then he turned back,
looking across at the surface of his desk, his eyes returning to the
ring. That design, like a pike turning in the water: where had he
seen that before? He went across and picked it up again, trying to
fit it on his finger and noting, as before, how narrow it was, as if
made for a woman's hand. Yet it was clearly a man's ring, the
rough-cast iron alriiost brutal in its yang masculinity. pe
glanced down at the signature on the paper, then looked back at the
ring. A carp, a pike. The two things reminded him of his father's
words that time, about the City being a carp pool without a pike.
Well maybe that was it. Maybe that was the clue to it all. A
carp, a pike. For a moment longer he stood there, staring at the two
things, as if to free their significance from the air, then, with a
sigh of impatience, he turned and went out into the early afternoon
sunlight, determined to enjoy it. THE
BITTER SCENT of burning silk hung in the air as Fat Wong made his way
down the narrow steps, his tiny feet moving briskly, a handful of his
men following after. The sound of fighting was close now, the rapid
stutter of small-arms fire punctuated by dull concussions that made
the whole deck shudder. Wong's face was set, his movements urgent.
Time was against him. At the
foot of the steps he turned right. Ahead, twenty ch'i along,
the corridor was blocked by a makeshift barrier, manned by his own
men. Wong Yi-sun approached it at a run, waving the guards aside as
he clambered up over the barrier and dropped down nimbly onto the
other side, hurrying on, not waiting for his men. Farther up the
corridor, in a large room to the left, a temporary headquarters had
been set up. Going in, he went straight to the central table,
pushing aside the men who stood there. Looking down at the hand-drawn
map of the United Bamboo's heartland, he studied the position of the
brightly colored squares on the hexagonal grid, taking the situation
in at a glance. Lehmann
had split them in two, as neatly as if he had brought an ax down on a
log. To the west things looked particularly desperate. There, his own
forces were surrounded, cut off and heavily outnumbered now that five
of his tonghad gone over to Lehmann. Here in the northeast, the
position was nowhere near as bad, yet it was only a matter of time.
Once Lehmann had dealt with Wong's western forces, he would turn and
the final battle would begin. "What
news is there?" he asked, looking about him. "This
came, Master," one of his men said, bowing low and handing him a
sealed note. "It came in from the north, ten minutes back. From
Red Gang territory." Wong
Yi-sun laughed, then ripped it open anxiously, his hopes rising. At
last, Yun Yueh-hui was coming! At last! But it was not from Dead Man
Yun. It was from Li Pai Shung, the new Boss of the Wo Shih Wo,
greeting him and assuring him of his friendship and loyalty. He
crumpled the note and threw it down, a wave of bitterness washing
through him. The gods were mocking him. Raising his hopes and then
dashing them. For Li Pai Shung was already dead, the Wo Shih Wo
destroyed. And his old friend and ally Yun Yueh-hui still sat on his
ass in his rooms, doing nothing. "Why?"
he asked for the hundredth time that hour. "Why doesn't the
Dead Man come?" But
there was no answer, only the dull sound of an explosion close by,
rattling the plastic counters on the map. LEHMANN
WALKED slowly through the ruins of the deck, surprised by the extent
of the damage. When he had last seen it, this had been a luxurious,
orderly place, the balconies festooned with bright red banners and
garlands of colorful flowers, the shops and restaurants busy with
affluent young Han. Now it was empty, desolate, the great
floor littered with debris, the shop fronts gutted, the tables
overturned. The
heart, he thought. I have plucked the. heart out of the beast.
Yet still it fought on, stubbornly, defiantly, like a badly
wounded bear, refusing to die. He
turned, looking down the length of Main toward the bell tower,
remembering how it had once looked. Twelve great cinnamon trees had
stood along the central aisle, brightening the great space with their
broad green crowns. Now the aisle seemed bare. The ornamental bowls
were cracked and charred, the trees gaunt, blackened stumps, embedded
in ash. Death,
it all said. Death has come. Lehmann
sighed deeply, tired to his bones. The United Bamboo was broken. Once
their banners had flown proudly over this place: banners on which
nine long, thick canes of bamboo were gripped by a single giant hand,
ivory yellow against a bright green background. But now that hand had
been hacked from its arm, its tight grip loosened. And he had picked
up the canes and snapped them, one by one. He
turned, clicking his fingers. At once his men spilled out from the
corridors where they'd been waiting, slowly filling the Main. In the
midst of them, six men carried a bulky field communications unit on a
litter between them. Setting it down where Lehmann indicated, they
got to work. While they did so, Lehmann looked about him, taking
advantage of the lull in the fighting to think things through. His
assassins had failed, but then, so too had Fat Wong's counterattack.
And now the United Bamboo were backed up into three decks just north
of where he stood, all exits from those decks sealed top and bottom.
At best they had four thousand men. Half of those were wounded, all
of them tired and hungry, but they were no less dangerous for that.
When the final battle came, they would put up fierce resistance.
Besides which, his own men were close to the limit now. He had tried
to rest them when he could, to make sure they were properly organized
and supplied with food and ammunition, but it had been difficult of
late. Moreover, in the chaos of battle much had gone wrong. Take Hui
Tsin, for instance. They had surrounded Fat Wong's "Red Pole"
in one of the western stacks, cutting him off and then
slowly closing in. Lehmann had taken great care, sure that
they had him, but Hui Tsin had slipped the net, audaciously cutting
his way through the Kuei Chuan lines with a mere handful of
fighters, while his main force struck elsewhere. A good
man, Lehmann thought, feeling something akin to admiration for
Hui Tsin's ability. It is a pity he has to die. He
turned, looking across. The rig was prepared. The technicians were
standing there, heads bowed, awaiting him. He
went across and stood beside the desk, his tall, white figure
standing out against the soot-stained blackness of his surroundings.
For a moment he simply looked about him at his men, noting how they
looked to him, eager now, unquestioning, their tiredness set aside,
and inwardly he smiled, knowing he was close. "Come,"
he said, tersely, unsmilingly. "Let's finish the job." "Gods..."
, Hui
Tsin moved back sharply, a look of disgust, maybe even of horror on
his face. Fat Wong's Red Pole had seen many things in his life, but
never anything quite so vile as this. The three boys had been trussed
up—bound tightly hand and foot—and hung from hooks. Then,
while their mother watched, they had been killed, their eyes poked
out, their throats slit like pigs. He
turned, looking about him at the empty, blood-spattered floor, his
eyes finally coming to rest on Dead Man Yun's daughter. She sat there
in the far corner, unnaturally still, her knees drawn up to her
chest, her face ashen, her eyes staring into emptiness. He
shuddered, angered and sickened by what had happened here. If he had
known he would not have killed the guards, but taken them. Yes, and
made their last few hours in this world a living hell. As it was,
there was little time. The final assault would begin any time now and
Leipzig was two hours distant. If there was any chance of saving the
United Bamboo, he had to leave here now. To get this evidence to Dead
Man Yun and wake that aged dragon from his slumbers. Hui
Tsin looked about him, then nodded. "Cut them down and bring
them," he said quietly. "And be gentle with the woman. What
she has suffered here today we cannot even begin to imagine." No,
and yet it was the way of War, the way he had chosen long ago, when
he had first uttered the sacred oaths and partaken of the rituals of
the brotherhood. How many mothers' sons had he sent to their deaths?
How many days of grief and bitterness had his knife hand carved from
the whiteness of the years? The
gods help me, he thought, for my earthly soul witt surely sink
down into the earth-prison when I am dead, to rot in eternal torment,
while my spirit soul roams the upper regions, forlorn, a hungry
ghost. Maybe
so. But before that happened, there was one final score to settle;
one last, earthly battle to wage. Lehmann.
He would hang Lehmann on a hook and gut him. Or die trying. IT WAS
THE WIND that hit first, pushing ahead of the great storm like a
company of outriders, wreaking havoc wherever it struck. At
Nantes Spaceport, it struck without warning, effortlessly ripping the
perimeter fence from its foundations and whipping it across the open
space like a giant, deadly length of ribbon. Buildings exploded.
Small ships were lifted from their pads and thrown about like toys,
while in the deeper pits, the big interplanetary craft were rocked
and buffeted, their service crews picked up and crushed like ants
against the walls and safety doors. As the
wind moved on, channeled up over the roof of the great City, there
was a moment's silence, a moment's calm. From the toppled ruins of
the central spire, a handful of survivors hobbled out, blessing their
luck, then stopped, conscious of the growing darkness of the storm.
There, filling the sky from horizon to horizon, was a wall of solid
blackness. And a growing noise, a noise which, as it came nearer,
seemed to sound not merely in the air, but in the earth itself, in
every atom of one's body, a single, organlike note of such intensity
and scale that it seemed like the voice of Hell. For
the briefest moment they stood there, transfixed, their hands pressed
to their ears, and then the storm surge hit, a giant wall of water
sixty ch'i in height, that powered its way ashore, scouring
the great port clean before it hit the wall of the City with a force
that threw it back upon itself. Slowly,
unheard beneath the great storm's roar, a segment of that whiteness
tore itself away from the surrounding stacks. Slowly, with a
dreadful, dreamlike slowness, it collapsed, tumbling into the surging
darkness of the waters. And as it did the second wave struck,
smashing into the breach with a force that made that great wall
shudder and begin to split apart. dead
MAN YUN stood there, his normally placid face twitching with emotion
as he looked down at the corpses of his daughter's children. Their
tiny, bloodless bodies had been laid out on the huge bed in Yun
Yueh-hui's room; that selfsame bed where they had so often played,
leaping about with gay abandonment while he, smiling, had looked on.
If he closed his eyes he could hear them still: could hear their
childish laughter, their shrieks of joy echoing throughout his rooms. A/i,
yes, he thought, clenching his teeth against the memory. But
all that ended—all joy, all love, all happiness—when
these, my beauties, died. Yun
shuddered, tears running freely down his cheeks, then reached out to
gently touch and stroke each darling face, as once he'd done to
comfort them in sleep. But there was no comfort anymore. No, and
nothing safe. Nothing but pain and grief and bitterness. "My
beauties . . ." he said, the ache of longing in his voice
dreadful to hear. "My darling little ones . . ." "Master
Yun," Hui Tsin said softly, loath to break into the old man's
grief. "Forgive me, but there is little time." Yun
turned, staring at Fat Wong's Red Pole almost sightlessly, then gave
a tiny nod. "Good boys, they were, Hui Tsin. Such darling little
boys. They were my life. Without them . . ." Hui
Tsin bowed his head, embarrassed by the rawness he had glimpsed in
the old man's face, the frightening openness. Whatever else he'd
expected, it had not been this. Anger, he'd thought there'd be, and
maybe even rage, but this . . . this womanly response ... He
took a long breath, then spoke again. "Forgive
me, Master Yun, but unless we act now it will be too late. The pai
nan jen's forces are attacking and Wong Yi-sun . . ." Yun
raised a hand, silencing the Red Pole, his manner suddenly more firm,
much more the Yun Yueh-hui of old. "I
understand, brother Hui. And I shall act. But not yet. Not until I
have properly grieved my daughter's sons. Return to your Master. Go
now, at once, and tell my brother Wong that the Dead Man will come.
But do not push me, Hui Tsin. You have no sons, no grandsons, and so
do not understand how I feel, nor what I have lost this day."
Yun moved closer, towering over the Red Pole, a fierceness now behind
his eyes. "I see how you look at me, Hui Tsin, but you are
wrong. Do not mistake my grief for weakness, nor my tears for sudden
softness. When I come I shall come as an avenging demon. And then I
shall crush the pai nan jen. Were the legions of Hell lined up
behind him, I would crush him." CHAPTER
TWENTY-ONE
Connections TRADITION
HAD IT that when the first frosts came the Li Family would close up
the estate at Tongjiang and move wives, sons, and daughters to
Yangjing, their floating palace, 160,000 li above City Europe.
It was an annual occurrence—a tradition that stretched back to
the earliest years of the Seven when the huge geostationary
environments had first been built. Li Yuan had spent a dozen
childhood winters thus, not knowing snow until, at thirteen, he had
stood there by the frozen lake at Tongjiang, looking up in wonder at
the falling whiteness. Each spring the Family would move back, in
time to witness the first buds sprout from the seeming deadness of
the branch, to see the miracle of blossom in the orchard. This
once, however, they had come early, to escape not the frost but the
unseasonable heat of these late autumn days. Li Yuan stood in the
half-light of the shuttle hangar, smiling to himself, Kuei Jen
cradled warm against his shoulder, as he watched the unloading. At
such moments he felt his father move in his bones. So many times he
had looked up from playing among the unloaded crates and, through a
child's eyes, had seen his father, even as he himself stood now,
supervising the unpacking. Satisfied,
Li Yuan turned and went through. Kuei was fifteen months old now and
babbling his first half words. Li Yuan laughed tenderly, delighted by
the ill-formed nonsense, and nuzzled the child, 478 nodding
to the guards who stood there, heads bowed at the door to his rooms.
Inside, things had been prepared. A tray of sweetmeats rested on a
low table. Beside it was a bowl with food for Kuei Jen. A nurse
waited, eyes averted, ready to feed the boy. Normally
Li Yuan would have handed Kuei Jen to her and gone through to his own
suite, to rest or to do some work, but on whim he dismissed the woman
and, setting Kuei Jen in a low chair, knelt down, beginning to feed
the boy himself. He was almost done when there was a faint cough
behind him. His cousin, Wei Tseng-li, knelt in the doorway, his eyes
lowered. "Come
in, Tseng-li. Please. I am almost done here." Conscious
of protocol, Tseng-li hesitated, then, bowing low, he crossed the
room in a crouch and knelt across from the T'ang and his son, not
presuming to be standing while the T'ang knelt. But, seeing the smile
of pleasure on Li Yuan's face, he ventured a smile of his own. "He
is a healthy boy, Highness. He will be a fine athlete, a good
horseman when he is older." Li
Yuan looked to him, his smile widening. "You think so, cousin
Tseng?" He laughed, then turned back, pushing another spoonful
of dinner into the waiting mouth, careful not to let Kuei Jen grab
the spoon. "Is there anything of importance to be dealt with?" "A
few matters, Highness. But nothing so urgent that you cannot finish
here." Wei
Tseng-li had been Li Yuan's private secretary for more than six
months now; a post he had filled better than any expectations. In the
past weeks Li Yuan had come to rely on him more and more as the
demands on his time had increased. Now, with the House open, they
could relax a little. "Good,"
Yuan said, straightening a little. "I'll finish, then we can go
through." The
bowl was almost empty. Li Yuan scraped the spoon around its edge to
catch the last of it, tucking it neatly into his son's mouth. "You
have the way of it," Tseng-li said, laughing. "When I try I
have it everywhere!" Li
Yuan glanced at him, then set the bowl aside. "You feed him
often, then?" Tseng-li
smiled broadly, for the moment wholly unselfconscious. "Only
when Mien Shan permits. They are all quite jealous of the task. There
is a regular contest between your wives as to who will tend to young
Kuei. A loving jealousy, you might call it." "Ah
. . ." Li Yuan looked thoughtful a moment longer, then slowly
got to his feet. He hadn't known, and he wasn't sure exactly how he
felt about it. He had thought only the nurses fed the child. "Wait
here a moment, Tseng-li. I must give the child back to the nurse." He
lifted Kuei Jen from the seat, turning away from his secretary, then
paused. The child, at his shoulder, was looking past him at Tseng-li,
smiling in that open way that only young children have. His dark and
liquid eyes held two perfect, tiny images of Tseng-li. Li Yuan took a
slow, deep breath, then began to move again, aware that in that brief
moment he had both weighed and decided something. Tseng-li.
He could trust Wei Tseng-li. Maybe even with his life. LI
YUAN THREW HIMSELF forward, arms out in a dive, and cut the water
crisply. He pushed hard with his legs underwater, his arms pulling
him forward strongly, smoothly through the cool and silent medium. At
the far end of the fifty-ch'i-long pool he surfaced, gasping for air,
then rested there, one hand holding the tiled overhang while he got
his breath back. Throughout
the three hours he had spent with Tseng-li at his desk he had thought
of this. Of the cool silence of the pool, the flicker of shadows on
the plain white walls, the gentle lapping of the water against the
metal rungs. More of his time these days was taken up with official
business, and though he sought to delegate as much as possible, it
still left him little time that was his own. So often, recently, he
had found himself thinking of something other than the matter at
hand. He would catch himself imagining this: the long, weightless
glide after the plunge; the pattern of light and shade on the water's
mottled surface. For a
long while he floated there, thoughtless, the water rising either
side of him, following the curve of the palace. Then, coming to
himself, he pushed away and began to swim, a leisurely breaststroke
that took him to the other end. Turning, he started back. He
was halfway down when he heard the door behind him slide back.
Slowing, he turned and, floating there, his arms out, his legs
slightly raised, looked back at the doorway. The
figure in the doorway had knelt and bowed low, in k'ou t'ou,
forehead pressed to the floor. It stayed there, awaiting his
acknowledgment. Li
Yuan frowned and pushed with his legs, moving closer. "Who is
that?" The
head lifted slowly. It was Tseng-li. "Forgive me, Highness, but
I thought the pool was empty. I did not know you came here." Li
Yuan laughed, relaxing. He had been angry, but seeing Tseng-li he
softened. "You came to swim?" Tseng-li
bowed his head again. "I will go, Highness. Forgive me." "No
. . . stay. Come join me, Tseng-li. There's room for two." Still
the young prince hesitated. "Tseng-li!
Your T'ang commands you! Now join me in the pool!" He
said it sternly, sharply, yet he was smiling. It would be good to
relax in Tseng-li's company. Besides, there were things he wanted to
say to his young cousin; things he had found difficult to say
earlier. Tseng-li
got up slowly, and, after bowing one last time, stripped off quickly
and jumped into the water. Li Yuan watched him surface, then strike
out firmly with a bold, aggressive backstroke. He followed him slowly
down, coming alongside him at the far end of the pool. Tseng-li hung
there by one hand, looking back at him and smiling. "Highness?" "You
swim well, cousin. The curve doesn't bother you." Tseng-li
laughed and looked past Yuan at the steep curvature of the water. In
the artificial gravity of the palace things behaved differently than
on Chung Kuo. Li Yuan's great-great-grandfather, Li Hang Ch'i, had
had them build this pool, in defiance of the strangeness of the
place. He, too, had been fond of swimming. But Li Yuan's father had
never used it. He had felt the pool unnatural, odd. Tseng-li
looked back at Li Yuan. "I came here earlier and saw it. All day
IVe thought of coming here." "AH
day?" Li Yuan looked mock stern at him, and Tseng-li blushed, realizing
what he had said. But then the T'ang laughed and nodded. "You
were not alone in that thought, cousin. My mind was also drawn
here. But tell me, you don't mind its strangeness?" "No,
Highness. I like new things. Strange things." "And the
old?" "That too. We live in constant flux. Things persist,
and yet they also change. Is
that not the law for all time?" Li
Yuan laughed. "Now you sound like my father." Tseng-li
joined his laughter. "Like all our fathers!" For a time
they rested there, in the water, laughing. Then Li Yuan
pushed away from the ledge. "Swim by my side, Tseng-li.
