"Kress, Nancy - And No Such Things Grow Here" - читать интересную книгу автора (Kress Nancy)
"And No Such Things Grow Here" by Nancy Kress
| And No Such Things Grow Here : Nancy Kress |
|
Here life has death for neighbor,
And far from eye or ear
Wan waves and wet winds labor,
Weak ships and spirits steer;
They drive adrift, and wither
They wot not who make thither;
But no such winds blow hither,
And no such things grow here.
Algernon Charles Swinburne,
"The Garden of Proserpine"
"See, I have a problem," Perri said.
Dee Stavros held the phone away from her ear and yawned hugely.
What the hell time was it, anyway? The clock had stopped in the
night: another power outage. Her one window was still dark. The
air was thick and hot.
"Dee, are you there?"
"Im here," Dee said to her sister. "So youve got a problem.
What else is new?"
"This is different."
"Theyre all different." Only they werent, really. Deadbeat boyfriends,
a violent ex-husband, cars "stolen," a last-minute abortion, bad
checks for overdue rent . . . Perris messy life changed only
in the details. Dee yawned again.
Perri said, "Ive been arrested for GMFA," and Dee woke fully
and sat up on the edge of the bed.
GMFA. Genetic Modification Felony Actions. The newest crime-fighting
tool, newest draconian set of laws, newest felonies to catch the
attention of a blood-crazy public who needed a scapegoat for .
. . everything. But Perri? Feckless, bumbling, dumb Perri? Not possible.
Professional training took over. Dee said levelly, "Where are
you now?"
"Rikers Island," Perri said, and at the relief in her voiceItll be all right, Dee will clean up after me againDee had to struggle to hold her anger in check.
"Do you have a lawyer?"
"No. I thought youd take care of that."
Of course. And now that she was listening, Dee heard behind Perri
all the muted miserable cacophony of Rikers Island, that chaotic
hellhole where alleged perps for the larger hellhole of Manhattan
were all taken, processed, and mishandled. But Perri didnt live
in Manhattan. Nobody who could avoid it lived in Manhattan. The
last time Dee had heard from her sister, Perri had been heading
for the beaches of North Carolina.
For once, Perri anticipated her. "I think they took me to Rikers
because it was an offshore offense. On a boat. A ship, really.
. . . Get away! Im not done, you bitch!"
Dee said rapidly, "Relinquish the phone, Perri, before you get
hurt. You had your two minutes. Ill be there as soon as I can."
"Oh, Dee, Im" The phone went dead.
Dee stood holding it uselessly. Perri was what? Sorry? Scared?
Innocent? But Perri was always those things in her own mind. Maybe
Dee should just leave her there. Get out of Perris life once
and for all. Teach Perri a lesson. Just leave her there to fend
for herself for once. . . .
But Dee was all too familiar with Rikers. Shed retired from the
force less than a year ago. She started to dress.
"Why me?" Eliot Kramer said when he appeared at her fourth-floor,
one-room apartment door just after dawn. Grimy sunshine glared
through Dees big south window, the only nice thing about her
room, other than its being on the far edge of Queens rather than
the near edge. Many people were afraid of sunshine indoors. Ultraviolet,
skin cancerseven though theyd been told that glass filtered
out the danger. Most people never listened to what they were told.
"Why you? Because youre the only decent lawyer I know."
"Twenty years with NYPD and you know one decent lawyer? Come on, Dee."
"Decent in both senses, Eliot. Usually the moral ones are incompetent
and the competent ones have been bought."
He shook his head. "Boy, Im glad I dont have your outlook on
life."
"You will. Youre just not old enough yet."
"And how old is this sister of yours?" Eliot asked as they hurried
down the stairs. "Whats her name again?"
"Perri Stavros. Shes twenty-seven. My kid sisterI raised her
after our parents died in a train wreck."
"And what exactly happened?"
"Havent any idea," Dee said. "And after she tells us, we still
might not know."
"Wonderful," Eliot said unhappily.
