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ChungKuo. The
words mean "Middle Kingdom," and since 221 B.C., when the
first emperor, Ch'in Shih Huang Ti, unified 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
3: THE
WHITE MOUNTAIN
published
by delacorte
press
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. 666
Fifth Avenue New York, New York 10103
Copyright
© 1992 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 Delacorte Press® is registered in the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office.
Canadian
Cataloguing-in-Publication Data Wingrove,
David The white mountain (Chung
kuo ; v. 3) ISBN 0-385-29875-7 I.
Title. II. Series: Wingrove, David. Chung kuo ; v. 3. 1991
823'. 914 C9I-O949I4-X
Library
of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data (Revised
for vol. 3) Wingrove,
David. Chung Kuo. Contents:
bk. i . The Middle Kingdom — bk.
3. The White Mountain. I. Title. PR6o73.l54sC5
1990 823'. 914 89-16845 ISBN
0-385-29873-0 (v. i) ISBN
0-385-29874-9 (v. 2) ISBN
0-385-29875-7 (v. 3) .
Manufactured
in the United States of America Published
simultaneously in Canada by Doubleday Canada Limited, 105
Bond Street, Toronto, Ontario, January
1992
to lily jackson, from your
grandson David on the occasion of your 95th birthday, with a
lifetime's love.
CONTENTS
B
O O K 3 The White Mountain PART i
Summer 2207—AT THE BRIDGE OF CH'IN Chapter i:
Scorched Earth
3 Chapter 2:
Gods of the Flesh
31 Chapter 3:
The Way of Deception
51 Chapter 4:
Carp Pool and Tortoise Shell
71 Chapter 5:
The Broken Wheel
89 Chapter 6:
Chen Yen
122 Chapter 7:
New Blood
141 Chapter 8:
Mirrors
157 Chapter 9:
The Temple of Heaven
178 Chapter 10:
Ghosts
195 Chapter 11:
The Tiger's Mouth
223 Chapter 12:
Willow-Plum Sickness
242 Chapter 13:
In the Open
259 Chapter 14:
The Shattered Land
279 INTERLUDE
Winter 2207 —DRAGON'S TEETH
PART 2
Summer 22o8-THE WHITE MOUNTAIN Chapter 15: Between
Light and Shadow 307 Chapter 16:
Dragonflies
335 Chapter 17: In a
Darkened Eye
374 Chapter iS: The
Dead Brother
394 Chapter 19: White
Mountain 410 Chapter 20: Flames
in a Glass 432 Author's Note
453 A Glossary of Mandarin
Terms 456 Acknowledgments
461 In Times to Come . . .
4^3
PART
I SUMMER 2207 At
the Bridge of Ch’in
The
white glare recedes to the Western hills, High in the distance
sapphire blossoms rise. Where shall there be an end of old and new? A
thousand years have whirled away in the wind. The sands of the ocean
change to stone, Fishes puff bubbles at the bridge of Ch'in. The
empty shine streams on into the distance, The bronze pillars melt
away with the years. —LI
ho, On and On Forever, ninth century a.d.
CHAPTER
ONE Scorched
Earth LI
SHAI TUNG stood beside the pool. Across from him, at the entrance to
the arboretum, a single lamp had been lit, its light reflecting
darkly in the smoked-glass panels of the walls, misting a pallid
green through leaves of fern and palm. But where the great T'ang
stood it was dark. These
days he courted darkness like a friend. At night, when sleep evaded
him, he came here, staring down through layers of blackness at the
dark submerged forms of his carp. Their slow and peaceful movements
lulled him, easing the pain in his eyes, the tenseness in his
stomach. Often he would stand for hours, unmoving, his black silks
pulled close about his thin and ancient body. Then, for a time, the
tiredness would leave him, as if it had no place here in the cool,
penumbral silence. Then
ghosts would come. Images imprinted on the blackness, filling the
dark with the vivid shapes of memory. The face of Han Ch'in, smiling
up at him, a half-eaten apple in his hand from the orchard at
Tongjiang. Lin Yua, his first wife, bowing demurely before him on
their wedding night, her small breasts cupped in her hands, like an
offering. Or his father, Li Ch'ing, laughing, a bird perched on the
index finger of each hand, two days before the accident that killed
him. These and others crowded back, like guests at a death feast. But
of this he told no one, not even his physician. These, strangely,
were his comfort. Without them the darkness would have been
oppressive: would have been blackness, pure and simple. Sometimes
he would call a name, softly, in a whisper; and that one would come
to him, eyes alight with laughter. So he remembered them now, in joy
and at their best. Shades from a summer land. He had
been standing there more than two hours when a servant came. He knew
at once that it was serious; they would not have disturbed him
otherwise. He felt the tenseness return like bands of iron about his
chest and brow, felt the tiredness seep back into his bones. "Who
calls me?" The
servant bowed low. "It is the Marshal, Chieh Hsia." He
went out, shedding the darkness like a cloak. In his study the
viewing screen was bright, filled by Tolonen's face. Li Shai Tung sat
in the big chair, moving Minister Heng's memorandum to one side. For
a moment he sat there, composing himself, then stretched forward and
touched the contact pad. "What is it, Knut? What evil keeps you
from your bed?" "Your servant never sleeps," Tolonen
offered, but his smile was halfhearted and his face was ashen. Seeing
that, Li Shai Tung went cold. Who is it now? he asked himself.
Wei Feng? Tsu Ma? Who haw they killed this time? The
Marshal turned and the image on the screen turned with him. He was
sending from a mobile unit. Behind him a wide corridor stretched
away, its walls blackened by smoke. Further down, men were working in
emergency lighting. "Where are you, Knut? What has been
happening?" "I'm
at the Bremen fortress, Chieh Hsia. In the barracks of
Security Central." Tolonen's face, to the right of the screen,
continued to stare back down the corridor for a moment, then turned
to face his T'ang again. "Things are bad here, Chieh Hsia. I
think you should come and see for yourself. It seems like the work of
the Ping Tioo, but. . ." Tolonen hesitated, his old familiar
face etched with deep concern. He gave a small shudder, then began
again. "It's just that this is different, Chieh Hsia. Totally
different from anything they've ever done before." Li
Shai Tung considered a moment, then nodded. The skin of his face felt
tight, almost painful. He took a shallow breath, then spoke. "Then
I'll come, Knut. I'll be there as soon as I can." IT WAS
HARD to recognize the place. The whole deck was gutted. Over fifteen
thousand people were dead. Damage had spread to nearby stacks and to
the decks above and below, but that was minimal compared to what had
happened here. Li Shai Tung walked beside his Marshal, turning his
bloodless face from side to side as he walked, seeing the ugly mounds
of congealed tar—all that was left of once-human bodies—that
were piled up by the sealed exits, conscious of the all-pervading
stench of burned flesh, sickly-sweet and horrible. At the end of Main
the two men stopped and looked back. "Are
you certain?" There were tears in the old T'ang's eyes as he
looked at his Marshal. His face was creased with pain, his hands
clasped tightly together. Tolonen
took a pouch from his tunic pocket and handed it across. "They
left these. So that we would know." The
pouch contained five small, stylized fish. Two of the golden pendants
had melted, the others shone like new. The fish was the symbol of the
Ping Tiao. Li Shai Tung spilled them into his palm. "Where
were these found?" "On the other side of the seals. There
were more, we think, but the heat. . ." Li Shai Tung shuddered,
then let the fish fall from his fingers. They had turned the deck
into a giant oven and cooked everyone inside—men, women, and
their children. Sudden anger twisted like a spear in his guts. "Why7.
What do they want, Knut? What do they want?" One hand jerked
out nervously, then withdrew. "This is the worst of it. The
killings. The senseless deaths. For what?" Tolonen
had said it once before, years ago, to his old friend Klaus Ebert;
now he said the words again, this time to his T'ang. "They want
to pull it down. All of it. Whatever it costs." Li
Shai Tung stared at him, then looked away. "No. . ."he
began, as if to deny it; but for once denial was impossible. This was
what he had feared, his darkest dream made real. A sign of things to
come. He had
been ill of late. For the first time in a long, healthy life he had
been confined to bed. That, too, seemed a sign. An indication that
things were slipping from him. Control—it began with one's own
body and spread outward. He
nodded to himself, seeing it now. This was personal. An attack upon
his person. For he was the State. Was the City. There
was a sickness loose, a virus in the veins of the world. Corruption
was rife. Dispersionism, Leveling, even this current obsession in the
Above with longevity—all these were symptoms of it. The actions
of such groups were subtle, invidious, not immediately evident; yet
ultimately they proved fatal. Expectations had changed and that had
undermined the stability of everything. They want to pull it down. "What
did they do here, Knut? How did they do this?" "We've
had to make some assumptions, but a few things are known for certain.
Bremen Central Maintenance reports that all communications to Deck
Nine were cut at second bell." "All?"
Li Shai Tung shook his head, astonished. "Is that possible,
Knut?" "That was part of the problem. They didn't believe
it, either; so they wasted an hour checking for faults in the system
at their end. They didn't think to send anyone to make a physical
check." Li
Shai Tung grimaced. "Would it have made a difference?" "No.
No difference, Chieh Hsia. There was no chance of doing
anything after the first ten minutes. They set their fires on four
different levels. Big, messy chemical things. Then they rigged the
ventilators to pump oxygen-rich air through the system at increased
capacity." "And the seals?" Tolonen
swallowed. "There was no chance anyone could have gotten out.
They'd blown the transit and derailed the bolt. All the interlevel
lifts were jammed. That was part of the communications blackout. The
whole deck must have been in darkness." "And
that's it?" Li Shai Tung felt sickened by the callousness of it
all. Tolonen
hesitated, then spoke again. "This was done by experts, Chieh
Hsia, Knowledgeable men, superbly trained, efficiently organized.
Our own special services men could have done no better." Li
Shai Tung looked back at him. "Say it, Knut," he said
softly. "Don't keep it to yourself. Even if it proves wrong, say
it." Tolonen
met his eyes, then nodded. "All of this speaks of money. Big
money. The technology needed to cut off a deck's communications—it's
all too much for normal Ping Two funding. Out of their range. There
has to be a backer." The
T'ang considered a moment. "Then it's still going on. We didn't
win the War after all. Not finally." Tolonen
looked down. Li Shai Tung's manner disturbed him. Since his illness
he had been different. Off-balance and indecisive, withdrawn, almost
melancholy. The sickness had robbed him of more than his strength; it
had taken some of his sharpness, his quickness of mind. It fell upon
the Marshal to lead him through this maze. "Maybe.
But more important is finding out who is the traitor in our midst."
"Ah. . ." Li Shai Tung's eyes searched his face, then
looked away. "At what level have they infiltrated?" "Staff." He
said it without hesitation, knowing that it had to be that high up
the chain of command. No one else could have shaped things in this
manner. To seal off a deck, that took clout. More than the Ping Tioo
possessed. Li
Shai Tung turned away again, following his own thoughts. Maybe Yuan
was right. Maybe they should act now. Wire them all. Control them
like machines. But his instinct was against it. He had held back from
acting on the Project's early findings. Even this—this
outrage—could not change his mind so far. "It's
bad, Knut. It's as if you could not trust your own hands to shave
your throat ,» Tolonen
laughed, a short, bitter bark of laughter. The old T'ang turned. "You
have it in hand, though, Knut." He smiled. "You, at least,
1 trust." The
Marshal met his master's eyes, touched by what had been said, knowing
that this was what shaped his life and gave it meaning. To have this
man's respect, his total trust. Without thinking, he knelt at Li Shai
Tung's feet. "I
shall find the man and deal with him, Chieh Hsia. Were it my
own son, I'd deal with him." AT THE
MOMENT, on the far side of the world, Li Yuan was walking down a path
on the estate in Tongjiang. He could smell the blossoms in the air,
apple and plum, and beneath those the sharper, sweeter scent of
cherry. It reminded him of how long it had been since he had been
here; of how little had changed while he had been gone. At the
top of the terrace he stopped, looking out across the valley, down
the wide sweep of marble steps toward the lake. He smiled, seeing her
on the far side of the lake, walking between the trees. For a moment
he simply looked, his heart quickened just to see her; then he went
down, taking the steps in two's and three's. He was
only a few paces from her when she turned. "Li
Yuan! You didn't say . . ." "I'm
sorry, I ..." But his words faltered as he noted the roundness
of her, the fullness of her belly. He glanced up, meeting her eyes
briefly, then looked down again. My son, he thought. My
son. "I'm
well." "You
look wonderful," he said, taking her in his arms, conscious of
the weeks that had passed since he had last held her. But he was
careful now and released her quickly, taking her hands, surprised by
how small they were, how delicate. He had forgotten. Not,
not forgotten. Simply not remembered. He
laughed softly. "How far along are you?" She
looked away. "More than halfway now. Twenty-seven weeks." He
nodded, then reached down to touch the roundness, feeling how firm
she was beneath the silks she wore, like the ripened fruit in the
branches above their heads. "I
wondered . . ." she began, looking back at him, then fell
silent, dropping her head. "Wondered
what?" he asked, staring at her, realizing suddenly what had
been bothering him. "Besides, what's this? Have you no smiles to
welcome your husband home?" He
reached out, lifting her chin gently with his fingers, smiling; but
his smile brought no response. She turned from him petulantly,
looking down at her feet. Leaf shadow fell across the perfection of
her face, patches of sunlight catching in the lustrous darkness of
her hair, but her lips were pursed. "I've
brought you presents," he said softly. "Up in the house.
Why don't you come and see?" She
glanced at him, then away. This time he saw the coldness in her eyes.
"How long this time, Li Yuan? A day? Two days before you're gone
again?" He
sighed and looked down at her hand. It lay limply in his own, palm
upward, the fingers gently bent. "I'm
not just any man, Fei Yen. My responsibilities are great, especially
at this time. My father needs me." He shook his head, trying to
understand what she was feeling, but he could not help but feel
angered by her lack of welcome. It was not his fault, after all. He
had thought she would be pleased to see him. "If
I'm away a lot, it can't be helped. Not just now. I would rather be
here, believe me, my love. I really would . . ." She
seemed to relent a little; momentarily her hand returned the pressure
of his own, but her face was still turned from his. "I
never see you," she said quietly. "You're never here." A bird
alighted from a branch nearby, distracting him. He looked up,
following its flight. When he looked back it was to find her watching
him, her dark eyes chiding him. "It's
odd," he said, ignoring what she had said. "This place—it's
changed so little over the years. I used to play here as a child,
ten, twelve years ago. And even then I imagined how it had been like
this for centuries. Unchanged. Unchanging. Only the normal cycle of
the seasons. I'd help the servants pick the apple crop, carrying
empty baskets over to them. And then, later, I'd have quite
insufferable bellyaches from all the fruit I'd gorged." He
laughed, seeing how her eyes had softened as he spoke. "Like any
child," he added after a moment, conscious of the lie, yet
thinking of a past where it had really been so. Back before the City,
when such childish pleasures were commonplace. For a
moment longer he simply looked at her. Then, smiling, he squeezed her
hand gently. "Come. Let's go back." On the
bridge he paused and stood looking out across the lake, watching the
swans moving on the water, conscious of the warmth of her hand in his
own. "How
long this time?" she asked, her voice softer, less
insistent than before. "A
week," he said, turning to look at her. "Maybe longer. It
depends on whether things keep quiet." She
smiled—the first smile she had given him in weeks. "That's
good, Yuan. I'm tired of being alone. 1 had too much of it before." He
gave a single nod. "I know. But things will change. I promise
you, Fei. It will be better from now on." She
raised her chin, looking at him intently. "I hope so. It's so
hard here on my own." Hard?
He looked across the placid lake toward the orchard, wondering what
she meant. He saw only softness here. Only respite from the harsh
realities of life. From deals and duties. Smelled only the healthy
scents of growth. He
smiled and looked at her again. "I decided something, Fei. While
I was away." She
looked back at him. "What's that?" "The
boy," he said, placing his hand on her swollen belly once more.
"I've decided we'll call him Han." LEHMANN
WOKE HIM, then stood there while he dressed, waiting. DeVore
turned, lacing his tunic. "When did the news break?" "Ten
minutes ago. They've cleared all channels pending the announcement.
Wei Feng is to speak." DeVore
raised an eyebrow. "Not Li Shai Tung?" He laughed. "Good.
That shows how much we've rattled him." He turned, glancing
across the room at the timer on the wall, then looked back at
Lehmann. "Is that the time?" Lehmann
nodded. DeVore
looked down thoughtfully. It was almost four hours since the attacks.
He had expected them to react quicker than this. But that was not
what was worrying him. "Has
Wiegand reported back?" "Not
yet." DeVore
went into the adjoining room. He sat in the chair, facing the big
screen, his fingers brushing the controls on the chair's arm to
activate it. Lehmann came and stood behind him. The
Ywe Lung—the wheel of dragons, symbol of the
seven—filled the screen as it did before every official
announcement; but this time the backdrop to the wheel was white,
signifying death. Throughout
Chung Kuo, tens of billions would be sitting before their screens,
waiting pensively, speculating about the meaning of this break in
regular programming. It had been a common feature of the
War-that-wasn't-a-War, but the screens had been empty of such
announcements for some time. That would give it added flavor. He
looked back at Lehmann. "When Wiegand calls in, have him
switched through. I want to know what's been going on. He should have
reported back to me long before this." "I've
arranged it already." "Good."
He turned back, smiling, imagining the effect this was having on the
Seven. They would be scurrying about like termites into whose nest a
great stick had just been poked; firing off orders here, there, and
everywhere; readying themselves against further attacks; not knowing
where the next blow might fall. Things had been quiet these last few
months. Deliberately so, for he had wanted to lull the Seven into a
false sense of security before he struck. It was not the act itself
but the context of the act that mattered. In time of war, people's
imaginations were dulled by a surfeit of tragedy, but in peacetime
such acts took on a dreadful significance. So it was now. They
would expect him to follow up—to strike again while they were
in disarray—but this time he wouldn't. Not immediately. He
would let things settle before he struck again, choosing his targets
carefully, aiming always at maximizing the impact of his actions,
allowing the Seven to spend their strength fighting shadows while he
gathered his. Until their nerves were raw and their will to fight
crippled. Then—and only then—would he throw his full
strength against them. He let
his head fall back against the thick leather cushioning, relaxing for
the first time in days, a sense of well-being flooding through him.
Victory would not come overnight, but then that was not his aim. His
was a patient game and time was on his side. Each year brought
greater problems for Chung Kuo—increased the weight of numbers
that lay heavy on the back of government. He had only to wait, like a
dog harrying a great stag, nipping at the heels of the beast,
weakening it, until it fell. Martial
music played from the speakers on either side of the screen. Then,
abruptly, the image changed. The face of Wei Feng, T'ang of East
Asia, filled the screen, the old man's features lined with sorrow. "People
of Chung Kuo, I have sad news. . ." he began, the very
informality of his words unexpected, the tears welling in the comers
of the old man's eyes adding to the immense sense of wounded dignity
that emanated from him. DeVore sat forward, suddenly tense. What had
gone wrong? He listened as Wei Feng spoke of the tragedy that had
befallen Bremen, watching the pictures dispassionately, waiting for
the old man to add something more—some further piece of news.
But there was nothing. Nothing at all. And then Wei Feng was finished
and the screen cleared, showing the Ywe Lung with its pure
white backdrop. DeVore
sat there a moment longer, then pulled himself up out of the chair,
turning to face Lehmann. "They
didn't do it. The bastards didn't do it!" He was
about to say something more when the panel on his desk began to flash
urgently. He switched the call through, then turned, resting on the
edge of the desk, facing the screen. He had
expected Wiegand. But it wasn't Wiegand's face that filled the
screen. It was Hans Ebert. "What
in hell's name has been happening, Howard? I've just had to spend two
hours with the Special Investigation boys being grilled! Bremen, for
the gods' sakes! The stupid bastards attacked Bremen!" DeVore
looked down momentarily. He had deliberately not told Ebert anything
about their designs on Bremen, knowing that Tolonen would screen all
his highest-ranking officers—even his future son-in-law—for
knowledge of the attack. Caught out once that way, Tolonen's first
thought would be that he had once again been infiltrated at staff
level. It did not surprise him, therefore, to learn that Tolonen had
acted so quickly. .-.; "I know," he said simply, meeting
Ebert's eyes. "What
do you mean, you know? Were you involved in that?" Ignoring
Ebert's anger, he nodded, speaking softly, quickly, giving his
reasons. But Ebert wasn't to be placated so simply. "I
want a meeting," Ebert said, his eyes blazing. "Today! I
want to know what else you've got planned." DeVore
hesitated, not for the first time finding Ebert's manner deeply
offensive, then nodded his agreement. Ebert was too important to his
plans just now. He needn't tell him everything, of course. Just
enough to give him the illusion of being trusted. "Okay.
This afternoon," DeVore said, betraying nothing of his thoughts.
"At Mu Chua's. I'll see you there, Hans. After fourth bell." He
broke contact, then sat back. "Damn
him!" he said, worried that he had still heard nothing. He
turned. "Stefan! Find out where the hell Wiegand is. I want to
know what's been happening." He
watched the albino go, then looked about the room, his sense of
well-being replaced by a growing certainty. Lehmann
confirmed it moments later. "Wiegand's dead," he said,
coming back into the room. "Along with another fifty of our men
and more than a hundred and fifty Ping Tiao." DeVore
sat down heavily. "What happened?" Lehmann
shook his head. "That's all we know. We've intercepted Security
reports from the Poznan and Krakov garrisons. It looks like they knew
we were coming." DeVore
looked down. Gods! Then the harvest was untouched, City Europe's vast
granaries still intact. He could not have had worse news. He
shuddered. This changed things dramatically. What had been designed
to weaken the Seven had served only to make them more determined. He had
known all along what the probable effect of a single strike against
Bremen would have. Had known how outraged people would be by the
assault on the soldiers' living quarters, the killing of innocent
women and children. That was why he had planned the two things to hit
them at the same time. With the East European Plantations on fire and
the safe haven of Bremen breached, he had expected to sow the seeds
of fear in City Europe. But fear had turned to anger, and what ought
to have been a devastating psychological blow for the Seven had been
transformed into its opposite. No
wonder Wei Feng had spoken as he had. That sense of great moral
indignation the old man had conveyed had been deeply felt. And there
was no doubting that the watching billions would have shared it. So
now the Seven had the support of the masses of Chung Kuo. Sanction,
if they wanted it, to take whatever measures they wished against
their enemies. DeVore
sighed and looked down at his hands. No. Things could not have turned
out worse. But
how? How had they known? Despair turned to sudden anger in him. He
stood abruptly. Wiegand! It had to be Wiegand! Which meant that the
report of his death was false; a fabrication put out for them to
overhear. Which meant. . . For a
moment he followed the chain of logic that led out from that thought;
then he sat again, shaking his head. No, not Wiegand. His instinct
was against it. In any case, Wiegand didn't have either the balls or
the imagination for such a thing. And yet, if not Wiegand, then who? Again
he sighed, deciding to put the base on full alert. In case he was
wrong. In case Wiegand had made a deal and was planning to lead
Tolonen back here to the Wilds. EMILY
ASCHER was angry. Very angry. She trembled as she faced her tour
compatriots on the central committee of the Ping Tiao, her arm
outstretched, her finger stabbing toward Gesell, spitting the words
out venomously. "What you did was vile, Bent. You've tainted us
all. Betrayed us." Gesell glanced at Mach then looked back at
his ex-lover, his whole manner defensive. The failure of the attack
on the plantations had shaken him badly and he was only now beginning
to understand what effect the Bremen backlash would have on their
organization. Even so, he was not prepared to admit he had been
wrong. "I
knew you'd react like this. It's exactly why we had to keep it from
you. You would have vetoed it." She
gave a high-pitched laugh, astonished by him. "Of course 1
would! And rightly so. This could destroy us." Gesell
lifted his hand, as if to brush aside the accusation of her ringer.
"You don't understand. If our attack on the plantations had
succeeded—" She
batted his hand away angrily. "No. I understand things
perfectly. This was a major policy decision and I wasn't consulted."
She turned her head, looking across at the other woman in the room.
"And you, Mao Liang? Were you told?" Mao
Liang looked down, shaking her head, saying nothing. But that wasn't
sc surprising: since she had replaced Emily in Gesell's bed, it was
as if she had lost he own identity. Emily
looked back at Gesell, shaking her head slowly. "I understand,
all right It's back to old patterns. Old men meeting in closed rooms,
deciding things for others." She huffed, a sound of pure
disgust. "You know, I really believed we were beyond all that.
But it was all lip service, wasn't it, Bent? All the time you were
fucking me, you really despised me as a person. After all, I was only
a woman. An inferior being. Not to be trusted with serious
matters." "You're
wrong—" Gesell began, stung by her words, but she shook
her head, denying him. "I
don't know how you've the face to tell me I'm wrong after what you've
done." She turned slightly. "And you, Mach. I know this was
all your idea." Mach
was watching her, his eyes narrowed slightly. "There was good
reason not to involve you. You were doing so well at recruiting new
members." Again
she laughed, not believing what she was hearing. "And what's
that worth now? All that hard work, and now you've pissed it all
away. My word. I gave them my word as to what we were, and you've
shat on it." "We're
Ko Ming," Gesell began, a slight edge to his voice now.
"Revolutionaries, not fucking hospital workers. You can't change
things and have clean hands. It isn't possible!" She
stared back at him witheringly. "Murderers, that's what
they're calling us. Heartless butchers. And who can blame them? We
destroyed any credibility we had last night." "I
disagree." She
turned, looking at Mach. "You can disagree as much as you like,
Jan Mach, but it's true. As of last night this organization is dead.
You killed it. You and this prick here. Didn't you see the trivee
pictures of the children that died? Didn't you see the shots of those
beautiful, blond-haired children playing with their mothers? Didn't
something in you respond to that?" "Propaganda—"
began Quinn, the newest of them, but a look from Gesell silenced him. Ascher
looked from one to the other of them, seeing how they avoided her
eyes. "No? Isn't there one of you with the guts to admit it? We
did that. The Ping Two. And this time there's nothing we
can do to repair the damage. We're fucked." "No,"
Mach said. "There is a way." She
snorted. "You're impossible! What way? What could we possibly do
that could even begin to balance things in our favor?" "Wait
and see," Mach said, meeting her eyes coldly. "Just wait
and see." devore
SAT BACK on the sofa, looking about him at the once opulently
furnished room, noting how the fabrics had worn, the colors faded
since he had last come here. He picked up one of the cushions beside
him and studied it a moment, reading the Mandarin pictograms sewn
into the velvet. Here men forget their cares. He
smiled. So it was, once. But now? He
looked up as Mu Chua entered, one of her girls following with a fully
laden tray. She smiled at him, lines tightening about her eyes and at
the comers of her mouth. "1
thought you might like some ch'a while you were waiting, Shih
Reynolds." He sat
forward, giving the slightest bow of his head. "That's kind of
you, Mother." As the
girl knelt and poured the ch'a, DeVore studied Mu Chua. She, too, was
much older, much more worn than he remembered her. In her sixties
now, she seemed drawn, the legendary ampleness of her figure a thing
of the past. Death showed itself in her; in the sudden angularity of
her limbs and the taut wiriness of her muscles; in the slackness of
the flesh at neck and arm and breast. He had known her in better
days, though it was unlikely she remembered him. She
was watching him, as if aware of how he looked at her. Even so, when
she spoke again, her smile returned, as strong as ever. He smiled
back at her. Though the body failed, the spirit lived on, in spite of
all she'd suffered. "Shall
I let him know you're here?" He
shook his head, then took the offered bowl from the girl. "No,
Mu Chua. I'll wait." She
hesitated, her eyes flicking to the girl, then back to him. "In
that case, is there anything you'd like?" Again
he smiled. "No, Though I thank you. Just let him know I'm here.
When he's finished, that is." He
watched her go, then looked about him, wondering. Mu Chua's old
protector, Feng Chung, the Triad boss, had died three years earlier,
leaving a power vacuum down here below the Net. Rival Triads had
fought a long and bloody war for the dead man's territory,
culminating in the victory of Lu Ming-shao, or "Whiskers Lu,"
as he was better known. No respecter of fine detail, Lu had claimed
Mu Chua's House of the Ninth Ecstasy as his own, letting Mu Chua stay
on as Madam, nominally in charge of things. But the truth was that Lu
ran things his way these days, using Mu Chua's as a clearinghouse for
drugs and other things, as well as for entertaining his Above
clients. Things
had changed, and in the process Mu Chua's had lost its shine. The
girls here were no longer quite so carefree; and violence, once
banned from the house, was now a regular feature of their lives. So the
world changes, thought DeVore, considering whether he should make
Whiskers Lu an offer for the place. "Has
something amused you?" He
turned sharply, surprised that he'd not heard Ebert enter, then saw
that the Major was barefooted, a silk pan drawn loosely about
his otherwise naked body. DeVore
set the ch'a bowl down beside him and stood, facing Ebert. "I
thought you were in a hurry to see me." Ebert
smiled and walked past him, pulling at the bell rope to summon one of
the girls. He turned back, the smile still on his lips. "I was.
But I've had time to think things through." He laughed softly.
"I ought to thank you, Howard. You knew that Tolonen would
screen his staff officers, didn't you?" DeVore
nodded. "I
thought so." There
was a movement to their right, a rustling of the curtains, and then a
girl entered, her head lowered. "You called, Masters?" "Bring
us a bottle of your best wine and two"— he looked at
DeVore, then corrected himself—"no, make that just one
glass." When
she was gone, DeVore looked down, for the first time letting his
anger show. "What
the fuck are you up to, Hans?" Ebert
blinked, surprised by DeVore's sudden hostility. Then, bridling, he
turned, facing him. "What do you mean?" "I
ought to kill you." "Kill
me? Why?" "For
what you did. It didn't take much to piece it together. There was
really no other possibility. No one else knew enough about our plans
to attack the plantations. It had to be you who blew the whistle." Ebert
hesitated. "Ah . . . that." Then, unbelievably, he gave a
little laugh. "I'm afraid I had to, Howard. One of our captains
got a whiff of things. If it had been one of my own men I could have
done something about it, but the man had already put in his report. I
had to act quickly. If they'd taken them alive . . ." DeVore
was breathing strangely, as if preparing to launch himself at the
bigger man. "I'm
sure you see it, Howard," Ebert continued, looking away from
him. "It's like in wei chi. You have to sacrifice a group
sometimes, for the sake of the game. Well, it was like that. It was
either act or lose the whole game. I did it for the best." You
did it to save your own arse, thought DeVore, calming himself,
trying to keep from killing Ebert there and then. It wouldn't do to
be too hasty. And maybe Ebert was right, whatever his real motive.
Maybe it had prevented a far worse calamity. At least the fortresses
were safe. But it still left him with the problem of dealing with the
Ping Tiao. "So
Wiegand's dead?" Ebert
nodded. "I made sure of that myself." Yes,
he thought. I bet you did. He forced himself to unclench his
fists, then turned away. It was the closest he had come to losing
control. Don't let it get to you, he told himself, but it
did no good. There was something about Ebert that made him want to
let fly, whatever the consequences. But no—that was Tolonen's
way, not his. It was what made the old man so weak. And Ebert too.
But he was not like that. He used his anger; made it work for him,
not against him. The
girl brought the wine, then left them. As Ebert turned to pour,
DeVore studied him, wondering, not for the first time, what Hans
Ebert would have been had he not been bom heir to GenSyn. A low-level
bully, perhaps. A hireling of some bigger, more capable man; but
essentially the same callous, selfish type, full of braggadocio, his
dick bigger than his brain. Or was
that fair? Wasn't there also something vaguely heroic about Ebert—
something that circumstance might have molded otherwise? Was it his
fault that he had been allowed everything, denied nothing? He
watched Ebert turn, smiling, and nodded to himself. Yes, it was
his fault. Ebert was a weak man, beneath it all, and his weakness
had cost them dearly. He would pay for it. Not now—he was
needed now—but later, when he had served his purpose. "Kan
Pei!" Ebert said, raising his glass. "Anyway, Howard, I've
better news." DeVore
narrowed his eyes. What else had Ebert been up to? Ebert
drank heavily from his glass, then sat, facing DeVore. "You're
always complaining about being underfunded. Well. . ." his smile
broadened, as if at his own cleverness, "I've found us some new
backers. Acquaintances of mine." "Acquaintances?" Ebert
laughed. "Friends . . . People sympathetic to what we're doing."
DeVore felt the tension creep back into his limbs. "What have
you said?" Ebert's face cleared, became suddenly sharper. "Oh,
nothing specific, don't worry. I'm not stupid. I sounded them first.
Let them talk. Then, later on, I spoke to them in private. These are
people I trust, you understand? People IVe known a long time." DeVore
took a long breath. Maybe, but he would check them out himself.
Thoroughly. Because, when it came down to it, he didn't trust Ebert's
judgment. "What sums are you talking about?" "Enough
to let you finish building your fortresses." DeVore
gave a small laugh. Did Ebert know how much that was, or was-he just
guessing? One thing was certain; he had never told Hans Ebert how
much even one of the great underground fortresses cost. "That's
good, Hans. I'll have to meet these friends of yours." MU
chua closed the door behind her, furious with Ebert. She had seen the
bruises on the girl's arms and back. The bastard! There'd been no
need. The girl was only fourteen. If he'd wanted that he should have
said. She'd have sent in one of the older girls. They, at least, were
hardened to it. She
stood still, closing her eyes, calming down. He would be out
to see her any moment and it wouldn't do to let him see how angry she
was. Word could get back to Lu Ming-shao, and then there'd be hell to
pay. She
shuddered. Life here could still be sweet—some days—but
too often it was like today, a brutish struggle simply to survive. She
went to her desk and busied herself, making out his bill, charging
him for the two sessions and for the wine and ch'a. She
paused, frowning, as she thought of his guest. There was something
strangely familiar about Shih Reynolds—as if they'd met
some time in the past—but she couldn't place him. He seemed a
nice enough man, but could that really be said of anyone who
associated with that young bastard? For once she wished she had
overheard what they were talking about. She could have—after
all, Lu Ming-shao had put in the surveillance equipment only four
months back—but a lifetime's habits were hard to break. She had
never spied on her clients and she didn't intend to start now; not
unless Lu specifically ordered her to. Mu
Chua froze, hearing Ebert's voice outside, then turned in time to
greet him as he came through the door into her office. "Was
it everything you wished for, Master?" He
laughed and reached out to touch her breast familiarly. "It was
good, Mu Chua. Very good. I'd forgotten how good a house you run." Her
smile widened, though inside she felt something shrivel up at his
touch. Few men touched her these days, preferring younger flesh than
hers, even so there was something horrible about the thought of being
used by him. "I'm
pleased," she said, bowing her head. "Here," she said,
presenting her bill, the figures written in Mandarin on the
bright-red paper. He
smiled and, without looking at the bill, handed her a single credit
chip. She looked down, then bowed her head again. "Why,
thank you, Master. You are too generous." He
laughed, freeing her breasts from her robe and studying them a
moment. Then, as if satisfied, he turned to go. "Forgive
me, Major Ebert. . ." she began, taking a step toward him. He
stopped and turned. "Yes, Mother Chua?" "I
was wondering . . . about the girl." Ebert
frowned. "The girl?" Mu
Chua averted her eyes. "Golden Heart. You remember, surely? The
thirteen-year-old you bought here. That time you came with the other
soldiers." He
laughed; a strangely cold laugh. "Ah, yes ... I'd forgotten that
I got her here." "Well?" He
looked at her, then turned away, impatient now. "Look, I'm busy,
Mu Chua. I'm Major now, I have my duties." She
looked at him desperately, then bowed her head again, her lips formed
into a smile. "Of course. Forgive me, Major." But inwardly
she seethed. Busy! Not too busy, it seemed, to spend more than two
hours fucking her girls! As the
door closed behind him she spat at the space where he had been
standing, then stood there, tucking her breasts back inside her robe,
watching her spittle dribble slowly down the red lacquered surface of
the door. "You
bastard," she said softly. "I only wanted a word. Just to
know how she is— whether
she's still alive." She
looked down at the credit chip in her hand. It was for a thousand
yuan— more than four times what she had billed him—but
he had treated it as nothing. Perhaps
that's why, she thought, closing her hand tightly over it. You
have no values because you don't know what anything is really
worth. You think you can buy anything. Well,
maybe he could. Even so, there was something lost in being as he was.
He lacked decency. She
went to the drawer of her desk and pulled out the strongbox, opening
it with the old-fashioned key that hung about her neck. Rummaging
about among the credit chips she found two for two hundred and fifty
yuan and removed them, replacing them with Ebert's thousand. Then,
smiling to herself, she felt among her underclothes and after wetting
herself with her finger, placed the two chips firmly up her clout. She
had almost saved enough now. Almost. Another month—two at the
most—and she could get out of here. Away from Whiskers Lu and
bastards like Ebert. And maybe she would go into business on her own
again. For, after all, men were always men. They might talk and dress
differently up there, but beneath it all they were the same
creatures. She
laughed, wondering suddenly how many li of First Level cock she'd had
up her in the fifty years she had been in the business. No. In that
respect, nothing ever changed. They might talk of purity, but their
acts always betrayed them. It was why she had thrived over the
years—because of that darkness they all carried about in them.
Men. They might all say they were above it, but try as they would, it
was the one thing they could not climb the levels to escape. FEI
YEN STOOD before him, her silk robes held open, revealing her
nakedness. "Please,
Yuan ... It won't hurt me." His
eyes went to her breasts, traced the swollen curve of her belly, then
returned to her face. He wanted her so much that it hurt, but there
was the child to think of. "Please
. . ." The
tone in her voice, the need expressed in it, made him shiver,
then reach out to touch her. "The doctors. . ." he began,
but she was shaking her head, her eyes— those beautiful,
liquid-dark eyes of hers—pleading with him. "What
do they know? Can they feel what I feel? No. So come, Yuan. Make love
to me. Don't you know how much I've missed you?" He
shuddered, feeling her fingers on his neck, then nodded, letting her
undress him; but he still felt wrong about it. Lying
beside her afterward, his hand caressing her stomach tenderly, he
said, "I could have hurt you." She
took his hand and held it still. "Don't be silly. I'd have told
you if it hurt." She gave a little shudder, then looked down,
smiling. "Besides, I want our child to be lusty, don't you? I
want him to know that his mother is loved." Her
eyes met his provocatively, then looked away. TOLONEN
bowed deeply, then stepped forward, handing Li Shai Tung the report
Hans Ebert had prepared on the planned attack on the plantations. "It's
all here?" the T'ang asked, his eyes meeting Tolonen's briefly
before they returned to the opening page of the report. "Everything
we discussed, Chieh Hsia." "And
copies have gone to all the Generals?" "And
to their T'ang, no doubt." Li
Shai Tung smiled bleakly. "Good." He had been closeted with
his ministers since first light and had had no time to refresh his
mind about the details. Now, in the few minutes that remained to him
before the Council of the Seven met, he took the time to look through
the file. Halfway
through he looked up. "You know, Knut, sometimes I wish I could
direct-input all this. It would make things so much easier." Tolonen
smiled, tracing the tiny slot behind his ear with his right index
finger, then shook his head. "It would not be right to break
with tradition, Chieh Hsia. Besides, you have servants and
ministers to assist you in such matters." Yes,
thought the T'ang, and as you've so often said, it would only be
another way in which my enemies could get to me. I've heard they can
do it now. Programs that destroy the mind's ability to reason. Like
the food I eat, it would need to be "tasted." No, perhaps
you're right, Knut Tolonen. It would only build more walls between
Chung Kuo and me, and the gods know there are enough already. He
finished the document quickly, then closed it, looking back at
Tolonen. "Is there anything else?" Tolonen
paused, then lowered his voice slightly. "One thing, Chieh
Hsia. In view of how things are developing, shouldn't we inform
Prince Yuan?" Li
Shai Tung considered a moment, then shook his head. "No, Knut.
Yuan has worked hard these last few weeks. He needs time with that
wife of his." He smiled, his own tiredness showing at the comers
of his mouth. "You know how Yuan is. If he knew, he would be
back here instantly, and there's nothing he can really do to help. So
let it be. If I need him, I'll instruct Master Nan to brief him
fully. Until then, let him rest." "Chieh Hsia." Li
Shai Tung watched his old friend stride away, then turned, pulling at
his beard thoughtfully. The session ahead was certain to be difficult
and it might have helped to have Yuan at his side, but he remembered
the last time, when Wang Sau-leyan had insisted on the Prince's
leaving. Well, he would give him no opportunity to pull such strokes
this time. It was too important. For what he was about to suggest. .
. He shuddered. Twenty years too late, it was. He knew that now. Knew
how vulnerable they had become in that time. But it had to be said,
even if it split the Council. Because unless it was faced—and
faced immediately—there could be no future for them. He
looked about him at the cold grandeur of the marble hallway, his eyes
coming to rest on the great wheel of the Ywe Lung carved into
the huge double doors, then shook his head. This was the turning
point. Whatever they decided today, there was no turning back from
this, no further chance to right things. The cusp was upon them. And
beyond? Li
Shai Tung felt a small ripple of fear pass down his spine, then
turned and went across to the great doorway, the four shaven-headed
guards bowing low before they turned and pushed back the heavy doors. WEI
FENG, T'ang of East Asia, sat forward in his chair and looked about
him at the informal circle of his fellow T'ang, his face stem, his
whole manner immensely dignified. It was he who had called this
emergency meeting of the Council; he who, as the most senior of the
Seven, hosted it now, at his palace of Chung Ning in Ning Hsia
Province. Seeing him lean forward, the other T'ang fell silent,
waiting for him to speak. "Well,
cousins, we have all read the reports, and I think we would all agree
that a major disaster was only narrowly averted, thanks to the quick
action of Li Shai Tung's Security forces. A disaster that, while its
immediate consequences would have befallen one of our number alone,
would have damaged every one of us. For are not the seven One and the
one Seven?" There
was nodding from all quarters, even from Wang Sau-leyan. Wei Feng
looked about him, satisfied, then spoke again. "It
is, of course, why we are here today. The attack on Bremen and the
planned Uttmnwn Plantations are significant enough in
themselves, but they have far wider implications. It is to these
wider implications—to the underlying causes and the long-term
prospects for Chung Kuo—that we must address ourselves." Wei
Feng looked briefly to his old friend Li Shai Tung, then lifted one
hand from the arm of his chair, seventy-five years of command forming
that tiny, almost effortless gesture. All of his long experience, the
whole majesty of his power, was gathered momentarily in his raised
hand, while his seated form seemed to emanate an aura of solemn
purpose and iron-willed determination. His eyes traced the circle of
his fellow T'ang. "These
are special circumstances, my cousins. Very special. I can think of
no occasion on which the threat to the stability of Chung Kuo has
been greater than it is now." There
was a low murmur of agreement, a nodding of heads. To Li Shai Tung it
felt suddenly like old times, with the Council as one not merely in
its policy but in its sentiments. He looked across at Wang Sau-leyan
and saw how the young T'ang of Africa was watching him, his eyes
filled with a sympathetic understanding. It was unexpected, but not,
when he considered it, surprising, for this—as Wei Feng had
said—threatened them all. If some good were to come of all that
horror, let it be this—that it had served to unify the Seven. He
looked back at Wei Feng, listening. "Not
even in the darkest days of the War was there a time when we did not
believe in the ultimate and inevitable triumph of the order that we
represent. But can we say so with such confidence today? Bremen was
more than a tragedy for all those who lost friends and family in the
attack—it was a show of power. A statement of potentiality.
What we must discover is this—who wields that power?
What is that potentiality? The very fact that we cannot answer these
questions immediately concerns me, for it indicates just how much we
have lost control of things. For Bremen to have happened ought to
have been unthinkable. But now we must face facts—must begin to
think the unthinkable." Wei
Feng turned slightly, the fingers of his hand opening out, pointed
toward Li Shai Tung. "Cousins!
It is time to say openly what has hitherto remained unexpressed. Li
Shai Tung, will you begin?" Their
eyes turned to the T'ang of Europe expectantly. "Cousins,"
Li Shai Tung began softly. "I wish I had come to you in better
days and spoken of these things, rather than have had adversity push
me to it. But you must understand that what I say here today is no
hasty, ill-considered reaction to Bremen, but has matured in me over
many years. Forgive me also if what I say seems at times to border on
a lecture. It is not meant so, I assure you. Yet it seemed to me that
I must set these things out clearly before you, if only to see
whether my eyes, my brain, deceived me in this matter, or whether my
vision and my reason hold good." "We
are listening, Cousin Li," Tsu Ma said, his expression willing
Li Shai Tung to go on—to say what had to be said. Li Shai Tung
looked about him, seeing that same encouragement mirrored in the
faces of the other T'ang, even in the pallid, moonlike face of Wang
Sau-leyan. "Very
well," he said, keeping his eyes on Wang Sau-leyan, "but
you must hear me out." "Of
course," Wei Feng said quickly, wanting to smooth over any
possibility of friction between the two T'ang. "There will be
ample time afterward to discuss these matters fully. So speak out,
Shai Tung. We are all ears." He
looked down, searching inside himself for the right words, knowing
there was no easy way to put it. Then, looking up, his face suddenly
set, determined, he began. "You
have all read Major Ebert's report, so you understand just how close
the Ping Tiao came to succeeding in their scheme to destroy
large areas of the East European Plantations. What you haven't seen,
however, is a second report I commissioned. A report to ascertain the
probable economic and social consequences had the Ping Tiao
succeeded." He saw
how they looked at each other and knew that the matter had been in
all their minds. "It
was, of necessity, a hastily compiled report, and I have since
commissioned another to consider the matter in much greater detail.
However, the results of that first report make fascinating
and—without exaggerating the matter—frightening reading.
Before I come to those results, however, let me undertake a brief
resume of the situation with regard to food production and population
increase over the past fifteen-year period." He saw
how Wang Sau-leyan looked down and felt his stomach tighten, instinct
telling him he would have to fight the younger T'ang on this. Well,
so be it. It was too important a matter to back down over. He
cleared his throat. "Back in 2192 the official population figure
for the whole of Chung Kuo was just short of thirty-four billion—a
figure that excludes, of course, the populations of both Net and
Clay. I mention this fact because, while the figure for the Clay
might, with good reason, be overlooked, that for the Net cannot. The
relationship of Net to City is an important one economically,
particularly in terms of food production; for while we have no
jurisdiction over the Net, we nonetheless produce all of the food
consumed there. "Unofficial
estimates for 2192 placed the population of the Net at just over
three billion. However, the growing number of demotions over the
period, added to an ever-increasing birth-rate down there, have given
rise to latest estimates of at least twice that number, with the
highest estimate indicating a below-Net population of eight billion. "Over
the same period the population of the City has also climbed, though
not with anything like the same rate of growth. The census of 2200
revealed a rounded-up figure of 37,800,000,000—a growth
rate of just under a half-billion a year." Li Shai Tung paused,
recalling the reports his father had once shown him from more than
two hundred years ago—World Population Reports compiled by an
ancient body called the United Nations. They had contained an
underlying assumption that as Man's material condition improved, so
his numbers would stabilize, but the truth was otherwise. One law
alone governed the growth of numbers—the capacity of Humankind
to feed itself. As health standards had improved, so infant mortality
rates had plummeted. At the same time life expectancy had increased
dramatically. With vast areas of the City being opened up yearly, the
population of Chung Kuo had grown exponentially for the first century
of the City's existence. It had doubled, from four to eight billion,
from eight to sixteen, then from sixteen to thirty-two, each doubling
a matter of only thirty years. Against such vast and unchecked growth
the United Nations estimate of the world's population stabilizing at
10.2 billion was laughable. What had happened was more like the
ancient tale of the king and the uiei chi board. In the
tale the king had granted the peasant his wish—for one grain of
rice on the first square of the board, twice as much on the second,
twice as much again on the third, and so on—not realizing how
vast the final total was, how far beyond his means to give. So it was
with the Seven. They had guaranteed the masses of Chung Kuo unlimited
food, shelter, and medical care, with no check upon their numbers. It
was madness. A madness that could be tolerated no longer. He
looked about him, saw how they were waiting for him, as if they knew
where his words led. "That
rate of growth has not, thankfully, maintained itself over the last
seven years. However, births are still outstripping deaths by two to
one, and the current figure of thirty-nine-and-a-half billion is
still enough to cause us major concern, particularly in view of the
growing problems with food production." So here he was, at
last, speaking about it. He
looked across at Wu Shih, then back to Tsu Ma, seeing how tense his
fellow T'ang had grown. Even Wei Feng was looking down, disturbed by
the direction Li Shai Tung's words had taken. He pressed on. "As
you know, for the past twenty years I have been trying to anticipate
these problems—to find solutions without taking what seems to
me now the inevitable step. The number of orbital farms, for
instance, has been increased eight hundred percent in the past
fifteen years, resulting in fifty-five percent of all Chung Kuo's
food now being grown off-planet. That success, however, has caused us
new problems. There is the danger of cluttering up the skies; the
problem of repairing and maintaining such vast and complex
machineries; the need to build at least four and possibly as many as
twelve new spaceports, capacity at the present ports being strained
to the limit. Added to this, the cost of ferrying down the produce,
of processing it and distributing it, has grown year by year. And
then, as we all know, there have been accidents." He
saw, once again, how they looked at each other. This was the Great
Unsaid. If the Seven could be said to have a taboo it was this—the
relationship of food production to population growth. It was Chung
Kuo's oldest problem—as old as the First Emperor, Ch'in Shih
Huang Ti himself—yet for a century or more they had refused to
discuss it, even to mention it. And why? Because that relationship
underpinned the one great freedom they had promised the people of
Chung Kuo— the one freedom upon which the whole great edifice
of Family and Seven depended—the right to have an unlimited
number of children. Take that away and the belief in Family
was undermined; a belief that was sacrosanct—that was the very
foundation stone of their great State. For were they not themselves
the fathers of their people? Yes.
But now that had to change. A new relationship had to be forged, less
satisfactory than the old, yet necessary; because without it there
would be nothing. No Seven, no State, nothing but anarchy. "We
know these things," he said softly, "yet we say nothing of
them. But now it is time to do our sums: to balance the one against
the other and see where such figures lead us. All of which brings me
back to the report I commissioned and its central question—what
would have happened if the Ping Tioo had succeeded in their attack on
the plantations?" "Li
Shai Tung . . . ?" It was Wei Feng. "Yes,
Cousin?" "Will
we be given copies of this report of yours?" "Of
course." Wei
Feng met his eyes briefly, his expression deeply troubled. "Good.
But let me say how—unorthodox I find this: to speak of a
document none of us have seen. It is not how we normally transact our
business," Li
Shai Tung lowered his head, respecting his old friend's feelings. "I
understand, Cousin, but these are not normal times, nor is this
matter—orthodox, shall we say. It was simply that I did not
feel I could submit such a document for the record. However, when the
detailed report is ready I shall ensure each of you receive a copy at
once." Wei
Feng nodded, but it was clear he was far from happy with the way
things had developed, despite his words about "thinking the
unthinkable." Li Shai Tung studied him a moment, trying to gauge
how strongly he felt on the matter; then he looked away, resuming his
speech. "However,
from our first and admittedly hurried estimates, we believe that the
Ping Tioo attack would have destroyed as much as thirty-five percent
of the East European growing areas. In terms of overall food
production this equates with approximately ten percent of City
Europe's total." He
leaned forward slightly. "Were
this merely a matter of percentage reductions the problem would be a
relatively minor one—and, indeed, short term, for the growing
areas could be redeveloped within three months—but the fact is
that we have developed a distribution network that is immensely
fragile. If you will forgive the analogy, we are like an army
encamped in enemy territory that has tried to keep its supply lines
as short as possible. This has meant that food from the plantations
has traditionally been used to feed the eastern Hsien of City
Europe, while the food brought down from the orbitals—landed in
the six spaceports on the western and southern coasts—has been
used to feed the west and south of the City. If the plantations
failed, it would mean shipping vast amounts of grain, meat, and other
edibles across the continent. It is not impossible, but it would be
difficult to organize and immensely costly." He
paused significantly. "That, however, would be the least of our
problems. Because production has not kept pace with population
growth, the physical amount of food consumed by our citizenry has
dropped considerably over the past fifteen years. On average, people
now eat ten percent less than they did in 2192. To ask them to cut
their consumption by a further ten percent—as we would
undoubt-edly have to in the short term—would, I am told, return
us to the situation we faced a year ago, with widespread rioting in
the lower levels. The potential damage of that is, as you can
imagine, inestimable. "But
let me come to my final point—the point at which my worries
become your worries. For what we are really talking of here is not a
question of logistics—of finding administrative solutions to
large-scale problems—but an ongoing situation of
destabilization. Such an attack, we could be certain, would be but
the first, and each subsequent attack would find us more vulnerable,
our resources stretched much further, our options fewer. What we are
talking of is a downward spiral with the only end in sight our own.
My counsellors estimate that it would need only a twenty-five percent
reduction in food supplies to make City Europe effectively
ungovernable. And what can happen in Europe can, I am assured, be
duplicated elsewhere. So you see, cousins, this matter has brought to
our attention just how vulnerable we are in this, the most important
and yet most neglected area of government." He
fell silent, noting the air of uneasiness that had fallen over the
meeting. It was Wu Shih, T'ang of North America, who articulated what
they all were thinking. "And
what is your answer, Shai Tung?" Li
Shai Tung took a small, shuddering breath, then answered. "For
too long we have been running hard to try to catch up with ourselves.
The time has come when we can do that no longer. Our legs cannot hold
us. We must have controls. Now, before it is too late." "Controls?"
Wang Sau-leyan asked, a faint puzzlement in his face. Li
Shai Tung looked back at him, nodding. But even now it was hard to
say the words themselves. Hard to throw off the shroud of silence
that surrounded this matter and speak of it directly. He raised
himself slightly in his chair, then forced himself to say it. "What
I mean is this. We must limit the number of children a man might
have." The silence that greeted his words was worse than
anything Li Shai Tung had ever experienced in Council. He looked to
Tsu Ma. "You see the need, don't you, Tsu Ma?" Tsu Ma
met his eyes firmly, only the faintness of his smile suggesting his
discomfort. "I understand your concern, dear friend. And what
you said—there is undeniably a deal of truth in it. But is
there no other way?" Li
Shai Tung shook his head. "Do you think I would even raise the
matter if I thought there were another way? No. We must take this
drastic action and take it soon. The only real question is how we go
about it. How we can make this great change while maintaining the
status quo." Wei
Feng pulled at his beard, disturbed by this talk. "Forgive me,
Shai Tung, but I do not agree. You talk of these things as if they
must come about, but I cannot see that. The attack on the plantations
would, I agree, have had serious repercussions, yet now we are
forewarned. Surely we can take measures to prevent further attacks?
When you said to me earlier that you wished to take decisive action,
I thought you meant something else." "What
else could I have meant?" Wei
Feng's ancient features were suddenly unyielding. "It's obvious,
surely, Cousin? We must take measures to crush these revolutionaries.
Enforce a curfew in the lower levels. Undertake level-by-level
searches. Offer rewards for information on these bastards." Li
Shai Tung looked down. That was not what he meant. The solution was
not so simple. The dragon of Change had many heads—cut off one
and two more grew in its place. No, they had to be far more radical
than that. They had to go to the source of the problem. Right down to
the root. "Forgive
me, cousin Feng, but I have already taken such measures as you
suggest. I have already authorized young Ebert to strike back at the
Ping Tiao. But that will do nothing to assuage the problem I
was talking of earlier. We must act before this trickle of
revolutionary activity becomes a flood." Wu
Shih was nodding. "I understand what you are saying, Shai Tung,
but don't you think that your cure might prove more drastic than the
disease? After all, there is nothing more sacred than a man's right
to have children. Threaten that and you might alienate not just the
revolutionary elements but the whole of Chung Kuo." "And
yet there are precedents." Wei
Feng snorted. "You mean the Ko Ming emperors? And where did that
end? What did that achieve?" It was
true. Under Mao Tse Tung the Ko Ming had tried to solve this problem
more than two hundred years before, but their attempt to create the
one-child family had had only limited success. It had worked in the
towns, but in the countryside the peasants had continued having six,
often a dozen children. And though the situations were far from
parallel, the basic underlying attitude was unchanged. Chung Kuo was
a society embedded in the concept of the Family, and in the right to
have sons. Such a change would need to be enforced. He
looked back at Wu Shih. "There would be trouble, I agree. A
great deal of trouble. But nothing like what must ultimately come
about if we continue to ignore this problem." He looked about
him, his voice raised momentarily, passionate in its belief. "Don't
you see it, any of you? We must do this! We have no choice!" "You
wish to put this to a vote, Shai Tung?" Wei Feng asked, watching
him through narrowed eyes. A
vote? He had not expected that. All he had wanted was for them to
carry the idea forward—to agree to bring the concept into the
realm of their discussions. To take the first step. A vote at this
stage could prevent all that, could remove the idea from the agenda
for good. He
began to shake his head, but Wang Sau-leyan spoke up, taking up Wei
Feng's challenge. "I
think a vote would be a good idea, cousins. It would clarify how we
feel on this matter. As Shai Tung says, the facts are clear, the
problem real. We cannot simply ignore it. I for one support Shai
Tung's proposal. Though we must think carefully how and when we
introduce such measures, there is no denying the need for their
introduction." Li
Shai Tung looked up, astonished. Wang Sau-leyan—supporting him!
He looked across at Tsu Ma, then to Wu Shih. Then perhaps . . . Wei
Feng turned in his chair, facing him. "I take it you support
your own proposal, Shai Tung?" "I
do." "Then
that is two for the proposal." He
looked at Wu Shih. The T'ang of North America looked across at Li
Shai Tung, then slowly shook his head. "And
one against." Tsu Ma
was next. He hesitated, then nodded his agreement. "Three
for, one against." Next
was Chi Hsing, T'ang of the Australias. "No," he said,
looking to Li Shai Tung apologetically. "Forgive me, Shai Tung,
but I think Wu Shih is right." Three
for, two against. On the
other side of Wang Sau-leyan sat Hou Tung-po, T'ang of South America,
his smooth, unbearded cheeks making him seem even younger than his
friend, Wang. Li Shai Tung studied him, wondering if, in this as in
most things, he would follow Wang's line. "Well,
Tung-po?" Wei Feng asked. "You have two children now. Two
sons. Would
you have one of them not exist?" Li
Shai Tung sat forward angrily. "That is unfair, Wei Feng!" Wei
Feng lifted his chin. "Is it? You mean that the Seven would be
exceptions to the general rule?" Li
Shai Tung hesitated. He had not considered this. He had thought of it
only in general terms. "Don't
you see where all this leads us, Shai Tung?" Wei Feng asked, his
voice suddenly much softer, his whole manner conciliatory. "Can't
you see the great depth of bitterness such a policy would bring in
its wake? You talk of the end of Chung Kuo, of having no alternative;
yet in this we truly have no alternative. The freedom to have
children—that must be sacrosanct. And we must find other
solutions, Shai Tung. As we always have. Isn't that the very reason
for our existence? Isn't that the purpose of the Seven—to
keep the balance?" "And if the balance is already lost?" Wei
Feng looked back at him, a deep sadness in his eyes, then turned,
looking back at Hou Tung-po. "Well, Tung-po?" The
young T'ang glanced at Li Shai Tung, then shook his head. Three for.
Three against. And there was no doubt which way Wei Feng would vote.
Li Shai Tung shivered. Then the nightmare must come. As sure as he
saw it in his dreams, the City falling beneath a great tidal wave of
blood. And afterward? He thought of the dream his son Li Yuan had
had, so long ago. The dream of a great white mountain of bones,
filling the plain where the City had once stood. He thought of it and
shuddered. "And
you, Wei Feng?" he asked, meeting his old friend's eyes, his own
lacking all hope. "I
say no, Li Shai Tung. I say no." OUTSIDE,
in the great entrance hall, Tsu Ma drew Li Shai Tung aside, leaning
close to whisper to him. "I
wish a word with you, Shai Tung. In private, where no one can
overhear us." Li
Shai Tung frowned. This was unlike Tsu Ma. "What is it?" "In
private, please, Cousin." They
went into one of the small adjoining rooms and closed the door behind
them. "Well,
Tsu Ma? What is it?" Tsu Ma
came and stood very close, keeping his voice low, the movements of
his lips hidden from the view of any overseeing cameras. "I
must warn you, Shai Tung. There is a spy in your household. Someone
very close to you." "A
spy?" He shook his head. "What do you mean?" "I
mean just that. A spy. How else do you think Wang Sau-leyan has been
able to anticipate you? He knew what you were going to say to the
Council. Why else do you think he supported you? Because he knew he
could afford to. Because he had briefed those two puppets of his to
vote with Wei Feng." Li
Shai Tung stared back at Tsu Ma, astonished not merely at this
revelation, but by the clear disrespect he was showing to his fellow
T'ang, Hou Tung-po and Chi Hsing. "How
do you know?" he asked, his own voice a hoarse whisper now. It
was unheard of. Unthinkable. Tsu Ma
laughed softly, and leaned even closer. "I have my own spies,
Shai Tung. That's how I know." Li
Shai Tung nodded vaguely, but inside he felt a numbness, a real
shock, at the implications of what Tsu Ma was saying. For it meant
that the Seven could no longer trust each other. Were no longer, in
effect, Seven, but merely seven men, pretending to act as one. He
shuddered. This was an ill day. He shook his head. "And what—?" He
stopped, turning, as someone began knocking on the door. "Come
in!" said Tsu Ma, stepping back from him. It was
Wei Feng's Chancellor, Ch'in Tao Fan. He bowed low. "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia, but my master asks if you would kindly return.
Urgent news has come in. Something he feels you both should see." They
followed Ch'in into Wei Feng's study, finding the other five T'ang
gathered before a huge wallscreen. The picture was frozen. It showed
a shaven-headed Han, kneeling, a knife held before him. "What
is this?" Li Shai Tung asked, looking to Wei Feng. "Watch,"
Wei Feng answered. "All of you, watch." As the
camera backed away, a large "big-character" poster was
revealed behind the kneeling man, its crude message painted in
bright-red ink on white in Mandarin, an English translation
underneath in black. PING
TIAO INNOCENT OF BREMEN TRAGEDY
WE
OFFER OUR BODIES IN SYMPATHY WITH THOSE WHO DIED
The
camera focused on the man once more. He was breathing slowly now,
gathering himself about the point of his knife. Then, with a great
contortion of his features, he cut deep into his belly, drawing the
knife slowly, agonizingly across, disemboweling himself. Li
Shai Tung shuddered. Our bodies. . . did that mean? He turned to Wei
Feng. "How
many of them were there?" "Two,
maybe three hundred, scattered throughout the City. But the poster
was the same everywhere. It was all very tightly coordinated. Their
deaths were all within a minute of each other, timed to coincide with
the very hour of the original attack." "And
were they all Han?" Tsu Ma asked, his features registering the
shock they all felt. Wei
Feng shook his head. "No. They were evenly distributed, Han and
Hung Mao. Whoever arranged this knew what he was doing. It was
quite masterful." "And
a lie," said Wu Shih, angrily. "Of
course. But the masses will see it otherwise. If I had known I would
have stopped the pictures going out." "And
the rumors?" Tsu Ma shook his head. "No, you could not have
hushed this up, Wei Feng. It would have spread like wildfire. But you
are right. Whoever organized this understood the power of the
gesture. It has changed things totally. Before, we had a mandate to
act as we wished against them. But now . . ." Li
Shai Tung laughed bitterly. "It changes nothing, Cousin. I will
crush them anyway." "Is
that wise?" Wei Feng asked, looking about him to gauge what the
others felt. "Wise
or not, it is how I will act. Unless my cousins wish it otherwise?" Li
Shai Tung looked about him, challenging them, a strange defiance in
his eyes; then
he turned and hurried from the room, his every movement expressive of
a barely controlled anger. "Follow
him, Tsu Ma," Wei Feng said, reaching out to touch his arm.
"Catch up with him and try to make him see sense. I understand
his anger, but you are right— this changes things. You must
make him see that." Tsu Ma
smiled, then looked away, as if following Li Shai Tung's progress
through the walls. "I will try, Wei Feng. But I promise nothing.
Bremen has woken something in our cousin. Something hard and fierce.
I fear it will not sleep until he has assuaged it." "Maybe
so. But we must try. For all our sakes." CHAPTER
TWO
Gods
of the Flesh KUAN
YIN, preserve us! What is that?" DeVore
turned, looking at his new lieutenant. "Haven't you ever seen
one of these, Schwarz?" He stroked the blind snout of the
nearest head, the primitive nervous system of the beast responding to
the gentleness of his touch. "It's a jou tung wu, my
friend, a meat-animal." The
jou tung wu filled the whole of the left-hand side of the
factory floor, its vast pink bulk contained within a rectangular mesh
of ice. It was a huge mountain of flesh, a hundred ch'i to a
side and almost twenty ch'i in height. Along one side of it,
like the teats of a giant pig, three dozen heads jutted from the
flesh; long, eyeless snouts with shovel jaws that snuffled and
gobbled in the conveyor-belt trough that moved constantly before
them. The
stench of it was overpowering. It had been present even in the
elevator coming up, permeating the whole of the stack, marking the
men who tended it with its rich indelible scent. The
factory was dimly lit, the ceiling somewhere in the darkness high
overhead. A group of technicians stood off to one side, talking
softly, nervously, among themselves. Schwarz
shuddered. "Why does it have to be so dark in here?" DeVore
glanced at him. "It's light-sensitive, that's why," he
said, as if that were all there was to it; but he didn't like it
either. Why had Gesell wanted to meet them here? Was the lighting a
factor? Was the bastard planning something? DeVore
looked past Schwarz at Lehmann. "Stefan. Here." Lehmann
came across and stood there silently, like a machine waiting to be
instructed. "I
want no trouble here," DeVore said, his voice loud enough to
carry to the technicians. "Even if Gesell threatens me, I want
you to hold off. Understand me? He'll
be angry. Justifiably so. But I don't want to make things any more
difficult than they are." Lehmann
nodded and moved back. There
was the sound of a door sliding back at the far end of the factory. A
moment later five figures emerged from the shadows—Gesell; the
woman, Ascher; and three others, big men they hadn't seen before.
Looking at them, DeVore realized they were bodyguards and wondered
why Gesell had suddenly found the need to have them. The
Ping Tiao leader wasted no time. He strode across and planted
himself before DeVore, his legs set apart, his eyes blazing, the
three men formed into a crescent at his back menacingly. "You've
got some talking to do this time, Shih Turner. And you'd better make
it good!" It was
the second time Gesell had threatened DeVore. Schwarz started to take
a step forward, but found Lehmann's hand on his arm, restraining him. "You're
upset," DeVore said calmly. "I understand that. It was a
fuck-up and it cost us dearly. Both of us." Gesell
gave a small laugh of astonishment. "You7. What
did it cost you? Nothing! You made sure you kept your hands clean,
didn't you?" "Are
you suggesting that what happened was my fault? As I
understand it, one of your squads moved into place too early. That
tipped off a Security captain. He reported in to his senior
commander. At that point the plug had to be pulled. The thing
wouldn't have worked. If you calmed down a while and thought it
through you'd see that. My man on staff had to do what he did.
If he hadn't, they'd have been in place, waiting for your assault
squads. They'd have taken some of them alive. And then where would
you be? They may have been brave men, Shih Gesell, but the T'ang's
servants have ways of getting information from even the stubbornest
of men. "As
for what I lost. I lost a great deal. My fortunes are bound up with
yours. Your failure hurt me badly. My backers are very angry." DeVore
fell silent, letting the truth of what he'd said sink in. Gesell
was very agitated, on the verge of striking DeVore, but he had been
listening—thinking through what DeVore had been saying—and
some part of him knew that it was true. Even so, his anger remained,
unassuaged. He
drew his knife. "You unctuous bastard . . ." DeVore
pushed the blade aside. "That'll solve nothing." Gesell
turned away, leaning against the edge of the trough, the jou tung
uiu in front of him. For a moment he stood there, his whole body
tensed. Then, in a frenzy of rage, he stabbed at the nearest head,
sticking it again and again with his knife, the blood spurting with
each angry thrust, the eyeless face lifting in torment, the long
mouth shrieking with pain, a shriek that was taken up all along the
line of heads, a great ripple running through the vast slab of
red-pink flesh. Gesell
shuddered and stepped back, looking about him, his eyes blinking,
then threw the knife down. He looked at DeVore blankly, then turned
away, while, behind him the blind snouts shrieked and shrieked,
filling the fetid darkness with their distress. The
technicians had held back. Now one of them, appalled by what the Ping
Tiao leader had done, hurried across, skirting Gesell. He jabbed
a needle-gun against the wounded head, then began rubbing salve into
the cuts, murmuring to the beast all the while as if it were a child.
After a moment the head slumped. Slowly the noise subsided, the heads
grew calm again, those nearest falling into a matching stupor. "Still,"
DeVore said after a moment, "you've contained the damage rather
well. I couldn't have done better myself." He saw
how Gesell glanced uncertainly at Ascher and knew at once that he'd
had nothing to do with the ritual suicides. He was about to make
comment when a voice came from the darkness to his left. "You
liked that? It was my idea." DeVore
turned slowly, recognizing Mach's voice. He narrowed his eyes, not
understanding. Mach was the last person he would have expected to
have tried to save the reputation of the Ping Tiao. No. The
collapse of the "Levelers" could only bolster the fortunes
of his own secret movement-within-a-movement, the Yu. Unless ...
He turned back, watching Gesell's face as Mach came toward him. Of
course! Gesell was out! Mach was now the de facto leader of the Ping
Tiao. It was what he had sensed earlier—why Gesell had been
so touchy, why he had begun to surround himself with thugs. Gesell
knew. Even if it hadn't been said, he knew. And was afraid. Mach
seemed taller, broader at the shoulder than before. Then DeVore
understood. He was wearing a uniform—the uniform of the
Security Reserve Corps. His long dark hair was coiled tightly in a
bun at the back of his head and he had shaved off the beard he
usually wore. He strode across casually, smiling tightly at Gesell,
then turned his back on his colleagues. "You've
got balls, Turner, I'll grant you that. If I'd been in your shoes,
this is the last place I'd come." DeVore
smiled. "I gambled. Guessed that the surprise of seeing me here
would make you listen to me. Even your friend, the hothead over
there." Gesell
glared back at him, but said nothing. It was as if Mach's presence
neutralized him. Mach
was nodding. "I'm sorry about that. Bent lets things get on top
of him at times. But he's a good man. He wants what I want." DeVore
looked from one to the other, trying to make out exactly what their
new relationship was. But one thing was clear: Mach was number one.
He alone spoke for the Ping Tiao now. Overnight the illusion
of equality—of committee—had dissipated, leaving a naked
power struggle. A struggle that Mach had clearly won. But had he won
anything of substance? Had he won it only to see the Ping Tiao
destroyed? If so, he seemed remarkably calm about it. "And
what do you want?" he asked. "Something new, or the same
old formula?" Mach laughed. "Does it matter? Are you
interested any longer?" "I'm
here, aren't I?" Mach
nodded, a slightly more thoughtful expression coming to his face.
"Yes." Again he laughed. It was strange. He seemed more
relaxed than DeVore had ever seen him. A man free of cares, not
burdened by them. "You
know, 1 was genuinely surprised when you contacted us. I wondered
what you could possibly want. After Bremen I thought you'd have
nothing to do with us. I did what I could to repair the damage, but.
. ." He shrugged. "Well, we all know how it is. We are
small fish in the great sea of the people, and if the sea turns
against us . . ." DeVore
smiled inwardly. So Mach knew his Mao. But had he Mao's dour
patience? Had he the steel in him to wait long years to see his
vision made real? His creation of the Yu suggested that he had. And
that was why he had come. To keep in touch with Mach. To cast off the
Ping Tiao and take up with the Yu. But it seemed that Mach had not
yet finished with the Ping Tiao. Why? Were the Yu not ready yet? Did
he need the Ping Tiao a while longer—as a mask, perhaps, for
his other activities? He
looked down, deciding how to play it; then he smiled, meeting Mach's
eyes again. "Let's
just say that I believe in you, Shih Mach. What happened was
unfortunate. Tragic, let's say. But not irreparable. We have
patience, you and I. The patience to rebuild from the ashes, neh?" Mach
narrowed his eyes. "And you think you can help?" DeVore
reached into his tunic pocket and took out the ten slender chips,
handing them across to Mach. Mach
looked at them, then laughed. "Half a million yuan. And
that'll solve all our problems?" "That
and four of my best propaganda men. They'll run a leaflet campaign in
the lower levels. They'll reconstruct what happened at Bremen until
even the most cynical unbeliever will have it on trust that the Seven
butchered fifteen thousand of their own to justify a campaign against
the Ping Tiao." Mach
laughed. "And you think that will work?" DeVore
shook his head. "No. 1 know it'll work. The Big Lie
always does." "And
in return?" "You
attack the plantations." Mach's
eyes widened. "You're mad. They'll be waiting for us now." "Like
they were at Bremen?" Mach
considered. "I take your point. But not now. We've lost too many
men. It'll take time to heal our wounds, and even more to train
others to take the place of those we lost." "How
long?" "A
year, perhaps. Six months at the very least." DeVore
shook his head. "Too long. Call it a month and I can promise
twenty times the money I've just given you." Mach's
mouth opened slightly, surprised. Then he shook his head. "For
once it's not a question of money. Or haven't you heard? The T'ang's
men raided more than a dozen of our cells this afternoon. To all
intents and purposes the Ping Tiao has ceased to exist in large parts
of City Europe. Elsewhere we're down to a bare skeleton. That's where
I Ve been, inspecting the damage. Touring the ruins, if you like." DeVore
looked past Mach at the others. No wonder the woman had been so
quiet. They had known. Even so, his reasoning remained sound. Until
the fortresses were ready, he needed an organization like the Ping
Tiao to burrow away at the foundations of the City and keep the Seven
under pressure. The Ping Tiao, or maybe the Yu. When the Yu were
ready. He was
silent a moment, then nodded. "I see. Then you had best use my
men to bolster your numbers, Shih Mach. Five hundred should be
enough, don't you think? I'll arrange for Schwarz here to report to
you two days from now. You'll have command, naturally." Mach
narrowed his eyes. "I don't understand. Why don't you just
attack them yourself? I don't see what you get out of doing it this
way." "You
don't trust me, then?" "Damn
right, I don't!" Mach laughed and half turned away, then turned
back, coming right up close to DeVore. "Okay.
Let's have no more games between us, Major. I know who you are, and I
know what you've done. I've known it some while now. It explains a
lot. But this • • . this just doesn't fit together." DeVore
stared back at him, undaunted. Of course he knew. Who did he think
let him know? "Start
thinking clearly, Mach. How could I get that many men into position
without Security finding out about it? No. I need you, Mach. I need
you to find false identities for these men. To find them places to
live. To organize things for me. Beyond that we both need this. In my
case to placate my backers, to let them see that something real,
something tangible, is being done against the Seven. You to bring new
blood to your movement, to prove that the Ping Tiao isn't moribund." Mach
looked away thoughtfully, then nodded. "All right. We'll do as
you say. But I want the funds up front, and I want them three days
from now. As token of your good faith." It
would be difficult, but not impossible. In any case, Ebert would pay.
He'd fucked things up, so he could foot the bill. DeVore offered his
hand. "Agreed." Mach hesitated, then took his hand. "Good.
Three days then. I'll let you know where we'll meet and when." As he
made his way back to the transporter, DeVore considered what had been
said and done. Whatever happened now, Gesell was dead. After the raid
on the plantations if necessary, but before if it could be arranged.
That was the last time he would put himself at risk with that fool. He
smiled. It had all seemed very bleak yesterday, when the news had
first broken, but it was going to be all right. Maybe even better
than before, in fact, because this gave him a chance to work much
closer with Mach. To make him his tool. In
that Mach and the jou tung wu were alike. Neither was
conscious of the role they served. Of how they were fattened only to
be slaughtered. For that was their ultimate purpose in life. To eat
shit and feed others. The jou tung wu to feed the mei yujen
wen, the "subhumans" of the City, and Mach—a
finer, tastier meat—to feed him. He
laughed. Yes, Mach, I mean to eat you. To make your skull my rice
bowl and feast upon your brains. Because that's how it is in
this little world of ours. It's man eat man, and always has been. He
slowed as he came closer to the transporter, checking for signs that
anything was wrong; then, satisfied, he ducked inside, leaving his
lieutenants to follow in the second craft. He sat
down at once, strapping himself in, the craft rising steeply even
before the door was fully closed, the pilot following his earlier
instructions to the letter, making sure there was no possibility of
pursuit, no chance of ambush. As the
ground fell away he smiled, thinking of the equation he had made in
his head. Yes, they were all meat-animals, every last one of them,
himself included. But he could dream. Ah yes, he could dream. And in
his dreams he saw them— finer, cleaner beasts, all trace of
grossness excised from their natures. Tall, slender creatures,
sculpted like glass yet hard as steel. Creatures of ice, designed to
survive the very worst the universe could throw at them. Survivors. No . .
. More than that. Inheritors. He
laughed. That was it—the name he had been looking for.
Inheritors. He keyed the word into his wrist set, then closed his
eyes and let his head fall back, relaxing. Yes.
Inheritors. But first he must destroy what stopped them from coming
into being. In that, Tsao Ch'un had been right. The new could not
come into being while the old remained. His inheritors could not
stand tall and straight in that cramped little world of levels. So
the old must go. The levels must be leveled, the walls torn down, the
universe opened up again. In order that they might exist. In order
that things could go forward again, onward to the ultimate—the
mind's total control of matter. Only then could they stop. Only then
could there be surcease. He
shivered. That was the dream. The reason—no—the
motivating force behind each action that he took, the dark wind
blowing hard and cold at his back. To bring them into being.
Creatures of ice. Creatures better than himself. What
finer aim was there? What finer aim? HANS
EBERT stopped in the doorway, lowering his head in a bow of respect,
then went in, the fully laden tray held out before him. As he came
near, Nocenzi, Tolonen, and the T'ang moved back slightly, letting
him put it down in the space they had cleared. They had been closeted
together three hours now, discussing the matter of reprisals and the
new Security measures. Li
Shai Tung smiled, accepting a bowl of ch'a from the young Major. "You
shouldn't have, Hans. I would have sent a servant." Ebert's
head remained lowered a moment longer. "You were in deep
discussion, Chieh Hsia. I felt it best to see to things
myself." The
old T'ang laughed softly. "Well, Hans, I'm glad you did. I did
not realize how much time had passed or how thirsty I had grown." The
T'ang made to sip from the bowl, but Ebert cleared his throat.
"Forgive me, Chieh Hsia. But if you'd permit me?" Li
Shai Tung frowned, then saw what Ebert meant. He handed him the bowl,
then watched as the young man sipped, then wiped where his lips had
touched with a cloth before handing back the bowl. The
T'ang looked to Tolonen and Nocenzi and saw how his own pleasure was
mirrored in their faces. Ebert was a splendid young man, and he had
been right to insist on tasting the ch'a before he drank it. "One
cannot be too careful, Chieh Hsia." Li
Shai Tung nodded. "You are quite right, Hans. What would your
father say, eh?" "To
you, nothing, Chieh Hsia. But he would most certainly have chastised
me for failing in my duties as his son if I had let you sip the ch'a
untasted." Again
the answer pleased the three older men greatly. With a last bow to
his T'ang, Ebert turned and began to pour for the General and the
Marshal. "Well,
Knut," continued the T'ang where he had left off, "do you
think we got them all?" Tolonen
straightened slightly, taking the bowl from Ebert before he answered. "Not
all, Chieh Hsia, but I'd warrant it'll be a year or more before we
have any more trouble from them, if then. Hans did a fine job. And it
was good that we acted when we did. If we had left it even an hour
later we wouldn't have got anyone to inform on the scum and we would
never have got to those cells. As it was . . ." As it was they
had practically destroyed the Ping Tioo. After the awfulness of
Bremen there had been smiles again. Grim smiles of satisfaction at a
job well done. "I wish I had known," the T'ang said,
looking away. "I might have pushed things a little less hard in
Council. Might have waited a while and tried to convince my fellow
T'ang rather than coerce them." "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia, but you acted as you had to," Nocenzi said, his
voice free of doubt. "Whether the threat be from the Ping Tioo
or from another group, the problem remains. And as long as population
outstrips food production it can only get worse." "Yes,
Vittorio, but what can I do? The Council will hear nothing of
population measures and I have done all that can be done to increase
productivity. What remains?" Nocenzi
looked to Tolonen, who gave the slightest nod, then turned to young
Ebert. "Hans, you know the facts and figures. Would you like to
spell it out for us?" . Ebert looked to his T'ang, then set his
ch'a down. "Chieh Hsia?" "Go
ahead, Major." Ebert
hesitated, then bowed his head. "Forgive me, Chieh Hsia, but
when I learned what had been planned against the plantations, I
decided, after consultation with Marshal Tolonen, to commission a
report. One separate from those you had asked us to compile." The
T'ang looked briefly to Tolonen, then frowned. "I see. And what
was in this report?" "It
was quite simple, Chieh Hsia. Indeed, it asked but one highly
specific question. What would it cost in terms of manpower and
finances to adequately guard the plantations?" "And
the results of your report?" Tolonen
interrupted. "You must understand, Chieh Hsia, that Ebert acted
only under my strict orders. Nor would I have mentioned this had you
been successful in Council. It's just that I felt we should be
prepared for the worst eventuality. For the failure of our action
against the Ping Tioo and the—the hostility, let us say, of the
Seven to your scheme." The
T'ang looked down, then laughed. "I am not angry, Knut. Gods,
no. I'm glad to have such fine men as you three tending to my
interests. If I seem angry, it is at the need for us to take such
measures. At the wastefulness of it all. Surely there's no need for
us to breed and breed until we choke on our own excess of flesh!" He
looked about him angrily, then calmed, nodding to himself. "Well,
Hans? What would the cost be?" Ebert
bowed. "In men we're talking of a further half-million, Chieh
Hsia. Six-hundred-and fifty thousand to be absolutely safe. In
money—for food, billeting, equipment, salaries, and so forth—it
works out to something like eighty-five thousand yuan per man,
or a total somewhere between forty-two and fifty-five billion yuan
per year. "However,
this scenario presumes that we have half a million trained
Security guards ready for placement. The truth is, if we took this
number of men from their present duties there would be a substantial
increase in criminal activity throughout the levels, not to say a
dramatic rise in civil disturbance at the very bottom of the City. It
would reduce current strength by over twenty-five percent, and that
could well result in a complete breakdown of law and order in the
lowest fifty levels." "And
the alternative?" "To
take a much smaller number, say fifty thousand, from present
strength, then recruit to make up numbers. This, too, creates
problems, primarily in training. To accommodate such an influx we
would have to expand our training program considerably. And the cost
. . . forgive me, Chieh Hsia, but that alone would account for an
estimated twenty billion, even before we equipped and trained the
first recruit." Li
Shai Tung considered a moment, then shook his head. "I don't
like it, ch'un tzu. To finance this would mean making
cuts elsewhere, and who knows what troubles that would bring? But
what choice do we have? Without enough food. . ." He
shrugged. It came back to the same thing every time. Population and
food. Food
and population. How fill the ever-growing rice bowl of Chung Kuo? Tolonen
hesitated, then bowed his head. "Might I suggest a solution,
Chieh Hsia?" "Of
course." "Then
what of this? What if we were to adopt part of Hans's scheme? Aim for
a force of, say, a quarter-million, to be stationed on the
plantations, concentrated at key points to maximize their
effectiveness. This to be phased in by degrees, at a rate of, say,
fifty thousand every six months. That would take the strain off the
training facilities while at the same time minimizing the social
effects." "But that would take too long, surely?" "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia, but the one thing Hans neglects to mention in his
report is the effectiveness of his action against the Ping Tioo. If
our problems of recruitment and training are great, imagine theirs.