There is something I must say
to you . . ." IT WAS
JUSTAFTERTENinthe morning when Kennedy reported to the duty captain
at Plainsborough garrison. After searching him thoroughly, the two
guards placed an audio-wrap over his head and led him to their craft.
That first part of the journey took an hour, then he was led up a
short set of steps and strapped into an acceleration couch. Minutes
later he felt the firm, steadily accelerating pressure of the
shuttle's climb. Only
when it docked, some eighty minutes later, did a gentler pair of
hands release his straps and take the bulky wrap from his head.
Kennedy sat up, feeling slightly nauseous, and rubbed furiously at
the two welts that the wraparound's harness had left across his
forehead and beneath his eyes. It had been a tighter fit than he was
accustomed to. Ironically—and, again, perhaps deliberately—they
had been showing an old historical saga, about the fall of the Sung
dynasty before the onslaught of the Mongol generals. A heavy-handed
piece of Han propaganda. Kennedy
cleared his throat and looked up at his liberator. From the touch,
the faint trace of scent, he had expected a woman, but it was not. A
middle-aged man, slender and finely featured, bowed and introduced
himself. He was dressed in silks of salmon-pink and lemon. "I
am Ho Chang, your valet. It will be some while before the T'ang can
see you. Meanwhile I shall prepare you for your audience." Kennedy
made to say something, but Ho Chang shook his head. "Wu Shih has
given specific orders. You must do exactly as I say." Kennedy
smiled inwardly, understanding at once how things stood. Beneath the
perfect manners ran a streak of raw hostility. Ho Chang did not like
him. Nor did he mean to like him. He let
himself be bathed and dressed. The cut of the silks felt strange; far
stranger than he had thought they would feel. They were elaborate and
heavy, like the silks the Minor Families wore, and he felt
overdressed in them. As he stood there, studying himself in the
mirror, Ho Chang fussed about him, taking great care to mask his
natural smell with scents. "The
very smell of you offends our noses," Ho Chang said bluntly, in
response to Kennedy's unspoken query. "You smell like babies.
Your skin . . ." He wrinkled his nose. "It stinks of milk." Kennedy
laughed, as if he took it as a joke, but beneath his laughter he felt
real anger. Unlike many of his kind, he took great care not to touch
milk products. Why then should Ho Chang insult him, unless as a
foretaste of the audience to come? Was that why he had been summoned
here: to be humiliated? Ho
Chang took him through to an antechamber, a great cavernous place
where shadows lay on every side and dragon pillars rose up into the
darkness overhead. There, insisting that Kennedy kneel, he lectured
him on the proper etiquette to be followed. It was all very different
from the first time he had met Wu Shih. This time full protocol was
called for. He would kneel on the stone before the raised dais and
strike the floor with his forehead three times. Not looking up at the
great T'ang, he would stand, then repeat the process, prostrating
himself three times in all before Wu Shih. This, the son kuei chiu
k'ou, was the ultimate form of respect as laid down in'the
ancient Book of Ceremonies; a form reserved only for the Sons of
Heaven. And
afterward? Afterward he would stay there, on his knees before Wu
Shih, not daring to lift his head and look upon his master until the
T'ang permitted. Nor would he speak. Not unless Wu Shih said he
might. For a
long time they waited there in the cool penumbral silence. Waited
until Kennedy felt certain that this, too, was deliberate; a ploy to
make him understand his own insignificance in the scheme of
things. Then, finally, it was time. Ho Chang led him to the
great doors and, bowing once, moved back, leaving him there. Slowly
the doors eased open. At once Kennedy knelt, as he'd been shown and,
lowering his head, shuffled forward until he came to the foot of the
steps. Wu
Shih sat on his throne. Behind him giant dragons of gold and green
were emblazoned on huge banners of red. Wu Shih wore yellow, the
color of imperial authority, the nine dragons—eight seen and
one hidden—emblazoned front and back. He watched silently as
Kennedy went through the son kuei chiu k'ou, then nodded his
satisfaction. "You
may lift your head, Shih Kennedy." Kennedy
looked up, surprised by the power, the resonance in Wu Shih's voice,
and, at a glance, saw how things were. Here his victories in the
recent polls mattered nothing. Here, knelt beneath the dragon throne,
he understood. Wu
Shih stared down at him a moment, then laughed; humorlessly,
imperiously. "Things
have changed since we last spoke, Shih Kennedy. You are more
dangerous, more attractive than you were. How strange that seems, yet
it was not wholly unexpected. Your success has merely hastened
things. Has made it necessary for me to act a little sooner than I
wished." Kennedy
looked for Wu Shih's hands and found them among the folds of yellow
cloth. They were as he remembered them. Not soft, like his facial
features, but hard and strong. The T'ang's face was deceptive, for it
suggested that one might deal with this man, but not the eyes, the
hands. They revealed the kind of man Wu Shih really was. A man of
great power. Ruthless and uncompromising. "I'll
not prolong things, Shih Kennedy," Wu Shih said, leaning forward
slightly, his omission of Kennedy's official rank the most casual of
insults. "I take you for a clever man, one who can see how
things are, therefore I'll not insult you with evasions, nor humor
you with airy promises. No. I have brought you here for the simplest
of reasons. To make a contract between us." Kennedy
opened his mouth slightly, then closed it, bowing his head. "Good.
I respect a man who understands how things really are. Such good
sense saves time in explanations, and right now I am an impatient
man." From
Wu Shih's smile, Kennedy understood that some irony was intended, but
it passed him by. "I shall agree, of course, to whatever you
ask, Chieh Hsia, but if it is to be a contract, might I know
what consideration I should expect?" The
T'ang smiled tightly. "Of course." He paused, then nodded.
The smile had gone. "For your part you will continue as you are,
speaking out against the policies of the Seven and opposing our
measures in the House. Seeming to be what you are not." There
was a moment's silence between them; a moment in which Kennedy, for
the first time, understood exactly what was required of him. Feeling
cold suddenly, alienated from himself, he slowly bowed his head,
listening, knowing what was to come. "You
will continue to campaign as now. In fact, you will act in all
respects as though no contract existed between us. Short of open
insurrection, that is." "And
in return?" "In
return I will pay off all your campaign debts. More than that, I am
prepared to fund an expansion of your activities and any incidental
expenses that occur. Your friend Michael Levers medical bills, for
instance." Kennedy
looked down, surprised, trying to make sense of things; but for the
moment Wu Shih's purpose evaded him. There was a moment's silence,
then Wu Shih spoke again. "Your
wife . . . how is she?" "She
is fine, Chieh Hsia." "And
your sons? Are they well after their treatment?" He
nodded, feeling a tightness at the pit of his stomach. "That's
good. I like them." Wu Shih laughed; a softer, more generous
sound than before. "Indeed, I like you, Joseph Kennedy.
You are a good man and I wish you no harm. However . . ." Kneeling
there, Kennedy felt that "however" hang in the air above
him, like a vast weight about to fall. "Well,
let us be plain, Shih Kennedy. I am not blind to the currents
of our times. I can see, for instance, that you are the man of
the moment; that what you presently stretch your hand out to grasp
will shortly be there within your palm." Wu
Shih leaned forward, his voice raised the slightest fraction. "Oh,
and don't mistake me, either. I know how you see us. Cut off from
things. Isolated behind a screen of Ministers and minor bureaucrats.
Yet the truth is other than you think. Because we spend so much of
our time up here you think we are out of touch. Secluded. But our
history is full of events that warn of the dangers of seclusion, and
we have made it our business to avoid this error—to trust no
one and to know everything. This is Wu Shih you are dealing with,
Shih Kennedy, not Han Huan Ti!" For a
brief moment Kennedy met the T'ang's dark, hawkish eyes and saw,
rather than the scorn he'd expected, something that was almost
respect. Han
Huan Ti, as every schoolchild knew, was an Emperor of the ancient Han
dynasty who had ruled through his court eunuchs and had been totally
cut off from the realities of his great empire. His reign had been an
evil time, characterized by popular uprisings and opposed by scholars
and soldiers alike. The point was not lost on Kennedy. "Then you
know I have another meeting, Chieh Hsia?" Wu
Shih nodded. "Three days from now. With my old friends, the
'Sons.11 understand they wish to join your organization." It was
more than Kennedy knew. "Perhaps," he said. "And you
would oppose that, Chieh Hsia?" "Not
at all. It would make sound political sense, after all. And with you
to keep an eye for me . . ." Kennedy's
knees were beginning to ache. He shifted his weight gently. "Then
this . . . contract makes no difference, Chieh Hsia?" "On
the contrary, it makes all the difference. For there will come a
moment—a single moment—when you will think you have
outgrown me." Wu
Shih paused, then stood up. Slowly he came down the steps until he
stood there, over the American, his foot raised, touching the brow of
the other. "It
is then, at that very moment, that our contract will find
its meaning. Then, when you think it matters least, that it
will bind you." It had
been the very lightest of touches, the merest brush of the T'ang's
silk slipper against the flesh of his forehead, but behind that
almost tender contact was .such a depth of brutality that Kennedy
shuddered and felt his stomach tighten, his testicles contract, the
naked reality of what he was doing hitting him. "Come,"
said the T'ang, stepping back. "The machine is ready." CHARLES
LEVER strode about the room, red-faced and angry. He had been
drinking heavily, and his temper hadn't been improved by the news his
accountant had brought him. "How
much7." he demanded, turning back to face the
sour-faced man who sat there in the chair in the corner of the room. "About
eleven million in all. Most of it drawn against bonds payable on his
inheritance. High rates, but what does he care?" Lever
went to the table and poured another glass of brandy from the
decanter, swilling it down thoughtlessly. "The scheming little
bastard! And to think I wasted my sympathy on him!" He laughed
unpleasantly. "Well, they won't see a /en! I'll disinherit the
little shit! Then they can chase him for satisfaction!" His
lawyer, standing by the door, sighed and looked away, holding his
tongue. There would be time later, when the old man had calmed down,
to explain the difficulties of disinheriting Michael, not least of
which was the fact that there was no one else to inherit. Not without
tracing the most distant of relations. "Will
you see Hartmann now?" asked Lever's private secretary, poking
his head around the door. It was the fourth time he had asked. "Fuck
Hartmann! What use is the bastard now?" The
head disappeared; went off to tell the ex-Representative—
released pending trial on Lever's personal bond for twenty million—
that his master was indisposed and could not see him yet. Lever
strode up and down, unable to rest, his whole body tense with anger,
with the feeling of betrayal. At first it had hurt, seeing Michael
there in his hospital bed, speaking out against him. He had
stood there before the screen, shocked and frightened by the
transformation in his son, as if all these years he had been
sheltering a viper in his bosom. And now the snake had turned and he
had been bitten. "Well,
damn him. Damn his black hide!" Lever's voice was almost
hysterical, on the edge of tears. But when he turned back to face the
young man his voice was calmer, more threatening than before. "Well,
that's it, eh? A fine reward for a father's love. Spits in my face.
Insults me. Questions my integrity." And with each statement he
tapped his chest with the stiff-held fingers of his right hand. His
large, double chin jutted out aggressively as he spoke and his eyes
glared, challenging anyone to gainsay him. "He's not my
son. Not now." He
turned to the lawyer. "Draw up the papers. Start now. I want him
out! I don't want him to get a single yuan, understand? And if
you need a new beneficiary, leave it all to the Institute." The
lawyer opened his mouth as if to query that, then closed it without
saying a word. He nodded and turned to go. "And
Jim," said Lever, calling him back a moment. "Arrange to
meet those bonds. In full. I'll have no one suffer for my son's
treachery." Alone,
finally, Lever stood there by the window, looking out across the lawn
toward the bright circle of the lake, seeing nothing but his son's
face, younger, much younger than it was now, smiling as it looked up
at him, so bright and eager and loving. He shuddered and, unseen, let
the first tear fall. Not love nor money could bring that back now.
Not love nor money. AT t h
at s A M E M o M E N T, in the great floating palace of Yangj ing, in
geostationary orbit high above City Europe, Li Yuan was talking to
his fellow T'ang, Wu Shih. Wu
Shih's face leaned in toward the surface of the screen, his features
grave with concern. "The rumors are strong, Li Yuan. More than
forty channels have carried something in the last few hours. And
MedFac has gone so far as to declare that there is a war going on in
your City." "A
war. . . ?" Li Yuan laughed, but beneath his laughter was
concern. He had had General Rheinhardt report to him regularly
since he had received Li Min's package, but now it seemed that
the initial assessment of the situation had been wrong. There was
indeed a war going on down there in the Lowers of his City, if not
one which, as yet, threatened him. But if Wu Shih were growing
concerned then it was time to act—firmly, decisively—to
bring the thing to a quick close. He
smiled. "I am grateful for your concern, Wu Shih, but the matter
is already in hand. Indeed, I hope to be able to issue a full
statement to the media two hours from now; one that will reassure
them and put an end to speculation." Wu
Shih smiled broadly. "I am glad it is so, cousin. It would look
ill to leave the matter any longer." "Indeed." Li
Yuan leaned across and cut the connection, then sat back, taking a
long deep breath. He had held back from acting until now, adopting a
course of wuwei—inaction—hoping that the matter
would resolve itself. But from the latest report it seemed that the
sides had reached a kind of stalemate. And that was dangerous. So far
the fighting had been limited to the Triad heartlands and to the
lower fifty. Locked in a stalemate, however, one or both of the sides
might look to escalate the conflict and bring in other, outside
elements. And who knew where that might lead? No. He had to act, and
now. He
leaned forward and tapped out the code that would connect him with
Rheinhardt, then sat back, waiting for his General to appear. "Helmut,"
he said without formalities. "I have a job for you. I want you
to prepare the Hei for action. They are to go in an hour from
now. It is time we settled this matter . . ." standing
THERE in the frame, Michael Lever looked about him. For the first
time in weeks the big hospital room seemed cramped and crowded.
Besides the two doctors and four attendants, others had come to see
him take his first steps since the bombing. He looked across at them,
smiling uncertainly, and feeling even less confident than he looked. "Take
your time," one of the doctors said, making a last check of the
frame. "Don't
fuss," he said, looking briefly at the manual controls on his
chest, hoping he would not need them. At the
far end of the room Kennedy was watching him, Mary and Jack Parker
close by. As he met Kennedy's eyes, the older man's face creased into
a smile. "Go for it," he said softly. "You can do it,
Michael." He
nodded, pleased that they were there, then looked back at the doctor.
"Ready?" The
doctor stepped back. "Whenever you are, Michael. But don't
strain for it. The connections have to develop. Work them too hard
and you'll have difficulties." He had
been told all of this before, but he listened, knowing how hard they
had worked to get him here so quickly: standing, about to walk again.
He turned his head and smiled at Mary. "Here goes, then." It was
an odd sensation, like wishing, and at first, like most wishes,
nothing happened. He was used now to the numbness of his body; had
grown used to the ghostly, disembodied sensation of not having his
legs or arms respond to the messages he sent them. This, then, was
strange. A calling upon ghosts. He
tried again, the message he sent—the desire—almost
tentative. There was the faintest tingling in his muscles, but no
movement. Not enough, he thought. Not quite enough. He
closed his eyes, resting. The frame, keeping him upright, was a
comfort, but he was still afraid. What if it didn't work? What if,
after all that delicate and painful surgery, the machine
malfunctioned? What then? They
had warned him about this. He would feel fragile, alienated from his
own body. The bioprosthetic implants would seem intrusive, maybe even
hostile to him. But they were not. They were simply undeveloped. He
had only to trust them. Opening
his eyes, he turned his head again, looking to the doctor. "It's
hard," he said. "It feels like there's no power there. No
pressure." "There's
a tingling?" "Yes,
but it's very faint." The
doctor smiled. "Good. Work on that. Bring that tingling on a
bit. Develop it. But remember, your muscles have done no work
at all these past weeks. There'll have been a slight atrophy. Nothing
damaging, but enough to make it seem at first that you're getting
nowhere. Keep trying, though, and it'll come." He
turned his head back. Then, gritting his teeth, he tried again. The
tingling grew. Then, suddenly, he felt the frame lift and then settle
again. He had moved his left leg forward about four inches. There
was a cheer in the room. He looked up. Everyone was smiling at him.
He laughed, relief flooding in. "That's
great," said the doctor, coming closer to check on the frame.
"That's really excellent, Michael." The
frame had done it, exaggerating his movement mechanically and taking
his full weight, but that did not lessen the sense of achievement he
felt. After so long he was connected again, linked up to his own
body. He shivered and felt tears come to his eyes. As he developed
the connections, the control he now had over his body, the doctors
would slowly diminish the supportive power of the frame. And
eventually, if all went well, he would discard the frame altogether.
He would walk again. Mary
came across and held him awkwardly, one arm reaching through the
frame to take his shoulder, the other caressing his cheek. "I'm
so glad, my love. Really I am." She stood back, grinning widely.
"I can't wait to see you walk into the House and take your
seat." He
grinned back. All of the fear he had been feeling these past few days
had dissipated. Slowly, conscious of the awkward, rather stilted
movements of the hydraulics, he raised his left arm and moved it
until his hand rested on his wife's shoulder. "Just now I feel a
bit like a maintenance machine," he said, laughing. Mary
leaned forward to kiss his forehead, then moved back as Kennedy came
across. Kennedy
leaned close, whispering, "I'm proud of you, Michael. You don't
know how proud. It's hurt me to see you lying there, day after day." "Thanks.
. ." Then, more hesitantly. "You don't know what it's
meant. I think I'd rather have been dead than lie there any longer." "I
know. . ." Kennedy made to step back, but was held there a
moment longer, the arm of the frame trapping him. "One
question, Joe." "Go
on." "Who
paid for all of this?" Kennedy
was about to answer, but Michael spoke again, quickly. "Look, I
know how much in debt we were after the last campaign, even after the
money I raised." He searched Kennedy's gray eyes. "So?" Kennedy
hesitated, then shook his head. "It's paid for. Let's leave it
at that, huh?" For a
moment Michael considered persisting, then he nodded. "All
right. I'll leave it. For now." Slowly, but less awkwardly than
before, he moved his arm away. "But I want to know who to
thank." There
was a strange movement in Kennedy's face, then, slowly, he '•
smiled again. "I can't," he said, shaking his head.
"Really, Michael. Just accept it." "Was
it my father?" "Your
father?" Kennedy laughed abruptly, as if the very idea was
absurd. "No . . . Look, Michael, I'm sorry, but don't ask me.
Please. I just can't say. Okay?" "Can't?" "Can't."
There was a finality to the way he said it that made Michael frown.