They emerged into the street, into the pale green light under
the thick trees. Young trees, saplings, twigs . . . this section
of Queens had only been planting for six years, since the Crisis,
and there were none of the large trees that richer neighborhoods
had immediately imported from God-knew-where. Trees grew up through
holes jackhammered into the aging sidewalk, up beside crumbling
stoops, up from buckets until they were big enough to transplant.
A whole row struggled to thrive in the street itself, which had
been narrowed to one lane now that cars were so unaffordable.
Fast-growing trees, poplars and aspens and cottonwoods, although
all trees (and everything else green) grew rapidly now. Whenever
possible, trees with broad leaves for the maximum amount of photosynthesis,
maximum amount of carbon dioxide scrubbed from the thick and overheated
air.
"Not too bad this morning," Eliot said. "Pretty breathable."
"Not if we dont get rain," Dee said. Enough water, always, was
the concern. Will it rain today? Dont you think its clouding
up? Might it rain tomorrow? Water meant biomass growth, giving
mankind a chance of getting back into control the atmospheric
O2/CO2 loop so dangerously rising toward 1 percent of CO2, the
upper limit of breathability.
"Itll rain," Eliot said. "Put on your mask, were almost at the
subway. One more questiondo you at least know what class of contraband
your sister was caught with?"
"No," Dee said. "Its all felony, isnt it?"
"Theres felonies and theres felonies," Eliot said, and put on
his mask.
Perri had been caught with class-two contraband, which meant five
to ten.
"But there are extenuating circumstances," Perri said, looking
pleadingly at Eliot, who merely nodded, dazed.
Dee was used to Perris effect on men. Even in the smelly, hot
(God, it was hot, and only early June), windowless interrogation
room, and even dirty and smelly herself, Perris beauty blazed.
The perfect body, the long long legs, the thick honey-colored
hair and full lips. But it was the eyes that always did it. Blue-green,
larger than any other human eyes Dee had ever seen, fringed with
long dark lashes. Perris eyes sparkled, never the same two seconds
in a row, unless you counted their unchanging sweetness of expression.
How did Perri keep that sweet expression, with the life shed
led? Dee didnt know, hadnt ever known.
Eliot said, his tone not quite professional, "Why dont you just
tell me the entire story from the beginning, Miss Stavros."
"Perri, please." She put her hand on his arm. "You will help me,
wont you, Eliot?" The gesture was unstudied, genuine. It finished
Eliot.
"Everythings going to be all right, Perri," he said, and Dee
snorted. No, it was not. Not this time. This time, Perri may have
dug herself under too deep for Deeor Eliotto pull her out. No,
please God, no. Dee knew about the kind of prisons that genemod offenders were
sent to, and what happened to them there. In the current public
climate, GMFA felons were the new pedophiles.
Perri said, "Well, it started when I went down to North Carolina.
To the beaches. I heard that sometimes holo companies recruited
actresses from there? It turned out not to be true, but by that
time Id met Carl and well, you know." She lowered her amazing
eyes, but not before Dee saw the flicker of pain.
"Go on," Eliot said. "Whats Carls last name?"
"He said Hansen. But it might not be. Anyway, I got pregnant."
Dee exploded, "How"
"Dont yell at me, Dee. I know it was my fault. The implant ran
out and I forgot to go get another one. And then Carl disappeared,
and I didnt have the money for an abortion, so I started sort
of asking around about a cheap one."
Suddenly Dee noticed how pale Perri was. It wasnt just the lack
of make-up. Lips nearly the same color as her skin, dark smudges
under her eyes . . . "You fool! Are you bleeding?"
"Oh, no," Perri said. "Everything went fine, Dee, and anyway Im
strong as an ox. You know that."
Eliot said, "Who performed the operation, Perri?"
"Well, thats just it. I know him only as Mike. This girl I
know said he was safe, hed done it for her friend, and he didnt
charge anything at all. He did it out of idealism." Her lips curved
in such a tender smile that Dee was instantly suspicious.