They've been routed. They won't easily recover from that. As I said
earlier, it'll be a year at the very least before they're in any fit
state to cause us problems, and there's no terrorist group of
comparable size to take their place." The
T'ang considered a moment, then nodded. "All right. We shall do
as you say, Knut. Draw up the orders and I'll sign them." He
turned, looking at Ebert. "You
have served me well today, Hans Ebert, and I shall not forget it. Nor
shall my son. But come, let's drink this fine ch'a you brought
before it cools. The three men bowed as one. "Chieh Hsw . . ." Li
YUAN looked up from the document he was reading and yawned. "You
should take a break, my Lord," Chang Shih-sen, his personal
secretary said, looking across at him from his desk on the far side
of the room. "I'll finish off. There are only a few things
remaining." Li
Yuan smiled. They had been working since seven and it was almost
midday. "A good idea, Shih-sen. But it's strange that my father
hasn't contacted me. Do you think he's all right?" "I
am certain of it, my Lord. You would be the first to hear were your
father ill." "Yes . . ." He looked down at Minister
Heng's memorandum again, then nodded. "It's interesting, this
business with the Shepherd boy, don't you think?"
-<. "My
Lord . . ." Chang Shih-sen was watching him, smiling, Li Yuan
laughed. "All right. I know when I'm being bullied for my own
good. I'll go, Shih-sen. But make sure you get an acknowledgment off
to Heng Yu this afternoon. I've kept him waiting two days as it is." "Of
course, my Lord. Now go. Enjoy the sunshine while you can." Li
Yuan went out into the brightness of the Eastern Courtyard, standing
there a moment at the top of the broad steps, his hand resting on the
cool stone of the balustrade. He looked about him, feeling totally at
peace with the world. There was such order here. Such balance. He
stretched, easing the tiredness of sitting from his limbs, then went
down, taking the steps two at a time before hurrying across the
grass, his silk pau flapping about him. There
was no sign of Fei Yen and her maids in the gardens, or in the long
walk. The ancient wall-enclosed space was still and silent. At the
stone arch he turned, considering whether he should go to her rooms,
then decided not to. She needed her rest. Now more than ever. For
their son's sake. As
ever the thought of it made him feel strange. He looked across at the
ancient, twisted shapes of the junipers that rested in the shade of
the palace walls, then turned his head, tracing the curved shape of
the pool with his eyes. He held himself still, listening, and was
rewarded with the singing of a bird, the sound distant, from across
the valley. He smiled, sniffing the cool, late morning air, finding a
faint scent of herbs underlying it. It was a good day to be alive. He
turned, looking at the great upright of the arch, then let his
fingers trace the complex interwoven patterns in the stone. All this
had stood here a thousand years and yet the pattern seemed freshly
cut into the stone. As if time had no power here. He
turned, making his way toward the stables. It had been some time
since he had seen his horses. Too long. He would spend an hour and
make a fuss over them. And later, perhaps, he would exercise Fei's
horse, Tai Huo. The
great barn of the stables was warm and musty. The grooms looked up
from their work as he entered, then hurried forward to form a line,
bowing from the waist. "Please,"
he said, "carry on. I'll not disturb you." They
backed away respectfully, then turned, returning to their chores. He
watched them a while, some part of him envying the simplicity of
their existence, then he looked upward, drawing in the strong, heady
scents of the barn—scents that seemed inseparable from the
darkly golden shadows of the stalls. Slowly
he went down the line, greeting each of the horses in its stall. The
dark-maned barb, Hei Jian, "Black Sword," lifted her broad
muzzle in greeting, letting him pat, then smooth her flank. Mei Feng,
"Honey Wind," the elegant akhal-teke, was more skittish,
almost petulant; but after a moment he relented, letting Li Yuan
smooth the honey-gold of his flank, his sharp ears pricked up. He was
the youngest of the six horses, and the most recently acquired, a
descendant of horses that had served the wild herdsmen of West Asia
thousands of years earlier. Next
was his brother's horse, the black Arab he had renamed Chi Chu,
"Sunrise." He spent some time with it, rubbing his cheek
against its neck, feeling a kinship with the mare that he felt with
none of the others. Beside it was the white Arab, the horse he had
bought for Fei Yen—Tai Huo, "Great Fire." He smiled,
seeing the creature, remembering the night he had brought Fei Yen
blindfolded to the stables to see him for the first time. That time
they had made love in the stall. He
turned, looking past the horse's rump, then frowned. The fifth stall
was empty. The Andalusian—his father's present to him on his
twelfth birthday—was not there. He stood at the head of the
stall, looking into the empty space, then turned, summoning the
nearest of the grooms. "Where
is the Andalusian?" The
groom bowed low, a distinct color in his cheeks. "I... I..."
he stammered. Li
Yuan turned, looking back at the stall, his sense of wrongness
growing. From outside he heard a clamor of voices. A moment later a
tall figure appeared in the great doorway. Hung Feng-chan, the Chief
Groom. "My
Lord . . ." he began hesitantly. Li
Yuan turned, facing him. "What is it, Hung?" Hung
Feng-chan bowed low. "The Andalusian is being . . . exercised,
my Lord." Li
Yuan frowned, his eyes returning to the empty stall. "Exercised,
Hung? I thought they were only exercised first thing. Is something
wrong with the animal?" "My
Lord, I . . ." "The
gods help us, Hung! What is it? Are you keeping something from me?" He
looked about him, seeing how the grooms had stopped their work and
were looking on, their flat Han faces frightened now. "Is
the horse dead, Hung? Is that it?" Hung
bowed his head lower. "No, my Lord ..." "Then
in the gods' names, what is it?" "Nan
Hsin is being ridden, my Lord." Li
Yuan straightened up, suddenly angry. "Ridden? By whom? We have
no guests. Who gave permission for anyone to ride the beast?" Hung
Feng-chan was silent, his head bowed so low that it almost touched
his slightly bent knees. Li
Yuan's bark of anger was unexpected. "Well, Hung? Who is riding
Nan Hsin? Or do
I have to have it beaten from you?" Hung
raised his head, his eyes beseeching his young master. "My Lord,
forgive me. I tried to talk her out of it. . ." "Tried
to—" He stopped, sudden understanding coming to him. Fei
Yen. He was ^ talking about Fei Yen. It couldn't be anyone else. No
one else would have dared countermand his orders. But Fei was seven
months pregnant. She couldn't go riding, not in her condition. The
child . . . He
rushed past the Chief Groom and stood in the great doorway, looking
out. The palace was to his left, the hills far off to the right. He
looked, scanning the long slope for a sight of her, but there was
nothing. Then he turned back, concern for her making him forget
himself momentarily, all control gone from his voice, a naked fear
shaping his words. "Where
is she, Hung? Where in the gods' names is she?" "I ... I
don't know, my Lord." Li
Yuan strode across to him and took his arms, shaking him. "Kuan
Yin preserve us, Hung! You mean you let her go out, alone,
unsupervised, in her condition?" Hung
shook his head miserably. "She forbade me, My Lord. She said—"
"Forbade you?! What nonsense is this, Hung? Didn't you realize
how dangerous, how stupid this is?" "My Lord, I—" Li
Yuan pushed him away. "Get out of my sight!" He looked
about him, furious now. "Go! All of you! Now! I don't want to
see any of you here again!" There
was a moment's hesitation, then they began to leave, bowing low as
they moved about him. Hung was last. "My Lord . . . ?" he
pleaded. But Li
Yuan had turned his back on the Chief Groom. "Just go, Hung
Feng-chan. Go now, before I make you pay for your foolishness." Hung
Feng-chan hesitated a moment longer, then, bowing to the back of his
Prince, he turned and left dejectedly, leaving Li Yuan alone. HANS
EBERT ran up the steps of the Ebert Mansion, grinning, immensely
pleased with his day's work. It had been easy to manipulate the old
men. They had been off-balance, frightened by the sudden escalation
of events, only too eager to believe the worst-case scenario he had
spelled out for them. But the truth was otherwise. A good general
could police the East European Plantations with a mere hundred
thousand men, and at a cost only one tenth of what he had mentioned.
As for the effect on the levels, that, too, had been exaggerated,
though even he had to admit that it wasn't known precisely what
effect such an attack would have at the lowest levels of the City. He
went through to his suite of rooms to shower and change. As he
stripped, he stood over his personal comset, scrolling through until
he came upon a cryptic message from his uncle. Beattie
asks if you'll settle his bar bill for him. He says a thousand will
cover it. Love, Uncle Lutz. Beattie
was DeVore. Now what did DeVore want ten million for? Ebert kicked
off his shorts and went across to the shower, the water switching on
as soon as he stepped beneath the spray. Whatever DeVore wanted, it
was probably best to give him just now. To pacify him. It would be
easy enough to reroute that much. He would get onto it later. Just
now, however, he felt like making his regular sacrifice to the gods
of the flesh. He closed his eyes, letting the lukewarm jets play on
him invigoratingly. Yes, it would be good to have an hour with the
mui tsai. To get rid of all the tensions that had built up
over the last few days. He
laughed, feeling his sex stir at the thought of her. "You
were a bargain, my lovely," he said softly. "If I'd paid
ten times as much, you'd have been a bargain." The
thought was not an idle one. For some time now he had thought of
duplicating her. Of transferring those qualities that made her such a
good companion to a vat-made model. After all, what wouldn't the
Supernal pay for such delicious talents? GenSyn could charge five
times the price of their current models. Fifty times, if they handled
the publicity properly. Yes,
he could see the campaign now. All the different, subtle ways of
suggesting it without actually saying it: of hiding the true function
of their latest model and yet letting it be known ... He
laughed, then stepped out, into the drying chamber, letting the warm
air play across his body. Or maybe he would keep her for himself.
After all, why should every jumped-up little merchant be able to buy
such pleasures? He
threw on a light silk gown and went down a small flight of steps into
the central space. The Mansion was shaped irregularly, forming a
giant G about the gardens. A small wooden bridge led across a narrow
stream to a series of arbors. Underfoot was a design of plum blossom,
picked out in small pale-pink and gray pebbles, while on every side
small red-painted wooden buildings, constructed in the Han style, lay
half-hidden among the trees, their gently sloping roofs overhanging
the narrow ribbon of water that threaded its way backward and forward
across the gardens. The
gardens were much older than the house. Or at least, their design
was, for his grandfather had had them modeled on an ancient Han
original, naming them the Gardens of Peace and Prosperity. The Han
character for Longevity was carved everywhere, into stone and wood,
and inlaid into mosaic at the bottom of the clear, fast-running
stream. Translucent, paper-covered windows surrounded the garden on
all sides, while here and there a moon-door opened onto new
vistas—onto another tiny garden or a suite of rooms. Hans
stopped in the middle of the gardens, leaning on the carved wooden
balustrade, looking down at his reflection in the still, green water
of the central pond. Life was good. Life was very good. He laughed,
then looked across at the three ancient pomegranate trees on the far
side of the pool, noting how their trunks were shaped like flowing
water, how they seemed to rest there, doubled in the stillness of the
water. Then, as he watched, a fish surfaced, rippling the mirror,
making the trees dance violently, their long, dark trunks undulating
like snakes. And
then he heard it, unmistakable. The sound of a baby crying. He
turned, puzzled. A baby? Here? Impossible. There were no children
here. He listened then heard it again, clearer now, from somewhere to
his left. In the servants' quarters. He
made his way around the pool and across the high-arched stone bridge,
then stood there, concentrating, all thoughts of the mui tsai
gone. A
baby. It was unmistakably a baby. But who would dare bring a baby
here? The servants knew the house rules. His mother's nerves were
bad. They knew that, and they knew the rules . . . He
pulled the robe tighter about him, then climbed the steps, hauling
himself up onto the terrace that ran the length of the servants'
quarters. The sound came regularly now; a whining, mewling sound,
more animal than human. An awful, irritating sound. He
went inside, finding the first room empty. But the noise was louder
here, much louder, and he could hear a second sound beneath it—the
sound of a woman trying to calm the child. "Hush
now," the voice said softly. "Hush, my pretty one." He
frowned, recognizing the voice. It was Golden Heart, the girl he had
bought from Mu Chua's singsong house ten years ago. The girl he had
taunted Fest with before he'd killed him. Yes,
Golden Heart. But what was she doing with a baby? He
made his way through, slowly, silently, until he stood there in the
doorway of her room, looking in. The girl was crouched over a cot,
her back to him, cooing softly to the child. The crying had stopped
now and the baby seemed to be sleeping. But whose child was it? And
who had given permission for it to be brought into the house? If his
mother found out she would have them dismissed on the spot. "Golden
Heart?" The
girl started, then turned to face him, the blood drained from her
face. "Excellency
. . ." she said breathlessly, bowing low, her body placed
between him and the cot, as if to hide the child. He
stepped into the room, looking past her. "What's happening
here?" She
half-turned her head, clearly frightened, taking one small step
backward so that she bumped against the edge of the cot. "Whose
child is that?" She
looked up at him, her eyes wide with fear. "Excellency . . ."
she repeated, her voice small, intimidated. He saw
and understood. He would get nothing out of her by frightening her,
but it was important that he know whose child it was and why it had
been brought here. Whoever it was, they would have to go, because
this was too serious a breach of house rules to be overlooked. He
moved closer, then crouched down before the girl, taking her hands
and looking up into her face. . "I'm
not angry with you, Golden Heart," he said softly, "but you
know the rules. The child shouldn't be here. If you'll tell me who
the mother is, I'll arrange for her to take the child away, but you
can't keep her here. You know you can't." He saw
doubt war with a strange, wild hope in her face and looked down,
puzzled. What was happening here? He looked up at her again, his
smile encouraging her. "Come,
Golden Heart. I'll not be angry. You were only looking after it,
after all. Just tell me who the mother is." She
looked away, swallowing almost painfully. Again there was that
strange struggle in her face, then she looked back at him, her eyes
burning wildly. "The
child is yours. Your son." "Mine?"
He laughed sourly, shaking his head. "How can it be mine?" "And
mine," she said softly, uncertainly. "Our child . . ." He
stood, a cold anger spreading through him. "What is this
nonsense? How could you have a child? You were sterilized
years ago." She
bowed her head, taken aback by the sudden sharpness of his voice. "I
know," she said, "but I had it reversed. There's a place—" "Gods!"
he said quietly, understanding what she had done. Of course. He saw
it now. She must have stolen some jewelery or something to pay for
it. But the child . . . He
pushed past her, looking down at the sleeping infant. It was a large
baby, five or six months in age, with definite Eurasian features. But
how had she kept him hidden? How had she kept her pregnancy from
being noticed? "No ... 1 don't believe you." She
came and stood beside him, resting her hands against the rail of the
cot, her chest rising and falling violently, a strange expectation in
her face. Then she bent down and lifted the child from the cot,
cradling him. "It's
true," she said, turning, offering the child to him. "He's
yours, Hans. When I knew I'd fallen I had him removed and tended in a
false uterus. After the birth I had him placed in a nursery. I'd
visit him there. And sometimes I'd bring him back here. Like today." "Secretly,"
he said, his voice calm, distant, a thousand li from his thoughts. "Yes
. . ." she said, lowering her head slightly, willing now to be
chastised. But still she held the child out to him, as if he should
take it and acknowledge it. "No,"
he said, after a moment. "No, Golden Heart. You had no child.
Don't you understand that? That thing you hold doesn't exist. It
can't be allowed to exist. GenSyn is a complex business and you had
no right to meddle in it. That thing would be an impediment. A legal
nightmare. It would—inconvenience things. Can't
you see that?" A
muscle twitched beneath her left eye, otherwise she made no sign that
she had understood the meaning of his words. "It's
all right," he said. "You won't be punished for your
foolishness. But this"— he lifted his hand vaguely,
indicating the sleeping child—"this can't be allowed. I'll
have someone take it now and destroy it." Her
whimper of fear surprised him. He looked at her, saw the tears that
were welling in her eyes, and shook his head. Didn't she understand?
Had she no sense at all? "You
had no right, Golden Heart. You belong to me. You do what I say, not
what you want. And this—this is ridiculous. Did you really
think you could get away with it? Did you really believe for a moment
. . . ?" He laughed, but the laughter masked his anger. No. It
was not acceptable. And now his mood was broken. He had been looking
forward to the mui tsai, but now even the thought of sex was suddenly
repugnant to him. Damn her! Damn the stupid girl with her
addle-brained broodiness! He should have known something was up.
Should have sensed it. Well, she'd not have another chance, that was
certain. He'd have the doctors make sure of it this time. Have them
make it irreversible. And
the child? It was as he'd said. The child didn't exist. It could not
be allowed to exist. Because GenSyn would be threatened by its
existence: the very structure of the company undermined by the
possibility of a long, protracted inheritance battle in the courts. He
looked at the girl again, at the pathetic bundle she held out before
her, and shook his head. Then he turned away, calling out as he did
so, summoning his servants to him. LI
SHAI TUNG'S figure filled the tiny overhead screen, his face grave,
the white robes of mourning he wore flowing loosely about him as he
came slowly down the steps to make his offering before the memorial
plaque. Beneath the screen, its polished surface illuminated by the
flickering light from the monitor, another, smaller plaque had been
set into the foot of the wall, listing all those who had died in this
small section of the deck. Axel
Haavikko knelt before the plaque, his head bowed, his shoulders
hunched forward. His face was gaunt, his eyes red from weeping. He
had not slept since the news had come. He had
thought himself alive again, reborn after years of
self-destruction—years spent in idle, worthless
dissipation—that moment in Tolonen's office twelve years
before, when Hans Ebert had betrayed him, put behind him finally, his
life redeemed by his friendship with Karr and Chen, made sense of by
their common determination to expose Ebert—to show him for the
hollow, lying shit he was. But all that was as nothing now. The light
that had burned in him anew had gone out. His sister was dead. Vesa,
his beloved Vesa, was dead. And nothing—nothing— could
redeem the waste of that. He
took a shivering breath, then looked up again, seeing the image of
the T'ang reflected in the plaque where Vesa's name lay. Vesa
Haavikko. It was all that remained of her now. That and the
relentless ghosts of memory. On
that morning he had gone walking with her. Had held her arm and
shared her laughter. They had got up early and gone down to see the
old men and their birds in the tree-lined Main at the bottom of
Bremen stack. Had sat at a cafe and talked about their plans for the
future. And afterward he had kissed her cheek and left her to go on
duty, never for a moment suspecting that it was the last time he
would ever see her. He
moaned softly, pressing his hands against his thighs in anguish. Why
her? She had done nothing. If anyone, it was he who deserved
punishment. So why her? He
swallowed painfully, then shook his head, but the truth would not be
denied. She was dead. His beloved Vesa was dead. Soulmate and
conscience, the best part of himself, she was no more. He
frowned, then looked down, suddenly bitter, angry with himself. It
was his fault. He had brought her here, after all. After long years
of neglect he had finally brought her to him. And to what end? A tear
welled and trickled down his cheek. He
shuddered, then put his hand up to his face. His jaw ached from
gritting his teeth, trying to fend off the images that came—those
dreadful imaginings of her final moments that tore at him, leaving
him broken, wishing only for an end to things. An end
. . . Yes, there would be an end to everything. But first he had a
score to settle. One final duty to perform. He
took a deep breath, summoning the energy to rise, then grew still,
hearing a noise behind him, a gentle sobbing. He half turned and saw
her there, kneeling just behind him to his right, a young woman, a
Hung Moo, dressed in mourning clothes. Beside her, his tiny hand
clutching hers, stood a child, a Han, bemusement in his
three-year-old face. He
looked down, swallowing. The sight of the boy clutching his mother's
hand threw him back across the years; brought back the memory of
himself, standing there before his mother's plaque; of looking down
and seeing Vesa's hand, there in his own, her fingers laced into his,
her face looking up at him, not understanding. Two
she had been, he five. And yet so old he had felt that day; so brave,
they'd said, to keep from crying. No, he
had never cried for his mother. But now he would. For mother and
sister and all. For the death of all that was good and decent in the
world. Li
yuan was standing in the stable doorway when she returned, his arms
folded across his chest, his face closed to her. He helped her from
the saddle, coldly silent, his manner overcareful, exaggeratedly
polite. She
stared at him, amused by this rare display of anger, trying to make
him acknowledge her presence, but he would not meet her eyes. "There,"
she said, pressing one hand against the small of her back to ease the
ache there. "No harm done." She
smiled and went to kiss him. He
drew back sharply, glaring at her, then took her hand roughly and led
her into the dark warmth of the stable. She went reluctantly, annoyed
with him now, thinking him childish. Inside
he settled the horse in its stall, then came back to her, making her
sit, standing over her, his hands on his hips, his eyes wide with
anger. "What
in hell's name do you think you were doing?" She
looked away. "1 was riding, that's all." "Riding
. . ." he murmured, then raised his voice. "1 said you
weren't to ride!" She
looked up, indignation rising in her. "I'm not a child, Li Yuan.
I can decide for myself what's best for me!" He
laughed scornfully, then turned, taking three steps away from her.
"You can decide, eh?" He stopped, looking directly at her,
his expression openly contemptuous. "You . . ." He
shook his head. "You're seven months pregnant and you think
riding is best for you?" "No
harm was done," she repeated, tossing her head. She would not
be lectured by him! Not in ten thousand years! She turned her
face aside, shaking now with anger. He
came across and stood over her, for a moment the image of his father,
his voice low but menacing. "You say that you're not a child,
Fei Yen, yet you've acted like one. How could you be so stupid?" Her
eyes flared. Who was he to call her stupid? This—this—boyl
He had gone too far. She pulled herself up awkwardly from the
chair and pushed past him. "I shall ride when I like! You'll not
prevent me!" "Oh,
won't I?" He laughed, but his mouth was shaped cruelly and his
eyes were lit with a sudden determination. "Watch! I'll show you
how—" She
was suddenly afraid. She watched him stride across the straw-strewn
tiles, a coldness in her stomach. He wouldn't. . . But then the
certainty of it hit her and she cried out "No-o-oh.1,"
knowing what he meant to do. She screamed it at his back, then went
after him, nausea mixing with her fear and anger. At the
far end of the stable he turned, so abruptly, that she almost ran
into him. He seized her upper arms, his fingers gripping the flesh
tightly, making her wince. "You'll
stand here and watch. You'll witness the price of your stupidity!" There
was so much anger, so much real venom in his words that she swayed,
feeling faint, paralyzed into inaction by this sudden change in him.
As she watched, he took the power-gun from the rack and checked its
charge, then went down the row of horses. At the
end stall he paused and turned to look at her, then went in, his hand
smoothing the flank of the dark horse, caressing its long face,
before he placed the stubby gun against its temple. "Good-bye,"
he whispered, then squeezed the trigger, administering the
high-voltage shock. The
horse gave a great snort, then collapsed onto the floor of the stall,
dead. Fei Yen, watching, saw how he shuddered, then stepped back,
looking at what he'd done, his face muscles twitching violently. Appalled,
she watched him move down the stalls, her horror mounting as the
seconds passed. Five
mounts lay dead on the straw. Only the last of them remained, the
horse in the third stall, the black Arab that had once been Han's.
She stood there, her hands clenched into tight fists, looking in at
it. She mouthed its secret name, a cold numbness gripping her, then
turned, looking at Li Yuan. Li
Yuan was breathing deeply now. He stood there in the entrance to the
stall, for a moment unaware of the woman at his side, looking in at
the beautiful beast that stood so proudly before him, its head
turned, its dark eyes watching him. His anger had drained from him,
leaving only a bitter residue: a sickness gnawing at the marrow of
his bones. He shook his head, wanting to cry out for all the pain and
anger she had made him feel, then turned and looked at her, seeing
now how ill her beauty sat on her. Like a
mask, hiding her selfishness. He bit
his lip, struggling with what he felt, trying to master it. There was
the taste of blood in his mouth. For a
moment longer he stood there, trembling, the gun raised, pointed at
her. Then
he threw it down. For a
time afterward he stood there, his hands empty, staring down at the
red-earth floor, at the golden spill of straw that covered it, a
blankness at the very core of him. When he looked up again she was
gone. Beyond the stable doors the sky was a vivid blue. In the
distance the mountains showed green and gray and white, swathed in
mist. He
went out and stood there, looking out into the beauty of the day,
letting his numbness seep down out of him, into the earth. Then he
turned back and went inside again, bending down to pick up the gun. The
child, that was all that mattered now; all that was important. To
make the Seven strong again. "I'm sorry, Han," he whispered
gently, laying his face against the horse's neck. "The gods know
1 didn't wish for this." Then, tears blurring his vision, he
stepped back and rested the gun against the horse's temple, easing
back the trigger.
CHAPTER THREE The
Way of Deception FEI
YEN went back to her father's house. For a week Li Yuan did nothing,
hoping she would return of her own free will; then when there was no
sign of her returning, he went to see her, taking time off from his
duties. The
Yin house defenses tracked him from twenty li out, checking
and rechecking his codes before granting him permission to set down.
He landed his private craft in the military complex at the back of
the estate, in a shadowy hangar where the sharp sweet scents of pine
and lemon mingled with the smell of machine oils. Two of
Yin Tsu's three sons, Sung and Chan, were waiting there to greet him,
bowed low, keeping a respectful silence. The
palace was on an island at the center of a lake; an elegant,
two-story building in the Ming style, its red, corbelled roof gently
sloped, its broad, paneled windows reminiscent of older times. Seeing
it, Li Yuan smiled, his past memories tinged with present sadness. The
two sons rowed him across the lake, careful not to embarrass him with
their attentions. Fei's father, Yin Tsu, was waiting on the landing
stage before the palace, standing beneath an ancient willow whose
shadow dappled the sunlit water. He
bowed low as Li Yuan stepped from the boat. "You
are welcome, Li Yuan. To what do I owe this honor?" Yin
Tsu was a small, neat man. His pure-white hair was cut short about
his neck in an almost occidental style, slicked back from his high
forehead. He held himself stiffly now, yet despite his white hair and
seventy-four years he was a sprightly man with a disposition toward
smiles and laughter. Just now, however, his small, fine features
seemed morose, the tiny webs of lines at the corners of his eyes and
mouth drawn much deeper than before. Li
Yuan took his hands. Small hands, like a woman's, the skin smooth,
almost silky, the fingernails grown long. "I
need to see my wife, Honored Father-in-Law. 1 must talk with her." A
faint breeze was blowing off the water. Fallen leaves brushed against
their feet then slowly drifted on. Yin
Tsu nodded his head. Looking at him, Li Yuan saw the original of his
wife's finely featured face. There was something delicate about it;
some quality that seemed closer to sculpture than genetic chance. "Come
through. I'll have her join us." Li
Yuan bowed and followed the old man. Inside it was cool. Servants
brought ch'a and sweetmeats while Yin Tsu went to speak to his
daughter. Li Yuan sat there, waiting, rehearsing what he would say. After
a while Yin Tsu returned, taking a seat across from him. "Fei
Yen will not be long. She wants a moment to prepare herself. You
understand?" "Of
course. I would have notified you, Yin Tsu, but I did not know when I
could come." The
old man lifted his chin and looked down his tiny nose at his
son-in-law. Unspoken words lay in the depth of his eyes. Then he
nodded, his features settling into an expression of sadness and
resignation. "Talk
to her, Yuan. But please, you must only talk. This is still my house. Agreed?" Li
Yuan bowed his head. Yin Tsu was one of his father's oldest friends.
An affront to him would be as an affront to his father. "If
she will not listen, then that will be an end to it, Yin Tsu. But I
must try. It is my duty as a husband to try." His
words, like his manner, were stilted and awkward. They hid how much
he was feeling at that moment: how much this meant to him. Yin
Tsu went to the window, staring out across the lake. It was difficult
for him too. There was a tenseness to each small movement of his that
revealed how deeply he felt about all this. But then, that was hardly
surprising. He had seen his hopes dashed once before, when Yuan's
brother Han had been killed. Li
Yuan sipped at his ch'a, then put it down. He tried to smile, but the
muscles in his cheeks pulled the smile too tight. From time to time a
nerve would jump beneath his eye, causing a faint twitch. He had not
been sleeping well since she had left. "How is she?" he
asked, turning to face Yin Tsu. "In
good health. The child grows daily." The old man glanced across,
then looked back at the lake. His tiny hands were folded together
across his stomach. "That's
good." On the
far side of the room, beside a lacquered screen, stood a cage on a
long, slender pole. In the cage was a nightingale. For now it rested
silently on its perch, but once it had sung for him—on that day
he had come here with his father to see Yin Tsu and ask him for his
daughter's hand in marriage. He sat
there, feeling leaden. She had left him on the evening of the
argument. Had gone without a word, taking nothing, leaving him to
think on what he had done. "And
how is Li Shai Tung?" Li
Yuan looked up blankly. "I beg your pardon, Honored Father?" "Your
father. How is he?" "Ah,"
he breathed in deeply, returning to himself. "He is fine now,
thank you. A little weak, but. . ." "None
of us are growing any younger." The old man shook his head, then
came across and sat again, a faint smile on his lips. "Not that
we would even if we could, eh, Yuan?" Yin
Tsu's remark was far from innocuous. He was referring to the new
longevity process. Already, it was said, more than a thousand of the
Above had had the operation and were taking the drugs
regularly—without concrete evidence of the efficacy of the
treatment, without knowing whether there were any traceable
side-effects. Such men were desperate, it seemed. They would grasp at
any promise of extended life. "Only
ill can come of it, Yuan. I guarantee." He leaned forward,
lifting the lid to look into the ch'a kettle, then summoned
the servant across. While the servant hurried to replenish it, Li
Yuan considered what lay behind his father-in-law's words. This was
more than small talk, he realized. Yin Tsu was talking to him not as
a son but as a future colleague. It was his way of saying that
whatever transpired they would remain friends and associates. The
interests of the Families—both Major and Minor—superseded
all else. As they had to. When
the servant had gone again, Yin Tsu leaned forward, his voice a
whisper, as if he were afraid of being overheard. "If
it helps at all, Li Yuan, my sympathy's with you. She acted rashly.
But she's a headstrong young woman, I warn you. You'll not alter that
with bit and bridle." Li
Yuan sighed, then sipped at his ch'a. It was true. But he had
wanted her both as she was and as he wanted her; like caging fire. He
glanced up at Yin Tsu and saw the concern there, the deep-rooted
sympathy. And yet in this the old man would support his daughter. He
had sheltered her; given her refuge against her husband. He might
sympathize but he would not help. There
was a sound, movement, from the far end of the long room. Li Yuan
looked up and saw her in the doorway. He stood up as Yin Tsu looked
around. "Fei
Yen, come in. Li Yuan is here to see you." Li
Yuan stepped forward, moving to greet her, but she walked past him,
as though he were not there. He turned, pained by her action,
watching her embrace her father gently. She
seemed paler than he remembered her, but her tiny form was well
rounded I now, seven and a half months into its term. He wanted
to touch the roundness of { the belly, feel the
movements of the growing child within. For all her coldness to him,
he felt as he had always felt toward her. All of it flooded back,
stronger than ever; all the tenderness and pain; all of his
unfathomable love for her. "Fei
Yen. . ." he began, but found he could say no more than that.
What could he say? How might he persuade her to return? He
looked pleadingly to Yin Tsu. The old man saw and giving the
slightest of nods, moved back, away from his daughter. "Forgive
me, Fei, but I must leave now. I have urgent business to attend to." "Father..."
she began, her hand going out to touch him, but he shook his head. "This
is between you two alone, Fei. You must settle it here and now. This
indecision is unhealthy." She
bowed her head, then sat. "Come,"
Yin Tsu beckoned to him. He hesitated, seeing how she was sitting,
her ' -head down, her face closed to him; then went across and
sat, facing her. Yin Tsu stood there a moment longer, looking from
one to the other. Then, without another word, he left. For a
time neither spoke or looked at the other. It was as if an
impenetrable screen lay between them. Then, unexpectedly, she spoke. "My
father talks as if there were something to decide. But I made my
decision when I left you." She looked up at him, her bottom lip
strangely curled, almost pinched. It gave her mouth a look of
bitterness. Her eyes were cold, defiant. And yet beautiful. "I'm
not coming back, Li Yuan. Not ever." He
looked at her, meeting her scorn and defiance, her anger and
bitterness, and finding only his own love for her. She was all he had
ever wanted in a woman. All he would ever want. He
looked down, staring at his perfectly manicured nails as if they held
some clue to things. "I
came to say that I'm sorry, Fei. That I was wrong." When
he looked up again he saw that she had turned her face aside. But her
body was hunched and tensed, her neck braced, the muscles stretched
and taut. She seemed to draw each breath with care, her hands pressed
to her breasts as if to hold in all she was feeling. "I
was wrong, Fei. I ... I overreacted." "You
killed them!" She spat the words out between her teeth. You
almost killed my child . . . But he bit back the retort that
had come to mind, closing his eyes, calming himself. "I know . .
." There
was a second silence, longer, more awkward than the first. Fei Yen
broke this one too. She stood, making to leave. He
went across and held her arm, keeping her there. She looked down at
his hand where it gripped her arm, then up at his face. It was a
harsh, unsparing look; a look of unfeigned dislike. There was
defiance in her eyes, but she made no move to take her arm away. "We
have not resolved this, Fei." "Resolved."
She poured all the scorn she could muster into the word. "I'll
tell you how you could resolve this, Li Yuan." She turned
to face him, glaring at him, the roundness of her stomach pressed up
hard against him. "You could take this from my belly and keep it
safe until its term is up! That's what you could do!" The words
were hard, unfeeling. She laughed bitterly, sneering at him. "Then
you could take your gun and—" He put
his hand over her mouth. She
stepped back, freeing herself from his grip. Then she looked at him,
rubbing her arm where he had held it, her eyes watching him all the
while, no trace of warmth in them. "You
never loved me," she said. "Never. I know that now. It was
envy. Envy of your brother. You wanted everything he had. Yes, that
was it, wasn't it?" She nodded, a look of triumph, a hideous
smile of understanding on her lips. It was
cruel. Cruel and untrue. He had loved his brother dearly. Had loved
her too. Still loved her, even now, for all she was saying. More than
the world itself. But he
could not say it. His face had frozen to a mask. His mouth was dry,
his tongue stilled by her anger and bitterness and scorn. For a
moment longer he watched her, knowing that it ended here, that all he
had wanted was in ruins now. He had killed it in the stables that
day. He turned and went to the door, determined to go, not to look
back, but she called out to him, "One thing you should know
before you leave." He
turned, facing her across the room. "What is it?" "The
child." She smiled, an ugly movement of the mouth that was the
imperfect copy of a smile. "It isn't yours." She shook her
head, still smiling. "Do you hear me, Li Yuan? I said the child
isn't yours." In the
cage at the far end of the room the bird was singing. Its sweet notes
filled the silence. He
turned away, moving one leg at a time until he was gone from there,
keeping his face a blank, his thoughts in check. But as he walked he
could hear her voice, almost kind for once. One thing, it
said, then laughed. One thing. "Is
this it?" DeVore asked, studying the statue of the horse
minutely, trying to discern any difference in its appearance. The
man looked across at him and smiled. "Of course. What were you
expecting? Something in an old lead bottle, marked with a skull and
crossbones? No, that's it, all right. It'd make arsenic seem like
honeydew, yet it's as untraceable as melted snow." DeVore
stood back, looking at the man again. He was nothing like the
archetypal scientist. Not in his dress, which was eccentrically Han,
nor in his manner, which was that of a low-level drug dealer. Even
his speech—scattered as it was with tiny bits of arcane
knowledge—seemed to smack of things illicit or alchemical. Yet
he was good. Very good indeed, if Ebert could be trusted on the
matter. "Well?
Are you happy with it, or would you like me to explain it once more?" DeVore
laughed. "There's no need. I have it by heart." The
lexicologist laughed. "That's good. And so will your friend, eh?
Whoever he is." DeVore
smiled. And if you knew exactly who that was, you would as soon
sell me this as cut your own throat. He
nodded. "Shall we settle, then? My friend told me you liked
cash. Bearer credits. Shall we call it fifty thousand?" He saw
the light of greed in the man's eyes and smiled inwardly. "1
thought a hundred. After all, it was a difficult job. That genetic
pattern—I've not seen its like before. I'd say that was someone
special. Someone well bred. It was hard finding the chemical key to
break those chains down. I—well, let's say I had to improvise.
To work at the very limit of my talents. I'd say that deserved
rewarding, wouldn't you?" DeVore
hesitated, going through the motions of considering the matter, then
bowed his head. "As you say. But if it doesn't work—" "Oh,
it will work, my friend. I'd stake my life on it. The man's as
good as dead, whoever he is. As I said, it's perfectly harmless to
anyone else, but as soon as he handles it the bacteria will be
activated. The rest," he said, laughing, "is history."
"Good." DeVore felt in his jacket pocket and took out the
ten bearer credits— the slender chips identical in almost every
respect to those he had given Mach a week earlier. Only in one
crucial respect were they different; these had been smeared with a
special bacteria—one designed to match the toxicologist's DNA.
A bacteria prepared only days earlier by the man's greatest rival
from skin traces DeVore had taken on his first visit here. DeVore
watched the man handle, then pocket the chips. Dead, he
thought, smiling, reaching out to pick up the statue the man had
treated for him. Or as good as, give a week or two. And
himself? Well, he was the last person to take such chances. He had
made sure he wore a false skin over both hands before handling the
things. Just in case. Because
one never knew, did one? And a poisoner was a poisoner, after
all. He
smiled, holding the ancient statue to his chest, then laughed, seeing
how the man joined his laughter, as if sharing the cruel joke he was
about to play. "And
there's no antidote? No possible way of stopping this thing once it's
begun?" The
man shook his head, then gave another bark of laughter. "Not a
chance in hell." IT WAS
DARK where Chen sat. Across from him a ceiling panel flickered
intermittently, as if threatening to come brightly, vividly, alive
again, but never managing more than a brief, fitful glow. Chen had
been nursing the same drink for more than an hour, waiting for
Haavikko to come, his ill ease growing with every passing minute.
More than ten years had passed since he had last sat in the Stone
Dragon—years in which he had changed profoundly—yet the
place remained unchanged. Still
the same shit-hole, he thought. A place you did well to escape from
as quickly as you could. As he had. But
now he was back, if only briefly. Still, Haavikko could hardly have
known, could he? No.
Even so, the coincidence made Chen's flesh crawl. He looked about him
uncomfortably, as if the ghost of Kao Jyan or the more substantial
figure of Whiskers Lu should manifest themselves from the darkness
and the all-pervading fug to haunt him. "You
want wings?" He
glanced at the thin young girl who had approached him and shook his
head, letting disgust and a genuine hostility shape his expression. "You
prefer I suck you? Here, at table?" He
leaned toward her slightly. "Vanish, scab, or I'll slit you
throat to tail." She
made a vulgar hand sign and slipped back into the darkness, but she
wasn't the first to have approached him. They were all out to sell
something. Drugs or sex or worse. For a price, you could do anything
you liked down here. It hadn't been so in his day, but now it was.
Now the Net was little different from the Clay. He sat
back. Even the smell of the place nauseated him. But that was hardly
surprising; the air filters couldn't have been changed in thirty
years. The air was recycled, yes, but that meant little here. He
swallowed, keeping the bile from rising. How many times had each
breath he took been breathed before? How many foul and cankered
mouths had sighed their last, drug-soured breath into this putrid
mix? Too
many, he thought. Far, far too many. He
looked across. There was someone in the doorway. Someone tall and
straight and wholly out of place in this setting. Haavikko. He'd come
at last. He got
up and went across, embracing his friend, then holding him off at
arm's length, staring up into his face. "Axel.
. . how are you? It's been a long time since you came to us. Wang Ti
and the boys . . . they've missed you. And I ... well, I was worried.
I'd heard . . ." He paused, then shook his head, unable to say. Haavikko
looked aside momentarily, then met his friend's eyes. "I'm
sorry, Chen, but it's been hard. Some days I've felt. . ." He
shrugged, then formed his face into a sad little smile. "Well. .
. I've got what you asked for. 1 had to cheat a little, and lie
rather a lot, not to mention a little bit of burglary, but then it's
hard being an honest man when all about you are thieves and liars.
One must pretend to take on their coloring a little simply to
survive, neh?"
; Chen
stared at him a moment, surprised by the hardness in his voice. His
sister's death had changed him. Chen squeezed his shoulder gently,
turning him toward his table. "Come.
Let's sit down. You can tell me what you've been up to while I go
through the file." Axel
sat. "You remember Mu Chua's?" Chen took the seat across
from him. "No. I don't think 1 do." "The House of the
Ninth Ecstasy?" Chen laughed. "Ah ... Is that still going?" Haavikko
stared down at his hands. "Yes, it's still going. And guess
what? Our friend Ebert is still frequenting it. It seems he visited
there no more than a week ago." Chen
looked up, frowning. "Ebert? Here? Why would he bother?"
Haavikko looked back at him, a bitter resentment in his eyes. "He
had a meeting, it seems. With a Shih Reynolds." "How do you
know this?" "The
Madam, Mu Chua, told me. It's funny ... I didn't even raise the
matter of Ebert, she just seemed to want to talk about him. She was
telling me about this girl she'd sold to Ebert—a
thirteen-year-old named Golden Heart. I remember it, strangely
enough. It was more than ten years ago, so the girl could well be
dead now; but Mu Chua was anxious to find out about her, as if the
girl were her daughter or something. Anyway, she told me about a
dream this girl had had— about a tiger coming from the west and
mating with her and about a pale-gray snake that died. It seems this
was a powerful dream—something she couldn't get out of her
mind—and she wanted me to find out what became of the girl. I
said I would and in return she promised to let me know if Ebert or
his friend returned. It could be useful, don't you think?" "This
Reynolds—do we know who he is or what he was meeting Ebert
about?" "Nothing,
I'm afraid. But Mu Chua thinks he's been there before. She said there
was something familiar about him." "Ping Tioo, perhaps?" "Perhaps
..." Chen
looked down at the file, touching his wrist band to make it glow,
illuminating the page beneath his fingers. For a while he was silent,
reading, then he looked up, frowning. "Is this all?" Haavikko
looked back at him blankly a moment, his mind clearly elsewhere, then
nodded. "That's it. Not much, is it?" Chen
considered a moment, then grunted. Hans Ebert had supposedly
instigated an investigation into the disappearance of his friend
Fest, but the investigation had never actually happened. No witnesses
had been called, no leads followed up. All that existed was this
slender file. "And
Fest? Is there any sign of him?" Haavikko
shook his head. "He's dead. That's what the file means. They did
it. Ebert and Auden. Because we'd got to Fest, perhaps, or maybe for
some other reason—I've heard since that Fest was getting a bit
too talkative for Ebert's liking even before we approached him. But
whatever, they did it. That file makes me certain of it." Chen
nodded. "So what now?" Haavikko
smiled tightly. "The girl, Golden Heart. I'm going to find out
what happened to her." "And
then?" Haavikko
shrugged. "I'm not sure. Let's see where this leads." "And
Ebert?" Haavikko
looked away, the tightness in his face revealing the depth of what he
felt. "At
first I thought of killing him. Of walking up to him in the Officers
Club and putting a bullet through his brain. But it wouldn't have
brought her back. Besides, I want everyone to know what he is. To see
him as I see him." Chen
was quiet a moment, then reached out and touched Haavikko's arm, as
if consoling a child. "Don't worry," he said softly. "We'll
get him, Axel. I swear we will." klaus
EBERT stood on the steps of his mansion, his hands extended to the
Marshal. Jelka watched as he embraced her father, then stood back,
one hand resting on Tolonen's shoulder. She could see how deep their
friendship ran, how close they were. More like brothers than friends. Ebert
turned, offering his hands to her, his eyes lighting at the sight of
her. He
held her close, whispering at her ear. "You really are quite
beautiful, Jelka. Hans is very lucky." But his smile only made
her feel guilty. Was it really so hard to do this for them? "Come.
We've prepared a feast," Ebert said, turning, putting his arm
about her shoulders. He led her through, into the vast high-ceilinged
hallway. She
turned her head, looking back at her father and saw how he was
smiling at her. A fierce, uncompromising smile of pride. It all
went well until she saw him. Until she looked across the room and met
his eyes. Then it came back to her: her deep-rooted fear of him,
something much greater than dislike. Dread, perhaps. Or the feeling
she had in her dreams sometimes. That fear of drowning in darkness.
Of a cold, sightless suffocation. She
looked down, afraid that her eyes would reveal what she was thinking.
It was a gesture that, to a watching eye, seemed the very archetype
of feminine modesty: the bride obedient, her husband's possession, to
be done with as he willed. But it wasn't so. Her
thoughts disturbed her. They hung like a veil at the back of her
eyes, darkening all she saw. Head bowed, she sat beside her future
mother-in-law, a sense of horror growing in her by the moment. "Jelka?" The
voice was soft, almost tender, but it was Hans Ebert who stood before
her, straight-backed and cruelly handsome. She looked up, past the
silvered buttons of his dark-blue dress uniform to his face. And met
his eyes. Cold, selfish eyes, little different from how she had
remembered them, but now alert to her. Alert and open to her
womanhood. Surprised by what he saw. She
looked away, frightened by what she saw, by the sudden interest where
before there had only been indifference. Like a curse, she thought.
My mother's curse, handed down to me. Her dying gift. But her mouth
said simply, "Hans," acknowledging
his greeting. "You're
looking very nice," he said, his voice clear, resonant. She
looked up, the strength of his voice, its utter conviction,
surprising her. Her beauty had somehow pierced the shell of his
self-regard. He was looking down at her with something close to awe.
He had expected a child, not a woman. And not a beautiful woman, at
that. Yes, he was surprised by her, but there was also something
else—something more predatory in that look. She
had changed in his eyes. Had become something he wanted. His sisters
stood behind him, no longer taller than her. They watched her
enviously. She had eclipsed them overnight and now they hated her.
Hated her beauty. "Come! Drinks everyone!" Klaus Ebert
called, smiling at her as he passed, oblivious of the dark, unseen
currents of feeling that swirled all about him in the room. And all
the while his son watched her. Her future husband, his eyes dark with
the knowledge of possession. She
looked away, studying the palatial vastness of the room. It was a
hundred ch'i across, high-ceilinged and six-sided, each wall
divided into five by tall, red-painted pillars. The walls were a
dark, almost primal green; double doors were set into the center of
each wall. Those doors filled the space between floor and ceiling,
pillar and pillar. Vast doors that made her feel as though she had
shrunk in size. GenSyn giants stood before the pillars to either side
of each door, the dark-green uniforms of the half-men blending in
with the studded leather of the door covering. A
border of tiles, glassy black and bright with darkness, surrounded
the central hexagonal space. Huge, claw-footed plinths rested on this
polished darkness, each bearing a man-sized vase; brutal-lipped and
heavy vases, decorated in violent swirls of red and green and black.
Elongated animals coiled about the thick trunk of each vase, facing
each other with bared fangs and flaring eyes. On the walls beyond
hung huge, wall-sized canvases in thick gilt frames, so dark as to
seem in permanent shadow; visions of some ancient forest hell, where
huntsmen ran on foot, ax or bow in hand, after a wounded stag. Again
there was the green of primal forest, the black of shadows, the red
of blood; these three repeated in each frame, melting into one
another as in a mist. A
dark-red carpet lay lush, luxuriant beneath her feet, while the
ceiling above was the black of a starless night. A
voice spoke to her, close by. She smelled a sickly sweetness, masking
some deeper, stronger scent. Turning, she met a pink-eyed stare. A
three-toed hand held out a glass. The voice was burred, deep,
sounding in the creature's throat. She looked at it aghast, then took
the offered glass. The
creature smiled and poured the blood-red liquid into the slender
crystal. Again she saw the lace at its cuffs, the neat whiteness of
its collar. But now she saw the bright, red roughness of the
sprouting hairs on its neck, the meat-pink color of its flesh, and
felt her skin crawl in aversion. She
stood and brushed past it, spilling her wine over the creature's
jacket, the stain a vivid slash of color on the ice-white velvet of
its sleeve. The
creature's eyes flared briefly, following her figure as she crossed
the room toward her father. Then it looked down at its sleeve, its
brutal lips curled back with distaste at the spoiled perfection
there. Li s H
AI TUNG sat at his desk, his hands resting lightly on either side of
the tiny porcelain figure, his face a mask of pain and bitter
disappointment. He had tried to deny it, but there was no doubting it
now. Tsu Ma's last message made it clear. It was Wang Ta Chuan. Wang,
his trusted Master of the Inner Palace, who was the traitor. The
old T'ang shuddered. First the boy Chung Hsin and now Wang Ta Chuan.
Was there no end to this foulness? Was there no one he could
trust? He had
done as Tsu Ma had suggested after the last meeting of the Council.
He had looked for the spy within his household and concluded that
only four people had been privy to the information Wang Sau-leyan had
used against him, four of his most senior and trusted men: Chung
Hu-yan, his Chancellor; Nan Ho, Master of Yuan's chambers; Li Feng
Chiang, his brother and advisor; and Wang Ta Chuan. At
first it had seemed unthinkable that any one of them could have
betrayed him. But he had done as Tsu Ma said; had brought each to him
separately and sown in them—casually, in confidence—a
single tiny seed of information, different in each instance. And
then he had waited to hear what Tsu Ma's spies reported back, hoping
beyond hope that there would be nothing. But this morning it had
come. Word that the false seed had sprouted in Wang Sau-leyaris ear. He
groaned, then leaned forward, pressing the summons pad. At once Chung
Hu-yan appeared at the door, his head bowed. "Chieh
Hsia?" Li
Shai Tung smiled, comforted by the sight of his Chancellor. "Bring
Wang Ta Chuan to me, Hu-yan. Bring him, then close the doors and
leave me with him," Li
Shai Tung saw the slight query in his Chancellor's eyes. Chung Hu-yan
had been with him too long not to sense his moods. Even so, he said
nothing, merely bowed and turned away, doing his master's bidding
without question. "A
good man . . ." he said softly, then sat back, closing his eyes,
trying to compose himself. Wang
Ta Chuan was a traitor. There was no doubt about it. But he would
have it from the man's lips. Would have him bow before him and admit
it. And
then? He
banged the table angrily, making the tiny porcelain statue shudder. The
man would have to die. Yet his family might live. If he confessed. If
he admitted of his own free will what he had done. Otherwise they,
too, would have to die. His wives, his sons, and all his pretty
grandchildren—all to the third generation as the law demanded.
And all because of his foolishness, his foulness. Why?
he asked himself for the hundredth time since he had known. Why
had Wang Ta Chuan betrayed him? Was it envy? Was it repayment for
some slight he felt had been made to him? Or was it something darker,
nastier than that? Did Wang Sau-leyan have some kind of hold on him?
Or was it simply greed? He
shook his head, not understanding. Surely Wang had all he wanted?
Status, riches, a fine, healthy family. What more did a man need? Li
Shai Tung reached out and drew the statue to him, studying it while
he mulled over these thoughts, turning it in his hands, some part of
him admiring the ancient craftsman's skill—the beauty of the
soft-blue glaze, the perfect, lifelike shape of the horse. It was
strange how this had returned to him. Young Ebert had brought it to
him only that morning, having recovered it in a raid on one of the
Ping Tioo cells. It was one of the three that had been taken from the
safe in Helmstadt Armory and its discovery in the hands of the Ping
Tioo had confirmed what he had always believed. But
now the Ping Tioo were broken, the horse returned. There would be no
more trouble from that source. There
was a knocking on the outer doors. He looked up, then set the statue
to one side. "Come!" he said imperiously, straightening in
his chair. Chung
Hu-yan escorted the Master of the Inner Palace into the room, then
backed away, closing the doors behind him. "Chieh
Hsial" Wang Ta Chuan said, bowing low, his manner no less
respectful, no less solicitous than it had always been. "Come
closer," Li Shai Tung ordered. "Come kneel before the
desk." Wang
Ta Chuan lifted his head briefly, surprised by his T'ang's request,
then did as he was told. "Have
I displeased you, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Shai Tung hesitated, then decided to broach the matter directly; but
before he could open his mouth, the doors to his study burst open and
Li Yuan stormed in. "Yuan!
What is the meaning of this?" he said, starting up from his
chair. "I
am sorry, Father, but I had to see you. It's Fei. . . She . .
." Li Yuan hesitated, taking in the sight of the kneeling man,
then went across and touched his shoulder. "Wang Ta Chuan, would
you leave us? I must talk with my father." "Yuan!"
The violence of the words surprised both the Prince and the kneeling
servant. "Be quiet, boy! Have you forgotten where you are?" Li
Yuan swallowed, then bowed low. "Good!"
Li Shai Tung said angrily. "Now hold your tongue and take a
seat. I have urgent business with Master Wang. Business that cannot
be put off." He
came from behind the desk and stood over Wang Ta Chuan. "Have
you something to tell me, Wang Ta Chuan?" "Chieh
Hsia?" The tone—of surprise and mild indignation—was
perfect, but Li Shai Tung was not fooled. To be a traitor—to be
the perfect copy of a loyal man— one needed such tricks. Tricks
of voice and gesture. Those and a stock of ready smiles. "You
would rather have it otherwise, then, Master Wang? You would rather I
told you?" He saw
the mask slip. Saw the sudden calculation in the face and felt
himself go cold. So it was true. Li
Yuan had stood. He took a step toward the T'ang. "What is this,
Father?" "Be
quiet, Yuan!" he said again, taking a step toward him, the hem
of his robes brushing against the kneeling man's hands. "Father.'" He
turned at Yuan's warning, but he was too slow. Wang Ta Chuan had
grabbed the hem of the T'ang's ceremonial pau, twisting the
silk about his wrist, while his other hand searched among his robes
and emerged with a knife. Li
Shai Tung tried to draw back, but Wang Ta Chuan tugged at the cloth
viciously, pulling him off balance. Yet even as the T'ang began to
fall, Li Yuan was moving past him, high-kicking the knife from Wang's
hands, then spinning around to follow through with a second kick that
broke the servant's nose. Li
Shai Tung edged back, watching as his son crouched over the fallen
man. "No,
Yuan— No!" But it
was no use. Li Yuan was as if possessed. His breath hissed from him
as he kicked and punched the fallen man. Then, as if coming to, he
stepped back, swaying, his eyes glazed. "Gods
. . ." Li Shai Tung said, pulling himself up against the edge of
the desk, getting his breath. Li
Yuan turned, looking at him, his eyes wide. "He tried to kill
you, Father! Why?
What had he done?" The
old T'ang swallowed dryly, then looked away, shaking his head, trying
to control himself, trying not to give voice to the pain he felt. For
a moment he could say nothing; then he looked back at his son. "He
was a spy, Yuan. For Wang Sau-leyan. He passed on information to our
cousin." The
last word was said with a venom, a bitterness that surprised them
both. Li
Yuan stared at his father, astonished. "A traitor?" He
turned, looking down at the dead man. "For a moment I thought it
was one of those things. Those copies that came in from Mars. I
thought. . ." He
stopped, swallowing, realizing what he had done. Li
Shai Tung watched his son a moment longer, then went back around his
desk and took his seat again. For a time he was silent, staring at
his hands, then he looked up again. "I must thank you, Yuan. You
saved my life just then. Even so, you should not have killed him. Now
we will never know the reason for his treachery. Nor can I confront
our cousin without the man's confession." "Forgive
me, Father. I was not myself." "No
... I could see that." He hesitated, then looked at his son more
thoughtfully. "Tell me. When you came in just now—what did
you want? What was so important that it made you forget yourself like
that?" For a
moment it seemed that Yuan would answer; then he shook his head.
"Forgive me, Father, it was nothing." Li
Shai Tung studied his son a moment longer, then nodded and reached
out, holding the tiny statue to him as if to draw comfort from it. klaus
ebert and the Marshal stood face to face, their glasses raised to
each other. "To
our grandchildren!" Ebert
nodded his satisfaction, then leaned closer. "1 must say, Jelka
is lovelier than ever, Knut. A real beauty she's become. She must
remind you of Jenny." "Very
much." Tolonen
turned, looking across. Jelka was sitting beside Klaus's wife, Berta,
her hands folded in her lap, her blond hair set off perfectly by the
flowing sky-blue dress she was wearing. As he watched, Hans went
across and stood over her, handsome, dashingly elegant. It was the
perfect match. Tolonen turned back, almost content, only the vaguest
unease troubling him. She was still young, after all. It was only
natural for her to have doubts. "Hans
will be good for her," he said, meeting his old friend's eyes.
"She needs a steadying influence." Klaus
nodded, then moved closer. "Talking of which, Knut, I've been
hearing things. Unsettling things." He lowered his voice, his
words for the Marshal only. "I hear that some of the young bucks
are up to old tricks. That some of them are in rather deep. And more
than youthful pranks." Tolonen
stared at him a moment, then nodded curtly. He had heard something
similar. "So it is, I'm sad to say. The times breed restlessness
in our young men. They are good apples gone bad." Ebert's
face showed a momentary distaste. "Is it our fault, Knut? Were
we too strict as fathers?" "You
and I?" Tolonen laughed softly. "Not we, Klaus. But
others?" He considered. "No, there's a rottenness at the
very core of things. Li Shai Tung has said as much himself. It is as
if Mankind cannot live without being at its own throat constantly.
Peace, that's at the root of it. We have been at peace too long, it
seems." It was
almost dissent. Klaus Ebert stiffened, hearing this bitterness from
his friend's lips. Things were bad indeed if the Marshal had such
thoughts in his head. "Ach,
I have lived too long!" Tolonen added, and the sudden ironic
tone in his voice brought back memories of their youth, so that both
men smiled and touched each other's arms. "All
will be well, Klaus, I promise you. We'll come to the root of things
soon enough. And then"—he made a movement that suggested
pulling up and discarding a plant—"then we shall be done
with it." They
looked at each other grimly, a look of understanding passing between
them. They knew the world and its ways. Few illusions remained to
them these days. Tolonen
turned to get a fresh drink, and caught sight of Jelka, getting up
hastily, the contents of her glass splashing over the serving
creature who stood beside her. He frowned as she came across. "What
is it, my love? You look like you've seen a ghost!" She
shook her head, but for the moment could not speak. There was a
distinct color in her cheeks. Klaus Ebert looked at her, concerned. "Did
my creature offend you, Jelka?" He looked at her tenderly, then
glared at the creature across the room. "No
. . ." She held on to her father's arm, surprised by her
reaction to the creature. "It's just. . ." "Did
it frighten you?" her father asked gently. She
laughed. "Yes. It did. It—surprised me, that's all. I'm
not used to them." Ebert relaxed. "It's my fault, Jelka. I
forget. They're such gentle, sophisticated creatures, you see. Bred
to be so." She
looked at him, curious now. "But why?" She was confused by
this. "I mean, why are they like that? Like goats?" Ebert
shrugged. "I suppose it's what we're used to. My
great-grandfather first had them as servants and they've been in the
household ever since. But they really are the most gentle of
creatures. Their manners are impeccable. And their dress sense is
immaculate." She
thought of the fine silk of the creature's sleeves, then shuddered,
recalling childhood tales of animals that talked. That
and the musk beneath the scent; the darkness at the back of those
blood-pink eyes. Impeccable, immaculate, and yet still an animal at
the back of all. A beast for all its breeding. She
turned to look, but the serving creature had gone, as if it sensed it
was no longer welcome. Good manners, she thought, but there was
little amusement to be had from it. The thing had scared her. "They
breed true," Ebert added. "In fact, they're the first of
our vat-bred creatures to attain that evolutionary step. We're justly
proud of them." Jelka
looked back at her future father-in-law, wondering at his pride in
the goat-thing he had made. But there was only human kindness in his
face. She
looked away, confused. So maybe it was her. Maybe she was out of
step. But it
was ugly, she thought. The thing was ugly. Then, relenting, she
smiled and took the glass of wine Klaus Ebert was holding out to her. AN
HOUR LATER the ritual began. Overhead
the lighting dimmed. At the far end of the room, the huge doors
slowly opened. It was
dark in the hallway beyond, yet the machine glowed from within. Like
a pearled and bloated egg, its outer skin as dark as smoked-glass, it
floated soundlessly above the tiled floor, a tightly focused circle
of light directly beneath it. Two GenSyn giants guided it, easing it
gently between the pillars of the door and out across the jet-black
marble of the tiles. Jelka
watched it come, her stomach tight with fear. This was her fate.
Unavoidable, implacable, it came, gliding toward her as in a dream,
its outer case shielding its inner brilliance, masking the stark
simplicity of its purpose. She
held her father's arm tightly, conscious of him at her side, of how
proudly he stood there. For him this moment held no threat. Today his
family was joined to Klaus Ebert's by contract—something he had
wished for since his youth. And how could that be wrong? The
machine stopped. The GenSyn servants backed away, closing the doors
behind them. Slowly the machine sank into the lush carpeting: dark
yet pregnant with its inner light. Beyond
it, in the shadows, a stranger stood at Klaus Ebert's side. The two
were talking, their hushed tones drifting across to where she stood.
The man was much smaller than Ebert, a tiny creature dressed entirely
in red. The Consensor. He looked at her with a brief, almost
dismissive glance, then turned back. Dry-mouthed,
she watched him turn to the machine and begin to ready it for the
ceremony. "Nu
shi Tolonen?" He stood before her, one hand extended. It
was time. She
took his hand. A small, cool hand, dry to the touch. Looking down,
she saw that he wore gloves, fine sheaths of black through which the
intense pallor of his skin showed. Holding her hand, he led her to
the machine. The
casing irised before her, spilling light. She hesitated, then stepped
up into the brilliance. He
placed her hands on the touch-sensitive pads and clamped them there,
then pushed her face gently but firmly against the molded screen of
transparent ice, reaching around her to attach the cap to her skull,
the girdle about her waist. The movements of his hands were gentle,
and for a time her fear receded, lost in the soothing comfort of his
touch; but then, abruptly, he moved back and the door irised closed
behind her, leaving her alone, facing the empty space beyond the
partition. There
was a moment of doubt so great her stomach seemed to fall away. Then
the wall facing her irised open and Hans Ebert stepped up into the
machine. Her
heart began to hammer in her breast. She waited, exposed to him, her
body held fast against the ice-clear partition. He
smiled at her, letting the Consensor do his work. In a moment he was
secured, his face pressed close against her own, his hands to hers,
only the thinnest sheet of ice between them. She
stared into his eyes, unable to look elsewhere, although she felt so
vulnerable, so hideously exposed to him that she wanted to close her
eyes and tear herself away. The feeling grew in her until she stood
there, cowed before his relentless stare, reduced to a frightened
child. And then he spoke. "Don't
be afraid. I'd never hurt you, Jelka Tolonen." The
words seemed to come from a thousand U away, distant,
disembodied, from the vast emptiness beyond the surface of his
pale-blue eyes. And yet it was as if the words had formed in her
head, unmediated by tongue or lip. And
still he looked at her. Looked through her. Seeing all she was
thinking. Understanding everything she was feeling. Emptying her.
Until there was nothing there but her fear of him. Then,
in her mind, something happened. A wall blew in and three men in
black stepped through. There was the smell of burning and something
lay on the floor beside her, hideously disfigured, bright slivers of
metal jutting from its bloodied flesh. She
saw this vividly. And in the eyes that faced hers something happened:
the pupils widened, responding to something in her own. For a moment
she looked outward, recognizing Hans Ebert, then the memory grabbed
at her again and she looked back inward, seeing the three men come
toward her, their guns raised. Strangely, the memory calmed her. I
survived, she thought. I danced my way to life. The
partition between them darkened momentarily, leaving them isolated.
Then it cleared, a circular pattern of pictograms forming in the ice;
a tiny circle of coded information displayed before each of their
pupils, duplicated so that each half of their brains could read and
comprehend. Genotypings. Blood samplings. Brain scans. Fertility
ratings. Jelka felt the girdle tighten, then a momentary pain as it
probed her. Figures
changed. The ice glowed green. They were a perfect genetic match. The
machine stored the figures dispassionately, noting them down on the
contract. The
green tinge faded with the pictograms. Again she found herself
staring into his eyes. He was
smiling. The skin surrounding his eyes was pulled tight in little
creases, his eyes much brighter than before. "You're
beautiful," said the voice in her head. "We'll be good
together. Strong, healthy sons you'll give me. Sons we'll both be
proud of." She
pictured the words forming in the darkness behind his eyes: saw them
lift and float across, piercing the ice between them; entering her
through her eyes. Her
fear had subsided. She was herself again. Now, when she looked at
him, she saw only how cruel he was, how selfish. It was there, at the
front of his eyes, like a coded pictogram. As the
machine began its litany she calmed herself, steeling herself to
outface him: No. You''II not defeat me, Hans Ebert. I'm stronger
than you think. I'll survive you. She smiled, and her lips
moved, saying yes, sealing the contract, putting her verbal mark to
the retinal prints and EGG traces the machine had already registered
as her identifying signature. But in her head the yes remained
conditional. I'll
dance my way to life, she thought. See if I don't. DEVORE
LOOKED DOWN at the indicator at his wrist, then peeled off the gas
mask. Outside his men were mopping up, stripping the corpses before
they set fire to the level. resell
was unconscious on the bed, the Han girl beside him. He
pulled back the sheet, looking down at them. The woman had small firm
breasts with large dark nipples and a scar that ran from her left hip
almost to her knee. DeVore smiled and leaned forward, running a
finger slowly down the cleanshaven slit of her sex. Too bad, he
thought. Too bad. He
looked across. Gesell lay on his side, one arm cradling his head. A
thick dark growth of hair covered his arms and legs, sprouted
luxuriantly at his groin and beneath his arms. His penis lay there,
like a newborn chick in a nest, folded softly into itself. Looking
at the man, DeVore felt a tight knot of anger constrict his throat.
It would be easy to kill them now. Never to let them wake. But it
wasn't enough. He wanted Gesell to know. Wanted to spit in his face
before he died. Yes.
For all the threats he'd made. All the shit he'd made him eat. He
drew the needle-gun from his pocket and fitted a cartridge, then
pushed it against GeselPs chest, just above the heart. Discarding the
empty cartridge, he fitted another and did the same to the girl. Then
he stepped back, waiting for the antidote to take effect. The
woman was the first to wake. She turned slightly, moving toward
Gesell, then froze, sniffing the air. "I'd
keep very still if I were you, Mao Liang." She
turned her head, her eyes taking in his dark form, then gave a tiny
nod. "Good.
Your boyfriend will be back with us in a moment. It's him I want. So
behave yourself and you won't get hurt. Understand?" Again
she nodded, then shifted back slightly as Gesell stirred. DeVore
smiled, drawing the gun from inside his tunic. "Good morning, my
friend. I'm sorry to have to disturb your sleep like this, but we've
business." Gesell
sat up slowly, rubbing his eyes, then went very still, seeing the gun
in DeVore's hand. "How
the fuck did you get in here?" he said softly, his eyes
narrowed. "I
bought my way in. Your guards were only too happy to sell you to me." "Sell.
. ." Understanding came to his face. He glanced at the girl,
then looked back at DeVore, some eternal element of defiance in his
nature making him stubborn to the last. "Mach
will get you for this, you fucker." DeVore
shrugged. "Maybe. But it won't help you, eh, Bent? Because
you're dead. And all those things you believed in—they're dead
too. I've wiped them out. There's only you left. You and the girl
here." He saw
the movement almost peripherally; saw how her hand searched beneath
the pillow and then drew back; heard the tiny click as she took off
the safety. He
fired twice as she lifted the gun, the weighted bullets punching two
neat holes in her chest, just below her heart. She fell back, dead. Gesell
moved forward sharply, then stopped, seeing how DeVore's gun was
trained on him, pointed directly at his head. "You
were always a loud-mouth, Gesell." Gesell
glared at him. "We should never have worked with you. Emily was
right. You never cared for anyone but yourself." "Did
I ever say otherwise?" Gesell
sat back, his face tense. "So why don't you do it? Get it over
with?" "I
will. . . don't worry, but not with this." He
threw the gun down. Gesell stared back at him a moment, then made his
move, scrambling for the gun. DeVore stepped back, drawing the spray
can from his pocket, watching as Gesell turned and pointed the gun at
him. "It's
empty." Gesell
pulled the trigger. It clicked then clicked again. DeVore
smiled, then stepped closer, lifting the spray, his finger holding
down the button as the fine particles hissed from the nozzle. He
watched Gesell tear at the thin film of opaque, almost translucent
ice that had formed about his head and shoulders; saw how his fingers
fought to free an airhole in the soft, elastic stuff, but already it
was growing hard. Desperation made ' Gesell throw himself about,
bellowing; but the sound was distant, muted. It came ; from
behind a screen that cut him off from the air itself. DeVore
emptied the can, then cast it aside, stepping back from the
struggling figure. GeselPs arms and hands were stuck now, welded
firmly to his face. For a moment longer he staggered about, then fell
down, his legs kicking weakly. Then he lay still. DeVore
stood over Gesell a moment, studying his face; satisfied by the look
of panic, of utter torment, he could see through the hard, glasslike
mask, then looked up. Mach was watching him from the door. "He's
dead?" DeVore
nodded. "And the woman, too, I'm afraid. She drew a gun on me." Mach
shrugged. "It's all right. It would have been difficult. She was
in love with him." "And
Ascher?" Mach
shook his head. "There's no trace of her." DeVore
considered that a moment, then nodded. "I'll find her for you." "Thanks."
Mach hesitated, then came in, looking down at Gesell. "I liked
him, you know. I really did. But sooner or later he would have killed
me. He was like that." DeVore
stood, then reached out, touching Mach's arm. "Okay. We've
finished here. Let's be gone. Before the T'ang's men get here."
CHAPTER
FOUR Carp Pool and Tortoise
Shell KIM
TURNED in his seat, looking at Hammond. "Well? What do you think
he wants?" Hammond
glanced at him, then looked away nervously, conscious of the overhead
camera. Kim
looked down. So it was like that. Spatz was putting pressure on him.
Well, it made sense. After all, it wasn't every day that Prince Yuan
came to visit the Project. He
looked about him, noting how Spatz had had his suite of offices
decorated specially for the occasion, the furnishings replaced. It
was a common joke on the Project that Spatz's offices were larger—and
cost more in upkeep—than the rest of the Project put together.
But that was only to be expected. It was how assholes like Spatz
behaved. Kim
had been on the Wiring Project for almost a year now, though for most
of that time he had been kept out of things by Spatz. Even so, he had
learned a lot, keeping what he knew from Spatz and his cronies. From
the outset he had been dismayed to learn how little they'd
progressed. It was not that they didn't know about the brain. The
basic information they needed had been discovered more than two
centuries before. No, it was simply that they couldn't apply it. They
had tried out various templates—all of them embellishments on
what already existed—but none of them had shown the kind of
delicacy required. In terms of what they were doing, they were crude,
heavy-handed models, more likely to destroy the brain than control
it; systems of blocks and stimulae that set off whole chains of
unwanted chemical and electrical responses. As it was, the wiring
system they had was worthless. A frontal lobotomy was of more use.
Unless one wanted a population of twitching, jerking puppets. And
now, in less than five hours, Prince Yuan would arrive for his first
annual inspection. Spatz, of course, was taking no chances. He
remembered the last visit he had had—from Marshal Tolonen—and
was determined to keep Kim away from things. Well,
let him try, Kim thought. Let him try. As if
on cue, Spatz arrived, Ellis, his assistant, trailing behind him with
a thick stack of paper files under his arm. He had seen this aspect
of officialdom before. Most of the time they shunned real paperwork,
preferring to keep as much as possible on computer; yet whenever the
big guns arrived, out would come thick stacks of paper. And
maybe it worked. Maybe it did impress their superiors. "Ward,"
Spatz said coldly, matter-of-factly, not even glancing at Kim as he
sat behind his desk. "Yes,
Shih Spatz?" He saw
the tightening of the man's face at his refusal to use his full
title. Spatz was a fool when it came to science, but he knew
disrespect when he saw it. Spatz looked up at Ellis and took the
files from him, sorting through them with a great deal of
self-importance before finally setting them aside and looking across
at Kim. "I
understand you've requested an interview with Prince Yuan." Kim
stared back at him, making no response, wanting to see how Spatz
would deal with his intransigence; how he would cope with this direct
assault on his authority. "Well.
. ." Spatz masked his anger with a smile. His face set, he
raised a hand and clicked his fingers. At once Ellis went across and
opened the door. Kim
heard footsteps behind him. It was the Communications Officer,
Barycz. He marched up to the desk and handed over two slender files
to add to the pile at Spatz's elbow. Are
you trying to build a wall against me, Spatz? Kim
thought, smiling inwardly. Because it won't work. Not toda^,
anyway. Because today Prince Yuan will be here. And I'II let him
know exactly what you've been doing. You know that, and it scares
you. Which is why I'm here. So that you can offer me some kind
of deal But it won't work. Because there's nothing you
can offer me. Nothing at all. Spatz
studied the first of the files for a while, then held it out to
Hammond. Kim
saw the movement in Hammond's face and knew, at once, that the file
had to do with himself. Hammond
read through the file, the color draining from his face, then looked
up at Spatz again. "But this . . ." Spatz
looked away. "What is the matter, Shih Hammond?" Hammond
glanced at Kim fearfully. "Is
it a problem, Shih Hammond?" Spatz said, turning to look at his
Senior Technician. "You only have to countersign. Or is there
something you wish to query?" Kim
smiled sourly. He understood. They had constructed a new personnel
file. A false one, smearing him. "Sign
it, Joel," he said. "It doesn't matter." Spatz
looked at him and smiled. The kind of smile a snake makes before it
unhinges its jaws and swallows an egg. Hammond
hesitated, then signed. "Good,"
Spatz said, taking the document back. Then, his smile broadening, he
passed the second file to Ellis. "Give this to the boy." Kim
looked up as Ellis approached, conscious of the look of apology in
the Assistant Director's eyes. "What
is this?" Spatz
laughed humorlessly. "Why don't you open it and see?" Kim
looked across. Hammond was looking down, his shoulders hunched
forward, as if he knew already what was in the second file. Kim
opened the folder and caught his breath. Inside was a sheaf of paper.
Hammond's poems and his own replies. A full record of the secret
messages they had passed between them. He
looked at Spatz. "So you knew?" But he knew at once that
neither Spatz nor Barycz was behind this. They were too dull-witted.
There was no way either of them could have worked out what was going
on. No, this was someone else. Someone much sharper than either of
them. But who? Spatz
leaned forward, his sense of dignity struggling with his need to
gloat. "You
thought you were being clever, didn't you, Ward? A regular little
smart-ass. I bet you thought you were so superior, neh?" He
laughed, then sat back, all humor drainin/g from his face. "For
your part in this, you're under report, Hammond, from this moment.
But you, Ward—you're out." "Out?"
Kim laughed. "Forgive me, Shih Spatz, but you can't do that. I'm
Prince Yuan's appointment. Surely only he can say whether I'm out or
not." Spatz
glanced at him disdainfully. "A formality. He'll have my
recommendation, backed by the personnel file and the complaints of
disruption filed against you by several staff members." Out of
the corner of his eye he saw Hammond start forward. "But you
promised—" Spatz
interrupted Hammond, his face hard. "I promised nothing, if you
recall. Now for the gods' sakes, hold your tongue! Even better, leave
the room. You've served your purpose." Hammond
rose slowly. "I've served my purpose, eh? Too fucking right I
have." He leaned forward, setting his hands firmly on the edge
of the desk, facing the Director. As if sensing what he intended,
Spatz drew the file toward him, then handed it to Ellis at his side. "If
you say another word—" Hammond
laughed, but his face was filled with loathing for the man in front
of him. "Oh, I've nothing more to say, Director Spatz. Just this
. . ." He
drew his head back and spat powerfully, cleanly, catching Spatz in
the center of his face. Spatz
cried out, rubbing at his face with the sleeve of his gown; then,
realizing what he had done, he swore. "You
bastard, Hammond! My silks . . ." Spatz
stood, his face livid with anger, his hands trembling. "Get
out! Get your things and be gone! As from this moment you're off the
Project." For a
moment longer, Hammond stood there, glaring at him, then he moved
back, a tiny shudder passing through him. "Joel,
I ..." Kim began, reaching out to him, but Hammond stepped back,
looking about him, as if coming to from a bad dream. "No.
It's fine, Kim. Really it is. I'll survive. The Net can't be worse
than this. At least I won't have to pawn myself every day to hsiao
jen like this pig-brained cretin here!" Spatz
trembled with rage. "Guards!" he yelled. "Get the
guards here, now!" Hammond laughed. "Don't bother, I'm
going. But fuck you, Spatz. Fuck you to hell. I hope Prince Yuan has
your ass for what you're trying to do here today." He I turned,
then bent down, embracing Kim. "Good luck, Kim," he
whispered. "I'm | sorry.
Truly I am." Kim
held him out at arm's length. "It's all right. I understand.
You're a good man, | Joel
Hammond. A good man." He
stood, watching him go, then turned back, facing Spatz. "So
what now?" Spatz
ignored him, leaning forward to talk into the intercom. "Send in
the nurse. We're ready now." Kim
looked at Ellis; saw how the man refused to meet his eyes. Then at
Barycz. Barycz was pretending to study the chart on the wall behind
Spatz. "Prince
Yuan will ask about me," Kim said. "He's certain to." Spatz
smiled coldly. "Of course he will. But you won't be there, will
you?" He
heard the door open, the nurse come in. "And
then he'll ask why I'm not there—" he began, but the words
were choked off. He felt the hypodermic-gun pressed against his neck
and tried to squirm away, struggling against the strong hand that
held his shoulder; but it was too late. The
hand released him. Slumping down into the chair, he felt a fiery cold
spreading through his veins, leaving him numb, his nerve ends frozen.
"I-wb . . ." he said, his eyes glazing. "I-jibw . . ."
Then he fell forward, scattering the sheaf of poems across the floor
beside him. LI
YUAN stepped down from his craft and sighed, looking about him. The
roof of the City stretched away from him like a vast field of snow,
empty but for the small group of officials who were gathered, heads
bowed, beside the open hatchway. He
looked north to where the City ended abruptly on the shores of the
icy Baltic, then turned to smile at his personal secretary, Chang
Shih-sen. "Have
you ever seen it when the cloud is low, Chang? The cloud seems to
spill from the City's edge like water over a fall. But slowly, very
slowly, as in a dream." "I
have never seen that, my Lord, but I should imagine it was
beautiful." Li
Yuan nodded. "Very beautiful. I saw it once at sunset. All the
colors of the sky seemed captured in those endless folds of
whiteness." Chang
Shih-sen nodded, then, softly, mindful of his place, added, "They
are waiting, my Lord." Li
Yuan looked back at him and smiled. "Let them wait. The day is
beautiful. Besides, I wish a moment to myself before I join them." "My
Lord . . ." Chang backed away, bowing. Li
Yuan turned, moving out from the shadow of the craft into the
mid-afternoon sunlight. Chang was a good man. Kind, hard-working,
thoughtful. But his father's Master of the Inner Palace, Wang Ta
Chuan, had been the same. It made one think. When the fate of so many
were in one person's hands, who could one trust? He
took a deep breath, enjoying the freshness, the warmth of the
sunlight on his arms and back. Last night, for the first time since
he had married Fei Yen, he had summoned a woman to his bed—one
of the serving girls from the kitchens— purging himself of the
need that had raged in his blood like a poison. Now he was himself
again. Or
almost himself. For he would never again be wholly as he was. Fei Yen
had changed that. Who
was it? he wondered for the thousandth time. Who slept with
you whik I was gone? Was it one of my servants? Or was it someone you
knew before our time together? He
huffed out his sudden irritation. It was no good dwelling on it.
Madness lay that way. No, best set such thoughts aside, lest he find
himself thinking of nothing else. And
what use would I then be to my father? He
shivered, then, calming himself, turned back, summoning Chang. "Is
this all?" Spatz,
stood before the seated Prince, bowed his head. "I am afraid so,
my Lord. But you must understand—I have been working under the
most severe restraints." Li
Yuan looked up, his disappointment clear. "Just what do you
mean, Director?" Spatz
kept his head lowered, not meeting the Prince's eyes. "To begin
with, I have been effectively two short on my team throughout my time
here." Li
Yuan leaned forward. "I do not understand you, Director. There
is no mention in your report of such a thing." "Forgive
me, my Lord, but the matter I am referring to is in the second file.
I felt it best to keep the main report to matters of—of
science, let us say." The
Prince sat back, irritated by the man's manner. If he'd had his way,
Spatz would have been replaced as Director, but Spatz was his
father's appointment, like Tolonen. He set
the top file aside, then opened the second one. It was a personnel
report on the boy, Ward. Li
Yuan looked up, surprised. Could Spatz have known? No. He couldn't
possibly have known about Kim and the special projects. But that,
too, had been a disappointment. After the first report he had heard
nothing from the boy. Nothing for ten months. At first he had assumed
that it was taking much longer than the boy had estimated or that his
work on the Project was taking up his time, but this explained it
all. He
read it through, then looked up again, shaking his head. The boy had
been at best lethargic, uncooperative, at worst disruptive to the
point of actual physical violence. "Why
was I not told of this before now?" Spatz
hesitated. "I. . .1 wished to be charitable to the boy, my Lord.
To give him every chance to change his ways and prove himself. I was
conscious of his importance to you. Of your special interest. So—" Li
Yuan raised his hand. "I understand. Can I see the boy?" "Of
course, my Lord. But you must understand his condition. I am told it
is a result of his 'restructuring' at the clinic. Occasionally he
falls into a kind of torpor' where he won't speak or even acknowledge
that anyone is there." "I
see." Li Yuan kept the depth of his disappointment from his
face. "And is he like that now?" "I
am afraid so, my Lord." "And
his tutor, T'ai Cho?" Spatz
gave a small shrug of resignation. "A good man, but his loyalty
to the boy is—shall we say, misguided. He is too involved, my
Lord. His only thought is to keep the boy from harm. I'm afraid
you'll get little sense from him either." Li
Yuan studied Spatz a moment longer, then closed the file. "You
wish to see the boy, my Lord?" Li
Yuan sighed, then shook his head. "No. I think I've seen
enough." He stood. "I'm disappointed, Spatz. Hugely
disappointed. I expected far greater progress than this. Still,
things are on the right lines. I note that youVe made some headway
toward solving things on the technical side. That's good, but I want
more. I want a working model twelve months from now." "My
Lord . . ." The note of pure panic in the Director's voice was
almost comical, yet Li Yuan had never felt less like laughing. "Twelve
months. Understand me? For my part, I'll make sure you have another
dozen men—the best scientists I can recruit from the Companies.