For some reason the subject had touched Kennedy personally, and at
some deep and hidden level. Why should that be? "Okay,"
he said after a moment. "I won't ask again." "Good,"
said Kennedy, stepping back out of his way. "Now let's see if
you can get that right leg going too." LATER,
alone with Parker, he asked again. "Don't
ask me," said Parker, sitting down at his bedside and leaning
across him to take his hand. "Joe saw to all that stuff. Anyway,
what does it matter? It's paid for. That's all that counts." "Is
it?" He was silent a moment, then, "You know, IVe felt
helpless in more ways than one, Jack. All the while IVe been here it
seems as though things have been kept from me. As if there's
something you haven't told me, any of you. Is there a reason for
that, Jack? Is there something you haven't told me?" Parker
looked down. "Like what?" Michael
took a deep breath, then shook his head. "I don't believe this.
Look, Jack, it's me, Michael, your best friend. What can't you tell
me?" Parker
met his eyes. "You want to know?" "Of
course I bloody want to know. It's driving me crazy all this not
knowing. Sure I'm an invalid, but don't treat me like a mental
cripple too, Jack. You know me better, surely?" "Maybe,"
said Parker. It was an odd thing to say. They had known each other
almost twenty years. "So?" "They
know who planted the bomb." Michael
went cold. How often had he thought about this? A thousand times?
More? And he had always assumed that they didn't know. "When did
they know?" he asked. Not who, but when. At that moment it
seemed more important. "Later
that day. They . . . they got him almost straightaway." Michael
shuddered and looked away. There was a slight tingling in his limbs.
The frame was hanging in its bracket at the far end of the room. For
a while he stared at it, conscious of how large and clumsy it looked
without him in it. Then he looked back at Parker. "Who was it?" Parker
smiled wearily. "Hartmann." "Hartmann?"
He laughed disbelievingly. Then, with a suddenness that took his
breath, he realized what that meant. "No . . ." Parker
was watching him, a look of deep concern in his eyes. "There was
a lot about it in the media those first few days. Since then it's
been embargoed. Which is . . ." "Why
I hadn't heard," Michael finished. Again there was that tingling
in his limbs, as if in response to some involuntary command, a
tensing of the muscles, a ghostly bunching of fists. "Who placed
the embargo? I didn't think anyone had enough clout." Parker
blinked and looked away. When he spoke again it was almost in a
whisper. "Wu Shih. Who else?" "Wu
Shih?" Michael was confused. "Why? I mean, why should he
want to do that?" Then, "Look, Jack, what's going on here?
I don't understand..." Parker
smiled bleakly. "Nor me. At least, not all of it. But between us
I'd say that our friend Kennedy has been making deals." "Deals?
With Wu Shih?" Parker
shrugged. "Let's just say that things have been a lot easier
these past few weeks. Too smooth. And I've been doing some thinking." "And?" "Look,
Michael, I'm sorry. I know how it seems. Your father's man tries to
have you killed. It's not a nice thought. It points the ringer where
you'd rather not have it pointed. But you did ask me. As for the
rest. . . I'm as much in the dark as you." Michael
closed his eyes, then nodded, but his face showed the sudden
bitterness, the despair he felt. When he openecTEis eyes again,
Parker was looking down. "Thanks, Jack. You're right. It's not
nice. But I feel better for knowing it. I ... I feel as if I can get
things straight in my mind now. Before, it was . . . confused. I felt
I was losing my grip on things." Parker
smiled but didn't look up. "You won't do anything?" "Like
what? Throw punches?" Parker
met his eyes. "Who knows? You're not as helpless as you look." "No,"
he answered, for the first time realizing what the operations meant.
"No. Not helpless at all." He
would get better, stronger. He would spend every hour, every minute
of his time getting better. And then, when he was ready . . . He
closed his eyes, letting the tingling fade from his limbs and chest,
calming himself. It had been a long day, a hard day. "Michael?"
Parker had felt the sudden tension in the fingers of the hand he
held, then the slow relaxation of the muscles. He leaned forward,
listening, then smiled, hearing the soft, regular pattern of his
friend's breathing. Michael Lever was sleeping. tolonen
STARED down at the ruins of Nantes spaceport a moment longer, then
turned to face Li Yuan's General, Rheinhardt. It was cramped in the
cruiser's cockpit, with barely enough room for the
pilot and the two big men, but no other craft had been
available. All else had been destroyed. "How
did it happen?" Tolonen asked, indicating the gap in the smooth
face of the City, the fallen stacks. "We're
not sure yet," Rheinhardt admitted, the somber expression on his
face a perfect copy of the older man's. "There are three
theories we're working on. The first is that subsidence, caused by
water erosion, undermined the supports and weakened them." "Is
that likely?" Rheinhardt
shook his head. "Not really. The river's course has changed over
the years, and it seems the water table has risen slightly in the
last decade. Even so, most of the pillars are sunk into the rock.
Besides, from what we can make out, most of them are still standing.
The stacks simply broke away by the look of it." "Or
were torn away?" "Maybe.
That's another of the theories. That the sheer, unprecedented force
of the storm—the tidal wave, particularly—simply ripped
the stacks from the surrounding sections." Tolonen
nodded. "And the third?" "One
of our experts has come up with the idea that the constant vibration
of the rockets taking off from the spaceport might have weakened the
connections between the stacks over the years." Rheinhardt
shrugged. "It seems highly unlikely, if you ask me, but we're
following it up anyway." Tolonen
sighed deeply, looking out once more at the scene of devastation
below. It was worse, far worse than he'd imagined it. The City was
supposed to be safe. One hundred percent safe. For a century and more
it had stood, undamaged by the elements, yet in the course of less
than thirty seconds, three whole stacks had slid into the Clay,
taking more than two hundred and eighty thousand people with them. If
news of this got out there would be panic in the levels, rioting. . . He
shuddered. Rheinhardt had been right to call him in. Right to cordon
off the surrounding areas and cut communications. But would it be
enough? Could they really prevent word of this from getting out? He
leaned forward, tapping the pilot's shoulder. "All right. Take
us back. I've seen enough." Rheinhardt
leaned close, lowering his voice. "Well, Knut? What should I do?
Li Yuan has ordered me to destroy our friend Li Min and scour the
Lowers of all Triad activity. And so I would gladly do. But that was
before I knew of this." He took a breath. "This . . . well,
it's the kind of thing that could set off the whole City, neh? Word
of it must be quashed, and at once. But IVe a problem. I haven't the
manpower both to quash this and take on the Triads. You can see that,
can't you, Knut?" "I
see it clear enough, Helmut. Besides, there'll be time enough to take
on that scum, neh?" "Then
you'll speak to Li Yuan?" Tolonen
smiled grimly. "At once. In the meantime let's have the T'ing
Wei earn their pay. Let's flood the airwaves with good news
and rumors of spring. And for once let us pray that it's enough." WONG
Yl -SUN lay there, wrapped in the ancient banner, like a wasp in a
spider's web. Blood from a thousand hatchet cuts had darkened the
fragile cloth, obscuring the original design, but the banner had once
hung in Fat Wong's hall, in pride of place. Lehmann
stood over the body of his rival, looking down at the pale, birdlike
face, and heaved a great sigh. He was close to exhaustion. For more
than forty hours he had fought. Fought beyond the point of hope
until, in the darkest hour, help had come. A hundred thousand
Hei—GenSyn half-men used by Security as riot troops—
sent in by Li Yuan to reinforce him. Turning the tide of battle in
his favor. Giving him victory. He
shuddered, remembering the moment, then crouched, reaching out to
touch the blood-encrusted silk. Peacock blue the banner had been, a
great triangle of gold at its center.. And in the blue had been
embroidered a single bloodred pictogram. Tian.
Nan Jen. Tu. Heaven. Man. Earth. It was
the banner, brought from the Fu Chou monastery six centuries
ago. Whoever held it led the great Council of the Hung Mun; was Head
of the 4895, the "Big Boss" here in the lowers of City
Europe. Or so
it had been. Until today. Lehmann
stood, then turned away, signaling to his men to take the body and
burn it, banner and all. All that was ended now. Six centuries of
tradition reduced to ash and dust. Now there was only he. All else
had been destroyed. He
stretched, easing his tired muscles, considering what he had done.
Two hundred thousand men were dead. Another eighty
thousand—prisoners, taken in the early hours of the
battle—would be dead within the hour. So he had ordered. And so
it had to be, for he could not risk the slightest threat of
opposition. Not yet. Not until he had rebuilt his organization and
stamped his mark upon these levels. He
turned, looking about him, noting how his men looked at him: in awe,
as if one of the ancient gods stood there among them. And inwardly he
laughed. Right now he was triumphant, was king of these levels, the
White T'ang, as they called him. But how long would that last? If Li
Yuan took it in his mind to crush him; to turn his brutish Hei
against their former allies . . . For a
moment his mind went numb. Tiredness, he told himself, but it was
more than tiredness. It was like that moment on the slopes of the
Otzalen Alps. That moment when he had looked down into the great
crater where DeVore's fortress had been and seen only darkness. Then,
too, he had felt like this, emptied of all thought, all enterprise. He
felt wasted, brittle-boned. A wraith. Victory, now that he had it,
seemed a hollow thing. Hollow, because it had not been his. Because,
at the final moment, he had depended on the favor of another. "Yao
Lu," he said, summoning one of his lieutenants. The
man hurried across and knelt, his head bowed low. "Master?" "How
much was in the chests you found?" "More
than two hundred million, Master," Yao answered, keeping his
head lowered. "And
in the rest of the caches?" "It
is hard to say exactly, Master, but more than five hundred million,
certainly." Seven
hundred million. It was a huge amount—much more than he'd
expected. With such a sum at hand, what could he not do, given
time? But that was it. The task of reconstruction was a
lengthy one, a time-consuming one, and he had no time. Not if he
wished to survive. Just
now one thing alone mattered. Placating Li Yuan. "Yao
Lu," Lehmann said finally, his decision made. "I want you
to gather it all together and bring it here. Every last fen of
it. And then I want you to contact the Major in charge of Li Yuan's
Hei and beg an audience with him. It is time we paid the great T'ang
his due. Time we paid tribute for the great service he has done us
this day." LI
YUAN STOOD on the great viewing circle, looking down at the
blue-white globe of Chung Kuo, one hand gently stroking his beardless
chin as he thought things through. He had hoped to have a week up
here—a week free of matters of State—but it was not to
be. Tolonen was right. The severity of the damage to Nantes spaceport
could not be overlooked. He had to deal with the matter urgently. He
shivered and turned away, looking about him at the room, remembering
how often he had seen his father standing where he now stood. His
father, deep in thought, one hand tugging gently at his plaited
beard. One day Kuei Jen would stand here looking down, matters of
State weighing heavily on his mind. But for now the child slept
peacefully, unaware of the burden he would one day bear. The
thought made him smile, but the smile was tinged with a faint
sadness. There were consolations, certainly, but sometimes the burden
seemed too much to bear. Some days he felt like giving it all up, as
his brother Han had once proposed, and handing it over to another.
But that could not be. This was his charge, his duty. What
to do, though, about Nantes? That was the question. If he went down
openly, Wang Sau-leyan was sure to hear of it, and that might prove
disastrous. There was another option, however. He could leave his
shuttle here and travel down on the service craft that was due to
leave in two hours' time. That would get him to Nantes in plenty of
time to deal with matters. Yes, and maybe he could persuade Wu Shih
and Tsu Ma to meet him there. Secretly of course. Because if Wang
were to hear of this, he might yet find a way to take
advantage of the situation. And with the Triads still at war down
there, it was impor- tant
to settle things quickly, before the rumors began to spread and panic
set in among the Lowers. His
decision made, Yuan climbed the steps quickly and went through,
heading for the nursery. Tseng-li
was kneeling, his back to Li Yuan, when the T'ang came into the room.
He was laughing, his laughter echoed back at him by the young child
who clung to his outstretched arms. On the far side of the room the
nursemaid, seeing Li Yuan, got up hastily, making to bow, but Li Yuan
motioned to her, raising a finger to his lips and smiling. She
straightened, but Tseng-li had seen the movement and half turned,
realizing that someone had come into the room. Kuei Jen also turned,
and, his smile widening, cried out to him. "Papa!" Laughing,
Li Yuan came forward and bent down. Tseng-li leaned back, out of the
way, as the little boy lifted his hands up to his father. "They
know their own," he said, getting up and giving a slight bow to
Li Yuan. "Some
more than others," Li Yuan answered, looking from Kuei Jen to
his secretary. "It is a sad thing that we who rule see so little
of those who matter most to us." He looked back at his son,
smiling broadly at him, then lifted him and hugged him tightly. "Like
now. I have to go back down, Tseng-li, at once. Something has come up
which I must attend to personally. I'll be gone two, maybe three
days." Tseng-li
gave another bow. "Is there anything I should be doing while you
are gone, Highness?" "Nothing
that cannot wait three days. My Ministers are capable men, after
all." Tseng-li
laughed, amused by the irony in his cousin's voice. "No,
Tseng-li," Li Yuan continued. "Just take care of my son, my
wives, while I am gone, neh?" The
fifteen-month-old Kuei Jen was making small burbling noises now and
pressing against Li Yuan's shoulder, rubbing his small, dark head
against the silk. "He's
tired," explained Tseng-li, dismissing the nursemaid with a
gesture of his hand. "He has been up several times in the
night." "Then
I'll hold him," said Li Yuan, with a small nod of finality. "It
is rather pleasant, neh?" "Just
now," agreed Tseng-li, smiling. "But they grow so fast. My
brother's children now . . ." He laughed, looking thoughtful.
"They're too big to carry already. Besides, they get so
independent." Li
Yuan nodded, watching his cousin carefully. Already Kuei Jen was
settling against him, snuggling in against the warmth of his
shoulder. "You miss your brothers, Tseng-li?" "Sometimes." Li
Yuan sighed, smiling at the small, warm weight he carried, then
looked back at Tseng-li. "A break would be good for you, neh?
Maybe when I get back." Tseng-li
nodded, keeping his silence; but his eyes showed gratitude. "Sometimes
I think that family is all. The rest. . ." Yuan laughed softly,
feeling the child stir gently against him with the movement. "Ill
thoughts for a T'ang, perhaps, but true. Nor would I trust a man who
felt otherwise." Tseng-li,
watching him, smiled and nodded. The child was asleep. CHAPTER
TWENTY-TWO
Circles
of Dark Captain
HENSSA of the floating palace, Yangjing, moved across the room
slowly, his legs drifting up as he turned and pulled himself along
the guide rungs, then anchored himself beside the lieutenant at the
screen. "The
codes check out?" The
lieutenant ran the signal again, then leaned back, letting his
captain watch as the code broke down on the screen. Behind the
sharp-etched lettering the image of the incoming craft was growing
steadily larger, its complex computer-generated recognition pattern
matching the programmed format perfectly. There
was total puzzlement on the captain's face. "Chi Hsing?" he
said. "What would Chi Hsing want?" The
lieutenant stayed silent. This wasn't his decision. Orders or no
orders, he wasn't going to shoot one of the Seven out of the skies.
He had a family down below to think of. "Send
for verification." "From
whom?" the lieutenant asked, staring fixedly at the screen. He
was conscious of the watching cameras, the tapes. No Board of Inquiry
would find his actions reprehensible. He would act to the letter, or
not at all. For a
full half minute the captain hesitated, while the craft drew slowly
nearer. Then, abruptly, he leaned across and, steadying him- 501 self,
tapped out a message on the touchpad. It was immediately coded and
sent: With respect, please advise purpose of visit. The
lieutenant saw the worry in his captain's eyes, and, for once, felt
some small sympathy for his normally overbearing superior. One did
not ask a T'ang what his purpose was. Such a breach of etiquette
might strip him of his rank. For a
time there was nothing. Then, as if there had been no query, the
original request-for-docking signal came back. The craft was only ten
minutes distant now and still closing. A decision would have to be
made. For
the first time the captain looked down at his lieutenant and shook
his head. "I don't like it." But he too was conscious, it
seemed, of the cameras overhead and left it at that. Turning, he
pushed off and drifted toward the far door. There, holding the top
rung firmly, he twisted and looked back at the lieutenant. "Give
them boarding clearance, but tell them there'll be a slight delay." "And
if they ask for a reason?" The
captain looked thoughtful a moment, then shrugged. "New security
procedures, that's all." Then he turned and, pressing the hatch
stud, slid through the irising circle into the corridor outside. The
lieutenant watched him go, then turned to face the screen again, his
fingers giving the clearance signal to the incoming ship. IT WAS
cramped in the shuttle. They sat in the forward compartment, six to a
side, their helmets almost touching across the narrow space. Their
suit systems kept them cool; even so, more than one of them had been
sweating these past few minutes as the bulk of the floating palace
grew larger on the screen above the hatch. They watched it in
silence, knowing that these moments were the most vital of the whole
mission. Here, as they approached, they were most vulnerable. One
mistake and they would be so much iced debris, floating in the
vacuum. For a
long time there was nothing. They could not hear the signal going
out, nor did they know anything of the query sent back. Moment by
moment the tension grew. Then, with a small click and a
hum, the internal channel came on and the group leader's voice
came across. "We've
got boarding permission. A small delay, it seems, then we're in. Good
luck!" There
was a small buzz of talk, and a sense in them all of great relief.
What lay ahead they had rehearsed to perfection. The worst of it was
now behind them. THE
CAPTAIN had arranged the men in a semicircle about the boarding deck.
They wore anchor shoes and full suits. Each held a small laser and a
deflector shield. Beyond that he had said nothing to them. If he were
right there would be time to give them simple orders. If wrong . . . He
smiled grimly, looking about him and listening to the sounds of the
docking shuttle. If wrong he would need to trust to Li Yuan's
understanding and compassion, for what he did now was an insult to
Chi Hsing. He
shivered and stared straight ahead at the huge doors, waiting for
them to open. His instincts told him this was wrong. Though the
signals were correct, the situation felt wrong. Why should Chi Hsing
visit now, and without warning? And why had he, Captain of the Watch,
received no notice of the visit? Against
this strove another inner voice. Who else would use Chi Hsing's
shuttle but the T'ang himself? Who use his codes? He was being
ridiculous even to begin to think that something was amiss. And
yet... Perhaps
this was why 1 was chosen. Perhaps they knew 1 would act this way.
Whatever, he had gone too far now for half measures. He would see
this through, whatever the personal cost. Whether his master
understood or not, duty bade him take this action. There
was a sudden silence. The craft had docked. Then he heard a sharp
hissing as the airlock filled. Thirty seconds, he thought, bracing
himself, lifting his weapon and pointing it at the doors. He saw
several of his men turn and look at him, then look back, not quite
certain why they were there, or what was happening, but he kept
silent a moment longer.
There'll be time, he told himself. Whoever it is, the;y'ZZ not
expect us here. The
hissing stopped. There was a low groan, then, with the slightest
hesitation, the doors began to slide back. Through the gap stepped
three men, fully suited, the first in a suit of gold, trimmed with
imperial yellow. "Chi
Hsing . . ." he began, lowering his gun and beginning to bow.