"Was this Mike an actual licensed doctor?"
"He didnt do the operation. My girlfriend introduced us at this
bar on the beach, and Mike took me on a powerboat out to where
the big ship was with the doctor aboard."
And Perri had gone with him. Just like that. Un-fucking-believable.
Eliot said, "Names, Perri. The girlfriend, the doctor, anyone
on the ship, the name of the ship itself."
"I dont know, except for my girlfriend. Betsy Jefferson."
"Do you think thats her real name?"
"Probably not," Perri said. "The beach is the kind of place you
get to be somebody else if you want to, you know?"
"I know," Dee said grimly. "Perri, do you know how much crime and
smuggling go through Hilton Head?"
"I do now."
Eliot said patiently, "Go on with your story, Perri. Our time
isnt unlimited, unfortunately."
"The doctor did the abortion. When I came to, I rested a while.
Everyone was kind to me. Then Mike said he couldnt take me back,
the ship had to leave. But he would send me in a little remote
boat. Thats a"
"We know what it is," Dee said harshly. "Smugglers use them all
the time. Theyre computer-guided to shore from out at sea, so
if the feds are there to intercept the stuff, at least they dont
get the perps, too. Did the damn thing dump you in the ocean?"
"Oh, no. It brought me right to a public dock in . . . Long Island?
I guess so. The ship must have sailed a long way while I was knocked
out. It was daylight. Mike said the remote boats arent illegal.
I would have been all right, except . . ."
"Except what?" Eliot said gently.
Perri didnt answer for a moment. When she spoke, her voice was
low. "The ship was full of plants. Flowers, little trees, all
sorts of stuff growing on the deck in the sunshine. Beautiful.
I . . . I wanted something to remember Mike by. You dont know
how good he was to me, Dee, how kind. I felt . . . anyway. I picked
a flower when nobody was looking and put it under my shirt. I
was wearing this loose mans shirt because since I got pregnant,
nothing of mine fit right. Nobody saw me take the flower."
"One flower?" Dee said. "Thats all?"
"The flower wasnt big. It had beautiful yellow petals that were
the same color as Mikes hair. Thats why I took it. Dont look
like that, Dee! A cop saw the remote boat land and came over to
the dock because even though theyre so tiny I guess theyre pretty
expensive and he was checking it out. And I staggered a little
getting out of the boat because it hadnt even been a day yet
since the operation. I was feeling a little woozy. It was so hot,
and it was a bad air day. The flower fell out from under my shirt.
Below the petals along the stem were all these hard little balls,
maybe two dozen of them. One burst apart when the flower fell,
and the cop saw it and took me in. I dont even know what it was!"
"I do," Eliot said. "As your attorney, the charges were of course
available to me and I downloaded them. The seed pods are awaiting
complete analysis at the GFCA lab, but the prelim shows genetic
modification for lethal insecticides. Airborne seeds, which makes
it a class-two genemod felony."
"But I didnt know!" Perri cried. "And I never understood whats
so bad about plants that kill insects, anyway! Dont look like
that, Dee, Im not stupid! I know the history of the Crisis as
well as you do. But those genemod plants that almost wiped out
all the wheat in the Midwest were only one kind of engineered
plant, and if people like Mike believe that other genemods can
be"
Dee cut her off. "People like Mike are criminals in it for the
profit. And it wasnt just the wheat-killing genemod that caused
the Crisis. And you may not be stupid, Perri, but you surely have
acted like it!"
Eliot held up his hand. "Ladies, the thing to focus on here is"
"No, Dees right," Perri said. She sat up straighter and her washed-out,
lovely face took on an odd dignity. "Ive been a fool, and I know
it. But I had no . . . what is it, Eliot? Criminal intent? Surely
that counts for something."