As for funding, you're quite correct, Director. It is inadequate.
Which is why I'm tripling it from this moment." For
the first time Spatz's head came up and his eyes searched him out.
"My Lord, you are too generous." Li
Yuan laughed sourly. "Generosity has nothing to do with it,
Director Spatz. I want a job done and I want it done properly. We
underfunded. We didn't see the scale of the thing. Well, now we'll
put that right. But I want results this time." "And
the boy?" Li
Yuan stood, handing the main copies of the files to Chang Shih-sen,
then looked back at Spatz. "The
matter of the boy will be dealt with. You need worry yourself no
further in that regard, Director." BARYCZ
LOCKED the door of the Communications Room, then went to his desk and
activated the screen. He tapped in the code and waited, knowing the
signal was being scrambled through as many as a dozen subroutes
before it got to its destination. The screen flickered wildly, then
cleared, DeVore's face staring out at him. "Is
it done?" Barycz
swallowed nervously, then nodded. "I've dispatched copies of the
files to your man. He should have them within the hour." "Good.
And the boy? He's out of it, I hope?" Barycz
bowed his head. "I've done everything as you ordered it, Shih
Loehr. However, there is one small complication. The Director has
ordered Hammond off the Project. With immediate effect." DeVore
looked away a moment, then nodded. "Fine. I'll see to that."
He looked back at Barycz, smiling. "You've done well, Barycz.
There'll be a bonus for you." Barycz
bowed his head again. "You are too kind." When he looked up
again the screen was dark. He
smiled, pleased with himself, then sat back, wondering how generous
Loehr planned to be. Maybe he'd have enough to move up a deck—to
buy a place in the Hundreds. Barycz
sniffed thoughtfully, then laughed, recalling how Hammond had spat in
the Director's face. "Served
the bastard right," he said quietly. Yes. He was not a spiteful
man, but he had enjoyed the sight of Spatz getting his deserts.
Enjoyed it greatly. LEHMANN
STOOD in the doorway, looking in. "Ebert's here." DeVore
looked up from the wei chi board and smiled. "Okay. I'll
be up in a while. Take him through into the private suite and get one
of the stewards to look after him. Tell him I won't be long." DeVore
watched his lieutenant go, then stood. He had been practicing new
openings. Experimenting. Seeing if he could break down old habits.
That was the only trouble with u>ei chi—it was not a
game to be played against oneself. One needed a steady supply of
opponents, men as good as oneself—better, if one really wished
to improve one's game. But he had no one. He
stretched and looked about him, feeling good, noticing his furs where
he had left them in the corner of the room. He had been out early,
before sunrise; he had gone out alone, hunting snow foxes. The
pelts of five were hanging in the kitchens, drying out, the scant
meat of the foxes gone into a stew—a special meal to celebrate.
Yes, things were going well. Only a few weeks ago the situation had
seemed bleak, but now the board was filling nicely with his plays. In
the north, the Ping Tiao were effectively destroyed and Mach's
Yu was primed to step into the resultant power vacuum. In the east
his men were in position, awaiting only his order to attack the
Plantations, while to the west he was building up a new shape—seeking
new allies among the elite of City North America. Added to these were
two much subtler plays—the poisoned statue and his plans for
the Wiring Project. All were coming to fruition. Soon the shapes on
the board would change and a new phase of the game would begin—the
middle game—in which his pieces would be in the ascendant. And
what was Ebert's role in all this? He had ambitions, that was clear
now. Ambitions above being a puppet ruler. Well, let Ebert have them.
When the time came, he would cut him down to size. Until then he
would pretend to trust him more. DeVore
laughed. In the meantime, maybe he would offer him the girl, the
lookalike. She had been meant for Tolonen—as a "gift"
to replace his murdered daughter—but Jelka's survival had meant
a change of plans. He studied the board thoughtfully, then nodded.
Yes, he would give Ebert the lookalike as an early wedding gift. To
do with as he wished. He
smiled, then leaned across and placed a white stone on the board,
breachin§ the space between two of the black masses, threatening
to cut. HANS
EBERT stood by the open hatchway of the transporter, his left hand
strao tiehtiv as the craft rose steeply from the mountainside. DeVore's
gift was crouched behind him against the far wall of the craft, as
far from the open hatchway as she could get. He could sense her there
behind him and felt the hairs rise along his spine and at the back of
his neck. The
bastard. The devious fucking bastard. He
smiled tightly and waved a hand at the slowly diminishing figure on
the hillside far below. Then, as the craft began to bank away, he
turned, looking at the girl, smiling at her reassuringly, keeping his
true feelings from showing. Games.
It was all one big game to DeVore. He understood that now. And this—
this gift of the girl—that was part of the play too. To
unsettle him, perhaps. Or mock him. Well, he'd not let him. He
moved past her brusquely and went through into the cockpit. Auden
turned, looking at him. "What
is it, Hans?" He
took a breath then shook his head. "Nothing. But you'd best have
this." He took the sealed letter DeVore had given him and handed
it across. "It's to Lever. DeVore wants you to hand it to him
when you meet the Americans at the spaceport. It's an invitation." Auden
tucked it away. "What else?" Ebert
smiled. Auden was a good man. He understood things without having to
be told. "It's just that I don't trust him. Especially when he
'puts all his stones on the table.' He's up to something." Auden
laughed. "Like what?" Ebert
stared out through the frosted glass, noting the bleakness of their
surroundings. "I don't know. It's just a feeling. And then
there's his gift . . ." Auden
narrowed his eyes. "So what are you going to do with her?" Ebert
turned back, meeting his eyes briefly, then jerked away, pulling the
cockpit door closed behind him. the
girl looked up as Ebert came back into the hold, her eyes wide,
filled with fear. He stopped, staring at her, appalled by the
likeness, then went across and stood by the open hatchway, looking
outward, his neat-cut hair barely moving in the icy wind. "I'm
sorry," he said, against the roar of the wind. "I didn't
mean to frighten you." He glanced around, smiling. "Here. .
. come across. I want to show you something." She
didn't move; only pressed tighter against the far wall of the cabin. "Come.
. ." he said, as softly as he could against the noise. "You've
nothing to be afraid of. I just want to show you, that's all." He
watched her: saw how fear battled in her with a need to obey. Yes,
he thought, DeVore would have instilled that in you, wouldn't
he? She kept looking down, biting her lip, then glancing up at
him again, of two minds. Yes,
and you're like her, he thought. Physically, anyway. But
you aren't her. You're just a common peasant girl he's had changed in
his labs. And the gods alone know what he's done to you. But the real
Jelka wouldn't be cowering there. She would have come across
of her own free will. To defy me. Just to prove
to me that I didn't frighten her. He smiled and looked
down, remembering that moment in the machine when she had glared back
at him. It had been then, perhaps, that he had first realized his
true feelings for her. Then that he had first articulated it inside
his head. I'm in love with you, Jelka Tolonen, he had thought,
surprised. In love. So unexpected. So totally unexpected. And
afterward, when she had gone, he had found himself thinking of her.
Finding the image of her entangled in his thoughts of other things.
How strange that had been. So strange to find himself so vulnerable.
And now this ... He
went to her and took her arm, coaxing her gently, almost tenderly,
across, then stood there, one arm holding tightly about her slender
waist, the other reaching up to hold the strap. The wind whipped her
long, golden hair back and chilled her face, but he made her look.
"There," he said. "Isn't that magnificent?" He
looked sideways at her; saw how she opened her eyes, fighting against
the fear she felt; battling with it; trying to see the beauty there
in that desolate place DeVore's thing. His "gift." For a
moment there was nothing. Then the tiniest of smiles came to her
lips, th< muscles about her eyes relaxing slightly as she saw. He
shivered, then drew his arm back and up, forcing her head down. He
watched the tiny figure fall away from the craft, twisting silently
in the air, a tiny star of darkness against the white, growing
smaller by the second; then he shuddered again, a strange mixture of
pain and incomprehension making him shake his head and moan. No.
There would be no impediments. Not this time. No possessive old women
or mad whores with their love children. And certainly no copies. No.
Because he wanted the real Jelka, not some copy. Even if she hated
him. Or maybe because she hated him. Yes, perhaps that was it.
Because underneath it all she was as strong as he and that strength
appealed to him, making her a challenge. A challenge he could not
turn his back on. For you will love me, Jelka Tblonen. You
will. He
watched the body hit in a spray of snow; then he turned away, the
roar of the wind abating as he drew the hatch closed behind him. emily
ASCHER turned from the door, then caught her breath, the pay-lock key
falling from her hand, clattering across the bare ice floor. "You
..." DeVore
looked back at her from where he sat on the edge of her bed and
smiled. "Yes, it's me." He saw
her look from him to the key, judging the distance, assessing the
possibility of getting out of the room alive, and smiled inwardly. She
looked back at him, her eyes narrowed. "How did you find me?" He
tilted his head, looking her up and down, his keen eyes searching for
the telltale bulge of a concealed weapon. "It
wasn't so hard. I've had someone trailing you since that meeting at
the meat warehouse. I knew then that you were planning to get out." "You
did?" She laughed, but her face was hard. "That's strange.
Because I had no plans to. Not until last night." He
smiled. "Then you got out in good time. They're all dead. Or had
you heard?" He saw
the way her breathing changed, how the color drained from her face. "And
Gesell?" He
nodded, watching her. "I made sure of him myself." Her
lips parted slightly, then she looked down. "I guess it was . .
. inevitable." But when she looked back at him he saw the hatred
in her eyes and knew he had been right. She was still in love with
Gesell. Such a
waste, he thought. Had the worm understood how lucky he had been to
share his bed with two such strong women? No.
Probably not. Like all his kind he took things without thinking of
their worth. "Mach
helped me," he said, watching her closely now, his hand resting
loosely on the gun in his pocket. "He arranged it all." "Why?"
she asked. "I don't understand. He wanted it to work more than
any of us." "He
still does. But he wants to start again, without the taint of Bremen.
New blood, with new ideals, fresh ideas." She
stared back at him a moment, then shook her head. "But still
with you, neh?" "Is
that why you got out? Because of my involvement?" She
hesitated, then nodded, meeting the challenge of his eyes. "It
changed, after you came. It was different before, sharper, but then .
. . well, you saw what happened. It wasn't like that before." "No
. . ." He seemed almost to agree. "Well, that's past, eh?" "Is
it?" He
nodded, sitting back slightly, the gun in his pocket covering her
now. "So
what now? What do you want of me?" His
smile broadened. "It's not what I want. It's what Mach wants." "And?" "And
he wants you dead." Again
that slight tremor of the breasts, that slight change in breathing,
quickly controlled. She had guts, that was certain. More, perhaps,
than any of them. But he had seen that much at once. Had singled her
out because of it. "I'm
unarmed," she said, raising her hands slowly. "So
I see," he said. "So?" She
laughed, almost relaxed. "No ... It wouldn't worry you at all,
would it? To kill an unarmed woman." "No,
it wouldn't. But who said I was going to kill you?" Her
eyes narrowed again. "Aren't you, then?" He
shook his head, then reached into his left pocket and pulled out a
wallet. It held a pass, a new set of identity documents, two
five-hundred yuan credit chips, and a ticket for the
intercontinental jet. "Here,"
he said, throwing it to her. She
caught it deftly, opened it, then looked up sharply at him. "I
don't under- stand
. . ." "There's
a price," he said. "I promised Mach I'd bring something
back. To prove I'd dealt with you. A finger." He saw
the small shiver pass through her. "I see." "It
shouldn't hurt. I'll freeze the hand and cauterize the wound.
There'll be no pain. Discomfort, yes, but nothing more." She
looked down, a strangely pained expression on her face, then looked
up again. "Why? I mean, why are you doing this? What's your
motive?" "Do
I have to have one?" She
nodded. "It's how you are." He
shrugged. "So you've told me before. But you're wrong." "No
strings, then?" "No
strings. You give me a finger and I give you your freedom, and a new
life in North America." She
laughed, still not trusting him, "It's too easy. Too — "
She shook her head. He
stood. "You're wondering why. Why should that cold, calculating
bastard DeVore do this for me? What does he want? Well, I'll tell
you. It's very simple. I wanted to prove that you were wrong about
me." She
studied him a moment, then went across and bent down, recovering the
pay-key. "Well?"
he asked. "Have we a deal?" She
looked up at him. "Have I a choice?" "Yes.
You can walk out of here, right now. I'll not stop you. But if you
do, Mach will come after you with everything he's got. Because he'll
not feel safe until you're dead." "And
you?" DeVore
smiled. "Oh, I'm safe. I'm always safe." SLOWLY
the great globe of Chung Kuo turned in space, moving through sunlight
and darkness, the blank faces of its continents glistening like ice
caps beneath huge swirls of cloud. Three hours had passed by the
measure of men; and in Sichuan Province, in the great palace at
Tongjiang, Li Shai Tung sat with his son in the dim-lit silence of
his study, reading through the report General Nocenzi had brought. Li
Yuan stood at his father's side, scanning each sheet as his father
finished with it. The
report concerned a number of items taken the previous evening in a
raid on a gaming club frequented by the sons of several important
company heads. More than a dozen of the young men had been taken,
together with a quantity of seditious material: posters and
pamphlets, secret diaries and detailed accounts of illicit meetings.
Much of the material confirmed what Tolonen had said only the day
before. There was a new wave of unrest; a new tide, running for
change. They
were good men—exemplary young men, it might be said—from
families whose ties to the Seven went back to the foundation of the
City. Men who, in other circumstances, might have served his father
well. But a disease was rife among them; a foulness that, once
infected, could not be shaken from the blood. And
the disease? Li Yuan looked across at the pile of folders balanced on
the far side of his father's desk. There were three of them, each
bulging with handwritten ice-vellum sheets. He had not had time to
compare more than a few paragraphs scattered throughout each text,
but he had seen enough to know that their contents were practically
identical. He reached across and picked one up, flicking through the
first few pages. He had seen the original in Berdichev's papers more
than a year earlier, among the material Karr had brought back with
him from Mars, but had never thought he would see another. He
read the title page. "The Aristotle File, Being the True History
of Western Science. By Soren Berdichev." The
document had become the classic of dissent for these young men, each
copy painstakingly written out in longhand. His
father turned in his seat, looking up at him. "Well, Yuan? What
do you think?" He set
the file down. "It is as you said, Father. The thing is a
cancer. We must cut it out, before it spreads." The
old T'ang smiled, pleased with his son. "If we can." "You
think it might already be too late?" Li
Shai Tung shrugged. "A document like this is a powerful thing,
Yuan." He smiled, then stood, touching his son's arm. "But
come ... let us feed the fish. It is a while since we had the chance
to talk." Li
Yuan followed his father into the semidarkness of the arboretum, his
mind filled with misgivings. Inside,
Li Shai Tung turned, facing his son, the carp pool behind him. "I
come here whenever I need to think." Li
Yuan looked about him and nodded. He understood. When his father was
absent, he would come here himself and stand beside the pool, staring
down into the water as if emptying himself into its depths, letting
his thoughts become the fish, drifting, gliding slowly, almost
listlessly in the water, then rising swiftly to breach the surface,
imbued with sudden purpose. The
old T'ang smiled, seeing how his son stared down into the water; so
like himself in some respects. "Sometimes
I think it needs a pike." Li
Yuan looked up surprised. "A pike in a carp pool, Father? But it
would eat the other fish!" Li
Shai Tung nodded earnestly. "And maybe that is what was wrong
with Chung Kuo. Maybe our great carp pool needed a pike. To keep the
numbers down and add that missing element of sharpness. Maybe that is
what we are seeing now. Maybe our present troubles are merely the
consequence of all those years of peace." "Things
decay . . ." Yuan said, conscious of how far their talk had
come, of how far his father's words were from what he normally
professed to believe. "Yes
. . ." Li Shai Tung nodded and eased himself back onto the great
saddle of a turtle shell that was placed beside the pool. "And
perhaps a pike is loose in the depths." Li
Yuan moved to the side of the pool, the toes of his boots overlapping
the tiled edge. "Have
you made up your mind yet, Yuan?" The
question was unconnected to anything they had been discussing, but
once again he understood. In this sense they had never been closer.
His father meant the boy, Kim. "Yes,
Father. I have decided." "And?" Yuan
turned his head, looking across at his father. Li Shai Tung sat with
his feet spread, the cane resting against one knee. Yuan could see
his dead brother, Han Ch'in, in that posture of his father's. Could
see how his father would have resembled Han when he was younger, as
if age had been given him and youth to Han. But Han was long dead and
youth with him. Only old age remained. Only the crumbling patterns of
their forefathers. "I
was wrong," he said after a moment. "The reports are
unequivocal. It hasn't worked out. And now this—this matter of
the sons and their 'New European' movement. I can't help but think
the two are connected—that the boy is responsible for this." Li
Shai Tung's regretful smile mirrored his son's. "It is
connected, Yuan. Without the boy there would be no file." He
looked clearly at his son. "Then you will act upon my warrant
and have the boy terminated?" Li
Yuan met his father's eyes, part of him still hesitant, even now.
Then he nodded. "Good.
And do not trouble yourself, Yuan. You did all you could. It seems to
me that the boy's end was fated." Li
Yuan had looked down; now he looked up again, surprised by his
father's words. Li Shai Tung saw this and laughed. "You find it
odd for me to talk of fate, neh?" "You
have always spoken of it with scorn." "Maybe
so. Yet any man must at some point question whether it is chance or
fate that brings things to pass, whether he is the author or merely
the agent of his actions." "And
you, Father? What do you think?" Li
Shai Tung stood, leaning heavily upon the silver-headed cane he had
come to use so often these days; the cane with the dragon's head,
which Han Ch'in had bought him on his fiftieth birthday. "It
is said that in the time of Shang they would take a tortoise shell
and cover it with ink, then throw it into a fire. When it dried, a
diviner would read the cracks and lines in the scorched shell. They
believed, you see, that the tortoise was an animal of great purity—in
its hard-soft form they saw the meeting of yin and yang, of
Heaven and Earth. Later they would inscribe the shells with questions
put to their ancestors. As if the dead could answer." Li
Yuan smiled, reassured by the ironic tone of his father's words. For
a moment he had thought. . . "And
maybe they were right, Yuan. Maybe it is all written. But then one
must ask what it is the gods want of us. They seem to give and take
without design. To build things up only to cast them down. To give a
man great joy, only to snatch it away, leaving him in great despair.
And to what end, Yuan? To what end?" Yuan
answered softly, touched to the core by his father's words. "I
don't know, Father. Truly I don't." Li
Shai Tung shook his head bitterly. "Bones and tortoise shells. .
." He laughed and touched the great turtle shell behind him with
his cane. "They say this is a copy of the great Luoshu shell,
Yuan. It was a present to your mother from my father, on the day of
our wedding. The pattern on its back is meant to be a charm, you see,
for easing childbirth." Yuan
looked away. It was as if his father felt a need to torture himself,
to surround himself with the symbols of lost joy. "You
know the story, Yuan? It was in the reign of Yu, oh, more than four
thousand years ago now, when the turtle crawled up out of the Luo
River, bearing the markings on its back." Yuan
knew the story well. Every child did. But he let his father talk,
finding it strange that only now should they reach this point of
intimacy between them; now when things were darkest, his own life
blighted by the failure of his dreams, his father's by ill health. "Three
lines of three figures were marked out there on the shell, as plain
as could be seen, the yin numbers in the corners, the yang
numbers in the center, and each line—horizontal, vertical,
and diagonal—adding up to fifteen. Of course, it was hailed at
once as a magic square, as a sign that supernatural powers were at
work in the world. But we know better, eh, Yuan? We know there are no
magic charms to aid us in our troubles, only our reason and our will.
And if they fail . . ." Li
Shai Tung heaved a sigh, then sat heavily on the great saddle of the
shell. He looked up at his son wearily. "But
what is the answer, Yuan? What might we do that wre have not already
done?" Li
Yuan looked across at his father, his eyes narrowed. "Cast
oracles?" The
T'ang laughed softly. "Like our forefathers, eh?" The
old man looked away; stared down into the depths of the pool. Beyond
him the moon was framed within the darkness of the window. The night
was perfect, like the velvet worn about the neck of a young girl. "I
hoped for peace, Yuan. Longed for it. But. . ." He shook his
head. "What
then, Father? What should we do?" "Do?"
Li Shai Tung laughed; a soft, unfamiliar sound. "Prepare
ourselves, Yuan. That's all. Take care our friends are true. Sleep
only when we're safe." It was
an uncharacteristically vague answer. Yuan
looked down, then broached the subject he had been avoiding all
evening. "Are you well, Father? I had heard—" "Heard?
Heard what?" Li Shai Tung turned, his tone suddemly sharp,
commanding. Li Yuan almost smiled, but checked himself, knowing his
(father's eagle eye was on him. "Only
that you were not your best, Father. No more than thiat. Headaches.
Mild stomach upsets. But do not be angry with me. A son should Ibe
concerned for his father's health." Li
Shai Tung grunted. "Not my best, eh? Well, that's true of us all
after thirty. We're never again at our best." He was silent a
moment, thenx turned, tapping his cane against the tiled floor.
"Maybe that's true of all things—that they're never at
their best after a while. Men and the things men build." "Particulars,
father. Particulars." The
old man stared at him a moment, then nodded. "So I've always
lectured you, Yuan. You learn well. You always did. You were always
suited! for this." There
was a long silence between them. Han Ch'in's death lay there in that
silence; cold, heavy, unmentionable, a dark stone of grief in the
guts of each that neither had managed to pass. "And
Fei Yen?" It was
the first time his father had mentioned the separation. The matter
was not yet public knowledge. Li
Yuan sighed. "It's still the same." There
was real pain in his Li Shai Tung's face. "You should command
her, Yuan. Order her to come home." Li
Yuan shook his head, controlling what he felt. "With great
respect, Father, I know what's best in this. She hates me. I know
that now. To have her in my home would . . . would weaken me." Li
Shai Tung was watching his son closely, his shoulders slightly
hunched. "Ah . . ." He lifted his chin. "I did not
know that, Yuan. I..." Again he sighed. "I'm sorry, Yuan,
but the child. What of the child?" Li
Yuan swallowed, then raised his head again, facing the matter
squarely. "The child is not mine. Fei Yen was unfaithful to me.
The child belongs to another man." The
old man came closer, came around the pool and stood facing his
son."You know this for certain?" "No,
but I know it. Fei Yen herself—" "No.
I don't mean 'know it' in some vague sense, I mean know; it, for good
and certain." His voice had grown fierce, commanding once more.
"This is important, Yuan. I'm surprised at you. You should have
seen to this." Li
Yuan nodded. It was so, but he had not wanted to face it. Had not
wanted to know for good and certain. He had been quite happy
accepting her word. "You
must go to her and offer her divorce terms, Yuan. At once. But you
will make the offer conditional. You understand?" Again
he nodded, understanding. There would need to be tests. Tests to
ascertain the father of the child. Genotyping. Then he would know.
Know for good and certain. He gritted his teeth, feeling the pain
like a needle in his guts. "Good,"
said the T'ang, seeing that what he had wanted was accomplished.
"There must be no room for doubt in the future. If your son is
to rule, he must be uncontested. Your son, not some cuckoo in
the nest." The
words stung Li Yuan, but that was their aim. His father knew when to
spare and when to goad. "And
then?" Li Yuan suddenly felt drained, empty of thought. "And
then you marry again. Not one wife, but two. Six if need be, Yuan.
Have sons. Make the family strong again. Provide." He
nodded, unable to conceive of life with any other woman but Fei Yen,
but for now obedient to his father's wishes. "Love!"
There was a strange bitterness to his father's voice. An edge.
"It's never enough, Yuan. Remember that. It always fails you in
the end. Always." Li
Yuan looked up, meeting his father's eyes, seeing the love and hurt
and pain there where for others there was nothing. "All
love?" The
T'ang nodded and reached out to hold his son's shoulder. "All
love, Yuan. Even this." THERE
was a pounding at the outer doors. Li Shai Tung woke, drenched in
sweat, the dream of his first wife, Lin Yua, and that dreadful night
so clear that, for a moment, he thought the banging on the doors a
part of it. He sat up, feeling weak, disoriented. The banging came
again. "Gods
help us... what is it now?" he muttered, getting up slowly and
pulling on his gown. He
went across and stood there, facing the doors. "Who is it?" "It
is I, Chieh Hsia. Your Chancellor, Chung Hu-yan." He
shivered. Chung Hu-yan. As in the dream. As on the night Lin Yua had
died giving birth to his son, Yuan. For a moment he could not answer
him. "Chieh
Hsia," came the voice again. "Are you all right?" He
turned, looking about him, then turned back. No. He was here. He
wasn't dreaming. Eighteen years had passed and he was here, in his
palace, and the knocking on the door, the voice—both were real. "Hold
on, Chung. I'm coming . . ." He
heard how weak his voice sounded, how indecisive, and shivered. Sweat
trickled down his inner arms, formed on his forehead. Why was
everything suddenly so difficult? He
fumbled with the lock, then drew back the catch. Stepping back, he
watched the doors open. Chung Hu-yan stood there, flanked by two
guards. "What
is it, Chung?" he said, his voice quavering, seeing the fear in
his Chancellor's face. Chung
Hu-yan bowed low. "News has come, Chieh Hsia. Bad news." Bad
news ... He felt his stomach tighten. Li Yuan was dead. Or Tsu Ma. Or
... "What
is it, Chung?" he said again, unconscious of the repetition. In
answer Chung moved aside. Tolonen was standing there, his face ashen. "Chieh
Hsia . . ." the Marshal began, then went down on one knee,
bowing his head low. "I have failed you, my Lord . . . failed
you." Li
Shai Tung half turned, looking to see who was standing behind him,
but there was no one. He frowned then turned back. "Failed,
Knut? How failed?" "The
Plantations . . ." Tolonen said, then looked up at him again,
tears in his eyes. "The Plantations are on fire." CHAPTER
FIVE
The Broken
Wheel
A
huge WINDOW filled the end of the corridor where the tunnel turned to
the right, intersecting with the boarding hatch. She stood there a
moment, looking out across the predawn darkness of the spaceport,
barely conscious of the passengers pushing by, knowing that this was
probably the last view she would ever have of City Europe—the
City in which she had spent her whole life. But that life was over
now and a new one lay ahead. Emily Ascher was dead, killed in a
fictitious accident three days ago. She was Mary Jennings now, a
blonde from Atlanta Canton, returning to the eastern seaboard after a
two-year secondment to the European arm of her company. She
had sat up until late learning the brief she had been sent, then
snatched three hours sleep before the call came. That had been an
hour ago. Now she stood, quite literally, on the threshold of a new
life, hesitating, wondering even now if she had done the right thing. Was it
really too late to go back—to make her peace with Mach? She
sighed and let her fingers move slowly down the dark, smooth surface
of the glass. Yes. DeVore might have been lying when he said he had
no motive in helping her, but he was right about Mach wanting her
dead. She had given Mach no option. No one left the Ping Tioo. Not
voluntarily, anyway. And certainly not alive. Even
so, wasn't there some other choice? Some other option than putting
herself in debt to DeVore? She
looked down at her bandaged left hand then smiled cynically at her
reflection in the darkened glass. If there had been she would not be
here. Besides, there were things she had to do. Important things. And
maybe she could do them just as well in America. If DeVore let her. It was
a big if, but she was prepared to take the chance. The only other
choice was death, and while she didn't fear death, it was hardly
worth preempting things. No.
She would reserve that option. Would keep it as her final bargaining
counter. Just in case DeVore proved difficult. And maybe she'd even
take him with her. If she could. Her
smile broadened, lost its hard edge. She turned, joining the line of
boarding passengers, holding out her pass to the tiny Han stewardess,
then moved down the aisle toward her seat. She
was about to sit when the steward touched her arm. "Forgive
me, Fu Jen, but have you a reserved ticket for that seat?" She
turned, straightening up, then held out her ticket for inspection,
looking the man up and down as she did so. He was a squat,
broad-shouldered Han with one of those hard, anonymous faces some of
them had. She knew what he was at once—one of those minor
officials who gloried in pettiness. He
made a great pretense of studying her ticket, turning it over, then
turning it back. His eyes flicked up to her face, then took in her
clothes, her lack of jewelry, before returning to her face again, the
disdain in them barely masked. He shook his head. "If
you would follow me, Fu Jen . . ." He
turned, making his way back down the aisle toward the cramped third-
and fourth-class seats at the tail of the rocket, but she stood where
she was, her stomach tightening, anticipating the tussle to come. Realizing
that she wasn't following him, he came back, his whole manner
suddenly quite brutally antagonistic. "You
must come, Fu Jen. These seats are reserved for others." She
shook her head. "1 have a ticket." He
tucked the ticket down into the top pocket of his official tunic.
"Forgive me, Fu Jen, but there has been a mistake. As I said,
these seats are reserved. Paid for in advance." The
emphasis on the last few words gave his game away. For a moment she
had thought that this might be DeVore's final little game with her,
but now she knew. The steward was out to extract some squeeze from
her. To get her to pay for what was already rightfully hers. She
glared at him, despising him, then turned and sat. If he just so much
as tried to make her budge . . . He
leaned over her, angry now. "Fu Jen! You must move! Now! At
once! Or I will call the captain!" She
was about to answer him when a hand appeared on the steward's
shoulder and drew him back sharply. It was
a big man. A Hung Moo. He pushed the Han steward back
unceremoniously, a scathing look of contempt on his face. "Have
you left your senses, man? The lady has paid for her seat. Now give
her her ticket back and leave her alone, or I'll report you to the
port authorities—understand me, Hsiao jen?" The
steward opened his mouth, then closed it again, seeing the Security
warrant card the man was holding out. Lowering his eyes, he took the
ticket from his pocket and handed it across. "Good!"
The man handed it to her with a smile, then turned back, shaking his
head. "Now get lost, you little fucker. If I so much as see you
in this section during the flight. . ." The
Han swallowed and backed away hurriedly. The
man turned back, looking at her. "I'm sorry about that. They
always try it on a single woman traveling alone. Your kind is usually
good for fifty yuan at least." She
looked at her ticket, a small shudder of indignation passing through
her, then looked back at him, smiling. "Thank you. I appreciate
your help, but I would have been all right." He
nodded. "Maybe. But a mutual friend asked me to look after you." "Ah
. . ." She narrowed her eyes, then tilted her head slightly,
indicating the warrant card he still held in one hand. "And
that's real?" He
laughed. "Of course. Look, can I sit for a moment? There are one
or two things we need to sort out." She
hesitated, then gave a small nod. No strings, eh? But it was just as
she'd expected. She had known all along that DeVore would have some
reason for helping her out. "What
is it?" she asked, turning in her seat to study him as he sat
down beside her. "These
..." He handed her a wallet and a set of cards. The cards were
in the name of Rachel DeValerian; the wallet contained a set of
references for Mary Jennings, including the documentation for a
degree in economics and a letter of introduction to Michael Lever,
the director of a company called MemSys. A letter dated two days from
then. She
looked up at him. "I don't understand." He
smiled. "You'll need a job over there. Well, the Levers will
have a vacancy for an economist on their personal staff. As of
tomorrow." How
do you know? she was going to ask, but his smile was answer
enough. If DeVore said there was going to be a vacancy, there would
be a vacancy. But why the Levers? And what about the other identity? "What's
this?" she asked, holding out the De Valerian cards. He
shrugged. "I'm only the messenger. Our friend said you would
know what to do with them." "I
see." She studied them a moment, then put them away. Then DeVore
meant her to set up her own movement. To recruit. She smiled and
looked up again. "What else?" He
returned her smile, briefly covering her left hand with his right.
"Nothing. But I'll be back in a second if you need me. Enjoy the
flight." He stood. "Okay. See you in Boston." "Boston?
I thought we were going to New York." He
shook his head, then leaned forward. "Hadn't you heard? New York
is closed. Wu Shih is holding an emergency meeting of the Seven and
there's a two-hundred U exclusion zone about Manhattan." She
frowned. "I didn't know. What's up?" He
laughed, then leaned forward and touched his finger to the panel on
the back of the seat in front of her. At once the screen lit up,
showing a scene of devastation. "There!"
he said. "That's what's up." THE
TWO MEN sat on the high wall of the dyke as the dawn came, looking
out across the flat expanse of blackened fields, watching the figures
move almost somnolently in the darkness below. The tart smell of
burned crops seemed to taint every breath they took, despite the
filters both wore. They were dressed in the uniform of reserve-corps
volunteers; and though only one of the two wore it legitimately, it
would have been hard to tell which. Great
palls of smoke lifted above the distant horizon, turning the dawn's
light ochre, while, two li out, a convoy of transporters sped
westward, heading back toward the safety of the City. DeVore
smiled and sat back. He took a pack of mint drops from his top pocket
and offered one to his companion. Mach looked at the packet a moment,
then took one. For a while both men were quiet, contemplating the
scene, then Mach spoke. "What
now?" DeVore
met Mach's eyes. "Now we melt away. Like ghosts." Mach
smiled. "And then?" . "Then
nothing. Not for a long time. You go underground. Recruit. Build your
movement up again. I'll provide whatever financing you need. But you
must do nothing. Not until we're ready." "And
the Seven?" DeVore
looked down. "The Seven will look to strengthen their defenses.
But they will have to spread themselves thin. Too thin, perhaps.
Besides, they've got their own problems. There's a split in Council." Mach
stared at the other man a moment, wide-eyed, wondering, as he had so
often lately, how DeVore came to know so much. And why it was that
such a man should want to fight against the Seven. "Why
do you hate them so much?" he asked. DeVore
looked back at him. "Why do you?" "Because
the world they've made is a prison. For everyone. But especially for
those lower down." "And
you care about that?" Mach
nodded. "Out here . . . this is real, don't you think? But that
inside . . ." He
shuddered and looked away, his eyes going off to the horizon. "Well,
it's never made sense to me, why human beings should have to live
like that. Penned in like meat-animals. Hemmed in by rules. Sorted by
money into their levels. I always hated it. Even when I was a child
of five or six. And I used to feel so impotent about it." "But
not now?" "No.
Not now. Now I've got a direction for my anger." They
were silent again, then Mach turned his head, looking at DeVore.
"What of Ascher?" DeVore
shook his head. "She's vanished. I thought we had her, but she
slipped through our fingers. She's good, you know." Mach
smiled. "Yes. She was always the best of us. Even Gesell
realized that. But she was inflexible. She was always letting her
idealism get in the way of practicalities. It was inevitable that
she'd break with us." "So
what will you do?" "Do?
Nothing. Oh, I'll cover my back, don't worry. But if I know our
Emily, she'll have found some way of getting out of City Europe. She
was always talking of setting up somewhere else—of spreading
our influence. She's a good organizer. I'd wager good money we'll
hear from her again." DeVore
smiled, thinking of her—at that very moment—on the jet to
America, and of her left index finger, frozen in its medical case,
heading out for Mars. "Yes," he said. "We shall. I'm
sure we shall." THEY
STOOD on the high stone balcony, the seven great Lords of Chung Kuo,
the sky a perfect blue overhead, the early morning sunlight
glistening from the imperial yellow of their silks. Below them the
great garden stretched away, flanked by the two great rivers, the
whole enclosed within a single, unbroken wall, its lakes and pagodas,
its tiny woods and flower beds, its bridges and shaded walkways a
pleasure to behold. A curl of red-stone steps, shaped like a dragon's
tail, led down. Slowly, their talk a low murmur barely discernible
above the call of the caged birds in the trees, they made their way
down, Wu Shih, their host, leading the way. At the
foot of the steps he turned, looking back. Beyond the gathered T'ang
his palace sat atop its artificial mound, firmly embedded, as if it
had always been there, its pure white walls topped with steep roofs
of red tile, the whole great structure capped by a slender six-story
pagoda that stood out, silhouetted against the sky. He nodded,
satisfied, then put out his arm, inviting his cousins into his
garden. There
was the soft tinkling of pagoda bells in the wind, the scent of
jasmine and forsythia, of gardenia and chrysanthemum, wafting to them
through the great moon-door in the wall. They stepped through, into
another world—a world of ancient delights, of strict order made
to seem like casual occurrence, of a thousand shades of green
contrasted against the gray of stone, the white of walls, the red of
tile. It was, though Wu Shih himself made no such claim, the greatest
garden in Chung Kuo—the Garden of Supreme Excellence—formed
of a dozen separate gardens, each modeled on a famous original. Their
business was done, agreement reached as to the way ahead. Now it was
time to relax, to unburden themselves, and where better than here
where symmetry and disorder, artistry and chance, met in such perfect
balance? Wu
Shih looked about him, immensely pleased. The garden had been built
by his great-great-grandfather, but like his father and his father's
father, he had made his own small changes to the original scheme,
extending the garden to the north so that it now filled the whole of
the ancient island of Manhattan. "It
is a beautiful garden, Cousin," Wang Sau-leyan said, turning to
him and smiling pleasantly. "There are few pleasures as sweet in
life as that derived from a harmoniously created garden." Wu
Shih smiled, surprised for the second time that morning by Wang
Sau-leyan. It was as if he were a changed man, all rudeness, all
abrasiveness, gone from his manner. Earlier, in Council, he had gone
out of his way to assure Li Shai Tung of his support, even preempting
Wei Feng's offer of help by giving Li Shai Tung a substantial amount
of grain from his own reserves. The generosity of the offer had
surprised them all and had prompted a whole spate of spontaneous
offers. The session had ended with the seven of them grinning
broadly, their earlier mood of despondency cast aside, their sense of
unity rebuilt. They were Seven again. Seven. Wu
Shih reached out and touched the young T'ang's arm. "If there is
heaven on earth it is here, in the garden." Wang
Sau-leyan gave the slightest bow of his head, as if in deference to
Wu Shih's greater age and experience. Again Wu Shih found himself
pleased by the gesture. Perhaps they had been mistaken about Wang
Sau-leyan. Perhaps it was only youth and the shock of his father's
murder, his brother's suicide, that had made him so. That and the
uncertainty of things. Wang
Sau-leyan turned, indicating the ancient, rusted sign bolted high up
on the trunk of a nearby juniper. "Tell
me, Wu Shih. What is the meaning of that sign? All else here is Han.
But that. . ." "That?"
Wu Shih laughed softly, drawing the attention of the other T'ang.
"That is a joke of my great-great-grandfather's, Cousin Wang.
You see, before he built this garden, part of the greatest city of
the Americans sat upon this site. It was from here that they
effectively ran their great Republic of sixty-nine states. And here,
where we are walking right now, was the very heart of their financial
empire. The story goes that my great-great-grandfather came to see
with his own eyes the destruction of their great city and that seeing
the sign, he smiled, appreciating the play on words. After all, what
is more Han than a wall? Hence he ordered the sign kept. And so this
path is know, even now, by its original name. Wall Street." The
watching T'ang smiled, appreciating the story. "We
would do well to learn from them," Wei Feng said, reaching up to
pick a leaf from the branch. He put it to his mouth and tasted it,
then looked back at Wang Sau-leyan, his ancient face creased into a
smile. "They tried too hard. Their ambition always exceeded
their grasp. Like their ridiculous scheme to colonize the stars." Again
Wang Sau-leyan gave the slightest bow. "I agree, Cousin. And yet
we still use the craft they designed and built. Like much else they
made." "True,"
Wei Feng answered him. "I did not say that all they did was bad.
Yet they had no sense of Tightness. Of balance. What they did, they
did carelessly, without thought. In that respect we would do well not
to be like them. It was thoughtlessness that brought their Empire
low." "And
arrogance," added Wu Shih, looking about him. "But come.
Let us move on. I have arranged for ch'a to be served in the
pavilion beside the lake. There will be entertainments too." There
were smiles at that. It had been some time since they had had the
chance for such indulgences. Wu Shih turned, leading them along the
long, the covered walkway, then up a twist of wooden steps and
out onto a broad gallery above a concealed lake. A low
wooden balustrade was raised on pillars above a tangle of sculpted
rock, forming a square about the circle of the lake, the wood painted
bright red, the pictogram for immortality cut into it in a repeated
pattern. The broad, richly green leaves of lotus choked the water,
while in a thatched ting on the far side of the lake, a group of
musicians began to play, the ancient sound drifting across to where
the Seven sat. Li
Shai Tung sat back in his chair, looking about him at his fellow
T'ang. For the first time in months the cloud had lifted from his
spirits, the tightness in his stomach vanished. And he was not alone,
he could see that now. They all seemed brighter, refreshed and
strengthened by the morning's events. So it was. So it had to be. He
had not realized how important it was before now; had not understood
how much their strength depended on their being of a single mind. And
now that Wang Sau-leyan had come to his senses they would be strong
again. It was only a matter of will. He
looked across at the young T'ang of Africa, and smiled. "I am
grateful for your support, Cousin Wang. If there is something I might
do for you in return?" Wang
Sau-leyan smiled and looked about him, his broad face momentarily the
image of his father's when he was younger; then he looked down. It
was a gesture of considerable modesty. "In the present
circumstances it is enough that we help each other, neh?" He
looked up, meeting Li Shai Tung's eyes. "I am a proud man, Li
Shai Tung, but not too proud to admit it when I have been wrong—and
I was wrong about the threat from the Ping Tiao. If my offer
helps make amends I am satisfied." Li
Shai Tung looked about him, a smile of intense satisfaction lighting
his face. He turned back to the young T'ang, nodding. "Your kind
words refresh me, Cousin Wang. There is great wisdom in knowing when
one is wrong. Indeed, I have heard it called the first step on the
path to true benevolence." Wang
Sau'leyan lowered his head but said nothing. For a while they were
quiet, listening to the ancient music. Servants moved among them,
serving ch'a and sweetmeats, their pale-green silks blending
with the colors of the garden. "Beautiful,"
said Tsu Ma, when it had finished. There was a strange wistfulness to
his expression. "It is some time since I heard that last piece
played so well." "Indeed—"
began Wu Shih, then stopped, turning as his Chancellor appeared at
the far end of the gallery. "Come, Fen," he said, signaling
him to come closer. "What is it?" Fen
Cho-hsien stopped some paces from his T'ang, bowing to each of the
other T'ang in turn before facing his master again and bowing low. "I
would not have bothered you, Chieh Hsia, but an urgent message
has just arrived. It seems that Lord Li's General has been taken
ill." Li
Shai Tung leaned forward anxiously. "Nocenzi, ill? What in the
gods' names is wrong with him?" Fen
turned, facing Li Shai Tung, lowering his eyes. "Forgive me,
Chieh Hsia, but no one seems to know. It seems, however, that he is
extremely ill. And not just him, but his wife and children too.
Indeed, if the report is accurate, his wife is already dead, and two
of his children." Li
Shai Tung looked down, groaning softly. Gods, was there no end to
this? He looked up again, tears in his eyes, the tightness returned
to his stomach. "You
will forgive me, cousins, if I return at once?" There
was a murmur of sympathy. All eyes were on the old T'ang, noting his
sudden frailty, the way his shoulders hunched forward at this latest
calamity. But it was Wang Sau-leyan who rose and helped him from his
chair, who walked with him, his arm about his shoulder, to the steps. Li
Shai Tung turned, looking up into the young T'ang's face, holding his
arm briefly, gratefully. "Thank you, Sau-leyan. You are your
father's son." Then he turned back, going down the twist of
steps, letting Wu Shih's Chancellor lead him, head bowed, back down
Wall Street to the dragon steps and his waiting craft. KIM
woke and lay there in the darkness, strangely alert, listening. For a
moment he didn't understand. There was nothing. Nothing at all. Then
he shivered. Of course. . . that was it. The silence was too perfect.
There was always some noise or other from the corridors outside, but
just now there was nothing. He sat
up, then threw back the sheet. For a moment he paused, stretching,
working the last traces of the drug from his limbs, then crouched,
listening again. Nothing. He
crossed the room and stood by the door, his mind running through
possibilities. Maybe they had moved him. Or maybe they had closed
down the Project and abandoned him. Left him to his fate. But he was
not satisfied with either explanation. He reached out, trying the
lock. The
door hissed back. Outside, the corridor was dark, empty. Only at the
far end was there a light. On the wall outside the guard room. He
shivered, the hairs on his neck and back rising. The overhead cameras
were dead, the red wink of their operational lights switched off. And
at the far end of the corridor, beyond the wall-mounted lamp, the
door to the Project was open, the barrier up. Something
was wrong. He
stood there a moment, not certain what to do, then let instinct take
over. Turning to his left, he ran, making for T'ai Cho's room and the
labs beyond, hoping it wasn't too late. T'ai
Cho's room was empty. Kim turned, tensing, hearing the soft murmur of
voices further along the corridor, then relaxed. They were voices he
knew. He hurried toward them, then slowed. The door to the labs was
wide open, as if it had been jammed. That, too, was wrong. It was
supposed to be closed when not in use, on a time-lock. He
twirled about, looking back down the dimly lit corridor. The few wall
lights that were working were backups. Emergency lighting only. The
main power system must have gone down. But was that an accident? Or
had it been done deliberately? He stepped inside, cautious now,
glancing across to his right where Spatz's office was. He could see
the Director through the open doorway, cursing, pounding the keyboard
on his desk computer, trying to get some response from it. As he
watched, Spatz tried the emergency phone, then threw the handset down
angrily. Then
maybe it had just happened. Maybe the shutdown had been what had
wakened him. He
ducked low and scuttled across the open space between the door and
the first row of desks, hoping Spatz wouldn't catch a glimpse of him,
then ran along the corridor between the desks until he came to the
end. The main labs were to the left, the voices louder now. He could
hear T'ai Cho's among them. He
hesitated, turning his head, staring back the way he'd come, but the
corridor was empty. He went on, coming out into the labs. They
were seated on the far side, some in chairs, some leaning on the
desk. All of them were there except Hammond. They looked around as he
entered, their talk faltering. "Kim!"
T'ai Cho said, getting up. Kim
put up his hand, as if to fend off his friend. "You've got to
get out! Now! Something's wrong!" Ellis,
the Director's Assistant, smiled and shook his head. "It's all
right, Kim. It's only a power failure. Spatz has gone to sort things
out." Kim
looked about him. A few of them were vaguely uneasy, but nothing
more. It was clear they agreed with Ellis. "No!"
he said, trying to keep the panic from his voice. "It's more
than that. The guards have gone and all the doors are jammed open.
Can't you see what that means? We've got to get out! Something's
going to happen!" Ellis
stood up. "Are you sure? The guards really aren't there?" Kim
nodded urgently. He could feel the tension like a coil in him; could
feel responses waking in him that he hadn't felt since—well,
since they'd tried to reconstruct him. He could feel his heart
hammering in his chest, his blood coursing like a dark, hot tide in
his veins. And above all he could feel all his senses heightened by
the danger they were in. It was as if he could hear and see, smell
and taste better than before. He
lunged forward, grabbing at T'ai Cho's arm, dragging him back. T'ai
Cho began resisting, but Kim held on tenaciously. "Come on!"
he begged. "Before they come!" "What
in the gods' names are you talking of, Kim?" "Come
on!" he pleaded. "You've got to come! All of you!" He
could see how his words had changed them. They were looking to each
other now anxiously. "Come
on!" Ellis said. "Kim could be right!" They
made for the outer offices, but it was too late. As Kim tugged T'ai
Cho around the corner he could see them coming down the corridor, not
forty ch'i away. There were four of them, dressed in black,
suited up and masked, huge lantern guns cradled against their chests.
Seeing the tall figure of T'ai Cho, the first of them raised his gun
and fired. Kim
pulled T'ai Cho down, then scrambled back, feeling the convected
warmth of the gun's discharge in the air, accompanied by a sharp,
sweet scent that might almost have been pleasant had it not signaled
something so deadly. "Get
back!" he yelled to the others behind him, but even as he said
it he understood. They were trapped here. Like the GenSyn apes they
had been experimenting on. Unarmed and with no means of escape. "Dead
. . ." he said softly to himself. Dead. As if they'd never
been. the
assassin backed away, shuddering, glad that his mask filtered out the
stench of burned flesh that filled the room. He felt a small shiver
ripple down his back. He hadn't expected them to act as they had.
Hadn't believed that they would just get down on their knees and die,
heads bowed. But
maybe that was what made them different from him. Made them watchers,
not doers; passive, not active. Even so, the way they had just
accepted their deaths made him feel odd. It wasn't that he felt pity
for them; far from it—their passivity revolted him. Himself, he
would have died fighting for his life, clawing and scratching his way
out of existence. But it was the way they made him feel. As if they'd
robbed him of something. He
turned away. The others had gone already, to fetch the boy and plant
the explosives. Time then to get out. He took a couple of paces, then
stopped, twisting around. Nerves,
he thought. It's only nerves. It's only one of the apes, scuttling
about in its cage. Even so, he went back, making sure, remembering
what DeVore had said about talking pains. He
stopped, his right boot almost touching the leg of one of the dead
men, and looked about him, frowning. The four apes lay on the floor
of their cages, drugged. "Funny. . ." he began. Then,
without warning, his legs were grabbed from behind, throwing him
forward onto the pile of bodies He turned, gasping, his gun gone from
him. The creature was on him in an instant, something hard smashing
down into his face, breaking his nose. He groaned, the hot pain of
the blow flooding his senses, stunning him. He put his hands up to
his face, astonished. "What the hell?" This time the blow
came to the side of his head, just beside his left eye. "Kuan
Yin!" He screeched, pulling his head back sharply, coughing as
the blood began to fill his mouth. He reached out wildly, trying to
grasp the creature, but it had moved away. He sat forward, squinting
through a blood haze at what looked no more than a child. But not
just a child. This was like something out of nightmare. It stood
there, hunched and spindly, the weight held threateningly in one tiny
hand, its big, dark, staring eyes fixed murderously on him, its mouth
set in a snarl of deadly intent. "Gods
. . ." He whispered, feeling himself go cold. Was this what they
were making here? These . . . things? But
even as the thought came to him, the creature gave an unearthly yell
and leaped on him—leaped high, like something demented—and
brought the weight down hard, robbing him of breath. li
shai tung turned, angered by what he had seen, and confronted the
Chief Surgeon. "What
in the gods' names did this to him, Chang Li?" Chang
Li fell to his knees, his head bent low. "Forgive me, Chieh
Hsia, but the cause of the General's affliction is not yet known.
We are carrying out an autopsy on his wife and children, but as yet—" "The
children?" Li Shai Tung took a long breath, calming himself. His
eyes were red, his cheeks wet with tears. His right hand gripped at
his left shoulder almost convulsively, then let it go, flinging
itself outward in a gesture of despair. "Will
he live?" Again
the Chief Surgeon lowered his head. "It is too early to say,
Chieh Hsia. Whatever it was, it was strong enough to kill his
wife and two of his children within the hour. Nocenzi and his other
daughter—well—they're both very ill." "And
you've definitely ruled out some kind of poison in the food?" Chang
Li nodded. "That is so, Chieh Hsia. It seems the Nocenzis were
eating with friends when they were stricken—sharing from the
same serving bowls, the same rice pot. And yet the three who ate with
them are totally unharmed." Li
Shai Tung shuddered, then beckoned the man to get up. "Thank
you, Chang Li. But let me know, eh? As soon as anything is known. And
do not tell the General yet of the loss of his wife or children. Let
him grow stronger before you break the news. I would not have him
survive this only to die of a broken heart." Chang
Li bowed his head. "It shall be as you say, Chieh Hsia." "Good."
He turned away, making his way across to the great hallway of the
hospital, his guards and retainers at a respectful distance. Nocenzi
had been conscious when he'd seen him. Even so, he had looked like a
ghost of his former self, all his ch'i, his vital energy, drained
from him. His voice had been as faint as the whisper of a breeze
against silk. "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia," he had said, "but you will need a new
General now." He had
taken Nocenzi's hand, denying him, but Nocenzi had insisted,
squeezing his hand weakly, not releasing it until the T'ang accepted
his resignation. He
stopped, remembering the moment, then leaned forward slightly, a mild
wash of pain in his arms and lower abdomen making him feel giddy. It
passed and he straightened up, but a moment later it returned,
stronger, burning like a coal in his guts. He groaned and stumbled
forward, almost falling against the tiled floor, but one of his
courtiers caught him just in time. "Chieh
Hsia!" There
was a strong babble of concerned voices, a thicket of hands reaching
out to steady him, but Li Shai Tung was conscious only of the way his
skin stung as if it were stretched too tightly over his bones, how
his eyes smarted as if hot water had been thrown into them. He took a
shuddering breath, then felt the pain spear through him again. Gods!
What was this? Doctors
were hurrying to him now, lifting him with careful, expert hands,
speaking soothingly as they helped support him and half-carry him
back toward the wards. The
pain was ebbing now, the strength returning to his limbs. "Wait.
. ." he said softly. Then, when they seemed not to hear him, he
repeated it, stronger this time, commanding them. "Hold there!" At
once they moved back, releasing him, but stayed close enough to catch
him if he fell. Chang Li was there now. He had hurried back when he
had heard, "Chieh Hsia . . . what is it?" Li
Shai Tung straightened, taking a breath. The pain had left him
feeling a little lightheaded, but otherwise he seemed all right. "I'm
fine now," he said. "It was but a momentary cramp, that's
all. My stomach. Hasty eating and my anxiety for the General's
welfare, I'm sure." He saw
how Chang Li looked at him, uncertain how to act, and he almost
laughed. "If
it worries you so much, Surgeon Chang, you might send two of your
best men to accompany me on the journey home. But I must get back.
There is much to be done. I must see my son and speak to him. And I
have a new General to appoint." He
smiled, looking about him, seeing his smile mirrored uncertainly in
thirty faces. "I, above all others, cannot afford to be ill.
Where would Chung Kuo be if we who ruled were always being sick?" There
was laughter, but it lacked the heartiness, the sincerity of the
laughter he was accustomed to from those surrounding him. He could
hear the fear in their voices and understood its origin. And, in some
small way, was reassured by it. It was when the laughter ceased
altogether that one had to worry. When fear gave way to relief and a
different kind of laughter. He
looked about him, his head lifted, his heart suddenly warmed by their
concern for him, then turned and began making his way back to the
imperial craft. yin
TSU welcomed the Prince and brought him ch'a. "You
know why I've come?" Li Yuan asked, trying to conceal the pain
he felt. Yin
Tsu bowed his head, his ancient face deeply lined. "I know, Li
Yuan. And I am sorry that this day has come. My house is greatly
saddened." Li
Yuan nodded uncomfortably. The last thing he had wished for was to
hurt the old man, but it could not be helped. Even so, this was a
bitter business. Twice Yin Tsu had thought to link his line with
kings, and twice he had been denied that honor. "You
will not lose by this, Yin Tsu," he said softly, his heart going
out to the old man. "Your sons ..." But it
was only half true. After all, what could he give Yin's sons to
balance the scale? Nothing. Or as good as. Yin
Tsu bowed lower. "Can
I see her, Father?" It was
the last time he would call him that and he could see the pain it
brought to the old man's face. This was not my doing, he
thought, watching Yin Tsu straighten up then go to bring her. He was
back almost at once, leading his daughter. Fei
Yen sat across from him, her head bowed, waiting. She was more than
eight months pregnant now, so this had to be dealt with at once. The
child might come any day. Even so, he was determined to be gentle
with her. "How
are you?" he asked tenderly, concerned for her in spite of all
that had happened between them. "I
am well, my Lord," she answered, subdued, unable to look at him.
She knew how things stood. Knew why he had come. "Fei
Yen, this is—painful for me. But you knew when we wed that I
was not as other men—that my life, my choices, were not those
of normal men." He sighed deeply, finding it hard to say what he
must. He raised his chin, looking at Yin Tsu, who nodded, his face
held rigid in a grimace of pain. "My Family—I must ensure
my line. Make certain." These
were evasions. He had yet to say it direct. He took another breath
and spoke. "You
say it is not my child. But I must be sure of that. There must be
tests. And then, if it is so, we must be divorced. For no claim can
be permitted if the child is not mine. You must be clear on that, Fei
Yen." Again
Yin Tsu nodded. Beside him his daughter was still, silent. He
looked away, momentarily overcome by the strength of what he still
felt for her, then forced himself to be insistent. "Will
you do as I say, Fei Yen?" She
looked up at him. Her eyes were wet with tears. Dark, almond eyes
that pierced him with their beauty. "I will do whatever you
wish, my Lord." He
stared at her, wanting to cross the space between them and kiss away
her tears, to forgive her everything and start again. Even now. Even
after all she had done to him. But she had left him no alternative.
This thing could not be changed. In this he could not trust to what
he felt, for feeling had failed him. His father was right. What good
was feeling when the world was dark and hostile? Besides, his son
must be his son. "Then
it shall be done," he said bluntly, almost angrily. "Tomorrow." He
stood, then walked across the room, touching the old man's arm
briefly, sympathetically. "And we shall speak again tomorrow,
Yin Tsu. When things are better known." the
old han squatted at the entrance to the corridor, waiting patiently,
knowing the dream had been a true dream, one of those he could not
afford to ignore. Beside him, against the wall, he had placed those
things he had seen himself use in the dream—a blanket and his
old porcelain water bottle. This
level was almost deserted. The great clothing factory that took up
most of it had shut down its operations more than four hours ago and
only a handful of Security guards and maintenance engineers were to
be found down here now. The old man smiled, recalling how he had
slipped past the guards like a shadow. His
name was Tuan Ti Fo, and though he squatted like a young man, his
muscles uncomplaining under him, he was as old as the great City
itself. This knowledge he kept to himself, for to others he was
simply Old Tuan, his age, like his origins, undefined. He lived
simply, some would say frugally, in his rooms eight levels up from
where he now waited. And though many knew him, few could claim to be
close to the peaceful, white-haired old man. He kept himself very
much to himself, studying the ancient books he kept in the box beside
his bed, doing his exercises, or playing himself at wei chi—long
games that could take a day, sometimes even a week to complete. The
corridor he was facing was less than twenty ch'i long, a
narrow, dimly lit affair that was little more than a feeder tunnel to
the maintenance hatch in the ceiling at its far end. Tuan Ti Fo
watched, knowing what would happen, his ancient eyes half-lidded, his
breathing unaltered as the hatch juddered once, twice, then dropped,
swinging violently on the hinge. A moment later a foot appeared—
a child's foot—followed by a leg, a steadying hand. He watched
the boy emerge, legs first; then drop. Tuan
Ti Fo lifted himself slightly, staring into the dimness. For a time
the boy lay where he had fallen; then he rolled over onto his side, a
small whimper—of pain, perhaps, or fear—carrying to where
the old Han crouched. In the
dream this was the moment when he had acted. And so now. Nodding
gently to himself, he reached beside him for the blanket. Tuan
Ti Fo moved silently, effortlessly through the darkness. For a moment
he knelt beside the boy, looking down at him; again, as in the dream,
the reality of it no clearer than the vision he had had. He smiled,
and unfolding the blanket, began to wrap the sleeping boy in it. The
boy murmured softly as he lifted him, then began to struggle. Tuan Ti
Fo waited, his arms cradling the boy firmly yet reassuringly against
his chest until he calmed. Only then did he carry him back to the
entrance. Tuan
Ti Fo crouched down, the boy balanced in his lap, the small, dark,
tousled head resting against his chest, and reached out for the water
bottle. He drew the hinged stopper back and put the mouth of the
bottle to the child's lips, wetting them. Waiting a moment, he placed
it to the boy's mouth again. This time the lips parted, taking in a
little of the water. It was
enough. The mild drug in the liquid would help calm him, make him
sleep until the shock of his ordeal had passed. Tuan
Ti Fo stoppered the bottle and fixed it to the small hook on his
belt, then straightened up. He had not really noticed before but the
boy weighed almost nothing in his arms. He looked down at the child,
surprised, as if the boy would vanish at any moment, leaving him
holding nothing. "You're
a strange one," he said softly, moving outside the dream a
moment. "It's many years since the gods sent me one to tend." So it
was. Many, many years. And why this one? Maybe it had something to do
with the other dreams—the dreams of dead, dark lands and of
huge brilliant webs, stretched out like stringed beads, burning in
the darkness of the sky. Dreams of wells and spires and falling
Cities. Dreams filled with suffering and strangeness. And
what was the boys role in all of that? Why had the gods chosen him
to do their work? Tuan
Ti Fo smiled, knowing it was not for him to ask, nor for them to
answer. Then, letting his actions be shaped once more by the dream,
he set off, carrying the boy back down the broad main corridor toward
the guard post and the lift beyond. THE
DOCTORS were gone, his ministers and advisors dismissed. Now, at
last, the great T'ang was alone. Li
Shai Tung stood there a moment, his arm outstretched, one hand
resting against the door frame as he got his breath. The upright
against which he rested stretched up like a great squared pillar into
the ceiling high overhead, white-painted, the simplicity of its
design emphasized by the seven pictograms carved into the wood and
picked out in gold leaf—the characters forming couplets with
those on the matching upright. Servants had opened the two huge
white-lacquered doors earlier; now he stood looking into the Hall of
Eternal Peace and Tranquility. To one side, just in view, stood a
magnificent funerary couch, the gray stone of its side engraved with
images of gardens and pavilions in which ancient scholars sat
enthroned while the women of the household wove and prepared food,
sang or played the ancient p'i p'a. Facing it was a broad,
red-lacquered screen, the Ywe Lung—the circle of
dragons, symbolizing the power and authority of the Seven— set
like a huge golden mandala in its center. He
sighed heavily, then went inside, leaving the great doors ajar, too
tired to turn and pull them closed behind him. It was true what they
had said: he ought to get to bed and rest; ought to take a break from
his duties for a day or so and let Li Yuan take up his burden as
Regent. But it was not easy to break the habits of a lifetime.
Besides, there was something he had to do before he rested. Something
he had put off far too long. He
crossed the room and slowly lowered himself to his knees before the
great tablet, conscious of how the gold leaf of the Ywe Lung
seemed to flow in the wavering light of the candles, how the red
lacquer of the background seemed to hum. He had never noticed that
before. Nor had he noticed how the smoke from the perfumed candles
seemed to form words—Han pictograms—in the still, dry
air. Chance, meaningless words, like the throw of yarrow stalks or
the pattern on a fire-charred tortoise shell. He
shivered. It was cold, silent in the room, the scent of the candles
reminding him of the tomb beneath the earth at Tongjiang. Or was it
just the silence, the wavering light? He
swallowed dryly. The ache in his bones was worse than before. He felt
drawn, close to exhaustion, his skin stretched tight, like parchment,
over his brittle bones. It would be good to rest. Good to lie there,
thoughtless, in the darkness. Yes . . . but he would do this one last
thing before he slept. Reaching
out, he took two of the scented sticks from the porcelain jar in
front of him and held them in the thread of laser light until they
ignited. Then, bowing respectfully, he set them in the jar in front
of the tiny image of his great-greatgrandfather. At once the image
seemed to swell, losing a degree of substance as it gained in size. The
life-size image of the old man seemed to look down at Li Shai Tung,
its dark eyes magnificent, its whole form filled with power. His
great-great-grandfather, Li Hang Ch'i, had been a tall, immensely
dignified man. For posterity he had dressed himself in the imperial
style of one hundred and ten years earlier, a simpler, more brutal
style, without embellishment. One heavily bejeweled hand stroked his
long white, unbraided beard, while the other held a silver riding
crop that was meant to symbolize his love of horses. "What
is it, Shai Tung? Why do you summon me from the dead lands?" Li
Shai Tung felt a faint ripple of unease pass through him. "I...
I wished to ask you something, Honorable Grandfather." Li
Hang Ch'i made a small motion of his chin, lifting it slightly as if
considering his grandson's words; a gesture that Li Shai Tung
recognized immediately as his own. Even
in that we are not free, he thought. We but ape the actions
of our ancestors, unconsciously, slavishly. Those things we consider
most distinctly ours—that strange interplay of mind and
nerve and sinew that we term gesture—are formed a
hundred generations before their use in us. Again
he shivered, lowering his head, conscious of his own weariness, of
how far below his great-great-grandfather's exacting standards he had
fallen. At that moment he felt but a poor copy of Li Hang Ch'i. "Ask,"
the figure answered, "whatever you wish." Li
Shai Tung hesitated, then looked up. "Forgive me, most respected
Grandfather, but the question I would ask you is a difficult one. One
that has plagued me for some while. It is this. Are we good or evil
men?" The
hologram's face flickered momentarily, the program uncertain what
facial expression was called for by the question. Then it formed
itself into the semblance of a frown, the whole countenance becoming
stem, implacable. "What
a question, Shai Tung! You ask whether we are good or evil men. But
is that something one can ask? After all, how can one judge? By our
acts? So some might argue. Yet are our acts good or evil in
themselves? Surely only the gods can say that much." He shook
his head, staring down at his descendant as if disappointed in him.
"I cannot speak for the gods, but for myself I say this. We did
as we had to. How else could we have acted?" Li
Shai Tung took a long, shuddering breath. It was as if, for that
brief moment, his great-great-grandfather had been there, really
there, before him in the room. He had sensed his powerful presence
behind the smokescreen of the hologrammic image. Had felt the
overpowering certainty of the man behind the words, and again,
recognized the echo in himself. So he had once argued. So he had
answered his own son, that time when Yuan had come to him with his
dream—that awful nightmare he had had of the great mountain of
bones rilling the plain where the City had been. Back
then, he had sounded so certain—so sure of things—but
even then he had questioned it, at some deeper level. He had gone to
his room afterward and lain there until the dawn, unable to sleep,
Yuan's words burning brightly in his skull. Are we good or evil
men? But it
had begun before then, earlier that year, when he had visited Hal
Shepherd in the Domain. It was then that the seed of doubt had
entered him; then—in that long conversation with Hal's son,
Ben—that he had begun to question it all. He sat
back, studying the hologram a moment, conscious of how it waited for
him, displaying that unquestioning patience that distinguished the
mechanical from the human. It was almost solid. Almost. For through
the seemingly substantial chest of his great-great-grandfather he
could glimpse the hazed, refracted image of the Ywe Lung, the
great wheel of dragons broken by the planes of his ancestor's body. He
groaned softly and stretched, trying to ease the various pains he
felt. His knees ached and there was a growing warmth in his back. I
ought to be in bed, he thought, not worrying myself about such
things. But he could not help himself. Something urged him on. He
stared up into that ancient, implacable face and spoke again. "Was
there no other choice then, Grandfather? No other path we might have
taken? Were things as inevitable as they seem? Was it all written?" Li
Hang Ch'i shook his head, his face like the ancient, burnished ivory
of a statue, and raised the silver riding crop threateningly. "There
was no other choice." Li
Shai Tung shivered, his voice suddenly small. "Then we were
right to deny the Hung Mao their heritage?" "It
was that or see the world destroyed." Li
Shai Tung bowed his head. "Then. . ." He paused, seeing how
the eyes of the hologram were on him. Again it was as if something
stared through them from the other side. Something powerful and
menacing. Something that, by all reason, should not be there. "Then
what we did was right?" The
figure shifted slightly, relaxing, lowering the riding crop. "Make
no mistake, Shai Tung. We did as we had to. We cannot allow ourselves
the empty luxury of doubt." "Ah
. . ." Li Shai Tung stared back at the hologram a moment longer,
then, sighing, he plucked the scented sticks from the offering bowl
and threw them aside. At once the image shrank, diminishing to its
former size. He leaned back, a sharp sense of anger overwhelming him.
Anger at himself for the doubts that ate at him and at his ancestor
for giving him nothing more than a string of empty platitudes. We
did as we had to ... He shook his head, bitterly disappointed.
Was there to be no certainty for him, then? No clear answer to what
he had asked? No.
And maybe that was what had kept him from visiting this place these
last five years: the knowledge that he could no longer share their
unquestioning certainty. That and the awful, erosive consciousness of
his own inner emptiness. He shuddered. Sometimes it felt as if he had
less substance than the images in this room. As if, in the blink of
an eye, his being would turn to breath as the gods drew the scent
sticks from the offering bowl. He
rubbed at his eyes, then yawned, his tiredness returned to him like
ashes in the blood. It was late. Much too late. Not only that, but it
was suddenly quite hot in here. He felt flushed and there was a
prickling sensation in his legs and hands. He hauled his tired bones
upright, then stood there, swaying slightly, feeling breathless, a
sudden cold washing through his limbs, making him tremble. It's
nothing, he thought. Only my age. Yet for a moment he found his mind
clouding. Had he imagined it, or had Chung Hu-yan come to him only an
hour ago with news of another attack? He put
his hand up to his face, as if to clear the cobwebs from his
thoughts, then shrugged. No. An hour past he had been with his
Ministers. Even so, the image of Chung Hu-yan waking him with awful
news persisted, until he realized what it was. "Lin Yua . . ."
he said softly, his voice broken by the sudden pain he felt. "Lin
Yua, my little peach . . . Why did you have to die? Why did you have
to leave me all alone down here?" He
shivered, suddenly cold again, his teeth chattering. Yes, he would
send for Surgeon Hua. But later—in the morning—when he
could put up with the old boy's fussing. Sleep,
he heard a voice say, close by his ear. Skep now, Li Shai
Tung. The day is done. He
turned, his eyes resting momentarily upon the dim gray shape of the
funerary couch. Then, turning back, he made a final bow to the row of
tiny images. Like breath, he thought. Or flames, dancing in
a glass. IT WAS
DARK in the room. Li Yuan lay on his back in the huge bed, staring up
into the shadows; the woman beside him was sleeping, her leg
against his own warm and strangely comforting. It was
a moment of thoughtlessness, of utter repose. He lay there, aware of
the weight of his body pressing down into the softness of the bed, of
the rise and fall of his chest with each breath, the flow of his
blood. He felt at rest, the dark weight of tension lifted from him by
the woman. In the
darkness he reached out to touch the woman's flank, then lay back,
closing his eyes. For a
time he slept. Then, in the depths of sleep he heard the summons and
pulled himself up, hand over hand, back to the surface of
consciousness. Nan Ho
stood in the doorway, his eyes averted. Li Yuan rose, knowing it was
important, letting Master Nan wrap the cloak about his nakedness. He
took the call in his study, beneath the portrait of his grandfather,
Li Ch'ing, knowing at once what it was. The face of his father's
surgeon, Hua, filled the screen, the old man's features more
expressive than a thousand words. "He's
dead," Li Yuan said simply. "Yes,
Chieh Hsia," the old man answered, bowing his head. Chieh
Hsia ... He shivered. "How
did it happen?" "In
his sleep. There was no pain." Li
Yuan nodded, but something nagged at him. "Touch nothing,
Surgeon Hua. I want the room sealed until I get there. And Hua, tell
no one else. I must make calls first. Arrange things." "Chieh
Hsia." Li
Yuan sat there, looking up at the image of his father's father,
wondering why he felt so little. He closed his eyes, thinking of his
father as he'd last seen him. Of his strength, masked by the surface
frailness. For a
moment longer he sat there, trying to feel the sorrow he knew he owed
his father, but it was kept from him. It was not yet real.
Touch—touch alone—would make it real. Momentarily his
mind strayed and he thought of Fei Yen and the child in her belly. Of
Tsu Ma and of his dead brother, Han Ch'in. All of it confused,
sleep-muddled in his brain. Then it cleared and the old man's face
came into focus. "And
so it comes to me," he said quietly, as if to the painting. But
the burden of it, the reality of what he had become while he slept,
had not yet touched him. He thought of the calls he must make to tell
the other T'ang, but for the moment he felt no impulse toward action.
Time seemed suspended. He looked down at his hands, at the Prince's
ring of power, and frowned. Then, as a concession, he made the call
to summon the transporter. He
went back to his room, then out onto the verandah beyond. The woman
woke and came to him, naked, her soft warmth pressed against his back
in the cool, predawn air. He
turned to her, smiling sadly. "No. Go back inside." Alone
again, he turned and stared out across the shadowed lands of his
estate toward the distant mountains. The moon was a low, pale
crescent above one of the smaller peaks, far to his right. He stared
at it a while, feeling hollow, emptied of all feeling, then looked
away sharply, bitter with himself. Somehow
the moment had no meaning. It should have meant so much, but it was
empty. The moon, the mountains, the man—himself—standing
there in the darkness: none of it made sense to him. They were
fragments, broken pieces of some nonsense puzzle, adding up to
nothing. He turned away, his feeling of anguish at the nothingness of
it all overwhelming him. It wasn't death, it was life that frightened
him. The senselessness of life. He
stood there a long time, letting the feeling ebb. Then, when it was
gone, he returned to his study, preparing himself to make his calls. TOLONEN
STOOD in the center of the chaos, looking about him. The floor was
cluttered underfoot, the walls black with soot. A pile of dark
plastic sacks was piled up against the wall to one side. They were
all that remained of the men who had worked here on the Project. "There
were no survivors, Captain?" The
young officer stepped forward and bowed. "Only the tutor, sir.
We found him thirty levels down, bound and drugged." Tolonen
frowned. "And the others?" "Apart
from T'ai Cho there were eighteen men on the Project, excluding
guards. We've identified seventeen separate corpses. Add to that the
other one— Hammond—and it accounts for everyone." "I
see. And the records?" "All
gone, sir. The main files were destroyed in the explosion, but they
also managed to get to the backups and destroy them." Tolonen
stared at him, astonished. "All of them? Even those held by
Prince Yuan?" "It
appears so. Of course, the Prince himself has not yet been spoken to,
but his secretary, Chang Shih-sen, advises me that the copies he was
given on his last visit are gone." "Gone?"
Tblonen swallowed dryly. He was still too shocked to take it in. How
could it have happened? They had taken the strictest measures to
ensure that the Project remained not merely "invisible" in
terms of its security profile, but that in the unlikely event of
sabotage, there would be copies of everything. But somehow all their
endeavors had come to nothing. The assassins had walked in here as if
they owned the place and destroyed everything, erasing every last
trace of the Project. DeVore.
It had to be DeVore. But why? How in the gods' names could he
possibly benefit from this? "Let
me see the reports." The
officer turned away, returning a moment later with a clipboard to
which were attached the preliminary, hand-written reports. Tolonen
took them from him and flicked through quickly. "Very
good," he said finally, looking up. "You've been very
thorough, Captain. I ..." He
paused, looking past the Captain. His daughter, Jelka, was standing
in the doorway at the end of the corridor. "What
is it?" Jelka
smiled uncertainly at him, then came closer. "I wanted to see.
I..." Tolonen
looked back at her a moment, then shrugged. "All right. But it's
not very pleasant." He
watched her come into the room and look about her. Saw how she
approached the sacks and lifted one of the labels, then let it fall
from her hand with a slight shudder. Even so, he could see something
of himself in her, that same hardness in the face of adversity. But
there was more than that—it was almost as if she were looking
for something. "What
is it?" he said after a moment. She
turned, looking at him, focusing on the clipboard he still held. "Can
I see that?" "It's
nothing," he said. "Technical stuff mainly. Assessments of
explosive materials used. Post-mortem examinations of remains. That
kind of thing." "I
know," she said, coming closer. "Can I see it? Please,
Daddy." Out of
the corner of an eye he saw the Captain smile faintly. He had been
about to say no to her, but that decided him. After all, she was a
Marshal's daughter. He had taught her much over the years. Perhaps
she, in turn, could teach the young officer something. He
handed her the file, watching her flick through it quickly again, as
if she were looking for something specific. Then, astonishingly, she
looked up at him, a great beam of a smile on her face. "I
knew it!" she said. "I sensed it as soon as I came in. He's
alive! This proves it!" Tolonen
gave a short laugh, then glanced briefly at the Captain before taking
the clipboard back from his daughter and holding it open at the place
she indicated. "What in the gods' names are you talking about,
Jelka? Who? Who's alive?" "The
boy. Ward. He isn't there! Don't you see? Look at the Chief
Pathologist's report. All the corpses he examined were those of
adults—of fully grown men. But Kim wasn't more than a child.
Not physically. Which means that whoever the seventeenth victim was,
he wasn't on the Project." "And
Kim's alive." "Yes
. . ." He
stared back at her, realizing what it might mean. The boy had a
perfect memory. So good that it was almost impossible for him to
forget anything. Which meant... He
laughed, then grew still. Unless they'd taken him captive. Unless
whoever had done this had meant to destroy everything but him. But
then why had they taken the tutor T'ai Cho and afterward released
him? Or had that been a mistake.7 "Gods
. . ." he said softly. If DeVore had the boy, he also had the
only complete record of the Project's work—the basis of a
system that could directly control vast numbers of people. It was a
frightening thought. His worst nightmare come true. If DeVore
had him. He
turned, watching his daughter. She was looking about her, her eyes
taking in everything, just as he'd taught her. He followed her
through, the young Captain trailing them. "What
is it?" he said quietly, afraid to disturb her concentration.
"What are you looking for?" She
turned, looking back at him, the smile still there. "He got out.
I know he did." He
shivered, not wanting to know. But she had been right about the other
thing, so maybe she was right about this. They went through the ruins
of the outer office and into the dark, fire-blackened space beyond
where they had found most of the bodies. "There!"
she said, triumphantly, pointing halfway up the back wall. "There!
That's where he went." Tolonen
looked. Halfway up the wall there was a slightly darker square set
into the blackness. He moved closer, then realized what it was. A
ventilation shaft. "I
don't see how . . ." he began, but even as he said it he changed
his mind and nodded. Of course. The boy had been small enough, wiry
enough. And after all, he had come from the Clay. There was his past
record of violence to consider. If anyone could have survived this,
it was Kim. So maybe Jelka was right. Maybe he had got out
this way. Tolonen
turned, looking at the young officer. "Get one of your experts
in here now, Captain. I want him to investigate that vent for any
sign that someone might have used it to escape. "Sir!" He
stood there, Jelka cradled against him, his arm about her shoulders,
while they tested the narrow tunnel for clues. It was difficult,
because the vent was too small for a grown man to get into; but with
the use of extension arms and mechanicals they worked their way
slowly down the shaft. After
twenty minutes the squad leader turned and came across to Tolonen. He
bowed, then gave a small, apologetic shrug. "Forgive
me, Marshal, but it seems unlikely he got out this way. The vent is
badly charred. It sustained a lot of fire damage when the labs went
up. Besides that, it leads down through the main generator rooms
below. He would have been sliced to pieces by the fans down there." Tolonen
was inclined to agree. It was unlikely that the boy had got out, even
if DeVore hadn't taken him. But when he looked down and met his
daughter's eyes, the certainty there disturbed him. "Are
you sure?" "I'm
certain. Trust me, Father. I know he got out. I just know." Tolonen
sniffed, then looked back at the squad leader. "Go in another
five ch'i. If there's nothing there we'll call it off." They
waited, Tolonen's hopes fading by the moment. But then there was a
shout from one of the men controlling the remote. He looked up from
his screen and laughed. "She's right. Damn me if she isn't
right!" They
went across and looked. There, enhanced on the screen, was a set of
clear prints, hidden behind a fold in the tunnel wall and thus
untouched by the blast. "Well?"
said Tolonen, "Are they the boy's?" There
was a moment's hesitation, then the boy's prints were flashed up on
the screen, the computer superimposing them over the others. There
was no doubt. They were a perfect match. "Then
he's alive!" said Tolonen. He stared at his daughter, then shook
his head, not understanding. "Okay," he said, turning to
the Captain, "this is what we'll do. I want you to contact Major
Gregor Karr at Bremen Headquarters and get him here at once. And
then—" He
stopped, staring open-mouthed at the doorway. "Hans . . . what
are you doing here?" Hans
Ebert bowed, then came forward. His face was pale, his whole manner
unnaturally subdued. "IVe
got news," he said, swallowing. "Bad news, I'm afraid,
Uncle Knut. It's the T'ang. I'm afraid he's dead." HANS
EBERT paused on the terrace, looking out across the gardens at the
center of the Mansion where the Marshal's daughter stood, her back to
him. Jelka
was dressed in the southern Han fashion, a tight silk samfu of
a delicate eggshell-blue wrapped about her strong yet slender body.
Her hair had been plaited and coiled at the back of her head, but
there was no mistaking her for Han. She was too tall, too blond to be
anything but Hung Moo. And not simply Hung Moo, but Nordic. New
European. He
smiled, then made his way down the steps quietly, careful not to
disturb her reverie. She was standing just beyond the bridge, looking
down into the tiny stream, one hand raised to her neck, the other
holding her folded fan against her side. His
wife. Or soon to be. He was
still some distance from her when she turned, suddenly alert, her
whole body tensed as if prepared against attack. "It's
all right," he said, raising his empty hands in reassurance.
"It's only me." He saw
how she relaxed—or tried to, for there was still a part of her
that held out against him—and smiled inwardly. There was real
spirit in the girl, an almost masculine hardness that he admired. His
father had been right for once: she would make him the perfect match. "What
is it?" she asked, looking back at him as if forcing herself to
meet his eyes. Again he smiled. "I'm
sorry, Jelka, but I have to go. Things are in flux and the new T'ang
has asked for me. But please . . . our home is yours. Make yourself
comfortable. My mui tsai, Sweet Flute, will be here in a while
to look after you." She
stared back at him a moment, her lips slightly parted, then gave a
small bow of her head. "And my father?" "He
feels it best that you stay here for the moment. As I said, things
are in flux and there are rumors of rioting in the lower levels. If
it spreads ..." She
nodded, then turned away, looking across at the ancient pomegranate
trees, flicking her fan open as she did so. It was a strange, almost
nervous gesture and for a moment he wondered what it meant. Then,
bowing low, he turned to go. But he had gone only a few paces when
she called to him. "Hans?" He
turned, pleased that she had used his name. "Yes?" "Will
you be General now?" He
took a long breath and shrugged. "If the new T'ang wishes it.