All about him his soldiers were sinking to their knees, their heads
lowered. But there was a movement behind the T'ang which made the
captain look and hesitate, then raise his gun again. But he was too
late. The air was crisscrossed with burning laser traces, and the
screams of his men were deafening in his ears. He himself was
shouting now, but his voice was lost in the general noise and
confusion. The three men were firing at the kneeling soldiers,
cutting them apart. Only he, miraculously, stood there in the midst
of it all, untouched. Trembling,
he lifted the weapon and fired, watching as the gold-tinted visor
split and then exploded. It is
not Chi Hsing, he told himself, as he held the beam on the falling
figure. It is not Chi Hsing. But even as the lasers of
the other men caught him, burning into his chest and arms and neck,
he felt a great pang of sorrow. He had killed a T'ang, a Son of
Heaven! And now his clan would be eradicated, the ghosts of his
ancestors unap-peased. His wife, his child . . . He
stumbled forward, then fell and lay still. One of the suited figures
paused, looking down at him, then stepped over him and clumped on
heavily toward the corridor. Behind him came others. Terrorists. Yu.
The suited figure laughed triumphantly, then yelled instructions
into his suit microphone. They
had done it! They were on board! out ON
the great mid-ocean city of Sohm Abyss it was late morning. The
restaurant was quiet, only a few people scattered about the tables.
Kim was sitting in his usual corner, a half-filled ch'a bowl at his
elbow, when Rebecca came into the room. Seeing him, she went across
and sat, facing him. He
looked up, meeting her eyes, uncertain what to say. He had not seen
her since the night of the party, but had kept to himself, working
longer hours than usual and sleeping in the lab. For a day or two, he
had even avoided coming here, lest she track him down. But he had
known all along that he would eventually have to face her. To have it
out with her. "Hi,"
she said softly, offering a smile. "I wondered where you'd got
to. I left messages on your comset. But maybe you didn't get them.
I'm told youVe been working hard." He
raised his eyebrows, as if he knew nothing about the messages, but it
was untrue. He had seen them. More than a dozen in all, asking him to
contact her and talk. "IVe
been worried about you," she said, leaning toward him, the scent
of jasmine wafting across to him. "I thought you might be angry
with me about what happened. When I woke up that morning and you'd
gone . . ." He
looked down. "I'm not angry with you." That
much was true. He wasn't angry with her, he was angry with himself,
for having made such a fool of himself. And now he felt ashamed.
Deeply, thoroughly ashamed. He had let himself down. Himself, and
Jelka. "Look,
I'm sorry," he said. "I was drunk, I..." She
laughed softly, provocatively. "Not that drunk." "That's
not what I meant," he said, meeting her eyes again, his face
deadly earnest. "I mean that it was wrong what we did. If I'd
have been sober I would never have gone to your room." "You
mean you didn't enjoy what happened?" Her eyes were wide,
staring into his. Reaching out, she touched his fingers, then closed
her own about them. "Because I did. And I can't stop thinking
about it. You and me, Kim, together in the darkness. It was
wonderful. Didn't you think so? You and me, doing that." She
shivered, squeezing his fingers tightly. "It
was wrong," he said again, steeling himself against her touch,
the soft seductiveness of her words. "There's a girl..." He saw
the movement in her eyes. The surprise and then the calculation. "A
girl? Someone you like, you mean?" He
nodded. "I made a promise." "A
promise?" She smiled, then frowned, the two expressions
strangely coexistent in her face. "What kind of promise?" "She's
young, you see, and her father . . . well, her father is a powerful
man. He doesn't want her to see me, so he's sent her away. To the
Colonies. But I made her a promise. I..." He
stopped, realizing that he had said much more than he'd intended. But
he wanted Rebecca to understand, to realize why that night with her
had been so wrong. Her
fingers slowly loosened their pressure about his own. She withdrew
her hands, then sat back, nodding to herself, a strange look on her
face. "So
you fuck me and leave me, and that's it, huh?" He
shivered. "It wasn't like that. If I'd been sober . . ." "If
yorid been sober." She shook her head, her face suddenly
hard, her eyes angry with him. "Don't you see it, Kim? Don't you
understand things yet? Or is it only atoms and abstract forces that
you comprehend? This girl. . . she won't wait for you. Not if her
father's against you. They hate us, Kim. Don't you get that yet? On
the face of it they may smile as they use us, but deeper down they
hate us. Clayborn we are. Different from them. And they despise us
for that." "No,"
he said quietly, disturbed by the sudden change in her, the pent-up
anger in her tiny frame. "Some of them, yes. But not all. This
girl . . •" She
stood abruptly, staring down at him, "You still don't see it, do
you? You and I, we're of a kind. We know how things are. How they
really are. We know about the darkness down there. Know, because it's
in us, every hour of every day. And we know what it's like to suffer,
to be bought and sold and treated like mere things." She
shuddered, staring down at him defiantly. "We're of a kind, Kim
Ward. Don't you understand that yet? You belong with me.
Wards, that's what we are. A pair. A matching pair." He sat
there, shaking his head, denying her, and yet a part of him saw the
truth in what she was saying. He licked at his lips, then spoke,
pained that it had come to this. "What
you say, Becky . . . it's true. We are alike. But that's all.
And what we did . . ." he shivered, "it was a mistake.
Can't you see it was a mistake?" She
stood there, staring at him; a long, angry stare that seemed to weigh
him. Then, without another word, she turned and walked away, closing
the door quietly, carefully behind her. For a
moment he sat there, staring at the door, conscious that it wasn't
over, that he had not convinced her that it was over, then, turning
his head, he realized that someone was standing there, not six paces
from where he sat. "Tuan
Wen-ch'ang!" The
tall Hui bowed his head and smiled, showing his imperfect teeth. "Kim
. . . May I sit with you?" "Of
course. Please . . ." Kim half stood, giving a tiny bow of
greeting. Tuan
sat, setting his chung down in front of him, then looked across at
Kim. "You
look disturbed, my friend. Is something troubling you?" Kim
looked down. If Tuan had come in while Rebecca was talking to him, he
would have seen, maybe even overheard something of what had passed
between them. Yet that was not what Tuan had meant. He was asking Kim
if he wanted to talk about his troubles, to share them with him. For
the briefest moment Kim hesitated, wondering whether he should keep
this to himself, but then, seeing the look of sympathy, of
understanding in the tall Hui's face, he nodded and leaned toward
him. "It's
like this..." "What's
happening up there?" Tseng-li
stood at Li Yuan's desk, staring down at the screen set into the
table's surface. He had been disturbed by the echoing metallic sound
of the shuttle docking, and had come here quickly, not stopping to
consult any of the others. The
lieutenant's face looked up at him, concerned. "I'm not sure, my
Lord. Chi Hsing's shuttle has docked. About three minutes back.
Captain Henssa went to greet him." "Chi
Hsing?" Tseng-li laughed, but his features formed an uncertain
frown. "Are you certain?" "The
coded signals were current and correct. No one but Chi Hsing's
personal Security could have known them, my Lord." Tseng-li
nodded, but he was thinking, This is wrong. Li Yuan would have
warned me. He would not have gone had he known Chi Hsing was
coming. For a moment he stood there, leaning forward as if in a
trance, then, "Have they boarded already?" The
lieutenant looked away at another screen. "Yes, they're coming
through even now. I..." His head jerked back, as if he had been
punched, his cheeks visibly paler, his eyes wide. "Arya......" The
screen went black. Tseng-li
ran. Out down the slow curving corridor and on, into the second room
on the left, nodding to the guard. There, he bent over the cot and
unceremoniously lifted the sleeping infant from among its covers and
ran on, out through the far door. People were stirring now, lifting
their heads as he ran through their quarters, or coming out to call
after him, but there was no time to stop and warn them. His duty now
was to Kuei Jen alone. Already it might be too late. At the
hatch that led through into the kitchens, a guard raised his rifle
and challenged him. "Let
me through!" he yelled, batting the rifle down. "Your
prince's life depends on it!" The
guard watched him go through, his mouth open, then nodded and turned
to defend the hatch, knowing now, if he'd not before, that something
was badly wrong. The
kitchens were empty. Tseng-li ran through the long, echoing rooms,
conscious of his own hoarse breathing, and of the half-dozing weight
of the child against his chest. He was cradling Kuei Jen awkwardly,
holding his tiny body firmly against him, afraid to drop or knock
him. On the
far side of the kitchens he stopped, taking deep breaths, then
listened. There were clear sounds of fighting now—explosions
and distant shouting, then the harsh but muted sound of someone
screaming. He thumbed the hatch's manual controls awkwardly and
clambered through into a narrow, rounded corridor where he had to
stoop and move more slowly. It all depended now on how quick the
intruders were, how well they knew the layout of the palace. If they
traveled straight up the hub they might have gotten there already, but he
was gambling on them not doing that. The private quarters were at the
front end of the palace, on the rim. If they were interested in the
T'ang and his family they would go there first. Or so he hoped. As he
moved along this narrow tunnel all sound was masked from him. But at
the end, he came out into the brightly lit well, and the noise came
back. Voices. Uncultured, Mid-level voices. He swallowed,
understanding at once. Terrorists! It was
hard to judge how far away the voices were. They could be down at the
far end of the hub still, or they might be directly above him, at
this end. If the latter, then he and Kuei Jen were dead. He
crossed the open space, then set the child down carefully in its
blankets, praying that it would not wake and cry. He straightened up,
breathing heavily, then opened one of the dozen or so lockers built
into the wall and took out the infant-sized pressure suit. Quickly he
fitted and sealed it, checking that the oxygen supply was working
before fastening the helmet. Then, reaching up into another of the
lockers, he took down his own suit and pulled it on. He had
wasted more than two minutes getting suited up. Now it was more
important than ever to be quick. Here,
at the "lower" end of the palace, there was only the
narrowest of connecting tubes from the rim to the hub. It was an
emergency and maintenance run, with a single stretch of laddering up
the inside of a plain metallic pipe. Clutching the child to him, he
began to climb. It looked simple, but he was climbing away from the
fast-rotating rim toward the hub. As he progressed along the rungs he
would grow steadily more weightless. Carrying the child he would need
to be careful. The last part of the climb would be awkward,
difficult. And
maybe, just maybe, they would be waiting for him. KI m
WAS SITTING on the edge of the desk, going through the latest batch
of results with Feng Wo-shen and another of his assistants, when the
doors at the far end of the laboratory swung open violently. "Becky..." He
stood, looking across at her. Little more thari an hour had passed
since he had last seen her, yet Rebecca looked quite awful. Her eyes
were dark and puffy, her hair disheveled. She had torn her
silks—ripped or cut them—and they hung raggedly
from her, like the clothes of a low-level beggar. But these were as
nothing compared to the strangeness of her stance, to the tense,
animal poise of her, the fierce hostility in her eyes. She
stood there a moment, staring at him, then, slowly, very slowly, she
began to come toward him, a strange awkwardness to her movements that
he recognized at once. So Luke had been, before they'd come for him.
And Will. And finally Deio. Each one in turn, like unstable
formations of atoms, spinning violently out of shape. She
had regressed, Returned to what she'd been, down there in the
darkness of the Clay. Or almost so, for there was still a spark of
sanity in her eyes, the merest glint of light where once the bright
fire of intellect had shone out. Feng
Wo-shen touched his arm. "Should I call Security?" "No,"
Kim said, putting out a hand, as if to physically stop him. "No,
Feng, I'll deal with this." Slowly
Feng backed away, drawing the assistant with him. Rebecca
had stopped, three paces from Kim, her body tensed, as if about to
spring. Looking at her, he could almost see the darkness flowing from
her. Darkness, like a great force of negativity, pouring from her
eyes, her mouth, the corded muscles of her limbs. And yet there was
still an element of control. Something still held her back— one
tiny, quivering cord of reason held her. Reason
... or obsession. She
raised her chin slightly, as if sniffing the air, then lifted her
arm, pointing at him. "You
were wrong, Kim Ward. You didn't understand." Her
hand was trembling, its frailty exaggerated by the movement, as if at
any moment it would disintegrate. For a moment her mouth struggled to
make shapes, as if some vital link between it and her inner self had
been severed; then, freeing itself, it spoke. "It
should have been us. You and me. Together, like Yin and Yang, until
the end of things." She shivered, an unnatural intensity making
her tremble. "You're mine, Kim Ward, don't you understand that
yet? Mine. It was meant" She
came closer, her eyes staring fiercely, defiantly into his. A
muscle in her cheek was twitching now, jumping violently, as
if something had got in behind the flesh. "But
you didn't want that, did you? You wanted something better than that,
neh? Something finer." She laughed coldly, her face ugly,
sneering now, her voice filled with a sudden venom. "You think
you're something special, don't you? You think they really want you
here. But it's not true. We're different from them. We're Clay, Kim.
Clay. And they never let us forget it. "Every
smile they give us is a lie. Every word a deception. But you can't
see that, can you? You're dazzled by the light of this place. So much
so that you can't see the darkness underlying everything." She
tilted her head slowly, lifting it, looking back at him from a
strange, unnatural angle. "Everything. Even your precious girl.
But then, you wouldn't have heard, would you?" He
narrowed his eyes. "What do you mean?" She
smiled; a hideous, triumphant smile. "IVe watched you. . . you
know that? Followed you all these years. Kept tabs on what you've
done, who youVe met. That's how I knew." The
smile slowly faded. Beneath it lay a bleak, hard bitterness. "It
was Tolonen, wasn't it? Tolonen who sent her away. I checked, you
see. I found things out." He was
silent, but her words made him afraid. "Tolonen,"
she said again, her face hardening. "Jelka Tolonen. Your paragon
of light. But do you know what she did? She nearly killed a man,
that's what. A young cadet. Kicked him to death, almost." He
shook his head. "You're lying." "Am
I?" She gave a bitter laugh. "From what I've heard, your
darling Jelka's a right little monster. Why, IVe heard . . ." The
sound of the slap startled Kim. He was conscious of Rebecca stumbling
back, of Feng's cry behind him, but before that there had been a
moment of utter darkness. Of forgetting. He
gave a little shake of his head, as if coming to, then looked across
at her again. Rebecca was standing there, one hand raised to her
face, a startled, angry look in her eyes. What
had she said? What was it now? He
looked down at his hand. The palm stung, as if it had been sprayed
with antiseptic. Then he looked back at her, at the red welt on her
cheek. For a moment there was no connection, only a kind of numbness,
a blackness where things ought to have been joined, and then he
understood. He had struck her. Because of something she had said.
Because . . . She
crouched, facing him, every cell, every atom of her being set against
him now. In that brief moment of darkness something had changed in
her. Whatever had been light in her was gone, extinguished by the
blow. What confronted him now was more animal than human. Even so,
the core of her obsession remained intact, undamaged. It was that
which drove her now. That and nothing else. Her
voice too had changed; had shed the veneer, the polish it had had
only moments before. It was harsh now and guttural, the words falling
awkwardly from her lips, like shards of broken pottery. "Yuu
erhh mae-en," she said, one hand making a clawing motion at him.
"Yuu aan mee, Kih-m. Turr-ge-thuur. Cle-ya. Wee urrh Cle-ya." "No,"
he said, appalled by the dreadful sound that was coming from her.
"No, Becky, please . . ." But it was too late. Snarling,
she threw herself at him, teeth bared. He
beat her off, hurling her back against the desk, winding her
momentarily, but she was at him again in an instant, her fingers
clawing at his eyes. "Becky!"
He thrust her away a second time, barely aware of Feng moving around
him and running for the door. "For the gods' sakes, Becky, no!" But
she was beyond words. With a savagery that frightened him, she leapt
at him again, coiling her arms about him tightly, as if to drag him
down into the depths she now inhabited. And this time he knew he
would have to hurt her if he was to stop her. Choking,
he struck out at her blindly, hitting her in the face and neck and
chest, surprising her with the viciousness of the blows, forcing her
to loosen her hands from about his neck. As she staggered back, he
brought his fists down hard, knocking her onto her knees. He was
about to finish it, to strike her one last time, when there was a
shout. 'Ward;
No.'" Kim
stopped, looking across. Administrator Schram was standing there on
the far side of the lab, Feng Wo-shen and two armed guards just
behind him. "Come
away, Ward. Now. We'll deal with this." Kim
looked down. Rebecca was kneeling just beneath him, her face tilted
up toward him, but her eyes were blank now, unseeing. As he watched,
a tremor seemed to go right through her, and then, slowly, her tiny
frame slumped, collapsing in upon itself. I've
killed her, he thought, horrified. Killed her ... Schram
was beside him now, taking control of things; ordering the guards to
bind the unconscious girl and take her, then turning to point at
Feng, instructing him to clear things up. But Kim was aware of none
of it. He was back there, suddenly; back in Rehabilitation, kneeling
beside the damaged cage, staring in at the lifeless bird, the vision
so real that he felt he could almost reach out and touch it. Again,
he thought, letting a shivering breath escape him. Events like
ripples in the great ocean of Time, circles of darkness stretching
out toward the distant shoreline of the future. He
groaned, thinking of the friends he had lost. First Luke, then Will
and Deio, and now Rebecca. Clay, they had been, each one of them,
formed from the earth and molded by dark circumstance. But to what
end? What point was there to all that death and suffering? What
reason? So that he might go on? No. It made no sense. No sense
at all. "Ward!" Schram
was staring at him, concerned, and shaking him. "Snap out of it,
Ward! It's over now. She's gone. We've taken her." "Taken
her?" Kim
turned, looking at Schram, seeing, behind the surface of the eyes,
the savage delight the man took in this tragedy. For him this sad
display had been a kind of triumph; proof positive that he was right—
that Clay was Clay and could never be raised, never be made truly
human. But Schram didn't understand. No, nor would he ever
understand. He would have had to have been there, first in the
darkness and afterward in the unit, with Luke and Will, Deio and
Rebecca. Kim
sighed, realizing for the first time the depth of his loss. They had
been something. Something bright and fine and wonderful. For a
time they had promised everything. Like a beautiful,
golden-eyed bird. A caged bird that had never flown. "Come
on now, back to work," Schram said, touching his arm, but Kim
batted his hand away. "Don't
touch me," he said, glaring at the man. "Don't you ever
touch me." He saw
the anger flare in the man's eyes and felt something harden deep
within him in response. Slave or no slave, he would not suffer this
kind of thing a moment longer. From here on he would fight it,
wherever he came up against it, not just for himself, but for those
who were no longer there to fight it. For the children of the dark
he'd come to love . . . and had lost. For
Luke and Will and Deio, and, finally, for Rebecca. "Call
Campbell," he said, staring back at Schram defiantly. "Now!