Eliot said quietly, "Not very much, Im afraid. I dont want to
lie to you, Perri. The GMFA Act is intended to prosecute illegal
genemod organizations working for profit and willing to do anything
at all to protect that profit. The Act is wide-reaching and harsh
because its modeled on RICO, the old Racketeering Influenced
and Corrupt Organization laws, and because genetic engineering
represents such a danger to the entire planet since the Greenhouse
Crisis. Or politicians think it does. Unfortunately, people like
you fall under the Act as well, and I wouldnt be doing my duty
by you if I didnt inform you honestly that your case isnt going
to play well in front of a jury of the usual hysterical citizens
whose grandmothers and babies are having trouble breathing."
"But the Greenhouse Crisis and the wheat kill-off were two separate
things!" Perri cried, surprising Dee.
"But most people dont separate them because they happened concurrently,"
Eliot said. "All at once the air was ruined, there was no bread,
prices for everything rocketed because the government made energy
so expensive to try to control industrial emissions . . . all
at once. In my experience, thats how juries see it. Perri, I
think youre much better off pleading guilty and letting me plea
bargain for you."
Perri was silent. Dee said thickly, already knowing the answer,
"Where will she do time?"
"Probably Cotsworth. Its the usual place for the east coast."
Cotsworth. It was notorious. Dee had never been inside, but she
didnt have to be. Shed seen other places like it. It wasnt
as bad as the mens worst prisonsthey never werebut a girl who
looked like Perri . . . was like Perri. . . .
Perri said, "All right, Eliot. If you think I should plead guilty,
I will."
Trusting him completely, on a half-hour acquaintance. Exactly
how she got into this in the first place with "Carl," with "Mike."
She would never learn.
Eliot said, "Ill do everything I can for you, Perri."
A wan smile, but the astonishing blue-green eyes dazzled. "I know
you will. I trust you."
Dee wasnt Perri. She probed, tested, cut. "What if the FBI finds
Mike?"
"They wont find Mike," Eliot said. They stood at the subway entrance
before the hellish descent underground. Eliot was going to his
office in Brooklyn, Dee to Queens. "God, you of all people know
they wont find Mike. The Genetic Modification Crimes section
of the FBI is overworked, there arent enough of them, and Perri
is such small potatoes they probably wont even look for Mike."
"The ship doesnt sound like small potatoes."
"They might not even believe the ship exists. Perri wouldnt be
the first perp to falsify events."
"Do you think thats what shes doing?"
"No," Eliot said. "I think shes telling the absolute truth. I
think shes that rare find, a person incapable of dishonesty.
But I dont think the FBI or the federal attorney will think so.
Theyre paid not to."
"But you think the ship exists," Dee persisted.
"Yes. There are dozens, maybe hundreds, of them out there, in
international waters where its much harder to do anything about
them. They genemod everything from insect-killing supercrops for
idealists who want to save the Earth, to insect-killing supercrops
for profiteers who want to own it. And who dont care if they
inadvertently kill off an entire Third World countrys rice crop
in the process. Oh, Perris ship is out there, all right, with
Mike running it. Although why hes also performing abortions
is a bit murky. But Im going to downplay that aspect with the
federal attorney. It makes Perri look irresponsible."
"She is irresponsible."
"Sometimes," Eliot said, "what looks like irresponsibility is
really innocence."
Here we go again, Dee thought. But if a ridiculous infatuation would increase Eliots
work on Perris behalf, let the poor sot be infatuated.
It was ironic. Raising Perri, she was always the one "mother"
who wouldnt let Perri take the bus by herself, walk home from
school alone, go downtown. Cops were like that. Unlike the other
mothers, Dee had known what was waiting out there in the street.
And then the grown-up Perri sought out more trouble than any of
her childhood friends.
Dee said, "So you dont think the authorities will look for Mike.
And even though it would help Perris plea, you wont, either."
Eliot said bluntly, "I cant afford the resources to look. Can
you?"
"No," Dee said.
"Also, the case will be heard in under a week, probably. They
dispose of these small things as fast as they can, fair or not.
You know that, Dee."
"Yes, I know that. But finding the ship would aid an appeal for
Perri."
"Yes. But theyre not going to find it, Dee."