Why?" She
made a small motion of her head, then looked down. "I... I just
wondered, that's all." "Ah
. . ." He stood there a moment longer, watching her, then turned
and made his way back along the path toward the house. And if he
were? Well, maybe it would be a reason for bringing his marriage
forward. After all, a General ought to have a wife, a family,
oughtn't he? He grinned and spurred himself on, mounting the steps
two at a time. Yes. He would speak to Tolonen about it later. SHE
STOOD there after he was gone, her eyes following the slow swirl of a
mulberry leaf as it drifted on the artificial current. So the
boy Kim was alive. But how had she known? She
shivered and turned, hearing footsteps on the pathway. It was a young
woman, a girl little older than herself. The mui tsai. The
girl came closer, then stopped, bowing low, her hands folded before
her. "Excuse me, Hsiao Chi, but my Master asked me to see to
your every wish." Jelka
turned, smiling at the girl's use of Hsiao Chi—Lady—to
one clearly no older than herself. But it was obvious that the girl
was only trying to be respectful. "Thank
you, Sweet Flute, but I wish only to wait here until my father
comes." The
mui tsai glanced up at her, then averted her eyes again. "With
respect, Hsiao Chi, I understand that that might be some while. Would
you not welcome some refreshments while you wait? Or perhaps I could
summon the musicians. There is a pavilion ..." Jelka
smiled again, warmed by the girl's manner. Even so, she wanted to be
left alone. The matter with the boy disturbed her. The preliminary
search of the levels below the Project had found no trace of him. She
sighed, then gave a tiny laugh. "All right, Sweet Flute. Bring
me a drink. A cordial. But no musicians. The birds sing sweetly
enough for me. And I do wish to be left alone. Until my father
comes." The
mui tsai bowed. "As you wish, Hsiao Chi." Jelka
looked about her, letting herself relax for the first time since she
had heard of the attack on the Project, drinking in the harmony of
the garden. Then she stiffened again. From
the far side of the gardens came a strange, high-pitched keening,
like the sound of an animal in pain. For almost a minute it
continued, and then it stopped as abruptly as it had begun. What
in the gods' names? She
hurried across the bridge and down the path, then climbed the wooden
steps up onto the terrace. It had come from here, she was sure of it. She
paused, hearing the low murmur of male voices from the doorway just
ahead of her. Slowly, step by step, she crept along the terrace until
she stood there, looking in. There
were four of them, dressed in the pale-green uniforms of the Ebert
household. In the midst of them, a gag tied tightly about her mouth,
was a woman. A Han woman in her early twenties. Jelka
watched, astonished, as the woman kicked out wildly and threw herself
about, trying to escape her captives, her face dark, contorted. But
there was no escaping. As Jelka watched, the men subdued her, forcing
her into a padded jacket, the overlong arms of which they fastened at
the back. Shuddering
with indignation, she stepped inside. "Stop it! Stop it at
once!" The
men turned, disconcerted by her sudden appearance, the woman in their
midst suddenly forgotten. She fell and lay there on the floor, her
legs kicking impotently. Jelka
took another step, her whole body trembling with the anger she felt.
"What in the gods' names do you think you're doing?" They
backed away as she came on, bowing abjectly. "Forgive
us, Mistress Tolonen," one of them said, recognizing her, "but
we are only acting on our Master's orders." She
looked at the man witheringly, then shook her head. "Unbind her.
Unbind her at once." "But,
Mistress, you don't understand-—" "Quiet,
man!" she barked, the strength in her voice surprising him. He
fell to his knees, head bowed, and stayed there, silent. She
shivered, then looked to the others. "Well? Must I ask you
again?" There
was a quick exchange of glances, then the men did as she said,
unbinding the woman and stepping back, as if afraid of the
consequences. But the woman merely rolled over and sat up, easing the
jacket from her, calm now, the fit—if that was what it had
been—gone from her. "Good,"
Jelka said, not looking at them, her attention fixed upon the strange
woman. "Now go. I wish to be alone with the woman." "But,
Mistress—" "Go!" There
was no hesitation this time. Bowing furiously, the four men departed.
She could hear the dull murmur of their voices outside, then nothing.
She was alone with the woman. Jelka
went to her and knelt, letting her hand rest on the woman's arm.
"What is it?" The
woman looked up at her. She was pretty. Very pretty. In some ways
more like a child than Jelka herself. "What's your name?"
Jelka asked, touched by the expression of innocence in the woman's
eyes. "My
baby . . ." the woman said, looking past Jelka distractedly.
"Where's my baby?" Jelka
turned, looking about the room, then saw it. A cot, there, on the far
side of the room. And as she saw, she heard it—a strange,
persistent snuffling. "There,"
she said gently. "Your baby's there." She
stood to one side as the woman got up, and casting the straitjacket
aside, went across to the cot, bending down over it to lift and
cradle the child. "There, there . . ." she heard her say, a
mother's softness in her voice. "There, they'll not harm you.
I'll see to that, my little darling. Mumma's here now. Mumma's here." Jelka
felt a ripple of relief pass through her. But she was still angry.
Angry with Hans, if it really was he who had given the order to
subdue the woman. He had no right to torment the woman. She went
across, touching the woman's back. "Let
me see ..." The
woman turned, smiling, offering the child. A small, helpless little
bundle, that snuffled and snuffled ... Jelka
felt herself go cold, then stepped back, shaking her head, her mouth
suddenly dry, appalled by what she saw. "No . . ." It
stared up at her, red-eyed, its pink face too thin to be human, the
hair that sprouted indiscriminately from its flesh too coarse,
despite the silks in which it was wrapped. As she stared at it, one
tiny three-toed hand pushed out at her, as if to grasp her hand. She
jerked away, feeling the bile rise in her throat. "Golden
Heart!" The voice came from the doorway behind her. "Put
that dreadful thing away, right now! What in the gods' names do you
think you're doing?" It was
the mui tsai, Sweet Flute. She came into the room, putting the
drink down on the table, then went across to the woman, taking the
bundle from her and setting it back in the cot. "It's
all right," she said, turning back to face Jelka. "I can
explain . . ." But
Jelka was no longer there. She was outside, leaning over the balcony,
gulping in air, the image of the tiny goat-creature like a mocking
demon burning indelibly in the redness behind her closed lids. T u A
N TI F O looked up from where he was making ch'a to where the
boy lay sleeping on the bedroll in the far corner of the room. He had
been asleep for some time, physically exhausted after his ordeal, but
now he tossed and turned, held fast in the grip of some awful
nightmare. The
old man put down the ch'a bowl and the cloth and went across
to the boy, balancing on his haunches beside him. The
boy seemed in pain, his lips drawn back from his teeth in what was
almost a snarl, his whole body hunched into itself, as if something
ate at him from within. He thrashed this way and that, as if fighting
himself; then, with a shudder that frightened the old man, went
still. "Gweder
. . ." the boy said quietly. "Gweder . . ." It was
said softly, almost gently, yet the word itself was hard, the two
sounds of which it was made stranger than anything Tuan Ti Fo had
ever heard. For a
moment there was silence, then the boy spoke again, the whole of him
gathered up into the movement of his lips. "PandY'a
bos ef, Lagasek?" This
time the voice was harsh, almost guttural. Tuan Ti Fo felt a small
ripple of fear pass through him; yet he calmed himself inwardly, a
still, small voice chanting the chen yen to dispense with
fear. "Travyth,
Gweder. Travyth . . ." He
narrowed his eyes, understanding. Two voices. The first much softer,
gentler than the second. Gweder and Lagasek . . . But what did it
mean? And what was this language? He had never heard its like before. He
watched, seeing how the face changed, ugly one moment, peaceful,
almost innocent the next. Now it was ugly, the mouth distorted.
Gweder was speaking again, his voice harsh, spitting out the words in
challenge. "Praga
obery why crenna? Bos why yeyn, Lagasek?" The
boy shivered violently and the face changed, all spite, all anger
draining from it. Softly now it answered, the brittle edges of the
words rounded off. Yet there was pain behind the words. Pain and a
dreadful sense of loss. "Yma
gweras yn aw ganow, Gweder . . . gweras ... ha an pyth bos
tewl." The
abruptness of the change made him shudder. And the laughter . . . The
laughter was demonic. The face now shone with a dark and greedy
malice. With evil. "Nyns-us
pyth, Lagasek." There
was such an awful mockery in that face that it made Tuan Ti Fo want
to strike it with his fist. Slowly,
very slowly, the malice sank down into the tissue of the face. Again
the boy's features settled into a kinder, more human form. "A'dhywar-lur
. . ." it breathed. "A-dhywar-lur." Then,
in a cry of anguish, "My bos yn annown . . . Yn annown!" A
ragged breath escaped Tuan Ti Fo. He stood abruptly, then crossed the
room to the tiny bookshelf. He brought the book back, then squatted
there again, closing his eyes and opening the pages at random,
reading the first thing his eyes opened upon. He
smiled. It was a passage from midway through Book One. One of his
favorites. He read, letting his voice be an instrument to soothe the
boy. "Thirty
spokes share one hub. Adapt the nothing therein to the purpose in
hand, and you will have the use of the cart. Knead clay in order to
make a vessel. Adapt the nothing therein to the purpose in hand, and
you will have the use of the vessel. Cut out doors and windows in
order to make a room. Adapt the nothing therein to the purpose in
hand, and you will have the use of the room. Thus what we gain is
Something, yet it is by virtue of Nothing that this can be put to
use." He
looked down, seeing how still the boy had become, as if listening to
his words; yet he was still asleep. "Who
are you, boy?" he asked softly, putting the book down. He
reached across and pulled up the blanket until it covered the boy's
chest. Yes, he thought, and what brought you here tome? For
the fates as surely directed you to me as they directed my feet
this morning to a path 1 never took before. He
leaned back, then took up the book and began to read again, letting
Lao Tzu's words—words more than two-and-a-half thousand years
old—wash over the sleeping boy and bring him ease. "Well?" Karr
stared back morosely at his friend, then put his ch'a bowl
down. "Nothing.
The trail's gone cold. I tracked the boy as far as the factory, but
there it ended. It's as if he vanished. There's no way he could have
got past that guard post." Chen
sat down, facing Karr across the table. "Then he's still there.
In the factory." Karr
shook his head. "We've taken it apart. Literally. I had a
hundred men in there, dismantling the place back to the bare walls.
But nothing." "We've
missed something, that's all. I'll come back with you. We can go
through it again." Karr
looked down. "Maybe. But I've been through it a dozen, twenty
times already. It's as if he was spirited away." Chen
studied his friend a moment. He had never seen Karr looking so down
in the mouth. "Cheer
up," he said. "It can't be that bad." "No?"
Karr sat back, drawing himself up to his full height. "It seems
Ebert's to be appointed General. The old T'ang accepted Nocenzi's
resignation before he died. Tolonen was to step back into the job,
but it seems the new T'ang wants a new man in the post." Chen
grimaced, then sat back. "Then our lives aren't worth a beggar's
shit." Karr stared at him a moment, then laughed. "You
think?" "And
you don't?" Karr
stood up. "Let a thousand devils take Hans Ebert. We'll
concentrate on finding the boy. After all, that's our job, isn't
it—finding people?" li
yuan was the first to arrive. Walking from the hangar, he felt
detached, as if outside himself, watching. The meaning of this death
had come to him slowly; not as grief but as nakedness, for this death
exposed him. There was no one now but him; a single link from a
broken chain. Outside
his father's rooms he stopped, in the grip of a strong reluctance,
but the eyes of others were upon him. Steeling himself, he ordered
the doors unlocked, then went inside. The
doors closed, leaving him alone with his dead father. Li
Shai Tung lay in his bed, as if he slept, yet his face was pale like
carved ivory, his chest still. Li
Yuan stood there, looking down at him. The old man's eyes were
closed, the thin lids veined, mauve leaf patterns on the milky white.
He knelt, studying the patterns in the white, but like the rest it
meant nothing. It was merely a pattern, a repetition. He
shook his head, not understanding, knowing only that he had never
seen his father sleeping. Never seen those fierce, proud eyes closed
before this moment. He put
his hand out, touching his father's cheek. The flesh was cold.
Shockingly cold. He drew his hand back sharply, then shuddered. Where
did it go? Where did all that warmth escape to? Into
the air, he said silently to himself. Into the air. He
stood, then drew the covers back. Beneath the silken sheets his
father lay there naked, the frailty of his body revealed. Li Yuan
looked, feeling an instinctive pity for his father. Not love, but
pity. Pity for what time had done to him. Death
had betrayed him. Had found him weak and vulnerable. His
eyes moved down the body, knowing that others had looked before he
had. Surgeons with their dispassionate eyes; looking, as he looked
now. He
shuddered. The body was thin, painfully emaciated, but unmarked. His
father had been ill. Badly ill. That surprised him, and he paused a
moment before putting back the sheet. It was unlike his father not to
comment on his health. Something was amiss. Some element beyond
simple senility had been the cause of this. He had
no proof and yet his sense of wrongness was strong. It made him turn
and look about him, noting the presence of each object in the room,
questioning their fiinction. All seemed well, and yet the sense of
wrongness persisted. He
went outside, into the hallway. Surgeon Hua was waiting there with
his assistants. "How
has my father been, Hua? Was he eating well?" The
old man shook his head. "Not for some time, Chieh Hsia. Not
since Han's death. But. . ." he pursed his lips, considering,
"well enough for an old man. And your father was old, Li
Yuan." Li
Yuan nodded, but he was still troubled. "Was he ... clear? In
his mind, I mean?" "Yes,
Chieh Hsia. Even last night." Hua paused, frowning, as if
he, too, were troubled by something. "There was nothing
evidently wrong with him. We've . . . examined him and . . ." "Evidently!" Hua
nodded, but his eyes were watchful. "But
you think that appearances might be deceptive, is that it, Hua?" The
old surgeon hesitated. "It isn't something I can put my finger
on, Chieh Hsia. Just a ... a feehng I have. Confucius
says—" "Just
tell me, Hua," Li Yuan said, interrupting him, reaching out to
hold his arm, his fondness for the old man showing in his face. "No
proverbs, please. Just tell me what made you feel something was
wrong." "This
will sound unprofessional, Chieh Hsia, but as you've asked." Hua
paused, clearing his throat. "Well, he was not himself. He was
sharp, alert, and in a sense no different from his old self, but he
was not—somehow—Li Shai Tung. He seemed like an actor,
mimicking your father. Playing him exceptionally well, but not. . ." He
faltered, shaking his head, grief overwhelming him. "Not
like the real thing," Li Yuan finished for him. Hua
nodded. "He was . . . uncertain. And your father never was
uncertain." Li
Yuan considered a moment, then gave his instructions. "I want
you to perform an autopsy, Hua. I want you to find out why he died. I
want to know what killed him." TSU MA
was dressed in white, his hair tied back in a single elegant bow. The
effect was striking in its simplicity, its sobriety; while his face
had a gentleness Li Yuan had never seen in it before. He came forward
and embraced Li Yuan, holding him to his breast, one hand smoothing
the back of his neck. It was this, more than the death, more than the
coldness of his father's cheek, that broke the ice that had formed
about his feelings. At last he let go, feeling the sorrow rise and
spill from him. "Good,
good," Tsu Ma whispered softly, stroking his neck. "A man
should cry for his father." And when he moved back, there were
tears in his eyes, real grief in his expression. "And
Wei Feng?" Li Yuan asked, wiping his eyes with the back of his
hand. "He's
waiting below." Tsu Ma smiled, a friend's strong smile. "We'll
go when you're ready." "I'm
ready," Li Yuan answered, straightening, unashamed now of his
tears, feeling much better for them. "Let us see our cousin." Wei
Feng was waiting in the viewing room, wearing a simple robe of white
gathered at the waist. As Li Yuan came down the stairs Wei Feng came
across and embraced him, whispering his condolences. But he seemed
older than Li Yuan remembered him. Much older. "Are
you all right, Wei Feng?" he asked, concerned for the old man's
health. Wei
Feng laughed. A short, melodic sound. "As well as could be
expected, Yuan." His expression changed subtly. "But your
father . . ." He sighed. Wei Feng was the oldest now. By almost
twenty years the oldest. "So much has changed, Yuan. So much.
And now this. This seems . . ." He shrugged, as if it were
beyond words to say. "I
know." Li Yuan frowned, releasing him. "They killed him,
Wei Feng." Wei
Feng simply looked puzzled, but Tsu Ma came close, taking his arm.
"How do you know? Is there proof?" "Proof?
No. But I know. I'm sure of it, Tsu Ma. I've asked Surgeon Hua
to ... to do an autopsy. Maybe that will show something, but even so,
I know." "So
what now?" Wei Feng had crossed his arms. His face was suddenly
hard, his tiny figure filled with power. "So
now we play their game. Remove the gloves." Beside
him Tsu Ma nodded. "We
know our enemies," Li Yuan said, with an air of finality. "We
have only to find them." "DeVore,
you mean?" Tsu Ma looked across at Wei Feng. The old man's face
was troubled, but his jaw was set. Determination weighed the heavier
in his conflicting emotions. Tsu Ma narrowed his eyes, considering.
"And then?" Li
Yuan turned. His eyes seemed intensely black, like space itself;
cold, vacant, all trace of life and warmth gone from them. His face
was closed, expressionless, like a mask. "Arrange a meeting of
the Council, Tsu Ma. Let Chi Hsing host it. We must talk." Li
Yuan was barely eighteen, yet the tone, the small movement of the
left hand that accompanied the final words, were uncannily familiar,
as if the father spoke and acted through the son. CHAPTER
SIX
Chen Yen The
ch'a bowl lay to one side, broken, its contents spilled across the
floor. Beside it Tuan Ti Fo crouched, his back to the door, facing
the boy. "Yn-mes
a forth, cothwasl" the boy snarled, the sound coming from
the back of his throat. "Yn-mes a forthl" Tuan
Ti Fo felt the hairs rise on the back of his neck. The boy was down
on all fours, his face hideously ugly, the features distorted with
rage, the chin thrust forward aggressively, his round, dark eyes
filled with animal menace. He made small movements with his body,
feinting this way and that, gauging Tuan Ti Fo's response to each, a
low growling coming from his throat. It was
the third time the boy had tried to get past him, and, as before, he
seemed surprised by the old man's quickness; shocked that, whichever
way he moved, Tuan Ti Fo was there, blocking his way. The
old man swayed gently on his haunches, then, as the boy threw himself
to the left, moved effortlessly across, fending off the child with
his palms, using the least force possible to achieve his end. The boy
withdrew, yelping with frustration, then turned and threw himself
again, like a dog, going for Tuan's throat. This
time he had to fight the boy. Had to strike him hard and step back,
aiming a kick to the stomach to disable him. Yet even as the boy fell
back, gasping for breath, that strange transformation overcame him
again. As Tuan Ti Fo watched, the harshness faded from the boys
features, becoming something softer, more human. "Welcome
back, Lagasek," he said, taking a long, shuddering breath. But
for how long? He looked about him, noting the broken bowl, the
spilled ch'a, and shook his head. He would have to bind the boy while
he slept, for in time he would have to sleep. He could not guard
against this "Gweder" thing forever. He
moved closer, crouching over the boy. He was peaceful now, his face
almost angelic in its innocence. But beneath? Tuan Ti Fo narrowed his
eyes, considering, then began to speak, softly, slowly, as if to
himself. "Look
at you, child. So sweet you look just now. So innocent. But are you
good or evil? Is it Gweder or Lagasek who rules you? And which of
them brought you here to my rooms?" He smiled, then got up,
moving across the room to fetch a small towel to mop up the ch'a,
a brush to gather up the tiny pieces of broken porcelain. And as
he did so he continued to speak, letting his voice rise and fall like
a flowing stream, lulling the sleeping child. "Kao
Tzu believed that each man, at birth, was like a willow tree, and
that righteousness was like a bowl. To become righteous, a man had
therefore to be cut and shaped, like the willow, into the bowl. The
most base instincts—the desire for food or sex—were, he
argued, all that one could ever find in the unshaped man, and human
nature was as indifferent to good or evil as free-flowing water is to
the shape it eventually fills." He
turned, looking at the child, seeing how the boy's chest now rose and
fell gently, as if soothed by his voice, then turned back, smiling,
beginning to mop up the spill. "Meng
Tzu, of course, disagreed. He felt that if what Kao Tzu said were
true, then the act of becoming righteous would be a violation of
human nature—would, in fact, be a calamity. But I have my own
reason for disagreeing with Kao Tzu. If it were so—if
human nature were as Kao Tzu claimed—then why should any
goodness come from evil circumstances? And why should evil come from
good?" He gave a soft laugh. "Some men are water
drops and willow sprouts, it's true; but not all. For there are those
who determine their own shape, their own direction, and the mere
existence of them demonstrates Kao Tzu's claim to be a
misrepresentation." He
finished mopping, then carried the towel to the basin in the corner
and dropped it in. Returning, he set the two large pieces of the
broken bowl to one side then began to sweep the tiny slivers of
porcelain into a pile. "Of
course, there is another explanation. It is said that shortly after
the Earth was separated from Heaven, Nu Kua created human beings. It
appears that she created the first men by patting yellow earth
together. She labored at this a long time, taking great care in the
shaping and molding of the tiny, human forms; but then she grew
tired. The work was leaving her little time for herself and so she
decided to simplify the task. Taking a long piece of string, she
dragged it to and fro through the mud, heaping it up and turning that
into men. But these were crude, ill-formed creatures compared to
those she had first made. Henceforth, it is said, the rich and the
noble are those descended from the creatures who were formed before
Nu Kua tired of her task—the men of yellow earth—whereas
the poor and the lowly are descendants of the cord-made men—the
men of mud." He
laughed quietly and looked up, noting how restful the boy now
was. "But
then, as the Tien Wen says, 'Nu Kua had a body. Who formed and
fashioned it?" He
turned, taking the thin paper box in which the ch'a brick had
come and put it down, sweeping the fragments up into it; then he
dropped in the two largest pieces. "Ah,
yes, but we live in a world gone mad. The bowl of righteousness was
shattered long ago, when Tsao Ch'un built his City. It is left to
individual men to find the way—to create small islands of
sanity in an ocean of storms." He looked about him. "This
place is such an island." Or had
been. Before the child had come. Before the bowl had been broken, his
peace disturbed. For a
moment Tuan Ti Fo closed his eyes, seeking that inner stillness deep
within himself, his lips forming the chen yen—the "true
words"—of the mantra. With a tiny shudder he passed the
hard knot of tension from him then looked up again, a faint smile at
the corners of his mouth. "Food,"
he said softly. "That's what you need. Something special." He
stood, went across to the tiny oven set into the wall on the far side
of the room, and lit it. Taking a cooking bowl from a shelf, he
partly filled it from the water jar and set it down on the ring. Tuan
Ti Fo turned, looking about him at the simple order of his room.
"Chaos. The world is headed into chaos, child, and there is
little you or I can do to stop it." He smiled sadly, then took
up the basin, carrying it across to the door. He would empty it
later, after the child had been fed. The
boy had turned onto his side, the fingers of one hand lightly
touching his neck. Tuan Ti Fo smiled, and taking a blanket, took it
across and laid it over the child. He
crouched there a moment, watching him. "You know, the Chou
believed that Heaven and Earth were once inextricably mixed together
in a state of undifferenti-ated chaos, like a chicken's egg. Hun
tun they called that state. Hun tun . . ." He
nodded, then went back to the oven, taking a jar from the shelf on
the wall and emptying out half its contents onto the board beside the
oven. The tiny, saclike dumplings looked like pale, wet, unformed
creatures in their uncooked state. Descendants of the mud men. He
smiled and shook his head. Hun tun, they were called. He had
made them himself with the things the girl Marie had brought last
time she'd come. It was soy, of course, not meat, that formed the
filling inside the thin shells of dough, but that was as he wished
it. He did not believe in eating flesh. It was not The Way. As the
water began to boil he tipped the dumplings into the bowl and stirred
them gently before leaving them to cook. There were other things he
added— herbs sent to him from friends on the plantations, and
other, special things. He leaned forward, sniffing the concoction
delicately, then nodded. It was just what the child needed. It
would settle him and give him back his strength. That
precious strength that "Gweder" spent so thoughtlessly. He
turned, expecting to see the child sitting up, his face transformed
again into a snarl, but the boy slept on. He
turned back, for a while busying himself preparing the food. When it
was cooked, he poured half of the broth into a small ceramic bowl and
took it to the boy. It was
a shame to wake him, but it was twelve hours now since he had eaten.
And afterward he would sleep. The herbs in the soup would ensure that
he slept. He set
the bowl down, then lifted the boy gently, cradling him in a
half-sitting position. As he did so the boy stirred and struggled
briefly, then relaxed. Lifting the spoon from the bowl, Tuan Ti Fo
placed it to the boy's lips, tilting it gently. "Here,
child. I serve you Heaven itself." The
boy took a little of the warm broth, then turned his head slightly.
Tuan Ti Fo persevered, following his mouth with the spoon, coaxing a
little of the liquid into him each time, until the child's mouth was
opening wide for each new spoonful. At
last the bowl was empty. Tuan Ti Fo smiled, holding the boy to him a
while, conscious again of how insubstantial he seemed. As if he were
made of something finer than flesh and bone, finer than yellow earth.
And again he wondered about his presence in the dream. What did that
mean? For it had to mean something. He
drew a pillow close, then set the boy's head down, covering him with
the blanket. "Maybe
you'll tell me, eh? When you wake. That's if that strange tongue is
not the only one you speak." He
went back to the oven and poured the remains of the hun tun into the
bowl, spooning it down quickly, then took bowls and basin outside,
locking the door behind him, going to the washrooms at the far end of
the corridor. It didn't take long, but he hurried about his tasks,
concerned not to leave the child too long. And when he returned he
took care in opening the door, lest "Gweder" should slip
out past him. But the boy still slept. Tuan
Ti Fo squatted, his legs folded under him, watching the boy. Then,
knowing it would be hours before he woke, he got up and fetched his
<wei chi set, smoothing the cloth "board" out on
the floor before him, placing the bowls on either side, the white
stones to his left, the black to his right. For a time he lost
himself in the game, his whole self gathered up into the shapes the
stones made on the board, until it seemed the board was the great Tao
and he the stones. Once
he had been the First Hand Supreme in all Chung Kuo, Master of
Masters and eight times winner of the great annual championship held
in Siichow. But that had been thirty—almost forty—years
ago. Back in the days when he had still concerned himself with the
world. He
looked up from the board, realizing his concentration had been
broken. He laughed, a quotation of Ch'eng Yi's coming to mind:
"Within the universe all things have their opposite: when there
is the yin, there is the yang; where there is goodness,
there is evil." And in
the boy? He took a deep breath, looking across at him. Gweder and
Lagasek. Yin and }ang. As in all men. But in this one the Tao was at
war with itself. Yin and yang were not complementary but
antagonistic. In that sense the child was like the world of Chung
Kuo. There, too, the balance had been lost. Yes, like the boy, Chung
Kuo was an entity at war with itself. But
the thought brought with it an insight. Just as this world of theirs
had been tampered with, so had the child. Something had happened to
split him and make him fight himself. He had lost his oneness. Or had
it taken from him. Tuan
Ti Fo cleared the board slowly, concerned for the boy. Yet maybe that
was his role in this—to make the boy whole again, to reconcile
the animal and the human in him. For what was a man without balance? "Nothing,"
he answered himself softly. "Or worse than nothing." He
began again, the shapes of black and white slowly filling the board
until he knew there were no more stones to play, nothing left to win
or lose. Tuan
Ti Fo looked up. The boy was sitting up, watching him, his dark,
overlarge eyes puzzling over the shapes that lay there on the cloth. He
looked down, saying nothing, then cleared the board and set up
another game. He began to play, conscious now of the boy watching,
edging slowly closer as the stones were laid and the board filled up
again. Again
he laid the final stone, knowing there was no more to be won or lost.
He looked up. The boy was sitting only an arm's length from him now,
studying the patterns of black and white with a fierce intensity, as
if to grasp some meaning from them. He
cleared the board and was about to play again when the boy's hand
reached out and took a white stone from the bowl to his left. Tuan Ti
Fo started to correct him—to make him take from the bowl of
black stones—but the boy was insistent. He slapped a stone down
in the comer nearest him on the right. In Tsu, the north. They
played, slowly at first, then faster, Tuan Ti Fo giving nothing to
the boy, punishing him for every mistake he made. Yet when he began
to take a line of stones he had surrounded from the board, the boy
placed his hand over Tuan's, stopping him, lifting his hand so that
he might study the position, his face creased into a frown, as if
trying to take in what he had done wrong. Only then did he move his
hand back, indicating that Tuan Ti Fo should take the stones away. The
next game was more difficult. The boy repeated none of the simple
errors he had made first time around. This time Tuan Ti Fo had to
work hard to defeat him. He sat back, his eyes narrowed, staring at
the boy, surprised by how well he'd played. "So,"
he said, "you can play." The
boy looked up at him, wide-eyed, then shook his head. No, Tuan
thought; its not possible. You must have played before. He
cleared the board and sat back, waiting, feeling himself go very
still, as if something strange—something wholly out of the
ordinary—were about to happen. This
time the boy set the stone down in the south, in Shang, only a
hand's length from Tuan Ti Fo's knee. It was a standard opening—the
kind of play that made no real difference to the final outcome—yet
somehow the boy made it seem a challenge. An hour later Tuan Ti Fo
knew he had been defeated. For the first time in over forty years
someone had humbled him on the board he considered his own. He sat
back, breathing deeply, taking in the elegance of the shapes the boy
had made, recollecting the startling originality of his strategies—as
if he had just reinvented the game. Then he bowed low, touching his
forehead almost to the board. The
boy stared back at him a moment, then returned his bow. So you
are human, after all, Tuan Ti Fo thought, shaking his
head, amused by the gesture. And now I'm certain that the gods
sent you. He laughed. Who knows? Perhaps you're even
one of them. The
boy sat with his legs crossed under him, perfectly still, watching
Tuan Ti Fo, his eyes narrowed as if trying to understand why the old
man was smiling. Tuan
Ti Fo leaned forward, beginning to clear the board, when a knock
sounded at the door. A casual rapping that he knew at once was Marie. He saw
how the boy froze—how his face grew rigid with fear—and
reached out to hold his arm. "It's
all right. . ." he whispered. "There!" he said,
indicating the blanket. "Get under there, boy, and stay hidden.
I'll send them away." marie
turned, hearing noises behind her, then broke into a smile, bowing to
the two elderly gentlemen who were passing in the corridor. She
turned back, frowning. Where was he? It was not like him to delay. Marie
Enge was a tall, good-looking woman in her late twenties with the
kind of physical presence that most men found daunting. They
preferred their women more delicately made, more deferent. Nor was
the impression of physical strength deceptive. She was a powerful
woman, trained in the arts of self-defense, but that was not to say
that she lacked feminine charm. At a second glance one noticed signs
of a softer side to her nature: in the delicate primrose pattern of
the edging to her tunic; in the strings of pearl and rose-colored
beads at her wrists; in the butterfly bow on her otherwise
masculine-looking pigtail. She
waited a moment longer, then knocked again. Harder this time, more
insistent. "Tuan
Ti Fo? Are you there? It's me. Marie. I've come for our game." She
heard a shuffling inside and gave a small sigh of relief. For a
moment she had thought he might be ill. She moved back, waiting for
the door to open, but it remained firmly shut. "TuanTiFo?" The
slightest edge of concern had entered her voice now. She moved
forward, about to press her ear against the door, when it slid open a
little. "What
is it?" the old man said, eyeing her almost suspiciously. "It's
me, Shih Tuan. Don't you remember? It's time for our game." "Ah
..." He pulled the door a fraction wider, at the same time
moving forward, blocking her view into the room. "Forgive me,
Marie, I've just woken. I didn't sleep well and—" "You're
not ill, are you?" she said, concerned. "No
. . ." He smiled, then gave a bow. "However, I do feel
tired. So if, for once, you'll excuse me?" She
hesitated, then returned his bow. "Of course, Shih Tuan.
Tomorrow, perhaps?" He
tilted his head slightly, then nodded. "Perhaps. . ." She
stood back, watching the door slide closed, then turned away. But she
had gone only a few paces before she turned and stared back at the
door, a strong sense of oddness—of wrongness—holding her
in its grip. He had never before spoken of sleepless nights: neither,
as far as she knew, had he ever complained of any kind of illness.
Indeed, a fitter old boy she had never known. Nor had he ever put her
off before. She frowned, then turned away again, moving slowly,
reluctantly, away. For a
moment she hesitated, not quite knowing what to do, then she nodded
to herself and began to move quicker. She would go straight to the
Dragon Cloud. Would ask Shang Chen if she could work an extra hour
this end of her shift and leave an hour earlier. Yes. And then she
would return. Just
in case the old man needed her. the
dragon CLOUD filled one end of the Main, dominating the market that
spread below its eaves. It was a big, traditional-looking building
with a steeply sloping roof of red tile, its five stories not
walled-in but open to the surroundings, each level linked by broad
mock-wooden steps. Greenery was everywhere, in bowls and screens and
hanging from the open balustrades, giving the teahouse the look of an
overgrown garden. Waiters dressed in pale-blue gowns—male and
female, Han and Hung Moo—hurried between the levels, carrying
broad trays filled with exquisite ceramics, the bowls and pots a pure
white, glazed with blue markings. At strategic points about the house
the ch'a masters, specialists in ch'a shu, the art of
tea, sat at their counters preparing their special infusions. If
need be the Dragon Cloud could seat five thousand. More than enough,
one would have thought, to cater to the surrounding levels. Even so,
it was packed when they got there, not a table free. Chen looked
about him, then looked back at Karr. "Let's
go elsewhere, Gregor. It'll be an hour at least before we get a
table." Karr
turned, beckoning to one of the waiters. Chen saw how the man came
across, wary of Karr, eyeing the big man up and down as if to assess
how much trouble he might be. Behind him, at the counter, several of
the other waiters, mostly Han, turned, following him with their eyes. Chen
watched; saw Karr press something into the waiter's hand; saw the man
look down, then look up again, wide-eyed. Karr muttered something,
then pressed a second tiny bundle into the man's hand. This time the
waiter bowed. He turned, and summoning two of his fellows across,
hurried away, whispering something to his companions. In a
little while the waiter was back, bowing, smiling, leading them up
two flights of steps to a table at the center of the house. As they
moved between the tables, three elderly Han came toward them, bowing
and smiling. Chen
leaned toward Karr, keeping his voice low. "You bought their
table?" Karr
smiled, returning the old gentlemen's bows before allowing one of the
waiters to pull a chair out for him. When Chen was seated across from
him, he answered. "I've
heard that the Dragon Cloud is the cultural center of these levels.
The place where everybody who is anybody comes. Here, if anywhere, we
shall hear news of the boy. You understand?" "Ah
. . ." Chen smiled and sat back, relaxing. It was not like Karr
to use his privilege so crudely and for a moment he had been
concerned by his friend's behavior. "Besides,"
Karr added, accepting the ch'a menu the waiter held out to him, "I
have heard that the Dragon Cloud is the paragon among teahouses. Its
fame spreads far and wide, even to the Heavens." This
was said louder, clearly for the benefit of the waiters. The one who
had first dealt with Karr bowed his head slightly, responding to his
words. "If
the ch'un tzu would like something . . . special?" Karr
leaned back. Even seated he was still almost a head taller than the
Han. "You
would not have a hsiang p'ien, by any chance?" The
waiter bowed his head slightly lower, a smile of pleasure splitting
his face. "It is the speciality of the Dragon Cloud, ch'un tzu.
What kind of Hsiang p'ien would you like?" Kan-
looked across at his friend. "Have you any preference, Kao
Chen?" Chen
studied the menu a moment, trying to recognize something he knew
among the hundred exotic brews, then looked up again, shrugging. "I
don't know. I guess I'll have what you have." Karr
considered a moment, then turned his head, looking at the waiter.
"Have you a ch'ing ch'a with a lotus fragrance?" "Of
course, Master. A poo yun, perhaps?" Karr
nodded. "A Jeweled Cloud would be excellent." The
man bowed, then, his head still lowered, took the ch'a menus from
them. "I will have the girl bring the ch'a and some
sweetmeats. It will be but a few minutes, ch'un tzu." He
bowed again, then backed away. Chen
waited until the man had gone, then leaned across, keeping his voice
low. "What in the gods' names is a hsiang J/ien?" Karr
smiled, relaxing for the first time in almost twelve hours of
searching. "Hsiang p'ien are flower ch'a. And a
ch'ing ch'a is a green, unfermented ch'a. The one we're having
is placed into a tiny gauze bag overnight with the calix of a freshly
plucked lotus." He laughed. "Have you not read your Shen
Fu, Chen?" Chen
laughed and shook his head. "When would I have time, my friend?
With three children there is barely time to shit, let alone read!" Karr
laughed, then studied him a moment. He reached out and touched his
arm gently. "Maybe so, Kao Chen, but a man ought to read. I'll
give you a copy of Shen Fu sometime. His Six Records of a Floating
Life. He lived four centuries ago, before the great City was
built. It was another age, I tell you, Chen. Cruder, and yet in some
ways better than ours. Even so, some things don't change. Human
nature, for instance." Chen
lowered his head slightly. So it was. He looked about him, enjoying
the strange peacefulness of the place. Each table was cut off from
the next by screens of greenery; even so, from where he sat he had a
view of what was happening at other tables and on other levels. Above
the nearest serving counter a huge banner portrait of the ch'a god Lu
Yu fluttered gently in the breeze of the overhead fans. It was an
image that even Chen recognized, flying, as it did, over every
teahouse in Chung Kuo. "Where
do we begin?" Chen asked after a moment. "I mean, we can't
simply go from table to table asking, can we?" Karr
had been staring away almost abstractedly; now he looked back at
Chen. "No. You're quite right, Chen. It must be done subtly.
Quietly. If necessary, we will sit here all day, and all tomorrow
too. Until we hear something." "And
if we don't?" Chen shook his head. "Besides, I hate all
this sitting and Chen ten
131 waiting.
Why don't we just empty this whole deck and search it room by room?" Karr
smiled. "You think that would be a good idea, Chen? And what
reason would we give?" "What
reason would we need to give? We are on the T'ang's business,
surely?" Karr
leaned toward him, lowering his voice to a whisper. "And if
rumor were to go about the levels that the T'ang has lost something
important and would clear a deck to find it? Surely such a rumor
would have a price? Would find ears we'd rather it didn't reach?" Chen
opened his mouth then closed it again. "Even so, there must be
something else we can do." Karr
shook his head. "The trail has gone cold. It would not do to
rush about blindly elsewhere. The boy is here somewhere. I know he
is. The only course now is to wait. To bide our time and listen to
the faint whispers from the tables." Chen
leaned forward, about to say something, then sat back again. One of
the waiters was approaching their table—a woman this time, a
tall, blond-haired Hung Mao. He glanced at her as she set the
tray down on the table between them, then frowned, seeing how Karr
was staring at her. "Your
hsiang p'ien," she said, moving back slightly from the
table, her head bowed. "Shall I pour for you, ch'un tzul"
Karr smiled. "That would be most pleasant." The
teapot was square in shape with a wicker handle; a white-glazed
ceramic pot with a blue circular pattern on each side—the
stylized pictogram for long life. Beside it was a chung, a lidded
serving bowl, and two ordinary ch'a bowls. Moving forward, the woman
poured some of the freshly brewed ch'a into their bowls, then the
rest into the chung, putting the lid back on. She
was a big woman, yet her movements were precise, almost delicate. She
touched the bowls as if each were alive, while the ch'a itself fell
daintily, almost musically into the bowls, not a drop splashed or
spilled. Chen,
watching Karr, saw a small movement in the big man's face; saw him
look up at the woman appreciatively. "Thank
you," Karr said, smiling up at her. "It is good to be
served by someone who cares so much for the art." She
looked at him for the first time, then lowered her eyes again. "We
try our best to please, ch'un tzu." "And
these bowls . . ." Karr continued, as if reluctant to let her
go. "I have rarely seen such elegance, such grace of line, such
sobriety of color." For
the first time she smiled. "They are-nice, aren't they? I've
often commented how pleasant it is to serve ch'a from such bowls.
They have—yu ya, no?" Karr
laughed softly, clearly delighted. "Deep elegance. Yes . . ."
He sat back, appraising her more closely. "You know a great
deal, Fu Jen . . . ?" Again
she lowered her eyes, a faint color coming to her neck and cheeks. "I
had a good teacher. And it is Hsiao Chieh Enge, not Fu Jen.
I am not married, you understand?" Karr's
smile faded momentarily. "Ah . . . forgive me." He sat
forward slightly. "Anyway, I thank you again, Hsiao Chieh Enge.
As I said, it is very pleasing to be served by one who knows so much
about the great art of ch'a shw." She
bowed one final time, and turned to go. Then, as if changing her
mind, she turned back, leaning closer to Karr. "And if it is not
too forward, ch'un tzu, you might call me Marie. It is how I
am known here in these levels. Ask for Marie. Anyone will know me." Chen
watched her go, then turned, looking back at Karr. The big man was
still watching her, staring across where she was preparing her next
order. "You
like her, Gregor?" Karr
looked back at him almost blankly, then gave a brief laugh. "I
think we have our contact, Chen. What did she say? Anyone will know
me. And likewise, she will know anyone, neh?" He raised one
eyebrow. Chen
was smiling. "You didn't answer me, Gregor. You like her, don't
you?" Karr
stared back at him a moment longer, then shrugged and looked away. As
he did so, a commotion started up behind them, at the ch'a counter. Chen
turned to look. There were three men—Han, dressed in dark silks
with blood-red headbands about their foreheads. He glanced at Karr
knowingly, then looked back. "Triad
men," he said quietly. "But what are they doing up this
high?" Karr
shook his head. "Things are changing, Chen. They've been
spreading their net higher and higher these last few years. The
unrest has been their making." "Even
so . . ." He shook his head, angered by what he saw. Karr
reached out and held his arm, preventing him from getting up.
"Remember why we're here. We can't afford to get involved." One of
them was shouting at the men behind the counter now—a stream of
threats and curses in Kuo'yu, Mandarin—while the two
behind him looked about them threateningly. It was a classic piece of
Triad mischief, an attempt to unsettle the owners of the Dragon Cloud
before they moved in in force. "I'd
like to kick their asses out of here," Chen said beneath his
breath. Karr
smiled. "It would be fun, neh? But not now. After the boy's
found, maybe. We'll find out who's behind it and pay them a visit,
neh? In force." Chen
looked at him and smiled. "That would be good." "In
the meantime . . ." Karr stopped, then leaned forward, his eyes
suddenly narrowed. Chen
turned and looked across. The leader of the three was still shouting,
but now his curses were directed at the woman who was confronting
him. Chen stood up, a cry coming to his lips as he saw the bright
flash of a knife being drawn. This
time Karr made no attempt to stop him. Rather, Karr was ahead of him,
moving quickly between the tables. Chen
saw the knife describe an arc through the air and felt himself
flinch. But then the Triad thug was falling backward, the knife
spinning away harmlessly through the air. A moment later he saw the
second of the men go down with a sharp groan, clutching his balls.
The third turned and began to run, but the woman was on him like a
tigress, pulling him backward by his hair, her hand chopping down
viciously at his chest. Chen
pulled up sharply, almost thudding into Karr, who stood there, his
hands clenched at his sides, his great chest rising and falling
heavily as he stared down at the three prone gangsters. The
woman turned, meeting Karr's eyes briefly, her own eyes wide, her
whole body tensed as if to meet some other threat; then she turned
away, a faint shudder passing through her, letting her co-workers
carry the three men off. Karr
hesitated a moment, then went after her. He caught up with her on the
far side of the teahouse, in an area that was roped off for the
staff's use only. She
turned, seeing he was following her, and frowned, looking down. "What
do you want?" Karr
shook his head. "That was . . . astonishing. I..." He
shrugged and opened his hands. "I meant to help you, but you
didn't need any help, did you?" He laughed strangely. "Where
did you learn to fight like that?" Again
she looked at him, almost resentful now, a reaction to the fight
beginning to set in. He could see that her hands were trembling
faintly and remembered how that felt. He nodded, feeling a mounting
respect for her. "I've
never seen a woman fight like that," he began again. "Look,"
she said, suddenly angry. "What do you want?" "I'm
looking for someone," he said, trusting her, knowing that she
had acted from more than self-interest. "My nephew. He had an
accident, you see, and he ran away. He can't remember who he is, but
I know he's here somewhere. I tracked him down here, but now he's
disappeared." She
stared at him a long while, then shrugged. "So what's that to do
with me?" He
swallowed, conscious that others were listening, then pressed on.
"It's just that you might be able to help me. You know these
levels. Know the people. If anything odd happened, you'd know about
it, neh?" She
gave a grudging nod. "I guess so." "Well,
then. You'll help me, neh? He's my dead brother's son and he means a
great deal to me. I. . ." He
looked down, as if unable to go on, then felt her move closer. "All
right," she said quietly, touching his arm. "I'll help.
I'll listen out for you." He
looked up, meeting her eyes. "Thanks. My name's Karr. Gregor
Karr." She
looked back at him a moment longer, then smiled. "Well. . .
you'd best get back to your ch'a, Gregor Karr. Hsiang p'ien
tastes awful when it's cold." AS
before, the old man was slow coming to the door, but this time she
was ready for him. This time when he slid the door back, she moved
toward him, as if expecting him to let her pass, beginning to tell
him about the incident at the Dragon Cloud, the wicker basket of
leftovers from the teahouse held out before her. It
almost worked, almost got her into the room; but then, unexpectedly,
she found herself blocked. "I
am sorry, Marie, but you cannot stay. It would benefit neither of us
to have our session now." She
turned her head, staring at him, noting how he looked down rather
than meet her eyes, and knew at once that he was lying to her. It
came as a shock, but it was also confirmation of the feeling she had
had back at the restaurant when the man Karr had spoken to her. The
boy was here. She knew he was. But what was Tuan Ti Fo up to? "Forgive
me," he was saying, the gentle pressure of his hand forcing her
slowly back, "but I am in the worst of humors, Marie. And when a
man is in an ill humor he is fit company only for himself, neh?" The
faint, apologetic smile was more like the old Tuan Ti Fo. She
tried to look past him, but it was almost impossible to see what or
who was in the room beyond. Stalling for time, she pushed the basket
at him. "You
will at least take these, Master Tuan. You must eat, after all, bad
humor or no." He
looked down at the basket, then up at her, smiling. "I am
extremely grateful, Marie, and yes, I would be a foolish old man
indeed if I did not welcome your gift." The
small bow he made was all she needed. For that brief moment she could
see the room beyond him and there, jutting out from what seemed at
first glance to be a pillow beneath the blanket, the naked foot of a
youth. She
shivered; then, backing away a step, returned Tuan Ti Fo's bow. "Tomorrow,"
he said. "When the mood has passed." "Tomorrow,"
she said, watching the door slide shut again. Then, turning away, she
began to make her way back to her apartment, confused, a dark
uncertainty at the core of her. TUAN
TI F O stood there for some time, staring at the door, the wicker
basket resting lightly in his hand. Then, hearing a movement behind
him, he turned. The boy had crawled out from beneath the blanket and
knelt looking across at Tuan Ti Fo, his eyes wide with fear. "It
was a friend," the old man said reassuringly. "But it seems
best not to take any chances, neh?" He set
the basket down on the low table by the oven, then turned back,
looking at the boy. "But
we must leave here now. I cannot stall her forever, and soon she will
grow suspicious, if she hasn't already. She is not a bad woman—quite
the contrary—but curiosity can be a destructive thing." He
eyed the boy a moment longer, not certain how much he understood,
then gave a small shrug. "I
have lived in this world a long time, child. I have been many things
in my time. I have worked in their factories and on their
plantations. I have served in their officialdom and lived among the
criminal element down beneath the Net. I know their world. Know it
for the madhouse it is. Even so, sometimes the way ahead is
uncertain. So it is now. We must leave here. That much is clear. But
where should we go?" "The
Clay," the boy answered him, staring back at him with a strange
intensity. "Take me down to the Clay. That's where I belong.
Where I came from." "The
Clay. . ." he whispered, then nodded, understanding. As in the
dream he had had. "Spiders," he said and saw the boy nod
his head slowly. Yes, spiders. Tiny, beautiful spiders, infused with
an inner light, spinning their vast webs across the endless darkness.
He had seen them, their strong yet delicate webs anchored to the
Clay. And there—how clearly he remembered it suddenly—there,
watching them climb into the dark, was the boy, smiling
beatifically, his big dark eyes filled with wonder. Tuan
Ti Fo shivered, awed by the power of the vision. "What's
your name, boy? What did they call you in the Clay?" The
boy looked away, as if the memory disturbed him, then looked back,
his eyes searching Tuan Ti Fo's. "Lagasek,"
he said finally. "Lagasek, they called me. Starer." Tuan
Ti Fo caught his breath. "And Gweder?" The
boy frowned and looked down, as if he were having trouble
recollecting the word. "Gweder? Gweder means mirror. Why? What
have I been saying? I..." He shuddered and looked about him.
"Something happened, didn't it? Something . . ." He shook
his head. "I feel funny. My voice, it's . . . different."
He stared down at his hands. "And my body, it's . . ." He
looked back at Tuan Ti Fo, puzzled. "It feels like I've been
asleep for a long, long time. Trapped in a huge, deep well of sleep.
I was working in the Casting Shop. I remember now. Chan Shui was
away. And then. . ." His face creased into a fierce frown of
concentration, then he let it go, shaking his head. "I don't
understand. T'ai Cho was going to . . ." "T'ai
Cho? Who's T'ai Cho?" The
boy looked up again. "Why, T'ai Cho's my friend. My tutor at the
Project. He . . ." The
frown came back. Again the boy looked down at his hands, staring at
his arms and legs as if they didn't belong to him. "What's
the matter, Lagasek? What's wrong?" "Laga.
. ." The boy stared at him, then shook his head again. "No.
It's Kim. My name is Kim. Lagasek was down there." "In
the Clay?" "Yes,
and. . ." he shook his head, "I feel. . . strange. My
body... It doesn't feel like it's mine. It's as if. . ." He
stopped, staring up at the old man, his face filled with an intent
curiosity. "What
did I say? Those words. You must have heard me say them. So what else
did I say?" Tuan
Ti Fo met his eyes, remembering the savagery of the face within his
face— the face of Gweder, the mirror—then shook his head. "You
said nothing, Kim. Nothing at all. But come. We must pack now and be
away from here. Before they find us." Kim
stood there a moment longer, staring up at the old man. Then, letting
his eyes fall, he nodded. "Shih
Karr! Please . . . stop a moment!" Karr
turned, prepared for trouble, then relaxed, seeing who it was. "Ah,
it's you, Marie Enge. How did you find me?" She
drew one hand back through her hair, then smiled uncertainly. "As
I said, I know everyone in these levels. And you . . ." She
looked him up and down admiringly. "Well, who could overlook a
man like you, Shih Karr?" He
laughed. "That's true. But what can I do for you, Marie Enge?" She
seemed to study him a moment before she spoke. "The thing you
were talking of. . ." He was
immediately alert. "The boy," he said quietly, leaning
toward her. "You know where he is?" Again
she hesitated, but this time he preempted her. "Look.
Come inside a moment. I've got a private room. We can talk more
easily there, if you wish." She
nodded and let herself be led to his room on the second level of the
travelers' hostel. As such places went it was a clean, respectably
furnished room, but it was a "transient" all the same, and
looking at him, she could not help but think he looked out of place
there. She had seen at once, back in the Dragon Cloud, how his
brutish exterior concealed a cultured manner. He
offered her the only chair, then set himself down on the edge of the
bed, facing her. "Well? What do you know?" She
looked away momentarily, thinking of Tuan Ti Fo. Was she doing the
right thing in coming to see Karr? Or was this all a mistake? She
looked back. "I've heard something. Nothing definite, but. . ." She
saw how Karr narrowed his eyes. Saw him look down, then look back at
her, some small change having taken place in his face. "Can I
trust you, Marie Enge?" The
strange openness of his deeply blue eyes took her by surprise. Some
quality that had previously been hidden now shone through them. She
stared back at him, matching his openness with her own. "I'm
honest, if that's what you mean, Shih Karr. And I can keep a
secret if I'm asked. That is, if it's someone I trust." He
lifted his chin slightly. "Ah... I understand. You're thinking,
can I trust Shih Karr? Well, let's see what we can do about
that. First I'll take a chance on you. And then, if you still want to
help me, maybe you'll trust me, neh?" She studied him a moment,
then nodded. "Good.
Then first things first. My name is Karr, but I'm not Shih Karr."
He fished into his tunic pocket and took out his ID, handing it
across to her. "As you can see, I'm a Major in the T'ang's
Security forces, and my friend Chen, whom you met earlier, is a
Captain. The boy we're looking for is not my nephew but we still need
to find him. Alive and unharmed." She
looked up from the ID card, then handed it across. "Why do you
need to find him? I don't understand. If he's just a boy . . ." Karr
slipped the card back, took out something else—a flat,
matte-black case— and handed that to her. "That's
a hologram of the boy. You can keep that. I've got others. But
that'll help you check he's the one we're looking for." She
rested the case on her knee, then pressed her palm on it briefly, the
warmth of her flesh activating it. She studied the image a while,
then killed it, looking back at Karr. "He's
a strange-looking boy. Why are you interested in him?" "Because
he's the only survivor of a terrorist raid on one of the T'ang's
installations. A very important scientific installation. The whole
place was destroyed and all Kim's fellow workers killed." "Kim?" "That's
his name. But as I was saying—" She
reached out and touched his arm, stopping him. "I don't follow
you. You said 'his fellow workers.' But he's just a boy. What would
he be doing on a scientific installation?" Karr
looked down at her hand, then sat back slightly. "Don't
underestimate him, Marie Enge. He may be just a boy, but he's also
something of a genius. Or was, before the attack. And he might be the
only surviving link we have to the Project. That's if he's still
alive. And if we can get to him before the terrorists find out that
he escaped." She
was looking at him strangely. "This is very important, then?" Karr
narrowed his eyes. "You want to be paid for your help?" "Did
I say that?" He
winced slightly at the sharpness in her voice, then bowed his head.
"I'm sorry. It's just. . ." "It's
all right, Major Karr. I understand. You must deal with some unsavory
types in the work you do." He
smiled. "Yes, But to answer you—I have the T'ang's own
personal authority to find the boy. If I wanted to I could tear this
place apart to find him. But that's not my way. Besides, I want the
boy unharmed. Who knows what he might do if he felt threatened." "I
see." She looked down, suddenly very still. "Look,"
he said, "why don't we simplify this? Why don't you act as
intermediary? It might be best if you and not one of us were to deal
with the boy. He might find it easier to trust you." She
looked back at him, grateful. Karr
smiled. "Then you know where he is." She
caught her breath, a strange little movement in her face betraying
the fact that she thought she had been tricked by him. Then she
nodded, looking up at him. "Yes.
At least, I think so." She
watched him a moment longer, a lingering uncertainty in her face,
then gave a small laugh. "You mean it, then? You'll let me
handle it?" He
nodded. "I gave my word to you, didn't I? But take this."
He handed her a necklace. "When you're ready, just press the
stud on the neck. We'll trace it and come." Again
the uncertainty returned to her face. He
smiled reassuringly. "Trust me, Marie Enge. Please. We will do
nothing until you call for us. I shall not even have you followed
when you leave this room. But I'm relying on you; so don't let me
down. Much depends on this." "All
right." She stood, slipping the necklace over her head. "But
what if he's afraid? What if he doesn't want to go back?" Karr
nodded, then reached into his tunic pocket again. "Give this to
him. He'll understand." It was
a pendant. A beautiful silver pendant. And inside, in the tiny
circular locket, was the picture of a woman. A beautiful dark-haired
woman. She snapped it closed, then held it up, watching it turn,
flashing, in the light. She
slipped the pendant into her apron pocket and turned to leave, but he
called her back. "By the way," he said. "How good are
you at wei chi?" She
turned in the doorway and looked back at him, smiling. "How
good? Well, maybe I'll play you sometime and let you find out for
yourself, eh, Major Karr?" Karr
grinned. "I'd like that, Marie Enge. I'd like that very much." SHE
WAS STANDING there when the door opened. It was just after two in the
morning and the corridors were empty. Tuan Ti Fo took one step into
the hall, then stopped, seeing her there in the shadows. "Marie
. . ." "I
know," she said quickly, seeing how he was dressed, how he was
carrying his bedroll on his back. Behind him the boy looked out,
wide-eyed, wondering what was going on. He
took a breath. "Then you will understand why we must go. The boy
is in great danger here." She
nodded. "I know that too. There are men trying to kill him. They
killed his friends." He
narrowed his eyes, his voice a whisper. "How do you know all
this, Marie?" "Inside,"
she said, moving closer. "Please, Tuan Ti Fo. I must talk with
you." When he hesitated, she reached out and touched his arm.
"Please, Master Tuan. For the boy's sake." They
went inside. The boy had backed away. He was crouched against the
back wall, his eyes going from Tuan Ti Fo to the newcomer, his body
tensed. "It's
all right, Kim," Tuan Ti Fo said, going across and kneeling next
to him. "She's a friend." He half turned, looking back at
Marie. "This is Kim. Kim, this is Marie." She
came across and stood there, shaking her head. "You're the boy,
all right, but it doesn't make sense." She looked from him to
Tuan Ti Fo. "I was told he was a scientist, a genius, but. . ."
She turned back. "Well, he's just a boy. A frightened little
boy." Tuan
Ti Fo's eyes had widened at her words. Now he laughed. "A boy he
may be, but just a boy he's certainly not. Do you know
something, Marie? He beat me. In only his third game." "I
don't understand you, Master Tuan. Beat you at what?" "At
the game. At wei chi. He's a natural." She
stared at Tuan Ti Fo, then looked back at the boy, a new respect
entering her expression. "He beat you?" Her voice
dropped to a whisper. "Gods . . ." "Yes."
Tuan Ti Fo chuckled. "And by five stones, no less. Not just
beaten, but humiliated." He looked back at Kim and gave him a
small bow. "Which makes our friend here unofficial First Hand
Supreme of all Chung Kuo, neh?" She
laughed, a small laugh of astonishment. "No wonder they want him
back." Tuan
Ti Fo stiffened, his face hardening. "They?" Marie
nodded, suddenly more sober. "Li Yuan. The new T'ang. Kim was
working for him." She
explained. Tuan
Ti Fo sighed. "I see. And you're certain of this?" "I.
. ." She hesitated, remembering her meeting with Karr, then
nodded. "Yes. But there's something I have to give the boy. They
said it would mean something to him." She
took the pendant from her pocket and crouched down, holding it out to
the boy. For a
moment he seemed almost not to see the bright silver circle that lay
in her palm. Then, a growing wonder filling his eyes, he reached out
and touched the hanging chain. She
placed it in his hand, then moved back slightly, watching him. Slowly
the wonder faded, shading into puzzlement. Then, like cracks
appearing in the wall of a dam, his face dissolved, a great flood of
pain and hurt overwhelming him. He
cried out—a raw, gut-wrenching sound in that tiny room—then
pressed the pendant to his cheek, his fingers trembling, his whole
face ghastly now with loss. "T'ai
Cho," he moaned, his voice broken, wavering. "T'ai Cho . .
. they killed T'ai Cho!" CHAPTER
SEVEN
New Blood THE
statues stood at the center of the Hall of Celestial Destinies in
Nantes spaceport, the huge, bronze figures raised high above the
executive-class travelers who bustled like ants about its base. Three
times life-size and magnificently detailed, the vast human figures
seemed like giants from some golden age, captured in the
holo-camera's triple eye and cast in bronze. "Kan
Ying bows to Pan Chao after the Battle of Kazatin," read the
description, the huge letters cut deep into the two-ch'i thick base,
the Mandarin translation given smaller underneath, as though to
emphasize the point that the message was aimed at those who had been
conquered in that great battle—the Hung Mao. Michael
Lever stopped and stared up at it. Kazatin was where the dream of
Rome, of the great Ta Ts'in emperors, had failed. The defeat of Kan
Ying— Domitian as he was known by his own people—had let
the Han into Europe. The rest was history. "What
do you make of it?" Kustow said into his ear. "It looks
like more of their crowing to me." Like
Lever, Kustow was in his late twenties, a tall man with close-cropped
blond hair. He wore the same somber clothes as Lever, wine-red pan.
that made them seem more like clerks than the heirs to great
Companies. Facially the two men were very different, Kustow's face
blunt, Lever's hawkish; but the similarity of dress and the starkness
of their haircuts made them seem like brothers or members of some
strange cult. So, too, the third of them, Stevens, who stood to one
side, looking back at the wall-length window and its view of the
great circle of the spaceport's landing apron. They
were strangers here. Americans. Young men on their fathers' business.
Or so their papers claimed. But there were other reasons for coming
to City Europe. This
was where things were happening just now. The pulsing heart of
things. And they had come to feel that pulse. To find out if there
was something they could learn from looking around. Lever
turned, smiling back at his best friend. "They say Kan Ying was
a good man, Bryn. A strong man and yet fair. Under him the lands of
la Ts'in were fairly governed. Had his sons ruled, they say
there would have been a golden age." Kustow
nodded. "A good man, yes, until the great Pan Chao arrived." The
two men laughed quietly, then looked back at the statue. Kan
Ying knelt before Pan Chao, his back bent, his forehead pressed into
the bare earth. He was unarmed, while Pan Chao stood above him, legs
apart, his great sword raised in triumph, two daggers in his belt.
Behind Kan Ying stood his four generals, their arms and insignia
stripped from them, their faces gashed, their beards ragged from
battle. There was honor in the way they held themselves, but also
defeat. Their armies had been slaughtered on the battlefield by the
superior Han forces. They looked tired, and the great, empty coffin
they carried between them looked too much for their wasted strength
to bear. Nor
would it grow any lighter. For, so the story went, Pan Chao had
decapitated Kan Ying there and then and sent his body back to Rome,
where it had lain out in the open in the great square, slowly
rotting, waiting for the triumphal entry into the city three years
later of the young Emperor Ho Ti. Two
thousand years ago, it had been. And still the Han crowed about it.
Still they raised great statues to celebrate the moment when they had
laid the Hung Moo low. Lever
turned. "Carl! Bryn! Come on! We're meeting Ebert in an hour,
don't forget." Stevens
turned, smiling, then hurried across. "I was just watching one
of the big interplanetary craft go up. They're amazing. I could feel
the floor trembling beneath me as it turned on the power and
climbed." Kustow
laughed. "So that's what it was . . . And there was I thinking
it was the chow mein we had on the flight." Stevens
smiled back at them, then put his arms about their shoulders. He was
the oldest of the three, an engineering graduate whose father owned a
near-space research and development company. His fascination with
anything to do with space and space flight bordered upon obsession
and he had been horrified when the New Hope had been blown out
of the sky by the Seven. Something had died in him that day, and at
the same time, something had been born. A determination to get back
what had been taken from them. To change the Edict and get out there,
into space again, whatever it took. "We'll
be building them one day, I tell you," he said softly. "But
bigger than that, and faster." Kustow
frowned. "Faster than that?" He shook his head. "Well,
if you say so, Carl. But I'm told some of those craft can make the
Mars trip in forty days." Stevens
nodded. "The Tientsin can do it in thirty. Twenty-six at
perihelion. But yes, Bryn. Give me ten years and I'll make something
that can do it in twenty." "And
kill all the passengers! I can see it now. It's bad enough crossing
the Atlantic on one of those things, but imagine the g-forces that
would build up if you—" "Please
..." Lever interrupted, seeing how things were developing. "Hans
will be waiting for us. So let's get on." They
went through to the main City Transfer barrier, ignoring the long
line of passengers at the gates, going directly to the duty officer,
a short, broad-shouldered man with neat black hair. "Forgive
me, Captain," Lever began, "but could you help us?" He
took his documentation from his pocket and pushed it into the
officer's hand. "We've an appointment with Major Ebert at eleven
and—" The
officer didn't even look at the card. "Of course, Shih Lever.
Would you mind following me? You and your two companions. There's a
transporter waiting up above. Your baggage will be sent on." Lever
gave a small nod of satisfaction. So Ebert had briefed his men
properly. "And the other two in our party?" The
officer smiled tightly. His information was not one hundred percent
perfect then. "They . . . will join you as quickly as possible." "Good."
Lever smiled. No, even Ebert hadn't known he was bringing two experts
with him. Nor had he wanted him to know. In business—even in
this kind of business—it was always best to keep your opponent
wrong-footed; even when your opponent was your friend. To make him
feel uncertain, uninformed. That way you kept the advantage. "Then
lead on," he said. "Let's not keep our host waiting." stevens
was the first to notice it. He leaned across and touched Lever's arm.
"Michael—something's wrong." "What
do you mean?" Stevens
leaned closer. "Look outside, through the window. There are
mountains down below. And the sun—it's to the left. We're
heading south. At a guess I'd say we're over the Swiss Wilds." Lever
sat up, staring outward, then looked down the aisle of the
transporter. "Captain?
Can you come here a moment?" The
Security officer broke off his conversation with his adjutant and
came across, bowing respectfully. "What
is it, Shih Lever?" Lever
pointed out at the mountains. "Where are we?" The
Captain smiled. "You've noticed. I'm sorry, ch'un tzu, but
I couldn't tell you before. My orders, you understand. However, Shih
Stevens is right. We're heading south. And those below are the
Swiss Wilds." He reached into his tunic and withdrew a folded
handwritten note, handing it to Lever. "Here, this will explain
everything." Lever
unfolded the note and read it quickly. It was from Ebert. Lever
smiled, his fingers tracing the wax seal at the foot of the note,
then looked up again. "And you, Captain? What's your role in
this?" The
officer smiled, then began to unbutton his tunic. He peeled it off
and threw it to one side; then sat down facing the three Americans. "Forgive
the deception, my friends, but let me introduce myself. My name is
Howard DeVore and I'm to be your host for the next eight hours." LEHMANN
SAT at the back of the room, some distance from the others. A huge
viewing screen filled the wall at the far end, while to one side, on
a long, wide table made of real mahogany, a detailed map of City
Europe was spread out, the Swiss Wilds and the Carpathians marked in
red, like bloodstains on the white. DeVore,
Lever, and the others sat in big leather chairs, drinks in hand,
talking. Above them, on the screen, the funeral procession moved
slowly through the walled northern garden at Tongjiang—the Li
family, the seven T'ang, their Generals, and their chief retainers.
Thirty shaven-headed servants followed, the open casket held high
above their heads. DeVore
raised his half-filled glass to indicate the slender, dark-haired
figure in white who led the mourners. "He
carries his grief well. But then he must. It's a quality he'll need
to cultivate in the days ahead." DeVore's
smile was darkly ironic. Beside him, Lever laughed; then he leaned
forward, cradling his empty glass between his hands. "And look
at our friend Hans. A study in solemnity, neh?" Lehmann
watched them laugh, his eyes drawn to the man who sat to the extreme
right of the group. He was much older than Lever and his friends, his
dark hair tied back in two long pigtails. There was a cold elegance
about him that contrasted with the brashness of the others. He was a
proud, even arrogant man; the way he sat, the way he held his head,
expressed that eloquently. Even so, he was their servant, and that
fact bridled his tongue and kept him from being too familiar with
them. His
name was Andrew Curval and he was an experimental geneticist; perhaps
the greatest of the age. As a young man he had worked for GenSyn as a
commodity slave, his time and talents bought by them on a
fifteen-year contract. Twelve years ago that contract had expired and
he had set up his own Company, but that venture had failed after only
three years. Now he was back on contract; this time to Old Man Lever. Lehmann
looked back at the others. Kustow was talking, his deep voice
providing a commentary on the proceedings. He was pointing up at Li
Yuan, there at the center of the screen. "Look
at him! He's such an innocent. He hasn't the faintest idea of how
things really stand." "No,"
Lever agreed. "But that's true of all of them. They're cut off
from the reality of what's happening in the Cities. There's real
dissent down there, real bitterness, and the Seven simply don't know
about it. They're like the Emperors of old: they don't like bad news,
so their servants make sure the truth never gets through to them.
That's bad enough, but as we all know, the system's corrupt to the
core. From the pettiest official to the biggest Minister, there's not
one of them you can't put a price to." The
camera closed in. Li Yuan's face, many times its natural size, filled
the screen. His fine, dark hair was drawn back tightly from his
forehead, secured at the nape of his neck in a tiny porcelain bowl of
purest white. His skin was unmarked, unlined—the flesh of
youth, untouched by time or the ravages of experience. Even
so, he knows, Lehmann thought, looking up into the young T'ang's
eyes. He knows we murdered his father. Or at least suspects. Irritated
by their arrogance, he stood and walked across the room, filling
Lever's glass from the wine kettle. "I think you underestimate
our man," he said quietly. "Look at those eyes. How like
his father's eyes they are. Don't misjudge him. He's no fool, this
one." He turned, looking directly at DeVore. "You've said
so yourself often enough, Howard." "I
agree," said DeVore, eyeing Lehmann sharply. "But there are
things he lacks, things the Seven miss now that Li Shai Tung is dead.
Experience, wisdom, an intuitive sense of when and how to act. Those
things are gone from them now. And without them . . ." He
laughed softly. "Well, without them the Seven are vulnerable." On the
screen the image changed, the camera panning back, the figures
diminishing as the larger context was revealed. A gray stone wall,
taller than a man, surrounded everything. Beyond it the mountains of
the Ta Pa Shan formed faint shapes in the distance. The tomb was to
the left, embedded in the earth, the great white tablet stretching
out toward its open mouth. To the right was the long pool, still,
intensely black, its surface like a mirror. Between stood the seven
T'ang and their retainers, all of them dressed in white, the color of
mourning. "One
bomb," said Kustow, nodding to himself. "Just one bomb and
it would all be over, neh?" He turned in his seat, looking
directly at DeVore. "How do you come by these pictures? I
thought these ceremonies were private?" "They
are," DeVore said, taking a sip from his glass. He leaned
forward, smiling, playing the perfect host, knowing how important it
was for him to win these young men over. "The camera is a
standard Security surveillance device. They're all over Tongjiang.
I've merely tapped into the system." All
three of the Americans were watching DeVore closely now, ignoring
what was happening on the screen. "I
thought those systems were discrete," Lever said. "They
are." DeVore set his drink down on the table at his side, then
took a small device from his pocket and handed it to Lever. "This
was something my friend Soren Berdichev developed at SimFic before
they shut him down. It looks and functions like the backup battery
packs they have on those Security cameras, but there's more to it
than that. What it does is to send a tight beam of information up to
a satellite. There the signal is scrambled into code and rerouted
here, where it's decoded." Lever
studied the device, then handed it to Kustow. He turned, looking back
at DeVore. "Astonishing. But how did you get it into place? I'm
told those palaces are tighter than a young whore's ass when it comes
to security." DeVore
laughed. "That's true. But whatever system you have, it always
relies on men. Individual men. And men can be bought, or won, or
simply threatened. It was relatively easy to get these installed." Lehmann,
watching, saw how that impressed the young men, but it was only half
true. The device worked exactly as DeVore had said, but the truth was
that he had access only to Tbngjiang, and that only because Hans
Ebert had been daring enough to take the thing in, risking the
possibility that an overzealous officer might search him, Tolonen's
favorite or no. Elsewhere his attempts to plant the devices had
failed. They
looked back at the screen. Li Yuan stood at the edge of the family
tablet, the freshly inscribed name of his father cut into the
whiteness there. Behind the young T'ang stood the rest of the Seven,
and at their back the Generals. Bringing up the rear of this small
but powerful gathering stood members of the Li Family— cousins,
uncles, wives, concubines, and close relations, a hundred in all. The
ranks were thin, the weakness of the Family exposed to view, and yet
Li Yuan stood proudly, his eyes looking straight ahead, into the
darkness of the tomb. "All
the trappings of power," said Kustow, shaking his head as if in
disapproval. "Like the Pharaohs, they are. Obsessed with death." Lehmann
studied Kustow a moment, noting the strange mixture of awe and
antagonism in his blunt, almost rectangular face. You admire this,
he thought. Or envy it, rather. Because you, too, would like
to create a dynasty and be buried in a cloth of gold. For
himself, he hated it all. He would have done with kings and
dynasties. They
watched as the casket was carried to the mouth of the tomb. Saw the
six strongest carry it down the steps into the candle-lit interior.
And then the camera focused once more upon Li Yuan. "He's strong
for one so young." They
were the first words Curval had spoken since he had come into the
room. Again Lehmann looked, admiring the manner of the man, his
singleness of being. In his face there was a hard, uncompromising
certainty about things; in some strange way it reminded Lehmann of
Berdichev, or of how Berdichev had become, after his wife's death. On the
screen Li Yuan bowed to the tablet, then turned, making his slow way
to the tomb. "He
looks strong," DeVore said after a moment, "but
there are things you don't know about him. That outward presence of
his is a mask. Inside he's a writhing mass of unstable elements. Do
you know that he killed all his wife's horses?" All
eyes were on DeVore, shocked by the news. To kill horses—it was
unthinkable! "Yes,"
DeVore continued. "In a fit of jealousy, so I understand. So you
see, beneath that calm exterior lies a highly unstable child. Not
unlike his headstrong brother. And a coward too." Lever
narrowed his eyes. "How so?" "Fei
Yen, his brother's wife, is heavily pregnant. Rumor has it that it is
not his child. The woman has been sent home to her father in
disgrace. And they say he knows whose bastard it is. Knows and does
nothing." "I
see," Lever said. "But does that necessarily make the man a
coward?" DeVore gave a short laugh. "If you were married
you would understand it better, Michael. A man's wife, his
child—-these things are more than the world to him. He would
kill for them. Even a relatively passive man. But Li Yuan holds back,
does nothing. That, surely, is cowardice?" "Or
a kind of wisdom?" Lever looked back up at the screen, watching
the young T'ang step down into the darkness. "Forgive me, Shih
DeVore, but I feel your friend here is right. It would not do to
underestimate Li Yuan." "No?" DeVore shrugged. "Even
so," Lever said, smiling, "I take your point. The Seven
have never been weaker than they are right now. And their average age
has never been younger. Why, we're old men by comparison to most of
them!" There was laughter at that. DeVore
studied the three Americans, pleased by Lever's unconscious echo of
his thoughts. It was time. He
raised his hand. At the prearranged signal the screen went dark and a
beam of light shone out from above, spotlighting the table and the
map on the far side of the room. "Ch'un
tzu. . ." DeVore said, rising to his feet, one arm extended,
indicating the table. "You've seen how things stand with the
Seven. How things are now. Well, let us talk of how things might be." Lever
stood, studying DeVore a moment, as if to weigh him, then smiled and
nodded. "All right, Shih DeVore. Lead the way. We're all ears." BACK
INSIDE, Li Yuan drew Wang Sau-leyan aside. "Cousin
Wang," he said softly. "May I speak to you in private? News
has come." Wang
Sau-leyan stared back at him, faintly hostile. "News, Cousin?" Li
Yuan turned slightly to one side, indicating the door to a nearby
room. Wang hesitated, then nodded and went through. Inside, Li Yuan
pulled the doors closed then turned, facing his fellow T'ang. "Your
grain ships . . ." he began, watching Wang Sau-leyan's face
closely. "Yes?"
Wang's expression was mildly curious. "I'm
afraid your ships are at the bottom of the ocean, Cousin. An hour
ago. It seems someone blew them up." Wang's
expression of angry surprise was almost comical. He shook his head as
if speechless; then, unexpectedly, he reached out and held Li Yuan's
arm. "Are you certain, Li Yuan?" Li
Yuan nodded, looking down at the plump, bejeweled hand that rested on
the rough cloth of his sleeve. "It's true. Your Chancellor, Hung
Mien-lo, has confirmed it." Wang
Sau-leyan let his hand fall. He turned his head away, then looked
back at Li Yuan, a strange hurt in his eyes. "I
am so sorry, Li Yuan. So very sorry. The grain was my gift to your
father. My final gift to him." He shook his head, pained. "Oh,
I can spare more grain—and, indeed, you will have it,
Cousin—but that's not the point, is it? Someone destroyed my
gift! My gift to your father!" Li
Yuan's lips parted slightly in surprise. He had not expected Wang to
be so upset, so patently indignant. Nor had he for one moment
expected Wang to offer another shipment. No, he had thought this all
some kind of clever ruse, some way of shirking his verbal obligation.
He frowned, then shook his head, confused. "Your
offer is very generous, Cousin, but you are in no way to blame for
what has happened. Indeed, I understand that the Ping Tiao have
claimed responsibility for the act." "The
Ping Tiao!" Again there was a flash of anger in Wang's face that
took Li Yuan by surprise. "Then the Ping Tiao will pay for their
insult!" "Cousin
. . ." Li Yuan said softly, taking a step closer. "The
matter is being dealt with, I assure you. The insult will not be
allowed to pass." Wang
gave a terse nod. "Thank you, Cousin. I—" There
was a loud knocking on the door. Li Yuan half turned, then looked
back at Wang. "You wished to say ... ?" A
faint smile crossed Wang's features. "Nothing, Cousin. But
again, thank you for telling me. I shall instruct my Chancellor to
send a new shipment at once." Li
Yuan lowered his head. "I am most grateful." Wang
smiled and returned the bow to the precise degree—tacitly
acknowledging their equality of status—then moved past Li Yuan,
pulling the door open. Hans
Ebert stood outside, in full-dress uniform, his equerry three paces
behind him. Seeing Wang Sau-leyan, he bowed low. "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia. I didn't realize . . ." Wang
Sau-leyan smiled tightly. "It is all right, Major Ebert. You may
go in. Your Master and I have finished now." ebert
turned, then, taking a deep breath, stepped into the doorway,
presenting himself. "Chieh
Hsia?" Li
Yuan was standing on the far side of the room, beside the ceremonial
fcang, one foot up on the ledge of it, his right hand stroking his
unbearded chin. He looked across, then waved Ebert in almost
casually. Ebert
marched to the center of the room and came smartly to attention,
lowering his head respectfully, waiting for his T'ang to speak. Li
Yuan sighed, then launched into things without preamble. "These
are troubled times, Hans. The old bonds must be forged stronger than
ever, the tree of state made firm against the storm to come, from
root to branch." Ebert
raised his head. "And my role in this, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan looked down. "Let me explain. Shortly before his death, my
father went to see General Nocenzi in hospital. As you may have
heard, he accepted Nocenzi's resignation. There was no other choice.
But who was to be General in his place?" He paused
significantly. "Well, it was my father's intention to ask
Marshal Tolonen to step down from his post of seniority to be General
again, and he drafted a memorandum to that effect. There were good
reasons for his decision, not least of which was the stability that
the old man's presence would bring to the Security forces. He also
felt that to bring in a loo woi—an outsider—might
cause some resentment. Besides which, it takes some time for a new
General to adapt to his command, and time was something we did not
have." Li
Yuan turned away, silent a moment, then looked back at him. "Don't
you agree, Hans?" Ebert
bowed his head. "It is so, Chieh Hsia. Moreover, there is no one
in all Chung Kuo with more experience than the Marshal. Indeed, I can
think of nobody your enemies would less welcome in the post." He saw
Li Yuan smile, pleased by his words. Even so, his sense of
disappointment was acute. After what Tolonen had said to him earlier
he had hoped for the appointment himself. Li
Yuan nodded, then spoke again. "However, my father's death
changes many things. Our enemies will think us weak just now. Will
think me callow, inexperienced. We need to demonstrate how wrong they
are. Tolonen's appointment as General would certainly help in that
regard, but I must also show them that I am my own man, not merely my
father's shadow. You understand me, Hans?" "I
understand, Chieh Hsia." Only
too well, he thought. Only too well. "Yes
. . ." Li Yuan nodded thoughtfully. "In that we are alike,
neh, Hans? We know what it is to have to wait. To be our fathers'
hands. Yet in time we must become them, and more, if we are to gain
the respect of the world." "It
is so," Ebert said quietly. "Besides
which," Li Yuan continued, "things are certain to get worse
before they get better. In consequence we must grow harder, more
ruthless than we were in the days of ease. In that, Wang Sau-leyan is
right. It is a new age. Things have changed, and we must change with
them. The days of softness are past." Ebert
watched Li Yuan's face as he spoke the words and felt a genuine
admiration for the young T'ang. Li Yuan was much harder, much more
the pragmatist than his father; his ideas about the Wiring Project
were proof of that. But Ebert was too far along his own road now to
let that color his thinking; too deeply committed to his own dream of
inheritance. One
day he would have to kill this man, admire him or not. It was that or
see his own dream die. "Trust,"
Li Yuan said. "Trust is the cornerstone of the state. In that,
as in many things, my father was right. But in an age of violent
change who should the wise man trust? Who can he trust?" Li
Yuan looked back at Ebert, narrowing his eyes. "I'm sorry, Hans.
It's just that I must talk this through. You understand?" Ebert
bowed his head. "I am honored that you feel you can talk so
freely in my presence, Chieh Hsia." Li
Yuan laughed, then grew serious again. "Yes, well... I suppose
it is because I consider you almost family, Hans. Your father was
chief among my Father's counselors since Shepherd's illness and will
remain among my Council of Advisors. However, it is not about your
father that I summoned you today; it is about you." Ebert
raised his head. "Chieh Hsia?" "Yes,
Hans. Haven't you guessed, or have I been too indirect? I want you
for my General—my most trusted man. I want you to serve me as
Tolonen served my father. To be my sword arm and my scourge, the bane
of my enemies, and the defender of my children." Ebert's
mouth had fallen open. "But, Chieh Hsia, I thought. . ." "Oh,
Tolonen is appointed temporarily. As caretaker General. He agreed an
hour ago. But it is you I want to stand behind me at my coronation
three days from now. You who will receive the ceremonial dagger that
morning." Ebert
stared at him, open-mouthed, then fell to his knees, bowing his head
low. "Chieh Hsia, you do me a great honor. My life is yours to
command." He had
rehearsed the words earlier, yet his surprise at Li Yuan's sudden
reversal gave them force. When he glanced up, he could see the
pleasure in the young T'ang's face. "Stand
up, Hans. Please." Ebert
got to his feet slowly, keeping his head bowed. Li
Yuan came closer. "It might surprise you, Hans, but I have been
watching you for some time now. Seeing how well you dealt with your
new responsibilities. It did not escape my notice how loyal your
officers were to you. As for your courage . . ." He reached out
and touched the metal plate on the back of Ebert's head, then moved
back again. "Most important of all, though, you have
considerable influence among the elite of First Level. An important
quality in a General." Li
Yuan smiled broadly. "Your appointment will be posted throughout
the levels, tonight at twelfth bell. But before then I want you to
prepare a plan of action for me." "A
plan, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan nodded. "A plan to eradicate the Ping Tioo. To finish off
what my father began. I want every last one of them dead, a month
from now. Dead and their bodies laid before me." Ebert's
mouth fell open again. Then he bowed his head. But for a moment he
had almost laughed. Eradicate the Ping Tioo? Little did Li Yuan know.
It was done already! And done by Li Yuan's chief enemy, DeVore! Li
Yuan touched his shoulder. "Well... go now, Hans. Go and tell
your father. I know he will be proud. It was what he always wanted." Ebert
smiled, then bowed his head again, surprised by the pride he felt. To
be this man's servant—what was there to be proud of in that?
And yet, strangely enough, he was. He turned to leave, but Li Yuan
called him back. "Oh,
and Hans ... we found the boy." Ebert
turned back, his stomach tightening. "That's excellent, Chieh
Hsia. How was he?" Li
Yuan smiled. "It could not have been better, Hans. He remembered
everything. Everything . . ." DEVORE
TOOK his eye from the lens of the electron-microscope and looked
across at the geneticist, smiling, impressed by what he'd seen. "It's
clever, Shih Curval. Very clever indeed. And does it always
behave like that, no matter what the host?" Curval
hesitated a moment, then reached across DeVore to take the sealed
slide from the microscope, handling it with extreme delicacy. As
indeed he should, for the virus it contained was deadly. He looked
back at DeVore. "If
the host has had the normal course of immunization, then, yes, it
should follow near enough the same evolutionary pattern. There will
be slight statistical variations, naturally, but such 'sports' will
be small in number. For all intents and purposes you could guarantee
a one hundred percent success rate." DeVore
nodded thoughtfully. "Interesting. So, in effect, what we have
here is a bug that evolves—that's harmless when it's first
passed on, but which, in only a hundred generations, evolves into a
deadly virus. A brain-killer." He laughed. "And what's a
hundred generations in the life of a bug?" For
the first time, Curval laughed. "Exactly . . ." DeVore
moved back, letting the scientist pass, his mind reeling with an
almost aesthetic delight at the beauty of the thing. "Moreover,
the very thing that triggers this evolutionary pattern is that which
is normally guaranteed to defend the body against disease—the
immunization program!" "Exactly.