Tell him I want to speak to him. Tell him I want out of here." THE
EDGES OF THE HATCH were still hot from where they'd burned their way
through. The Yu squeezed through delicately, then twisted and
pushed as she'd been taught. The movement took her across the room,
to where the lifeless body of the Security lieutenant rested in the
chair, his arms floating out in front of him. Big globules of blood
and visceral matter were drifting out from the shattered mess that
had been his head. Unconcerned, the Yu swept it aside and pulled
herself down beside the corpse. A
quick inspection showed that the man had had no chance to damage the
desk. She turned and looked back at the hatch. One of her colleagues
was looking through the jagged hole into the room. "Well?"
she said impatiently, using the narrow-band frequency that linked
them all. "All
functional," the woman by the desk answered. "Vesa can put
the power through again. I've got the tapes." Leaning
over the corpse, she took two small tapes from a pocket at the neck
of her suit and slotted them into the surface of the desk. Power had
been out only two and a half minutes, but it was time enough to sound
warning bells down below on Chung Kuo. A squadron of fast and heavily
armed fighters would be heading toward them
already. The tapes might confuse them, maybe hold them a
while, until things were more advanced. Abruptly
the power came on again. On one of the screens she saw two of her
team, firing down a corridor, the bullets arcing with the Coriolis
effect they had been warned about. On another screen she saw a figure
in silks, floating motionless, facedown in the ornamental pool, a
dark red stain spreading out from among the long black strands of its
hair. A third screen showed two guards, waiting, their backs to a
large, heavily ornamented door. They looked scared to death, but
determined. She
watched a moment longer, fascinated, then looked away, busying
herself, getting down to work. KRIZ
STOOD on the viewing plate, looking down past her feet at the image
of the world. Often, in the run-throughs, she had paused and, for the
briefest moment, looked down. But this was different. This time it
was for real. She could feel the long, cold drop beneath her. It was
like standing with only a sheet of transparent ice between you and
all that space. She shuddered and looked across the room toward the
stairs, listening to the constant stream of messages in her ear. It had
gone well. Better than they'd hoped. Two minutes more and it would be
all theirs. "Kriz!
Kriz! Are you there?" It was
Donna, her lieutenant. Right now she should be in Li Yuan's quarters.
* "YouVe got him?" "No!
He's not here! We've missed him!" Kriz
frowned. It wasn't possible. His shuttle was still in the dock, and
his schedule showed that he was here. "No," she said
quickly. "Search everywhere. He has to be here!" Donna
came back to her at once. "And Kuei Jen too. He's not here
either!" "What?"
Disturbed and angered, she hesitated, then rushed across the room
and up the steps. "I'm coming through. Hold tight where you
are." Then, changing frequencies, she spoke quickly to the three
team members who had been left to hold the hub. "Anne, stay
where you are. Vesa and Joan,
move down the hub to the end. And be careful. There may be someone
there." She
ran on, past fallen guards and through smoldering, damaged rooms,
until she came to Li Yuan's private suite. Here, where they had
expected the fighting to be hardest, things were untouched. That,
more than anything, convinced her that Li Yuan had not been here. "The
wives?" she asked. "Farther
down," Donna answered, coming across. "We had to torch the
rooms. The guards fought hard." "AndKueiJen?" "He
was here. The cot bedding was disturbed. His nurse knew
nothing though. She was asleep. When she woke he was gone." "Then
he's still here." She smiled, reassured by the news. "Good.
Then let's find the little bastard!" TSENG-LI
SHIVERED. He could hear them coming, their heavy, weighted boots
clanking with each step. "Another minute!" he hissed softly
through his teeth. "Just give me another minute!" Kuei
Jen was already wedged inside the tiny craft they called "the
coffin," attached by a web of cords in the niche where,
normally, the engineer on duty would keep a spare air bottle. There
was neither time nor room for finesse how, though, so it would have
to do. And if they failed, well, it was better than dying here. And
death grew more certain with every passing moment. He was
outside, in the cramped maintenance area beside the blister that held
the small, beetlelike maintenance craft. For more than a minute now
he had been working at the catch of the manual controls, trying to
force it open with a wrench. But time was running out fast. Even if
he managed to get it open and operate the override, there was no
guarantee that he'd get back to the craft. He had visions of it
drifting out slowly on its two-ii tether, the outer hatch open to the
vacuum. If Kuei Jen didn't freeze to death he would suffocate
eventually. Unless Tseng-li could clamber back in somehow and close
the outer hatch manually. And even then they had only twelve hours of
air. Things
were bad. And getting worse by the second. He grunted and
hit out at the heavy catch viciously, swearing beneath his
breath. "Give, you bastard, give!" For a moment longer it
held, then, with a hiss, it gave, the automatic controls springing
the plate back so that it banged against his face plate. "Well,
sod you too!" he said, laughing, halfway between relief and
sheer panic. Quickly he reached in and turned and pulled out the
handle. At once he heard the dull concussion of the seals as they
moved into place. The maintenance room was now an airlock, both of
its access doors sealed off. It made him feel better, safer. It would
take them minutes to cut through them. And in minutes . . . He was
about to turn away, when another of the controls caught his
attention. A dial. It was calibrated finely, from o through to 2. At
present it was set just over i. A second set of figures gave
rotational speed. He knew at once what it was. Smiling, he turned the
dial slowly to the right. Then, with an abruptness that was almost
vicious, he slammed the dial back to the left and left it there,
turning to face the opening blister. KRIZ
WAS BY THE POOL when it struck. There had been a moment's sensation
of heaviness, of pressure, then, slowly at first but with gathering
speed, things began to happen. At first the feeling was quite
pleasant, a kind of lightness that was as much of the spirit as of
the body. Then, before she knew what had hit her, the huge sheet of
water in front of her began to lift and break apart. In her
ear-mike there was a gabble of sudden panic. The palace was slowing
down! Someone had stopped its spin! "Anne!"
she screamed, her feet coming away from the floor momentarily. "What
the fuck are you doing?" There
was a moment's radio silence, then Anne's voice came through. "What's
going on? Aiya! What's happening?" Kriz
understood at once. The override. Someone had got to the end of the
hub before them. Even as she thought it, Vesa's voice came through
loudly in her ear. "It's
sealed! Someone's sealed it off!" "Use
explosives!" Kriz yelled back. By now she was floating several
feet from the floor. Huge lumps of water were drifting out and up,
away from the pool. She could
imagine the chaos elsewhere. "Once you're inside, there'll be a
control panel. Try not to damage it. Reset the dial for one
atmosphere." She
could feel herself shedding weight by the moment as the great palace
slowed, its huge engines reversing its spin and bringing it to a
complete halt. Soon it would be as weightless all around the rim as
it was at the hub. Suddenly
it had all gone wrong. Badly wrong! "Vesa,
I..." The
ship shuddered. It was as if something had hit it. Something huge.
Kriz felt herself thrown across the pool, big gouts of water
colliding with her and turning her about. She was buffeted and
slowed. Then, when she thought things had died down, there was a
second, far bigger detonation, that seemed to pick her up and shake
her about, then cast her down, like a huge hand pressing her firm
against the bottom of the pool, flattening her. FROM A
HUNDRED LI out the first of the fighters saw it happen and caught it
on camera. There was a flicker and a blurring of the starlight
surrounding the tip of the hub. Slowly, almost gracefully, the spokes
of the lower end fell away, severing the hub from the rim. Then, only
moments later, the whole structure seemed to shudder and slowly
buckle, a strange electric tracery surrounding the docking nodule at
the top. The opposite end of the hub was swinging inward now, toward
the rim, but even before it struck, the whole palace seemed to
quiver, then shatter, like a fragile shape of glass. For a
moment the fighter's screen was incandescently bright. Then, very
slowly, it faded to a flickering, ember-strewn black. There was a
strong hiss of static on the audio band. "What's
happened?" said a voice, cutting through the distortion. "What
in the gods' names is going on up there?" "It's
gone," said the pilot softly, disbelievingly. "Kuan Yin
preserve us, it's gone!" CHAPTER
TWENTY-THREE
The Stone Within SEE,
" said Tsu Ma, nodding gravely. He sat, all color drained from
his face. "And has any wreckage been found yet?" The
man on the screen seemed to concentrate a moment, then nodded. He was
wired to the console in front of him and was receiving reports by the
moment. "Most of the wreckage appears to have stayed up there,
but a lot of it has been falling. There have been reports of large
chunks coming down into the sea off the Guinea coast." Tsu
Ma looked away a moment, then back at the screen, his whole face
grown stiffer, a sudden anger making his eyes flare. "Who did
this?" There
was no hesitation this time. "It was the Yu. Kiev had two
minutes of taped material sent out from Yangjing before its systems
cut out." "Yu.
. ." he said under his breath. Then, "How did they get on
board?" The
Security man shook his head. "We don't know that yet, Chieh
Hsia. Tracking reports certain . . . difficulties." "Difficulties?"
He was suspicious at once. "What kind of difficulties?" "Well.
. ." The man's hesitation showed his discomfort. He knew all the
old adages about the bearers of ill news. "It seems we have half
a day's tracking transmissions missing for that sector." "Missing?"
Tsu Ma laughed harshly. "That's impossible. There are backups to
the backups, surely?" The
man bowed his head. "That is so, Chieh Hsia, but there is
no stored record. Only a gap." Tsu
Ma was quiet, thinking, WangSau-kyan. This was his doing. But
how prove it? How tie him to this foulness? Then, like a cold wave,
dousing his anger, it struck him what this meant for Li Yuan: his
whole family gone. Tsu Ma shivered and half turned, hearing the
voices from the other room—hearing, at that very moment, as if
in hideous mockery of events, Li Yuan's strong and vital laughter.
Laugh no more, Li Yuan, for your wives are dead, and your infant
son. With
difficulty he returned his attention to the matter in hand. "Put
me through to Tracking. I want explanations." There
was a four-second delay, then a worried face replaced that of the
Security man. "Gerhardt, Chieh Hsia. Head of Tracking, North-em
Hemisphere." Tsu Ma
launched in at once. "What's happening, Gerhardt? I am told that
you are missing half a day's transmissions. Is that possible?" "No,
Chieh Hsia." "But
true." "Yes,
Chieh Hsia." "Then
how do you explain it?" Gerhardt
swallowed, then spoke up. "It has been erased, Chieh Hsia.
Someone here has removed it from the record." "Someone?"
Tsu Ma's voice was suddenly pitiless. The
official bowed his head submissively. "It is my responsibility,
Chieh Hsia. I know my duty." "Are
you saying that you did it?" Gerhardt
hesitated, then shook his head. Tsu Ma
took a deep breath, then spoke again, his patience close to snapping.
"This is no time for honor, man. I want to know who did it, and
at whose instigation. And I want to know as soon as possible.
Understand? We'll talk of duty then." Gerhardt
made to speak, then simply bowed. Tsu Ma cut the connection and sat
there, staring blankly at the empty screen. Then, grunting, he stood
up heavily and turned to face the doorway. Wu
Shih was standing there, looking in. Seeing the color of Tsu Ma's
face, he took two steps into the room. "What in the gods' names
is it?" Tsu Ma
licked at his dry lips, then, coming forward, took Wu Shih's arm and
led him back through. There, on a couch on the left of the room, Li
Yuan was sitting, a cup of dark wine in one hand. Tsu Ma looked to Wu
Shih, then indicated that he should take a seat. Li Yuan, looking up,
smiled, but his smile quickly faded. "What
has happened?" "I
have bad news," Tsu Ma answered him directly, knowing there was
no way of softening what had to be said. "Yangjing is destroyed.
There are no survivors." Li
Yuan opened his mouth, then looked down sharply. Carefully he put his
wine cup down. Then, ashen-faced, his eyes avoiding theirs, he got up
and left the room. Wu
Shih stared at Tsu Ma, his face a register of the horror he was
feeling. "This is true?" he asked softly, then, shaking his
head, he laughed bitterly. "Of course . . . You would not joke
of such a thing." He took a breath, then, "Kuan Yin!
How?" Tsu
Ma's voice trembled now. It had finally got to him. Seeing Li Yuan;
having to tell him. "Yu terrorists. They got aboard somehow." Wu
Shih shook his head. "It is not possible." "No?"
Tsu Ma's voice was sharp. Too sharp. He waved a hand uncertainly at
his fellow T'ang, then sat beside him. "I'm sorry ... but yes,
it is possible." "Wang
Sau-leyan . . ." Wu Shih said quietly, looking past Tsu Ma at
the empty doorway. "Yes,"
Tsu Ma answered him. "It could be no other. It has his mark." "Then
what?" Tsu Ma
laughed, the full horror of the irony striking him. "Then we
must do as Li Yuan said. Nothing. Until we have conclusive proof." Wu
Shih got up angrily. "But that was before!" Tsu Ma
looked down at his hands. "Nothing has changed. Not even the
fall of Yangjing could justify us acting without proof. Even Li Yuan
would say as much." Wu
Shih snorted. "It fits you ill to be so reasonable with other's
hurts. He has lost a son." "And
wives . . ." Tsu Ma added, remembering sharply his own part in
affairs. "But we are T'ang as well as men. We must act by law,
not instinct." "What
law does Wang Sau-leyan follow that he can butcher us and we do
nothing?" Wu Shih strode across the room, then came back. "I
cannot simply do nothing, Tsu Ma. I would choke on my own bile were I
not to act." Tsu Ma
looked up at him, his eyes wet with tears. "You think I do not
feel the same, Wu Shih? Gods, I would break him with these hands were
it so simple. But we must be certain. We must act with justice. No
man must fault us." Wu
Shih huffed again. "And if we find nothing?" Tsu Ma
was silent a long while. Then, meeting Wu Shin's eyes again, he
smiled bleakly. "Then I shall kill him anyway." WANG
SAU-LEYAN sat up irritably and tore the black velvet covers from his
eyes. "Well?
What is it?" The
servant kneeling in the open doorway lifted his head marginally. "It
is Chi Hsing, Chieh Hsia. He begs an audience." Wang
glanced at the bedside timer and shook his head. Then, as if suddenly
more awake, he got up quickly and wrapped his silks about him, then
made for his study. Chi
Hsing's angry face filled the big screen above the desk. He barely
waited for Wang to come into the room before he began. "What
is the meaning of this, Wang Sau-leyan? M;y shuttle! You have used my
shuttle!" Wang
Sau-leyari frowned, confused, then came closer to the screen, raising
a hand. "Hold on, cousin. I don't know what you mean. What about
your shuttle? What has happened?" Chi
Hsing laughed cynically. "No games, cousin. This is serious. It
could mean war." Wang
Sau-leyan's puzzlement was genuine, and Chi Hsing, seeing it, frowned
and seemed to lean back away from the screen. "You
mean you do not know?" Wang
shook his head, feeling a sudden tightness in his stomach. "No .
. . Something has happened, then?" Chi
Hsing took a breath, then, more calmly, answered him. "I had the
news only minutes ago. Li Yuan is dead. With all his family. Yangj
ing has fallen. Blown from the skies." Wang
Sau-leyan felt a powerful surge of exultation pass through him, but
kept his face a rigid mask. "Ah . . ." was all he said. But
the news was like a sweet wind blowing after centuries of drought,
sign of the refreshing rain to come. Chi
Hsing-spoke again. "Then you knew nothing of this?" Wang
shook his head mutely. But now that he had heard, he knew. Mach! Mach
had gone in early! "Who knows of this apart from you?" "My
private servants. A few of my Security staff." "Then
there is no problem. The shuttle will have been destroyed in the
explosion. No one could trace it back to you, surely?" Even
as he said it, he knew the steps to be taken. Who to bribe, what
records to destroy. There would be traces. The movements of
the shuttle would be recorded. But action could be taken—if
taken now—to erase such things. "There were no survivors?" "None." Again
he fought to hide the intense pleasure he felt at the news. He took a
breath, then nodded. "Leave it to me, Chi Hsing. I shall ensure
that no trace remains." "You
swear you had no knowledge of this, Sau-leyan?" Wang
let his anger show. "Do not insult me, cousin. I knew nothing.
And though this news pleases me, it brings me no pleasure to leam of
your own fears. I feel it my duty to help you, cousin." Chi
Hsing was silent a moment, then gave the slightest of nods. "I
do not like this, Sau-leyan. Nor do I share your pleasure at the
news. This strikes to the heart of us all. I know your hatred for Li
Yuan, but think. It might have been you or I. Whoever did this struck
out at the Seven—at us—not only at Li Yuan." Wang
dropped his head, as if chastened. "I am sorry. You are right,
Chi Hsing. But I'll not weep when I feel joy." Chi
Hsing stared at him a moment, then looked away, presenting
Wang Sau'leyan with a profile. "You realize the problems
this will cause us?" He
did. And when Chi Hsing was gone from the screen, he sat there torn
between anger and joy—joy at the news and anger at Mach's
preempting the new proposals in the House. Mach's impatience would
cause him problems—major problems. Still, if only each day
would bring such problems! Quickly he tapped out a discreet code
which, he knew, would worm its way to Mach, erasing all trace of its
passage. It would ensure no contact between them in the delicate
weeks to come. It
remained, then, only to deal with the matter of the shuttle. And
that, like all else, he would do through certain men in Chi Hsing's
own household. They knew not who they dealt with, only that such
dealings made them rich. Let them attempt to cover his traces. And if
they failed? Wang
Sau-leyan got up and walked back through to his dead father's
bedroom, too excited now to sleep. If they failed to clear Chi
Hsing's name it mattered little. The Seven would be Five. And with Li
Yuan gone . . . He
laughed, then went briskly to the window and drew back the curtains.
Outside it was dark, the moon low in the sky. It would be morning in
two hours. He held his hands out before him, palms open, and looked
down at them. Such smooth, white hands. For a long time he held them
there, staring at them, then closed them slowly, smiling to himself. Let
them make their accusations. He, Wang Sau-leyan, would have clean
hands. He
turned from the window, picturing himself there, in council, facing
the angry faces of Tsu Ma and Wu Shih, his own anger tightly
harnessed. "You do me wrong," he heard himself say.
"I knew nothing of this." It was
the truth. He laughed, delighted. Yes, for once it was almost the
truth. LI
YUAN lay THERE in the darkened room, grieving, the hurt a vast
weight, pressing down on his chest, crushing him; a dark and
heavy millstone, beneath which he lay, helpless. To move was
an effort, each hard-won breath a betrayal. They were dead. In a
moment of stillness, of unthinking nullity, someone crept into the
room and knelt beside him. It was Tsu Ma. He felt the older man's
hand at his neck, in the dark hair there; felt a wetness on his brow,
then the softest pressure of his cheek against his own. Eyes closed,
he held the other man tightly, letting the smothered grief escape.
Then, when the pain of it seemed to have lessened, he felt Tsu Ma
move back and release him. He sat, feeling hollow, staring
sightlessly into the shadows. "This
much loss . . ." Tsu Ma
did not complete his words. Li Yuan turned his head slowly, facing
him. There was such a pressure in his upper chest, such a need to say
something, yet nothing came. He coughed, almost choking, then bent
his head suddenly, succumbing to the sharpness of the feeling. At the
far end of the room the door slowly opened. "Chieh
Hsia . . . ?" Tsu Ma
turned his head, then stood and went across. "Yes," he said
quietly. "What is it?" There
was a brief whispered exchange, then Tsu Ma came back. "Yuan ...
if you would go through and wash your face. General Rheinhardt is
here. He has news." Li
Yuan stood slowly. In the light from the open door he could see Tsu
Ma's face clearly; see the redness of the eyes, the wetness of his
cheeks. "Rheinhardt?" he said hoarsely. "I thought no
one knew. . ." He
frowned, and looked past Tsu Ma, toward the servant in the doorway.