"No," she said. "But I am." |
|
"And No Such Things Grow Here" by Nancy Kress
| And No Such Things Grow Here : Nancy Kress |
|
Here life has death for neighbor,
And far from eye or ear
Wan waves and wet winds labor,
Weak ships and spirits steer;
They drive adrift, and wither
They wot not who make thither;
But no such winds blow hither,
And no such things grow here.
Algernon Charles Swinburne,
"The Garden of Proserpine"
"See, I have a problem," Perri said.
Dee Stavros held the phone away from her ear and yawned hugely.
What the hell time was it, anyway? The clock had stopped in the
night: another power outage. Her one window was still dark. The
air was thick and hot.
"Dee, are you there?"
"Im here," Dee said to her sister. "So youve got a problem.
What else is new?"
"This is different."
"Theyre all different." Only they werent, really. Deadbeat boyfriends,
a violent ex-husband, cars "stolen," a last-minute abortion, bad
checks for overdue rent . . . Perris messy life changed only
in the details. Dee yawned again.
Perri said, "Ive been arrested for GMFA," and Dee woke fully
and sat up on the edge of the bed.
GMFA. Genetic Modification Felony Actions. The newest crime-fighting
tool, newest draconian set of laws, newest felonies to catch the
attention of a blood-crazy public who needed a scapegoat for .
. . everything. But Perri? Feckless, bumbling, dumb Perri? Not possible.
Professional training took over. Dee said levelly, "Where are
you now?"
"Rikers Island," Perri said, and at the relief in her voiceItll be all right, Dee will clean up after me againDee had to struggle to hold her anger in check.
"Do you have a lawyer?"
"No. I thought youd take care of that."
Of course. And now that she was listening, Dee heard behind Perri
all the muted miserable cacophony of Rikers Island, that chaotic
hellhole where alleged perps for the larger hellhole of Manhattan
were all taken, processed, and mishandled. But Perri didnt live
in Manhattan. Nobody who could avoid it lived in Manhattan. The
last time Dee had heard from her sister, Perri had been heading
for the beaches of North Carolina.
For once, Perri anticipated her. "I think they took me to Rikers
because it was an offshore offense. On a boat. A ship, really.
. . . Get away! Im not done, you bitch!"
Dee said rapidly, "Relinquish the phone, Perri, before you get
hurt. You had your two minutes. Ill be there as soon as I can."
"Oh, Dee, Im" The phone went dead.
Dee stood holding it uselessly. Perri was what? Sorry? Scared?
Innocent? But Perri was always those things in her own mind. Maybe
Dee should just leave her there. Get out of Perris life once
and for all. Teach Perri a lesson. Just leave her there to fend
for herself for once. . . .
But Dee was all too familiar with Rikers. Shed retired from the
force less than a year ago. She started to dress.
"Why me?" Eliot Kramer said when he appeared at her fourth-floor,
one-room apartment door just after dawn. Grimy sunshine glared
through Dees big south window, the only nice thing about her
room, other than its being on the far edge of Queens rather than
the near edge. Many people were afraid of sunshine indoors. Ultraviolet,
skin cancerseven though theyd been told that glass filtered
out the danger. Most people never listened to what they were told.
"Why you? Because youre the only decent lawyer I know."
"Twenty years with NYPD and you know one decent lawyer? Come on, Dee."
"Decent in both senses, Eliot. Usually the moral ones are incompetent
and the competent ones have been bought."
He shook his head. "Boy, Im glad I dont have your outlook on
life."
"You will. Youre just not old enough yet."
"And how old is this sister of yours?" Eliot asked as they hurried
down the stairs. "Whats her name again?"
"Perri Stavros. Shes twenty-seven. My kid sisterI raised her
after our parents died in a train wreck."
"And what exactly happened?"
"Havent any idea," Dee said. "And after she tells us, we still
might not know."
"Wonderful," Eliot said unhappily.