The very thing that all First Level children have pumped into their
systems as six-month fetuses." DeVore
watched him place the sealed slide back into the padded, shock-safe
case and draw another out. "Come
. . . here's another. Slightly different this time. Same principal,
but more specific." DeVore
leaned forward, fascinated. "What do you mean, more specific?" Curval
slipped the slide into the slot, then stood back. "Just watch.
I'll trigger it when you're ready." DeVore
put his eye to the lens. Again he saw the thing divide and grow and
change, like the ever-evolving pattern in a kaleidoscope, but this
thing was real, alive—as alive as only a thing whose
sole purpose was to kill could be. DeVore
looked up. "It looks the same." Curval
looked at him closely. "You noticed no difference then?" DeVore
smiled. "Well, there were one or two small things midway
through. There was a brief stage when the thing seemed a lot bigger
than before. And afterward, there was a slight color change. Then it
normalized. Was the same as before." Curval
laughed. "Good. So you did see." "Yes,
but what did I see?" Curval
took out the slide—not as carefully as before, it seemed—and
put it down on the table beside him. "This
. . ." he tapped it almost carelessly, "is as harmless to
you or I as spring water. We could take in a huge dose of it and it
wouldn't harm us one tiny little bit. But to a Han . . ." DeVore's
eyes widened. Curval
nodded. "That's right. What you saw was the virus priming itself
genetically, like a tiny bacteriological time bomb, making itself
racially specific." DeVore
laughed, then reached across to pick it up. The slide seemed empty,
yet its contents could do untold damage. Not to him or his kind, but
to the Han. He smiled broadly. "Wonderful! That's wonderful!" Curval
laughed. "I thought you'd like it. You know, I had you in mind
constantly while I was making it. I would sit there late nights and
laugh, imagining your reaction." DeVore
looked at him a moment, then nodded. The two had known each other
more than twenty years, ever since their first fateful meeting at one
of Old Man Ebert's parties. Curval had been restless even
then—wanting to break out on his own, burdened by the remaining
years of his contract. It had been DeVore who had befriended him.
DeVore who had found him his first important contacts in City
America. DeVore who had shown him the top-security files detailing
the deals Klaus Ebert had struck with various companies to destroy
CurvaPs own enterprise. DeVore who had arranged the deal whereby he
worked for the Levers and yet had his own private laboratories. And
now Curval was returning the favor. With only one string attached. A
minor thing. DeVore could have the virus, but first he must promise
to kill Old Man Ebert. He had agreed. "Does
Michael know about this?" Curval
smiled. "What do you think? Michael Lever is a nice young man
for all his revolutionary fervor. He wants to change things—but
fairly. He'll fight if he must, but he won't cheat. He'd kill me if
he knew I'd made something like this." DeVore
considered that a while, then nodded. "You're sure of that?"
Curval laughed sourly. "I know that young man too well. He seems
different, but underneath it all he's the same as the rest of them.
They've had it too easy, all of them. What fires them isn't ambition
but a sense of bitterness. Bitterness that their fathers still treat
them as children. For all they were saying back there in the screen
room, they don't want change. Not real change like you and I want.
When they talk of change what they mean is a change of leadership.
They'd as soon relinquish their privileges as the Seven." "Maybe,"
DeVore said, watching Curval pack up the microscope. "By the
way, has the virus a name?" Curval
clicked the case shut and turned, looking back at DeVore. "Yes,
as a matter of fact it does. I've named it after the viral strain I
developed it from. That, too, was a killer, though not as lethal or
efficient as mine. And it was around for centuries before people
managed to find a cure for it. Syphilis, they called it. What the Han
call yang mei ping, 'willow-plum sickness.' " DeVore
laughed, surprised. "So it's sexually transmitted?" Curval
stared at DeVore, then laughed quietly. "Of course! I thought
you understood that. It's the only way to guarantee that it will
spread, and spread widely. Fucking. . . it's the thing the human race
does most of and says least about. And when you consider it, it's the
perfect way of introducing a new virus. After all, they're all
supposed to be immune to sexual disease. From birth." DeVore
touched his tongue against his top teeth, then nodded. Errant
husbands and their unfaithful wives, bored concubines and their
casual lovers, lecherous old men and randy widows, singsong girls and
libertine young sons—he could see it now, spreading like the
leaves and branches of a great tree until the tree itself rotted and
fell. He laughed, then slapped Curval on the back. "YouVe
done well, Andrew. Very well." Curval
looked at him. "And you, Howard? You'll keep your promise?" DeVore
squeezed his shoulder. "Of course. Have I ever let you down? But
come, let's go. Our young friends will be wondering why we've been
gone so long. Besides, I understand our friend Kustow has brought his
wei chi champion with him and I fancied trying myself out
against him." Curval
nodded. "He's good. I've seen him play." DeVore
met his eyes. "As good as me?" Curval
turned and took the tiny, deadly slide from the table. "They say
he might even challenge for the championship next year." DeVore
laughed. "Maybe so, but you still haven't answered me. YouVe
seen me play. Would you say he's as good as me?" Curval
slotted the slide back into the case and secured the lid, then looked
back at DeVore, hesitant, not certain how he'd take the truth. "To
be honest with you, Howard, yes. Every bit as good. And maybe a lot
better." DeVore
turned away, pacing the tiny room, lost in his own thoughts. Then he
turned back, facing Curval again, a smile lighting his face. "Our
friend Kustow ... do you know if he likes to gamble?" devore
looked UP from the board, then bowed to his opponent, conceding the
game. It was the fifth the two had played and the closest yet. This
time he had come within a stone of beating the Han. Even so, the
result of the tournament was conclusive; Kustow's champion had
triumphed five-nothing, two of those games having been won by a
margin of more than twenty stones. "Another
five?" Kustow said, smiling. He had done well by the contest—
DeVore had wagered five thousand yuan on each game and a
further ten thousand on the tournament. DeVore
looked back at him, acknowledging his victory. "I wish there
were time, my friend, but you must be at the Ebert Mansion by nine
and it's six already. I'll tell you what, though. When I come to
America, I'll play your man again. It will give me the opportunity to
win my money back." Lever
leaned forward in his chair. "You plan to come to America, then,
Shih DeVore? Wouldn't that be rather dangerous for you?" DeVore
smiled. "Life is dangerous, Michael. And while it pays to
take care, where would any of us be if we did not take risks?" Lever
looked to his two friends. "True. But one must choose one's
friends well in these uncertain times." DeVore
bowed his head slightly, understanding what was implied. They were
inclined to work with him but had yet to commit themselves fully. He
would need to give them further reasons for allying with him. "And
one's lieutenants. My man Mach, for instance. He served me well in
the attack on the T'ang's plantations." Lever gave a laugh of
surprise. "That was you? But I thought. . ." "You
thought as everyone was meant to think. That it was the Ping Tiao.
But no, they were my men." "I
see. But why? Why not claim credit for yourself?" "Because
sometimes it suits one's purpose to make one's enemies believe the
truth is other than it is. You see, the Ping Tiao is now
defunct. I destroyed the last vestiges of that organization two days
back. Yet as far as the Seven are concerned, it still exists—still
poses a threat to them. Indeed, the new T'ang, Li Yuan, plans to
launch a major campaign against them. He has given instructions to
his new General to use whatever force it takes to destroy them, and
at whatever cost. Such a diversion of funds and energies is to be
welcomed, wouldn't you say?" Lever
laughed. "Yes! And at the same time it draws attention away from
your activities here in the Wilds. I like that." DeVore
nodded, pleased. Here were young men with fire in them. They were not
like their European counterparts. Their anger was pure. It had only
to be channeled. He
stood, and with one final bow to his opponent, came around the table,
facing the three young men. "There's
one more thing before you go from here. Something I want to give
you." Lever
looked to his friends, then lowered his head. "We thank you,
Shih DeVore, but your hospitality has been reward enough." DeVore
understood. Lever was accustomed to the use of gifts in business to
create obligations. It was a trick the Han used a great deal. He
shook his head. "Please, my friends, do not mistake me; this
gift carries no obligation. Indeed, I would feel greatly offended if
you took it otherwise. I am no trader. I would not dream of seeking
any material advantage from our meeting. Let this be a simple token
of our friendship, neh?" He
looked to each of them; to Lever, Kustow, and finally to Stevens,
seeing how each had been won by the simplicity of his manner. "Good.
Then wait here. I have it in the other room." He
left them, returning a moment later with a bulky, rectangular parcel
wrapped in red silk. "Here,"
he said, handing it to Lever. "You are to open it later—on
the flight to Ebert's if you must, but later. And whatever you
finally decide to do with it, bear in mind that great sacrifices have
been made to bring this to you. Let no one see it who you do not
trust like a brother." Lever
stared at the parcel a moment, his eyes burning with curiosity, then
looked up again, smiling. "IVe
no idea what this is, but I'll do as you say. And thank you, Howard.
Thank you for everything. You must be our guest when you come to
America." DeVore
smiled. "That's kind of you, Michael. Very kind indeed." "Well,
Stefan, what do you think?" Lehmann
stood there a moment longer at the one-way mirror, then turned back,
looking at DeVore. He had witnessed everything. "The
contest. . . You lost it deliberately, didn't you?" DeVore
smiled, pleased that Lehmann had seen it. "I
could have beaten him. Not at first, maybe, but from the third game
on. There's a pattern to his game. That's the way it is with these
Americans. There's a pattern to their thinking and I feel as if I'm
beginning to discern it. Which is why I have to go there myself.
Europe is dead as far as we're concerned. WeVe milked it dry. If we
want to complete the fortresses, we've got to get funds from the
Americans. WeVe got to persuade them to invest in us—to make
them see us as the means | by which they can topple the Seven." "And
Curval? You promised him you'd kill Old Man Ebert. Is that wise?" DeVore
laughed. "If the gods will it that the old man dies in the next
six months, he will die, and I will claim the credit. But I shall do
nothing to aid them. I have no great love for Klaus Ebert—I
think he's a pompous old windbag, to tell the truth— but he is
Hans's father. Kill him and we risk all. No, we will leave such
things to fate. And if Curval objects . . ." He laughed. "Well,
we can deal with that as and when, neh? As and when." CHAPTER
EIGHT
Mirrors IT
WAS NIGHT. Li Yuan stood on the bridge, staring down into the lake,
watching the full moon dance upon the blackness. Tongjiang was quiet
now, the guests departed. Guards stood off at a distance, perfectly
still, like statues in the silvered darkness. It had
been a long and busy day. He had been up at four, supervising the
final arrangements for his father's funeral, greeting the mourners as
they arrived. The ceremony had taken up the best part of the morning,
followed by an informal meeting of the Seven. Interviews with
ministers and various high officials had eaten up the rest of the
afternoon as he began the task of tying up the loose strands of his
father's business and making preparations for his own coronation
ceremony three days hence. And other things. So many other things. He
felt exhausted, yet there was still more to do before he retired. He
turned, looking back at the palace, thinking how vast and desolate it
seemed without his father's presence. There was only him now—only
Li Yuan, second son of Li Shai Tung. The last of his line. The last
of the house of Li. A
faint wind stirred the reeds at the lake's edge. He looked up, that
same feeling of exposure—that cold, almost physical sense of
isolation—washing over him again. Where were the brothers, the
cousins he should have had? Dead, or never born. And now there was
only him. A thin
wisp of cloud lay like a veil across the moon's bright face. In the
distance a solitary goose crossed the sky, the steady beat of its
wings carrying to where he stood. He
shivered. Today he had pretended to be strong; had made his face
thick, like a wall against his inner feelings. And so it had to be,
from this time on, for he was T'ang now, his life no longer his own.
All day he had been surrounded by people— countless
people, bowing low before him and doing as he bid—and yet he
had never felt so lonely. No,
never in his life had he felt so desolate, so empty. He
gritted his teeth, fighting back what he felt. Be strong, he told
himself. Harden yourself against what is inside you. He took a deep
breath, looking out across the lake. His father had been right. Love
was not enough. Without trust— without those other qualities
that made of love a solid and substantial thing—love was a
cancer, eating away at a man, leaving him weak. And he
could not be weak, for he was T'ang now, Seven. He must put all human
weakness behind him. Must mold himself into a harder form. He
turned away, making his way quickly down the path toward the palace. At the
door to his father's rooms he stopped, loath to go inside. He looked
down at the ring that rested, heavy and unfamiliar, on the first
finger of his right hand, and realized that nothing could have
prepared him for this. His father's death and the ritual of burial
had been momentous occasions, yet neither was quite as real as this
simpler, private moment. How
often had he come in from the garden and found his father sitting at
his desk, his secretaries and ministers in attendance? How often had
the old man looked up and seen him, there where he now stood, and
with a faint, stern smile, beckoned him inside? And
now there was no one to grant him such permission. No one but
himself. Why,
then, was it so difficult to take that first small step into the
room? Why did he feel an almost naked fear at the thought of sitting
at the desk—of looking back at where he now was standing? Perhaps
because he knew the doorway would be empty. Angry
with himself, he took a step into the room, his heart hammering in
his chest as if he were a thief. He laughed uncomfortably as he
looked about him, seeing it all anew. It was
a long, low-ceilinged room, furnished in the traditional manner, his
father's desk, its huge scrolled legs shaped like dragons, raised up
on a massive plinth at the far end of the chamber, a low,
gold-painted balustrade surrounding it, like a room within a room,
the great symbol of the Ywe Lung set into the wall behind.
Unlike his own, it was a distinctly masculine room, no hanging bowls,
no rounded pots filled with exotic plants breaking up its rich yang
heaviness; indeed, there was not a single trace of greenery, only
vases and screens and ancient wall hangings made of silk and golden
thread. He
moved further in, stopping beside a huge bronze cauldron. It was
empty now, but he recalled when it had once contained a thousand tiny
objects carved from jade; remembered a day when he had played there
on his father's floor, the brightly colored pieces—exquisite
miniatures in blue and red and green—scattered all about him.
He had been four then, five at most, but still he could see them
vividly, * could feel the cool, smooth touch of them between his
fingers. He
turned. On the wall to his right was a mirror, an ancient metallic
mirror of the T'ang Dynasty, its surface filled with figures and
lettering arrayed in a series of concentric circles emanating outward
from the central button. Li Yuan moved closer, studying it. The
button—a simple unadorned circle—represented the
indivisibility of all created things. Surrounding it were the animals
of the Four Quadrants: the Tiger, symbol of the west and of
magisterial dignity, courage, and martial prowess; the Phoenix,
symbol of the south and of beauty, peace, and prosperity; the Dragon,
symbol of the east, of fertility and male vigor; and the Tortoise,
symbol of the north, of longevity, strength, and endurance. Beyond
these four were the Eight Trigrams and surrounding those the Twelve
Terrestrial Branches of the zodiac—rat, ox, and tiger; hare,
dragon and serpent; horse, goat, and monkey; cock, dog, and boar. A
band of twenty-four pictograms separated that from the next circle of
animals—twenty-eight in all—representing the
constellations. He
looked past the figures a moment, seeing his face reflected back at
him through the symbols and archetypes of the Han universe. Such a
mirror was hu hsin ching and was said to have magic powers,
protecting its owner from evil. It was also said that one might see
the secrets of futurity in such a mirror. But he had little faith in
what men said. Why, he could barely see his own face, let alone the
face of the future. He
turned his head away, suddenly bitter. Mirrors: they were said to
symbolize conjugal happiness, but his own was broken now, the pieces
scattered. He
went across to the desk. Nan Ho had been in earlier to prepare it for
him. His father's things had been cleared away and his own put in
their place—his inkblock and brushes, his sandbox and the tiny
statue of Kuan Ti, the god of war, which his brother, Han Ch'in, had
given him on his eighth birthday. Beside those were a small pile of
folders and one large, heavy-bound book, its thick spine made of red
silk decorated with a cloud pattern of gold leaf. Mounting
the three small steps he stood with his hands resting on the low
balustrade, his head almost brushing the ceiling, looking across at
the big, tall-backed chair. The great wheel of seven dragons—the
Yuie Lung or Moon Dragon— had been burned into the back
of the chair, black against the ochre of the leather, mirroring the
much larger symbol on the wall behind. This chair had been his
father's and his father's father's before that, back to his
great-great-great-grandfather in the time of Tsao Ch'un. And
now it was his. Undoing
the tiny catch, he pushed back the gate and entered this tiny
room-within-a-room, conscious of how strange even that simple action
felt. He looked about him again, then lowered himself into the chair.
Sitting there, looking out into the ancient room, he could feel his
ancestors gathered close: there in the simple continuity of place,
but there also in each small movement that he made. They
lived, within him. He was their seed. He understood that now. Had
known it even as they had placed the lid upon his father's casket. He
reached across and drew the first of the folders from the pile.
Inside was a single sheet from Klaus Ebert at GenSyn, a document
relinquishing thirteen patents granted in respect of special
food-production techniques. Before his father's death, Ebert had
offered to release the patents to his competitors to help increase
food production in City Europe. They were worth an estimated
two-hundred-and-fifty million yuan on the open market, but
Ebert had given them freely, as a gift to his T'ang. Li
Yuan drew the file closer, then reached across and took his brush,
signing his name at the bottom of the document. He set
the file aside and took another from the pile. It was the summary of
the post-mortem report he had commissioned on his father. He read it
through, then signed it and set it atop the other. Nothing. They had
found nothing. According to the doctors, his father had died of old
age. Old age and a broken heart. Nonsense, he thought. Utter
nonsense. He
huffed out his impatience, then reached across for the third file,
opening it almost distractedly. Then, seeing what it was, he sat
back, his mouth gone dry, his heart beating furiously. It was the
result of the genotyping test he had had done on Fei Yen and her
child. He
closed his eyes, in pain, his breathing suddenly erratic. So now he
would know. Know for good and certain who the father was. Know to
whom he owed the pain and bitterness of the last few months. He
leaned forward again. It was no good delaying. No good putting off
what was inevitable. He drew the file closer, forcing himself to read
it; each word seeming to cut and wound him. And then it was done. He
pushed the file away and sat back. So ... For a
moment he was still, silent, considering his options, then reached
across, touching the summons bell. Almost
at once the door to his right swung back. Nan Ho, his Master of the
Inner Chamber, stood there, his head bowed low. "Chieh Hsia?" "Bring
ch'a, Master Nan. I need to talk." Nan Ho
bobbed his head. "Should I send for your Chancellor, Chieh
Hsia?" "No, Master Chan, it is you I wish to speak
with." "As you wish, Chieh Hsia." When
he had gone, Li Yuan leaned across and drew a large, heavy-bound book
toward him. A stylized dragon and phoenix—their figures drawn
in gold—were inset into the bright-red silk of the cover.
Inside, on the opening page was a handwritten quotation from the Li
Chi, the ancient Book of Rites, the passage in the original
Mandarin. The
point of marriage is to create a union between two persons of
different families, the object of which is to serve first the
ancestors in the temple and second,
the generation to come. He
shivered. So it was. So it had always been among his kind. Yet he had
thought it possible to marry for love. In so doing he had betrayed
his kind. Had tried to be what he was not. For he was Han. Han to the
very core of him. He recognized that now. But it
was not too late. He could begin again. Become what he had failed to
be. A good Han, leaving all ghosts of other selves behind. He
flicked through the pages desultorily, barely seeing the faces that
looked up at him from the pages. Here were a hundred of the most
eligible young women selected from the Twenty-Nine, the Minor
Families. Each one was somewhat different from the rest, had some
particular quality to recommend her, yet it was all much the same to
him. One thing alone was important now—to marry and have sons.
To make the family strong again, and fill the emptiness surrounding
him. For
anything was better than to feel like this. Anything. He
closed the book and pushed it away, then sat back in the chair,
closing his eyes. He had barely done so when there was a tapping on
the door. "Chieh
Hsia?" "Come!"
he said, sitting forward again, the tiredness like salt in his blood,
weighing him down. Nan Ho
entered first, his head bowed, the tray held out before him. Behind
him came the she t'ou—the "tongue," or taster.
Li Yuan watched almost listlessly as Nan Ho set the ch'a things
down on a low table, then poured, offering the first bowl to the she
t'ou. The
man sipped, then offered the bowl back, bowing gracefully, a small
smile of satisfaction crossing his lips. He waited a minute, then
turned to Li Yuan and bowed low, kneeling, touching his head against
the floor before he backed away. Nan Ho
followed him to the door, closing it after him; then he turned,
facing Li Yuan. "Shall
I bring your ch'a up to you, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan smiled. "No, Nan Ho. I will join you down there." He
stood, yawning, stretching the tiredness from his bones, then leaned
forward, picking up the heavy-bound volume. "Here,"
he said, handing it to Nan Ho, ignoring the offered bowl. Nan Ho put
the bowl down hastily and took the book from his T'ang. "You
have decided, then, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan stared at Nan Ho a moment, wondering how much he knew—whether
he had dared look at the genotyping—then, dismissing the
thought, he smiled. "No, Master Nan. I have not decided. But you
will." Nan Ho looked back at him, horrified. "Chieh
Hsial" "You
heard me, Master Nan. I want you to choose for me. Three wives, I
need. Good, strong, reliable women. The kind that bear sons. Lots of
sons. Enough to fill the rooms of this huge, empty palace." Nan Ho
bowed low, his face a picture of misery. "But Chieh Hsia ...
It is not my place to do such a thing. Such responsibility. . ."
He shook his head and fell to his knees, his head pressed to the
floor. "I beg you, Chieh Hsia. I am unworthy for such a task." Li
Yuan laughed. "Nonsense, Master Nan. If anyone, you are the very
best of men to undertake such a task for me. Did you not bring Pearl
Heart and Sweet Rose to my bed? Was your judgment so flawed then? No!
So, please, Master Nan, do this for me, I beg you." Nan Ho
looked up, wide-eyed. "Chieh Hsia . . . you must not say such
things! You are T'ang now." "Then
do this thing for me, Master Nan," he said tiredly. "For I
would be married the day after my coronation." Nan Ho
stared at him a moment longer, then bowed his head low again,
resigned to his fate. "As my Lord wishes." "Good.
Now let us drink our ch'a and talk of other things. Was I mistaken or
did I hear that there was a message from Hal Shepherd?" Nan Ho
put the book down beside the table, then picked up Li Yuan's bowl,
turning back and offering it to him, his head bowed. "Not
Hal, Chieh Hsia, but his son. Chung Hu-yan dealt with the
matter." "I see. And did the Chancellor happen to say what
the message was?" Nan Ho hesitated. "It was ... a picture,
Chieh Hsia." "A picture? You mean, there were no words? No
actual message?" "No, Chieh Hsia." "And
this picture—what was in it?" "Should I bring it,
Chieh Hsia?" "No. But describe it, if you can." Nan Ho
frowned. "It was odd, Chieh Hsia. Very odd indeed. It was
of a tree—or rather, of twin apple trees. The two were closely
intertwined, their trunks twisted about each other; yet one of the
trees was dead, its leaves shed, its branches broken and rotting.
Chung Hu-yan set it aside for you to look at after your coronation."
He averted his eyes. "He felt it was not something you would
wish to see before then." Like
the gift of stones his father had tried to hide from him—the
white u>ei chi stones DeVore had sent to him on the day he
had been promised to Fei Yen. Li
Yuan sighed. For five generations the Shepherds had acted as advisors
to his family. Descended from the original architect of the City,
they lived beyond its walls, outside its laws. Only they, in all
Chung Kuo, stood equal to the Seven. "Chung Hu-Yan acted as he
felt he ought, and no blame attaches to him; but in future any
message—worded or otherwise—that comes from the Shepherds
must be passed directly to me, at once, Master Nan. This picture—you
understand what it means?" "No, Chieh Hsia." "No.
And neither, it seems, does Chancellor Chung. It means that Hal
Shepherd is dying. The tree was a gift from my father to him. I must
go and pay my respects at once." "But, Chieh Hsia . . ." Li
Yuan shook his head. "I know, Master Nan. I have seen my
schedule for tomorrow. But the meetings will have to be cancelled.
This cannot wait. He was my father's friend. It would not do to
ignore such a summons, however strangely couched." "A
summons, Chieh Hsial" "Yes, Master Nan. A summons." He
turned away, sipping at his ch'a. He did not look forward to seeing
Hal Shepherd in such a state, yet it would be good to see his son
again; to sit with him and talk. A faint, uncertain smile came to his
lips. Yes, it would be good to speak with him, for in truth he needed
a mirror just now: someone to reflect him back clearly to himself.
And who better than Ben Shepherd? Who better in all Chung Kuo? THE
MAN staggered past him, then leaned against the wall unsteadily, his
head lowered, as if drunk. For a moment he seemed to lapse out of
consciousness, his whole body hanging loosely against his
outstretched arm, then he lifted his head, stretching himself
strangely, as if shaking something off. It was only then that Axel
realized what he was doing. He was pissing. Axel
looked away, then turned back, hearing the commotion behind him. Two
burly-looking guards—Han, wearing the dark green of GenSyn, not
the powder-blue of Security—came running across, batons drawn,
making for the man. They
stood on either side of the man as he turned, confronting him. "What
the fuck you think you do?" one of them said, prodding him
brutally, making him stagger back against the wall. He was
a big man, or had been, but his clothes hung loosely on him now. They
were good clothes, too, but like those of most of the people gathered
there, they were grime-ridden and filthy. His face, too, bore
evidence of maltreatment. His skin was blotched, his left eye almost
closed, a dark, yellow-green bruise covering the whole of his left
cheek. He stank, but again that was not uncommon, for most were
beggars here. He
looked back at the guards blearily, then lifted his head in a
remembered but long-redundant gesture of pride. "I'm
here to see the General," he said uncertainly, his pride leaking
from him slowly until his head hung once again. "You know . . ."
he muttered, glancing up apologetically, the muscle in his cheek
ticking now. "The handout... I came for that. It was on the
newscast. I heard it. Come to this place, it said, so I came." The
guard who had spoken grunted his disgust. "You shit bucket,"
he said quietly. "You fucking shit bucket. What you think you up
to, pissing on the T'ang's walls?" Then, without warning, he hit
out with his baton, catching the beggar on the side of the head. The
man went down, groaning loudly. As he did, the two guards waded in,
standing over him, striking him time and again on the head and body
until he lay still. "Fucking
shit bucket!" the first guard said as he stepped back. He
turned, glaring at the crowd that had formed around him. "What
you look at? Fuck off! Go on! Fuck off! Before you get same!" He
raised his baton threateningly, but the message had gotten through
already. They had begun to back off as soon as he had turned. Axel
stood there a moment longer, tensed, trembling with anger, then
turned away. There was nothing he could do. Nothing, at least, that
would not land him in trouble. Two he could have handled, but there
were more than fifty of the bastards spread out throughout the hall,
jostling whoever got in their way and generally making themselves as
unpleasant as they could. He knew the type. They thought themselves
big men—great fighters, trained to take on anything—but
most of them had failed basic training for Security or had been
recruited from the plantations, where standards were much lower. In
many cases their behavior was simply a form of compensation for the
failure they felt at having to wear the dark green of a private
security force and not the imperial blue. He
backed away, making his way through the crowd toward the end of the
hall, wondering how much longer they would be forced to wait. They
had started lining up three hours ago, the corridors leading to the
main transit packed long before Axel had arrived. For a brief while
he had thought of turning back—even the smell of the mob was
enough to make a man feel sick—but he had stayed, determined to
be among the two thousand "fortunates" who would be let
into the grounds of the Ebert Mansion for the celebrations. He had
dressed specially. Had gone out and bought the roughest, dirtiest
clothes he could lay his hands on. Had put on a rough workman's hat—a
hard shell of dark plastic, like an inverted rice bowl—and
dirtied his face. Now he looked little different from the rest. A
beggar. A shit-bucket bum from the lowest of the levels. He
looked about him, his eyes traveling from face to face, seeing the
anger there and the despair, the futility and the incipient madness.
There was a shiftiness to their eyes, a pastiness to their
complexions, that spoke of long years of deprivation. And they were
thin, every last one of them; some of them so painfully
undernourished that he found it difficult to believe that they were
still alive, still moving their wasted, fragile limbs. He stared at
them, fascinated, his revulsion matched by a strong instinctive pity
for them; for many, he knew, there had been no choice. They had
fallen long before they were born, and nothing in this world could
ever redeem them. In that he differed. He, too, had fallen, but for
him there had been a second chance. Lowering
his head, he glanced at the timer at his wrist, keeping it hidden
beneath the greasy cuff of his jacket. It was getting on toward
midnight. They would have to open the gates soon, surely? Almost
at once he felt a movement in the crowd, a sudden surge forward, and
knew the gates had been opened. He felt himself drawn forward, caught
up in the crush. Hei
were manning the barriers, the big GenSyn half-men herding the
crowd through the narrow gates. Above the crowd, on a platform to one
side, a small group of Han officials looked on, counting the people
as they went through. Past
the gates, crush barriers forced the crowd into semi-orderly lines,
at the head of which more officials—many of them masked against
the stench and the possibility of disease—processed the
hopeful. As
movement slowed and the crush grew more intense, he heard a great
shouting from way back and knew the gates had been closed, the quota
filled. But he was inside. The
pressure on him from all sides was awful, the stink of unwashed
bodies almost unbearable; but he fought back his nausea, reminding
himself why he was there. To bear witness. To see for himself the
moment when Hans Ebert was declared General-Elect. As he
passed through the second barrier, an official drew him aside and
tagged his jacket with an electronic trace, then thrust a slice of
cake and a bulb of drink into his hands. He shuffled on, looking
about him, seeing how the others crammed their cake down feverishly
before emptying the bulb in a few desperate swallows. He tried a
mouthful of the cake, then spat it out. It was hard, dry, and
completely without flavor. The drink was little better. Disgusted, he
threw them down, and was immediately pushed back against the wall as
those nearby fought for what he had discarded. The
big transit lift was just ahead of them now. Again Hei herded
them into the space, cramming them in tightly, until Axel felt his
breath being forced from him. Like the others surrounding him, he
fought silently, desperately, for a little space— pushing out
with his elbows, his strength an asset here. The
doors closed, the huge elevator—used normally for goods, not
people— began
its slow climb up the levels. As it did, a voice sounded overhead,
telling them that they must cheer when the masters appeared on the
balcony; that they would each receive a five-^uan coin if they
cheered loud enough. "The
cameras will be watching everyone," the voice continued. "Only
those who cheer loudly will get a coin." The
journey up-level seemed to last an eternity. Two hundred and fifty
levels they climbed, up to the very top of the City. Coming
out from the transit was like stepping outside into the open.
Overhead was a great, blue-black sky, filled with moonlit cloud and
stars, the illusion so perfect that for a moment Axel caught his
breath. To the right, across a vast, landscaped park, was the Ebert
Mansion, its imposing facade lit up brilliantly, the great balcony
festooned with banners. A human barrier of Hei prevented them from
going that way—the brute, almost porcine faces of the guards
lit grotesquely from beneath. All around him people had slowed,
astonished by the sight, their eyes wide, their mouths fallen open;
but masked servants hurried them on, ushering them away to the left,
into an area that had been fenced off with high transparent barriers
of ice. They
stumbled on, only a low murmur coming from them now, most of them
awed into silence by the sight of such luxury, intimidated by the
sense of openness, by the big sky overhead. But for Axel, shuffling
along slowly in their midst, it reminded him of something else—of
that day when he and Major DeVore had called upon Representative
Lehmann at his First Level estate. And he knew, almost without
thinking it, that there was a connection between the two. As if such
luxury bred corruption. Stewards
herded them down a broad gravel path and out into a large space in
front of the Mansion. Here another wall barred their way, the
translucent surface of it coated with a nonreflective substance that
to the watching cameras would make it seem as if there were no
wall—no barrier—between the Eberts and the cheering
crowd. As the
space filled up, he noticed the stewards going out into the crowd,
handing out flags and streamers—the symbols of GenSyn and the
Seven distributed equally—before positioning themselves at
various strategic points. Turning, he sought out one of the stewards
and took a banner from him, aiming to conceal himself behind it when
the cheering began. It was unlikely that Hans Ebert would study the
film of his triumph that closely, but it was best to take no chances. He
glanced at his timer. It was almost twelve. In a few moments ... The
stewards began the cheering, turning to encourage the others standing
about them. "Five yuanl" they shouted. "Only
those who shout will get a coin!" As the
Eberts stepped out onto the balcony, the cheering rose to a
crescendo. The cameras panned about the crowd, then focused on the
scene on the balcony again. Klaus Ebert stood there in the
foreground, a broad beam of light settling on him, making his hair
shine silver-white, his perfect teeth sparkle. "Friends!"
he began, his voice amplified to carry over the cheering. "A
notice has been posted throughout our great City. It reads as
follows." He turned and took a scroll from his secretary, then
turned back, clearing his throat. Below, the noise subsided as the
stewards moved among the crowd, damping down the excitement they had
artificially created. Ebert
opened out the scroll, then began. "I,
Li Yuan, T'ang designate of Ch'eng Ou Chou, City Europe,
declare the appointment of Hans Joachim Ebert, currently Major in my
Security services, as Supreme General of my forces, this appointment
to be effective from midday on the fifteenth day of September in the
year two thousand two-hundred'and-seven." He stepped back,
beaming with paternal pride. There
was a moment's silence and then a ragged cheer went up, growing
stronger as the stewards whipped the crowd into a fury of enthusiasm. Up on
the balcony, Hans Ebert stepped forward, his powder-blue uniform
immaculate, his blond hair perfectly groomed. He grinned and waved a
hand as if to thank them for their welcome, then stepped back,
bowing, all humility. Axel,
watching from below, felt a wave of pure hatred pass through him. If
they knew—if they only knew all he had done. The cheating and
lying and butchery; the foulness beneath the mask of perfection. But
they knew nothing. He looked about him, seeing how caught up in it
they suddenly were. They had come for the chance of food and drink
and for the money, but now that they were here their enthusiasm was
genuine. Up there they saw a king—a man so high above them that
to be at such proximity was a blessing. Axel saw the stewards look at
each other and wink, laughing, sharing the joke, and he felt more
sick than he had ever felt among the unwashed masses. They, at least,
did not pretend that they were clean. One could smell what they were.
But Ebert? Axel
looked past the fluttering banner, saw how Ebert turned to talk to
those behind him, so at ease in his arrogance, and swore again to
bring him low. To pile the foul truth high, burying his flawless
reputation. He
shuddered, frightened by the sheer intensity of what he felt; knowing
that if he had had a gun and the opportunity, he would have tried to
kill the man, right there and then. Up on the balcony, the Eberts
turned away, making their way back inside. As the doors closed behind
them the lights went down, leaving the space before the Mansion in
darkness. The
cheering died. Axel threw the banner down. All about him the crowd
was dispersing, making for the barriers. He turned, following them,
then stopped, looking back. Was it that? Was it excess of luxury that
corrupted a man? Or were some men simply bom evil and others good? He
looked ahead, looked past the barriers to where small knots of
beggars had gathered. Already they were squabbling, fighting each
other over the pittance they had been given. As he came closer he saw
one man go down and several others fall on him, punching and kicking
him, robbing him of the little he had. Nearby the guards looked on,
laughing among themselves. Laughing...
He wiped his mouth, sickened by all he'd seen, then pushed past the
barrier, ignoring the offered coin. INSIDE
THE MANSION the celebrations were about to begin. At the top of the
great stairway, Klaus Ebert put his arm about his son's shoulders and
looked out across the gathering that-filled the great hall below. "My
good friends!" he said, then laughed. "What can 1 say? 1 am
so full of pride! My son . . ." He
drew Hans closer and kissed his cheek, then looked about him again,
beaming and laughing, as if he were drunk. "Come,
Father," Hans said in a whisper, embarrassed by his father's
sudden effusiveness. "Let's get it over with. I'm faint with
hunger." Klaus
looked back at him, smiling broadly, then laughed, squeezing his
shoulder again. "Whatever you say, Hans." He turned back,
putting one arm out expansively. "Friends! Let us not stand on
formalities tonight. Eat, drink, be merry!" They
made their way down the stairs, father and son, joining the crowd
gathered at the foot. Tolonen was among those there, lean and elegant
in his old age, his steel-gray hair slicked back, the dress uniform
of General worn proudly for the last time. "Why,
Knut," Klaus Ebert began, taking a glass from a servant, "I
see you are wearing Hans's uniform!" Tolonen
laughed. "It is but briefly, Klaus. I am just taking the creases
out of it for him!" There
was a roar of laughter at that. Hans smiled and bowed, then looked
about him. "Is Jelka not here?" Tolonen
shook his head. "I'm afraid not, Hans. She took an injury in her
practice session this morning. Nothing serious—only a
sprain—but the doctor felt she would be better off resting. She
was most disappointed, I can tell you. Why, she'd spent two whole
days looking for a new dress to wear tonight!" Hans
lowered his head respectfully. "I am sorry to hear it,
Father-in-Law. I had hoped to dance with her tonight. But perhaps you
would both come here for dinner—soon, when things have
settled." Tolonen
beamed, delighted by the suggestion. "That would be excellent,
Hans. And it would make up for her disappointment, I am sure." Hans
bowed and moved on, circulating, chatting with all his father's
friends, making his way slowly toward a small group on the far side
of the hall, until, finally, he came to them. "Michael!"
he said, embracing his old friend. "Hans!"
Lever held Ebert to him a moment, then stood back. They had been
classmates at Oxford in their teens, before Lever had gone on to
Business College and Ebert to the Academy. But they had stayed in
touch all this time. Ebert
looked past his old friend, smiling a greeting to the others. "How
was your journey?" "As
well as could be expected!" Lever laughed, then leaned closer.
"When in the gods' names are they going to improve those things,
Hans? If you've any influence with Li Yuan, make him pass an
amendment to the Edict to enable them to build something more
comfortable than those transatlantic rockets." Ebert
laughed, then leaned closer. "And my friend? Did you enjoy his
company?" Lever
glanced at his companions, then laughed. "I can speak for us all
in saying that it was a most interesting experience. I would never
have guessed . . ." Ebert
smiled. "No. And let's keep it that way, neh?" He turned,
looking about him, then took Lever's arm. "And his gift?" Lever's
eyes widened. "You knew about that?" "Of
course. But come. Let's go outside. It's cool in the garden. We can
talk as we go. Of Chung Kuo and Ta Ts'in and dreams of empire." Lever
gave a soft laugh and bowed his head. "Lead on ..." ITWASJUST
after four when the last of the guests left the Ebert Mansion. Hans,
watching from the balcony, stifled a yawn, then turned, and went back
inside. He had not been drinking and yet he felt quite drunk—buoyed
up on a vast and heady upsurge of well-being. Things had never been
better. That very evening his father had given over a further sixteen
companies to him, making it almost a quarter of the giant GenSyn
empire that he now controlled. Life, at last, was beginning to open
to him. Earlier he had taken Tolonen aside to suggest that his
marriage to Jelka be brought forward. At first, the old man had
seemed a little put out, but then when Hans had spoken of the sense
of stability it would bring him, Tolonen had grown quite keen—almost
as if the idea had been his own. Ebert
went down the stairs and out into the empty hall, standing there a
moment, smiling, recollecting Tolonen's response. "Let
me speak to her," Tolonen had said, as he was leaving. "After
the coronation, when things have settled a little. But I promise you,
Hans, I'll do my best to persuade her. After all, it's in no one's
interest to delay, is it?" No, he
thought. Especially not now. At least, not now that they had come to
an arrangement with the Americans. He
went out and said good night to his father and mother, then came
back, running across the hall and out through the back doors into the
garden. The night seemed fresh and warm and for the briefest moment
he imagined himself outside, beneath a real moon, under a real sky.
Well, maybe that would happen soon. In a year, two years perhaps.
When he was King of Europe. On the
ornamental bridge he slowed, looking about him. He felt a great
restlessness in his blood; an urge to do something. He thought of the
mui tsai, but for once his restlessness was pure,
uncontaminated by a sense of sexual urgency. No, it was as if he
needed to go somewhere, do something. All of this waiting—for
his inheritance, his command, his wife—seemed suddenly a
barrier to simple being. Tonight he wanted to be, to
do. To break heads or ride a horse at breakneck speed. He
kicked out, sending gravel into the water below, watching the ripples
spread. Then he moved on, jumping down the steps to the path and
vaulting up onto the balcony above. He turned, looking back. A
servant had stopped, watching him. Seeing Ebert turn, he moved on
hurriedly, his head bowed, the huge bowl he held making slopping
sounds in the silence. Ebert
laughed. There were no heads to break, no horses here to ride. So
maybe he would fuck the mui tsai anyway. Maybe that would
still his pulse and purge the restlessness from his system. He
turned, making his way along to his suite of rooms. Inside he began
to undress, unbuttoning his tunic. As he did so, he went over to the
comset and touched in the code. He
turned away, throwing his tunic down on a chair, then tapped on the
inner door. At once a servant popped his head around the door. "Bring
the mui tsai to my room; then go. I'll not need you any more tonight,
Lo Wen." The
servant bowed and left. Ebert turned back, looking at the screen.
There were a great number of messages for once, mainly from friends
congratulating him on his appointment. But among them was one he had
been expecting. DeVore's. He
read it through and laughed. So the meeting with the Americans had
gone well. Good. The introduction was yet another thing DeVore owed
him for. What's more, DeVore wanted him to do something else. He
smiled, then sat down, pulling off his boots. Slowly, by small
degrees, DeVore was placing himself in his debt. More and more he had
come to rely on him—for little things at first, but now for
ever larger schemes. And that was good. For he would keep account of
all. There
was a faint tapping at the inner door. He
turned in the chair, looking across. "Come in," he said
softly. The
door slid back. For a moment she stood there, naked, looking in at
him, the light behind her. She was so beautiful, so wonderfully made
that his penis grew hard simply looking at her. Then she came across,
fussing about him, helping him with the last few items of his
clothing. Finished,
she looked up at him from where she knelt on the floor in front of
him. "Was your evening good, Master?" He
pulled her up onto his lap, then began to stroke her neck and
shoulders, looking up into her dark and liquid eyes, his blood
inflamed now by the warmth of her flesh against his own. "Never
better, Sweet Flute. Never in my whole life better." DEVORt
slipped the vial back into its carrying case, sealed the lid, and
handed ii^to Lehmann. "Don't
drop it, Stefan, whatever else you do. And make sure that Hans knows
what to do with it. He knows it's coming, but he doesn't properly
know what it is. He'll be curious, so it's best if you tell him
something, if only to damp down his curiosity." The
albino slipped the cigar-shaped case into his inner pocket, then
fastened his tunic tight. "So what should I say?" DeVore
laughed. "Tell him the truth for once. Tell him it kills Han.
He'll like that." Lehmann
nodded, then bowed and turned away. He
watched Lehmann go, then took his furs from the cupboard in the
comer. It was too late now to sleep. He would go hunting instead.
Yes, it would be good to greet the dawn on the open mountainside. DeVore
smiled, studying himself in the mirror as he pulled on his furs;
then, taking his crossbow from the rack on the wall, he went out,
making his way toward the old tunnels, taking the one that came out
on the far side of the mountain beside the ruins of the ancient
castle. As he
walked along he wondered, not for the first time, what Lever had made
of the gift he'd given him. The
Aristotle File. A copy of Berdichev's original, in his own
handwriting. The true history of Chung Kuo. Not the altered and
sanitized version the Han peddled in their schools, but the truth,
from the birth of Western thought in Aristotle's Yes/No logic, to the
splendors of space travel, mass communications, and artificial
intelligence systems. A history of the West systematically erased by
the Han. Yes, and that was another kind of virus. One, in its own
way, every bit as deadly for the Han. DeVore
laughed, his laughter echoing down the tunnel. All in all it had been
a good day. And it was going to get better. Much better. IT was
EXACTLY ten minutes past five when the scouts moved into place on the
mountainside, dropping the tiny gas pellets into the base's
ventilation outlets. At the entrance to the hangar, four masked men
sprayed ice-eating acids onto the snow-covered surface of the doors.
Two minutes later, Karr, wearing a mask and carrying a lightweight
air cannister, kicked his way inside. He
crossed the hangar at a quick march, then ran down the corridor
linking it to the inner fortress, his automatic searching this way
and that, looking for any sign of resistance; but the colorless,
odorless gas had done its work. Guards lay slumped in several places.
They would have had no chance to issue any kind of warning. He
glanced down at his wrist timer, then turned, looking back.
Alreadythe first squad was busy, binding and gagging the unconscious
defenders before the effects of the gas wore off. Behind them a
second squad was coming through, their masked faces looking from side
to side, double-checking as they came along. He
turned back, pushing on, hyper-alert now, knowing that it would not
be long before he lost the advantage of surprise. There
were four elevators spaced out along a single broad corridor. He
stared at them a moment, then shook his head. A place like this, dug
deep into the mountainside, would be hard to defend unless one
devised a system of independent levels, and of bottlenecks linking
them—bottlenecks that could be defended like the barbican in an
ancient castle, the killing ground. So here. These lifts—
seemingly so innocuous—were their barbican. But unlike in a
castle there would be another way into the next level of the
fortress. There had to be, because if the power ever failed, they had
to have some way of ensuring that they still got air down in the
lower tunnels. There
would be shafts. Ventilation shafts. As above. Karr
turned and beckoned the squad leader over. "Locate
the down shafts. Then I want one man sent down each of them straight
away. They're to secure the corridors beneath the shafts while the
rest of the men come through. Understand?" The
young lieutenant bowed, then hurried away, sending his men off to do
as Karr had ordered. He was back a moment later. "They're
sealed, Major Karr." "Well?
Break the seals!" "But
they're alarmed. Maybe even boobytrapped." Karr
grunted, impatient now. "Show me!" The
shaft was in a tiny corridor leading off what seemed to be some kind
of storeroom. Karr studied it a moment, noting its strange
construction; then, knowing he had no alternative, he raised his fist
and brought it down hard. The seal cracked but didn't break. He
struck it again, harder this time, and it gave, splintering into the
space below. Somewhere
below he could hear a siren sounding, security doors slamming into
place. "Let's
get moving. They know we're here now. The sooner we hit them the
better, neh?" He
went first, bracing himself against the walls of the narrow tunnel as
he went down, his shoulders almost too wide for the confined space.
Others followed, almost on top of him. Some
five ch'i above the bottom seal he stopped and brought his gun
around, aiming it down between his legs. He opened fire. The seal
shattered with a great upward hiss of air, tiny splinters thrown up
at him. He
narrowed his eyes, then understood. The separate levels were kept at
different pressures, which meant there were air locks. But why? What
were they doing here? He scrambled down, then dropped. As he hit the
floor he twisted about. A body lay to one side of the shaft's exit
point, otherwise the corridor was empty. It was
a straight stretch of corridor, sixty ch'i long at most,
ending in a T-junction at each end. There were no doors, no windows,
and as far as he could make out, no cameras. Left
or right? If the ground plan followed that of the level above, the
lifts would be somewhere off to the left, but he didn't think it
would be that simple. Not if Devore had designed this place. Men
were jumping down behind him, forming up either side, kneeling, their
weapons raised to their shoulders, covering both ends of the
corridor. Last
down was the squad leader. Karr quickly dispatched him off to the
left with six men, while he went right with the rest. He had
not gone more than a dozen paces when there was a loud clunk and a
huge metal fire door began to come down. From
the yells behind him, he knew at once that the same was happening at
the other end of the corridor. No cameras, eh? How could he have been
so naive! He
ran, hurling himself at the diminishing gap, half sliding, half
rolling beneath the door just before it slammed into the floor. As he
thudded into the end wall he felt his gun go clattering away from
him, but there was no time to think of that. As he came up from the
floor the first of them was on him, slashing down with a knife the
length of his forearm. Karr
blocked the blow and counterpunched, feeling the man's jaw shatter.
Behind him, only a few paces off, a second guard was raising his
automatic. Kan-ducked, using the injured guard as a shield, thrusting
his head into the man's chest as he began to fall, pushing him upward
and back, into the second man. Too
late, the guard opened fire, the shells ricocheting harmlessly off
the end wall as he stumbled backwards. Karr
kicked him in the stomach, then stood over him, chopping down
savagely, finishing him off. He stepped back, looking about him. His
gun was over to the right. He picked it up and ran on, hearing voices
approaching up ahead. He
grinned fiercely. The last thing they would expect was a single man
coming at them. Even so, it might be best to give himself some
additional advantage. He looked up. As he'd thought, they hadn't
bothered to set the pipework and cabling into the rock, but had
simply secured it to the ceiling of the tunnel with brackets. The
brackets looked firm enough—big metallic things—but were
they strong enough to bear his weight? There
was only one way to find out. He tucked his gun into his tunic and
reached up, pulling himself up slowly. Bringing his legs up, he
reached out with his boots to get a firmer grip. So far so good. If
he could hold himself there with his feet and one hand, he would be
above them when they came into view. The rest should be easy. They
were close now. At any moment they would appear at the end of the
corridor. Slowly he drew the gun from his tunic, resting the stock of
it against his knee. There!
Four of them, moving quickly but confidently, talking among
themselves, assuming there was no danger. He let them come on four,
five paces, then squeezed the trigger. As he
opened fire, the bracket next to his feet jerked, then came away from
the wall. At once a whole section of cabling slewed toward him, his
weight dragging it down. Along the whole length of the ceiling the
securing brackets gave, bringing down thick clouds of rock and
debris. Karr
rolled to one side, freeing himself from the tangle, bringing his gun
Up to his chest. Through the dust he could see that two of them were
down. They lay still, as if dead, pinned down by the cables. A third
was getting up slowly, groaning, one hand pressed to the back of his
head where the cabling had struck him. The fourth was on his feet,
his gun raised, looking straight at Karr. There
was the deafening noise of automatic fire. Shells hammered into the
wall beside him, cutting into his left arm and shoulder, but he was
safe. His own fire had ripped into the guards an instant earlier,
throwing them backward. Karr
got up slowly, the pain in his upper arm intense, the shoulder wound
less painful but more awkward. The bone felt broken—smashed
probably. He crouched there a moment, feeling sick, then straightened
up, gritting his teeth, knowing there was no option but to press on.
It was just as it had been in the Pit all those years ago. He had a
choice. He could go on and he could live, or he could give up and let
himself be killed. A
choice? He laughed sourly. No, there had never really been a choice.
He had always had to fight. As far back as he could remember, it had
always been the same. It was the price for being who he was, for
living where he'd lived, beneath the Net. He
went on, each step jolting his shoulder painfully, taking his breath.
The gun was heavy in his right hand. Designed for two-handed use, its
balance was wrong when used one-handed, the aim less certain. Surprise.
It was the last card left up his sleeve. Surprise and sheer audacity. He was
lucky. The guard outside the control room had his back to Karr as he
came out into the main corridor. There was a good twenty ch'i between
them, but his luck held. He was on top of the man before he realized
he was there, smashing the stock of the gun into the back of his
head. As the
man sank to his knees, Karr stepped past him into the doorway and
opened fire, spraying the room with shells. It was messy—not
the way he'd normally have done it—but effective. When his gun
fell silent again, there were six corpses on the floor of the room. One
wall had been filled with a nest of screens, like those they'd found
in the Overseer's House in the plantation. His gunfire had destroyed
a number of them, but more than three-quarters were still
functioning. He had the briefest glimpse of various scenes, showing
that fighting was still going on throughout the fortress, and then
the screens went dead, the overhead lights fading. He
turned, listening for noises in the corridor, then turned back,
knowing his only hope was to find the controls that operated the
doors and let his men into this level. He
scanned the panels quickly, cursing the damage he'd done to them,
then put his gun down beside a keyboard inset into the central panel.
Maybe this was it. The
keyboard was unresponsive to his touch. The screen stayed blank.
Overhead a red light began to flash. Karr grabbed his gun and backed
out. Just in time. A moment later a metal screen fell into place,
sealing off the doorway. What
now? Karr
turned, looking to his left. It was the only way. But did it lead
anywhere? Suddenly he had a vision of DeVore sitting somewhere,
watching him, laughing as he made his way deeper and deeper into the
labyrinth he had built; knowing that all of these tunnels led
nowhere. Nowhere but into the cold, stone heart of the mountain. He
shuddered. The left side of his tunic was sodden now, the whole of
his left side warm, numb yet tingling, and he was beginning to feel
lightheaded. He had lost a lot of blood and his body was suffering
from shock, but he had to go on. It was too late now to back off. He
went on, grunting with pain at every step, knowing he was close to
physical collapse. Every movement pained him, yet he forced himself
to keep alert, moving his head from side to side, his whole body
tensed against a sudden counterattack. Again
his luck held. The long corridor was empty, the rooms leading off
deserted. But did it go anywhere? Karr
slowed. Up ahead the wall lighting stopped abruptly, but the tunnel
went on, into the darkness. He
turned, looking back, thinking he'd heard something, but there was
nothing. No one was following him. But how long would it be before
someone came? He had to keep going on. Had
to. He
thpw off4iis mask, pulled the heat-sensitive glasses down over his
eyes, and went on\ After
a while the tunnel began to slope downward. He stumbled over the
first of the steps and banged his damaged shoulder against the wall.
For a moment he crouched there, groaning softly, letting the pain
ease, then went on, more careful now, pressing close to the
right-hand wall in case he fell. At
first they were not so much steps as broad ledges cut into the rocky
floor, but soon that changed as the tunnel began to slope more
steeply. He went on, conscious of the sharp hiss of his breathing in
the silent darkness. Partway
down he stopped, certain he had made a mistake. The wall beside him
was rough, as if crudely hacked from the rock. Moreover, the dank,
musty smell of the place made him think that it was an old tunnel,
cut long before DeVore's time. For what reason he couldn't guess, but
it would explain the lack of lighting, the very crudeness of its
construction. He
went on, slower now, each step an effort, until, finally, he could go
no further. He sat, shivering, his gun set down beside him in the
darkness. So
this was it? He laughed painfully. It was not how he had expected to
end his days—in the cold, dank darkness at the heart of a
mountain, half his shoulder shot away—but if this was what the
gods had fated, then who was he to argue? After all, he could have
died ten years ago, had Tolonen not bought out his contract; and they
had been good years. The very best of years. Even
so, he felt a bitter regret wash over him. Why now? Now that he had
found Marie. It made no sense. As if the gods were punishing him. And
for what? For arrogance? For being bom the way he was? No ... it made
no sense. Unless the gods were cruel by nature. He
pulled the heat-sensitive glasses off, then leaned back a little,
seeking some posture in which the pain would ease; but it was no
good. However he sat, the same fierce, burning ache seized him again
after a few moments, making him feel feverish, irrational. What
then? Go back? Or go on, ever down? The
question was answered for him. Far below he heard a heavy rustling
noise, then the sharp squeal of an unoiled door being pushed back.
Light spilled into the tunnel. Someone was coming up, hurriedly, as
if pursued. He
reached beside him for his gun, then sat back, the gun lying across
his lap, its barrel facing down toward the light. It was
too late now to put his glasses back on, but what the hell? Whoever
it was, he had the light behind him, while Karr sat in total
darkness. Moreover, he knew someone was coming, while the other man
had no idea Karr was there. The advantages were all his. Even so, his
hand was trembling so badly now that he wondered if he could even
pull the trigger. Partway
up the steps the figure stopped, moving closer to the right-hand
wall. There
was a moment's banging, then it stopped, the figure turning toward
him again. It sniffed the air, then began to climb the steps, slower
now, more cautiously, as if it sensed his presence. Up it came,
closer and closer, until he could hear the steady pant of its breath,
not twenty ch'i below. New.'
he thought, but his fingers were dead, the gun a heavy weight in his
lap. He
closed his eyes, awaiting the end, knowing it was only a matter of
time. Then he heard it. The figure had stopped; now it was moving
back down the steps. He heard it try the lock again and opened his
eyes. For a
moment his head swam, then, even as his eyes focused, the door below
creaked open, spilling light into the dimly lit passageway. Karr
caught his breath, praying the other wouldn't turn and see him there.
Yet even as the figure disappeared within, he recognized the profile. DeVore.
It had been DeVore. CHAPTER
NINE
The Temple of Heaven THE
TOWER was built into the side of the mountain; a small, round
two-story building, dominated by a smooth, gray overhang of rock.
Beneath it only the outlines of ancient walls remained, huge
rectangles laid out in staggered steps down the mountainside, the low
brickwork overgrown with rough grasses and alpine flowers. Lehmann
stood at the edge of the ruins, looking out across the broad valley
toward the east. There was nothing human here; nothing but the sunlit
mountains and, far below, the broad stretch of the untended meadows
cut by a slow-moving river. Looking at it, he could imagine it
remaining so a thousand years, while the world beyond the mountains
tore itself apart. And so
it would be. Once the disease of humanity had run its course. He
looked across. On the far side of the valley bare rock fell half a li
to the green of the valley floor, as if a giant had cut a crude
path through the mountains. Dark stands of pine crested the vast wall
of rock; then as the eye traveled upward, that, too, gave way—to
snow and ice and, finally, to the clear, bright blue of the sky. He
shivered. It was beautiful. So beautiful it took his breath away. All
else—all art, however fine—was mere distraction compared
to this. This was real. Was like a temple. A temple to the old gods.
A temple of rock and ice, of tree and stream, thrown up into the
heavens. He
turned, looking back at Reid. The man was standing by the tower,
hunched into himself, his furs drawn tight about him as if unaware of
the vast mystery that surrounded him. Lehmann shook his head, then
went across. It was
only a hunch, but when he had seen the Security craft
clustered on the slopes, his first thought had been of the old
tunnel. He'll be there, he'd thought. Now, an hour later, he wasn't
quite so sure. "What
are we doing?" Reid asked anxiously. He, too, had seen the
extent of the Security operation; had seen the rows of corpses
stretched out in the snow. Lehmann
stared back at him a moment, then climbed the narrow path to the
tower. The doorway was empty. He went inside and stood looking about
him. The tower was a shell, the whole thing open to the sky, but the
floor was much newer. The big planks there looked old, but that was
how they were meant to look. At most they were ten years old. Reid
came and stood there in the doorway, looking in at him. "What is
this? Are we going to camp here until they've gone?" Lehmann
shook his head, then turned and came out, searching the nearby slope.
Then, with a grunt of satisfaction, he crouched down, parting the
spiky grasses with his gloved hands. "Here,"
he said. "Give me a hand." Reid
went across. It was a hatch of some kind. An old-fashioned circular
metal plate less than a ch'i in circumference. There were two
handles set into either side of the plate. Lehmann took one, Reid the
other. Together they heaved at the thing until it gave. Beneath
was a shallow shaft. Lehmann leaned inside, feeling blindly for
something. "What
are you doing?" Reid asked, looking out past him, afraid that a
passing Security craft would spot them. Lehmann
said nothing, simply carried on with his search. A moment later he
sat back, holding something in his hand. It looked like a knife. A
broad, flat knife with a circular handle. Or a spike of some kind. Lehmann
stood, then went back to the tower. He
went inside and crouched down, setting the spike down at his side.
Groaning with the effort, he pushed one of the planks back tight
against the far wall, revealing a small depression in the stonework
below, its shape matching that of the spike perfectly. Lehmann hefted
the spike a moment, then slotted it into the depression. Reid,
watching from the open doorway, laughed. It was a key. Lehmann
stepped back into the doorway. As he did so there was a sharp click
and the whole floor began to rise, pushing up into the shell of the
tower, until it stopped two ch'i above their heads. It was
an elevator. Moreover, it was occupied. Reid made a small sound of
surprise, then bowed his head hurriedly. It was DeVore. "About
time!" DeVore said, moving out past the two men, his face livid
with anger. "Another hour and they'd have had me. I could hear
them working on the seal at the far end of the tunnel." "What
happened?" Lehmann asked, following DeVore out into the open. DeVore
turned, facing him. "Someone's betrayed us! Sold us down the
fucking river!" Lehmann
nodded. "They were Security," he said. "The craft I
saw were Special Elite. That would mean orders from high up, wouldn't
you say?" There
was an ugly movement in DeVore's face. His incarceration in the
tunnel had done nothing for his humor. "Ebert! But what's the
bastard up to? What game's the little fucker playing now?" "Are
you sure it's him?" DeVore
looked away. "No. I can't see what he'd gain from it. But who
else could it be? Who else knows where we are? Who else could hit me
without warning?" "So
what are you going to do?" DeVore
laughed sourly. "Nothing. Not until I've spoken to the little
weasel. But if he hasn't got a bloody good explanation, then he's
dead. Useful or not, he's dead, hear me?" HAL
SHEPHERD turned his head, looking up at the young T'ang, his eyes wet
with gratitude. "Li
Yuan . . . I'm glad you came." His
voice was thin, almost transparently so, matching perfectly the face
from which it issued; a thin-fleshed, ruined face that was barely
distinguishable from a skull. It pained Li Yuan to see him like this.
To see all the strength leeched from the man and death staring out
from behind his eyes. "Ben
sent me a note," he said gently, almost tenderly. "But you
should have sent for me before now. I would have spared the time. You
know I would." The
ghost of a smile flickered on Shepherd's lips. "Yes. You're like
Shai Tung in that. It was a quality I much admired in him." It
took so long for him to say the words—took such effort—that
Li Yuan found himself longing for him to stop. To say nothing. Simply
to lie there, perhaps. But that was not what Shepherd wanted. He knew
his death lay but days ahead of him, and now that Li Yuan was here,
he wanted his say. Nor was it in Li Yuan's heart to deny him. "My
father missed you greatly after you returned here. He often remarked
how it was as if he had had a part of him removed." Li Yuan
looked aside, giving a small laugh. "You know, Hal, I'm not even
sure it was your advice he missed, or simply your voice." He
looked back, seeing how the tears had formed again in Shepherd's
eyes, and found his own eyes growing moist. He looked away, closing
his eyes briefly, remembering another time, in the long room at
Tongjiang, when Hal had shown him how to juggle. How, with a laugh,
he had told him that it was the one essential skill a ruler needed.
So he always was—part playful and part serious, each game of
his making a point, each utterance the distillation of a wealth of
unspoken thought. He had been the very best of Counselors to his
father. In that the Li family had always been fortunate, for who else
among the Seven could draw from such a deep well as they did with the
Shepherds? It was what gave them their edge. Was why the other
Families always looked to Li for guidance. But
now that chain was broken. Unless he could convince Hal's son
otherwise. He
looked back at Shepherd and saw how he was watching him, the eyes
strangely familiar in that unrecognizably wasted face. "I'm
not a pretty sight, I realize, Yuan. But look at me. Please. I have
something important to say to you." Li
Yuan inclined his head. "Of course, Hal. I was . . .
remembering." "I
understand. I see it all the time. In Beth. You grow accustomed to
such things." Shepherd
hesitated, a brief flicker of pain passing across his face; then he
went on, his voice a light rasp. "Well...
let me say it simply. Change has come, Yuan, like it or not. Now you
must harness it and ride it like a horse. I counseled your father
differently, I know, but things were different then. Much has
changed, even in this last year. You must be ruthless now.
Uncompromising. Wang Sau-leyan is your enemy. I think you realize
that. But do not think he is the only one who will oppose you. What
you must do will upset friend as well as foe, but do not shrink from
it merely because of that. No. You must steer a hard course, Yuan. If
not, there is no hope. No hope at all." Hal
lay there afterward, quiet, very still, until Yuan realized that he
was sleeping. He sat, watching him a while. There was nothing
profound in what Hal had said; nothing he had not heard a thousand
times before. No. What made it significant was that it was Hal who
had said it. Hal, who had always counseled moderation, even during
the long War with the Dispersionists. Even after they had seeded him
with the cancer that now claimed him. He sat
there until Beth came in. She looked past him, seeing how things
were, then went to the drawer and fetched another blanket, laying it
over him. Then she turned, looking at Li Yuan. "He's
not. . . ?" Li Yuan began, suddenly concerned. Beth
shook her head. "No. He does this often now. Sometimes he falls
asleep in mid-sentence. He's very weak now, you understand. The
excitement of your coming will have tired him. But please, don't
worry about that. We're all pleased that you came, Li Yuan." Li
Yuan looked down, moved by the simplicity of her words. "It was
the least I could do. Hal has been like a father to me." He
looked up again, meeting her eyes. "You don't know how greatly
it pains me to see him like this." She
looked away, only a slight tightening of her cheek muscles revealing
how much she was holding back. Then she looked back at him, smiling. "Well.
. . let's leave him to sleep, eh? I'll make some ch'a." He
smiled, then gave the smallest bow, understanding now why his father
had talked so much about his visit here. Hal's pending death or no,
there was contentment here. A balance. And
how could he find that for himself? For the wheel of his own life was
broken, the axle shattered. He
followed her out down the narrow twist of steps, then stood staring
out through the shadows of the hallway at the garden—at a
brilliant square of color framed by the dark oak of the doorway. He
shivered, astonished by the sight; by the almost hallucinatory
clarity of what could be seen within that frame. It was as if, in
stepping through, one might enter another world. Whether it was
simply a function of the low ceiling and the absence of windows
inside and the contrasting openness of the garden beyond he could not
say, but the effect took away his breath. It was like nothing he had
ever seen. The light seemed embedded in the darkness, like a lens. So
vivid it was. As if washed clean. He went toward it, his lips parted
in wonder, then stopped, laughing, putting his hand against the warm
wood of the upright. "Ben?" The
young man was to the right, in the kitchen garden, close by the
hinged door. He looked up from where he was kneeling at the edge of
the path, almost as if he had expected Li Yuan to appear at that
moment. "Li
Yuan . . ." Li
Yuan went across and stood there over him, the late morning sunlight
warming his neck and shoulders. "What are you doing?" Ben
patted the grass beside him. "I'm playing. Won't you join me?" Li
Yuan hesitated, then, sweeping his robes beneath him, knelt at Ben's
side. Ben
had removed a number of the rocks from the border of the flower beds,
exposing the dark earth beneath. Its flattened surface was
crisscrossed with tiny tunnels. On the grass beside him lay a long
silver box with rounded edges, like an overlong cigar case. "What's
that?" Li Yuan asked, curious. Ben
laughed. "That's my little army. I'll show you in a while. But
look. It's quite extensive, isn't it?" The
maze of tiny tunnels spread out several ch'i in each
direction. "It's
part of an ants' nest," Ben explained. "Most of it's down
below, under the surface. A complex labyrinth of tunnels and levels.
If you could dig it out in one big chunk it would be huge. Like a
tiny city." "I
see," said Li Yuan, surprised by Ben's interest. "But what
are you doing with it?" Ben
leaned forward slightly, studying the movement in one of the tracks.
"They've been pestering us for some while. Getting in the sugar
jar and scuttling along the back of the sink. So Mother asked me to
deal with them." "Deal
with them?" Ben
looked up. "Yes. They can be a real nuisance if you don't deal
with them. So I'm taking steps to destroy their nest." Li
Yuan frowned, then laughed. "I don't understand, Ben. What do
you do—use acid or something?" Ben
shook his head. "No. I use these." He picked up the silver
case and handed it across to the young T'ang. Li
Yuan opened the case and immediately dropped it, moving back from it
sharply. "It's
all right," Ben said, retrieving the case. "They can't
escape unless I let them out." Li
Yuan shivered. The box was full of ants—big, red,
brutal-looking things; hundreds of them, milling about menacingly. "You
use them?" Ben
nodded. "Amos made them. He based them on polyergus—Amazon
ants. They're a soldier caste, you see. They go into other ants'
hives and enslave them. These are similar, only they don't enslave,
they simply destroy." Li
Yuan shook his head slowly, horrified by the notion. "They're
a useful tool," Ben continued. "I've used them a lot out
here. We get new nests every year. It's a good thing Amos made a lot
of these. I'm forever losing half a dozen or so. They get clogged up
with earth and stop functioning or occasionally the real ants fight
back and take them apart. Usually, however, they encounter very
little resistance. They're utterly ruthless, you see. Machines,
that's all they are. Tiny, super-efficient little machines. The
perfect gardening tool." Ben
laughed, but the joke was lost on Li Yuan. "Your
father tells me I must be ruthless." Ben
looked up from the ants and smiled. "It was nothing you didn't
know." Li
Yuan looked back at Ben. As on the first occasion they had met—the
day of his engagement to Fei Yen—he had the feeling of being
with his equal, of being with a man who understood him perfectly. "Ben?
Would you be my Counselor? My Chief Advisor? Would you be to me what
your father was to my father?" Ben
turned, looking out across the bay, as if to take in his
surroundings, then he looked back at Li Yuan. "I
am not my father, Li Yuan." "Nor
I mine." "No."
Ben sighed and looked down, tilting the case, making the ants run
this way and that. There was a strange smile on his lips. "You
know, I didn't think it would tempt me, but it does. To try it for a
while. To see what it would be like." He looked up again. "But
no, Li Yuan. It would simply be a game. My heart wouldn't be in it.
And that would be dangerous, don't you think?" Li
Yuan shook his head. "You're wrong. Besides, I need you, Ben.
You were bred to be my helper, my advisor . . ." He
stopped, seeing how Ben was looking at him. "I
can't be, Li Yuan. I'm sorry, but there's something else I have to
do. Something more important." Li
Yuan stared at him, astonished. Something more important? How could
anything be more important than the business of government? "You
don't understand," Ben said. "I knew you wouldn't. But you
will. It may take twenty years, but one day you'll understand why I
said no today." "Then
I can't persuade you?" Ben
smiled. "To be your Chief Advisor—to be what my father was
to Li Shai Tung—that I can't be. But I'll be your sounding
board if you ever need me, Li Yuan. You need only come here. And we
can sit in the garden and play at killing ants, neh?" Li
Yuan stared back at him, not certain whether he was being gently
mocked, then let himself relax, returning Ben's smile. "All
right. I'll hold you to that promise." Ben
nodded. "Good. Now watch. The best bit is always at the start.
When they scuttle for the holes. They're like hounds scenting blood.
There's something pure— something utterly pure—about
them." Li
Yuan moved back, watching as Ben flipped back the transparent cover
to the case, releasing a bright red spill. They fell like sand onto
the jet-black earth, scattering at once into the tiny tracks, the
speed at which they moved astonishing. And then they were gone, like
blood-soaked water drained into the thirsty earth, seeking out their
victims far below. It was
as Ben had said; there was something pure—something quite
fascinating—about them. Yet at the same time they were quite
horrifying. Tiny machines, they were. Not ants at all. He shuddered.
What in the gods' names had Amos Shepherd been thinking when he made
such things? He looked at Ben again. "And
when they've finished . . . what happens then?" Ben
looked up at him, meeting his eyes. "They come back. They're
programmed to come back. Like the Hei you use beneath the Net. It's
all the same, after all. All very muchvthe same." hans
EBERT sat back in his chair, his face dark with anger. "Karr
did what!" Scott
bowed his head. "It's all here, Hans. In the report." "Report?"
Ebert stood and came around the desk, snatching the file from the
Captain. He opened it, scanning it a moment, then looked back at
Scott. "But
this is to Tolonen." Scott
nodded, "I took the liberty of making a copy. I knew you'd be
interested." "You did, eh?" Ebert took a breath, then
nodded. "And DeVore?" "He got away. Karr almost had
him, but he slipped through the net." Ebert swallowed, not
knowing what was worse, DeVore in Karr's hands or DeVore loose and
blaming him for the raid. He had
barely had time to consider the matter when his equerry appeared in
the doorway. "There's
a call for you, sir. A Shih Beattie. A business matter, I
understand." He felt his stomach tighten. Beattie was DeVore. "Forgive
me, Captain Scott. I must deal with this matter rather urgently. But
thank you. I appreciate your prompt action. I'll see that you do not
go unrewarded for your help." Scott
bowed and left, leaving Ebert alone. For a moment he sat, steeling
himself, then leaned forward. "Patch
Shih Beattie through." He sat
back, watching as the screen containing DeVore's face tilted up from
the desk's surface, facing him. He had never seen DeVore so angry.
"What the fuck are you up to, Hans?" Ebert
shook his head. "I heard only five minutes ago. Believe me,
Howard." "Crap! You must have known something was going on.
You've got your finger on the pulse, haven't you?" Ebert
swallowed back his anger. "It wasn't me, Howard. I can
prove it wasn't. And I didn't know a fucking thing until just now.
All right? Look . . ." He held up the file, turning the opening
page so that it faced the screen. DeVore was silent a moment,
reading, then he swore. "You
see?" Ebert said, glad for once that Scott had acted on his own
initiative. "Tolonen ordered it. Karr carried it out. Tsu Ma's
troops were used. I was never, at any stage, involved." DeVore
nodded. "All right. But why? Have you asked yourself that yet,
Hans? Why were you excluded from this?" Ebert
frowned. He hadn't considered it. He had just assumed that they had
done it because he was so busy preparing to take over the
generalship. But now that he thought about it, it was odd. Very odd
indeed. Tolonen, at the very least, ought to have let him know that
something was going on. "Do you think they suspect some kind of
link?" DeVore
shook his head. "Tolonen would not have recommended you, and Li
Yuan certainly wouldn't have appointed you. No, this has to do with
Karr. I'm told his men were poking about the villages recently. I was
going to deal with that, but they've preempted me." "So
what do we do?" DeVore
laughed. "That's very simple. You'll be General in a day or so.
Karr, instead of being your equal, will be your subordinate." Ebert
shook his head. "That's not strictly true. Karr is Tolonen's
man. He always was. He took a direct oath to the old man when he
joined Security eleven years ago. He's only technically in my
command." "Then
what about that friend of his. Kao Chen? Can't you start
court-martial proceedings against him?" Ebert
shook his head, confused. "Why? What will that achieve?" "They're
close. Very close, so I've heard. If you can't get at Karr, attack
his friends. Isolate him. I'm sure you can rig up enough evidence to
convict the Han. You've got friends who would lie for you, haven't
you, Hans?" Hans
laughed. More than enough. Even so, he wasn't sure he wanted to take
on Karr. Not just yet. "Isn't
there an alternative?" "Yes.
You might have Karr killed. And Tolonen, too, while you're at it." "Kill
Tolonen?" Ebert sat forward, startled by the suggestion. "But
he's virtually my father-in-law!" "So?
He's dangerous. Can't you see that, Hans? He almost had me killed
last night. And where would we have been then, eh? Besides, what if
he discovers the link between us? No, Hans, this is no time to play
Shih Conscience. If you don't have him killed, I will." Ebert
sat back, a look of sour resignation on his face. "All right. I
take your point. Leave it with me." "Good.
And Hans . . . congratulations. You'll make a good General. A very
good General." Ebert
sat there afterward, thinking back on what had been said between
them. To kill Karr; he could think of nothing more satisfying or—when
he considered it—more difficult. In contrast, having Tolonen
killed would be all too easy, for the old man trusted him implicitly. He
understood DeVore's anger—understood and even agreed with the
reasons he had given—yet the thought of killing the old man
disturbed him. Oh, he had cursed the old man often enough for a fool,
but he had never been treated badly by him. No, Tolonen had been like
a father to him these past years. More of a father than his own. At
some level he rather liked the old dog. Besides, how could he marry
Jelka, knowing he had murdered her father? He
stood, combing his fingers back through his hair, then came out from
behind his desk. And
yet, if he didn't, DeVore would. And that would place him at a
disadvantage in his dealings with the Major. Would place him in his
debt. He laughed bitterly. In reality there was no choice at all. He
had to have Tolonen killed. To keep the upper hand. And to
demonstrate to DeVore that, when it came to these matters, he had the
steel in him to carry through such schemes. He
paused, contemplating the map. Beginning tomorrow, all this was his
domain. Across this huge continent he was the arbiter, the final
word, speaking with the T'ang's tongue. Like a prince, trying out the
role before it became his own. There was a tapping on the door behind
him. He turned. "Come!" It was the Chancellor, Chung
Hu-yan. "What is it, Chung? You look worried." Chung
held out a sheaf of papers to him, the great seal of the T'ang of
Europe appended to the last of them. "What are these?" Chung
shook his head, clearly flustered. "They are my orders for the
coronation ceremony tomorrow, Major Ebert. They outline the protocol
I am to follow." Ebert
frowned. "So what's the problem? You follow protocol. What is
unusual in that?" "Look!"
Chung tapped the first sheet. "Look at what he wants them all to
do." Ebert read the passage Chung was indicating, then looked up
at him, wide-eyed. "He wants them to do that?" Chung
nodded vigorously. "I tried to see him, this morning, but he is
not at the palace. And the rehearsal is to be in an hour. What shall
I do, Major Ebert? Everyone who is to be there tomorrow is
attending—the very cream of the Above. They are bound to feel
affronted by these demands. Why, they might even refuse." Ebert
nodded. It was a distinct possibility. Such a ritual had not been
heard of since the tyrant Tsao Ch'un's time, and he had modeled it
upon the worst excesses of the Ch'ing dynasty—the Manchu. "I
feel for you, Chung Hu-yan, but we are our masters' hands, neh? And
the T'ang's seal is on that document. My advice to you is to follow
it to the letter." Chung Hu-yan stared at the sheaf of papers a
moment longer, then quickly furled them and with a bow to Ebert,
turned, hurrying away. Ebert watched him go, amused by how ruffled
the normally implacable Chancellor was. Even so, he had to admit to a
small element of unease on his own account. What Li Yuan was asking
for was a radical departure from the traditional ceremony and there
was bound to be resentment, even open opposition. It would be
interesting to see how he dealt with that. Very interesting indeed. THE
BIG man mounted the steps, pressing his face close to the
Chancellor's, ignoring the guards who hurried to intercede. "Never!"
he said, his voice loud enough to carry to the back of the packed
hall. "I'd as soon cut off my own bollocks as agree to that!" There
was laughter at that, but also a fierce murmur of agreement. They had
been astonished when Chung Hu-yan had first read Li Yuan's
instructions to them. Now their astonishment had turned to outrage. Chung
Hu-yan waved the guards back, then began again. "Your T'ang
instructs you—" but his words were drowned out by a roar
of disapproval. "Instructs
us?" the big man said, turning now, looking back into the hall.
"By what right does he instruct us?" "You
must do as you are told," Chung Hu-yan began again, his voice
quavering. "These are the T'ang's orders." The
man shook his head. "It is unjust. We are not hsiaojen—little
men. We are the masters of this great City. It is not right to try to
humiliate us in this manner." Once
more a great roar of support came from the packed hall. Chung Hu-yan
shook his head. This was not his doing! Not his doing at all! Even
so, he would persist. "You
must step down, Shih Tarrant. These are the T'ang's own
instructions. Would
you disobey them?" Tarrant
puffed out his huge chest. "YouVe heard what I have to say,
Chancellor Chung. I'll not place my neck beneath any man's foot,
T'ang or no. Nor will anyone in this room, I warrant. It is asking
too much of us. Too much by far!" This
time the noise was deafening. But as it faded the great doors behind
Chung Hu-yan swung back and the T'ang himself entered, a troop of his
elite guards behind him. A hush
fell upon the crowd. Li
Yuan came forward until he stood beside his Chancellor, looking back
sternly at the big man, unintimidated by his size. "Take
him away," he said, speaking over his shoulder to the captain of
the guard. "What he has said is in defiance of my written order.
Is treason. Take him outside at once and execute him." There
was a hiss of disbelief. Tarrant stepped back, his face a picture of
astonishment, but four of the guards were on him at once, pinning his
arms behind his back. Shouting loudly, he was frog-marched past the
T'ang and out through the doors. Li
Yuan turned his head slowly, looking out across the sea of faces in
the hall, seeing their anger and astonishment, their fear and
surprise. "Who
else will defy me?" he demanded. "Who else?" He
paused, looking about him, seeing how quiet, how docile they had
become. "No. I thought not." "This
is a new age," he said, lifting his chin commandingly. "And
a new age demands new rules, new ways of behaving. So do not mistake
me for my father, ch'un tzu. I am Li Yuan, T'ang of City
Europe. Now bow your heads." HE WAS
LIKE the sun, stepping down from the Tien Tan, the Temple of
Heaven. His arms were two bright flashes of gold as he raised the
imperial crown and placed it on his brow. Sunlight beat from his
chest in waves as he moved from side to side, looking out across the
vast mass of his subjects, who were stretched out prone before him in
the temple grounds. No one
looked. Only the cameras took this in. All other eyes were cast into
the dust, unworthy of the sight. "This
is a new age," Li Yuan said softly to himself. "A new time.
But old are the ways of power. As old as Man himself." One by
one his servants came to him, stretched out on the steps beneath him,
their heads turned to one side, the neck exposed. And on each
preferred neck he trod, placing his weight there for the briefest
moment before releasing them. His vassals. This time they'd learn
their lesson. This time they would know whose beasts they were. Officers
and Administrators, Representatives and Company Executives, Ministers
and Family Heads—all bowed before him and exposed their necks,
each one acknowledging him as their Lord and Master. Last
was Tolonen. Only here did Li Yuan's reluctance take a shape, his
naked sole touching the old man's neck as if he kissed it, no
pressure behind the touch. Then
it was done. The brute thing made manifest to all. He was an Emperor,
like the emperors of old, powerful and deadly. And afterward he saw
how changed they were by this; how absolute he'd made them think his
power. He almost smiled, wondering what his father would have made of
this. So powerful was this ritual, so naked its meaning. You
are mine, it said, to crush beneath my heel, or raise
to prominence. The
ceremony over, he dismissed all but those closest to him, holding
audience in the great throne room. First to greet him there were his
fellow T'ang. They climbed the marble steps to bow their heads and
kiss his ring, welcoming him to their number. Last of these was Wei
Feng, wearing the white of mourning. Wei's eyes were filled with
tears, and when he had kissed the ring, he leaned forward to hold Li
Yuan to him a moment, whispering in his ear. Li
Yuan nodded and held the old man's hands a moment, then relinquished
them. "I shall," he said softly, moved deeply by the words
his father's friend had uttered. Others
came, pledging loyalty in a more traditional way. And last of all his
officers, led by General Tolonen. The
General knelt, unsheathing his ceremonial dagger and offering it up
to his T'ang, hilt first, his eyes averted. Li Yuan took it from him
and laid it across his lap. "You
served my father well, Knut. I hope you'll serve me just as well in
future. But new lords need new servants. I must have a General to
match my youth." The
words were a formality, for it was Tolonen who had pushed to have
Ebert appointed. The old man nodded and lifted his head. "1 wish
him well, Chieh Hsia. He is as a son to me. I have felt
honored to have served, but now my time is done. Let another serve
you as I tried to serve your father." Li
Yuan smiled, then summoned the young man forward. Hans
Ebert came toward the throne, his head bowed, his shoulders stooped,
and knelt beside Tolonen. "I am yours," he said ritually,
lowering his forehead to touch the step beneath the throne, once,
twice, and then a third time. The sheath at his belt was empty. No
mark of rank lay on his powder-blue uniform. He waited, abased and
"naked" before his Lord. "Let
it begin here," said Li Yuan, speaking loudly over the heads of
the kneeling officers to the gathered eminences. "My trust goes
out from me and into the hands of others. So it is. So it must be.