If Rheinhardt knew they were here, it meant their security was
breached. Only Tseng-li had known. Tsu Ma
reached out and took his arm. "Freshen up, cousin. Then come to
my study." Li
Yuan looked at him steadily, then shook his head. "No. I shall
come as I am. Tears are no cause for shame." They
went through, servants and guards looking down, not daring to look.
All knew how things stood. The rumor had gone out around
the palace an hour back. Even so, they could not help but
notice how Li Yuan bore himself. Such dignity in grief. Such
strength. In Tsu
Ma's study, Wu Shih came to him and held him a moment before leaving.
Then, with a nod to his private secretary, Tsu Ma also left the room.
The secretary gave a deep bow, then went to the far door and opened
it, letting Rheinhardt into the room. "I shall be here if you
need me, Chieh Hsia," he said, bowing again, then left,
closing the door behind him. Li
Yuan was alone in the room with his General. "Who
told you I was here, Helmut?" "It
was Tseng-li, Chieh Hsia." Li
Yuan was silent a moment, puzzled. Rheinhardt was unarmed, but he
still suspected a trap—some kind of trickery. "When did he
tell you this?" "Less
than an hour back, Chieh Hsia." Li
Yuan shivered. Haven't you heard? he almost said, then
realized that Rheinhardt would have heard all, before even he had
been told. He started forward. "What do you mean?" "Just
that I spoke to him, Chieh Hsia. He told me where you were. It
was . . ." The General hesitated, venturing a smile. "It
was a great relief to me, my Lord." At
once he understood. "You thought me dead?" "The
whole world thinks you dead." "And
Tseng-li?" Li Yuan took a step closer, his face caught between
doubt and hope. "He
is alive, Chieh Hsia. As is Kuei Jen." Li
Yuan laughed, openly astonished. "Kuei Jen? Alive?" "A
scoutship picked them up. Their craft was damaged, but they were
unharmed." "Their
ship?" "A
little maintenance craft. It survived the explosion. But they were
lucky. It seemed like just another piece of debris. Only a visual
contact saved them." But Li
Yuan was barely listening. He crossed the room quidkly and stood over
Tsu Ma's desk, studying the controls. Then, impatiently, he turned to
Rheinhardt. "Where are they now? How can I contact them?" The
General came across and punched in the access code, then stepped
back, away from the desk, leaving Li Yuan alone, looking down into
the screen. A
soldier's face appeared and, with a quick bow, turned and called
someone forward. It was clear that they had been waiting for this
moment. "Tseng-li!"
said Li Yuan joyfully, as the familiar face came onto the screen.
"How are you?" Tseng-li
bowed, smiling, his eyes wet. "We are alive, Highness." "And
my son? Where is my son?" Another
soldier brought Kuei Jen and handed him to Tseng-li, who turned back
to face the screen, cradling the sleeping child. The movement
disturbed Kuei Jen. He stretched and began to cry, one arm struggling
against Tseng-li's neck briefly before he quieted and grew still
again. "Kuei!"
Li Yuan called softly, tears of joy rolling down his cheeks. "My
little Kuei. . ." Tseng-li
was silent a moment, strong emotions crossing and re-crossing his
face. Regaining control, he spoke again. "They
were Yu, Highness. I heard them. But the craft. . ." He
hesitated, then said it. "It was Chi Hsing's shuttle. His
Security codes." Li
Yuan straightened up, a shudder passing through him. He had gone
cold. "You are certain, Tseng-li?" "Your
guards were thorough, Highness, but they were betrayed." Li
Yuan moaned. His momentary relief at finding them alive had masked
all else from him. Yet his wives were still dead, his palace
destroyed. And now, he found, Chi Hsing had betrayed him. "Not
Wang Sau-leyan, then?" He said the words quietly, shivering, a
sudden bitter hatred replacing the grief and happiness. "I
have no reason. . ." began Tseng-li, then stopped, seeing the
look on Li Yuan's face. "Li Yuan, I..." "Do
your brothers know you live?" Li Yuan asked suddenly, changing
the subject. "They
. . . No, they do not know yet, Highness." "Then
I will let them know myself. I would not have them grieve while you
live." Tseng-li
opened his mouth, then bowed, understanding. , "And
Tseng-li..." He
looked up again, meeting Li Yuan's eyes across the distance. "Yes,
Highness?" "I
do not know how you managed it, but my debt to you is great. Whatever
you want, you shall have it." Tseng-li
smiled bitterly. "There is but one thing I want now, cousin
Yuan. I want him dead." "Who?
Chi Hsing?" The
bitter smile remained. "Not him. The other one . . ." "Ah
yes . . ." Li Yuan took a deep breath. "Yes. And I too." TSU MA
WAS WAITING for him in the anteroom. "Well?" he said,
coming forward anxiously. "Tseng-li
lives," Li Yuan said, smiling at the news. "And my son,
Kuei Jen." There
was a look of delight on Tsu Ma's face. He embraced Li Yuan tightly,
then stepped back, a sharper expression on his face. "Then we
know what happened!" "Yes,"
said Li Yuan, looking down. "We were wrong, it seems." "Wrong?" "It
was not our cousin Wang. Not directly, anyway. This was Chi Hsing." "Chi
Hsing?" Tsu Ma laughed, disbelievingly. "Why, he hasn't the
guts!" Then, seeing how Li Yuan continued to stand there, the
same expression on his face, Tsu Ma shook his head. "What proof
is there?" Li
Yuan looked up. "They used his shuttle to board. His codes. What
more do we need?" Tsu Ma
stared at him a moment longer, then nodded. "I'll call a
Council, then . . ." But Li
Yuan reached out and took his arm. "No. Not this time. This time
we do things my way." CHI
HSING WAS bowed at Li Yuan's feet, one hand pressed to the cold tiled
floor, the other clutching the hem of the young T'ang's robes. He was
pleading now, almost in tears. "What
can I do to convince you, Yuan? I was betrayed . . ." Wang
Sau-leyan looked on from across the room, bitter and silent. He had
been made to seem a fool. His own face had betrayed him. But surprise
was not evidence and Chi Hsing had kept silent about their meetings.
It did not matter what Li Yuan or the others thought privately.
Before the world they needed proof, and they had none. "You
were betrayed?" Tsu Ma's voice was heavy with sarcasm. He made a
sound of disgust and turned away, going across to where Wu Shih and
Wei Chan Yin stood watching. Li
Yuan bent down and tugged the silk from Chi Hsing's hand. It was a
savage, ugly gesture. Chi Hsing looked up at his fellow T'ang
briefly, then lowered his head once more, humbling himself. All
majesty had gone from him. He was a supplicant now, begging for his
life. Li Yuan, on the other hand, seemed almost demonic in his power.
His face was like a hawk's, pitiless, almost inhuman in its abstract
cruelty. His eyes rested on Chi Hsing's topknot a moment, then he
moved his head sharply and stared angrily across at Wang. "And
you swear Wang Sau-leyan knew nothing of this? You are certain of
this, Chi Hsing?" Wang
made to speak, but Wu Shih barked at him. "Hold your tongue,
Wang Sau-leyan! Chi Hsing must answer this!" Incensed,
he nevertheless did as he was told, glowering at Wu Shih. If the
sight of Li Yuan's living face had been a shock, this now was almost
more than he could bear. How dare they speak to him this way! Chi
Hsing shuddered, then shook his head. "Wang Sau-leyan knew
nothing. I spoke to him, only moments after I had heard. I
thought..." "You
thought what?" The cold anger in Li Yuan's voice was terrible to
hear. Chi
Hsing took a breath, then spoke again, looking all the while at a
spot just in front of Li Yuan's feet. "It is no secret that he
hates you, Li Yuan. And so I thought—this is his work." "And
was it?" "Take
care," said Wang, taking a step forward. But he could see how
things stood. All etiquette had been forgotten. Li Yuan, as ever, had
ridden roughshod over tradition. These others were his dupes. His
accomplices. They
were all awaiting Chi Hsing's response. "He
knew nothing. I swear it. His surprise was unfeigned. There is a tape
of my call to him. I..." "Enough!"
Li Yuan said suddenly. He turned from Chi Hsing and came across,
stopping in front of Wang Sau-leyan. Giving the slightest bow, he
spoke again. "Chi Hsing, though disgraced, would hardly say such
a thing lightly. And the tape—I am sure that it shows what he
claims." He lifted his chin. "So, cousin, I must apologize
for what I asked." Wang
Sau-leyan's face was red with anger now, his nostrils flared, his
whole expression indignant, yet still he said nothing. Even in
apologizing, Li Yuan had insulted him and made a mockery of
tradition. And all the while his fellow T'ang had looked on, saying
nothing. Li
Yuan turned away sharply, his back to Wang Sau-leyan, and looked
across at Chi Hsing. "What, then, of you, Chi Hsing? What should
we do?" "This
is a nonsense . . ." began Wang, but before he could say any
more, Li Yuan had turned and placed one hand roughly, almost brutally
over his mouth, pushing his head back. He spoke fiercely, as if to a
vassal. "Be
quiet, Wang Sau-leyan! You have nothing to say here! Understand?" Li
Yuan removed his hand abruptly, glaring at Wang, then turned away
again, leaving Wang to touch his bruised lip tenderly. There was
murder in Li Yuan's almond eyes. Li
Yuan crossed the room again and stood over Chi Hsing. There was a
look of disgust on his face now. "Speak up, Chi Hsing. What
should we do with you?" "Do?"
Chi Hsing turned his head and looked past Li Yuan at the others, his
eyes imploring them, but their faces were as hard as Li Yuan's.
Seeing this, Chi Hsing dropped his head again, submissive. "There
is no precedent," he said quietly. "Nor
for the destruction of a palace," said Wu Shih, but Li Yuan was
uncompromising now. "You
have broken the most sacred trust, Chi Hsing—that which binds
us who must rule Chung Kuo. For myself I would see you dead and your
sons beside you in the ground. But this is not a personal thing. We
must consider how best to act for those we represent." Li
Yuan paused and turned to face the others who stood apart from him.
"We must decide now, and act at once. In this we must not be
seen to be indecisive. There are those who would take advantage of
our apparent disarray." He took a deep breath, then said it.
"Chi Hsing must stand down." "No!
You cannot do this!" Wang Sau-leyan said, outraged. "There
are but six of us here. We must wait for Hou Tung-po. A Council must
be called." Li
Yuan tensed, but did not look at Wang Sau-leyan. When he spoke again
his words were measured, and it was as if Wang had said nothing. "Chi
Hsing must do this for us. He must appear before the world and
confess what he has done. Then, before all, he will stand down. And
his lands will be forfeit to the Seven. We shall rule the Australias
as a colony, with a governor who will report directly to us in
Council." Both
Chi Hsing and Wang Sau-leyan were silent. It was Wu Shih, the eldest
of them, who spoke next. "So it must be. For the sake of us all.
And you, Chi Hsing, must be a sleeping dragon. You will retire to
your estate and take no more part in the doings of this world. Your
wives, your sons, will live, but they will not inherit." At
this Wang Sau-leyan came forward and stood between Li Yuan and the
others. "Again, this cannot be! This is a matter for Council!" "Are
you opposed to this?" Tsu Ma demanded angrily. "There
are forms . . ." Wang began, but Li Yuan interrupted him. "We
shall vote on this. Right now." Wang
Sau-leyan faced him angrily. "No! This is not right! Hou Tung-po
is not here. We cannot act like this!" "Right.7"
Li Yuan sniffed. "You have not understood me yet, have you,
cousin? My wives are dead, my palace blown out of the sky. And you
talk of forms, tradition . . ." He laughed scathingly. "If
you are so worried, let us meet form this way. Let us count cousin
Hou as opposed to what we do. Would that be fair, Wang
Sau-leyan? Would it be right?" Wang
bristled visibly. "And Chi Hsing?" Li
Yuan shook his head. "Chi Hsing has no say in this." "No
say?" Li
Yuan spoke angrily, each word clearly and separately enunciated. "It
is as I said. He has no say." Wang
Sau-leyan stood there facing him a moment longer, then turned away
sharply. "Do as you will, then. I'll have no part of this." "Your
hands are clean, eh, cousin?" It was Tsu Ma who taunted him. But
it did not matter now. It would be as Li Yuan said. "You
will do this?" Li Yuan asked, looking down at Chi Hsing. "I
have no choice?" "No,"
corrected Li Yuan. "We have no choice. For myself, as I
said, I would kill you now." Chi
Hsing hesitated, then bowed lower, placing his forehead to the ground
miserably. "Then I shall do as you ask." LI
YUAN STOOD on the balcony outside his dead wives' rooms, a thick
cloak draped about his shoulders. It was dark and chilly. Overhead a
thin, ragged cloud blew fitfully across the sky. Through screens of
leafy vine the light of the crescent moon cast a mottled silver over
everything. Kuei
Jen was sleeping. Tseng-li had been sent home to his brothers. Below
Li Yuan, in the palace grounds, a doubled guard patrolled silently.
Only he, it seemed, was restless. He turned, sighing, and looked back
into the empty, silent rooms, remembering. How
strange it was. Before, if he had been asked, he would have said that
it was not love he felt for them, more a kind of warm familiarity, a
feeling of physical comfort, and he might have smiled wistfully and
shaken his head, as if puzzled by the question. But now he realized
just how foolish he had been. How childish. Only now, through grief
and loss of them, did he finally understand just how much they had
meant to him. Love.
How clearly his father's words came back to him now. Love was the
thing that failed. Love ... a thing too insubstantial, too fragile to
hold and keep, and yet, in the end, there was nothing stronger,
nothing more real than love. He
shuddered, then stretched, feeling tired beyond words. In the greater
world huge changes were taking place even at that moment. Under Wu
Shih's direction, Chi Hsing was standing down and a Governor was
being appointed to run the Australian continent. Yet those changes,
great as they were, seemed as nothing compared to the changes in his
heart. There was no measuring such changes. They blotted out the
stars themselves, casting vast, dark shadows on the perceiving eye. Yes,
he thought, bowing his head. Death not Love is master of this
uiorld. As he
stood there, looking in at the empty rooms, small memories of them
returned to him. Against the emptiness he saw his second wife, Lai
Shi, turn and look across at him, laughing, that strange, flirtatious
movement of her mouth, special to her alone, making him smile. Beyond
her, the youngest, Fu Ti Chang, sat reading an old romance, her
jet-black hair like a fine veil over the pallor of her face. As she
turned to face him he caught his breath, finding the innocence of her
dark eyes suddenly quite beautiful. And if he turned, he could see
Mien Shan, there on the far side of the room, the great mirror behind
her, smiling as she cradled her son and gently sang to him. How much
he had liked that curious pursing of her lips when she sang. How much
he missed it now. The
memories faded, vanished. Empty rooms, he thought. That's
all I have now. Empty rooms. He
placed his hand against his neck, the warmth of his fingers strange
against the night-chilled flesh. He pressed, then gently tugged at
it, feeling the strength of muscle, the hardness of the bone beneath;
all of it so tenuous, so transient. All of it dust before the wind.
Perhaps, then, it was best to go as they had gone, in one brief and
sudden burst of pain. Pain, and then . . . nothingness. "Best.
. ." he said softly, letting his hand fall away, and gritting
his teeth against the sudden upsurge of feeling. Best? Who knew what
was best? And yet he was charged to know—or, at least, to seem
to know. It was what made his grief so different. So special. And yet
it was only grief, for all that, no different from the grief of
countless millions who had suffered since the dawn of Man. But
was grief all? Was there no more to it than this? Li Yuan drew
the cloak tighter about his shoulders, then offered the words
to the chill and silent air. "Must
it always be like this? Must the heart become a stone?"
He stood there for a long time after that, feeling a kind of disgust
for what he was. Then,
abruptly, he crossed the room and went through
to where Kuei Jen was sleeping and woke his nurse, telling her
to prepare the child to travel. /P> fei
yen MET HIM in the Great Room at Hei Shui. He had given her no notice
of his coming and she had had no time to ready herself. She had
thrown a pale blue gown about her and tied back her long, black hair,
but her face was unmade, her nails unpainted. It was years since he
had seen her look so natural. Hesitantly, her face showing deep
puzzlement, she crossed the room to him, then knelt at his feet, her
head bowed, awaiting his command. "YouVe
heard?" he asked her softly. She
gave the smallest nod, then was still. "I.
. ."he looked about him, conscious of the guards by the door,
the nurse behind him, holding Kuei Jen. Abruptly, he turned and
dismissed them. Then, bending down, he lifted her chin and made her
look at him. "I have to talk to you. I..." Her
eyes, always the most beautiful thing about her, robbed him of words.
For a moment he knelt there, close to her, conscious of her warm,
sweet smell, of her nakedness beneath the gown, and wanted only to
hold her; to close his eyes and hold on tight to her. She
moved back, away from him. "Why?" Her
eyes looked briefly at his hand where it yet hovered, awkward,
between their faces, then met his own again, their intensity
surprising him. He
drew his hand back, looking down. How explain what had made him come?
It was more than sudden impulse, yet even he knew how unreasonable it
seemed. This had ended years ago. And to come here now . . . "What
do you want, Li Yuan?" Her
voice was softer than before. He looked up at her, not knowing
what to expect and found her watching him strangely, her eyes
trying to fathom him. "I
thought. . ." she began, then fell silent. Her mouth had fallen
open slightly, its wet softness there before him, as in his dreams. "IVe
been thinking of you," he said. "Of us." He saw
the pain in her face and, for the first time, understood what she had
suffered; saw the emptiness that no number of casual lovers could
fill. Slowly, tenderly, he reached out and touched her cheek. "Don't,"
she said, but the slight pressure of her cheek against his fingers
gave the lie to the word. He
shivered. "They're dead." Again
there was a moment's pain in her face, awful to see. Then she nodded.
"Did you love them?" His
fingers grew still. "I did not think so. But I must have. It...
it hurts." She
bowed her head. There were tears in her eyes now. "Is that why
you are here? Because of them?" He
took a long, deep breath. "I do not know." For a
moment he thought of telling her of that moment earlier— out in
the dark, beneath the moon—when he had seen things clear, then
shook his head. "No,"
he said at last. "It isn't that. Or not just that. I... I missed
you." "You
missed me?" she said, a trace of her former bitterness
surfacing. She saw him wince and at once was contrite. "Li Yuan,
I. . ." She dropped her head, swallowed. "I am sorry. It is
hard. Harder than I can bear some days." He
gave a single nod. "I know." He
looked at her more carefully now and saw the faint crow's feet about
her eyes, the lines at mouth and neck and remembered that she was
eight years his elder. His dead brother's wife, and once his own. But
she was still beautiful. Still the most beautiful woman he had ever
seen. Again he wanted to kiss her and hold her, yet he felt
constrained. Death came between them, darkening their understanding
of how things were. He
stood, turning away from her. "I do not know what I want. I am
confused. I thought... I thought that if I came here it would
all come clear again. That maybe it would be as it was." For
the first time she laughed; a bitter, ugly sound. He turned, looking
at her, and saw how all softness had gone from her face. "Do
you mean to be so cruel, Li Yuan, or is it still some sickly
innocence that makes you so insensitive?" "I
didn't mean to ..." "You
never mean to. You just do." She
sat back, glaring at him, all humility gone from her now; more,
suddenly, the woman he had known and lived with. His equal. Ever his
equal. "Are you such a fool that you cannot see it?" He
shook his head, but already he was beginning to understand. "It
cannot be as it was," she said, getting up slowly and coming
across to where he stood. "There is more than death between us.