They emerged into the street, into the pale green light under
the thick trees. Young trees, saplings, twigs . . . this section
of Queens had only been planting for six years, since the Crisis,
and there were none of the large trees that richer neighborhoods
had immediately imported from God-knew-where. Trees grew up through
holes jackhammered into the aging sidewalk, up beside crumbling
stoops, up from buckets until they were big enough to transplant.
A whole row struggled to thrive in the street itself, which had
been narrowed to one lane now that cars were so unaffordable.
Fast-growing trees, poplars and aspens and cottonwoods, although
all trees (and everything else green) grew rapidly now. Whenever
possible, trees with broad leaves for the maximum amount of photosynthesis,
maximum amount of carbon dioxide scrubbed from the thick and overheated
air.
"Not too bad this morning," Eliot said. "Pretty breathable."
"Not if we dont get rain," Dee said. Enough water, always, was
the concern. Will it rain today? Dont you think its clouding
up? Might it rain tomorrow? Water meant biomass growth, giving
mankind a chance of getting back into control the atmospheric
O2/CO2 loop so dangerously rising toward 1 percent of CO2, the
upper limit of breathability.
"Itll rain," Eliot said. "Put on your mask, were almost at the
subway. One more questiondo you at least know what class of contraband
your sister was caught with?"
"No," Dee said. "Its all felony, isnt it?"
"Theres felonies and theres felonies," Eliot said, and put on
his mask.
Perri had been caught with class-two contraband, which meant five
to ten.
"But there are extenuating circumstances," Perri said, looking
pleadingly at Eliot, who merely nodded, dazed.
Dee was used to Perris effect on men. Even in the smelly, hot
(God, it was hot, and only early June), windowless interrogation
room, and even dirty and smelly herself, Perris beauty blazed.
The perfect body, the long long legs, the thick honey-colored
hair and full lips. But it was the eyes that always did it. Blue-green,
larger than any other human eyes Dee had ever seen, fringed with
long dark lashes. Perris eyes sparkled, never the same two seconds
in a row, unless you counted their unchanging sweetness of expression.
How did Perri keep that sweet expression, with the life shed
led? Dee didnt know, hadnt ever known.
Eliot said, his tone not quite professional, "Why dont you just
tell me the entire story from the beginning, Miss Stavros."
"Perri, please." She put her hand on his arm. "You will help me,
wont you, Eliot?" The gesture was unstudied, genuine. It finished
Eliot.
"Everythings going to be all right, Perri," he said, and Dee
snorted. No, it was not. Not this time. This time, Perri may have
dug herself under too deep for Deeor Eliotto pull her out. No,
please God, no. Dee knew about the kind of prisons that genemod offenders were
sent to, and what happened to them there. In the current public
climate, GMFA felons were the new pedophiles.
Perri said, "Well, it started when I went down to North Carolina.
To the beaches. I heard that sometimes holo companies recruited
actresses from there? It turned out not to be true, but by that
time Id met Carl and well, you know." She lowered her amazing
eyes, but not before Dee saw the flicker of pain.
"Go on," Eliot said. "Whats Carls last name?"
"He said Hansen. But it might not be. Anyway, I got pregnant."
Dee exploded, "How"
"Dont yell at me, Dee. I know it was my fault. The implant ran
out and I forgot to go get another one. And then Carl disappeared,
and I didnt have the money for an abortion, so I started sort
of asking around about a cheap one."
Suddenly Dee noticed how pale Perri was. It wasnt just the lack
of make-up. Lips nearly the same color as her skin, dark smudges
under her eyes . . . "You fool! Are you bleeding?"
"Oh, no," Perri said. "Everything went fine, Dee, and anyway Im
strong as an ox. You know that."
Eliot said, "Who performed the operation, Perri?"
"Well, thats just it. I know him only as Mike. This girl I
know said he was safe, hed done it for her friend, and he didnt
charge anything at all. He did it out of idealism." Her lips curved
in such a tender smile that Dee was instantly suspicious.
"Was this Mike an actual licensed doctor?"