This is the chain we forge, the chain that links us all." He
looked down at the young man, speaking more softly, personally now.
"Raise your head, Hans Ebert. Look up at your Lord, who is as
the sun to you and from whom you have your life. Look up and take
from me my trust." Ebert
raised his head. "I am ready, Chieh Hsia," he said,
his voice steady, his eyes meeting those of Li Yuan unflinchingly. "Good."
Li Yuan nodded, smiling. "Then take the badge of your office." He
lifted the dagger from his lap and held it out. Ebert took it
carefully, then sheathed it, curtly lowering his head once more. Then
both he and Tolonen backed down the steps, their eyes averted, their
heads bowed low. THAT
SAME evening they met in a room in the Purple Forbidden City—the
Seven who ruled Chung Kuo. One thing remained before they went from
there, one final task to set things right. Tsu Ma
stood before Li Yuan, grasping his hands firmly, meeting him eye to
eye. "You're sure you want this?" "The
genotyping is conclusive. It must be done now, before the child is
born. Afterward is too late." Tsu Ma
held him a moment longer, then released his hands. "So be it
then. Let us all sign the special Edict." Each
signed his name and sealed it with his ring, in the old manner. Later
it would be confirmed with retinal prints and ECG patterning, but for
now this was sufficient. Wei
Feng was last to sign and seal the document. He turned, looking back
at the new T'ang. "Good sits with ill this day, Li Yuan. I would
not have thought it of her." "Nor
I," said Li Yuan, staring down at the completed Edict. And so it
was done. Fei Yen was no longer his wife. The child would not
inherit. "When
is the marriage to be?" Tsu Ma stood close. His voice was
gentle, sympathetic. "Tomorrow,"
Yuan answered, grateful for Tsu Ma's presence. "How strange that
is. Tonight I lose a wife. And tomorrow ..." "Tomorrow
you gain three." Tsu Ma shook his head. "Do you know who it
was, Yuan? Whose son Fei Yen is carrying?" Li
Yuan looked at him, then looked away. "That does not concern
me," he said stiffly. Then, relenting, he laid his hand on Tsu
Ma's arm. "It was a mistake ever to have begun with her. My
father was right. I know that now. Only my blindness kept it from
me." "Then
you are content?" Li
Yuan shook his head. "Content? No. But it is done." TOLONEN
turned from the screen and the image of the boy and faced the
Architect. "From
what I've seen, the experience seems not to have done Ward too much
harm, but what's your opinion? Is he ready for this yet, or should we
delay?" The
Architect hesitated, remembering the last time, years before, when he
had been questioned about the boys condition. Then it had been
Berdichev, but the questions were much the same. How is the boy? Is
he ready to be used? He smiled tightly, then answered Tolonen. "It's
too early to know what the long-term effects are going to be, but in
the short-term you're right. He's emerged from this whole episode
extremely well. His reaction to the attack—the trauma and loss
of memory—seems to have been the best thing that could have
happened to him. I was concerned in case it had done lasting damage,
particularly to his memory, but if anything the experience seems to
have"—he shrugged—"toughened him up, I guess
you'd say. He's a resilient little creature. Much tougher than we
thought. The psychological blocks we created during his restructuring
four years ago seem to have melted away—as if they'd never
been. But instead of regressing to that state of savagery in which we
first encountered him, he appears to have attained a new balance.
I've never seen anything like it, to be honest. Most minds are too
inflexible—too set in their ways—to survive what Kim has
been through without cracking. He, on the other hand, seems to have
emerged stronger, saner than ever." Tolonen
frowned. "Maybe. But you say that the psychological blocks have
gone. That's a bad thing, surely? I thought they were there to
prevent the boy from reverting into savagery." "They
were." "Then
there's a chance he might still be dangerous?" "There's
a chance. But that's true of anyone. And I mean anyone. We've all of
us a darker side. Push us just so far and we'll snap. I suspect now
that that was what happened the first time, that Kim was simply
responding to extreme provocation from the other boy. My guess is
that unless Kim were pushed to the same extreme again he'd be
perfectly safe. After all, he's not a bomb waiting to go off; he's
only a human being, like you or me." "So
what you're saying is that, in your opinion, he's not dangerous. He
won't be biting people's ears off or clawing out their eyes?" The
Architect shook his head. "1 doubt it. The fact that his friend
survived has helped greatly. Their reunion was a major factor in his
recuperation. If T'ai Cho had been killed our problems might have
been of a different order, but as it is, I'd say Kim's fine. As fine
as you or I." Tolonen
turned, looking back at the screen. "Then you think he's up to
it?" The Architect laughed. "I do. In fact, I think it
would be positively good for him. He has a mind that's ever-hungry
for new things and an instinct for seeking them out. From what I've
heard of it, the North American scene should prove a good hunting
ground in that regard." Tolonen
frowned, not certain he liked the sound of that, but it was not in
his brief to query what was happening in Wu Shih's city; his job was
to find out whether Kim was fit to travel to North America, and from
all indications, he was. He
sniffed deeply, then nodded, his mind made up. "Good. Then
prepare the boy at once. There's a flight from Nantes spaceport at
tenth bell. I want Ward and his tutor on it." "And
the wire? Shall we remove that now that our tests are finished?"
Tolonen looked away. "No. Leave it in. It won't harm him, after
all." He looked back at the Architect, his face a mask.
"Besides, if something does go badly wrong—if he goes
missing again—we'll be able to trace him, won't we?" The
Architect looked down, beginning to understand what was really
happening. "Of course. Of course ..." "Would
you like anything, sir?" The
boy looked up, startled, his dark eyes wide, then settled back in his
seat again, shaking his head. "Nothing
... I ... I'm all right." The
Steward backed off a pace, noting how tense the bodyguards had grown,
and bowed his head. "Forgive me, sir, but if you change your
mind you have only to press the summons button." The
boy returned a tense smile. "Of course." The
Steward moved on, settling the passengers, making sure they were
securely strapped into the seats, asking if there was anything he
could do for them before the launch; but all the while his mind was
on the boy. Who
was he? he wondered. After all, it wasn't every day they received an
order direct from Bremen; nor was it customary for Security to
reserve a whole section of the cabin for a single passenger. Knowing
all this he had expected some high-ranking Han—a Minor Family
prince at the very least, or a Minister—so the boy's appearance
had surprised him. At first he had thought he might be a prisoner of
some kind, but the more he thought about it the more that seemed
ridiculous. Besides, he wasn't bound in any way, and the men with him
were clearly bodyguards, not warders. He had only to ask for
something and one of them would go running. No. Whoever he was, he
was important enough to warrant the kind of treatment reserved only
for the very highest of the Above—the Supernal, as they
were known these days—and yet he seemed merely a boy, and a
rather odd, almost ugly little boy at that. There was a curious
angularity to his limbs, a strange darkness in his overlarge eyes. The
Steward came to the end of the walkway and turned, looking back down
the cabin. It was five minutes to takeoff. The young Americans were
settled now. Like so many of their kind they were almost totally
lacking in manners. Only the quiet one—Lever—had even
seemed to notice he was there. The rest had snapped their fingers and
demanded this and that, as if he were not Steward but some half-human
creature manufactured in the GenSyn vats. It was things like that
that he hated about this new generation. They were not like their
fathers. No, not at all. Their fathers understood that other men had
their own pride, and that it was such pride that held the vast fabric
of society together. These youngsters had no idea. They were blind to
such things. And one day they would pay—and pay dearly—for
their blindness. He
turned and went through the curtain. The Security Captain was sitting
there, the file open on his knee. He looked up as the Steward came
in, giving him a brief smile. "Are
they all settled?" The
Steward nodded. "Even the two women. I had to give them a
sedative each, but they seem all right now." He shook his head.
"They shouldn't let women travel. I have nothing but trouble
with them." The Captain laughed, closing the file. "And the
boy?" "He's fine. I wondered—" The
Captain shook his head. "Don't ask me. All I was told was that
there was to be a special guest on board. A guest of the T'ang
himself. But who he is or what . . ." He shrugged, then laughed
again. "I know. I'm as curious as you. He's a strange one, neh?" The
Steward nodded, then moved away, satisfied that the Captain knew no
more than he. Even so, he thought he had glimpsed a picture of the
boy, earlier, when he had first come back behind the curtain—in
the file the Captain was reading. He could have been mistaken, but. .
. "Are
you on business?" he asked, pulling the webbing harness out from
the wall behind the Captain. "Liaison,"
the Captain answered, moving forward in his seat, letting himself be
fastened into the harness. "My job is to increase cooperation
between the two Cities." The
Steward smiled politely. "It sounds very interesting. But I'd
have thought there was little need." "You'd
be surprised. The days of isolation are ended for the Cities. The
Triads have spread their nets wide these days. And not only the
Triads. There's a lot of illicit trade going on. Some of it via these
rockets, I've no doubt!" The
Steward stared at him a moment, then turned away. "Anyway, I'll
leave you now. I have one last check to make before I secure myself." The
Captain nodded, then called him back. "Here. I almost forgot. I
was told to deliver this to the boy before we took off." He
handed the Steward a sealed envelope. "It was in my file. Along
with a picture of the boy. All very mysterious, neb?" The
Steward stared at the envelope a moment, then nodded. He turned away,
disappearing through the curtain once again. DeVore
watched the man go, breathing a sigh of relief. Then he laughed. It
was easy—all so bloody easy. Why, he could have taken the boy
out earlier, in the lobby, if he'd wished. He'd had a clear shot. But
that wasn't what he wanted. No, he wanted the boy. Besides, Li Yuan
was up to something. It would be interesting to find out what. He
smiled, then opened the file again, picking up from where he'd left
off. After a moment he looked up, nodding thoughtfully. Ebert had
done him proud. There was everything here. Everything. The report
Tolonen had made on the attack on the Project, the medical and
psychological reports on Ward, and a full transcript of the
debriefing. The only thing missing—and it was missing only
because it didn't exist—was something to indicate just why Li
Yuan had decided to ship the boy off to North America. Well,
maybe he could clarify things a little over the next few days. Maybe
he could find out—through the Levers—what it was Li Yuan
wanted. And at the same time he might do a little business on his own
account: he would take up young Lever's invitation to meet his father
and have dinner. Yes,
and afterward he would put his proposal to the son. Would see just
how deep his enthusiasm for change was. And then . . . ? He
smiled and closed the file. And then he would begin again, building
new shapes on a new part of the board, constructing his patterns
until the game was won. For it would be won. If it took him a dozen
lifetimes he would win it.
CHAPTER TEN
Ghosts IT
WAS A COLD, gray morning, the sky overcast, the wind whipping off the
surface of the West Lake, bending back the reeds on the shoreline of
Jade Spring Island. In front of the great pavilion—a huge,
circular, two-tiered building with tapered roofs of vermillion
tile—the thousand bright red-and-gold dragon banners of the
T'ang flapped noisily, the ranks of armored bearers standing like
iron statues in the wind, their red capes fluttering behind them. To the
south of the pavilion, a huge platform had been built, reaching
almost to the lake's edge. In its center, on a dais high above the
rest, stood the throne, a great canopy of red silk shielding it from
the rain that gusted intermittently across the lake. Li
Yuan sat on the throne, his red silks decorated with tiny golden
dragon-and-phoenix emblems. Behind him, below the nine steps of the
great dais, his retainers and ministers were assembled, dressed in
red. Facing
Li Yuan, no more than a hundred ch'i distant, a wide bridge
linked the island to the eastern shore. It was an ancient bridge,
built in the time of the Song Dynasty, more than a thousand years
before, its white-stone spans decorated with lions and dragons and
other mythical beasts. Li
Yuan stared at it a moment, then turned his head, looking out
blank-eyed across the lake, barely conscious of the great procession
that waited on the far side of the bridge. News had come that
morning. Fei Yen had had her child. A boy, it was. A boy. The
music of the ceremony began, harsh, dissonant—bells, drums, and
cymbals. At once the New Confucian officials came forward, making
their obeisance to him before they backed away. On the eastern shore
the procession started forward, a great tide of red, making its slow
way across the bridge. He
sighed and looked down at his hands. It had only been two days since
he had removed her wedding ring. A single day ... He shivered. So
simple it had been. He had watched himself remove it from his finger
and place it on the gold silk cushion Nan Ho held out to him. Had
watched as Nan Ho turned and took it from the room, ending the life
he had shared with her, destroying the dream for good and all. He
took a shuddering breath, then looked up again. This was no time for
tears. No. Today was a day for celebrations, for today was his
wedding day. He
watched them come. The heads of the three clans walked side by side
at the front of the procession; proud old men, each bearing his honor
in his face like a badge. Behind them came the ranks of brothers and
cousins, sisters and wives, many hundreds in all; and beyond them the
lung t'ing—the "dragon pavilions"— each
one carried by four bare-headed eunuch servants. The tiny sedan
chairs were piled high with dowry gifts for the T'ang: bolts of silk
and satin, boxes of silver, golden plates and cups, embroidered
robes, delicate porcelain, saddles and fans and gilded cages filled
with songbirds. So much, indeed, that this single part of the
procession was by far the longest, with more than a hundred lung
t'ing to each family. An
honor guard was next. Behind that came the three feng yu, the
phoenix chairs, four silver birds perched atop each canopy, each
scarlet and gold sedan carried aloft by a dozen bearers. His
brides . . . He had
asked Nan Ho to get the heads of the three clans to agree to waive
the preliminary ceremonies—had insisted that the thing be done
quickly if at all—yet it had not been possible to dispense with
this final ritual. It was, after all, a matter of face. Of pride. To
marry a T'ang—that was not done without due celebration,
without due pomp and ceremony. And would the T'ang deny them that? He
could not. For to be T'ang had its obligations as well as its
advantages. And so here he was, on a cold, wet, windy morning,
marrying three young women he had never seen before this day. Necessary,
he told himself. For the Family must be strong again. Even so, his
heart ached and his soul cried out at the wrongness of it. He
watched them come, a feeling of dread rising in him. These were the
women he was to share his life with. They would bear his sons, would
lie beneath him in his bed. And what if he came to hate them? What if
they hated him? For what was done here could not easily be undone. No. A
man was forgiven one failure. But any more and the world would
condemn him, wherever lay the fault. Wives.
These strangers were to be his wives. And how had this come about? He
sat there, momentarily bemused by the fact. Then, as the music
changed and the chant began below, he stood and went to the top of
the steps, ready for the great ceremony to begin. An
hour later it was done. Li Yuan stepped back, watching as his wives
knelt, bowing low, touching their foreheads to the floor three times
before him. Nan Ho
had chosen well, had shown great sensitivity; for not one of the
three reminded him in the least of Fei Yen, yet each was, in her own
way, quite distinct. Mien Shan, the eldest and officially his First
Wife, was a tiny thing with a strong build and a pleasantly rounded
face. Fu Ti Chang, the youngest, just seventeen, was also the
tallest; a shy, elegant willow of a girl. By way of contrast, Lai Shi
seemed quite spirited; she was a long-faced girl, hardly a beauty,
but there was a sparkle in her eye that made her by far the most
attractive of the three. Li Yuan had smiled when she'd pulled back
her veil, surprised to find an interest in her stirring in himself. Tonight
duty required him to visit the bed of Mien Shan. But tomorrow? He
dismissed his wives, then turned, summoning Nan Ho to him. "Chieh
Hsia?" He
lowered his voice. "I am most pleased with this morning's
events, Master Nan. You have done well to prepare things so quickly."
Nan Ho bowed low. "It was but my duty, Chieh Hsia." "Maybe
so, but you have excelled yourself, Nan Ho. From henceforth you are
no longer Master of the Inner Chamber but Chancellor." Nan
Ho's look of amazement was almost comical. "Chieh Hsia!
But what of Chung Hu-yan?" Li
Yuan smiled. "I am warmed by your concern, Nan Ho, but do not
worry. I informed Chung yesterday evening. Indeed, he confirmed my
choice." Nan Ho's puzzlement deepened. "Chieh Hsia?" "I
should explain, perhaps, Master Nan. It was all agreed long before my
father's death. It was felt that I would need new blood when I became
T'ang, new men surrounding me. Men I could trust. Men who would grow
as I grew and would be as pillars, supporting me in my old age. You
understand?" Nan
Ho bowed his head. "I understand, Chieh Hsia, and am
honored. Honored beyond words." "Well
. . . Go now. Chung Hu-yan has agreed to stay on as your advisor
until you feel comfortable with your new duties. Then he is to become
my Counselor." Nan Ho
gave the briefest nod, understanding. Counselor. It would make Chung
virtually an uncle to Li Yuan; a member of Li Yuan's inner council,
discussing and formulating policy. No wonder he had not minded
relinquishing his post as Chancellor. "And
when am I to begin, Chieh HsJa?" Li
Yuan laughed. "You began two days ago, Master Nan, when you came
to my room and took the book of brides from me. I appointed you then,
in here." He tapped his forehead. "You have been my
Chancellor ever since." JELKA
WAS STANDING at her father's side, among the guests in the great
pavilion, when Hans Ebert came across and joined them. "Marshal
Tolonen . . ." Ebert bowed to the old man, then turned, smiling,
to Jelka. In his bright-red dress uniform he looked a young god, his
golden hair swept back neatly, his strong, handsome features formed
quite pleasantly. Even his eyes, normally so cold, seemed kind as he
looked at her. Even so, Jelka hardened herself against the illusion,
reminding herself of what she knew about him. He
lowered his head, keeping his eyes on her face. "It's good to
see you here, Jelka. I hope you're feeling better." His
inquiry was soft-spoken, his words exactly what a future husband
ought to have said, yet somehow she could not accept them at face
value. He was a good actor—a consummately good actor, for it
seemed almost as if he really liked her— but she knew what he
was beneath the act. A shit. A cold, self-centered shit. "I'm
much better, thank you," she said, lowering her eyes, a faint
blush coming to her cheeks. "It was only a sprain." The
blush was for the lie she had told. She had not sprained her ankle at
all. It was simply that the idea of seeing Hans Ebert made General in
her father's place had been more than she could bear. To have spent
the evening toasting the man she most abhorred!—she could think
of nothing worse. She
kept her eyes averted, realizing the shape her thoughts had taken.
Was it really that bad? Was Hans Ebert really so abhorrent? She
looked up again, meeting his eyes, noting the concern there. Even so,
the feeling persisted. To think of marrying this man was a mistake. A
horrible mistake. His
smile widened. "You will come and dine with us, I hope, a week
from now. My father is looking forward to it greatly. And I. It would
be nice to speak with you, Jelka. To find out who we are." "Yes
. . ." She glanced up at him, then lowered her eyes again, a
shiver of revulsion passing through her at the thought. Yet what
choice had she? This man was to be her husband—her life
partner. Ebert
lifted her hand, kissing her knuckles gently before releasing it. He
smiled and bowed, showing her the deepest respect. "Until then .
. ." He turned slightly, bowing to her father, then turned away. "A
marvelous young man," Tolonen said, watching Ebert make his way
back through the crowd toward the T'ang. "Do you know, Jelka, if
I'd had a son, I'd have wished for one like Hans." She
shivered. The very thought of it made her stomach tighten, reminded
her of the mad girl in the Ebert Mansion and of that awful pink-eyed
goat-baby. A son like Hans . . . She shook her head. No! It could
never be! IN THE
SEDAN traveling back to Nanking, Jelka sat facing her father,
listening to him, conscious, for the first time in her life, of how
pompous, how vacuous his words were. His notion that they were at the
beginning of a new "Golden Age," for instance. It was
nonsense. She had read the special reports on the situation in the
lower levels and knew how bad things were. Every day brought growing
disaffection from the Seven and their rule, brought strikes and riots
and the killing of officials; yet he seemed quite blind to all that.
He spoke of growth and stability and the glorious years to come,
years that would recapture the glory of his youth. She
sat a long while, simply listening, her head lowered. Then, suddenly,
she looked up at him. "I
can't." He
looked across at her, breaking off. "Can't what.7"
- She
stared back into his steel-gray eyes, hardening herself against him.
"I can't marry Hans Ebert." He
laughed. "Don't be silly, Jelka. It's all arranged. Besides,
Hans is General now." "I
don't care.'" she said, the violence of her words surprising
him. "I simply can't marry him!" He
shook his head, then leaned forward. "You mustn't say that,
Jelka. You mustn't!" She
glared back at him defiantly. "Why not? It's what I feel. To
marry Hans would kill me. I'd shrivel up and die." "Nonsense!"
he barked, angry now. "You're being ridiculous! Can't you see
the way that boy looks at you? He's besotted with you!" She
looked down, shaking her head. "You don't understand. You really
don't understand, do you?" She shuddered, then looked up at him
again. "I don't like him, Daddy. I ..." She gave a
small, pained laugh. "How can I possibly marry someone I don't
like?" He had
gone very still, his eyes narrowed. "Listen, my girl, you will,
and sooner than you think. I've agreed to a new date for the
wedding. A month from now." She
sat back, open-mouthed, staring at him. He
leaned closer, softening his voice. "It's not how I meant to
tell you, but there, it's done. And no more of this nonsense. Hans is
a fine young man. The very best of young men. And you're a lucky
girl. If only you'd get these silly notions out of your head, you'd
come to realize it. And then you'll thank me for it." "Thank
you?" The note of incredulity in her voice made him sit
back, bristling. "Yes.
Thank me. Now no more. I insist." She
shook her head. "You don't know him, Father. He keeps a girl in
his house— a mad girl whose baby he had killed. And I've
heard—" "Enough!" Tolonen
got to his feet, sending the sedan swaying. As it slowed, he sat
again, the color draining slowly from his face. "I
won't hear another word from you, my girl. Not another word. Hans is
a fine young man. And these lies—" "They're
not lies. I've seen her. I've seen what he did to her." "Lies.
. ." he insisted, shaking his head. "Really, I would
not have believed it of you, Jelka. Such behavior. If your mother
were alive . . ." She
put her head down sharply, trembling with anger. Gods! To talk of her
mother at such a time. She slowed her breathing, calming herself,
then said it one more time. "I
can't." She
looked up and saw how he was watching her—coldly, so far from
her in feeling that it was as if he were a stranger to her. "You
will," he said. "You will because I say you will." THE
DOCTOR was still fussing over Karr's shoulder when they brought the
man in. Karr turned, wincing, waving the doctor away, then leaned
across the desk to study the newcomer. "You're
sure this is him?" he asked, looking past the man at Chen. Chen
nodded. "We've made all the checks. He seems to be who he claims
he is." Karr
smiled, then sat back, a flicker of pain passing across his face.
"All right. So you're Reid, eh? Thomas Reid. Well, tell me, Shih
Reid, why are you here?" The
man looked down, betraying a moment's fear; then he girded up his
courage again and spoke. "I
was there, you see. After you raided the fortress. I was there with
the Man's lieutenant—" "The
Man?" "DeVore.
That's what we call him. The Man." Karr
glanced at Chen. "And?" "Just
that 1 was there, afterward. Lehmann and I—" "Lehmann?" "Stefan
Lehmann. The albino. Under-Secretary Lehmann's son." Karr
laughed, surprised. "And he's DeVore's lieutenant?" "Yes.
I was with him, you see. We'd been off to deliver something for the
Man. But when we got back, shortly after eight, we saw your
transporters from some distance away and knew there had been trouble.
We flew south and doubled back, crossing the valley on foot; then we
climbed up to the ruins." "The
ruins?" "Yes,
there's a castle ... or at least the remains of one. It's on the
other side of the mountain from the base. There's an old system of
tunnels beneath it. The Man used them when he built the base. Linked
up to them." "Ah
. . ." The light of understanding dawned in Karr's eyes. "But
why did you go there?" "Because
Lehmann had a hunch. He thought DeVore might be there, in the old
tunnel." "And
was he?" "Yes." Karr
looked at Chen. It was as he'd said. But now they knew for sure.
DeVore had got out: he was loose in the world to do his mischief. "Do
you know where he is?" Reid
shook his head. "So
why are you here? What do you want?" Reid
looked aside. "I was . . . afraid. Things were getting desperate
out there. Out of hand. DeVore, Lehmann . . . they're not people you
can cross." "And
yet you're here. Why?" "Because
I'd had enough. And because I felt that you, if anyone, could protect
me." "And
why should I do that?" "Because
I know things. Know where the other bases are." Karr
sat back, astonished. Other bases . . . "But I thought—"
He checked himself and looked at Chen, seeing his own surprise
mirrored back at him. They had stumbled onto the Landek base by
complete chance in the course of their sweep of the Wilds, alerted by
its heat-emission patterns. They had blessed their luck, but never
for an instant had they thought there would be others. They assumed
all along that DeVore was working on a smaller scale: that he'd kept
his organization much tighter. This
changed things. Changed them dramatically. Reid
was watching Karr. "I know how things are organized out there. I
was in charge of several things in my time. I've pieced things
together in my head. I know where their weak spots are." "And
you'll tell us all of this in return for your safety?" Reid
nodded. "That and ten million yuan." Karr
sat back. "I could have you tortured. Could wring the truth from
you." "You
could. But then, Ebert might come to know about it, mightn't he? And
that would spoil things for you. I understand he's already instigated
a special investigation into your activities." Karr
jerked forward, grimacing, the pain from his shoulder suddenly
intense. "How do you know this?" Reid
smiled, amused by the effect his words had had. "I overheard it.
The Man was speaking to Ebert. It seems the new General plans a purge
of his ranks. And you and your friend Kao Chen are top of the
list." "But
ten million. Where would I get hold of ten million yuan7." Reid
shrugged. "That's your problem. But until you agree to my terms
I'm telling you nothing. And the longer you wait, the more likely it
is that Ebert will close you d,, own. Chen
broke his silence. "And what good would that do you, Shih Reid?" Reid
turned, facing Chen. "The way I figure it, Kao Chen, is that
either I'm dead or I'm safe and very, very rich. It's the kind of
choice I understand. The kind of risk I'm willing to take. But how
about you? You've got children, Kao Chen. Can you look at things so
clearly?" Chen
blanched, surprised that Reid knew so much. It implied that DeVore
had files on them all: files that Ebert, doubtlessly, had provided.
It was a daunting thought. The possibility of Wang Ti and the
children being threatened by DeVore made him go cold. He looked past
Reid at Karr. "Gregor
. . ." Karr
nodded and looked back at Reid, his expression hard. "I'll find
the money, Shih Reid. I give you my word. You'll have it by this
evening. But you must tell me what you know. Now. While I can still
act on it. Otherwise my word won't be worth a dead whore's coonie." Reid
hesitated, then nodded. "All right. Get me a detailed map of the
Wilds. I'll mark where the bases are. And then we'll talk. I'll tell
you a story. About a young General and an ex-Major, and about a
meeting the two had at an old skiing lodge a year ago." LI YU
AN s AT in his chair in the old study at Tongjiang, the package on
the desk before him. He looked about him, remembering. Here he had
learned what it was to shoulder responsibility, to busy himself with
matters of State. Here he had toiled—acting as his father's
hands—until late into the night, untangling the knotted thread
of events to find solutions to his father's problems. And
now those problems were his. He looked down at the package and
sighed. He
turned, looking across at the big communications screen. "Connect
me with Wu Shih," he said, not even glancing at the overhead
camera. "Tell him I have something urgent to discuss." There
was a short delay and then the screen lit up, the T'ang of North
America's face filling the screen, ten times life size. "Cousin
Yuan. I hope you are well. And congratulations. How are your wives?" "They
are wives, Wu Shih. But listen. I have been considering that matter
we talked about and I believe I have a solution." Wu
Shih raised his eyebrows. Some weeks before, his Security sources had
discovered the existence of a new popular movement, "The Sons of
Benjamin Franklin." Thus far there was nothing to link them to
anything even resembling a plot against the Seven, nor could any acts
of violence or incitement be laid at their door. In that respect they
kept scrupulously within the letter of the law. However, the mere
existence of such a secret society—harking, as its name
implied, back to a forbidden past—was cause for grave concern.
In other circumstances he might simply have rounded up the most
prominent figures and demoted them. But these were no ordinary
hotheads. The "Sons" were, without exception, the heirs to
some of the biggest companies in North America. Wu Shih's problem was
how to curtail their activities without alienating their powerful and
influential fathers. It was a tricky problem, made worse by the fact
that because no crime had been committed, there was no pretext upon
which he might act. "A solution, Li Yuan? What kind of
solution?" "I
have sent someone into your City, Wu Shih. As my envoy, you might
say, though he himself does not know it." Wu
Shih frowned and sat forward slightly, his image breaking up
momentarily, then re-forming clearly. "An envoy?" Li
Yuan explained. Afterward Wu Shih sat back, considering. "I see.
But why do you think this will work?" "There
is no guarantee that it will, but if it fails we have lost nothing,
neh?" Wu Shih smiled. "That sounds reasonable enough."
"And you will look after the boy for me?" "Like my own
son, Li Yuan." "Good.
Then I must leave you, Wu Shih. There is much to do before this
evening." Wu
Shih laughed. "And much to do tonight, neh?" There
was a momentary hesitation in Li Yuan's face, then he returned Wu
Shih's smile tightly, bowing his head slightly to his fellow T'ang
before he cut contact. Tonight. He shivered. Tonight he wished only
to be alone. But that was not his fate. He was married now. He had
duties to his wives. And to his ancestors. For it was up to him now
to provide a son. To continue the line so that the chain should
remain unbroken, the ancestral offerings made, the graves tended. Even
so, his heart felt dead in him. Ever since this morning he had kept
thinking of the new child, seeing it in his mind, resting in Fei
Yen's arms as she lay there propped up in bed on her father's estate. He
shook his head, then stood. It hurt. It hurt greatly, but it was
behind him now. It had to be. His life lay ahead of him, and he could
not carry his hurt about like an open wound. Nor could he wait for
time to heal the scars. He must press on. For he was T'ang now.
T'ang. He
stood with his hands resting against the edge of the desk, staring
down at the package, still undecided about sending it; then he leaned
forward, pressing the summons bell. "Send in Nan Ho." The
boy's debriefing had proved more successful than any of them had
dared hope and had put the lie to what Director Spatz had said about
Ward's "nil contribution" to the Project. Ward had
remembered everything. In fact, the extent of his knowledge about the
Wiring Project had surprised them all. With what he had given them,
they would be able to reconstruct the facility within months. A
facility that, in theory anyway, would be far more advanced than the
one Spatz had so spectacularly mismanaged. This
time he would do it right. Would ensure that the right men were
appointed, that it was adequately funded and properly protected. No,
there would be no mistakes this time. Mistakes.
He shook his head. He had misjudged things badly. He ought to have
trusted to his instinct about the boy, but he had been off-balance.
That whole business with Fei Yen had thrown him. He had been unable
to see things clearly. But now he could put things right. Could
reward the boy. Indeed, what better way was there of making Ward
loyal to him than through the ties of gratitude? And he needed the
boy to be loyal. He saw that now. Saw what he had almost lost through
his inadvertence. Such
talent as Kim possessed appeared but rarely in the world. It was a
priceless gift. And whoever had the use of it could only benefit.
Change was coming to Chung Kuo, like it or not, and they must find a
way to harness it. Ward's skills—his genius—might prove
effective, not in preventing change—for who could turn back the
incoming tide—but in giving it a shape better suited to the
wishes of the Seven. For
now, however, Li Yuan would use him in a different role. As an eye,
peering into the darkness of his enemies' hearts. As an ear,
listening to the rhythms of their thought. And then, when he was done
with that, he would fly him on a long leash, like a young hawk,
giving him the illusion of freedom, letting him stretch his wings
even as he restrained and directed him. There
was a faint knock. "Come," he said. "You
sent for me, Chieh Hsial" He
picked up the package and offered it to his Chancellor. "Have
this sent to Shih Ward at once. I want it to be in his room
when he returns tonight." "Of
course, Chieh Hsia." Nan Ho hesitated. "Is that
all?" As
ever, he had read Li Yuan's mood. Had understood without the need for
words. "One
thing, Nan Ho. You will carry a note for me. Personally. To Fei Yen.
To wish her well." Nan Ho
bowed his head. "Forgive me, Chieh Hsia, but is that
wise? There are those who might construe such a note to mean—" Li
Yuan cut him off. "Nan Ho! Just do it. Wise or not, I feel it
must be done. So please, take my message to her and wish her well. I
would not be bitter about the past, understand me? I would be strong.
And how can I be strong unless I face the past clear-eyed,
understanding my mistakes?" Nan Ho
bowed, impressed by his master's words. "I will go at once,
Chieh Hsia." "Good.
And when you return you will find me a new Master of the Inner
Chambers. A man who will serve me as well as you have served me." Nan Ho
smiled. "Of course, Chieh Hsia. I have the very man in
mind." IT WAS
AFTER midnight and Archimedes' Kitchen was packed. The club was dimly
lit, like the bottom of the ocean, the air heavy with exotic scents.
As one stepped inside, under the great arch, the deep growl of a
primitive bass rhythm obliterated all other sound, like a slow,
all-pervasive heartbeat, resonating in everything it touched. The
architecture of the club was eccentric but deliberate. All things Han
were absent here. Its fashions looked backward, to the last years of
the American Empire, before the Great Collapse. From
its position at the top edge of the City, the Kitchen overlooked the
dark-green, island-strewn waters of Buzzards Bay. Through the vast,
clear windows of the upper tiers you could, on a clear day, see the
southwestern tip of Martha's Vineyard, distant and green, unspoiled
by any structure. Few were so inclined. For most of the time the
magnificent view windows were opaqued, arabesques of vivid color
swirling across their blinded surfaces. Inside,
the place was cavernous. Tier after tier spiraled up about the
central circle of the dance floor, a single, broad ramp ascending
smoothly into the darkened heights. Along the slowly winding length
of this elegantly carpeted avenue, tables were set. Ornate,
impressive tables, in Empire style, the old insignia of the
sixty-nine States carved into the wooden surfaces, bronzed eagles
stretching their wings across the back of each chair.
Gold-and-black-suited waiters hovered—literally hovered—by
the rail to take orders. Their small backpack jets, a memory of the
achievements of their technological past, flaunted the Edict. Like
bees, they tended the needs of the crowded tiers, fetching and
carrying, issuing from the darkness high above their patrons' heads. In the
center of all was a huge light sculpture, a twisting double band of
gold stretching from floor to ceiling. It was a complex double helix,
detailed and flowing, pulsing with the underlying bass rhythm, by
turns frail and intense, ghostly thin and then broad, sharply
delineated, like a solid thing. This, too, bordered on the illicit;
it was a challenge of sorts to those who ruled. Membership
of the Kitchen was exclusive. Five, almost six thousand members
crowded the place on a good night—which this was—but five
times that number were members and twenty times that were on the
club's waiting list. More significantly, membership was confined to
just one section of the populace. No Han were allowed here, nor their
employees. In this, as in so many other ways, the club was in
violation of statutes passed in the House some years before, though
the fact that most of the North American Representatives were also
members of the Kitchen had escaped no one's notice. It was
a place of excess. Here, much more was permitted than elsewhere.
Eccentricity seemed the norm, and nakedness, or a partial nakedness
that concealed little of importance, was much in evidence. Men wore
their genitalia dressed in silver, small fins sprouting from the
sides of their drug-aroused shafts. The women were no less overt in
their symbolism; many wore elaborate rings of polished metal about
their sex—space gates, similar in form to the docking apertures
on spacecraft. It was a game, but there was a meaning behind its
playfulness. Of
those who were dressed—the majority, it must be said—few
demonstrated a willingness to depart from what was the prevalent
style: a style that might best be described as Techno-Barbarian, a
mixture of space suits and ancient chain mail. Much could be made of
the curious opposition of the fine—in some cases
beautiful—aristocratic faces and the brutish, primitive dress.
It seemed a telling contrast, illustrative of some elusive quality in
the society itself, of the unstated yet ever-present conflict in
their souls. Almost a confession. It was
almost two in the morning when Kim arrived at the "gateway"
and presented his invitation. The sobriety of his dress marked him as
a visitor, just as much as his diminutive status. People stared at
him shamelessly as he was ushered through the crowded tunnel and out
into the central space. He
boarded a small vehicle to be taken to his table—a replica of
the four-wheeled, battery-powered jeep that had first been used on
the moon two hundred and thirty-eight years before. At a point
halfway up the spiral it stopped. There was an empty table with
spaces set. Nearby two waiters floated, beyond the brass-and-crystal
rail. Kim
sat beside the rail, looking down at the dance floor more than a
hundred ch'i below. The noise was not so deafening up here.
Down there, however, people were thickly pressed, moving slowly,
sensuously, to the stimulus of a Mood Enhancer. Small firefly clouds
of hallucinogens moved erratically among the dancers, sparking
soundlessly as they made contact with the moist warmth of naked
flesh. Kim
looked up. His hosts had arrived. They stood on the far side of the
table— two big men, built like athletes, dressed casually in
short business pau, as if to make him more at ease. The
older of the two came around the table to greet him. "I'm
glad you could come," he said, smiling broadly. "My name is
Charles Lever." "I
know," Kim said simply, returning his smile. <* Old
Man Lever; he was Head of the biggest pharmaceuticals company in
North America, possibly in the whole of Chung Kuo. The other man, his
personal assistant, was his son, Michael. Kim shook Lever's hand and
looked past him at his son, noting how alike they were. They
sat, the old man leaning toward him across the table. "Do you
mind if I order for you, Kim? I know the specialties of this place." Kim
nodded and looked around, noting the occupants of the next table
down. His eyes widened in surprise. Turning, he saw it was the same
at the next table up. A group of aristocrats now sat at each table.
They had not been there before, so they must have slipped into their
places after the Levers had arrived. There was nothing especially
different about the way they dressed, yet they were immediately
noticeable. They were bald. The absence of hair drew the eye first,
but then another detail held the attention: a cross-hatching of
scars, fine patterns like a wiring grid in an ancient circuit. These
stood out, blue against the whiteness of each scalp, like some alien
code. Kim
studied them a moment, fascinated, not certain what they were; he
looked back to find Old Man Lever watching him, a faint smile of
amusement on his lips. "I see you've noticed my friends." Lever
rose and went from table to table, making a show of introducing them.
Kim watched, abstracted from the reality of what was happening,
conscious only of how uniform they seemed despite a wide variation of
features, of how this one thing erased all individuality in their
faces, making things of them. "What
you see gathered here, Kim, is the first stage of a grand experiment.
One I'd like you to help me in." The old man stood there, his
arms folded against his broad chest, relaxed in his own power and
knowledge, confident of Kim's attention. "These people are the
first to benefit from a breakthrough in ImmVac's research program.
Trailblazers, you might call them. Pioneers of a new way of living." Kim
nodded, but he was thinking how odd it was that Lever should do this
all so publicly, should choose this way of presenting things. "These,"
Lever paused and smiled broadly, as if the joke was all too much for
him. "These are the first immortals, Kim. The very first." Kim
pursed his lips, considering, trying to anticipate the older man. He
was surprised. He hadn't thought anyone was close enough yet. But if
it were so, then what did it mean? Why did Lever want to involve him?
What was the flaw that needed ironing out? "Immortals,"
the old man repeated, his eyes afire with the word. "What
Mankind has always dreamed of. The defeat of death itself." There
were whispers from the nearby tables, like the rustle of paper-thin
metal streamers in a wind. At Kim's back the coiled and spiraling
threads of light pulsed and shimmered, while waiters floated between
the levels. The air was rich with distracting scents. It all seemed
dreamlike, almost absurd. / "Congratulations,"
he said. "I assume . . ." He
paused, holding the old man's eyes. What did he assume? That
it worked? That Lever knew he was flouting the Edict? That it was
"what Mankind had always dreamed of"? All of these,
perhaps, but he finished otherwise. "1 assume you'll pay me well
for my help, Shih Lever." The
son turned his head sharply and looked at Kim, surprised. His father
considered a moment, then laughed heartily and took his seat again. "Why,
of course you'll be paid well, Shih Ward. Very well indeed. If you
can help us." The
waiters arrived, bringing food and wine. For a moment all speech was
suspended as the meal was laid out. When it was done Kim poured
himself a glass of water from the jug, ignoring the wine. He sipped
the ice-cold liquid, then looked across at Old Man Lever again. "But
why all this? Why raise the matter here, in such a public place?" Lever
smiled again and began eating his appetizer. He chewed for a while,
then set his fork down. "You aren't used to our ways yet, are
you? All this"— he gestured with his knife— "It's
a marketplace. And these"— he indicated his "friends"—
"these are my product." He grinned and pointed at Kim with
his knife. "You, so I'm told on good authority, come with a
reputation second to none. Forget connections." There was a
brief flicker in the comer of one eye. "By meeting you here,
like this, I signal my intention to work with you. The best with the
best." He took a second forkful, chewed, and swallowed. Beside
him his son watched, not eating. "So
it's all publicity?" "Of
a kind." The son spoke for the father. "It does our shares
no harm. Good rumor feeds a healthy company." Old
Man Lever nodded. "Indeed. So it is, Kim. And it won't harm your
own career one jot to be seen in harness with ImmVac." Yes,
thought Kim, unless the Seven start objecting to what you're
doing and close you doitm. Aloud he said, "You know I
have other plans." The
old man nodded. "I know everything about you, Kim." It
sounded ominous and Kim looked up from his plate, momentarily
alarmed, but it was only a form of words. Not everything, he thought. "It
would be ... theoretical work," continued Lever. "The sort
of thing I understand you're rather good at. Synthesizing-." Kim
tilted his head, feeling uneasy, but not knowing quite why he had the
feeling. Perhaps the words had simply thrown him. He didn't like to
be known so readily. "We
have a drug that works. A stabilizer. Something that in itself
prevents the error catastrophe that creates aging in human beings.
But we don't want to stop there. Longevity shouldn't just be for the
young, eh, Kim?" There was a slight nervousness in his laughter
that escaped no one at the table. The son looked disconcerted by it,
embarrassed. To Kim, however, it was the most significant thing Lever
had said. He knew now what it was that drove him. You
want it for yourself. And the drug you have won't give it to you.
It doesn't reverse the process, it only holds it in check. You want
to be young again. You want to live forever. And right now you can't
have either. "And
your terms?" . Again
Lever laughed, as if Kim were suddenly talking his own language.
"Terms we'll discuss when we meet. For now just enjoy this
marvelous food. Dig in, Kim. Dig in. You've never tasted anything
like this fish, I guarantee." Kim
took a bite and nodded. "It's good. What is it?" There
was laughter at the surrounding tables. Lever raised a hand to
silence it, then leaned across the table toward the boy. "They
only serve one kind offish here. Shark." Kim
looked across at the watchful faces of the new immortals, then back
at the Levers, father and son, seeing how much they enjoyed this
little joke. "Like
Time," he said. "How's
that?" asked the old man, sitting back in his chair, one arm
curled about the eagle's wing. "Time,"
said Kim, slowly cutting a second mouthful from the fish steak in
front of him. "It's like a shark in a bloodied sea." He saw
their amusement fade, the biter bit, a flicker in the corner of the
old man's eye. And something else. Respect. He saw how Lever looked
at him, measuring him anew. "Yes," he said, after a moment.
"So it is, boy. So it is." TOLONEN
climbed the twist of stairs easily, two at a time, like a man half
his age. As he turned to say something to the leader of the honor
guard, he realized he was alone. The stairs behind were empty, the
door at their foot closed. Up ahead the corridor was silent, dimly
lit, doors set off on either side. At the far end a doorway led
through to the central control room. "What
in hell . . ." he began, then fell silent. Something had not
been right. His instincts prickled, as if to alert him. Something
about their uniforms . . . He
reacted quickly, turning to shoot the first of them as they came
through the far door, but they were moving fast and the second had
aimed his knife before Tolonen could bring him down. He
fell to his knees, crumpled against the right-hand wall, blood oozing
from his left arm, his gun arm, his weapon fallen to the floor. He
could hear shooting from below, from back the way he'd come, but
there was no time to work out what it meant. As he pulled the knife
from his arm and straightened up, another of the assassins appeared
at the far end of the corridor. Grabbing
up the gun, he opened fire right-handed, hitting the man almost as he
was on him. The assassin jerked backward, then lay there, twitching,
his face shot away, the long knife still trembling in his hand. He
understood. They had instructions to take him alive. If not, he would
have been dead already. But who was it wanted him? He
barely had time to consider the question when he heard the door slide
open down below and footsteps on the stairs. He swung around, a hot
stab of pain shooting up his arm as he aimed his gun down into the
stairwell. It was
Haavikko. Tolonen felt a surge of anger wash through him. "You
bastard!" he hissed, pointing his gun at him. "No!"
Haavikko said urgently, putting his hands out at his sides, the big
automatic he carried pointing away from the Marshal. "You don't
understand! The honor guard. Their chest patches. Think, Marshal!
Think!" Tolonen
lowered his gun. That was right. The recognition band on their chest
patches had been the wrong color. It had been the green of an African
banner, not the orange of a European one. Haavikko
started up the steps again. "Quick! We've got to get inside." Tolonen
nodded, then turned, covering the corridor as Haavikko came
alongside. "I'll
check the first room out," Axel said into his ear. "We can
hole up there until help comes. It'll be easier to defend than this." The
old man nodded, gritting his teeth against the pain in his arm.
"Right. Go. I'll cover you." He
moved out to the right, covering the doorway and the corridor beyond
as Haavikko tugged the door open and stepped inside. Then Haavikko
turned back, signaling for him to come. Inside,
the room was a mess. This whole section was supposed to be a safe
area— a heavily guarded resting place for visiting Security
staff—but someone had taken it apart. The mattresses were
ripped, the standing lockers kicked over, papers littered the floor. Haavikko
pointed across the room. "Get behind there—between the
locker and the bed. I'll take up a position by the door." Tolonen
didn't argue. His arm was throbbing painfully now and he was
beginning to feel faint. He crossed the room as quickly as he could
and slumped against the wall, a wave of nausea sweeping over him. It was
not a moment too soon. Tolonen heard the door slam further down the
corridor and the sound of running men. Then Haavikko's big gun opened
up, deafening in that confined space. Haavikko
turned, looking back at him. "There are more of them coming.
Down below. Wait there. I'll deal with them." Through
darkening vision, Tolonen saw him draw the grenade from his belt and
move out into the corridor. It was a big thing; the kind they used to
blast their way through a blocked Seal. He closed his eyes, hearing
the grenade clatter on the steps. And
then nothing. AXEL
CROSSED the room swiftly, throwing himself on top of the locker,
shielding the Marshal with his body. It was not a moment too soon. An
instant later the blast shook the air, ripping at his back, rocking
the whole room. He
pulled himself upright. There was a stinging pain in his right
shoulder and a sudden warmth at his ear and neck. He looked down.
Tolonen was unconscious now and the wound in his arm was still
seeping blood, but the blast seemed not to have harmed him any
further. Axel
turned. The room was slowly filling with smoke and dust. Coughing, he
half-lifted the old man, then dragged him across the room and out
into the corridor. He stopped a moment, listening, then hauled the
old man up onto his shoulder, grunting with the effort, his own pain
forgotten. Half-crouching, the gun strangely heavy in his left hand,
he made his way along the corridor, stepping between the fallen
bodies. At the far end he kicked the door open, praying there were no
more of them. The
room was empty, the door on the far side open. Taking a breath he
moved on, hauling the old man through the doorway. He could hear
running feet and shouts from all sides now, but distant, muted, as if
on another level. Ping
Tiaol If so, he had to get the Marshal as far away as
possible. The
Marshal was breathing awkwardly now, erratically. The wound in his
arm was bad, his uniform soaked with blood. He
carried the old man to the far side of the room then set him down
gently, loosening his collar. He cut a strip of cloth from his own
tunic and twisted it into a cord, then bound it tightly about the
Marshal's arm, just above the wound. The old man hadn't been
thinking. Pulling the knife out had been the worst thing he could
have done. He should have left it in. Now it would be touch and go. He
squatted there on his haunches, breathing slowly, calming himself,
the gun balanced across his knee, one hand combing back his thick
blond hair. Waiting ... Seconds
passed. A minute ... He had almost relaxed when he saw it. The
thing scuttled along the ceiling at the far end of the corridor.
Something new. Something he had never seen before. A probe of some
kind. Slender, camouflaged, it showed itself only in movement, in the
tiny shadows it cast. It
came a few steps closer and stopped, focusing on them. Its tiny
camera eye rotated with the smallest of movements of the lens. He
understood at once. This was the assassin's "eyes." The man
himself would be watching, out of sight, ready to strike as soon as
he knew how things stood. Axel
threw himself forward, rolling, coming up just as the assassin came
around the corner. The
tactic worked. It gave him the fraction of a second that he needed.
He was not where the man thought he'd be, and in that split second of
uncertainty the assassin was undone. Axel
stood over the dead man, looking down at him. His limbs shook badly
now, adrenaline changed to a kind of naked fear, realizing how close
it had been. He
turned away, returning to Tolonen. The bleeding had stopped, but the
old man was still unconscious, his breathing slow, laborious. His
face had an unhealthy pallor. Axel
knelt astride the Marshal, tilting his head backward, lifting his
neck. Then, pinching his nostrils closed, he breathed into his mouth. Where
was the backup? Where was the regular squad? Or had the Ping Tiao
taken out the entire deck? He
shuddered and bent down again, pushing his breath into the old man,
knowing he was fighting for his life. And
then there was help. People were milling about behind him in the
room— special elite Security and medics. Someone touched his
arm, taking over for him. Another drew him aside, pulling him away. "The
Marshal will be all right now. We've regularized his breathing." Haavikko
laughed. Then it had failed! The assassination attempt had failed! He
started to turn, to go over to Tolonen and tell him, but as he moved
a huge wave of blackness hit him. Hands
grabbed for him as he keeled over, cushioning his fall, then settled
him gently against the wall. "Kuan
Yin!" said one of them, seeing the extent of his burns. "We'd
better get him to a special unit fast. It's a wonder he got this
far." TEN
THOUSAND li away, on the far side of the Atlantic, DeVore was
sitting down to breakfast at the Lever Mansion. The Levers—father
and son—had come straight from Archimedes' Kitchen. DeVore had
got up early to greet them, impressed by the old man's energy. He
seemed as fresh after a night of wining and dining as he had when
he'd first greeted DeVore more than thirty hours before. While
servants hurried to prepare things, they went into the Empire Room.
It was a big, inelegant room, its furnishings rather too heavy, too
overbearing for DeVore's taste. Even so, there was something
impressive about it, from the massive pillars that reached up into
the darkness overhead to the gallery that overlooked it on all four
sides. The table about which they sat was huge—large enough to
sit several dozen in comfort—yet it had been set for the three
of them alone. DeVore sat back in the tall-backed chair, his hands
resting on the polished oak of the arms, looking down the full length
of the table at Lever. The
old man smiled, raising a hand to summon one of his servants from the
shadows. "Well, Howard? How did you get on?" DeVore
smiled. Lever was referring to the return match against Kustow's wei
chi champion. "I
was very fortunate. I lost the first two. But then . . ." Lever
raised an eyebrow. "You beat him?" DeVore
lowered his head, feigning modesty, but it had been easy. He could
have won all five. "As I say, I was fortunate." Michael
Lever stared at him, surprised. "Your
friends were most hospitable," DeVore said. "They're good
fellows, Michael. I wish we had their like in City Europe." "And
you, Howard? Did you win your money back?" DeVore
laughed. "Not at all. I knew how weak Kustow's man was. It would
not have been fair to have wagered money on the outcome." Michael
Lever nodded. "I see . . ." But it was clear he was more
impressed than he was willing to say. So it had been with the others
last night: their eyes had said what their mouths could not. DeVore
had seen the new respect with which they looked at him. Ten stones he
had won by, that last game. Kustow's champion would never live it
down. The
old man had been watching them from the far end of the table. Now he
interrupted. "It's
a shame you're not staying longer, Howard. I would have liked to take
you to see our installations." DeVore
smiled. He had heard rumors of how advanced they were, how openly
they flouted the Edict's guidelines. But then, the War with the
Dispersionists, which had so completely and devastatingly crushed the
Above in City Europe, had barely touched them here. Many of the
Dispersionists' natural allies here had kept out of that war. As a
result, things were much more buoyant, the Company Heads filled with
a raw self-confidence that was infectious. Everywhere he'd been there
was a sense of optimism; a sense that here, if nowhere else, change
could be forced through, Seven or no. He
looked back at Old Man Lever, bowing his head. "I would have
liked that, Charles. But next time, perhaps? I've been told your
factories are most impressive: a good few years ahead of their
European counterparts." Lever
laughed, then leaned forward. "And so they should be! I've spent
a great deal of money rebuilding them these past few years. But it
hasn't been easy. No. We've had to go backward to go forward, if you
see what I mean." DeVore
nodded, understanding. Indeed, if he needed any further clue to what
Lever meant, he had only to look about him. Mementos of the American
Empire were everywhere in the room, from the great spread eagles on
the backs of the chairs to the insignia on the silverware. Most
prominent of all was the huge map on the wall behind Old Man Lever: a
map of the American Empire at its height in 2043, five years after
the establishment of the sixty-nine States. The year of President
Griffin's assassination and the Great Collapse. On the
map, the red, white, and blue of the Empire stretched far into the
southern continent. Only the triple alliance of Brazil, Argentina,
and Uruguay had survived the massive American encroachments, forming
the last outposts of a onetime wholly Latin continent, while to the
north the whole of Canada had been swallowed up, its vastness divided
into three huge administrative areas. He
looked down. To him such maps were vivid testimonies to the
ephemerality of Empires, the certain dissolution of all things human
in the face of Time. But to Lever and his kind they were something
different. To them the map represented an ideal, a golden age to
which they must return. America.
He had seen how the word lit them from within, how their eyes
came alive at its sound. Like their European cousins, they had been
seduced by the great dream of return. A dream that his gift of the
Aristotle File was sure to feed, like coals on the fire of their
disaffection, until this whole vast City erupted in flames. He
sighed. Yes, the day would come. And he would be there when it did.
To see the Cities in flames, the Seven cast down. He
turned in his chair, taking a cup of coffee from the servant, then
looked across again, meeting Lever's eyes. "And the boy? How was
your dinner? I understand you took him to the Kitchen." Lever
smiled thoughtfully. "It went well. He's sharp, that one. Very
sharp. And I'm grateful for your introduction, Howard. It could prove
a most valuable contact." "That's
what I thought—" "However,"
Lever interrupted, "I've been wondering." DeVore
took a sip of his coffee and set the cup down, pushing it away from
him. "Wondering?" "Yes.
Think a moment. If the boy is so valuable, then why has Li Yuan sent
him here? Why hasn't he kept him close at hand, in Europe, where he
can use him?" DeVore
smiled. "To be honest with you, Charles, I'm not sure. I do know
that the old T'ang intended to have the boy terminated. Indeed, if it
hadn't been for the attack on the Project, the boy wouldn't be here
now. It seems Li Yuan must have reconsidered." "Yes.
But what's he up to now?" DeVore
laughed. "That's what we'd all like to know, neh? But to be
serious, I figure it like this. The boy suffered a great shock.
Certain psychological blocks that were induced in him during his
personality reconstruction aren't there any longer. In a very real
sense he's not the same person he was before the attack. Li Yuan has
been told that. He's also been told that, as a result, the boy is not
one hundred percent reliable. That he needs a rest and maybe a change
of setting. So what does he do? He ships the boy off here, with a
complete medical backup, hoping that the trip will do him good and
that he'll return refreshed, ready to get to work again." Lever
nodded thoughtfully. "So you think Li Yuan will use him, after
all?" DeVore
raised his eyebrows. "Maybe. But then maybe not. I have heard
rumors." "Rumors?" DeVore
smiled, then shrugged apologetically. "I can't say just yet. But
when I hear more I'll let you know, I promise you." Lever
huffed impatiently, then turned in his chair, snapping his fingers.
"Come! Quickly now! I'm starving." Across
from him his son laughed. "But, Father, you only ate three hours
back. How can you be starving?" Lever
stared back at his son a moment, then joined his laughter. "I
know. But I am, all the same." He looked back at DeVore. "And
you, Howard, what will you eat?" DeVore
smiled. The world, he thought. I'll eat die world. But
aloud he said, "Coffee will do me fine, Charles. I've no
appetite just now. Maybe later, neh?" He
turned, looking at the son. "Are you eating, Michael, or can I
interest you in a breath of air?" The
young man sat back, drawing one hand through his short blond hair. "I
was going to get a few hours sleep, but half an hour won't make much
difference." He turned, looking across. "You'll excuse us,
Father?" Lever
nodded. "That's fine, Michael. But remember there's a lot still
to be done before Friday night." Young
Lever smiled. "It's all in hand." "Good!"
Lever lifted his fork, pointing at DeVore. "Why don't you change
your mind and stay over, Howard? We're holding a Thanksgiving Ball.
You could see how we Americans celebrate things. Besides, there'll be
a lot of interesting and important people there. People you ought to
meet." DeVore
bowed his head. "Thanks, but I really must get back tonight.
Another time, perhaps?" Lever
shrugged, then waved them away, lowering his head as he dug into his
breakfast. Outside
it was cooler. Subtle lighting gave the impression that it really was
morning, that they really were walking beneath a fresh, early autumn
sky, a faint breeze whispering through the branches of the nearby
trees. DeVore,
watching the younger Lever, saw how he changed once out of his
father's presence, how the tense pose of formality slipped from him. "Was
I right?" he asked, as soon as they were out of earshot of the
mansion. Lever
turned. "You're a clever man, Howard, but don't underestimate my
father." "Maybe.
But was I right?" Lever
nodded. "It was all he talked about. But then, that's not
surprising. It's an obsession with him. Immortality . . ." He
shook his head. DeVore
put his hand on the young man's arm. "I understand how you must
feel, Michael. I've not said anything before now—after all, it
would hardly be good manners to talk of it in front of your
father—but to you I can speak freely. You see, I find the idea
of living forever quite absurd. To think that we could outwit death—
that we could beat the old Master at his own game!" He laughed
and shook his head ruefully, seeing how he had struck a chord in the
other man. "Well, I'm sure you agree. The very idea is
ludicrous. Besides, why perpetuate the weakness of the old
creature—the mei yu jen went Why not strive to make some
better, finer being?" "What
do you mean?" DeVore
lowered his voice. "You've seen what I've achieved so far. Well,
much more has yet to be done. The fortresses are but a small part of
my scheme. It's my belief that we must look beyond the destruction of
the Seven and anticipate what happens afterward. And not merely
anticipate. The wise man seeks to shape the future, surely?" Lever
nodded thoughtfully. "It's what I've always said," "Good.
Then hear me out, for I have a plan that might benefit us both." "Apian?" "Yes.
Something that will keep everyone happy." Lever
laughed. "That's a tall order." "But
not impossible. Listen. What if we were to set up an Immortality
Research Center in the Wilds?" Lever
started. "But I thought you said—?" "I
did. And I meant what I said. But look at it this way; you want one
thing, your father another. However, he has the power—the
money, to be precise—and you have nothing. Or as good as." He
could see from the sourness in the young man's face that he had
touched a raw nerve. "Well,
why not channel a little of that money into something for yourself,
Michael?" Lever's
eyes widened, understanding. "I see. When you talk of a research
center, you don't mean that, do you? You're talking of a front. A way
of channeling funds." "Of
course." "You're
asking me to fool my father. To draw on his obsession, hoping he'll
be blind to what I'm doing." DeVore
shook his head. "I'm asking nothing of you, Michael. You'll act
as you choose to act. And if that accords with what I want, then all
well and good. If not . . ." He shrugged and smiled pleasantly,
as if it didn't matter. "And
what do you want?" DeVore
hesitated. He had been asked that question so many times now that he
had even begun to ask it of himself. For a brief moment he was
tempted to spell it out—the whole grand scheme he carried in
his head—then changed his mind. "I
think you know what I want. But let me just ask you this, Michael. If
your father got his dearest wish—if he finally found a way of
becoming immortal—what then? Wouldn't that simply prove a curse
to all involved? After all, if he were to live forever, when
would you inherit?" Lever
met DeVore's eyes briefly, then looked away. But DeVore, watching,
had seen how his words had touched him to the quick. It was what he
feared—what his whole generation feared. To be a son forever,
bound by a living ghost. Lever
shivered, then shook his head. "And this Center—how would
you go about selling the idea to my father?" DeVore
smiled, then took the young man's arm again, leading him on,
beginning to outline his plan. But the most difficult part now lay
behind him. The rest would be easy. Immortality.
It was a nonsense, but a useful nonsense. And he would milk it to the
last drop. But before then he would carry out a few last schemes of
his own. To tidy things up, and settle a few last scores. IT was
AFTER six in the morning when Kim got back to the
high-security complex where he was staying. The guards checked his
ID, then passed him through. The
apartment was in darkness, only the faint glow of the console display
showing from the room at the far end of the hallway. He stood there a
moment, feeling uneasy. His bedroom was just up a little on the
right. He went through, closing the door behind him, then turned on
the bedside lamp. He
stiffened, then turned slowly, looking about him. The red silk
package on the bedside table had not been there when he had left.
Someone had been into the room. He
stared at it a moment, wondering what to do. If it were a bomb it
might already be too late—merely coming into the room could
have triggered the timer. Then he saw the note poking out from
beneath, and smiled, recognizing the hand. He
sat, placing the package beside him on the bed while he read the
note. It was in Mandarin, the black-ink characters formed with
confident, fluent strokes. At the foot of the small, silken sheet was
the young T'ang's seal, the Ywe Lung impressed into the bright
gold wax. He read it quickly. Shi/i
Ward, At our
first meeting I said that if you did as I wished I would tear up my
father's warrant. You have more than fulfilled your part of our
agreement, therefore I return my father's document, duly enacted. I
would be honored if you would also accept these few small gifts with
my sincere gratitude for your help in restoring the Project. I look
forward to seeing you on your return from my cousin's City.
With deepest respect, Li Yuan
Kim
looked up. The note was most unusual. With deepest respect. These
were not words a T'ang normally used to a subject. No, he knew enough
of the social mechanics of Chung Kuo to know that this was
exceptional behavior on the young T'ang's part. But why? What did he
want from him? Or was
that fair? Did Li Yuan have to want something? He put
the note down and picked up the package. Beneath the silk wrapping
was a tiny box, a black lacquered box, the letters of Kim's name
impressed into the lid in bright gold lettering. He felt a tiny
tremor of anticipation ripple through him as he opened it. Inside the
box, wrapped in the torn pieces of Li Shai Tung's warrant, were four
small cards. He spilled them onto the bed. They were little different
from the computer cards that were in use everywhere throughout Chung
Kuo: multipurpose cards that served to store information in every
shape and form. There was no guessing what these were until he fed
them into a comset. They might be credit chips, for instance, or
holograms, or special programs of some kind. The only clue he had was
the number Li Yuan had hand-written on each. He
scooped them up and went into the end room, turning on the desk lamp
beside the console before slipping the first of the cards—numbered
yi, one—into the slot in front of him. He sat
back, waiting. There
was the sound of a tiny bell being rung, the note high and pure, then
two words appeared on the screen. PASS
CODE? He
placed his hand palm down on the touchpad and leaned forward over the
dark, reflective surface, opening his eyes wide, letting the machine
verify his retinal print. He spoke four words of code, then sat back. There
was a fraction of a second's delay before the response came up on the
screen. AUDIO
OR VISUAL? "Visual,"
he said softly. The
surface rippled in acknowledgment, like the calm surface of a pool
dis- turbed
by a single small stone falling cleanly into its center. A moment
later the screen lifted smoothly from the desktop, tilting up to face
him. He
gave the code again. At once the screen filled with information. He
scanned through quickly, then sat back. It was an amended copy of his
contract with SimFic, buying out their interest in him. And the new
owner? It was written there at the foot of the contract. Kim Ward.
For the first time in his life he owned himself. He
shivered, then took the file from the slot, replacing it with the one
marked er, two. As the
screen lit up again, he nodded to himself. Of course. It would have
meant nothing being his own master without this—his citizenship
papers. But Li Yuan had gone further: he had authorized an all-levels
pass that gave Kim clearance to travel anywhere within the seven
Cities. Few people—even among the Above— were allowed
that. Two
more. He stared at the tiny cards a moment, wondering; then he placed
the third, marked san, into the slot. At
first he didn't understand. Maybe one of Li Yuaris servants had made
a mistake and placed the wrong card in the package. Then, as the
document scrolled on, he caught his breath, seeing his name in the
column marked "Registered Head." A
company! Li Yuan had given him his own company—complete with
offices, patents, and enough money to hire staff and undertake
preliminary research. He shook his head, bewildered. All this ... he
didn't understand. He
closed his eyes. It was like a dream, a dream he would shortly wake
from; yet when he opened his eyes again, the information was still
there on the screen, Li Yuan's personal verification codes rippling
down the side of the file. But
why? Why had Li Yuan given him all this? What did he want in return? He
laughed strangely, then shook his head again. It always came back to
that. He had grown so used to being owned—to being used—that
he could not think of such a gesture in any other way. But what if Li
Yuan wanted nothing? What if he meant what he had said in his note?
What had he to lose in making such a gesture? And
what gain? He
frowned, trying to see through the confusion of his feelings to the
objective truth, but for once it proved too difficult. He could think
of no reason for Li Yuan's generosity. None but the one his words
appeared to give. He
removed the file, then placed the last of the cards, marked si, into
the slot. What
noui? What else could Li Yuan possibly give him? It was
a different kind of file—he saw that at once. For a start, Li
Yuan's personal code was missing. But it was more than that. He could
tell by the length and complexity of the file that it had been
prepared by experts. He
gave the access code. At once the screen filled with brilliant
colors, like a starburst, quickly resolving itself into a complex
diagram. He sat back, his mouth wide open. It was a genotyping. No.
Not just a genotyping. He knew at once what it was without needing to
be told. It was his genotyping. He
watched, wide-eyed, as the program advanced, one detail after another
of the DNA map boldly emphasized on the screen. Then, lifting the
details from the flat screen one by one, it began to piece the
building blocks together until a holo-image of a double helix floated
in the air above the desk, turning slowly in the darkness. He
studied the slowly turning spiral, memorizing it, his heart pounding
in his chest, then gave the verbal cue to progress the file. The
next page gave a full probability set. It numbered just short of six
billion possible candidates: the total number of adult male Hung Mao
back in 2190. He shivered, beginning to understand, then cued the
file again. The next display itemized close-match candidates. Ten
names in all. He scanned the list, his mouth fallen open again. His
father . . . One of these was his father. One by
one he was given details of the ten: genotypes, full-face portraits,
potted biographies, each file quite frightening in its detail. When
the last had faded from the screen he called hold, then sat back, his
eyes closed, his breathing shallow. He felt strange, as if he were
standing on the edge of a deep well, ill-balanced, about to fall. He
shivered, knowing he had never felt like this before. Knowledge had
always been an opening, a breaching of the dark, but this . . . For
once he was afraid to know. He let
the giddiness pass and opened his eyes again, steeling himself. "All
right. Move on." There
was a full-second's hesitation and then the screen lit up. This time
it gave details of the known movements of the ten candidates over a
three-month period in the Winter of 2190, details compiled from
Security files. It
narrowed things down to a single candidate. Only one of the ten had
visited the Clay during that period. Only one, therefore, could
possibly have been his father. He
swallowed dryly, then cued the file again. The
image appeared immediately, as sharp as if it had been made earlier
that day. A youngish man in his late twenties or early thirties, a
tall, slightly built man, fine-boned and elegant, with distinctly
aristocratic features. His light-brown hair was cut neatly but not
too severely and his dark-green eyes seemed kind, warm. He was
dressed simply but stylishly in a dark-red pau, while around
both of his wrists were a number of slender tiao tuo, bracelets
of gold and jade. Kim
narrowed his eyes, noticing an oddity about the man. It was as if his
head and body were parts of two different, separate beings; the head
too large, somehow, the chin and facial features too strong for the
slender, almost frail body that supported them. Kim frowned, then
mouthed his father's name. "Edmund . . . Edmund Wyatt." It was
an old image. Looking at it, he felt something like regret that he
would never meet this man or come to know him; for, as the file
indicated, Edmund Wyatt had been dead for eight years—executed
for the murder of the T'ang's minister, Lwo Kang. A crime for which
he had later, privately, been pardoned. Kim shuddered. Was that
the reason for Li Yuan's generosity? To square things up somehow?
Or was a T'ang above such moral scruples? He
leaned forward, about to close the file, when the image of Wyatt
vanished. For a moment the screen was blank; then it lit up again.
GENOTYPE PREDICT: FEMALE SOURCE. He
called hold, his voice almost failing him, his heart hammering once
more. For a long time he sat there, hunched forward in his chair,
staring at the heading; then in a voice that was almost a whisper, he
gave the cue. First
came the genotype, the puzzle pieces of DNA that would interlock with
Edmund Wyatt s to produce his own. He watched as they formed a
double-helix in the air. Then, dramatically, they vanished, replaced
not by further figures, but by a computer-graphics simulation—a
full-length 3-D portrait of a naked woman. He
gasped, then shook his head, not quite believing what he saw. It was
his mother. Though he had not seen her in almost a dozen years, he
knew at once that it was she. But not as she had been. No, this was
not at all like the scrawny, lank-haired, dugless creature he had
known. He
almost laughed at the absurdity of the image, but a far stronger
feeling—that of bitterness—choked back the laughter. He
moaned and looked away, the feeling of loss so great that for a
moment it threatened to unhinge him. "Mother
. . ." he whispered, his eyes blurring over. "Mother ..."
The computer had made assumptions. It was programmed to assume a
normal Above diet, normal Above life-expectations. These it had fed
into its simulation, producing something that, had such conditions
prevailed down in the Clay, would have been quite accurate. But as it
was . . . Kim
looked at the image again, staring, open-mouthed at a portrait of his
mother as she might have been: a dark-haired beauty, strong-limbed
and voluptuous, full-breasted and a good two ch'i taller than
she had been in life. A strong, handsome woman. He
shuddered, angered. It was awful, like some dreadful mockery. He
shook his head. No. The reality—the truth—that was
grotesque. And this? He
hesitated, afraid to use the word; but there was no other way of
describing the image that floated there in the darkness. It was
beautiful. Beautiful. The
image was a li<e. And yet it was his mother. There was no
doubt of that. He had thought her gome from mind, all trace of her
erased. After all, he had been little more than four when the tribe
had taken him. But now the memories came back, like ghosts,
tauinting, torturing him. He had
only to close his eyes and he could see her crouched beneath the low
stone wall, just after tthey had escaped from the Myghtern's brothel,
her eyes bright with excitement. Coiuld see her lying beside him in
the darkness, reaching out to hold him close, her tthin arms curled
about him. Could see her, later, scrambling across the rocks in tlhe
shadow of the Wall, hunting, her emaciated form flexing and unflexing
as she tracked some pallid, ratlike creature. Could see her turn,
staring back at him, a smile on her lips and in her dark,
well-rounded eyes. Could
see her . . . He
covered his eyes, pressing his palms tight into the sockets as if to
block out these visions, a singlle wavering note of hurt—a low,
raw, animal sound, unbearable in its intensity—welling up from
deep inside him. For a
time there was nothing but his pain. Nothing but the vast,
unendurable blackness of loss. Then, as it ebbed, he looked up once
more, and with a shuddering breath, reached out ito touch her. His
fingers brushed the air, passed through the beautiful, insubstantial
image. He
sighed. Oh, hie could see her now. Yes. And not only as she was but
as she should have been. Glorious. Wonderful. . . He sat
back, wiping the wetness from his cheeks; then he shook his head,
knowing that it was wrong to live like this, the City above, the Clay
below. Knowing, with a certainty he had never felt before, that
something had gone wrong. Badly wrong,. He
leaned forward, closing the file, then sat back again, letting out a
long, shuddering breath. Yes, he knew it now. Saw it with a clarity
that allowed no trace of doubt. Chung Kuo was like himself:
motherless, ghost-haunted, divided against itself. It might seem
(teeming with life, yet in reality it was a great, resounding shell,
its emptiness echoirug down the levels. Kim
picked up the four tiny cards and held them a moment in his palm. Li
Yuan had given him back his life. More than that, he had given him a
future. But who would give Chung Kuo such a chance? Who would give
the great world back its past and seek to heail it? He
shook his head. No, not even Li Yuan could do that. Not even if he
wished it. CHAPTER
ELEVEN
The
Tiger's Mouth EBERT
LOOKED about him, then turned back to Mu Chua, smiling. "You've
done well, Mu Chua. I'd hardly have recognized the place. They'll be
here any time now, so remember these are important business contacts
and I want to impress them. Are the new girls dressed as I asked?" Mu
Chua nodded. "Good.
Well, keep them until after my entrance. These things must be done
correctly, neh? One must whet their appetites before giving them the
main course." "Of
course, General. And may I say again how grateful I am that you honor
my humble House. It is not every day that we play host to the
nobility." Ebert
nodded. "Yes . . . but more is at stake than that, Mother Chua.
If these ch'un tzu like what they see, it is more than likely
you will receive an invitation." "An
invitation?" "Yes.
To a chao ted hid, an entertainment, at one of the First Level
mansions. This afternoon, I am told, there is to be a gathering of
young princes. And they will need—how shall I put it?—special
services." Mu
Chua lowered her head. "Whatever they wish. My girls are the
very best. They are shen nu, god girls." Again
Ebert nodded, but this time he seemed distracted. After a moment he
looked back at Mu Chua. "Did the wine from my father's cellar
arrive?" "It
did, Excellency." "Good.
Then you will ensure that our guests drink that and nothing else.
They are to have nothing but the best." "Of
course, General." "I
want no deceptions, understand me, Mu Chua. Carry this off for me and
I will reward you handsomely. Ten thousand yuan for you alone.
And a thousand apiece for each of your girls. That's on top of your
standard fees and expenses." Mu
Chua lowered her head. "You are too generous, Excellency." Ebert
laughed. "Maybe. But you have been good to me over the years,
Mother Chua. And when this proposition was put before me, my first
thought was of you and your excellent House. 'Who better,' I said to
myself, 'than Mu Chua at entertaining guests.'" He smiled
broadly at her, for once almost likable. "I am certain you will
not let me down." Mu
Chua lowered her head. "Your guests will be transported." He
laughed. "Indeed." After
Ebert had gone, she stood there a moment, almost in a trance at the
thought of the ten thousand yuan he had promised. Together
with what she would milk from this morning's entertainment, it would
be enough. Enough, at last, to get out of here. To pay off her
contacts in the Above and climb the levels. Yes.
She had arranged it all already. And now, at last she could get away.
Away from Whiskers Lu and the dreadful seediness of this place. Could
find somewhere up-level and open up a small, discreet, cozy little
house. Something very different, with its own select clientele and
its own strict rules. She
felt a little shiver of anticipation pass through her; then stirred
herself, making the last few arrangements before the two men came,
getting the girls to set out the wine and lay a table with the
specially prepared sweetmeats. She
had no idea what Ebert was up to, but it was clear that he set a
great deal of importance on this meeting. Only two days ago his man
had turned up out of the blue and handed her twenty-five thousand
yuan to have the House redecorated. It had meant losing custom
for a day, but she had still come out of it ahead. Now it seemed
likely that she would gain much more. Even
so, her suspicions of Hans Ebert remained. If he was up to something
it was almost certain to be no good. But was that her concern? If she
could make enough this one last time she could forget Ebert and his
kind. This was her way out. After today she need never compromise
again. It would be as it was, before the death of her protector, Feng
Chung. The
thought made her smile; made her spirits rise. Well, as this was the
last time, she would make it special. Would make it something that
£ven Hans Ebert would remember. She
busied herself, arranging things to perfection, then called in the
four girls who were to greet their guests. Young girls, as Ebert had
specified, none of them older than thirteen. She
looked at herself in the mirror, brushing a speck of powder from her
cheek, then turned, hearing the bell sound out in the reception room.
They were here. She
went out, kneeling before the two men, touching her forehead against
her knees. Behind her, the four young girls did the same, standing at
the same time that she stood. It was a calculated effect, and she saw
how much it pleased the men. Ebert
had briefed her fully beforehand; providing her with everything she
needed to know about them, from their business dealings down to their
sexual preferences. Even so, she was still surprised by the contrast
the two men made. Hsiang
K'ai Fan was a big, flabby-chested man, almost effeminate in his
manner. His eyes seemed to stare out of a landscape of flesh,
triple-chinned and slack-jowled; yet his movements were dainty and
his dress was exquisite. His lavender silks followed the fashion of
the Minor Families—a fashion that was wholly and deliberately
out of step with what was being worn elsewhere in the Above—with
long wide sleeves and a flowing gown that hid his booted feet.
Heavily perfumed, he was nonetheless restrained in his use of
jewelry, the richest item of his apparel being the broad, red velvet
ta lian, or girdle pouch, that he wore about his enormous
waist, the two clasps of which were studded with rubies and emeralds
in the shape of two butterflies. His nails were excessively long, in
the manner of the Families; the ivory-handled fan he held moved
slowly in the air as he looked about him. An
Liang-chou, on the other hand, was a tiny, ratlike man, stringily
built and astonishingly ugly even by the standard of some of the
clients Mu Chua had entertained over the years. Flat-faced and
beady-eyed, he was as nervous as Hsiang was languid; his movements
jerky, awkward. Meeting his eyes, Mu Chua smiled tightly, trying to
keep the aversion she felt from showing. Rumor had it that he fucked
all six of his daughters—even the youngest, who was only six.
Looking at him, it was not hard to imagine. She had seen at once how
his eyes had lit up at the sight of her girls. How a dark, lascivious
light had come to them: the kind of look a predatory insect gives its
victim before it pounces. Unlike
Hsiang, An Liang-chou seemed to have no taste at all when it came to
dress. His gaudily colored pau hung loosely on him, as if he
had stolen it from another. Like Hsiang he was heavily perfumed, but
it was an unpleasantly sickly scent, more sour than sweet, as if
mixed with his own sweat. She saw how his hand—the fingers
thickly crusted with jeweled rings—went to his short ceremonial
dagger; how his lips moved wetly as he considered which girl he would
have first. "My
lords . . . you are welcome to my humble House," she said,
lowering her head again. "Would you care for something to
drink?" Hsiang
seemed about to answer, but before he could do so, An Liang-chou
moved past her and after pawing two of the girls, chose the third.
Gripping her upper arm tightly he dragged her roughly after him,
through the beaded curtain and into the rooms beyond. Mu
Chua watched him go, then turned back to Hsiang, smiling, all
politeness. "Would
the Lord Hsiang like refreshments?" Hsiang
smiled graciously and let himself be led into the next room. But in
the doorway to the Room of Heaven he stopped and turned to look at
her. "Why,
this is excellent, Mu Chua. The General was not wrong when he said
you were a woman of taste. I would not have thought such a place
could have existed outside First Level." She
bowed low, immensely pleased by his praise. "Ours is but a
humble House, Excellency." "However,"
he said, moving on, into the room, "I had hoped for—well,
let us not prevaricate, eh?—for special pleasures." She
saw how he looked at her and knew at once that she had misjudged him
totally. His silken manners masked a nature far more repugnant than
An Liang-chou's. "Special
pleasures, Excellency?" He
turned, then sat in the huge silk-cushioned chair she had bought
specially to accommodate his bulk, the fan moving slowly, languidly
in his hand. He
looked back at her, his tiny eyes cold and calculating amid the flesh
of his face. "Yes," he said smoothly. "They say you
can buy anything in the Net. Anything at all." She
felt herself go cold. Ebert had said nothing about this. From what
he'd said, Hsiang's pleasures were no more unnatural than the next
man's. But this . . . She
waved the girls away, then slid the door across and turned to face
him, reminding herself that this was her passage out, the last time
she would have to deal with his kind. "What
is it you would like?" she asked, keeping her voice steady. "We
cater for all tastes here, my Lord." He
smiled, a broad gap opening in the flesh of his lower face, showing
teeth that seemed somehow too small to fill the space. His voice was
silken, like the voice of a young woman. "My
needs are simple, Mu Chua. Very simple. And the General promised me
that you would meet them." She
knelt, bowing her head. "Of course, Excellency. But tell me,
what exactly is it that you want?" He
clicked the fan shut, then leaned forward slightly, beckoning her
across. She
rose, moving closer, then knelt, her face only a hand's width from
his knees. He leaned close, whispering, a hint of aniseed on his
breath. "I
have been told that there is a close connection between sex and
death, that the finest pleasure of all is to fuck a woman at the
moment of her death. I have been told that the death throes of a
woman bring on an orgasm so intense . . ." She
looked up at him, horrified, but he was looking past her, his eyes
lit with an intense pleasure, as if he could see the thing he was
describing. She let him spell it out, barely listening to him now,
then sat back on her heels, a small shiver passing through her. "You
want to kill one of my girls, is that it, Lord Hsiang? You wish to
slit her throat while you are making love to her?" He
looked back at her, nodding. "I will pay well." "Pay
well . . ." She looked down. It was not the first time she had
had such a request. Even in the old days there had been some like
Hsiang who linked their pleasure to the pain of others, but even
under Whiskers Lu there had been limits to what she would allow. She
had never had one of her girls die while with a client, intentionally
or otherwise; and it was on her tongue to tell this bastard, Prince
or no, to go fuck himself. But. . . She
shuddered, then looked up at him again, seeing how eagerly he awaited
her answer. To say no was to condemn herself at best to staying here,
at worst to incurring the anger of Hans Ebert. And who knew what he
would do to her if she spoiled things now for him? But to say yes was
to comply with the murder of one of her girls. It would be as if she
herself had held the knife and drawn it across the flesh. "What
you ask . . ." she began, then hesitated. "Yes?" She
stood, then turned away, moving toward the door before turning back
to face him again. "You must let me think, Lord Hsiang. My girls
. . ." "Of course," he said, as if he understood. "It
must be a special girl." His laughter chilled her blood. It was
as if what he was discussing were commonplace. As for the girl
herself... In all her years she had tried to keep it in her mind that
what her clients bought was not the girl, but the services of the
girl, as one bought the services of an accountant or a broker. But
men like Hsiang made no such distinction. To them the girl was but a
thing to be used and discarded as they wished. But how to say no?
What possible excuse could she give that would placate Hsiang K'ai
Fan? Her mind raced, turning back upon itself time and again, trying
to find a way out, some way of resolving this impossible dilemma.
Then she relaxed, knowing, at last, what to do. She
smiled and moved closer, taking Hsiang's hands gently and raising him
from his chair. "Come,"
she said, kissing his swollen neck, her right hand moving down his
bloated flank, caressing him. "You wanted special pleasures,
Hsiang K'ai Fan, and special pleasures you will have. Good wine, fine
music, the very best of foods . . ." "And
after?" He stared at her expectantly. Mu
Chua smiled, letting her hand rest briefly on the hard shape at his
groin, caressing it through the silk. "After, we shall do as you
wish." charles
lever's son Michael sat at his desk, facing Kim across the vastness
of his office. "Well?