More than other wives, other husbands. Time has changed us, Li Yuan.
It has made you what you are, me what I am. Only the outward forms
remain—time-ravaged things that look like we once were."
She paused, looking up into his face. "We cannot go back, Li
Yuan. Not ever." He was
silent, uncertain. "Do
you still love me?" she asked suddenly. Her face was fierce,
uncompromising, but in her eyes he could see something else, deep
down, hidden maybe even from herself. A fragility. A need. And for
the first time he smiled; a tender, pitying smile. "I
have never stopped loving you." Her
whole face seemed to twitch and then reform, more ugly, more pained
than before, but somehow also more beautiful. She had not expected
this. Whatever she might have hoped for, his answer had surprised
her. She
looked down, then turned away, all fierceness gone from her suddenly.
Her chest rose and fell violently and her hands clutched at her waist
as if to hold in all that she was feeling. But when she turned back
there was anger in her face. "Then why? Why all of this if that
was true?" I
don't know, he thought, and for the first time knew it was
true. It could have been repaired. This, where they were now, was all
his fault. Oh, she had been
unfaithful, yes, but what was that? He had been hard on her—much
too hard. Was it her fault if she had proved less than perfect? Had
he loved only her perfection? "I
was young, Fei Yen. Maybe too young. I wronged you. I realize that
now." She
made a small noise, then shook her head hesitantly. "What are
you saying?" Her whole face was tensed against him, mistrustful
now. She was afraid of what he was saying; fearful of being led by
him and then discarded once again. These were old wounds, deep
wounds. Why open them again unless to heal them? "I
am tired," he said finally. "And hurt. But that is not why
I am here, Fei Yen. Nor do I wish to hurt you." He shook his
head, genuinely pained. "That is the last thing I want, believe
me." Her
voice was tiny now, tremulous. "So what then? What do you want?" He
looked at her; saw her again as he had once seen her, clearly, his
vision purged of all hatred and jealousy. "I want you back. I
want to try again." She
turned from him, hiding her face. "No, Yuan, that cannot be." "Why?"
He was astonished. Had he read her wrong? He had thought. . . "Fei
Yen? What is it?" She
half turned to look at him, then turned and ran from the room. But in
that momentary look he had seen. In some small way she was still in
love with him. He took three steps toward the far door, then stopped,
pain and confusion making his head whirl. But if she loves me ... For a
moment longer he stood there, undecided, then he turned and went back
out into the entrance hall. A guard came at his summons, then rushed
off to bring the nurse and Kuei Jen. While he waited, Li Yuan went to
the entrance arch and looked out down the steps toward the eastern
slopes, remembering how he had once gone hunting there, in the woods,
with his brother Han Ch'in. The
memory was ill—was like bile in his throat. He turned angrily
and yelled, bidding the nurse to hurry. Then, with unconcealed
bitterness, he pushed out through the doors and, ignoring the guards,
ran across the grass toward his skimmer. "Where
to, Chieh Hsial" his pilot asked, looking around at him,
then back at the nurse hurrying across the grass, Kuei Jen bundled in
her arms. Home,
he almost said, but even as he thought it he realized that there was
nowhere now he could really call home. "Fukien," he said,
finally. "Contact Tsu Ma. Tell him I have changed my mind. That
I would like to stay with him awhile."
EPILOGUE
AUTUMN 2210 After
Rain
At Heaven's border, the
autumn clouds are thin and driven from the west by a thousand winds. The world is beautiful at
dawn after rain, and the rains won't hurt the farmers. Border willows grow
kingfisher green, the hills grow red with mountain pears. A Tartar lament rises from
the tower. A single wild goose sails into the void. —Tu
Fu, After Rain, eighth century a.d.
IT
WAS LATE. Kim stood to one side of the landing pad, the tall figure
of Tuan Wen-ch'ang beside him, as the cruiser came in across the
ocean from the northwest, its lights sweeping the dark waters. In one
hand he held his pack—a lightweight holdall containing his
notebooks, a portable comset, and a change of silks. In the other he
clutched the envelope he had been given only twenty minutes back.
Inside it were details of his new posting. The
craft lifted and circled to the north, hovering there half a li
out while Security checked out its codes, the faint drone of its
engines filling the still night air. Then, like a bee moving from
flower to flower, it lifted up, over them, and settled on the pad
with a gentle hiss of hydraulics. Tuan
looked down at Kim and smiled, indicating that he should go first.
Kim returned his smile, pleased that Tuan had been posted with him,
and turned, making his way across as the hatch irised open, the ramp
unfolding onto the pad. North
America. That was where they were sending him this time. Back to the
East Coast. Moreover, they wanted him to apply himself to something
new—to genetics, the very field that Old Man Lever had tried so
long and hard to win him to. He smiled at the irony, able, after all
he'd been through, to see the funny side of that. More so
because of the news that had come through only an hour past
from Philadelphia. Halfway
up the ramp he stopped and turned, looking back, trying to fix this
final image of Sohm Abyss in his mind. He had grown here. More here,
perhaps, than anywhere else, for it was here that he had finally got
back in touch with himself. Here where he had made himself whole. Or
as whole as he could be without Jelka. The future now seemed far less
threatening than it had been only weeks ago. His planned life with
Jelka was no longer an unattainable vision but merely a promise
delayed. Tuan
put a hand on his shoulder. "What are you thinking, Kim?" "That
I'll miss this place." Tuan
gave a surprised laugh. "Really? After all that happened?" "Maybe
because it happened. But it's not just that. I felt in touch with
things here. Really in touch. Look at it, Tuan. You've the great
ocean below and the sky above. It's magnificent, don't you think? And
so open. So connected. Besides . . ." Tuan
raised an eyebrow, but Kim just smiled, letting it pass. "I
hear that our new boss is a good man." Kim
shrugged. "Curval's certainly the best in his field, if that's
what you mean. From all accounts he's revolutionized genetics
single-handedly these last twenty-five years. SimFic must have paid a
fortune to wean him from ImmVac." "As
much as for you?" Kim
laughed. "YouVe seen my file, then, Tuan Wen-ch'ang?" "No.
But I've heard the talk . . ." Kim
looked away thoughtfully, then looked back at Tuan, smiling.
"Whatever, it'll be interesting, neh?" "And
challenging . . ." Yes,
he thought, turning to go inside. Even so, he knew it was only a
filling of time, a distraction, until she returned. Until he could
see her blue eyes smiling back at him again. Jelka
stood at the window of the Governor's apartment, looking out. Beyond
the reinforced glass the surface of the moon was dark, the sun a pale
and tiny circle low in the sky, glimpsed through a thick
orange haze. To the east, along the shoreline of the great
ethane lake, the spires of the refineries reached up into the
darkness, their slender, needlelike forms lit by a thousand bright
arc lamps. Beyond them the sprawl of Cassini Base, a city of four
hundred and eighty thousand people, stretched to the foot of the ice
escarpment; a towering wall of crystalline nitrogen. Clathrate, she
had heard it called, and had noted the word in her diary. To tell
Kim, when she saw him again. She
turned, accepting the glass that was offered her, and smiled. It was
their last day on Saturn's largest moon. Tomorrow the Meridian
sailed for Mars. So, tonight—if "night" was a
term that made any sense in a place like this—the Governor had
thrown a special reception, inviting the leading citizens from each
of the nine colonies. They had been arriving here the last six days,
all manner of strange craft cluttering the big hangar to the south of
the town. Jelka
looked about her momentarily, taking it all in. They were a strange,
austere people out here, sparsely fleshed and taut-muscled beneath
the pressure suits they wore at all times. A tall, angular-looking
race whose movements were slow, considered. A product of the harsh
environment, she realized, and felt, once more, a kind of awe at it
all. Over two million people lived out here in the Saturn system. Two
million mouths that needed feeding. Two million pairs of lungs that
needed air. Two million bodies needing water, warmth, and protection
from the unforgiving elements. One
hundred and seventy-nine degrees below zero it was beside the great
ethane lake. An unthinkably bitter cold that brought with it no end
of technical problems for the men—and women—who worked
Saturn's moons, mining and manufacturing, or harvesting the rich soup
of complex hydrocarbons that lay within the great ethane lakes of
this, Titan, the largest of the colonies. She
moved through the packed crowd, smiling, offering a word here and
there, making her way across to the Governor, who stood with a small
group of Security officers on the far side of the great circular
room, beside the ancient orrery. She had met most of the people there
on her travels about the colonies. Only tiny Mimas, closest to
Saturn, had proved impossible to visit. Otherwise she had seen it
all. And recorded it—for Kim. "How
are you, Jelka? Have you enjoyed yourself?" She
stopped to answer the query, smiling, remembering the man from
lapetus Colony. "I'm
fine, Wulf Thorsson," she said, clasping his hand momentarily.
"And I have enjoyed myself greatly. I will be sad to go. But one
day I will come back here, maybe." The
big man smiled broadly, placing both his hands over hers, as if to
enclose them, or keep them warm. "With your husband, eh?" "Maybe,"
she said thoughtfully, then, with a brief nod, moved on. Yes, they
were good people out here. Reliable, trustworthy people. And so they
had to be. If you couldn't trust your fellow man out here you were
dead. Sooner or later. She
squeezed through between the last few people and came out beside the
Governor. Helmut Read was an old friend of her father's; a big man,
made from the same physical mold. The same mold, she realized, that
Klaus Ebert and his son—her onetime fiance—Hans Ebert had
been cast from. The thought disturbed her briefly, then it passed.
Like her father and Old Man Ebert, Read emanated an aura of
certainty, of ageless, infinite capacity. There was no problem too
great for him; no wrong that he could not somehow put right. So it
was with her father, she realized. Even so, sometimes such men were
wrong, however good their intentions. Read
turned and, seeing Jelka there, grinned broadly, welcoming her. "Come
through, my love. Come and talk to us!" he said, taking her
hands and drawing her close to hug her, then setting her there next
to him, her hand clasped tightly in his. He had
taken her under his wing from the moment she had entered Saturn's
system, three months back, and since then had gone to great trouble
to show her everything he could. She could picture clearly the pride
with which he had shown her the great hollowed shafts of the mining
operation on Tethys, the enthusiasm with which he had talked of the
expansion going on on tiny Phoebe, and of the plans to build a whole
new city on the far side of Titan, where Huygens Base now stood.
Things were happening out here, and far from being bored, she had
found it all quite fascinating. But then, she had always felt that
she was seeing it for two, and had tried to ask the questions Kim
might ask. And
sometimes, just sometimes, the sheer beauty of it touched her. As if,
in this rawness, she had a glimpse of that same austere beauty that
had once been Kalevala, the place from which her own people had come
two thousand years ago, the land of lakes and rocks . . . The
Governor turned to her, squeezing her hand gently. "I am sorry
you have to go tomorrow, Jelka," he said, looking at her sadly,
as if she were his daughter. "I cannot express how much I have
enjoyed having you here. Why, if I were twenty years younger . . ." "And
unmarried," added one of the officers, to general laughter. "And
unmarried," Read acknowledged, his smile broadening, "I
would have found a way to keep you here." "I
shall leave with a sad heart," she said quite genuinely. "I
had no idea what I would find out here, but I can see now why so many
stay here. It is a beautiful place. Perhaps the most beautiful in the
system." "Then
you do not mind the danger?" one of the officers asked, his
slightly stilted accent typical of the Colonies. "No,"
she answered, clear-eyed. "Indeed, that's part of its beauty,
neh? That sense of living on the edge of things. These suits . . ."
She tugged gently with her free hand at the strong but supple cloth
beneath the rigid neck and smiled. "IVe grown rather fond of
mine. Why, I think I'll continue wearing one when I get back to Chung
Kuo. Who knows, it might set a new fashion among the warm-worlders!" There
was delight at that, and laughter. Many times on her travels she had
heard how soft they thought the "warm-worlders" of Chung
Kuo; it being confided, at the same time, that they thought her
different from the others who came out on the big tour ships like the
Meridian. Totally different. And so
she was. Back there, close to the sun, she had felt cut off from her
fellows; a stranger among "friends," always the outsider.
But out here she felt strangely in her element and had found herself
drawn—instinctively drawn—to these big, slow, fiercely
independent people. She
smiled, looking about her at their finely sculpted faces. It took a
special kind of person to come and live out here, two billion li from
the sun; a special kind of mentality. The intense cold, the pressure,
the fact that everything—food, water, air, everything—had
to be manufactured: these
factors had forged a whole new race. Or remade the old. She wasn't
sure which. For a
moment she looked down, studying the ancient brass orrery nearby.
Four tiny planets circled the sun closely—Mercury, Venus, Chung
Kuo, and Mars. Beyond them, some way out, was Jupiter and then, the
same distance out again, was Saturn, where she was now. She
had come a long way these past fifteen months. Was ten times farther
from the sun than when she'd started. But her father had been wrong.
She had not forgotten Kim. Not at all. In fact, the farther out she
came, the more she thought of him; the more she tried to see things
through his eyes and think of them as he might think of them. The
films she took, the things she noted in her diary—all were for
him. And if it took six years before she could see him again,
nonetheless she would wait, holding herself prepared; saving herself
for him. For the time would come. The time would surely come. Three
days ago his "letter" had arrived. At first she had set it
aside, confused by the official-looking nature of the package, by the
SimFic logo on the reverse. It was only some fifteen hours later,
after a long and tiring tour of the Great Escarpment, that she
returned and finally opened it. It
was the first time she had heard from him since that day when she had
been hustled aboard the Meridian at Nanking spaceport. But not, it
seemed, the first time he had written. From the things he said, it
was clear he had written often to her. The thought of that angered
her, even now. The thought that her father had been meddling again,
keeping things from her, trying to run her life the way he wanted
it and not as she would have it. But
now she knew. What her father had said, the last time she had spoken
to him, had been a lie. Kim had not forgotten her. Far from it. And
if her father thought she would change her mind, then he simply did
not understand her. Not the way Kim understood her, anyway. She
looked up again, smiling at the thought. Yes, he alone, perhaps,
understood her—perfectly, instinctively—and trusted her,
the way these people out here trusted each other. In the face of
everything. Six
years they would have to wait. Six years until she came of age. But
she would wait. And in the meantime she would make her slow
way back to him. Inward, ever inward toward the great sun of
her being. Knowing
he would be waiting. Knowing he would be there, his dark eyes
watching for her. MORE
than A HUNDRED sedans filled the lawn before the Lever Mansion, their
pole-men crouched quietly, waiting, while servants from the house
went among them, offering bowls of noodles and tiny cups of rice
wine. Inside
the house, the invited guests had gathered in the great library,
talking in a hushed, slightly shocked tone. Only the day before, in
the selfsame room, Old Man Lever had addressed them at a fund-raising
meeting, his robust, no-nonsense manner inspiring many of them to
believe he would be there a century from then, still urging them on.
But now he was dead, and no end of rhetoric would bring him back. Not
in this cycle of existence. He lay
now in a great casket at one end of the room, his gray hair combed
neatly back, his massive chest unmoving beneath the pure white silks.
For the first time in many years he seemed at peace, no longer
striving for something that forever evaded him. No longer angry. The
guests had been arriving for the last four hours to pay their
respects, coming from every comer of the great City. Last to arrive,
tired by his journey from the clinic, was Lever's son, Michael. For
Michael, too, the news had come as a great shock. Like the rest, he
had thought the Old Man would live forever. For an hour or two he had
toyed with the idea of boycotting the funeral, of playing the part of
the spurned son to the bitter end, but he had not felt right about
that. No, for the truth was he still loved his father. The news of
the old man's death had shaken him to the core. He had stood there,
astonished; then later, alone with Mary, he had broken down, crying
like a child while she held him. Now, solemn and dignified, he walked
beside her through the door to his dead father's house, his
biopros-thetics giving him an awkward, stilted gait. "Steward
Dann," he said, greeting his father's "Number One" in
the great entrance hall. "I am most sorry that we have to
meet again like this." The
Steward bowed his head low, clearly moved that Michael had come. "And
I, Master Michael. I had hoped to welcome you back in happier
circumstances." Michael
smiled tightly, then walked on, Mary silent at his side, as strong
and supportive as ever. At the
entrance to the library he halted, turning to look at her, suddenly
fearful. In answer she reached out, squeezing his arm gently,
encouraging him to face what lay ahead. He
took a long, deep breath, then went on, the servants pushing the
great doors open before him. Seeing him, the crowd within grew
silent, all heads turning to watch as Michael crossed the room,
making for his father's casket. Looking
down at the old man, Michael felt a wash of pain and longing so
fierce, so intense, that it threatened to sweep him away. Then, with
the faintest shudder, he bowed his head low and reached out to touch
and briefly hold his father's hand. So
cold it was. So cold and hard. He
looked up, seeking Mary's eyes, for a brief moment a young boy again,
fearful and bewildered; then, taking another long shuddering breath,
he looked about him, smiling his thanks, his gratitude to all those
friends of his father who had come to see him in this, his final
moment on the Earth. "Thank
you," he said brokenly. "Thank you all. My father would
have been touched. And I... I am greatly moved by your presence. He
was a great man, my father. A great, great man." Many
looked down, moved by his tiny speech, but some stared at him openly,
as if wondering what his game was; why he came now, the obedient son,
when before he had denied his filial duty. As he
backed away from the casket, a faint murmur rose from all sides.
Already that morning a rumor had gone about that Wu Shih would place
a Steward in charge of the Company until a buyer could be found for
ImmVac, either as a whole, or broken down into its composite parts.
If the latter, many there hoped to benefit from Old Man Lever's
death. At the
doorway, Michael looked back briefly, then walked on, willing
himself forward, Mary half running to catch up with him. Out on the
lawn he stopped, among the pole-men and runners who had stood and
bowed before one of the Masters. Mary caught up with him there and
held him to her tightly while he sobbed. Finally,
he pushed back, away from her. "All right," he said softly.
"We're done here. Let's go." "Shih
Lever?" They
turned. It was Ainsworth, Old Man Lever's lawyer. Michael
looked down. "What is it? Is there something I have to sign?" Ainsworth
shook his head, then held something out to Michael. Michael took it
and studied it a moment. It was the original of the Disinheritance
Statement, the final page signed with an angry flourish by his
father. "I
have one," Michael answered coldly, drawing himself up straight
and holding out the document for Ainsworth to take back, something of
his father in him at that moment. "No.