"He didnt do the operation. My girlfriend introduced us at this
bar on the beach, and Mike took me on a powerboat out to where
the big ship was with the doctor aboard."
And Perri had gone with him. Just like that. Un-fucking-believable.
Eliot said, "Names, Perri. The girlfriend, the doctor, anyone
on the ship, the name of the ship itself."
"I dont know, except for my girlfriend. Betsy Jefferson."
"Do you think thats her real name?"
"Probably not," Perri said. "The beach is the kind of place you
get to be somebody else if you want to, you know?"
"I know," Dee said grimly. "Perri, do you know how much crime and
smuggling go through Hilton Head?"
"I do now."
Eliot said patiently, "Go on with your story, Perri. Our time
isnt unlimited, unfortunately."
"The doctor did the abortion. When I came to, I rested a while.
Everyone was kind to me. Then Mike said he couldnt take me back,
the ship had to leave. But he would send me in a little remote
boat. Thats a"
"We know what it is," Dee said harshly. "Smugglers use them all
the time. Theyre computer-guided to shore from out at sea, so
if the feds are there to intercept the stuff, at least they dont
get the perps, too. Did the damn thing dump you in the ocean?"
"Oh, no. It brought me right to a public dock in . . . Long Island?
I guess so. The ship must have sailed a long way while I was knocked
out. It was daylight. Mike said the remote boats arent illegal.
I would have been all right, except . . ."
"Except what?" Eliot said gently.
Perri didnt answer for a moment. When she spoke, her voice was
low. "The ship was full of plants. Flowers, little trees, all
sorts of stuff growing on the deck in the sunshine. Beautiful.
I . . . I wanted something to remember Mike by. You dont know
how good he was to me, Dee, how kind. I felt . . . anyway. I picked
a flower when nobody was looking and put it under my shirt. I
was wearing this loose mans shirt because since I got pregnant,
nothing of mine fit right. Nobody saw me take the flower."
"One flower?" Dee said. "Thats all?"
"The flower wasnt big. It had beautiful yellow petals that were
the same color as Mikes hair. Thats why I took it. Dont look
like that, Dee! A cop saw the remote boat land and came over to
the dock because even though theyre so tiny I guess theyre pretty
expensive and he was checking it out. And I staggered a little
getting out of the boat because it hadnt even been a day yet
since the operation. I was feeling a little woozy. It was so hot,
and it was a bad air day. The flower fell out from under my shirt.
Below the petals along the stem were all these hard little balls,
maybe two dozen of them. One burst apart when the flower fell,
and the cop saw it and took me in. I dont even know what it was!"
"I do," Eliot said. "As your attorney, the charges were of course
available to me and I downloaded them. The seed pods are awaiting
complete analysis at the GFCA lab, but the prelim shows genetic
modification for lethal insecticides. Airborne seeds, which makes
it a class-two genemod felony."
"But I didnt know!" Perri cried. "And I never understood whats
so bad about plants that kill insects, anyway! Dont look like
that, Dee, Im not stupid! I know the history of the Crisis as
well as you do. But those genemod plants that almost wiped out
all the wheat in the Midwest were only one kind of engineered
plant, and if people like Mike believe that other genemods can
be"
Dee cut her off. "People like Mike are criminals in it for the
profit. And it wasnt just the wheat-killing genemod that caused
the Crisis. And you may not be stupid, Perri, but you surely have
acted like it!"
Eliot held up his hand. "Ladies, the thing to focus on here is"
"No, Dees right," Perri said. She sat up straighter and her washed-out,
lovely face took on an odd dignity. "Ive been a fool, and I know
it. But I had no . . . what is it, Eliot? Criminal intent? Surely
that counts for something."