Have you seen enough?" Kim
looked about him. Huge tapestries filled the walls to the left and
right of him, broad panoramas of the Rockies and the great American
plains; while on the end wall, beyond Lever's big oak desk and the
leather-backed swivel chair, was a bank of screens eight deep and
twenty wide. In the center of the plushly carpeted room, on a big low
table, under glass, was a 3-D map of the east coast of City North
America, ImmVac's installations marked in blue. Kim moved closer,
peering down through the glass. "There's
an awful lot to see." Lever
laughed. "That's true. But I think you've seen most of the more
interesting parts." Kim
nodded. They had spent the day looking over Imm Vac's installations,
but they had still seen only a small fraction of Old Man Lever's vast
commercial empire. More than ever, Kim had been conscious of the
sheer scale of the world into which he had come. Down in the Clay, it
was not possible to imagine the vastness of what existed a wartha—up
Above. At times he found himself overawed by it all, wishing for
somewhere smaller, darker, cozier in which to hide. But that feeling
never lasted long. It was, he recognized, residual; part of the
darker self he had shrugged off. No, this was his world now. The
world of vast continent-spanning cities and huge corporations
battling for their share of Chung Kuo's markets. He
looked up. Lever was searching in one of the drawers of his desk. A
moment later he straightened, clutching a bulky folder. Closing the
drawer with his knee, he came around, thumping the file down beside
Kim. "Here.
This might interest you." Kim
watched as Lever crossed the room and locked the big double doors
with an old-fashioned key. "You
like old things, don't you?" Lever
turned, smiling. "I've never thought about it really. We've
always done things this way. Hand-written research files, proper
keys, wooden desks. I guess it makes us ... different from the other
North American companies. Besides, it makes good sense. Computers are
untrustworthy, easily accessed, and subject to viruses. Likewise
doorlocks and recognition units. But a good, old-fashioned key can't
be beaten. In an age of guile, people are reluctant to use force—to
break down a door or force open a drawer. The people who'd be most
interested in our product have grown too used to sitting at their own
desks while they commit their crimes. To take the risk of entering
one of our facilities would be beyond most of them." He laughed.
"Besides, it's my father's policy to keep them happy with a
constant flow of disinformation. Failed research, blind alleys, minor
spin-offs of a more important research program—that kind of
thing. They tap into it and think they've got their finger on the
pulse." Kim grinned. "And they never learn?" Lever
shook his head, amused. "Not yet they haven't." Kim looked
down at the file. "And this?" "Open it and see. Take
it across to my desk if you want." Kim flipped back the cover
and looked, then turned his head sharply, staring at Lever. "Where
did you get this?" "You've seen it before?" Kim
looked down at it again. "I have ... of course I have,
but not in this form. Who . . . ?" Then he recognized the
handwriting. The same handwriting that had been on the copy of the
cancelled SimFic contract he had been given by Li Yuan. "Soren
Berdichev . . ." Lever
was looking at him strangely now. "You knew?" Kim
gave a small, shuddering breath. "Six years ago. When I was on
the Project." "You
met Berdichev there?" "He
bought my contract. For his company, SimFic." "Ah . . . Of
course. Then you knew he'd written the File?" Kim laughed
strangely. "You think Berdichev wrote this?" "Who
else?" Kim
looked away. "So. He claimed it for his own." Lever
shook his head. "Are you trying to tell me he stole it from
someone?" In a small voice, Kim began to recite the opening of
the File; the story of the pre-Socratic Greeks and the establishment
of the Aristotelian yes/no mode of thought. Lever stared back at him
with mounting surprise. "Shall I continue?" Lever
laughed. "So you do know it. But how? Who showed it to you?"
Kim handed it back. "I know because I wrote it." Lever
looked down at the folder, then back at Kim, giving a small laugh of
disbelief. "No," he said quietly. "You were only a
boy." Kim
was watching Lever closely. "It was something I put together
from some old computer records I unearthed. I thought Berdichev had
destroyed it. I never knew he'd kept a copy." "And
yet you knew nothing about the dissemination?" "The
dissemination?" "You
mean, you really didn't know?" Lever shook his head,
astonished. "This is the original, but there are a thousand more
copies back in Europe, each one of them like this, hand-written. Now
we're going to do the same over here— disseminate them among
those sympathetic to the cause." "The
cause?" "The
Sons of Benjamin Franklin. Oh, we'd heard rumors about the File and
its contents some time ago, but until recently we'd never seen it.
Now, however—" He laughed, then shook his head again in
amazement. "Well, it's like a fever in our blood. But you
understand that, don't you, Kim? After all, you wrote the
bloody thing!" Kim
nodded, but inside he felt numbed. He had never imagined . . . "Here,
look . . ." Lever led Kim over to one of the tapestries. "I
commissioned this a year ago, before I'd seen the File. We put it
together from what we knew about the past. It shows how things were
before the City." Kim
looked at it and shook his head. "It's wrong." "Wrong?" "Yes,
all the details are wrong. Look." He touched one of the animals
on the rocks in the foreground. "This is a lion. But it's an
African lion. There never were any lions of this kind in America. And
those wagons crossing the plains, they would have been drawn by
horses. The gasoline engine was a much later development. And these
tents here—they're Mongol in style. North American Indian tents
were different. And then there are these pagodas—" "But
in the File it says—" "Oh,
it's not that these things didn't exist, it's just that they didn't
exist at the same time or in the same place. Besides, there were
Cities even then—here on the east coast." "Cities?
But I thought—" "You
thought the Han invented Cities? No. Cities have been in Man's blood
since the dawn of civilization. Why, Security Central at Bremen is
nothing more than a copy of the great ziggurat at Ur, built more than
five thousand years ago." Lever
had gone very still. He was watching Kim closely, a strange intensity
in his eyes. After a moment he shook his head, giving a soft laugh. "You
really did write it, didn't you?" Kim
nodded, then turned back to the tapestry. "And this"—he
bent down, indicating the lettering at the foot of the picture—"this
is wrong too." Lever
leaned forward, staring at the lettering. "How do you mean?" "A.D.
It doesn't mean what's written here. That was another of Tsao Ch'un's
lies. He was never related to the Emperor Tsao He, nor to any of
them. So all of this business about the Ancestral Dynasties is a
complete nonsense. Likewise B.C. It doesn't mean 'Before the Crane.'
In fact, Tsao He, the 'Crane,' supposedly the founder of the Han
Dynasty and ancestor of all subsequent dynasties, never even existed.
In reality, Liu Chi-tzu, otherwise known as P'ing Ti, was Emperor at
the time—and he was the twelfth of the great Han dynasty
emperors. So, you see, the Han adapted parts of their own history
almost as radically as they changed that of the West. They had to—to
make sense of things and keep it all consistent." "So
what do they really mean?" "A.D.
. . . that stands for anno Domini. It's Latin—TaTs'in—for'the
year of our Lord.'" "Our
Lord?" "Jesus
Christ. You know, the founder of Christianity." "Ah
. . ." But Lever looked confused. "And B.C.? Is that Latin
too?" Kim
shook his head. "That's 'before Christ.' " Lever
laughed. "But that doesn't make sense. Why the mixture of
languages? And why in the gods' names would the Han adopt a Christian
dating for their calendar?" Kim
smiled. When one thought about it, it didn't make a great deal of
sense, but that was how it was—how it had been for more than a
hundred years before Tsao Ch'un arrived on the scene. It was the Ko
Ming—the Communists—who had adopted the Western
calendar; and Tsao Ch'un, in rewriting the history of Chung Kuo, had
found it easiest to keep the old measure. After all, it provided his
historians with a genuine sense of continuity, especially after he
had hit upon the idea of claiming that it dated from the first real
Han dynasty, ruled, of course, by his ancestor, Tsao He, "the
Crane." "Besides
. . ." Lever added, "I don't understand the importance of
this Christ figure. I know you talk of all these wars fought in his
name, but if he was so important why didn't the Han incorporate him
into their scheme of things?" Kim
looked down, taking a long breath. So they had read it but they had
not understood. In truth, their reading of the File was, in its way,
every bit as distorted as Tsao Ch'un's retelling of the world. Like
the tapestry, they would put the past together as they wanted it, not
as it really was. He met
Lever's eyes. "You forget. I didn't invent what's in the File.
That's how it was. And Christ. . ." he sighed. "Christ was
important to the West, in a way that he wasn't important to the Han.
To the Han he was merely an irritation. Like the insects, they didn't
want him in their City, so they built a kind of net to keep him out." Lever
shivered. "It's like that term they use for us—t'e an
tsan, 'innocent westerners.' All the time they seek to denigrate
us. To deny us what's rightfully ours." "Maybe
..." But Kim was thinking about Li Yuan's gifts. He, at least,
had been given back what was his. ebert
STRODE into the House of the Ninth Ecstasy, smiling broadly; then he
stopped, looking about him. Why was there no one to greet him? What
in the gods' names was the woman up to? He
called out, trying to keep the anger from his voice, "Mu Chua!
Mu Chua, where are you?" then crossed the room, pushing through
the beaded curtain. His
eyes met a scene of total chaos. There was blood everywhere. Wine
glasses had been smashed underfoot, trays of sweetmeats overturned
and ground into the carpet. On the far side of the room a girl lay
facedown, as if drunk or sleeping. He
whirled about, drawing his knife, hearing sudden shrieking from the
rooms off to his left. A moment later a man burst into the room. It
was Hsiang K'ai Fan. Hsiang
looked very different—his normally placid face was bright,
almost incandescent, with excitement; his eyes popping out from the
surrounding fat. His clothes, normally so immaculate, were
disheveled, the lavender silks ripped and spattered with blood. He
held his ceremonial dagger out before him, the blade slick, shining
wetly in the light; while, as if in some obscene parody of the blade,
his penis poked out from between the folds of the silk, stiff and wet
with blood. "Lord
Hsiang . . ." Ebert began, astonished by this transformation.
"What has been happening here?" Hsiang
laughed; a strange, chilling cackle. "Oh, it's been wonderful,
Hans . . . simply wonderful! IVe had such fun. Such glorious fun!" Ebert
swallowed, not sure what to make of Hsiang's "fun," but
quite sure that it spelt nothing but trouble for himself. "Where's
An Liang-chou? He's all right, isn't he?" Hsiang
grinned insanely, lowering the dagger. His eyes were unnaturally
bright, the pupils tightly contracted. He was breathing strangely,
his flabby chest rising and falling erratically. "An's fine.
Fucking little girls, as usual. But Hans . . . your woman . . . she
was magnificent. You should have seen the way she died. Oh, the
orgasm I had. It was just as they said it would be. Immense it was. I
couldn't stop coming. And then—" Ebert
shuddered. "You what7." He took a step
forward. "What are you saying? Mu Chua is dead?" Hsiang
nodded, his excitement almost feverish now, his penis twitching as he
spoke. "Yes, and then I thought. . . why not do it again? And
again . . . After all, as she said, I could settle with Whiskers Lu
when I was done." Ebert
stood there, shaking his head. "Gods . . ." He felt his
fingers tighten about his dagger, then slowly relaxed his hand. If he
killed Hsiang it would all be undone. No, he had to make the best of
things. To make his peace with Whiskers Lu and get Hsiang and An out
of here as quickly as possible. Before anyone else found out about
this. "How
many have you killed?" Hsiang
laughed. "I'm not sure. A dozen. Fifteen. Maybe more." "Gods
. . ." Ebert
stepped forward, taking the knife from Hsiang. "Come on,"
he said, worried by the look of fierce bemusement in Hsiang's face.
"Fun's over. Let's get An and go home." Hsiang
nodded vaguely, then bowed his head, letting himself be led into the
other room. Toward
the back of the House things seemed almost normal. But as Ebert came
to the Room of Heaven, he slowed, seeing the great streaks of blood
smeared down the door frames, and guessed what lay within. He
pushed Hsiang aside, then went inside. A girl lay to one side, dead,
her face bloody, her abdomen ripped open, the guts exposed; on the
far side of the room lay Ma Chua, naked, face up, on the huge bed,
her throat slit from ear to ear. Her flesh was ashen, as if bleached,
the sheets beneath her dark with her blood. He
stood there, looking down at her a moment, then shook his head.
Whiskers Lu would go mad when he heard about this. Mu Chua's House
had been a key part of his empire, bringing him a constant flow of
new contacts from the Above. Now, with Mu Chua dead, who would come? Ebert
took a deep breath. Yes, and Lu Ming-shao would blame him—for
making the introduction, for not checking up on Hsiang before he let
him go berserk down here. If he had known . . . He
twirled about, his anger bubbling over. "Fuck you, Hsiang! Do
you know what you've done?" Hsiang
K'ai Fan stared back at him, astonished. "I b-beg your pardon?"
he stammered. "This!"
Ebert threw his arm out, indicating the body on the bed; then he
grabbed Hsiang's arm and dragged him across the room. "What the
fuck made you want to do it, eh? Now we've got a bloody war on our
hands! Or will have, unless you placate the man." Hsiang
shook his head, bewildered. "What man?" "Lu
Ming-shao. Whiskers Lu. He's the big Triad boss around these parts.
He owns this place. And now you've gone and butchered his Madam.
He'll go berserk when he finds out. He'll hire assassins to track you
down and kill you." He saw
how Hsiang swallowed at that, how his eyes went wide with fear, and
felt like laughing. But no, he could use this. Yes, maybe things
weren't quite so bad after all. Maybe he could turn this to his
advantage. "Yes, he'll rip your throat out for this, unless . .
." Hsiang pushed his head forward anxiously. "Unless . . .
?" Ebert looked about him, considering. "This was one of
his main sources of income. Not just from prostitution, but from
other things, too—drugs, illicit trading, blackmail. It must
have been worth, oh, fifteen, twenty million yuan a year to
him. And now it's worth nothing. Not since you ripped the throat out
of it." "I didn't know. . ." Hsiang shook his head,
his hands trembling. His words came quickly now, tumbling from his
lips. "I'll pay him off. Whatever it costs. My family is rich.
Very rich. You know that, Hans. You could see this Whiskers Lu,
couldn't you? You could tell him that. Please, Hans. Tell him I'll
pay him what he asks." Ebert
nodded slowly, narrowing his eyes. "Maybe. But you must do
something for me too." Hsiang
nodded eagerly. "Anything, Hans. You only have to name it." He
stared at Hsiang contemptuously. "Just this. I want you to throw
your party this afternoon—your chao tai hui—just
as if nothing happened here. You understand? Whatever you or An did
or saw here must be forgotten. Must never, in any circumstances, be
mentioned. It must be as if it never was. Because if news of this
gets out there will be recriminations. Quite awful recriminations.
Understand?" Hsiang
nodded, a look of pure relief crossing his face. "And
Hsiang. This afternoon . . . don't worry about the girls. I'll
provide them. You just make sure your friends are there." Hsiang
looked down, chastened, the madness gone from him. "Yes ... As
you say." "Good.
Then find your friend and be gone from here. Take my sedan if you
must, but go. I'll be in touch." Hsiang
turned to go, but Ebert called him back one last time. "And,
Hsiang . . ." Hsiang
stopped and turned, one hand resting against the blood-stained
upright of the door. "Yes?" "Do
this again and I'll kill you, understand?" Hsiang's
eyes flickered once in the huge expanse of flesh that was his face;
then he lowered his head and backed away. Ebert
watched him go, then turned, looking down at Mu Chua again. It was a
shame. She had been useful—very useful—over the years.
But what was gone was gone. Dealing with Whiskers Lu was the problem
now. That and rearranging things for the party later. It had
all seemed so easy when he'd spoken to DeVore earlier, but Hsiang had
done his best to spoil things for him. Where, at this late stage,
would he find another fifteen girls—special girls of the
quality Mu Chua would have given him? Ebert
sighed, then, seeing the funny side of it, began to laugh,
remembering the sight of Hsiang standing there, his penis poking out
stiffly, for all the world like a miniature of his ratlike friend, An
Liang-chou, staring out from beneath the fat of Hsiang's stomach. Well,
they would get theirs. They and all their friends. But he would make
certain this time. He would inject the girls he sent to entertain
them. He
smiled. Yes, and then he'd watch as one by one they went down.
Princes and cousins and all; every last one of them victims of the
disease DeVore had bought from his friend Curval. How
clever, he thought, to catch them that way. For who would think that
was what it was. He laughed. Syphilis ... it had not been heard of in
the Above for more than a century. Not since Tsao Ch'un had had his
own son executed for giving it to his mother. No, and when they did
find out it would be too late. Much too late. By then the sickness
would have spread throughout the great tree of the Families,
infecting root and branch, drying up the sap. And then the tree would
fall, like the rotten, stinking thing it was. He
shivered, then put his hand down, brushing the hair back from the
dead woman's brow, frowning. "Yes.
But why did you do it, Mother? Why in hell's name did you let him do
it to you? It can't have been the money . . ." Ebert
took his hand away, then shook his head. He would never understand—
never in ten thousand years. To lie there while another cut your
throat and fucked you. It made no sense. And yet... He
laughed sourly. That was exactly what his kind had done for the last
one hundred and fifty years. Ever since the time of Tsao Ch'un. But
now all that had changed. From now on things would be different. He
turned and looked across. Three of Mu Chua's girls were standing in
the doorway, wide-eyed, huddled together, looking in at him. "Call
Lu Ming-shao," he said, going across, holding the eldest by the
arm. "Tell him to come at once, but say nothing more. Tell him
Hans Ebert wants to talk to him. About a business matter." He let
her go, then turned, facing the other two, putting his arms about
their shoulders. "Now, my girls. Things seem uncertain, I know,
but I've a special task for you, and if you do it well..." HSIANG
WANG leaned his vast bulk toward the kneeling messenger and let out a
great huff of annoyance. "What
do you mean, my brother's ill? He was perfectly well this morning.
What's happened to him?" The
messenger kept his head low, offering the hand-written note. "He
asks you to accept his apologies, Excellency, and sends you this
note." Hsiang
Wang snatched the note and unfolded it. For a moment he grew still,
reading it, then threw it aside, making a small, agitated movement of
his head, cursing beneath his breath. "He
says all has been arranged, Excellency," the messenger
continued, made uncomfortable by the proximity of Hsiang Wang's huge,
trunklike legs. "The last of the girls—the special
ones—was hired this morning." The
messenger knew from experience what a foul temper Hsiang K'ai Fan's
brother had and expected at any moment to be on the receiving end of
it, but for once Hsiang Wang bridled in his anger. Perhaps it was the
fact that his guests were only a few ch'i away, listening
beyond the wafer-thin wall, or perhaps it was something else: the
realization that, with his elder brother absent, he could play host
alone. Whatever, it seemed to calm him, and with a curt gesture of
dismissal he turned away, walking back toward the great double doors
that led through to the Hall of the Four Willows. Hsiang
Wang paused in the doorway, taking in the scene. From where he stood,
five broad grass-covered terraces led down, like crescent moons, to
the great willowleaf-shaped pool and the four ancient trees from
which the Hall derived its name. There were more than a hundred males
from the Minor Families here this afternoon, young and old alike.
Many of the Twenty-Nine were represented, each of the great clans
distinguishable by the markings on the silk gowns the princes wore,
but most were from the five great European Families of Hsiang and An,
Pei, Yin, and Chun. Girls went among them, smiling and laughing,
stopping to talk or rest a gentle hand upon an arm or about a waist.
The party had yet to begin and for the moment contact was restrained,
polite. The sound oierhu and k'un ti—bow and
bamboo flute—drifted softly in the air, mixing with the scents
of honeysuckle and plum blossom. Low
tables were scattered about the terraces. The young princes
surrounded these, lounging on padded couches, talking or playing
Chou. On every side tall shrubs and plants and lacquered
screens—each decorated with scenes of forests and mountains,
spring pastures and moonlit rivers—broke up the stark geometry
of the hall, giving it the look of a woodland glade. Hsiang
Wang smiled, pleased by the effect, then clapped his hands. At once
doors opened to either side of him and servants spilled out down the
terraces, bearing trays of wine and meats and other delicacies. Still
smiling, he went down, moving across to his right, joining the group
of young men gathered about Chun Wu-chi. Chun
Wu-chi was Head of the Chun Family; the only Head to honor the Hsiang
clan with his presence this afternoon. He was a big man in his
seventies, long-faced and bald, his pate polished like an ancient
ivory carving, his sparse white beard braided into two thin plaits.
Coming close to him, Hsiang Wang knelt in san k'ou, placing
his forehead to the ground three times before straightening up again. "You
are most welcome here, Highness." Chun
Wu-chi smiled. "I thank you for your greeting, Hsiang Wang, but
where is your elder brother? I was looking forward to seeing him
again." "Forgive
me, Highness," Hsiang said, lowering his head, "but K'ai
Fan has been taken ill. He sends his deep regards and humbly begs
your forgiveness." Chun
looked about him, searching the eyes of his close advisors to see
whether this could be some kind of slight; then, reassured by what he
saw, he looked back at Hsiang Wang, smiling, putting one bejeweled
hand out toward him. "I
am sorry your brother is ill, Wang. Please send him my best wishes
and my most sincere hope for his swift recovery." Hsiang
Wang bowed low. "I will do so, Highness. My Family is most
honored by your concern." Chun
gave the smallest nod, then looked away, his eyes searching the lower
terraces. "There are many new girls here today, Hsiang Wang. Are
there any with—special talents?" Hsiang
Wang smiled inwardly. He had heard of Chun Wu-chi's appetites.
Indeed, they were legendary. When he was younger, it was said, he had
had a hundred women, one after the other, for a bet. It had taken him
three days, so the story went, and afterward he had slept for fifty
hours, only to wake keen to begin all over. Now, in his seventies,
his fire had waned. Voyeurism had taken the place of more active
pursuits. "There
is one girl, Highness . . ." he said, remembering what K'ai Fan
had said. "I have been told that she can manage the most
extraordinary feats." "Really?"
Chun Wu-chi's eyes lit up. Hsiang
Wang smiled. "Let me bring her, Highness." He looked about
him at the younger men. "In the meantime, if the ch'un tzu
would like to entertain themselves?" On cue
the lights overhead dimmed, the music grew more lively. From vents
overhead subtle, sweet-scented hallucinogens wafted into the air. As he
made his way down to the pool, he saw how quickly some of the men,
eager not to waste a moment, had drawn girls down onto the couches
next to them; one—a prince of the Pei Family—had one girl
massaging his neck and shoulders while another knelt between his
legs. Hsiang
Wang laughed softly. There would be more outrageous sights than that
before the day was done. Many more. He slowed, looking about him,
then saw the girl and lifted his hand, summoning her. She
came across and stopped, bowing before him. A dainty little thing,
her hair cut in swallow bangs. She looked up at him, revealing her
perfect features, her delicate rosebud lips. "Yes, Excellency?" He
reached in his pocket and took out the thousand-^uan chip he had
stashed there earlier, handing it to her. "You know what to do?" She
nodded, a smile coming to her lips. "Good.
Then go and introduce yourself. I'll have the servants bring the
beast." He
watched her go, glad that he had gone through all this with his
brother two days before. Sick.
What a time for K'ai Fan to fall sick! Surely he knew how important
this occasion was for the Family? Hsiang Wang shuddered, then threw
off his irritation. It could not be helped, he supposed. And if he
could please Old Chun, who knew what advantages he might win for
himself? He
hurried back in time to see the servants bring the beast. The ox-man
stood there passively, its three-toed hands at its sides, looking
about it nervously, its almost-human eyes filled with anxiety. Seeing
it, some of the younger princes laughed among themselves and leaned
close to exchange words. Hsiang Wang smiled and moved closer,
standing at Chun's shoulder. At once another girl approached and
knelt at Chun's side, her flank against his leg, one hand resting
gently on his knee. Chun
looked down briefly, smiling, then looked back, studying the girl and
the beast, one hand tugging at his beard, an expression of interest
on his long, heavily lined face. Hsiang
raised his hand. At once the servants came forward, tearing the fine
silks from the ox-man's back, tugging down its velvet trousers. Then
they stood back. For a moment it stood there, bewildered, trembling,
its big dark-haired body exposed. Then, with a low, cowlike moan, it
turned its great head, as if looking to escape. At
once the girl moved closer, putting one hand up to its chest, calming
it, whispering words of reassurance. Again it lowed, but now it was
looking down, its eyes on the girl. From
the couches to either side of Chun Wu-chi came laughter. Laughter and
low, excited whispers. Slowly
she began to stroke the beast, long, sensuous strokes that began high
up in the beast's furred chest and ended low down, between its
heavily muscled legs. It was not long before it was aroused, its huge
member poking up stiffly into the air, glistening, long and wet and
pink-red in the half-light—a lance of quivering, living matter. As the
girl slipped her gown from her shoulders, there was a low murmur of
approval. Now she stood there, naked, holding the beast's huge
phallus in one hand, while with the other she continued to stroke its
chest. Its
lowing now had a strange, inhuman urgency to it. It turned its head
from side to side, as if in pain, its whole body trembling, as if at
any moment it might lose control. One hand lifted, moving toward the
girl, then withdrew. Then,
with a small, teasing smile at Chun Wu-chi, the girl lowered her head
and took the beast deep into her mouth. There
was a gasp from all around. Hsiang, watching, saw how the girl he had
assigned to Chun was working the old man, burrowed beneath his
skirts, doing to him exactly what the other was doing to the ox-man.
He smiled. Judging from the look of pained pleasure on the old man's
face, Chun Wu-chi would not forget this evening quickly. IT WAS
JUST after nine in the evening and in the great Hall of Celestial
Destinies at Nantes spaceport a huge crowd milled about. The 8:20
rocket from Boston had come in ten minutes earlier and the final
security clearances were being made before its passengers were passed
through into the hall. .
Lehmann stood at the base of the statue in the center of the hall,
waiting. DeVore had contacted him an hour and a half ago to say he
would be on the 8:20. He had sounded angry and irritable, but when
Lehmann had pressed him about the trip, he had seemed enthusiastic.
It was something else, then, that had soured his mood—something
that had happened back here, in his absence—and there was only
one thing that could have done that: the failure of the assassination
attempt on Tolonen. Was
that why DeVore had asked him to meet him here? To try again? It made
sense, certainly, for despite all their "precautions" the
last thing Security really expected was a new attempt so
shortly after the last. He
turned, looking up at the giant bronze figures. He knew that the
composition was a lie, part of the Great Lie the Han had built along
with their City; even so there was an underlying truth to it, for the
Han had triumphed over the Ta Ts'in. Kan Ying had
bowed before Pan Chao. Or at least, their descendants had. But
for how much longer would the dream of Rome be denied? For
himself, it was unimportant. Han or Hung Mao, it did not matter who
ruled the great circle of Chung Kuo. Even so, in the great struggle
that was to come, his ends would be served. Whoever triumphed, the
world would be no longer as it was. Much that he hated would, of
necessity, be destroyed, and in that process of destruction—of
purification—a new spirit would be unleashed. New and yet quite
ancient. Savage and yet pure, like an eagle circling in the cold
clear air above the mountains. He
looked away. A new beginning, that was what the world needed. A new
beginning, free of all this. Lehmann
looked about him, studying the people making their way past him,
appalled by the emptiness he saw in every face. Here they were, all
the half-men and half-women and all their little halflings, hurrying
about their empty, meaningless lives. On their brief, sense-dulled
journey to the Oven Man's door. And
then? He
shivered, oppressed suddenly by the crush, by the awful perfumed
stench of those about him. This now—this brief moment of time
before it began—was a kind of tiger's mouth; that moment before
one surrounded one's opponent's stone, robbing it of breath. It was a
time of closing options. Of fast and desperate plays. There
was a murmuring throughout the hall as the announcement boards at
either end showed that the passengers from the 8:20 Boston rocket
were coming through. Lehmann was about to go across to the gate when
he noticed two men making their way through the crowd, their faces
set, their whole manner subtly different. Security?
No. For a start they were Han. Moreover, there was something fluid,
almost rounded about their movements; something one never found in
the more rigorously and classically trained Security elite. No. These
were more likely Triad men. Assassins. But who were they after? Who
else was on DeVore's flight? Some Company Head? Or was this a gang
matter? He
followed them surreptitiously, interested, wanting to observe their
methods. The
gate at the far end of the hall was open now and passengers were
spilling out. Looking past the men, he saw DeVore, his neat, tidy
figure making its way swiftly but calmly through the press. The men
were exactly halfway between him and DeVore, some ten or fifteen ch'i
in front of him, when he realized his mistake. "Howard/" DeVore
looked up, alerted, and saw at once what was happening. The two
assassins were making directly for him now, less than two body
lengths away, their blades out, slashing at anyone who got in their
way, intent on reaching their quarry. Beyond them Lehmann was pushing
his way through the crowd, yelling at people to get out of his way;
but it would be several seconds before he could come to DeVore's aid. DeVore
moved forward sharply, bringing the case he was carrying up into the
face of the first man as he came out of the crowd in front of him.
Hampered by a woman at his side, the assassin could only jerk his
head back, away. At once DeVore kicked out, making him stagger back.
But even as he did, the second assassin was upon him, his notched
knife swinging through the air at DeVore's head. The
speed at which DeVore turned surprised the man. One hand countered
the knife blow at the wrist while the other punched to the ribs. The
assassin went down with a sharp cry. DeVore
turned, facing the first assassin, feinting once, twice, with his
fists before he twisted and kicked. The assassin moved back expertly,
but before he could counter, he sank to his knees, Lehmann's knife
embedded in his back. There
was shouting and screaming from all sides of them now. "Come
away," Lehmann said quietly, taking DeVore's arm. "Before
Security comes!" But DeVore shrugged him off, going over to the
second man. The
would-be assassin lay there, helpless, clutching his side, gasping
with pain. DeVore had shattered his rib cage, puncturing his lung. He
crouched close, over the man, one hand at his throat. "Who
sent you?" The
man pushed his face up at DeVores and spat. DeVore
wiped the blood-stained phlegm from his cheek and reached across to
pick up the assassin's blade. Then, as the man's eyes widened, he
slit open his shirt and searched his torso for markings. DeVore
turned, looking up at Lehmann, a fierce anger in his face. "He's
not Triad and he's not Security, so who the fuck . . . ?" The
third man came from nowhere. DeVore
had no time to react. It was only accident that saved him. As Lehmann
turned, he moved between DeVore and the man, glancing against the
assassin's knife arm. The knife, which would have entered DeVore's
heart, was nudged to one side, piercing DeVore between neck and
shoulder. The
assassin jerked the serrated knife out savagely from DeVore's flesh;
but before he could strike again, Lehmann had lashed out, punching
his nose up into his skull. The man fell and lay still. DeVore
sank to his knees, holding one hand over the wound, a look of
astonishment on his bloodless face. This time Lehmann didn't ask.
With a single blow he finished off the second man, then turned and
did the same to the other. Then, lifting DeVore up onto his shoulder,
ignoring the shouts of protest from all about him, he began to carry
him toward the exit and the safety of the transit, praying that their
man in Security could hold his fellows off a minute longer. As for
DeVore's question, he had his answer now; for that last man had been
a Hung Mao, a face they'd often seen in the past, one of
several who had always been in the background at their meetings with
the Ping Tiao. A guard. One of the ones who had defected to
the Yu. So it
was Mach, Jan Mach, who'd tried to have DeVore killed. CHAPTER
TWELVE
Willow Plum Sickness 0N
THE OPEN windswept hillside the small group gathered about the grave.
Across the valley, cloud shadow drew a moving line that descended,
crossing the water, then came swiftly up the slope toward them. Ben
watched the shadow sweep toward him, then felt the sudden chill as
the sun passed behind the cloud. So it
is, he thought. As swift as that it comes. The
wooden casket lay on thick silken cords beside the open grave. Ben
stood facing the casket across the darkness of the hole, his feet
only inches from the drop. Earth.
Dark earth. It had rained and tiny beads of moisture clung to the
stems of grass overhanging the grave. In the sunlight they seemed
strange, incongruous. It was
still unreal. Or not yet real. He felt no grief as yet, no strong
feeling for what he had lost, only a vacancy, a sense of his own
inattentiveness. As if he had missed something . . . They
were all in black, even Li Yuan. Blackness for death. The old Western
way of things. His mother stood beside the casket, her face veiled,
grieving heavily. Beside him stood his sister, and next to her Li
Yuan's Chancellor, Nan Ho. A cold
wind gusted from the south across the hilltop, blowing his hair into
his eyes. A sea breeze, heavy with brine. He combed strands back into
place with his fingers, then left his hand there, the fingers buried
in his fine, thick hair, his palm pressed firmly against his
forehead. Like an amnesiac. A sleeper. He
felt like an actor, the outer shell dissociated from the inner core
of himself: the "boy in black" at the graveside. An
impostor. Neither loving nor dutiful. Cuckoo in the nest. Too
distanced from things to be his father's son, his brother's brother. Had he
ever even said he loved him? Two of
Li Yuan's men came and lifted the casket on its cords. Ben
moved back as they lowered the casket into the earth. A cassette of
death, slotting into the hillside. And no
rewind ... no playback. Hal Shepherd existed only in the memories of
others now. And when they in their turn died? Was it all simply a
long process of forgetting? Of blinded eyes and decaying images?
Maybe... but it didn't have to be. The
earth fell. He closed his eyes and could see it falling, covering the
pale wood of the casket. Could hear the sound of the earth tumbling
against the wood. A hollow, empty sound. He
opened his eyes. The hole was a shallow depression of uneven
darkness. The T'ang's men had ceased shoveling. He
felt the urge to bend down and touch the cold, dark earth. To crush
it between his fingers and feel its gritty texture, its cool,
inanimate substance. Instead he watched as Li Yuan stepped forward
and pressed the young tree into the pile of earth, firming it down,
then moving back to let the servants finish their task. No
words. No graven stones. This was his father's wish. Only a tree. A
young oak. Ben
shivered, his thoughts drawn elsewhere. What was the darkness like on
the other side of being? Was it only a nothingness? Only
blank, empty darkness? They
walked back along the path, down to the cottage by the bay—Li
Yuan holding his mother's arm, consoling her; Nan Ho walking beside
his sister. Ben came last, alone, several paces behind. His
father's death. Expected so long, it had nonetheless come like a blow
of evil fate to his mother. He had heard her crying in the night: a
sound that could not be described, only heard and remembered. A
wordless noise, connected to the grieving animal deep within the
human—a sound drawn from the great and ancient darkness of our
racial being. An awful, desolate sound. Once heard, it could never be
forgotten. He
turned and looked back. There was no sign of the grave, the fledgling
tree. Banks of iron-gray clouds were massed above the hillside. In a
while it would rain. He
turned and looked down the slope at the cottage and the bay beyond,
seeing it all anew. Where was its paradigm? Where was the designer of
all this? The shaping force? Death
had unlocked these questions, forcing his face relentlessly against
the glass. He
sighed, then walked on, making his slow way down. LI
yuan stood in the center of Ben's room, looking about him. Ben was
hunched over his desk, working, making notations in a huge
loose-leafed book, the pages of which were covered in strange
diagrams. It was
not what Li Yuan had expected. The room was cluttered and untidy,
totally lacking, it seemed, in any organizational principle. Things
were piled here, there, and everywhere, as if discarded and
forgotten; while one whole wall was taken up by numerous
half-completed pencil sketches depicting parts of the human anatomy. He
looked back at Ben, seeing how tense he was, crouched over the big
square-paged book, and felt a ripple of unease pass through him. It
did not seem right, somehow, to be working on the day of his father's
funeral. Li Yuan moved closer, looking over Ben's shoulder at the
diagram he was working on—seeing only a disorganized mess of
lines and shapes and coded instructions set down in a dozen brilliant
colors on the underlying grid, like the scribblings of a child. "What
is that?" Ben
finished what he was doing, then turned, looking up at the young
T'ang. "It's
a rough." "A
rough?" Li Yuan laughed. "A rough of what?" "No.
. . that's what I call it. All of these are instructions. The dark
lines—those in brown, orange, and red, mainly—are
instructions to the muscles. The small circles in blue, black, and
mauve are chemical input instructions; the nature of the chemical and
the dosage marked within the circle. The rectangular blocks are just
that—blocks. They indicate when no input of any kind is passing
through the particular node." "Nodes?"
Li Yuan was thoroughly confused by this time. Ben
smiled. "Pai pi. You know, the old artificial reality
experiments. I've been working on them for the last fifteen months. I
call them 'shells.' This is an input instruction diagram. As I said,
a rough. These eighty-one horizontal lines represent the input
points, and these forty vertical lines represent the dimension of
time— twenty to a second." Li
Yuan frowned. "I still don't understand. Inputs into what?" "Into
the recipient's body. Come. I'll show you. Downstairs." They
went down, into the basement workrooms. There, at one end of the
long, low-ceilinged room, almost hidden by the clutter of other
machinery, was the shell. It was a big, elaborately decorated casket;
like something one might use for an imperial lying-in-state, the lid
lacquered a midnight black. Ben
stood beside it, looking back at Li Yuan. "The recipient climbs
in here and is wired up—the wires being attached to eighty-one
special input points both in the brain and at important nerve centers
throughout the body. That done, the casket is sealed, effectively
cutting the recipient off from all external stimuli. That absence of
stimuli is an unnatural state for the human body: if denied sensory
input for too long the mind begins to hallucinate. Using this
well-documented receptivity of the sensory apparatus to false
stimuli, we can provide the mind with a complete alternative
experience." Li
Yuan stared at the apparatus a moment longer, then looked back at the
Shepherd boy. "Complete? How complete?" Ben
was watching him, as a hawk watches a rabbit. An intense, predatory
stare. "As
complete as the real thing. If the art is good enough." "The
art... I see." Li Yuan frowned. It seemed such a strange thing
to want to do. To create an art that mimicked life so closely. An art
that supplanted life. He reached out and touched the skeletal
frame that hung to one side of the shell, noting the studded inputs
about the head and chest and groin. Eighty-one inputs in all. "But
why?" Ben
stared at him as if he didn't understand the question, then handed
him a book similar to the one he had been working on in his room.
"These, as I said, are the roughs. They form the diagrammatic
outline of an event-sequence—a story. Eventually those lines
and squiggles and dots will become events. Sensory actualities. Not
real, yet indistinguishable from the real." Li
Yuan stared at the open page and nodded, but it still didn't explain.
Why this need for fictions? For taking away what was and filling it
with something different? Wasn't life itself enough? Ben
was leaning close now, looking into his face, his eyes filled with an
almost insane intensity, his voice a low whisper. "It's
like being a god. You can do whatever you want. Create whatever you
want to create. Things that never happened. That never could
happen." Li
Yuan laughed uncomfortably. "Something that never happened? But
why should you want to do that? Isn't there enough diversity in the
world as it is?" Ben
looked at him curiously, then looked away, as if disappointed. "No.
You miss my point." It was
said quietly, almost as if it didn't matter. As if in that brief
instant between the look and the words, he had made his mind up about
something. "Then
what is the point?" Li Yuan insisted, setting the book
down on the padded innards of the casket. Ben
looked down, his hand reaching out to touch the apparatus. For the
first time Li Yuan noticed that the hand was artificial. It seemed
real, but the deeply etched ridge of skin gave it away. Once
revealed, other signs added to the impression. There was an added
subtlety of touch, a deftness of movement just beyond the human
range. "Your
question is larger than you think, Li Yuan. It questions not merely
what I do, but all art, all fiction, all dreams of other states. It
asserts that 'what is' is enough. My argument is that 'what is' is
insufficient. We need more than 'what is.' Much more." Li
Yuan shrugged. "Maybe. But this takes it too far, surely? It
seems a kind of mockery. Life is good. Why seek this false
perfection?" "Do
you really believe that, Li Yuan? Are you sure there's nothing my art
could give you that life couldn't?" Li
Yuan turned away, as if stung. He was silent for some time; then he
looked back, a grim expression of defiance changing his features.
"Only illusions, my friend. Nothing real. Nothing solid and
substantial." Ben
shook his head. "You're wrong. I could give you something so
real, so solid and substantial that you could hold it in your
arms—could taste it and smell it and never for a moment know
that you were only dreaming." Li
Yuan stared at him, aghast, then looked down. "I don't believe
you," he said finally. "It could never be that good." "Ah,
but it will." Li
Yuan lifted his head angrily. "Can it give you back your father?
Can it do that?" The
boy did not flinch. His eyes caught Li Yuan's and held them. "Yes.
Even that, if I wanted it." li
YUAN ARRIVED at Tongjiang two hours later to find things in chaos,
the audience hall packed with his ministers and advisors. While the
T'ang changed his clothes, Nan Ho went among the men to find out what
had been happening in their brief absence. When
Li Yuan returned to his study, Nan Ho was waiting for him, his face
flushed, his whole manner extremely agitated. "What
is it, Nan Ho? What has got my ministers in such a state?" Nan Ho
bowed low. "It is not just your ministers, Chieh Hsia. The
whole of the Above is in uproar. They say that more than two hundred
people are ill already, and that more than a dozen have died." Li
Yuan sat forward. "111? Died7. What do you
mean?" Nan Ho
looked up at him. "There is an epidemic, Chieh Hsia, sweeping
through the Minor Families. No one knows quite what it is." Li
Yuan stood angrily and came around his desk. "No one knows? Am I
to believe this? Where are the Royal Surgeons? Have them come to me
at once." Nan Ho
lowered his head. "They are outside, Chieh Hsia, but—" "No
buts, Master Nan. Get them in here now. If there is an epidemic, we
must act fast." Nan Ho
brought them in, then stood back, letting his T'ang question the men
directly. The
eight old men stood there, their ancient bodies bent forward
awkwardly. "Well?"
he said, facing the most senior of them. "What has been
happening, Surgeon Yu? Why have you not been able to trace the source
of this disease?" "Chieh
Hsia . . ." the old man began, his voice quavering. "Forgive
me, but the facts contradict themselves." "Nonsense!"
Li Yuan barked, clearly angry. "Do you know the cause of the
disease or not?" The
old man shook his head, distressed. "Forgive me, Chieh Hsia, but
it is not possible. The Families are bred immune. For more than one
hundred and fifty years—" Li
Yuan huffed impatiently. "Impossible? Nothing is
impossible! I've just come from Hal Shepherd's funeral. They killed
him, remember? With a cancer. Something that, according to you, was
quite impossible. So what have they come up with now?" The
old man glanced sideways at his colleagues, then spoke again. "It
seems, from our first tests, that what the victims are suffering from
is what we term yang mei ping, willow-plum sickness." Li
Yuan laughed. "A fancy name, Surgeon Yu, but what does it mean?" Nan Ho
answered for the old man. "It is syphilis, Chieh Hsia. A
sexually transmitted disease that affects the brain and drives its
victims insane. This strain, apparently, is a particularly virulent
and fast-working one. Besides side-stepping the natural immunity of
its victims, it has a remarkably short incubation period. Many of its
victims are dead within thirty hours of getting the dose." Surgeon
Yu looked at Nan Ho gratefully, then nodded. "That is so, Chieh
Hsia. However, it seems that this particular strain affects only
those of Han origin. As far as we can make out, no Hung Moo are
affected." Li
Yuan turned away, recognizing at once the implications of the thing.
Willow-plum sickness ... He had a vague recollection of reading about
the disease. It was one of those many sicknesses the Hung Moo had
brought with them when they had first opened China up, in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. But this was worse, far worse
than anything those ancient sea-traders had spread among the port
women, because this time his kind had no natural immunity to it. None
at all. He
turned back. "Are you certain, Surgeon Yu?" "As
certain as we can be, Chieh Hsia." "Good.
Then I want you to isolate each victim and question them as to who
they have slept with in the past thirty days. Then I want all
contacts traced and isolated. Understand?" He
looked past Yu at his Chancellor. "Nan Ho, I want you to contact
all the Heads of the Minor Families and have them come here, at once.
By my express order." Nan Ho
bowed. "Chieh Hsia." And
meanwhile he would call his fellow T'ang. For action must be taken.
Immediate action, before the thing got out of hand. KARR
WAS buttoning his tunic when Chen came into the room, barely stopping
to knock. He turned from the mirror, then stopped, seeing the look of
delight on Chen's face. "What
is it?" Chen
handed Karr a file. "It's our friend. There's no doubt about it.
These are stills taken from a Security surveillance film thirty-two
hours ago at Nantes spaceport." Karr
flipped the folder open and flicked through the stills a moment, then
looked back at Chen, his face lit up. "Then we've got him, neh?" Chen's
face fell. He shook his head. "What?" "I'm
afraid not. It seems his man Lehmann just picked him up and carried
him out of there." "And
no one intercepted him? Where was Security?" "Waiting
for orders." Karr
started to speak, then understood. "Gods . . . Again?" Chen
nodded. "And
the Security Captain. He committed suicide, neh?" Chen
sighed. "That's right. It fits the pattern. I checked back in
their surveillance records. The computer registers that a man
matching DeVore's description passed through Nantes spaceport four
times in the past month." "And
there was no Security alert?" "No.
Nor would there have been. The machine was reprogrammed to ignore the
instruction from Bremen. As he was wearing false retina, the only way
they could have got him was by direct facial recognition, and because
they rely so heavily on computer-generated alerts, the chance of that
was minimal." "So
how did we get these?" Chen
laughed. "It seems there was a fairly high-ranking junior
minister on the same flight as DeVore. He complained about the
incident direct to Bremen, and when they discovered they had no
record of the event they instigated an immediate inquiry. This
resulted." Karr
sat down heavily, setting the file to one side, and began to pull on
his boots. For a moment he was quiet, thoughtful, then he looked up
again. "Do
we know where he'd been?" "Boston.
But who he saw there or what he was doing we don't know yet. Our
friends in North American Security are looking into it right now." "And
the assassins?" Karr asked, pulling on the other boot. "Do
we know who they were?" Chen
shrugged. "The two Han look like Triad assassins, but the
third—well, we have him on record as a probable Ping Tiao
sympathizer." Karr
looked up, raising his eyebrows. "Ping Tiao? But they don't
exist any longer. At least, that's what our contacts down below tell
us. Our friend Ebert is supposed to have wiped them out." Chen
nodded. "You don't think . . . ?" Karr
laughed. "Even Ebert wouldn't be stupid enough to try to work
with the Ping Tiao. DeVore wouldn't let him." "So
what do you think?" Karr
shook his head. "We don't know enough, that's clear. Who besides
ourselves would want DeVore dead?" "Someone
he's crossed?" Karr
laughed. "Yes. But that could be anyone, neh? Anyone at all." LI
YUAN LOOKED out across the marbled expanse of the Hall of the Seven
Ancestors and nodded to himself, satisfied. The space between the
dragon pillars was packed. More than two thousand men—all the
adult males of the Twenty-Nine—were gathered here this
afternoon. All, that was, but those who had already succumbed to the
sickness. He sat
on the High Throne, dressed in the dragon robe of imperial yellow
edged with blue. In one hand he held the Special Edict, in the other
the bamboo cane with the silver cap that had been his brother's
present to his father. There
was the faintest murmur from below, but when he stood, the hall fell
silent, followed a moment later by a loud rustling of expensive silks
as in a single movement, the great crowd knelt, touching their heads
to the floor three times in the ritual Uu k'ou. Li Yuan smiled
bleakly, remembering another day, nine years ago—the day his
father had summoned the leaders of the Dispersionists before him,
here in this very hall, and humbled them, making their leader,
Lehmann, give up his friend Wyatt. Much had changed since then, but
once again the will of the T'ang had to be imposed. By agreement it
was hoped; but by force, if necessary. Li
Yuan came down, stopping three steps from the bottom, facing the five
elderly men who stood at the front of the crowd. His Chancellor, Nan
Ho, stood to the right, the list scrolled tightly in one hand. Behind
him, just beyond the nearest of the dragon pillars, a troop of elite
guards waited, their shaved heads bowed low. He
looked past the five Family Heads at the great press of men behind
them. All had their heads lowered, their eyes averted, acknowledging
his supremacy. Right now they were obedient, but would they remain so
when they knew his purpose? Would they understand the need for this,
or would they defy him? He shivered, then looked back at the five who
stood closest. He saw
how the hands of nephews and cousins reached from behind Chun Wu-chi,
supporting him, keeping him from falling; saw how frail his
once-father-in-law, Yin Tsu had become; how the first signs of
senility had crept into the eighty-three-year-old face of Pei Ro-hen.
Only An Sheng and Hsiang Shao-erh, both men in their fifties, seemed
robust. Even so, the Minor Families had thrived—a dozen,
fifteen, sons not uncommon among them—while the Seven had
diminished. Why was that? he wondered for the first time. Was it
merely the pressures of rule, the depredations of war and politics,
or was it symptomatic of some much deeper malaise? There
was silence in the hall, but underneath it he could feel the
invisible pressure of their expectations. Many of them had heard
rumors of the sickness; even so, most were wondering why he had
summoned them. Why they were standing here, in this unprecedented
manner, in the Great Hall at Tongjiang, waiting for him to speak. Well,
now they would know. He would put an end to all speculation. "Ch'un
tzul" he began, his voice resonant, powerful. "I
have summoned you here today because we face a crisis—perhaps
the greatest crisis the Families have ever faced." Li
Yuan looked across the sea of lowered heads, aware of the power he
exercized over these men, but conscious also of what that power
rested upon. They obeyed him because they had agreed among themselves
to obey him. Take away that agreement—that mandate—and
what followed? He
took a breath, then continued. "More
than fifty of our number are dead. Another three hundred, I am told,
are sick or close to death. And the cause of this mysterious illness?
Something we thought we had rid ourselves of long ago—yang
mei ping. Willow-plum sickness!" There
was a murmur of surprise and a number of heads moved agitatedly, but
as yet no one dared meet his eyes. He moved on, keeping his voice
calm, letting the authority of his position fill his words. "In
the past, I am told, the disease would have killed only after long
months of suffering, leading to blindness and eventual madness, but
this is a new, more virulent strain—one that our Families are
no longer immune to. It is a brain-killer. It can strike down a
healthy man—or woman—in less than thirty hours; although,
as is the way of such diseases, not all succumb immediately to the
virus but become carriers. That, in itself, is horrible enough; but
this strain, it seems, is particularly j vile, for it is racially
specific. It affects only us Han." Shocked
faces were looking up at him now, forgetting all propriety.
Deliberately' ignoring this lapse, Li Yuan pressed on, saying what
must be said. "Such
are the facts. What we must now ask ourselves is what are we to do to
combat this disease? There is no cure, nor is there time to find one.
No cure, that is, but the most drastic of preventive measures." Hsiang
Shao-erh looked up at him, his eyes half-lidded, deeply suspicious.
"What do you mean, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan met the older man's gaze firmly. "I mean that we must test
everyone in this hall. Wives and children too. And then we must find
those outside the Families—men or women—who have been in
contact with anyone from the Families." "In
contact, Chieh Hsial" The
words were framed politely, but he noted Hsiang's hostility. Hsiang
had already lost his oldest son to the virus and it was clear that he
saw the drift of Li Yuan's speech. He
answered unflinchingly. "In sexual contact. How else do
you think the disease was spread?" Again
he felt the ripples of shock pass through the Hall. Despite his
reference to willow-plum sickness, many had simply not understood
until that moment. A low buzz ran from one end of the hall to the
other. "But
surely, Chieh Hsia—?" Li
Yuan cut Hsiang off sharply, his patience snapping. "Silence!
All of you, be silent now! I have not finished." The
hall fell silent, heads were lowered again; but only a pace or so
from him, Hsiang glared back at him, bristling with anger. Li Yuan
looked past him, addressing the great mass. "We
must test everyone. We must track down every last victim—especially
the carriers—of this disease." "And
then?" The voice was Hsiang Shao-erh's. Stubborn, defiant. Li
Yuan looked back at him. "And then they must die." The
hall erupted. Li Yuan looked out across the seething crowd, seeing
the angry opposition—but also the strong agreement—his
words had engendered. Arguments raged on every side. Just beneath
him, Hsiang Shao-erh and An Sheng were protesting loudly, their arms
gesticulating, their faces dark with anger; while Yin Tsu and Pei
Ro-han attempted to remonstrate with them. For a while he let it go
on, knowing that this violent flood of feelings must be allowed its
channel, then he raised one hand, palm outward. Slowly the Hall fell
silent again. He
looked down at Hsiang Shao-erh. "You wish to say something,
Cousin?" Hsiang
took a pace forward, placing one foot on the first step of the High
Throne, seeming almost to threaten his T'ang. He spat the words out
angrily. "I
protest, Chieh Hsia! You cannot do this! We are Family, not hsioo
jenl Never in our history have we been subjected to such
humiliation! To make us take this test of yours would be to undermine
our word, our honor as ch'un tzul Why, it is tantamount to
saying that we are all fornicators and unfaithful to our wives!" Li
Yuan shook his head. "And the deaths? The spread of the disease?
Are these things mere ghosts and idle rumors?" "There
are a few, I admit. Young bucks . . . but even so—" "A
few!" Li Yuan spat the words back angrily, almost
contemptuously, taking a step forward, almost pushing his face into
Hsiang's, forcing him to take a step back. "You
are a fool, Hsiang, to think of face at such a time! Do you really
believe I would do this if it were not necessary? Do you think I
would risk damaging my relationship with you, my cousins, if there
were not some far greater threat?" Hsiang
opened his mouth, then closed it again, taken aback by the unexpected
violence of Li Yuan's counterattack. "This
is a war," Li Yuan said, looking past him again, addressing the
massed sons and cousins. "And upon its outcome depends how Chung
Kuo will be in years to come. Whether there will be good, stable
rule—the rule of Seven and Twenty-Nine—or chaos. To think
that we can fight such a war without losses—without
sacrifices—is both ridiculous and untenable." He
looked back directly at Hsiang. "Do not mistake me, Hsiang
Shao-erh. Face, honor, a man's word—these are the very things
that bind our society in times of peace, and I would defend them
before any man. Yet in times of war we must let go sometimes of our
high ideals, if but briefly. We must bow, like the reeds before the
wind, or go down, like a great tree in a storm." Hsiang
lowered his eyes. "Chieh Hsia . . ." "Good.
Then you will sign the paper, Hsiang Shao-erh?" Hsiang
looked up again. "The paper?" Nan Ho
brought the scroll across. Li Yuan turned, offering it to Hsiang.
"Here. I have prepared a document. I would not have it said that
the compact between Seven and Twenty-Nine was broken. There must be
agreement between us, even in this matter." Li
Yuan held the document out toward Hsiang Shao-erh. As his father had,
so he now seemed the very embodiment of imperial power; unyielding,
like the famous rock in the Yellow River that, for centuries, had
withstood the greatest of floods. Hsiang
stared at the scroll, then looked up at his T'ang, his voice smaller
suddenly, more querulous. "And if any here refuse?" Li
Yuan did not hesitate. "Then the compact is ended, the Great
Wheel broken." Hsiang
shuddered. For a moment longer he stood there, hesitant, staring at
the document. Then, suddenly, he lowered his head. "Very well,
Chieh Hsia. I will sign." AFTERWARD,
while the Families were lining up to be tested, Nan Ho went to Li
Yuan in his study. "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia," he said, bowing low, "but I did not
understand. Why did Hsiang Shao-erh oppose you just now? I would have
thought, with his eldest son dead, he would have been the first to
sanction your actions—to prevent the deaths of more of his
sons." Li
Yuan sighed. "So it would have been, I'm sure, Master Nan, but
the chao tai hut where the sickness was originally spread, was
held on Hsiang's estate. Oh, he had nothing to do with the
organization of the affair—that was all his son K'ai Fan's
doing—nor was Hsiang Shao-erh responsible for the sickness
itself. However, he feels responsible. Many among the
Twenty-Nine blame him, irrational as that is. As a consequence he has
lost great face. That display today was an attempt to regain his
face. Unfortunately, I could not allow it. Now, I am afraid, I have
made an enemy." "Things
can be smoothed over, surely, Chieh Hsia7. A gift,
perhaps . . ." Li
Yuan shook his head. "I made him challenge me. And then I broke
him before his equals. It had to be done, but there is no repairing
it. No, so we must watch ourselves from that quarter henceforth. Wang
Sau-leyan is sure to hear of what happened here today. No doubt he
will try to exploit the division between Hsiang and me." The
Chancellor shook his head, then looked up again. "Forgive me,
Chieh Hsia, but do you not think death too extreme a penalty? After
all, it was not their fault that they picked up this sickness. Have
you not considered, perhaps, castrating those found with the virus?
Those, that is, who would not die of it anyway." "No,
Master Nan. Had they been servants we might well have done that, but
these are Family. Such a humiliation would be worse than death for
them. Besides, what of the women they have infected? What are we to
do with them? Sew them up?" Nan Ho
gave a brief, uncomfortable laugh, then bowed his head. "I had
not thought, Chieh Hsia." Li
Yuan smiled sadly. "Never mind. Go now, Master Nan. Go and
supervise the screening. I will expect you three hours from now to
give your report on the proceedings." "Chieh
Hsia . . ." Li
Yuan sat back. There were other things to consider now; other
sicknesses to rid the world of. The Young Sons, for instance, and the
virus of the Aristotle File. He sighed and leaned forward again,
punching in the code that would connect him with Tsu Ma in Astrakhan. It was
time to act. Time to draw in the nets and see what fish they had
caught. W u s
h I h, T'ang of North America, raised his eyes from the small screen
inset into his desk and looked across at the huge image of Li Yuan's
face that filled the facing wall. He
gave a deep sigh, then placed his hands palm down on the desk,
clearly disturbed by what he had just seen. "Well,
Cousin, I must thank you. The tape is quite conclusive. Even so, I
feel nothing but sadness that it has come to this. I had hoped that I
could persuade them somehow from their folly, but it is much more
than mere folly, isn't it? More than boredom or high spirits. This
can lead to one thing only—rebellion and the overthrow of the
Seven. I have to act. You understand that?" Li
Yuan nodded. "Of course," he said sympathetically. "Which
is why I have already spoken with Tsu Ma. He agrees. And the sooner
the better. The Sons of Benjamin Franklin are not the only group.
There are similar factions in the other Cities, linked to the Young
Sons. If we are to act, it would be best if we acted in concert, neh?
Tonight, if possible. At twelfth bell." "And
the other T'ang?" Li
Yuan shook his head. "There's no time for that. Besides, if Wang
Sau-leyan were to learn, it's likely there would be no one there to
arrest. He has a funny way with 'secrets.'" Wu
Shih looked down, considering, then nodded. "All right. Twelfth
bell. And you will act elsewhere? You and Tsu Ma?" "At
twelfth bell." He started to cut the connection. "Li
Yuan! Wait! What of the boy? Do you think they will suspect his role
in this?" Li
Yuan laughed. "How could they? Even he doesn't know what he has
been these past few days." Wu
Shih gave a small laugh. "Even so, should I take steps to get
him out?" Li
Yuan shook his head. "No. Any such move might alert them. Ensure
only that your men do not harm him by mistake." Wu
Shih lowered his head slightly, a mark of respect that he had often
made to Yuan's father, Li Shai Tung, and an implicit acknowledgment
of where the real leadership lay within the Seven. Li
Yuan smiled. "Then goodnight, Cousin. We shall speak in the
morning. Once things are better known." THE
lever MANSION was a huge, two-story house with gables, standing in
its own wooded grounds. Outside it was dark, the house lights
reflected brightly in the dark waters of the nearby lake. In the
center of the mansion's bold facade was a pillared entrance, its
wide, double doors open, light spilling out onto a gravel drive. Dark
sedans, some antique, some reproduction, lined the entrance road,
their drivers dressed in a black-suited livery that matched the
ancient crest on the sides of the sedans. All evening they had gone
back and forth, ferrying guests between the house and the transit,
almost a li away. The
illusion was almost perfect. The darkness hid the walls of the
surrounding decks, while above the house a thick, dark-blue cloth
masked the ice of the stack's uppermost floor, like a starless night
sky. Kim
stood between the trees, in darkness, looking back at the house. This
was the third time he had come to Richmond, to the Lever Mansion, but
it was the first time he had seen the house in darkness. Tonight they
were throwing a ball. A party for the elite of their City—the
Supernal, as they called themselves. It was the first time he had
heard the term used and it amused him to think of himself, so loui
in birth, mixing in such high company. He was not drunk—he
took care never to touch alcohol or drugs—but merely mixing in
the atmosphere of the house was enough to create a mild euphoria. The
air was chill, sharp. In the trees nearby the leaves rustled in a
mild, artificial breeze. Kim smiled, enjoying the strangeness of it
all, and reached out to touch the smooth bark of one of the pines. "Kim?" A
tall, elegant young man in old-fashioned evening dress stood at the
edge of the gravel, calling him. It was Michael Lever. "I'm
here," he said, stepping out from the trees. "I was just
getting some air." Lever
greeted him, more than a ch'i taller than he, straight-backed and
blond, an American . . . "Come
on in," he said, smiling. "Father has been asking for you." Kim
let himself be ushered inside once more, through reception room and
ballroom and out into a smaller, quieter space beyond. Leather doors
closed behind him. The room was dimly lit, pervaded by the tart smell
of cigar smoke. Old Man Lever was sitting on the far side of the
room, beside the only lamp, his friends gathered about him in
high-backed leather chairs. Old men, like himself. By the window
stood a group of younger men. Michael joined them, accepting a drink
from one; then he turned back, looking across at Kim. Charles
Lever lit up a new cigar, then beckoned Kim over. "Here, Kim.
Take a seat." He indicated the empty chair beside him. "There
are some people here— friends of mine—I want you to
meet." Old
men. The thought flashed through Kim's mind. Old men, afraid
of dying. He sat
in the huge, uncomfortable chair, ill at ease, nodding acknowledgment
to each of the men in turn; noting each face and placing it. These
were big men. Powerful men. Each of them Lever's equal. So what had
Lever said? What had Lever promised he could do for them? "We
were talking," Lever said, turning in his chair to look at Kim.
"Chewing things over among ourselves. And I was telling my
friends here about your new company. About Chi Chu. Potentially a
nice little outfit, but small, undercapitalized." Kim
looked down, surprised that Lever knew already. Lever
cleared his throat, then nodded, as if satisfied by his own
evaluation of things. "And I was saying what a shame it was.
Because I've seen your like before, Kim. A hot property with plenty
of good, strong ideas and lots of get-up-and-go, but nothing to back
it up. There's a pattern to it too. I've seen how they've built
things up—how they've grown real fast. Up to a certain point.
And then . . ." He shook his head and looked down at the cigar
smoldering between his ringers. "Then they've tried to move up
a league. Into manufacturing. Because it's a shame to let the big
industrials take so large a share of the cut. Galling, even." The
young men by the window were watching him intently, almost
suspiciously. Kim could feel their eyes on him; could almost sense
what they were thinking. What would this mean for them? For if their
fathers lived forever . . . "I've
seen them try to take that step," Lever continued. "And
I've seen them flounder, unable to cope with the sheer size of the
market. I've watched the big companies move in, like those sharks we
were talking of, and gobble up the pieces. Because that's what it's
really all about, Kim. Not ideas. Not potential. Not get-up-and-go.
But money. Money and power." He
paused and sucked at his cigar. All around him the old men nodded,
but their eyes never left Kim's face. "So
I was saying to my friends here, let's make things happen a little
differently this time. Use some of our money, our power to help this
young man. Because it's a shame to see potential go to waste. A damn
shame, if you ask me." He
leaned back, drawing on the cigar, then puffed out a narrow stream of
smoke. Kim waited, silent, not knowing what to say. He wanted nothing
from these men. Neither money nor power. But that was not the point.
It was what they wanted from him that mattered here. "CosTech
has offered for your contract. Right?" Kim
opened his mouth, then snapped it shut. Of course Lever would know.
He had spies, hadn't he? They all had spies. It was how things worked
at this level. You weren't in business unless you knew what the
competition was up to. "Yes.
But I haven't decided yet." He lied, wanting to hear what they
were going to offer. "I'm meeting them again in two weeks to
talk terms." Lever
smiled, but it was a smile tinged with sourness. "Working for
the competition, eh?" He laughed. "Rather you than me,
boy." There
was laughter from the gathered circle. Only by the window was there
silence. "But
why's this, Kim? Why would you want to waste a year of your life
slaving for CosTech when you could be pushing Eureka on to bigger
things?" Make
your offer, Kim thought. Spell it out. What you want. What
you're offering. Make a deal, old man. Or would that embarrass
you, being so direct? "You
know what they've offered?" he asked. Lever
nodded. "It's peanuts. An insult to your talent. And it ties
you. Limits what you could do." Ah,
thought Kim, that's more to the point. Working for CosTech, he could
not work for ImmVac. And they needed him. The old men needed him,
because, after a certain age, it was not possible to stop the aging
process. Not as things stood. They had to catch it before the
molecular signal triggered it. Afterward was no good. What ImmVac had
developed was no good for any of these men. The complex system of
cell-replication began to break down, slowly at first, but
exponentially, until the genetic damage was irreparable. And then
senility. And
what good was money or power against senility and death? "I'm
a physicist," he said, looking at the old man directly. "What
good am I to you? You want a biochemist. Someone working in the field
of defective protein manufacture. In cell repair. Not an engineer." Lever
shook his head. "You're good. People say you're the best. And
you're young. You could learn. Specialize in self-repair mechanisms."
He stared at Kim fiercely. The cigar in his hand had gone out. "We'll
pay what you ask. Provide whatever you need." Kim
rubbed at his eyes. The cigar smoke had made them sore. He wanted to
say no and have an end to it, but knew these were not men he could
readily say no to. "Two
weeks, Shih Lever. Give me two weeks, then I'll let you know." Lever
narrowed his eyes, suspicious of the young, childlike man. "Two
weeks?" "Yes.
After all, you're asking me to change the direction of my life. And
that's something I have to think about. I've got to consider what it
means. What I might lose and what gain. I can't see it right now.
Which is why I need to think it through." But he
had thought it through already and dismissed it. He knew what he
wanted; had known from the first moment he had glimpsed the vision of
the web. Death—what was death beside that vision? Lever
looked to the other men in the room, then nodded his agreement. "All
right, Shih Ward. Two weeks it is." IT was
LATE. The crowd in the ballroom had thinned out, but the dancing went
on. On the balcony overlooking the hall, a ten-man orchestra played a
slow waltz, their bows rising and falling in the fragmented light.
Kim stood at the back of the hall, beside Michael Lever, watching the
couples move about the floor, realizing that this, too, was an
illusion, a dream of agelessness. As if time could be restored, its
flow reversed. "I
love their dresses," he said, looking up at the tall young man.
"They're like jellyfish." Lever
roared, then turned to his friends and repeated Kim's comment. In a
moment their laughter joined his own. Lever turned back to Kim,
wiping his eyes with the back of his hand. "That's
rich, Kim. Marvelous! Like jellyfish!" And again he burst into
laughter. Kim
looked at him, surprised. What had he said? It was true, wasn't it?
The bobbing movement of their many-layered dresses was like those of
jellyfish in the ocean, even down to the frilled edges. "I
was only saying—" he began, but he never finished
the sentence. At that moment the main lights came up. The orchestra
played on for a moment or two, then ended in sudden disarray. The
dancers stopped circling and stood looking toward the doorway at the
far end of the ballroom. Suddenly it felt much colder in the hall.
There was the sound of shouting from outside. "What
in hell's name?" Lever said, starting to make his way toward the
doors. Then he stopped abruptly. Soldiers had come out onto the
balcony above the dance floor. More came into the ballroom through
the doorway. Security troops in powder-blue fatigues, black-helmeted,
their visors down. Kim
felt his mouth go dry. Something was wrong. The
soldiers formed a line along the edge of the balcony and along the
lower walls, covering the dancers with their weapons. Only a few of
their number went among the dancers, their visors up, looking from
face to face. Up above, on the balcony, a lieutenant began to read
out a warrant for the arrest of fifteen men. In the
ballroom there was disbelief and anger. One young man jostled a
Security guard and was brought down by a sharp blow with a rifle
butt. When the soldiers left the hall they took more than a dozen
young men, Lever and his friends among them. Kim,
watching, saw the anger in surrounding faces after the soldiers had
gone. More anger than he'd ever seen. And different, very different
from the anger of the Clay. This anger smoldered like red-hot ashes
fanned by a breath. It was a deep-rooted, enduring anger. Beside
Kim a young man's face was distorted, black with rage. "He'll
pay! The bastard will pay for this!" Others gathered about him,
shouting, their fists clenched, the dance forgotten. Kim
stood a moment longer, then turned away, going quickly from the hall.
Things had changed. Suddenly, dramatically, the rules had changed,
and he was no longer safe here. He passed through, glancing from side
to side, seeing only outrage on the faces of those he passed. Outside
he walked past the waiting sedans and on, out across the darkness
toward the transit. In a
sober moment they would remember. Old Man Lever would remember. And
in his anger, who knew how he would act? It was a time for taking
sides, and he was Li Yuan's man. He.
saw soldiers up ahead, guarding the transit entrance, and began to
run, knowing his safety lay with them. But nearer the barrier he
turned and looked back at the house, remembering the dresses bobbing
to the music, the swish of lace in the air. And a circle of old men,
offering him the earth. CHAPTER
THIRTEEN
In
the Open TOLONEN
STOOD at Haavikko's bedside, looking down at him, a faint smile on
his lips. It had been only two days since his own operation and he
was still feeling weak, but he had had to come. A
nurse brought him a chair and he sat, content to wait until the young
man woke. His new arm ached at the shoulder, despite the drugs, but
it was feeling better than it had. Besides,
he was alive. Thanks to Haavikko, he was alive. The
nurse hovered but he waved her away, then settled to watch the
sleeping man. All
his life he had been self-reliant. All his life he had fought his own
fights, keeping himself always one step ahead of his enemies. But now
he was growing old. At last he had proof of it. His old eyes had
missed the discrepancy of the color codings on the soldiers' chests,
his reactions had been just a fraction of a second too slow, and he
had lost his arm as a result. Almost his life. He
smiled, studying the young man. Haavikko was cradled in bandages,
special healants creating new skin growth on his badly burned
shoulder and back. Tolonen
shook his head as if to clear it, feeling both sad and happy at once.
He had been told what Haavikko had done for him, like a son for a
father; risking himself when all bonds of duty or obligation had long
ago been severed between them. Yes,
he had sorely misjudged the boy; had believed him other than he was. Haavikko
stirred and opened his eyes. "Marshal. . ." He made to sit
up, then winced and eased back, closing his eyes again. The blast had
removed most of the skin at the top of his back and taken off his
ear. "Lie
still, boy. Please. You need your rest." Haavikko
opened his eyes again and looked up at the Marshal. "Your arm .
. ." he said, clearly pained by the sight. Tolonen
laughed gruffly. "You like it? It hurts a bit just now, but that
doesn't matter. I'm alive, that's the thing." He sat back, his
right hand reaching up to scratch at the stubble on his left cheek;
an awkward, embarrassed gesture, indicative of just how hard the old
man found it to deal with this. The warmth he felt toward the other
man—that depth of reawakened feeling—brought him close to
tears. He looked away a moment, controlling himself, then finished
what he had meant to say. "Thanks to you, Axel. Thanks to you." Axel
smiled. His hands lay above the sheets. Long, fine hands, undamaged
in the incident. Tolonen took one and squeezed it. "I
misjudged you, boy. I—" Haavikko
shook his head, a slight grimace of pain crossing his face. "It
doesn't matter. Really, sir. I..." He turned his head slightly,
looking across the room to the peg where his clothes hung. "But
there's something you must know. Something important." Tolonen
smiled. "Rest, my boy. There's plenty of time for other things .
. ." "No
. . ." Haavikko swallowed dryly. "Over there, in my tunic,
there's a package. I was bringing it to you when it happened. I'd
pieced it all together." Tolonen
shook his head, puzzled. "Pieced what together?" Haavikko
looked up, pleading with his eyes. "Just look. Please, sir. You
don't have to read it all right now. Later, perhaps, when you feel up
to it. But promise me you'll read it. Please, Marshal." Tolonen
let go of Haavikko's hand, got up heavily, and walked across the
room. Just as Haavikko had said, there was a small package in the
inner pocket of the tunic. He tugged at it until it came free, then
went back, taking his seat again. He
held the package out, a query in his eyes. "So what is this?" Haavikko
swallowed again and Tolonen, taking the hint, put the package down
and picked up the glass by the bedside, giving Haavikko a few sips. "Well?" "Long
ago you asked me to do something for you—to make a list of
people who might have been involved in the assassination of Minister
Lwo Kang. Do you remember?" Tolonen
laughed. "Gods! That must have been eleven years ago. And you
did that?" Haavikko
made the smallest movement of his head. "That's how it began.
But I extended it. I kept a record of anything I felt wasn't
right—anything that didn't quite make sense to me. Then,
recently, I teamed up with Kao Chen and your man Karr." "Good
men," Tolonen said, nodding his approval. "Yes."
Haavikko smiled, then grew serious again. "Anyway, what you have
there is the result of our investigations. My original list, my
notes, and a few other things. Computer files. Hologram images." Tolonen
lifted the package and turned it in his hand; then he set it down on
his knee and reached out to take Haavikko's hand again. "And you
want me to look at it?" "Yes.
. ." Tolonen
considered a moment. He had promised Jelka he would dine with her
later on, but maybe he would cancel that. He could always say he was
tired. Jelka would understand. He smiled broadly at Haavikko. "Of
course. It's the very least I can do." Haavikko
looked back at him, his eyes moist. "Thank you," he said,
his voice almost a whisper. "Thank you, sir." Tolonen
sat clasping the young man's hand. The ache in his left shoulder was
much stronger now. It was probably time for his medication, but he
felt loath to leave Haavikko. "I
must go now," he said softly. "But I promise you I'll look
at your files. Later. When it's quiet." Haavikko
smiled, his eyes closed. Slowly his mouth relaxed. In a moment he was
sleeping. Tolonen
placed the young man's hand gently back on the sheets, then got to
his feet stiffly. Twice lucky, he thought, remembering the attack at
Nanking spaceport. He made his way across, then turned, looking back,
noticing for the first time just how pale Haavikko was. He stood
there a moment longer, absently scratching at the dressing at his
shoulder, then desisted, annoyed with himself. He
looked down at the silver arm and sighed, remembering how Jelka had
fussed when she'd first seen it. But there was steel in her too. She
had borne up bravely. So, too, this young man. Oh, he would make
things up. He was determined on it. He would find a way of making
things right again. Tolonen
yawned, then, smiling sadly to himself, turned away, leaving the
young officer to sleep. TSU ma
lifted the dish and brushed his thumb across its silken, contoured
surface. It was a perfect piece; black lacquer carved with two water
fowls against a background of lotus. Fourteenth century, from the
last years of the Yuan Dynasty. He smiled to himself, then turned to
face Li Yuan. "Two
years they would labor to make one of these. Two years of a master
craftsman's life. And at the end, this. This small fragment of dark
perfection." Li
Yuan looked across at him, turning from the view of Rio de Janeiro's
bay and Sugarloaf Mountain beyond. He had not been listening, but he
saw the lacquered dish in Tsu Ma's hands and nodded. "That piece
is beautiful. Hou Ti had many fine things." Tsu Ma
held his eyes a moment. "These days some think of them as
primitive, ignorant men. Barbarians. But look at this. Is this
barbarian?" He shook his head slowly, his eyes returning to the
dish. "As if the mere passage of years could make our species
more sophisticated." Li
Yuan laughed and came closer. "Your point, Tsu Ma?" Behind
them, at the far side of the long room, the rest of the Seven were
gathered, talking among themselves. Tsu Ma
put the dish down, letting his fingers rest in its shallow bowl, then
looked up at Li Yuan again. "Just that there are those here who
think the future better than the past simply because it is the
future. Who believe that change is good simply because it is change.
They have no time for comparisons. Nor for the kind of values
expressed in the simplicity of this dish. No time for craft, control,
or discipline." He lowered his voice a fraction. "And I
find that disturbing, Li Yuan. Dangerous, even." Li
Yuan studied him a moment, then gave the barest nod of agreement.
They had covered much ground that morning, but nothing yet of true
significance. On the matters of the stewardships and the new
immortality drugs he had bowed like the reed before the wind, not
pushing his own viewpoint, merely ensuring that these matters were
not finalized. Let them play their games of evading death, he
thought; death would find them anyway, wherever they hid. As for the
other, there was time enough to force his view on that. "How
deep is this feeling?" Tsu Ma
considered a moment, then leaned toward Li Yuan. "Deep, Cousin.
Deep enough to trouble me." He looked past the younger man, out
beyond the window glass, seeing how the space between the bowl of
hills was plugged with the white of the City's walls. "They
would do away with certain restraints." He stretched his long
neck, lifting his chin, then looked directly at Li Yuan. "You'll
see. This afternoon. . ." The
early afternoon sunlight fell across Li Yuan's arm and shoulder. "It
is the illness of our time. Change and the desire for change. But I
had not thought—" Yuan smiled and broke off, seeing Chi
Hsing, the T'ang of the Australias, approach. The
two men nodded, acknowledging the newcomer. "Are
you not eating, cousins?" Chi Hsing smiled and turned, summoning
the waiters, then turned back. "Before we resume, there is a
matter I must raise with you. A change has been proposed to the
scheduled itinerary." "A
change?" Li Yuan said, raising his eyebrows slightly, but
heavily emphasising the word. Beside him Tsu Ma kept his amusement to
himself, staring back masklike at his fellow T'ang. Chi
Hsing was known for neither his intelligence nor his subtlety. In
that regard he was much more his mother's child than his father's. He
was a father now himself, of course. Two young sons, the eldest
barely two years old, had blessed his first marriage, changing him
considerably. He was less rash now than he'd been, and though he had
secretly applauded Li Yuan's purge of the Ping Tioo, he also had
misgivings about such actions. He feared for his sons, remembering
what had happened in the War with the Dispersionists. Vengeance was
fine, but now he wished only for peace. Peace.
So that he might see his sons grow to be men. Strong, fine men, as
his father had been. "Wang
Sau-leyan has made a request," he began, his eyes searching both
their faces. "And there are others here who wish to speak on the
matter." His eyes grew still, focused on Li Yuan. "Go
on, Cousin." Chi
Hsing bowed his head slightly. "He wishes to discuss the
arrests. The action you took in league with Wu Shih against the Young
Sons." It was
clear, by the way Chi Hsing stood there, that he expected Li Yuan to
refuse. Indeed, it was within Li Yuan's rights to refuse Wang's
request, as his father had done once before. But Li Yuan only smiled
politely. "I
have no objection to that. Do you, Tsu Ma?" "Not
I." Li
Yuan reached out and touched Chi Hsing's shoulder. "It is best,
after all, if these things are aired between us. In the open." Chi
Hsing nodded, still hesitant, as if he expected Li Yuan to change his
mind at any moment. Then, realizing he had achieved his end, he
smiled. "Good.
That's very good, Li Yuan. As you say, it is best. In the open."
He nodded again, this time decisively, then turned and went across to
where Wang Sau-leyan and their host, Hou Tung-po, T'ang of South
America, were standing. Wang listened a moment, then looked across at
Li Yuan, bowing his head slightly. "In
the open," said Tsu Ma beneath his breath. "You're like
your father, Yuan. Devious." Li
Yuan turned, surprised, then laughed, seeing the humor beneath the
surface of Tsu Ma's words. "Words are words, Tsu Ma. We must
bend and shape them to our needs." Tsu Ma
nodded, pleased with that. "So it is in these troubled times,
Cousin. But history shall judge us by our actions." wang
sau-leyan was leaning forward in his seat, his hands folded in his
lap, his big moon face looking from one to another as he spoke. He
seemed calm, relaxed, his voice soft and deep, persuasive in its
tones. Thus far he had said little that had not been said before, but
now he turned the conversation. "In
this room, as in the rooms of the Twenty-Nine and the mansions of the
Supernal, there are those who are questioning recent events. Some
with anger, some with sadness and misgivings. Others
fearfully, remembering things not long past. But every last one of
them is concerned, wondering where it will stop. For myself, I
believe it has already gone too far." Wu
Shih made to interrupt, but Wang raised his hand. "You will have
your say, Wu Shih, and 1 shall listen. But first hear me out. This
must be said, before it is too late for words." Tsu Ma
reached into the pocket of his jacket and took out a slender silver
case. "Then talk, Cousin. Let us hear what you have to say." There
was an unconcealed hostility in the words that surprised Li Yuan. He
watched Tsu Ma take a cheroot from the case, close it, and slip it
back into his pocket. "Thank
you, Cousin," said Wang, watching the older man light the
cheroot and draw the first breath from it. He smiled tightly, then
let his face fall blank again. "As I said, there is anger and
sadness and a great deal of fear. Unhealthy symptoms. Signs of a deep
and bitter hostility toward us." Wu
Shih grunted indignantly, but kept his silence. His cheeks burned red
and his eyes bored into the side of Wang's softly rounded face. "We
have sown a harvest of discontent," Wang went on. "1 say
we, because this affects us all. And yet I hesitate to use that
plural, because it suggests consensus on our part. Suggests a
commonly agreed-upon set of actions, discussed and debated here, in
Council, as has always been our way." He paused and looked about
him, shaking his head. "Instead I wake to find the world a
different place from when I slept. And myself every bit as surprised
as those who came begging audience, saying, 'Why is my son arrested?'
" In the
chair beside him, Hou Tung-po nodded his head vigorously. "So it
was for me. I was not notified, Li Yuan. Not consulted before you and
Wu Shih acted. A poor choice was left to me—to seem a scoundrel
or look a fool. Relations are bad between us and the Above. As bad as
at any time during the last ten years. We must act to defuse this
situation before it gets out of hand. We must make some gesture to
placate the Above." There
was a moment's silence, then Li Yuan spoke, his anger at Wang
Sau-leyan's criticism barely contained. "When
a man saves his brother's life, does he say first, 'Excuse me,
brother, I would save your life, is that all right with you?' No, he
acts, pushing his brother aside, out of the way of the falling rock.
He acts! I make no apologies for my actions. Nor for the lack of
consultation. Surprise was a necessity. I could not risk informing
anyone." He
stood, going to the center of their informal circle, looking down at
Wang Sau-leyan. "Perhaps
you relish death, Cousin Wang. For myself I would grow old in peace,
no dagger to my throat." Wang
laughed; a short, bitter laugh. "Oh yes, Li Yuan, you act like
one destined to live long. For while your enemies multiply, your
friends diminish." Li
Yuan smiled back at him tightly. "So it is in this world. But it
is better to trust one's friends and know one's enemies. Better to
act than to prevaricate." Wang
Sau-leyan glared back at Li Yuan, infuriated by his words, all
pretense of calm gone from him. "Ai yal—but must we
all suffer for your rashness, Cousin? Must vx. reap what you
sow? You sound like your dead brother—hotheaded!" For a
moment there was a tense silence, then Li Yuan gave a soft laugh.
"Hotheaded, you say?" He shook his head. "Not so,
Cousin. Not so. You ask for something to placate the Above, like a
woman begging for her son's life. Has it come to that? Are we so weak
we must beg for our existence? Are we not to crush what seeks
to destroy us? It seems you have changed your tune, Wang Sau-leyan,
for once you sought to lecture us ..." Wang
was shaking his head. "Young men, Li Yuan, that's all they are.