You misunderstand. He signed it, but he never registered it. He
wouldn't let me. Which means that it's all yours, Michael. ImmVac and
all the rest. Yours." Michael
Lever narrowed his eyes a moment, eyeing the man as if he saw him for
what he was. Then, throwing the paper down, he turned and stomped
away, Mary hurrying to keep up with him as he made his way between
the rows of sedans and out toward the transit. A
U T H O R ‘ S NOTE T HE TRANSCRIPTION of standard Mandarin into European alphabetical form was first achieved in the seventeenth century by the Italian Matteo Ricci, who founded and ran the first Jesuit Mission in China from 1583 until his death in 1610. Since then, several dozen attempts have been made to reduce the original Chinese sounds, represented by some tens of thousands of separate pictograms, into readily understandable phonetics for Western use. For a long time, however, three systems dominated—those used by the three major Western powers vying for influence in the corrupt and crumbling Chinese Empire of the nineteenth century: Great Britain, France, and Germany. These systems were the Wade-Giles (Great Britain and America—sometimes known as the Wade system), the Ecole Frangaise de PExtreme Orient (France), and the Lessing (Germany). Since
1958, however, thd Chinese themselves have sought to create one
single phonetic form, based on the German system, which they termed
the hanyu pinyin fang'an ("Scheme for a Chinese Phonetic
Alphabet"), known more commonly as ^pinyin; and in all
foreign-language books published in China since January i, 1979,
pinyin has been used, as well as being taught now in schools
along with the standard Chinese characters. For this work, however, I
have chosen to use the older and, to my mind, far more elegant
transcription system, the Wade-Giles (in modified form). For those
now accustomed to the harder forms of pinyin, the following
(courtesy of Edgar Snow's The Other Side of the River;
Gollancz, 1961) may serve as a rough guide to pronunciation: 'Chi
is pronounced as "Gee," but Ch'i sounds like "Chee."
Ch'in is exactly our "chin." Chu
is roughly like "Jew," as in Chu Teh (Jew Duhr),
but Ch'u equals "chew." Tsung
is "dzung"; ts'ung with the "ts" as in
"Patsy." Tai
is our word sound "die"; T'ai—"tie." Pai
is "buy" and P'ai is "pie." Kung
is like "Gung" (a Din); K'ung with the "k"
as in "kind." J
is the equivalent of r but slur it, as rrrun. H
before an s, as in hsi, is the equivalent of an aspirate but is often
dropped, as in Sian for Hsian. Vowels
in Chinese are generally short or medium, not long and flat. Thus
Tang sounds like "dong," never like our "tang."
T'ang is "tong." a
as in father ih—her
e—run
o—look eh—hen
ou-—go i—see
u—soon The
effect of using the Wade-Giles system is, I hope, to render the
softer, more poetic side of the original Mandarin, ill-served, I
feel, by modem pinyin. This
usage, incidentally, accords with many of the major reference sources
available in the West: the (planned) 16 volumes of Denis Twichett and
Michael Loewe's The Cambridge History of China, Joseph
Needham's mammoth multivolumed Science and Civilization in China,
John Fairbank and Edwin Reischauer's China, Tradition &
Transformation, Charles Mucker's China's Imperial Past,
Jacques Gernet's A History of Chinese Civilisation, C. P.
Fitzgerald's China: A Short Cultural History, Laurence Sickman and
Alexander Soper's The Art and Architecture of China,
William Hinton's classic social studies, Fanshen and Shenfan, and
Derk Bodde's Essays on Chinese Civilization. The
Luoshu diagram, mentioned in the Prologue, is a three by three number
square
492 357 816 and
was supposedly seen on the shell of a turtle emerging from the Luo
River some two thousand years before Christ. As can be seen, all the
numbers in any one row, column, or diagonal add up to fifteen. During
the T'ang dynasty its "magical" properties were exported to
the Muslim world, where they were used—as here—as a charm
for easing childbirth. Wu
Shih's mention (in Chapter One) of "the three brothers of the
Peach Garden" is a reference to Lo Kuan Chung's classic Chinese
novel San Kuo Yan Yi, or The Romance of the Three Kingdoms, in
which the three great heroes, Liu Pei, Chang Fei, and Kuan Yu, swear
brotherhood. The
translation of Chu Yuan's T'ien Wen, or "Heavenly
Questions," is by David Hawkes from The Songs of the South:
An Anthology of Ancient Chinese Poems, published by
Penguin Books, London, 1985. The
quotation from Jukka Tolonen is from a song on the album Lambertland
by the Finnish band Tasavallan Presidentti, and the lyrics from
the song "Last Quarters" are reprinted with the kind
permission of Sonet Records. The
passage quoted from Book One [V] of Lao Tzu's Too Te Ching is
from the D. C. Lau translation, published by Penguin Books, London,
1963, and used with their kind permission. The
quotation from Rainer Maria Rilke's Duino Elegies is from the Hogarth
Press fourth edition of 1968, translated by J. B. Leishman and
Stephen Spender. Thanks to the estate of Rilke, St. John's College,
Oxford, for permission. Those wishing a translation of the four lines
used in Chapter Nineteen might refer back to the epigram used in Part
Three of The Middle Kingdom. The
translation of Tu Fu's "After Rain" is by Sam Hamill from
his wonderful anthology of Tu Fu's verse, Facing the Snow: Visions
of Tu Fu,
published by White Pine Press, Fredonia, New York, and is reprinted
here with their kind permission. Once
again, I find 1 have quoted extensively from Samuel B. Griffith's
translation of Sun Tzu's The Art of War, published by Oxford
University Press, 1963. I reprint the four passages used herein with
their kind permission and only hope I have directed a few readers to
this most excellent work. Finally,
for those of you unfamiliar with the pidgin Cornish used in Part Two
of the book, here are translations of the relevant passages. First,
the utterances of the Clay-men: Avodya! Get back! A'wartha! Up above! An
chy. Kerdhes! Tenna dhe an chy! The house. Go! Take the house! Ena.
. . . Ena ha ena! There. ... There and there! And Ben's
whisperings: Of
ancow. I am death. Gwelaf why gans ow onen
lagas. I see you with my one eye. Ow golow lagas dewana
why! My bright eye pierces you! Ou; enawy a'vyn
podretha agas eskem. . . My light will rot your bones. Fyough, byghan gwas!
Fyough! Flee, little men! Flee! Furthermore,
when the hologram of the Ox-faced angel says Dyesk' yrma!
("Come!"), there is a faint echo of The Revelation to
John (6:1). February 1992 A
Glossary of Mandarin Tenns Most
of the Mandarin terms used in the text are explained in context.
However, as a few are used more naturally, I've considered it best to
provide a brief explanation. ai
ya!—common exclamation of surprise or dismay. ch'a—tea.
It might be noted that ch'ashu, the Chinese art of tea, is an ancient
forebear of the Japanese tea ceremony chanoyu. chang
shan—literally "long dress," which fastens to the
right. Worn by both sexes. The women's version is a fitted,
calf-length dress similar to the chi poo. A South China
fashion, also known as a cheung sam. chan
shih—a fighter. Ch'eng
Ou Chou—City Europe. ch'i—a
Chinese foot; approximately 14.4 inches. ch'i
chu—spider. chieh
hsia—term meaning "Your Majesty," derived from
the expression "below the steps." It was the formal way of
addressing the Emperor, through his Ministers, who stood "below
the steps." chi
pao—literally "banner gown"; a one-piece gown of
Manchu origin, usually sleeveless, worn by women. Chou—"state";
here the name for a card game based on the politics of the state of
Chung Kuo. 555 chung—a
lidded serving bowl for ch'a. ch'un
tzu—an ancient Chinest term from the Warring States period,
describing a certain class of noblemen, controlled by a code of
chivalry and morality known as the li, or rites. Here the term is
roughly, and sometimes ironically, translated as "gentlemen."
The ch'un tzu is as much an ideal state of behavior—as
specified by Confucius in the Analects—as an actual
class in Chung Kuo, though a degree of financial independence and a
high standard of education are assumed prerequisites. erhu—two-stringed
bow with snakeskin-covered sound box. fen—unit of money (a
cent); one hundred fen make up a yuan. han—term
used by the Chinese to describe their own race, the "black-haired
people," dating back to the Han Dynasty (210 b.c.—A.D.
220). It is estimated that some ninety-four percent of modern China's
population are Han racially. hei—literally
"black"; the Chinese pictogram for this represents a man
wearing war paint and tattoos. Here it refers to the genetically
manufactured (GenSyn) half-men used as riot police to quell uprisings
in the lower levels. hsiao
jen—"little man/men." In the Analects, Book XIV,
Confucius writes: "The gentleman gets through to what is up
above; the small man gets through to what is down below." This
distinction between "gentlemen" (ch'un tzu) and
"little men" (hsiao jen), false even in Con-fuciys's
time, is no less a matter of social perspective in Chung Kuo. hsien—historically
an administrative district of variable size. Here the term is used to
denote a very specific administrative area: one of ten stacks—each
stack composed of thirty decks. Each deck is a hexagonal living unit
often levels, two li, or approximately one kilometer in diameter. A
stack can be imagined as one honeycomb in the great hive of the City. Hsien
L'ing—"Chief Magistrate." In Chung Kuo, these
officials are the T'ang's representatives and law enforcers for the
individual Hsien, or Administrative Districts. In times of peace,
each Hsien also elects a representative to the House at Weimar. Hung
Mao—literally "redheads," the name the Chinese
gave to the Dutch (and later English) seafarers who attempted to
trade with China in the seventeenth century. Because of the piratical
nature of their endeavors (which often meant plundering Chinese
shipping and ports) the name has connotations of piracy. Hung
Mun—the Secret Societies or, more specifically, the Triads. hun
tun—"the Chou believed that Heaven and Earth were once
inextricably mixed together in a state of undifferentiated chaos,
like a chicken's egg. Hun Tun they called that state" (from
"Chen Yen," Chapter Six of The White Mountain). It
is also the name of a meal of tiny saclike dumplings. jou
tung wu—literally "meat animal." Kan
pei!—"good health" or "cheers"; a
drinking toast. Ko
Ming—"revolutionary." The T'ien Ming is
the Mandate of Heaven, supposedly handed down from Shang Ti, the
Supreme Ancestor, to his earthly counterpart, the Emperor (Huang Ti).
This Mandate could be enjoyed only so long as the Emperor was worthy
of it, and rebellion against a tyrant—who broke the Mandate
through his lack of justice, benevolence, and sincerity—was
deemed not criminal but a rightful expression of Heaven's anger. k'ou
t'ou—the fifth stage of respect, according to the "Book
of Ceremonies," involves kneeling and striking the head against
the floor. This ritual has become more commonly known in the West as
kowtow. Kuan
hua—Mandarin, the language spoken in mainland Clyna. Also
known as Kuo-yu and Pad hua. Kuan
Yin—the goddess of mercy; originally the Buddhist male
bodhisattva, Avalokitsevara (translated into Han as "He who
listens to the sounds of the world," or "Kuan Yin").
The Han mistook the saint's well-developed breasts for a woman's and,
since the ninth century, have worshiped Kuan Yin as such. Effigies of
Kuan Yin usually show her as the Eastern Madonna, cradling a child in
her arms. She is also sometimes seen as the wife of Kuan Kung, the
Chinese God ofWar. li—a
Chinese "mile," approximating to half a kilometer or one
third of
a mile. Until 1949, when metric measures were adopted in China, the U
could vary from place to place. min—literally
"the people"; used (as here, by the Minor Families) in a
pejorative sense (i.e., as an equivalent to "plebeian"). Ming—the
Dynasty that ruled China from 1368101644. Literally, the name means
"Bright" or "Clear" or "Brilliant." It
carries connotations of cleansing. niao—literally
"bird"; but here, as often, it is used euphemistically, as
a term for the penis, often as an expletive. nu
er—daughter. nu
shih—an unmarried woman; a term equating to "Miss." pai
nan jen—literally "white man." pau—a
simple long garment worn by men. Ping
Tiao—leveling. To bring down or make flat. p'i
p'a—a four-stringed lute used in traditional Chinese music. san
kuei chiu k'ou—the eighth and final stage of respect, according
to the "Book of Ceremonies," involves kneeling three times,
each time striking the forehead three times against the floor. This
most elaborate form of ritual was reserved for Heaven and its son,
the Emperor. shan
shui—the literal meaning is "mountains and water,"
but the term is normally associated with a style of landscape
painting that depicts rugged mountain scenery with river valleys in
the foreground. It is a highly popular form, first established in the
T'ang Dynasty, back in the seventh to ninth centuries A.D. shao
lin—specially trained assassins; named after the monks of the
shoo lin monastery. shih—"Master."
Here used as a term of respect somewhat equivalent to our use of
"Mister." The term was originally used for the lowest level
of civil servants, to distinguish them socially from the
run-of-the-mill "misters" (hsian sheng) below them
and the gentlemen (ch'un tzu) above. siangchi—Chinese
chess. tai—"pockets";
here used to denote Representatives bought by (and thus "in the
pocket of") various power groupings (originally the Seven). t'ai
chi—the Original, or One, from which the duality of all things
(yin and yang) developed, according to Chinese
cosmology. We generally associate the t'ai chi with the Taoist
symbol, that swirling circle of dark and light supposedly
representing an egg (perhaps the Hun Tun), the yolk and the white
differentiated. T'ai
Shan—the great sacred mountain of China, where emperors have
traditionally made sacrifices to Heaven. T'ai Shan, in Shantung
province, is the highest peak in China. "As safe as T'ai Shan"
is a popular saying, denoting the ultimate in solidity and certainty. Ta
Ts'in—the Chinese name for the Roman Empire. They also knew
Rome as Li Chien and as "the Land West of the Sea."
The Romans themselves they termed the "Big Ts'in"—the
Ts'in being the name the Chinese gave themselves during the Ts'in
Dynasty (a.d. 265-316). T'ing
Wei—the Superintendency of Trials. See Book Three (The White
Mountain), Part Two, for an instance of how this department of
government functions. ti
tsu—a bamboo flute, used both as a solo instrument and as part
of an ensemble. tong—a
gang. In China and Europe, these are usually smaller and thus
subsidiary to the Triads, but in North America the term has generally
taken the place of "Triad." ts'un—a
Chinese "inch" of approximately 1.44 Western inches. Ten
ts'un form one ch'i. wan
wu—literally "the ten thousand things"; used
generally to include everything in creation, or, as the Chinese say,
"all things in Heaven and Earth." wei
chi—"the surrounding game," known more commonly in
the West by its Japanese name of "Go." It is said that the
game was invented by
the legendary Chinese Emperor Yao in the year 2350 B.C. to train the
mind of his son, Tan Chu, and teach him to think like an Emperor. wen
ming—a term used to denote Civilization, or written culture. wuwei—nonaction;
an old Taoist concept. It means keeping harmony with the flow of
things—doing nothing to break the flow. yamen—the
official building in a Chinese community. yang—the
"male principle" of Chinese cosmology, which, with its
complementary opposite, the female yin, forms the t'ai chi,
derived from the Primeval One. From the union of yin and
yang arise the "five elements" (water, fire, earth,
metal, wood) from which the "ten thousand things" (the wan
wu) are generated. Yang signifies Heaven and the South, the Sun
and Warmth, Light, Vigor, Maleness, Penetration, odd numbers, and the
Dragon. Mountains are yang. yin—the
"female principle" of Chinese cosmology (see yang). Yin
signifies Earth and the North, the Moon and Cold, Darkness,
Quiescence, Femaleness, Absorption, even numbers, and the Tiger. The
yin lies in the shadow of the mountain. yu—literally
"fish" but because of its phonetic equivalence to the word
for "abundance," the fish symbolizes wealth. Yet there is
also a saying that when the fish swim upriver it is a portent of
social unrest and rebellion. yuan—the
basic currency of Chung Kuo (and modern-day China). Colloquially
(though not here) it can also be termed kivai—"piece"
or "lump." One hundred fen (or cents) make up one
yuan. yueh
ch'in—a Chinese dulcimer; one of the principal instruments of
the Chinese orchestra. Ywe
Lung—-literally, the "Moon Dragon," the wheel of
seven dragons that is the symbol of the ruling Seven throughout Chung
Kuo: "At its center the snouts of the regal beasts met, forming
a roselike hub, huge rubies burning fiercely in each eye. Their
lithe, powerful bodies curved outward like the spokes of a giant
wheel while at the edge their tails were intertwined to form the rim"
(from "The Moon Dragon," Chapter Four of The Middle
Kingdom). In
Times to Come . . . in
beneath the tree of heaven, the fifth volume of the Chung Kuo saga,
the pace of events quickens as the final years of the great
Earth-spanning Empire of the Seven draw close. The
book opens with the courtroom drama of the GenSyn inheritance case—a
case that takes the strangest of turns—after which, the action
moves out to Mars, where, at a critical turning point in the Colony's
history, Li Yuan's principle enemy, DeVore, attempts to kidnap
Marshal Tolonen's daughter and make the red planet independent of the
rule of the Seven. Circumstances seem in his favor, yet the actions
of a lost race and one redeemed man—the traitor, Hans
Ebert—result in unexpected developments, developments that
strongly foreshadow events back on Chung Kuo. For
Kao Chen, disillusioned with his role as Major in Li Yuan's Security
forces, these are trying times. Cut off from his wife by her mental
illness and forced to serve a system he no longer believes in, Chen
finds he must fashion a new life for himself... or go under. Yet he
is not entirely alone. By chance he comes upon a young girl, Hannah,
who, awakened to the ugliness and brutal unfairness of her world,
wants to become its voice, its very conscience in the troubled years
to come. In
North America, Michael Lever and his wife Emily Ascher find
themselves the inheritors of a corrupt and decadent financial empire. Encouraged
by Emily, Michael presses for change, trying to create a more humane
system, but in doing so he finds himself once more lined up against
the entrenched forces of reaction—the Old Men he thought had
died out with his father. At
Weimar, Lever's friend and ally, Kennedy, learns the bitter lesson
that attaining power is sometimes far easier than exercising it.
Frustrated by delays and compromises, he decides to take matters into
his own hands and force the pace of change, even though to do so will
bring him into direct conflict with the T'ang of North America, Wu
Shih. And all the while the situation in North America is
deteriorating. One single spark could set the great City alight, a
spark that will eventually come from a wholly unlooked-for source. For
Ben Shepherd, the great artist of Chung Kuo, these are the years of
his maturity. His first great work, The Familiar, is finally
delivered to the world to great critical and popular success. But all
is not well for Ben. His sister, Meg, has left him, and his
monomaniacal drive to experience everything—and to record it
for his art—leads him into further danger as he makes an
expedition into the darkness of the Clay, that unlit wasteland
beneath the City's floor. Since
the death of his wives, Li Yuan has become a recluse, shutting
himself off even from his closest friends and ruling City Europe
through his chancellor, Nan Ho. However, when his cousin, Wang
Sau-leyan, T'ang of Africa, threatens him directly, he is forced to
face events once more. Standing beneath the tree of heaven, at the
graveside of his father and beloved elder brother, Li Yuan must
decide the fate of his world. Should he try to make peace once more?
Or should he fight a war, a war that is certain to destroy the very
system of City and Seven that he has striven so long to preserve? In
Beneath the Tree of Heaven the great world of Chung Kuo is
brought to the edge of chaos. In fire and ice a new age is about to
be born. . . . |
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