Eliot said quietly, "Not very much, Im afraid. I dont want to
lie to you, Perri. The GMFA Act is intended to prosecute illegal
genemod organizations working for profit and willing to do anything
at all to protect that profit. The Act is wide-reaching and harsh
because its modeled on RICO, the old Racketeering Influenced
and Corrupt Organization laws, and because genetic engineering
represents such a danger to the entire planet since the Greenhouse
Crisis. Or politicians think it does. Unfortunately, people like
you fall under the Act as well, and I wouldnt be doing my duty
by you if I didnt inform you honestly that your case isnt going
to play well in front of a jury of the usual hysterical citizens
whose grandmothers and babies are having trouble breathing."
"But the Greenhouse Crisis and the wheat kill-off were two separate
things!" Perri cried, surprising Dee.
"But most people dont separate them because they happened concurrently,"
Eliot said. "All at once the air was ruined, there was no bread,
prices for everything rocketed because the government made energy
so expensive to try to control industrial emissions . . . all
at once. In my experience, thats how juries see it. Perri, I
think youre much better off pleading guilty and letting me plea
bargain for you."
Perri was silent. Dee said thickly, already knowing the answer,
"Where will she do time?"
"Probably Cotsworth. Its the usual place for the east coast."
Cotsworth. It was notorious. Dee had never been inside, but she
didnt have to be. Shed seen other places like it. It wasnt
as bad as the mens worst prisonsthey never werebut a girl who
looked like Perri . . . was like Perri. . . .
Perri said, "All right, Eliot. If you think I should plead guilty,
I will."
Trusting him completely, on a half-hour acquaintance. Exactly
how she got into this in the first place with "Carl," with "Mike."
She would never learn.
Eliot said, "Ill do everything I can for you, Perri."
A wan smile, but the astonishing blue-green eyes dazzled. "I know
you will. I trust you."
Dee wasnt Perri. She probed, tested, cut. "What if the FBI finds
Mike?"
"They wont find Mike," Eliot said. They stood at the subway entrance
before the hellish descent underground. Eliot was going to his
office in Brooklyn, Dee to Queens. "God, you of all people know
they wont find Mike. The Genetic Modification Crimes section
of the FBI is overworked, there arent enough of them, and Perri
is such small potatoes they probably wont even look for Mike."
"The ship doesnt sound like small potatoes."
"They might not even believe the ship exists. Perri wouldnt be
the first perp to falsify events."
"Do you think thats what shes doing?"
"No," Eliot said. "I think shes telling the absolute truth. I
think shes that rare find, a person incapable of dishonesty.
But I dont think the FBI or the federal attorney will think so.
Theyre paid not to."
"But you think the ship exists," Dee persisted.
"Yes. There are dozens, maybe hundreds, of them out there, in
international waters where its much harder to do anything about
them. They genemod everything from insect-killing supercrops for
idealists who want to save the Earth, to insect-killing supercrops
for profiteers who want to own it. And who dont care if they
inadvertently kill off an entire Third World countrys rice crop
in the process. Oh, Perris ship is out there, all right, with
Mike running it. Although why hes also performing abortions
is a bit murky. But Im going to downplay that aspect with the
federal attorney. It makes Perri look irresponsible."
"She is irresponsible."
"Sometimes," Eliot said, "what looks like irresponsibility is
really innocence."
Here we go again, Dee thought. But if a ridiculous infatuation would increase Eliots
work on Perris behalf, let the poor sot be infatuated.
It was ironic. Raising Perri, she was always the one "mother"
who wouldnt let Perri take the bus by herself, walk home from
school alone, go downtown. Cops were like that. Unlike the other
mothers, Dee had known what was waiting out there in the street.
And then the grown-up Perri sought out more trouble than any of
her childhood friends.
Dee said, "So you dont think the authorities will look for Mike.
And even though it would help Perris plea, you wont, either."
Eliot said bluntly, "I cant afford the resources to look. Can
you?"
"No," Dee said.
"Also, the case will be heard in under a week, probably. They
dispose of these small things as fast as they can, fair or not.
You know that, Dee."
"Yes, I know that. But finding the ship would aid an appeal for
Perri."
"Yes. But theyre not going to find it, Dee."
"No," she said. "But I am." |
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