Young men. Misguided, overenthusiastic, that's all." Wang looked
beyond Li Yuan, a faint smile resting on his lips. "It would
defuse things if we let them go, and in time this thing would
certainly blow over." "Blow
over?" Li Yuan shook his head in disbelief. "What must they
do before you see it, Cousin? Must they hold the gun to your head?
This is no act of high spirits. This is revolution. Open rebellion.
Don't you understand? It begins with ideas and it ends with
bloodshed." He paused, then took a step closer, pointing down
at'Wang. "They would kill you, Wang Sau-leyan, T'ang of Africa,
and set themselves up in your place. Just as they killed your eldest
brothers. Or do you forget?" Li
Yuan stood there, breathing deeply, staring down at Wang Sau-leyan,
forcing him to meet his eyes. "Well?
Do you still want appeasement?" Wang nodded. "And
who else?" He looked at Hou Tung-po, then across to Chi Hsing.
Both nodded, though neither met his eyes. "And
you, Wei Feng? What do you counsel?" He turned, facing the aged
T'ang of East Asia. "You, surely, know the depths of this
problem." "You speak as if I had the casting vote, Li
Yuan." "You
have." It was Tsu Ma who answered for Li Yuan. Beside him Wu
Shih looked across, bowing his head in assent. Wei
Feng sighed and looked down. "You know what I feel," he
began, his low, toneless voice picking out each word slowly,
meticulously. "You know my dislikes, my prejudices." He
looked up at Li Yuan. "You must know, then, that what you did
pleased me greatly." He smiled sourly. "However, that is
not what is at issue here. What is at issue is our manner of
conducting ourselves, Li Yuan. Not the action itself—with which
I basically agree and for which I would support you at any other
time—but the way in which you acted. As Wang Sau-leyan
says, you acted without consulting us." He
paused, considering, then spoke again. "We are Seven, Li Yuan.
Not One, but Seven. In that lies our strength. For seven generations
now, our strength and the reason for peace in the world. For the
strength of our society. Break that cohesion and you break it all." "You
defer then, Wei Feng?" Wei
Feng nodded. "I say free the young men. Then do as Wang says.
Make the best of a bad lot and seek conciliation." For a
moment longer Li Yuan stood there, then he shrugged. "So be it,"
he said, looking across at Wang. "I will hand my prisoners over
to you, Cousin, to do with as you will." He
looked away, leaving it there, but in his head the words resounded.
Not One, but Seven. In that Ues our strength. He had never
questioned it before, but now, standing there amidst his peers, he
asked himself if it were really so. He
glanced at Wu Shih, seeing how the T'ang of North America was looking
down, his anger unexpressed, and he had his answer. The days of
unanimity were gone, and what had made the Seven such a force had
gone with them. What Wei Feng had said, that had been true once, back
in his father's time, but now? Seven
. . . the word was hollow now, the Great Wheel broken. It had died
with his father. Four against three—that was the new reality.
He looked across at Wang Sau-leyan, seeing the gleam of triumph in
his eyes and knew. It was finished. Here, today, it had ended. And
now they must find another path, another way of governing themselves.
That was the truth. But the truth could not be spoken. Not yet,
anyway, and certainly not here, in Council. He
smiled, suddenly relaxing as if a great weight had been taken from
his shoulders, and turned his head, meeting Tsu Ma's eyes, seeing the
light of understanding there. "Shall
we move on?" he said, looking about the circle of his fellow
T'ang. "Time presses and there's much to do." Yes,
he thought; but none of it matters now. From now on this is merely
play, a mask to hide our real intentions. For all the real decisions
will henceforth be made in secret. Out in
the open. He laughed, recognizing finally the full irony of
what he had said earlier, then turned, looking at Tsu Ma, and smiled,
seeing his smile returned strongly. Yes. So it would be from now on.
In the open . . . IT HAD
been summer in Rio. In Tongjiang it was winter. Li
Yuan stood on the terrace, looking out over the frozen lake. He wore
furs and gloves and thick leather boots, but his head was bare,
snowflakes settling in his fine, dark hair. Below him the slope was
deep in snow, while on the far shore the trees of the orchard formed
stark, tangled shapes against the white. He
looked up past the gentle slopes toward the distant mountains. Vast,
sharp-edged escarpments of rock speared the colorless sky. He
shivered and turned away, finding the bleakness of the view too close
to his present mood. He
looked across at the palace, the stables beyond. His men were waiting
on the verandah, talking among themselves beneath the great,
shuttered windows. They did not like it here, he knew. This openness
appalled them. They felt exposed, naked to all the primal things the
City shut out behind its walls, but for him only this was real. The
rest was but a game. He had
expected to find her here, or at least the memory of her, but there
was nothing. Only the place itself remained, robbed of its scents,
its vivid greenness, all human presence gone. As if all that had
happened here had never been. He
shivered and looked down at his feet. A leaf clung to the ankle of
his right boot. He removed his glove, stooped to pluck the wet and
blackened leaf, then straightened up, feeling the icy cold against
his flesh, the wetness in his palm. What did it all mean? He brushed
the leaf away and pulled his glove back on, turning to walk back to
the palace and the waiting transit. Nothing,
he decided. It meant nothing. He
flew southwest, over unbroken whiteness. Not snow this time but the
endless City, three thousand U without a break, until they
reached Kuang Chou, ancient Canton, at the mouth of the Pei River.
Then, for a while, there was the blue of the South China Sea, before
Hong Kong and to its southeast, the island of T'ai Yueh Shan, where
Yin Tsu had his estate. He had
put this off too long. But now it was time to see the child. To
bestow his gift upon his past-wife's son. Coded
signals passed between the ship and the estate's defense system; then
they came down, Yin Tsu greeting him in the hangar. He was kneeling,
his forehead pressed to the cold metal of the grid as Li Yuan stepped
down. Li
Yuan had changed clothes on the flight down, shedding his furs and
gloves and heavy boots in favor of thin satins of a fiery orange and
slippers of the finest kid. Approaching the old man he stopped,
lifting his foot. Yin
Tsu took the offered foot with care and kissed it once, then once
more before releasing it. "Yin
Tsu, once-father, please." He reached down and took the old
man's hand, helping him up. Only then did Yin Tsu look at him. "I
am honored by your visit, Chieh Hsia. Wnat may I do for you?" "Fei
Yen ... Is she still here with you?" The
old man nodded, his thin lips forming i'r ; faintest of
smiles. "Yes, Chieh Hsia. She is here. And the child." "Good.
Good." He hesitated a moment, feeling awkward, then spoke again.
"I'd like to see her. And . . . the child too. If she would see
me." "Please.
Come through." Yin Tsu led the way, half turned toward Li Yuan
in courtesy as he walked, bowed low, his hands held out but pressed
together in an attitude of the deepest respect. While
he waited for her, he thought of what he would say. He had not seen
her since the day he had insisted on the tests. Had she forgiven him
for that? He
gritted his teeth, thinking on it, then turned to find her standing
there. She was wearing a pale lemon-colored dress, her dark hair
hanging loose about her shoulders. The child was not with her. "I—"
he began, but the sight of her struck him dumb. She seemed more
beautiful than ever, her face stronger, her breasts much fuller than
he remembered them. As he had turned to face her, she had bowed and
now rested on one knee, her head lowered, awaiting his command. "Fei
Yen," he said, but the words came out so softly that she did not
hear them. He went across and touched her gently on the crown of her
head, wanting to kiss her there, his cheek muscle twitching with the
tension he felt this close to her. He stepped back, straightening up.
"Get up, Fei Yen. Please . . ." She
got up slowly, her dark eyes filled with awe of him. She had seen how
powerful he was; how his servants laid their necks down for him to
tread upon. Had seen and was afraid. This was not the boy she had
known. No, he was no longer a child, but a man: the cub a lion now,
dressed in flame. "You
look well," he said, aware of the inadequacy of the words. "I
wondered when you'd come. I knew you would." He
nodded, surprised by how subdued she sounded. So different from
before. "And the child?" "He's
fine." She looked away, biting her lip. "He's sleeping now.
Do you want to see him?" She glanced at him, aware of his
hesitation. "You don't have to. I know how you feel about all
this." Do
you? he thought; but he kept silent and simply nodded. "Han,"
she said. "1 called him Han. As you wished." She
was watching him; trying to see what he made of it. His cheek muscle
twitched once more and then lay still, his face a mask. "Come,"
she said after a moment, then led him down a high-ceilinged corridor
«| to the nursery. A girl
sat beside the cot, her hands in her lap. At the entrance of her
mistress she got up and bowed. Then she saw Li Yuan and abased
herself, as Yin Tsu had done. Fei Yen dismissed her hurriedly, then
turned to face Li Yuan again. "Don't
wake him, Yuan. He needs his sleep." He
nodded and went close, looking down at the baby from the side of the
cot. The
child lay on its side, one hand up to its mouth, the other resting
lightly against the bars at the side of the cot. A fine, dark down of
hair covered its scalp, while about its neck lay a monitoring strip,
the milky white band pulsing quickly, in time with the baby's
heartbeat. "But
he's so—so tiny I" Li Yuan laughed, surprised. The
baby's hands, his tiny, perfectly formed feet were like fine
sculpture. Like miniatures in tarnished ivory. "He's
not a month yet," she said, as if that explained the beauty of
the child. Li Yuan wanted to reach out and hold one of those tiny
hands; to feel its fingers stretch and close about his thumb. He
turned, looking at her, and suddenly all of the old bitterness and
love were there, impurely mixed in what he was feeling. He hated her
for this. Hated her for making him feel so much. Frustration made him
grit his teeth and push past her, the feeling overwhelming him,
making him want to cry out for the pain he felt. As it
had always been, he realized. It had always hurt him to be with her.
She took too much. Left him so little of himself. And that was wrong.
He could not be a T'ang and feel like this. No, it was better to feel
nothing than to feel so much. He stood with his back to her,
breathing deeply, trying to calm himself, to still the turmoil in his
gut and put it all back behind the ice. Where
it belonged. Where it had to belong. She
was silent, waiting for him. When he turned back, all trace of
feeling had gone from his face. He looked across at the cot and the
sleeping child, then back at her, his voice quiet, controlled. "I
want to give you something. For you and the child. It will be his
when he comes of age, but until that time it is yours to administer." She
lowered her head obediently. "I
want him to have the palace at Hei Shui." She
looked up, wide-eyed with surprise. "Li Yuan—" But he
had raised his hand to silence her. "The
documents are drawn up. I want no arguments, Fei Yen. It's little
enough compared to what he might have had." She
turned her head away, unable to disguise the moment's bitterness,
then nodded her acquiescence. "Good."
He turned, looking at the cot once more. "There will be an
allowance too. For both of you. You will not want for anything, Fei
Yen. Neither you nor he." "My
father—" she began, pride creeping back into her voice,
but she cut it off, holding her tongue. She knew he need do nothing.
The terms of the divorce were clear enough. Hers was the shame. In
her actions lay the blame for how things were. "Let
it be so, then," he said finally. "Your father shall have
the documents. And Han. . ." he said the name; said it and
breathed deeply afterward, a muscle jumping in his cheek. "Han
shall have Hei Shui." TOLONEN
LOOKED UP, his long face ashen, his gray eyes filled with a deep
hurt. For a time he stared sightlessly at the wall, then slowly shook
his head. "I
can't believe it," he said quietly, pushing the file away from
him. "I just can't believe it. Hans. . ." His mouth creased
into a grimace of pain. "What will I say?. . . What will his
father say?" Then he thought of Jelka and the betrothal and
groaned. "Gods, what a mess. What a stinking, horrible mess this
is." The
file on Hans Ebert was a slender dossier, not enough to convict a man
in law, but enough to prove its case by any other measure. To an
advocate it would have been merely a mass of circumstantial evidence,
but that evidence pointed in one direction only. Tolonen
sighed, then rubbed at his eyes. Hans had been clever. Too clever, in
fact; for the sum total of his cleverness was a sense of absence, of
shadow where there should have been substance. Discrepancies in
GenSyn funds. Payments to fellow officers. Unexplained absences in
Ebert's service record—missing hours and days that, in three
cases, linked up with dates given them by DeVore's man Reid.
Misplaced files on five of the eighteen Young Sons arrested on Li
Yuan's instructions only a day or so ago, all of which had, at some
point, passed through Ebert's hands. Then there was the statement
given by the girl in the Ebert household, Golden Heart, and, finally,
the holograms. The
holograms seemed, on the surface of it, to be the most conclusive
evidence, though in law, he knew, they held no real significance. It
had been successfully claimed long ago that photographic and
holographic evidence was unreliable, since GenSyn could make a
perfect duplicate of anyone. This and the whole question of
image-verification had relegated such "information" to a
secondary status in law. But this was not something that would ever
see a courtroom. Wider issues were at stake here. And older codes of
conduct. In one
of the holograms Hans could be seen standing on the verandah of a
skiing lodge, looking down at a figure on the snow below him. That
figure was DeVore. They were grainy shots, taken from a narrow
triangulation—perhaps as little as twenty degrees—and
consequently the far side of the three-dimensional image blurred into
perfect whiteness; but that incompleteness itself suggested that it
was genuine, taken with two hand-helds from a distance, who knew for
what purpose— maybe blackmail. The holograms had been found in
storage in DeVore's stronghold, almost as though they had been left
to be found. In itself this might have led Security to discount them
as a subtle attempt to undermine Ebert's position, but added to the
other matters they we're significant. No,
there was no real proof, but the circumstantial evidence was
considerable. Ebert
had been working with the rebels; providing them with funds; meeting
with them; passing on information, and covering their tracks where
necessary. Tolonen
closed the file, then sat back, his hands trembling. He had always
trusted Ebert. When he had asked Haavikko to investigate he had been
thinking of three other officers. For him the question of Hans
Ebert's loyalty had never arisen. Not until this evening. He
shook his head. There were tears in his eyes now; tears running down
his furrowed cheeks. He gritted his teeth, tightening the muscles in
his face, but still the tears came. There was only one thing to do.
He would have to go and see Klaus. After all, this was Family. A
matter of honor. He let
out a shuddering sigh, then shook his head, remembering. Jelka ... He
had promised Jelka that he would dine with her at home tonight. He
glanced at the timer on the wall, then pulled himself up out of the
chair, throwing the file down on the bed. He was late already, but
she would understand. He would call Helga and explain. And maybe send
Jelka a note by messenger. He
shivered, feeling old beyond his years. He had been so wrong. So very
wrong. And not just once but twice now. First with DeVore and then .
. . "Ach.
. ." he muttered, then turned, angry with himself for his
weakness, pressing the button to summon his aide. He would bathe and
dress and go to see his old friend. For a father should know his son.
Whatever kind of creature he was. IT was
JUST after three when Jelka woke. The apartment was in darkness,
silent. For a while she lay there, trying to settle back into sleep,
then abandoned the idea. She
slipped on a robe and went to her father's room, forgetting for a
moment. His bed was empty, the room tidy. Of course . . . She moved
on, pausing outside her aunt and uncle's room, hearing their soft
snoring from within. In the kitchen she found a hand-written note
resting against the coffee machine. The sheet was folded in half, her
name written on the front in her father's neat, upright hand. She sat
at the table and read it through, then smiled, thinking of him. She
always felt such fear for him when he was out on business. More so
since the latest attempt on his life. She
looked about her at the dark forms of the kitchen, feeling suddenly
tense, restless. That sense of restlessness seemed almost her natural
state these days. That and an underlying desire to break things. But
she told no one of these feelings. She knew they had to do with Hans
and the forthcoming marriage, but there was little she could do to
salve them. One
thing she could do, however, was exercise. The gym was locked,
but unknown to her father, she had memorized the combination. She
punched it in, then went through, into darkness, the doors closing
behind her automatically. They
had strengthened the walls since the attack on her and put in a
special locking system, but otherwise the gym was much as it had
been. She went across to the panel on the wall and switched on three
of the spotlights over the wall bars, then shrugged off her robe and
began to exercise, knowing that no one could hear her once the doors
were closed. There
was a wall-length mirror at the far end of the gym. As she went
through her routine, she caught glimpses of her naked figure as it
moved between the three separate beams of light, her limbs flashing
like spears of ice, her body twisting and turning intricately. And as
she danced she felt the tension drain from her, deriving a definite
pleasure from her body's precise and disciplined movements. Faster
she went and faster, like a dervish, crying out in delight as her
feet pounded the floor, flicking her over in a somersault, then into
a tight, high leap. And
afterward she stood there, breathing deeply, trying not to laugh. If
he could only see me now . . . She shook her head, then drew her hair
back from her face. She
had begun a second routine when something caught her eye. She slowed,
then stopped, facing the door, her whole body tensed. The
panel above the door was pulsing steadily. A feverish, silent pulse
that meant one thing only. There were intruders in the apartment. LEHMANN
READ the note quickly, then crumpled it in his hand and threw it
aside. Tolonen led a charmed life. Three times they had tried for him
now and three times they had failed. Tonight, for instance, Ebert had
assured him that he would be at home, but for some reason he had not
come. Lehmann cursed softly, then turned, going into the room where
they held the two captives. They
lay on the bed, facedown, their plump, naked bodies bound hand and
foot. Beside them the two Han waited. "Anything?"
he asked, seeing the huge welts on the prisoners' backs, the burns on
their arms where they had been tortured. "Nothing,"
one of the Han answered him. "Nothing at all." Lehmann
stood there a moment, wondering if he should try something more
persuasive, then shrugged and gave the order, turning away, letting
them get on with it. Outside,
in the corridor, he paused and looked about, sniffing the air.
Something nagged at him. They had searched the apartment thoroughly
and there was no sign of the girl, so maybe she had gone. But
then why the note? He
turned and looked down the corridor at the door to the gym. In there?
he wondered. It was unlikely, but then so was the possibility that
the girl had gone. Her bed had been slept in, even if the covers were
cold. He
stood at the control panel, studying it. It was a new doorlock,
specially strengthened. Without the code there was no way of opening
it. He was about to turn away when he realized that he didn't have to
get inside to find out if she was there. There was a security
viewscreen. Which meant that there were cameras inside. It
took only a moment to work out how to operate the screen, then he was
staring into darkness, the cameras looking for forms among the
shadows. He scanned the whole room once, then went back carefully,
double-checking. Nothing. There was no one in the room. He
switched off the screen, satisfied now that she had gone. It was a
shame. She would have made the perfect hostage. But as it was, the
death of Tolonen's brother and sister-in-law would hurt the old man
badly. He
went back to where his men were waiting. They had finished now and
were ready to go. He looked down at the corpses dispassionately,
feeling nothing for them. Directly or indirectly they served a system
that was rotten. This, then, was their fate. What they deserved. He
leaned forward and spat in the face of the dead man, then looked up,
meeting the eyes of the Han. "All
right. We've finished here. Let's go." They
nodded, then filed out past him, their weapons sheathed, their eyes
averted. Lehmann looked about him, then drew his knife and followed
them out into the corridor. JELKA
waited in the darkness, fearing the worst, her cheeks wet, her
stomach tight with anxiety. This was the nightmare come again. And
this time it was much worse than before, for this time she could do
nothing. Nothing but crouch there by the locked door, waiting. In the
past hour she learned how dreadful a thing inaction was—far
worse than the terror of hiding. When she had been balanced on the
perch above the camera it had been somehow easier—much
easier—than the awiul limbo of not-knowing that came afterward.
Then she could think to herself, "In a few moments this will be
over, the cameras will stop moving and I can drop to the floor
again." But the waiting was different. Horribly different. The
very quality of time changed subtly, becoming the implement by which
she tortured herself, filling the darkness with her vile imaginings. In the
end her patience broke and she went out, afraid that they would still
be there, waiting silently for her, but unable to stay in the gym a
moment longer. Outside
it was dark, silent. A strange smell hung in the air. She went slowly
down the corridor, feeling her way, crouching warily, prepared to
strike out with hand or foot, but there was nothing. Only her fear. At the
first door she stopped, sniffing the air. The smell was stronger
here, more sickly than in the corridor. She gritted her teeth and
went inside, placing her feet carefully, staring into the darkness,
trying to make out forms. There
were vague shapes on the floor close to her. She leaned toward them,
then jerked her head back, giving a small cry, unable to stop
herself. Even in the darkness she could tell. Could see the wire
looped tightly about their throats. She
backed away, horrified, gasping for breath, her whole body shaking
violently, uncontrollably. They were dead. She
turned and began to run, but her legs betrayed her. She stumbled, and
her outstretched hands met not the hard smoothness of the floor but
the awful, yielding softness of dead flesh. She shrieked and
scrambled up, then fell again, her horror mounting as she found
herself tangled among the bodies that littered the floor. She
closed her eyes and reached out, taking the wall as her guide, small
sounds of brute disgust forming at the back of her throat as she
forced herself to tread over them. She
went out into the dimly lit corridor. The outside barrier was
unmanned, the elevator empty. She stood there a moment, beside the
open doors, then went inside and pressed to go down. It was the same
at the bottom of the deck. There were no guards anywhere, as if the
whole contingent had been withdrawn. She went into the control center
for the deck and sat at the console, trying to work out how to
operate the board. Her first few attempts brought no response, then
the screen lit up and a soft MekVoc asked for her Security code. She
stammered the number her father had made her memorize, then repeated
it at the machine's request. At once a face filled the central
screen. "Nu
shi Tolonen," the duty officer said, recognizing her at once.
"What is it? You look—" "Listen!"
she said, interrupting him. "There are no guards. The apartment
has been attacked. They've—" She bit it off, unable to
say, yet it seemed he understood. "Stay
where you are. I'll inform the General at once. We'll get a special
unit over to you within the next ten minutes." He was leaning
out of screen as he spoke, tapping a scramble code into the machine
next to him. Then he turned back, facing Jelka again. "All
right. They're on their way. The General will contact you directly.
Stay by the board." He paused and drew a breath. "How long
ago did this happen?" "About
an hour." She shuddered, trying not to think of what she had
left back up the levels. "I think they've gone now. But there
are . . ." She swallowed dryly, then continued, steeling herself
to say it. "There are bodies. My aunt and uncle. Some others. I
don't know who." She took a shuddering breath, so close to tears
again that she found it difficult to control herself. "Listen
to me, Jelka. Do exactly what I say. There should be a medical
cupboard in the restroom next to you. You'll find some tranquilizers
there. Take two. Only two. Then come back to the board and stay
there. All right?" She
nodded and went off to do as she was told, but then she stopped and
turned, looking back at the screen. Why was there no one here? Where
was the guard unit? The pattern was all too familiar. Like the
attack on the Wiring Project that time. It hit
her suddenly. This wasn't like the other attack on her. This had been
set up. From inside. Someone had given the order for the unit to pull
out. Someone at the top. Which
meant that she had to get out. Right away. Before they came for her. Even
as she turned and looked, the picture on the screen changed. Hans
Ebert's face appeared, red-eyed, his cheeks unshaven. He had been
summoned from his bed. "Jelka? Is that you? Come closer. Come
over to the board." In a
trance she went across and stood there, staring down at the screen. "Stay
where you are. And don't worry. I'll be with you just as soon as I
can." She
stood there, a cold certainty transfixing her. Then, as his face
vanished from the screen, she reached across and cut the connection.
She laughed, a cold bitter laughter, then, not looking back, made her
way across to the transit and went inside, pressing the down button. IT w a
S T E n minutes after four when Tolonen got to the Ebert Mansion. One
of the goat creatures greeted him and ushered him through to the
study. It bowed low, then, in a deep, burred voice, excused itself
while it went to fetch its master. A moment later another of the
creatures entered the room; taller, gaunter than the first, its dress
immaculate. It came across to where the Marshal stood and asked him
what he would have to drink. "Nothing,
thank you," he answered, not looking at the beast. "Would
you like something to eat, Marshal?" It
stood close to him, almost at his elbow. He could hear its breathing,
smell its heavy musk beneath the artifice of its cologne. "No.
Now leave me," he said, waving it away. "Is
there anything I can do for you, Excellency?" it persisted,
seeming not to have heard what he had said nor to have seen his
gesture of dismissal. Tolonen
turned and shook his head, meeting the creature's pink eyes. He had
not noticed before how repulsive the creatures were; how vile their
combination of sophistication and brutality. "I'm sorry,"
he said tightly, controlling the irritation he was feeling. "But
please leave me alone. I want nothing, I assure you." He
watched it go, then shuddered, wondering if this would be the last
time he would come here; whether by this he ended it all between
himself and his oldest friend. He looked around, trying to distract
himself, aware that the moment was drawing close, but it was no good:
the words he had come to say ran on inside his head, like an awful,
unrelenting litany. He
hadn't long to wait. Klaus Ebert had doused his face, put on a robe,
and come down. He pushed the far doors open and strode into the room,
smiling, his arms out to welcome his friend. "You're
damned early, Knut, but you're as welcome as ever." Ebert
clasped Tolonen to him, then released him, standing back. "What
brings you here at this hour, Knut? All's well with you and yours, I
hope?" Tolonen
smiled wanly, touched more than ever by the warmth and openness of
the greeting, but the smile was fragile. Underlying it was a
bitterness that he found hard to contain. He nodded, then found his
voice. "They were well when I left them, Klaus." He
drew a breath, then shook his head once, violently, his face muscles
tightening into a grimace. "I rehearsed the words, but I can't.
. ." He straightened his back, controlling his emotions. Then,
with his right hand, he took the file from beneath his artificial arm
and handed it across. Ebert
frowned. "What's this, Knut?" He searched his friend's face
for explanations, troubled now, but could find nothing there. His
broad lips formed a kind of shrug, then he turned and went to his
desk, pulling open the top drawer and taking out a small case. He
sat, setting the file down on the broad desktop, then opened the case
and drew out a pair of old-fashioned spectacles, settling them on the
bridge of his nose. He
opened the file and began to read. Tolonen
stood on the far side of the desk, watching Ebert's face as he read.
He had written out a copy of the file in his own hand, taking direct
responsibility for the matter. After
a moment Ebert looked up at him, his eyes half-lidded. "I don't
understand this, Knut. It says . . ." He laughed briefly,
awkwardly, then shook his head, watching Tolonen carefully all the
while. "You wouldn't. . ." He
looked down, then immediately looked up again, his mouth making the
first motion of speech but saying nothing. There was a strange
movement in his face as he struggled toward realization—a
tightening of his lips, a brief flash of pain in his eyes. Tolonen
stood silently, his right fist clenched tight, the nails digging into
the soft palm, his own face taut with pain, waiting. Ebert
looked down again, but now there was a visible tremor in his hand as
it traced the words, and after a moment a tear gathered, then fell
from his nose onto the sheet below. He turned the page and read on,
the trembling spreading to his upper arms and shoulders. When he had
finished he closed the folder slowly and took off his glasses before
looking up at Tolonen. His eyes were red now, tear-rimmed, and his
face had changed. "Who
else knows of this, Knut?" Ebert's
voice was soft. His eyes held no hatred of his old friend, no blame,
only a deep, unfathomable hurt. Tolonen
swallowed. "Three of us now." "And
Li Yuan? Does he know yet?" Tolonen
shook his head. "This is family, Klaus. Your son." The
man behind the desk considered that, then nodded slowly, a small sad
smile forming on his lips. "I thank you, Knut. I..." The
trembling in his hands and arms returned. Then something broke in the
old man and his face crumpled, his mouth opening in a silent howl of
pain, the lower jaw drawn back. He pressed his palms into the desk's
surface, trying to still the shaking, to control the pain that
threatened to tear him apart. "Why?" he said at
last, looking up at the Marshal, his eyes beseeching him. "What
could he possibly have wanted that he didn't have?" Tolonen
shrugged. He had no answer to that. No understanding of it. At
that moment the door at the far end of the study opened. One of the
goat-creatures stood there, a tray of drinks in one hand. For a
second or two Klaus Ebert did nothing, then he turned in his seat and
yelled at the beast. "Get
out, you bloody thing! Get out!" It
blanched, then turned and left hurriedly. There was the sound of
breaking glass in the hallway outside. Ebert
turned back to face the Marshal, breathing deeply, his face a deep
red. "How long have I, Knut? How long before Li Yuan has to
know?" Tolonen
shivered. They both knew what had to be done. "Two days,"
he said quietly. "I can give you two days." Ebert
nodded, then sat back in his chair, clasping his hands together
tightly. "Two days," he repeated, as if to himself, then
looked up at Tolonen again. "I'm sorry, Knut. Sorry for Jelka's
sake." "And
I." Tolonen
watched him a moment longer, then turned and left, knowing that there
was nothing more to be said. His part in this was ended, his duty
discharged; but for once he felt anything but satisfaction. there
WERE FIRES on the hillside. Bodies lay unmoving on the snow. In the
skies above the mountains the dark, knifelike shapes of Security
battleships moved slowly eastward, searching out any trace of warmth
in the icy wasteland. In the
control room of the flagship sat Hans Ebert, Li Yuan's General. He
was unshaven and his eyes were red-rimmed from lack of sleep. His
uniform was undone at the collar and he had his feet up on the
console in front of him. Above him a bank of nine screens showed the
landscape down below. Over the image on the central screen ran bright
red lines of data. From time to time a map would flash up, showing
the current extent of the sweep. Hans
watched the screens vacantly, tired to the core. There were drugs he
might have taken to ameliorate his condition, but he had chosen to
ignore them, feeding his bitter disappointment. There
were five others in the low-ceilinged room with him, but all were
silent, wary of their commander's dark mood. They went about their
tasks deftly, quietly, careful not to draw his attention. Eight
strongholds had been taken. Another five had been found abandoned.
DeVore's network was in tatters, more than three thousand of his men
dead. What Karr had begun, he, in the space of six short hours, had
finished. Moreover, Jelka was gone, probably dead, and all his dreams
with her. His dreams of being king. King of the world. "The
lodge is up ahead, sir!" He
looked up sharply, then took his feet down from the desk. "Good!"
He bit the word out savagely, then relented. He turned, looking at
the young officer who had reported it to him. "Thanks . . ." The
officer saluted and turned smartly away. Ebert sat a moment longer,
then hauled himself up onto his feet and went down the narrow
corridor and out into the cockpit. Staring out through the broad,
thickly slatted screen, he could see the mountain up ahead, the lodge
high up on its western slopes. It was
a mere twelve months since he had met DeVore here, and now he was
forced to return, the architect of his own undoing, following his
T'ang's explicit orders. Silently he cursed Li Yuan. Cursed the whole
damn business, his irritation and frustration rising to fever pitch
as he stood there, watching the lodge draw closer. They
touched down less than half a li away, the twin turrets of the
battleship pointed toward the lodge. Hans suited up then went down,
onto the snow. He crossed the space slowly, a lonely figure in black,
holding the bulky gun with both hands, the stock tucked into his
shoulder. Fifty paces from the verandah he stopped, balancing the
gun's barrel across his left forearm and flicking off the safety.
Then, without a word, he emptied the cartridge into the side of the
lodge. The
explosions were deafening. In seconds the lodge was a burning ruin,
debris falling everywhere, sizzling in the snow as it fell; the
concussions echoing back and forth between the mountains, starting
small slides. He waited a moment longer, the weapon lowered, watching
the flames, then turned and walked back, the heavy gun resting
loosely on his shoulder. CHAPTER
FOURTEEN
The Shattered Land Klaus
EBERT waited in his study for his son. He had dismissed his servants
and was alone in the huge, dimly lit room, his face expressionless.
The file lay on the desk behind him, the only object on the big
leather-topped desk. It had been fifteen hours since Tolonen's visit
and he had done much in that time; but they had been long, dreadful
hours, filled with foul anticipation. Hans
had been summoned twice. The first time he had sent word that he was
on the T'ang's business and could not come, the second that he would
be there within the hour. Between the two had been the old man's
curtly worded message, "Come now, or be nothing to me." A bell
rang in the corridor outside, signal that his son had arrived. Ebert
waited, his feet apart, his hands clasped behind his back. He was the
picture of strength, of authority, his short gray hair combed back
severely from his high forehead, but his gray-green eyes were
lifeless. There
were footsteps on the tiled floor outside, then a knock on the great
oak door. Hans entered, followed by two young lieutenants. He crossed
the room and stood there, only an arm's length from his father. The
two officers stood by the door, at ease. "Well,
Father?" There was a trace of impatience, almost of insolence in
the young man's tone. Klaus
Ebert narrowed his eyes and looked past his son at the two
lieutenants. "This is family business," he said to them.
"Please leave us." There
was a moment's uncertainty in their faces. They looked to each other
but made no move to go. Ebert stared at them a moment, then looked to
his son for explanation. "They're
under my direct orders, Father. They're not to leave me. Not for a
moment." His voice was condescending now, as if he were
explaining something to an inferior. Ebert
looked at his son, seeing things he had never noticed before, the
arrogance of his bearing, the slight surliness in the shapes his
mouth formed, the lack of real depth in his clear blue eyes. It was
as if he looked at you, but not into you. He saw only
surfaces; only himself, reflected in others. He
felt something harden at the core of him. This was his son. This
creature. He hissed out a long breath, his chest feeling
tight; then he started forward, shouting at the two officers. "Get
out, damn you! Now! Before I throw you out!" There
was no hesitation this time. They jerked as if struck, then turned,
hurrying from the room. Klaus stared at the closed door a moment then
turned, looking at his son. "There
was no need for that." "There
was every need!" he barked, and saw his son flinch
slightly. "1 summon you and you excuse yourself. And then you
have the nerve to bring your popinjay friends—" "They're
officers—" Hans began, interrupting, but the old man cut
him off with a sharp gesture of his hand. "Your.
. . friends." He turned to face his son, no longer
concealing his anger. He bit the words out. "To bring them here,
Hans." He pointed at the floor. "Here, where only we
come." He took a breath, calming himself, then moved away, back
to the desk. From there he turned and looked back at his son. Hans
was looking away from him, his irritation barely masked. "Well?
What is it, Father?" The
words were sharp, abrasive. Hans glanced at his father then resumed
his rigid stance, his whole manner sullen, insolent, as if answering
to a superior officer he detested. So it
has come to this? Ebert thought, growing still, studying his son. He
looked down at the file and gritted his teeth. But he didn't need the
Marshal's carefully documented evidence. All that he needed was there
before him, for his own eyes to read. "Well?"
the young man insisted. "You've summoned me from my duties,
threatened to withhold from me what is mine by right, and insulted my
officers. I want to know why, Father. What have I done to warrant
this treatment?" Ebert
laughed bitterly. "My son," he said, weighting the second
word with all the! irony he could muster; but what he felt was hurt—a
deep, almost overwhelming feeling of hurt—and a sense of
disillusionment that threatened to unhinge his mind. He stood up and
moved away from the desk, circling his son until he stood-; with his
back to the door. "What
have you done, Hans? What have you done?" The
young man turned, facing his father, his fists clenched at his sides.
He seemed barely in control of himself. "Yes, what have I
done?" Ebert pointed across at the desk. "See that file?" "So?"
Hans made no move to look. "You could have sent it to me. I
would have read it." Ebert
shook his head. "No, Hans. I want you to read it now."
There was a small movement in the young man's face, a moment's doubt,
and then it cleared. He nodded and turned, taking his father's seat. Ebert
went to the door and locked it, slipping the key into his pocket.
Hans was reading the first page, all color drained from his face.
Why? the old man asked himself for the thousandth time that
day. But in reality he knew. Selfishness. Greed. A cold
self-interest. These things were deeply rooted in his son. He looked
at him, his vision doubled, seeing both his son and the stranger who
sat there wearing the T'ang's uniform. And, bitterly, he recognized
the source. Berta,
he thought. Yfou're Berta's child. Hans
closed the file. For a moment he was silent, staring down at the
unmarked cover of the folder, then he looked up, meeting his fathers
eyes. "So . . ."he said. There was sober calculation in his
eyes: no guilt or regret, only a simple cunning. "What now,
Father?" Ebert
kept the disgust he felt from his voice. "You make no denial?"
"Would you believe me if I did?" Hans sat back, at ease
now. The old man shook his head. Hans
glanced at the file, then looked back at his father. "Who else
knows, besides Tolonen?" "His
one-time lieutenant, Haavikko." Ebert moved slowly, crossing the
room in a half-circle that would bring him behind his son. "Then
Li Yuan has yet to be told?" He nodded. Hans
seemed reassured. "That's good. Then I could leave here this
evening." He turned in his seat, watching his father's slow
progress across the room toward him. "I could take a ship and
hide out among the Colony planets." Ebert
stopped. He was only paces from his son. "That's what you want,
is it? Exile? A safe passage?" Hans
laughed. "What else? I can't argue with this." He brushed
the file with the fingertips of his left hand. "Li Yuan would
have me killed if I stayed." Ebert
took another step. He was almost on top of his son now. "And
what if I said that that wasn't good enough? What if I said no? What
would you do?" The
young man laughed uncomfortably. "Why should you?" He
leaned back, staring up at his father, puzzled now. Ebert
reached out, placing his hand gently on his son's shoulder. "As
a child I cradled you in my arms, saw you learn to walk and utter
your first, stumbling words. As a boy you were more to me than all of
this. You were my joy. My delight. As a man I was proud of you. You
seemed the thing I'd always dreamed of." Hans
licked at his top lip, then looked down. But there was no apology.
"Shall I go?" The
old man ignored the words. The pressure of his hand increased. His
fingers gripped and held. Reaching out, he placed his other hand
against Hans's neck, his thumb beneath the chin. Savagely, he pushed
Hans's head up, forcing him to look into his face. When he spoke, the
words were sour, jagged-edged. "But now all that means nothing."
He shook his head, his face brutal, pitiless. "Nothing! Do you
hear me, Hans.7" Hans
reached up to free himself from his father's grip, but the old man
was unrelenting. His left hand slipped from the shoulder to join the
other about his son's neck. At the same time he leaned forward,
bearing down on the younger man, his big hands tightening their grip,
his shoulder muscles straining. Too
late the young man realized what was happening. He made a small,
choked sound in his throat, then began to struggle in the chair, his
legs kicking out wildly, his hands beating, then tearing, at his
father's arms and hands, trying to break the viselike grip. Suddenly
the chair went backward. For a moment Hans was free, sprawled on the
floor beneath his father's body; but then the old man had him again,
his hands about his throat, his full weight pressing down on him,
pushing the air from the young man's lungs. For
one frozen moment the old man's face filled the younger man's vision,
the mouth gasping as it strained, spittle flecking the lips. The eyes
were wide with horror, the cheeks suffused with blood. Sweat beaded
the brow. Then, like a vast, dark wave, the pain became immense. His
lungs burned in his chest and his eyes seemed about to burst. And
then release. Blackness . . . He
gasped air into his raw throat, coughing and wheezing, the pain in
his neck so fierce that it made him groan aloud; a hoarse, animal
sound. After
a moment he opened his eyes again and pulled himself up onto one
elbow. His father lay beside him, dead, blood gushing from the hole
in the back of his head. He
looked around, expecting to see his lieutenants, but they were not in
the room. The door to his father's private suite was open, however,
and there was movement inside. He called out—or tried to—then
struggled up into a sitting position, feeling giddy, nauseated. At the
far end of the room a figure stepped into the doorway; tall as a man,
but not a man. Its white silk jacket was spattered with blood, as
were its trousers. It looked at the sitting man with half-lidded
eyes; eyes that were as red as the blood on its clothes. Over one arm
was a suit of Hans's father's clothes. "Here,
put these on," said the goat-creature in its soft, animal voice.
It crossed the room and stood there over him, offering the clothes. He
took them, staring at the beast, not understanding yet, letting it
help him up and across the study to his father's room. There, in the
doorway, he turned and looked back. His
father lay facedown beside the fallen chair, the wound at the back of
his head still wet and glistening in the half light. "We
must go now," said the beast, its breath like old malt. He
turned and met its eyes. It was smiling at him, showing its fine,
straight teeth. He could sense the satisfaction it was feeling. Years
of resentment had culminated in this act. He shuddered and closed his
eyes, feeling faint. "We
have an hour, two at most," it said, its three-toed hand moving
to the side of Ebert's neck, tracing but not touching the weltlike
bruise there. For a moment its eyes seemed almost tender. He
nodded and let it lead him. There was nothing for him here now.
Nothing at all. KARR
looked UP over his glass and met the young officer's eyes. "What
is it, Captain?" "Forgive
me, sir. I wouldn't normally come to you on a matter of this kind,
but I think this will interest you." He
held out a slender dossier. Karr stared at it a moment, then took it
from him. Putting down his glass, he opened it. A moment later, he
started forward, suddenly alert. "When
did this come in?" "Twenty
minutes ago. Someone said you were down here in the Mess, sir, so I
thought..." Karr
grinned at him fiercely. "You did well, Captain. But what put
you on to this?" "The
name, sir. Mikhail Boden. It was one of the names we had as a suspect
for the murder of a Fu Jen Maitland six years ago. It seems
she was Under-Secretary Lehmann's wife at one time. She was burned to
death in her rooms. An incendiary device. Boden was there shortly
before she died. His retinal print was in the door camera that
survived the blaze. When it appeared again, I thought I'd have a look
at the visual image and see if it was the same man. As you can see,
it wasn't." "No
. . ." Karr got to his feet. The camera stills were of two quite
different men, yet the retinal print was the same. "But how come
the computer allowed the match?" "It
seems that the only detail it has to have a one-hundred-percent
mapping on is the retinal pattern. That's unchanging. The rest—facial
hair, proportion of muscle and fat in the face—changes over the
years. The computer is programmed to ignore those variations. As long
as the underlying bone structure is roughly the same the computer
will recognize it as being the same face." Karr
laughed. "And you know who this is?" The
young officer smiled back at Karr. "I read my files, sir. It's
DeVore, isn't it?" "Yes.
And he entered Salzburg hsien twenty or twenty-five minutes
ago, right?" "Yes,
sir." "Good.
And you're tracking him?" "Yes,
sir. I've put two of my best men on the job." "Excellent." Karr
looked down at the dossier again. The gods knew why DeVore had made
such an elementary mistake, but he had, so praise them for it. Taking
the handset from his pocket, he tapped in Chen's combination, then,
as Chen came on line, gave a small laugh. "It's DeVore, Chen. I
think we've got him. This time I really think we've got him!" T o l
o N E n was crouched in the middle of the room. The corpses were gone
now, his men finished here, but still the room seemed filled with
death. He looked up at the young officer, his face pulled tight with
grief, his eyes staring out at nothing. "I should have killed
him while I had the chance." He shuddered and looked down at his
big square hands. "If only I had known what mischief he was up
to." "We'll
track him, sir. Bring him back," the officer offered, watching
his Marshal, a deep concern in his clear gray eyes. The
old man shook his head and looked down again. Something had broken in
him in the last few hours. His shoulders sagged, his hands—real
and artificial— rested on his knees limply. All of the anger,
all of the old blind rage that had fired him as a man, had gone.
There was no avenging this, whatever he said. The young officer had
seen how the old man had looked, such tenderness and agony in his
face as he.bent and gently touched the wire about his brother's neck.
It was awful to see such things. More than could be borne. The
young man swallowed, his voice a sympathetic whisper. "Can I get
you anything, sir?" Tolonen
looked up at him again, seeming to see him for the first time. There
was a faint smile on his lips, but it was only the smallest flicker
of warmth in the wasteland of his features. "Is
there any news?" The
young man shook his head. There was no trace of Jelka. It was as if
she had vanished. Perhaps she was dead, or maybe Ebert had her after
all. He hoped not. But
she was nowhere in the City. An eighteen-hour Security trawl had
found no trace of her. The
officer went through to the living room, returning a moment later
with two brandies. "Here," he said, handing one to the
Marshal. "This will help." Tolonen
took the glass and stared at it a while, then drained it at a gulp.
He looked up at the young officer, his face expressionless. "Telling
Li Yuan was hard." His wide brow furrowed momentarily. "I
felt I had failed him. Betrayed him. It was bad. Worse than Han
Ch'in's death. Much worse." "It
wasn't your fault." Tolonen
met his eyes a moment, then looked away, shaking his head. "If
not mine, then whose? I knew and didn't act. And this . . ." His
mouth puckered momentarily and his fists clenched. He took a deep
breath, then looked up again. "This is the result." The
officer was about to answer the Marshal, to say something to
alleviate the old man's pain, when a three-tone signal sounded in his
head. There was news. He narrowed his eyes, listening, then smiled; a
huge grin of a smile. "What
is it?" Tolonen asked, getting to his feet. "It's
Viljanen, from Jakobstad. He says to tell you that Jelka is there.
And safe." jelka
stood at the end of the old stone jetty, waiting for him. Waves
crashed against the rocks across the bay. Above her the slate-gray
sky was filled with huge thunderheads of cloud, black and menacing. The
island was in winter's grip. Snow covered everything. She stood
there, above the deep-green swell of the sea, wrapped in furs against
the cold, only her face exposed to the bitter air. The boat was small
and distant, rising and falling as she watched, laboring against the
elements. Beyond it, its scale diminished by the distance, lay the
clifflike whiteness of the City, its topmost levels shrouded by low
cloud. Only
as the boat came nearer could she hear the noise of its engine, a
thin thread of regularity amid the swirling chaos of wind and wave.
Entering the bay the engine noise changed, dropping an octave as the
boat slowed, turning in toward the jetty. She saw him on the deck,
looking across at her, and lifted her arm to wave. They
embraced on the path above the water, the old man hugging her to him
fiercely, as if he would never again let her go. He pushed back her
hood and kissed her on the crown, the brow, the lips, his hot tears
coursing down her frozen face, cooling in her lashes and on her
cheeks. "Jelka
. . . Jelka ... I was so worried." She
closed her eyes and held on to him. Snow had begun to fall, but he
was warm and close and comforting. The familiar smell of him eased
her tortured mind. She let him turn her and lead her back to the
house. He
built a fire in the old grate, then lit it, tending it until it was
well ablaze. She sat watching him in the half-light from the window,
her hand clasping the pendant at her neck, the tiny kuei dragon
seeming to burn against her palm. Still
kneeling, he half turned toward her, his face a mobile mask of black
and orange, his gray hair glistening in the flickering light. "How
did you get here?" he asked gently. "My men were looking
for you everywhere." She
smiled but did not answer him. Desperation creates its own resources,
and she had been desperate to get here. Besides, she wasn't sure. It
was as if she had dreamed her journey here. She had known. Known that
while the storm might rage on every side, here was safety, here the
eye. And she had run for the eye. Here, where it was warm and safe. He
watched her a moment longer, his moist eyes filled with the fire's
wavering light, then stood. He was old. Old, and weary to the bone.
She went across and held him, laying her cheek against his neck, her
arm about his waist. For a moment he rested against her, thoughtless,
unmoving, then he shifted slightly, looking down into her face. "But
why here? Why did you come here?" In her
head there had been the memory of brine and leather and engine oils,
the strong scent of pine; the memory of a circle of burned and
blackened trees in the woods, of an ancient stone tower overlooking a
boiling sea. These things, like ghosts, had summoned her. She
smiled. "There was nowhere else." He
nodded, then sighed deeply. "Well. . . It's over now." "Over?" His
hand went to her face, holding her where the jaw bone came down
beneath the ear, his thumb stroking the soft flesh of her cheek. His
own face was stiff, his chin raised awkwardly. "I
was wrong, Jelka. Wrong about many things, but most of all wrong to
try to force you into something you didn't want." She
knew at once what he meant. Hans. She felt herself go cold, thinking
of him. "I
was blind. Stupid." He shook his head slowly. His face muscles
clenched and unclenched, then formed a grimace. This pained him. As
much as the deaths. She
opened her lips to speak, but her mouth was dry. She nodded. She had
tried to tell him. "He's
gone," he said, after a moment. "Hans has gone." For a
moment she said nothing. Her face was blank, her eyes puzzled.
"Gone?" Her
father nodded. "So it's over. Finished with." For a
moment longer she held herself there, tensed against the news, afraid
to believe him. Then, suddenly, she laughed, relief flooding her. She
shivered, looking away from her father. Gone. Hans was gone. Again
she laughed, but then the laughter died. She looked up suddenly,
remembering. "He
told me to stay there. He was coming for me." She
shivered again, more violently this time, her arm tightening about
her father's waist, her hands gripping him hard. She looked up
fiercely into his face. "He
would have killed me." "I
know," he said, pulling her face down against his neck, his arms
wrapped tightly about her. His voice was anxious now, filled with
sorrow and regret. "I was wrong, my love. So very wrong. Gods
forgive me, Jelka, I didn't know. I just didn't know . . ." THAT
NIGHT Jelka dreamed. The sky pressed down upon her head, solid and
impenetrable. Voices clawed at her with hands of ragged metal,
screeching their elemental anger. It was dark; a darkness laced with
purple. She was alone on the tilted, broken land, the storm raging at
every comer of the earth. Each
time the lightning struck, she felt a tremor pass through her from
head to toe, as sharp as splintered ice. And when the thunder growled
it sounded in her bones, exploding with a suddenness that made her
shudder. Through
the dark, its progress marked in searing flashes of sudden light,
came the tower, its eyes like shattered panes of glass, its wooden
spider limbs folding and stretching inexorably, bringing it closer. She
stood there, unable to move, watching it come. It seemed malefic,
evil, its dark mouth crammed with splintered bone. She could hear it
grunt and wheeze as it dragged its weight across the jagged, uneven
ground. Closer it came, climbing the hill on which she stood, picking
its way through the darkness. In the
sudden light she saw it, close now and laughing horribly, its crooked
mouth smiling greedily at her. Its breath was foul, rolling up the
hill to where she stood. The scent of rottenness itself. As the
darkness enfolded her again she cried out, knowing she was lost. Her
cry rang out, louder than the storm, and for a moment afterward there
was silence. Light leaked slowly into that silence, as if her cry had
cracked the darkness open at its seams. Things
took a shadowy form. The tower had stopped. It stood there, not far
below her. She could hear its wheezing, scraping voice as it
whispered to itself. Her sudden cry had startled it. Then, as she
stared into the half-dark, the earth between her and the tower
cracked and split. For a moment the land was still and silent, and
then something small and dark crawled from the dark mouth of the
earth. A stooped little creature with eyes that burned like coals.
Its wet, dark skin shone with an inner light and its limbs were short
but strong, as though it had dug its way to the surface. As she
watched, it climbed up onto its legs and stood facing the tower. In
one hand it held a circle of glass backed with silver. Holding it up
before it, it advanced. Light
flashed from the circle and where it touched the tower small leaves
of bright red flame blossomed. The tower shrieked and stumbled
backward, but the small, dark creature kept advancing, light flashing
from the circle in its hand, the tiny fires spreading, taking hold. Screeching,
the tower turned and began to run, its thin legs pumping awkwardly.
Thick black smoke billowed up into the air above it, gathering in a
dense layer beneath the solid sky. The noise of the tower burning,
splitting, was fierce. Great cracks and pops filled the bright-lit
silence. The
creature turned, looking at her, the glass lowered now. Its fiery
eyes seemed both kind and sad. They seemed to see right through her,
to the bone and the darkness beneath the bone. She
stared back at it as the darkness slowly returned, filling the space
between the sky and the cracked and shattered land, until all she
could see was the fallen tower, blazing in the distance, and, so
close she could feel their warmth, two jewels of fire set into the
soft and lambent flesh of the creature. As she
watched, it smiled and bowed its head to her. Then, its movements
quick and fluid, it returned to the open crack and slipped down into
the darkness of the earth. FOR
eighteen HOURS DeVore hadn't settled, but had moved on constantly, as
if he knew that his only salvation lay in flight. His disguises had
been tenuous at best and he had cashed in old friendships at a
frightening rate; but all the while Karr had kept close on his tail.
Then, suddenly, Karr had lost him. That was in Danzig. It might have
ended there, but DeVore got careless. For the second time that day he
doubled up on an identity. As
backup, Karr had programmed the Security pass computer to "tag"
all past known aliases of DeVore—eight in all—with
special priority "screamers." If DeVore used any of them,
alarm bells would ring. It was the slimmest of chances and no one
expected it to work, but for once it did. A day after Karr had lost
the trail, DeVore gave himself away. A screamer sounded on one Joseph
Ganz, who had moved up-level in one of the Amsterdam stacks. A random
Security patrol had checked on his ID and passed him through, unaware
of the tag, Karr was there in less than an hour. Chen was waiting for
him, with a full Security battalion. He had sealed off all the
surrounding stacks and put Security guards at every entrance to the
transit lifts. The fast-track bolts were shut down, and they were
ready to go in. There
was no possibility that DeVore had gone far. All the local Security
posts had been alerted at once. If DeVore was coming out, it would be
by force this time, not guile. He had worn his last disguise. Karr
smiled fiercely and rubbed his big hands together. "I have you
now, old ghost. You won't slip away this time." There
were five decks to check out. Chen planned to move through them
carefully, one at a time, from the bottom up—fifty levels in
all—but Karr knew already where he would find DeVore. At the
very top of the City. He left Chen in charge of the sweep and went on
up, alone, taking the transit to the uppermost deck. He was
an impressive sight, coming out of the transit; a seven-ch'i giant,
in full combat dress and carrying a fearsome array of weaponry. He
walked slowly, searching faces, but knowing that he wouldn't find
DeVore there, in the corridors. His quarry would be higher up, holed
up somewhere in one of the penthouse apartments. With an old friend,
perhaps. Karr
lowered his visor and pressed out a code into his wrist comset. Onto
the transparent visor came a readout. He thumbed it through as he
walked, until he came upon a name he knew. Steven Cherkassky. An old
associate of DeVore's and a retired Security officer. Karr checked
habitation details, moving toward the inter-level lifts. Cherkassky's
apartment was on the far side of the deck and at the highest level.
Just as he'd thought. DeVore would be there. Karr
took a deep breath, considering. It would not be easy. DeVore was one
of the best. He had been an excellent Security Major. In time he
would have been General. But he'd had more ambitious plans than that.
Karr had studied his file carefully and viewed training films of him
in action. Karr respected few men, but DeVore demanded respect.
Speed, size, and age were on Karr's side, but DeVore was cunning. And
strong too. A fox with the strength of a tiger. People
moved hurriedly out of Karr's way as he strode along. The lift
emptied at his bark of command and he went up. He thumbed for a map,
then thumbed again for Cherkassky's service record. The man might
have retired, but he could still be dangerous. It did not pay to make
assumptions. Cherkassky,
Steven. The file extract appeared after a two-second delay. He
took in the details at a glance, then cleared his visor and stopped. He
hadn't realized . . . This gave things a new complexion. The old man
had been specially trained. Like Karr, he was an assassin. Karr
checked his guns, all the while staring down the wide, deserted
corridor. He was less than a hundred ch'i from Cherkassky's apartment
now. If they were being careful—and there was no reason to
expect otherwise—they would know he was coming. There would
have been an "eye" close by the transit; someone to report
back at once. Which
meant they would be waiting for him. He
switched to special lenses. At once his vision changed. Using
lenses he could pick out the shape of a tiny insect at five hundred
ch'i. Squeezing the corners of his eyes he adjusted them to
medium range and checked all the surfaces ahead for signs of
antipersonnel devices. It seemed clear, but for once he decided not
to trust the visual scan. He set one of his hand lasers to low charge
and raked it along the walls and floors, then along the ceiling.
Nothing. Yet he still felt ill at ease. Some instinct held him back.
He waited, breathing shallowly, counting to twenty in his head, then
heard a sound behind him—so faint that it would have been easy
to miss it. The faintest clicking, like a claw gently tapping the
side of a porcelain bowl. He
tensed, listening, making sure, then turned fast and rolled to one
side, just as the machine loosed off a burst of rapid fire. The wall
exploded beside him as the heavy shells hit home. He cursed and fired
back, the first few rounds wild, the next deadly accurate. The
machine sputtered, then blew apart, hot fragments flying everywhere.
A piece embedded itself in his side, another cracked the front of his
visor. There
was no time to lose now. The machine was like the one they had used
to attack Tolonen, but more deadly. A remote. Which meant they had
seen him. Seen how good he was. He was using up his advantage. He
considered the situation as he ran. They knew he was coming. Knew
what he was like, how fast, how agile he was. There was one of him
and two of them. Older, yes, but more experienced than he. A Security
Major and a special-services assassin, now sixty-eight, but still fit
and active, he was certain. On those facts alone it might seem he had
little chance of succeeding. But there was one final factor,
something they didn't know; that DeVore couldn't know, because it had
never got into Karr's service record. In his teens—before he
had become a blood— he had been an athlete; perhaps the finest
athlete the Net had ever produced. And he was better now. At
twenty-nine he was fitter and faster than he'd ever been. Karr
slowed as he neared the end of the corridor. There was no tape to
break this time; even so, his time was close to nine seconds. They
wouldn't think . . . He
fired ahead of him, letting momentum take him through the door,
rolling and springing up, turning in the next movement to find
Cherkassky on the ceiling above the door, held there in an assassin's
cradle. He was turning with his feet, but it wasn't fast enough. Karr
shot away the strands, making Cherkassky tumble to the floor, all the
while his eyes darting here and there, looking for DeVore. He skipped
over the rubble and crouched above the winded assassin. "Where
is he? Tell me where he is." The
old man laughed, then coughed blood. Karr shot him through the neck.
DeVore had gone. Had traded on his final friendship. But he could not
have gone far. Cherkassky hadn't been operating the machine. So ... Quickly,
carefully, he checked the rest of the apartment. There was no sign of
the controls here, so DeVore had them elsewhere. Somewhere close by.
But where? He pushed his helmet out into the corridor, then, a moment
later, popped his head around the comer to look. Nothing. There was a
high-pitched screaming from a nearby apartment but he ignored it,
stepping out into the corridor again. There was no way out overhead.
The roof was sealed here. He had checked on that earlier. No. The
only way out was down. He
glanced at his timer. It was only three minutes and forty-eight
seconds since he had stood at the far end of the corridor. Was that
time enough for DeVore to get to the elevator? Possibly. But Karr had
a hunch that he hadn't done that. DeVore would want to make sure he
was safe, and that meant getting back at his pursuer. He walked
slowly down the corridor, keeping to the wall, the largest of his
guns, an antique Westinghouse-Howitzer, pressed tight against his
chest. He would take no chances with this bastard. He was
about to go on when he paused, noticing the silence. The screaming
had stopped suddenly, almost abruptly, in mid-scream. It had taken
him a second or two to notice it, but then it hit him. He turned,
lowering himself onto his haunches, as if about to spring. Two doors
down the corridor, it had been. He went back slowly, his finger
trembling against the hair trigger, making a small circle around the
door until he stood on its far side, his back to Cherkassky's
apartment. He had two options now: to wait or to go in. Which would
DeVore expect him to do? Was he waiting for Karr to come in, or was
he about to come out? For a moment Karr stood there, tensed,
considering; then he smiled. There was a third option: burn away the
wall and see what lay behind it. He liked that. It meant he didn't
have to go through a door. He lay
down, setting the big gun up in front of him, ejecting the standard
explosive shells and slipping a cartridge of ice-penetrating charges
into the loader. Then he squeezed the trigger, tracing a line of
shells first up the wall, then along the top of it. The partition
shuddered, like something alive, and began to peel away from where
the charges had punctured holes in it. There was no sound from the
other side of the wall; only silence and the roiling smoke. He
waited, easing his finger back and forth above the hair trigger as
the ice curled back, revealing the shattered room. Karr's eyes took
in each and every detail, noting and discarding them. A young woman
lay dead on the lounger, her pale limbs limp, her head at an odd
angle—garrotted, by the look of it. There was no sign of
DeVore, but he had been there. The woman had been alive only a minute
before. Karr
crawled into the room. A siren had begun to sound in the corridor. It
would bring Chen and help. But Karr wanted to finish this now. DeVore
was his. He had pursued him for so long now. And, orders or no, he
would make sure of things this time. He
stopped, calling out, "Surrender yourself, DeVore. Put your
hands up and come out. You'll get a fair trial." It was
a charade. Part of the game they had to play. But DeVore would pay no
heed. They both knew now that this could end only in death. But it
had to be said. Like the last words of a ritual. His
answer came a moment later. The door to the right hissed open a
fraction and a grenade was lobbed into the room. Karr saw it curl in
the air and recognized what it was. Dropping his gun, he placed his
hands tight over his ears and pushed his face down into the floor. It
was a concussion grenade. The shock of it ripped a hole in the
floor and seemed to lift everything in the room into the air. In a
closed room it would have been devastating, but much of the force of
it went out into the corridor. Karr got up, stunned but unhurt, his
ears ringing. And then the door began to iris open. Reactions
took over. Karr buckled at the knees and rolled forward, picking up
his gun on the way. DeVore was halfway out the door, the gun at his
hip already firing, when the butt of Karr's gun connected with his
head. It was an ill-aimed blow that glanced off the side of his jaw,
just below the ear, but the force of it was enough to send DeVore
sprawling, the gun flying from his hands. Karr went across, his gun
raised to aim another blow, but it was already too late. DeVore was
dead, his jaw shattered, fragments of it pushed up into his brain. Karr
stood a moment looking down at his old enemy, all of the fierce
indignation and anger he felt welling up in him again. He shuddered,
then, anger getting the better of him, brought the gun down, once,
twice, a third time, smashing the skull apart, spilling DeVore's
brains across the floor. "You
bastard . . . You stinking, fucking bastard!" Then,
taking the small cloth bag from his top pocket, he undid the string
and spilled the stones over the dead man. Three hundred and sixty-one
black stones. For
Haavikko's sister, Vesa, and Chen's friend, Pavel; for Kao Jyan and
Han Ch'in, Lwo Kang and Edmund Wyatt, and all the many others whose
deaths were attributed to him. Karr
shuddered, then threw the cloth bag down. It was done. He could go
home now and sleep. li
yuan stood in the deep shadow by the carp pool, darkness wrapped
about him like a cloak. It had been a long and tiring day, but his
mind was sharp and clear. He stared down through layers of darkness,
following the languid movements of the carp. In their slow,
deliberate motions it seemed he might read the deepest workings of
his thoughts. Much
had happened. In the chill brightness of his study, all had seemed
chaos. DeVore was dead and his warren of mountain fortresses
destroyed. But Klaus Ebert was also dead and his son, the General,
had fled. That had come as a shock to him, undermining his newfound
certainty. Here,
in the darkness, however, he could see things in a better light. He
had survived the worst his enemies could do. Fei Yen and young Han
were safe. Soon he would have a General he could trust. These things
comforted him. In the light of them, even Wang Sau-leyan's
concessions to the Young Sons seemed a minor thing. For a
while he let these things drift from him; let himself sink into the
depths of memory, his mood dark and sorrowful, his heart weighed down
by the necessities of his life. He had companionship in Tsu Ma and
three wives to satisfy his carnal needs. Soon he would have a
child—an heir, perhaps. But none of this was enough. So much
was missing from his life. Fei Yen herself. Han Ch'in, so deeply
missed that sometimes he would wake from sleep, his pillow wet with
tears. Worst were the nightmares; images of his father's corpse,
exposed, defenseless in its nakedness, painfully emaciated, the skin
stretched pale across the frame of bone. The
fate of Kings. He
turned and looked across at the single lamp beside the door. Its
light was filtered through the green of fern and palm, the smoky
darkness of the panels, as if through depths of water. He stared at
it, reminded of something else—of the light on a windswept
hillside in the Domain as a small group gathered about the unmarked
grave. Sunlight on grass and the shadows in the depths of the earth.
He had been so certain that day: certain that he didn't want to stop
the flow of time and have the past returned to him, fresh, new again.
But had Ben been right? Wasn't that the one thing men wanted most? Some
days he ached to bring it back. To have it whole and perfect. To sink
back through the years and have it all again. The best of it. Before
the cancer ate at it. Before the worm lay in the bone. He
bowed his head, smiling sadly at the thought. To succumb to that
desire was worse than the desire itself. It was a weakness not to be
tolerated. One had to go on, not back. The
quality of the light changed. His new Master of the Inner Chamber,
Chan Teng, stood beside the doorway, silent, waiting to be noticed. "What
is it, Master Chan?" "Your
guest is here, Chieh Hsia." "Good."
He lifted a hand to dismiss the man, then changed his mind. "Chan,
tell me this. If you could recapture any moment from your past—if
you could have it whole, perfect in every detail—would you want
that?" The
middle-aged man was silent a while; then he answered. "There
are, indeed, times when I wish for something past, Chieh Hsia.
Like all men. But it would be hard. Hard living in the now if
'what was* were still to hand. The imperfection of a man's memories
is a blessing." It was
a good answer. A satisfactory answer. "Thank you, Chan. There is
wisdom in your words." Chan
Teng bowed and turned to go, but at the door he turned back and
looked across at his master. "One
last thing, Chieh Hsia. Such a gift might well prove useful.
Might prove, for us, a blessing." Li
Yuan came out into the light. "How so?" Chan
lowered his eyes. "Might its very perfection not prove a cage, a
prison to the mind? Might we not snare our enemies in its sticky
web?" Li
Yuan narrowed his eyes. He thought he could see what Chan Teng was
saying, but he wanted to be sure. "Go on, Chan. What are you
suggesting?" "Only
this. That desire is a chain. If such a thing exists it might be used
not as a blessing but a curse. A poisoned gift. It would be the
ultimate addiction. Few men would be safe from its attractions. Fewer
still would recognize it for what it was. A drug. A way of escaping
from what is here and now and real." Li
Yuan took a deep breath, then nodded. "We shall speak more on
this, Chan. Meanwhile, ask my guest to come through. I shall see him
here, beside the pool." Chan
Teng bowed low and turned away. Li Yuan stared down at the naked glow
of the lamp, then moved his hand close, feeling its radiant warmth,
tracing its rounded shape. How would it feel to live a memory? Like
this? As real as this? He sighed. Perhaps, as Chan said, there was a
use for Shepherd's art: a way of making his illusions serve the real.
He drew his hand away, seeing how shadows formed between the fingers,
how the glistening lines of the palm turned dull and lifeless. To
have Han and Fei again. To see his father smiling. He
shook his head, suddenly bitter. Best nothing. Better death than such
sweet torture. There
was movement in the corridor outside. A figure appeared in the
doorway. Li Yuan looked up, meeting Shepherd's eyes. "Ben
. . ." Ben
Shepherd looked about him at the room, then looked back at the young
T'ang, a faint smile on his lips. "How are you, Li Yuan? With
all that's happened, I wasn't sure you'd remember our meeting." Li
Yuan smiled and moved forward, greeting him. "No. I'm glad you
came. Indeed, our meeting is fortuitous, for there's something I want
to ask you. Something only you can help me with." Ben
raised an eyebrow. "As mirror?" Li
Yuan nodded, struck once again by how quick, how penetrating Ben
Shepherd was. He, if anyone, could make things clear to him. Ben
went to the edge of the pool. For a moment he stared down into the
darkness of the water, following the slow movements of the fish, then
he looked back at Li Yuan. :
'••>: "Is it about Fei Yen and the child?" Li
Yuan shivered. "Why should you think that?" Ben
smiled. "Because, as I see it, there's nothing else that only I
could help you with. If it were a matter of politics, there are a
dozen able men to whom you might talk. Whereas the matter of your
ex-wife and the child. Well. . . who could you talk to of that within
your court? Who could you trust not to use what was said to gain some
small advantage?" Li
Yuan bowed his head. It was true. He had not thought of it in quite
such a calculated manner, but it was so. "Well?"
he said, meeting Ben's eyes. Ben
moved past him, crouching down to study the great tortoise shell with
its ancient markings. "There's
an advantage to being outsidfe of things," Ben said, his eyes
searching the surface of the shell, tracing the fine patterning of
cracks beneath the transparent glaze. "You see events more
clearly than do those who are taking part in them. What's more, you
learn to ask the right questions." He turned his head, looking
up at Li Yuan. "For instance: Why, if Li Yuan knows who the
father of his child is, has he not acted on that knowledge? Why has
he not sought vengeance on the man? Of course, the assumption has
always been that the child is not Li Yuan's. But why should that
necessarily be the case? It was assumed by almost everyone that Li
Yuan divorced Fei Yen to ensure the child of another man would have
no legitimate claim upon the Dragon Throne, but why should that be
so? What if that were merely a pretext? After all, it is not an easy
thing to obtain a divorce when one is a T'ang. Infidelity, while a
serious enough matter in itself, would be an insufficient reason. But
to protect the line of inheritance . . ." Li
Yuan had been watching Ben, mesmerized, unable to look away. Now Ben
released him and he drew back a pace, shuddering. "You always
saw things clearly, didn't you, Ben?" "To the bone."
"And was I right?" "To
divorce Fei Yen? Yes. But the child . . . Well, I'll be frank—that
puzzles me somewhat. I've thought about it often lately. He's your
son, isn't he, Li Yuan?" Li Yuan nodded. "Then why
disinherit him?" Li
Yuan looked down, thinking back to the evening when he had made that
awful decision, recollecting the turmoil of his feelings. He had
expected the worst—had steeled himself to face the awful fact
of her betrayal—but when he had found it was his child,
unquestionably his, he was surprised to find himself not
relieved but appalled, for in his mind he had already parted from
her. Had cast her from him, like a broken bowl. For a long time he
had sat there in an agony of indecision, unable to see things
clearly. But then the memory of Han Ch'in had come to him—of
his dead brother, there beside him in the orchard, a sprig of white
blossom in his jet-black hair—and he had known, with a fierce
certainty, what he must do. He
looked back at Ben, tears in his eyes. "I wanted to protect him.
Do you understand that? To keep him from harm. He was Han, you see.
Han Ch'in reborn." He shook his head. "I know that doesn't
make sense, but it's how I felt. How I still feel, every time I think
about the child. It's . . ." He
turned away, trying for a moment to control—to wall in—the
immensity of his suffering. Then he turned back, his face open,
exposed to the other man, all of his grief and hope and suffering
there on the surface for Ben's eyes to read. "I
couldn't save Han Ch'in. I was too young, too powerless. But my son .
. ." He swallowed, then looked aside. "If one good thing
can come from my relationship with Fei Yen, let it be this: that my
son can grow up safe from harm." Ben
looked down; then, patting the shell familiarly, he stood. "I
see." He walked back to the edge of the pool, then turned,
facing Li Yuan again. "Even so, you must have sons, Li Yuan.
Indeed, you have taken wives for that very purpose. Can you save them
all? Can you keep them all from harm?" Li
Yuan was staring back at him. "They will be sons . . ."
"And Fei's son, Han? Is he so different?" Li
Yuan looked aside, a slight bitterness in his face. "Don't tease
me, Ben. I thought you of all people would understand." Ben
nodded. "Oh, I do. But I wanted to make sure that you did. That
you weren't trying to fool yourself over your real motives. You say
the boy reminds you of Han. That may be so, and I understand your
reasons for wanting to keep him out of harm's way. But it's more than
that, isn't it? You still love Fei Yen, don't you? And the child . .
. the child is the one real thing that came of your love." Li
Yuan looked at him gratefully. Ben
sighed. "Oh, I understand clear enough, Li Yuan. You wanted to
be her, didn't you? To become her. And the child . . . that's
the closest you'll ever come to it." Li
Yuan shivered, acknowledging the truth of what Ben had said. "Then
I was right to act as I did?" Ben
turned, looking down, watching the dark shapes of the carp move
slowly in the depths. "You remember the picture I drew for you,
the day of your betrothal ceremony?" Li
Yuan swallowed. "I do. The picture of Lord Yi and the ten
suns—the ten dark birds in the fu sang tree." "Yes.
Well, I saw it then. Saw clearly what would come of it." "To
the bone." Ben
looked back at the young T'ang, seeing he understood. "Yes, You
remember. Well, the mistake was made back there. You should never
have married her. You should have left her as your dream, your
ideal." He shrugged. "The rest, I'm afraid, was inevitable.
And unfortunate, for some mistakes can never be rectified." Li
Yuan moved closer until he stood facing Ben, his hand resting loosely
on Ben's arm, his eyes boring into Ben's, pleading for something that
Ben could not give him. "But
what else could I have done?" "Nothing,"
Ben said. "There was nothing else you could have done. But still
it isn't right. You tried to shoot the moon, Li Yuan, like the great
Lord Yi of legend. And what but sorrow could come of that?" IT WAS
DAWN in the Otzalen Alps and a cold wind blew down the valley from
the north. Stefan Lehmann stood on the open mountainside, his furs
gathered tight about him, the hood pulled up over his head. He
squinted into the shadows down below, trying to make out details, but
it was hard to distinguish anything, so much had changed. Where
there had been snow-covered slopes and thick pine forest was now only
barren rock—rock charred and fused to a glossy hardness in
places. Down where the entrance had been was now a crater almost a li
across and half a li deep. He
went down, numbed by what he saw. Where the land folded and rose
slightly he stopped, resting against a crag. All about him were the
stumps of trees, charred and splintered by the explosions that had
rent the mountain. He shuddered and found he could scarcely catch his
breath. "All gone," he said, watching his words dissipate
into the chill air. AM
gone . . . A thin
veil of snow began to fall, flecks on the darkness below where he
stood. He made himself go on, clambering down the treacherous slope
until he stood at the crater's edge, looking down into the great
circle of its ashen bowl. Shadow
filled the crater like a liquid. Snowflakes drifted into that
darkness and seemed to blink out of existence, their glistening
brightness extinguished in an instant. He watched them fall,
strangely touched by their beauty. For a time his mind refused to
acknowledge what had been done. It was easier to stand there, emptied
of all thought, all enterprise, and let the cold and delicate beauty
of the day seep into the bones, like ice into the rock. But he knew
that the beauty of it was a mask, austere and terrible. Inhumanly so.
For even as he watched, the whiteness spread, thickening, concealing
the dark and glassy surface. At his
back the mountains thrust high into the thin, cold air. He looked up
into the grayness of the sky, then turned, looking across at the
nearest peaks. The early daylight threw them into sharp relief
against the sky. Huge, jagged shapes they were, like the broken,
time-bared jawbone of a giant. Beneath, the rest lay in shadow, in
vast depths of blue shading into impenetrable darkness. Clouds
drifted in between, casting whole slopes of white into sudden shade,
obscuring the crisp, paleocrystic forms. He watched, conscious of the
utter silence of that desolate place, his warm breath pluming in the
frigid air. Then, abruptly, he turned away, beginning to climb the
slope again. The
rawness of the place appalled some part of him that wanted warmth and
safety, yet the greater part of him—that part he termed his
true self—recognized itself in all of this. It was not a place
for living, yet living things survived here, honed to the simplest of
responses by the savagery of the climate, made lithe and fierce and
cunning by necessity. So it was for him. Rather this than the
deadness of the City—that sterile womb from which nothing new
came forth. He
reached the crest and paused, looking back. The past with all its
complex schemes was gone. It lay behind him now. From here on he
would do it his way; would become a kind of ghost, a messenger from
the outside, flitting between the levels, singular and deadly. A
bleak smile came to his albinic eyes, touched the comers of his
thin-lipped mouth. He felt no grief for what had happened, only a new
determination. This had not changed things so much as clarified them.
He knew now what to do; how to harness all the hatred that he felt
for them. Hatred enough to fill the whole of Chung Kuo with death. The
cloud moved slowly south. Suddenly he was in sunlight again. He
turned to his right, looking up toward the summit. There, at the top
of the world, an eagle circled the naked point of rock, its great
wings extended fully. The sight was unexpected yet significant;
another sign for him to read. He watched it for some time then moved
on, descending into the valley, heading north again toward his
scantily provisioned cave. It would be hard, but in the spring he
would emerge again, leaner and hungrier than before, but also purer,
cleaner. Like a new-forged sword, cast in the fire and tempered in
the ice. He
laughed—a cold, humorless sound—then gritted his teeth
and began to make his way down, watching his footing, careful not to
fall.
INTERLUDE I WINTER 2207 Dragons
Teeth
Without
preparedness superiority is not real superiority and there can be no
initiative either. Having grasped this point, a force which is
inferior but prepared can often defeat a superior enemy by surprise
attack. —mao
tse tung, On Protracted War, May 1938
IT
WAS DUSK on Mars. On the Plain of Elysium it was minus 76 degrees and
falling. Great swaths of shadow lay to the north, beneath the slopes
of Chaos, stretching slowly, inexorably toward the great dome of Kang
Kua City. Earth lay on the horizon, a circle of pure whiteness,
back-lit by the sun. The evening star, they called it here. Chung
Kuo. The place from which they had come, centuries before. DeVore
stood at the window of the tower, looking out across the great dome
of Kang Kua toward the northern desert and the setting sun. The
messenger had come an hour earlier, bringing news from Earth. He
smiled. And so it had ended, his group surrounded, his pieces taken
from the board. Even so, he was pleased with the way his play had
gone. It was not often that one gained so much for so small a
sacrifice. He
turned, looking back into the room. The morph sat at the table, its
tautly muscled skin glistening in the dull *ed light. It was hunched
forward, its hands placed on either side of the board, as if
considering its next play. So patient it was; filled with an inhuman
watchfulness, an inexhaustible capacity for waiting. He
went to the table and sat, facing the faceless creature. This was the
latest of his creations; the closest yet to the human. Closest and
yet furthest, for few could match it intellectually or physically. He
took a white stone from the bowl and leaned forward, placing it in
shang, the south, cutting the line of black stones that
extended from the comer. "Your
move," he said, sitting back. Each
stone he placed activated a circuit beneath the board, registering in
the creature's mind. Even so, the illusion that the morph had
actually seen him place the stone was strong. Its shoulders tensed as
it leaned closer, seeming to study the board; then it nodded and
looked up, as if meeting his eyes. Again
it was only the copy—the counterfeit—of a gesture, for
the smooth curve of its head was unmarked, like unmolded clay or a
shell waiting to be formed. So,
too, its personality. He
looked away, a faint smile on his lips. Even in those few moments it
had grown much darker. The lights of the great dome, barely evident
before, now glowed warmly, filling the cold and barren darkness. "Did
you toast my death, Li Yuan?" he asked the darkness softly. "Did
you think it finally done between us?" But it
wasn't done. It was far from being done. He
thought back, remembering the day when he had sent the "copy"
out, two weeks after the assassination squad. It had never known;
never for a moment considered itself anything but real. DeVore, it
had called itself, fancying that that was what it had always been.
And so, in a sense, it had. Was it not his genetic material, after
all, that had gone into the being's making? Were they not his
thoughts, his attitudes, that had gone to shape its mind? Well then,
perhaps, in a very real sense, it was himself. An imperfect
copy, perhaps, but good enough to fool all those it had had to face;
even, when it turned to face the mirror, itself. He
watched the morph play its stone, his own one line out while at the
same time protecting the connection between its groups. He smiled,
pleased. It was the move he himself would have made. Shadowing
... it was an important part of the game. As important, perhaps, as
any of the final skirmishes. One had to sketch out one's territory
well in advance, while plotting to break up one's opponent's future
schemes: the one need balanced finely against the other. DeVore
leaned across the table and took a stone from the bowl, holding it
for a moment between his fingers, finding its cool, polished weight
strangely satisfying; then set it down in £>mg, the east,
beginning a new play. He
stood and went to the window again, looking out across the lambent
hemisphere of the dome to the darkness beyond. He had
never returned from Mars. What had landed at Nanking ten years ago
had been a copy—a thing so real that to call it artificial
questioned definition— while he had remained here, perfecting
his plays, watching—from this cold and distant world—how
the thing he had made fared in his place. It was
impressive. Indeed, it had exceeded all expectations. Whatever doubts
he had harbored about its ability had quickly vanished. By all
reports it had inherited his cunning along with many other of his
traits. But in the end its resources had proved insufficient. It was
but a single man, fragile in all the ways a single man is fragile.
Karr's rifle butt had split its skull and ended all its schemes. And
so it was if one were single. But to amend the forgotten poet
Whitman's words, he would contain multitudes: would be like the
dragon's teeth, which, when planted from the dragon's severed head,
would sprout, producing a harvest of dragons, each fiercer, finer
than its progenitor. He
breathed deeply, then turned to look at the morph again. Soon it
would be time. They would take this unformed creature and mold it,
mind and body, creating a being superior to those it would face back
on Chung Kuo. A quicker, more cunning beast, unfettered by pity or
love or obligation. A new model, better than the last. But
this time it would have another's face. He
went across, placing his hand on the creature's shoulder. Its flesh
was warm, but the warmth was of the kind that communicated itself to
the senses only after a moment or two: at first it had seemed cold,
dead almost. Well, so it was, and yet, when they had finished with
it, it would think itself alive; would defy God himself had He said,
"I made you." But
whose face would he put to this one? Whose personality would furnish
the empty chambers of its mind? He leaned across the creature to play
another stone, furthering his line in ping, extending out toward tsu,
the north. A T'ang? A General? Or something subtler—something
much more unexpected? DeVore
smiled and straightened up, squeezing the creature's arm familiarly
before he moved away. It would be interesting to see what they made
of this one, for it was different in kind from the last. It was what
his own imperfect copy had dreamed of. An inheritor. The first
of a new species. A cleaner, purer being. A
dragon's tooth. A seed of destruction, floated across the vacuum of
space. The first stone in a new, more terrifying game. He laughed,
sensing the creature move behind him in the semidarkness, responding
to the noise. Yes, the first. . . but not the last. The
White Mountain
Chi K'ang Tzu asked Confucius
about government, saying, "What would you think if, in order to
move closer to those who possess the Way, I were to kill those who do
not follow the Way?"
Confucius answered, "In
administering your government, what need is there for you to kill?
Just desire the good in yourself and the common people will be good.
The virtue of the gentleman is like wind; the virtue of the small man
is like grass. Let the wind blow over the grass and it is sure to
bend."
—confucius,
The Analects, Book XII
"All
warfare is based on deception."
—SUN tzu, The
Art of War, Book I, Estimates
CHAPTER
FIFTEEN Between
Light and Shadow cHEN
KNELT patiently before the mirror as Wang Ti stood over him, brushing
out his hair and separating it into bunches. He watched her fasten
three of them at the scalp, her fingers tying the tiny knots with a
practiced deftness. Then, with a glancing smile at his reflection,
she began to braid the fourth into a tight, neat queue. As ever, he
was surprised by the strength of her hands, their cleverness, and
smiled to himself. A good woman, she was. The best a man could have. "What
are you thinking, Kao Chen?" she asked, her fingers moving on to
the second of the bunches, her eyes meeting his in the mirror. "Just
that a man needs a wife, Wang Ti. And that if all men had wives as
good as mine this world would be a better place." She
laughed; her soft, rough-edged peasant's laugh that, like so many
things she did, made him feel warm deep down inside. He lowered his
eyes momentarily, thinking back. He had been dead before he met her.
Or as good as. Down there, below the Net, he had merely existed,
eking out a living day by day, like a hungry ghost, tied to nothing,
its belly filled with bile. And
now? He smiled, noting the exaggerated curve of her belly in the
mirror. In a month—six weeks at most—their fourth child
would be born. A girl, the doctors said. A second girl. He shivered
and turned his head slightly, trying to look across at the present he
had bought her only the day before, but she pulled his head back
firmly. "Keep
still. A minute and I'll be done." He
smiled, noting the tone in her voice, that same tone she used for the
children when they would not do as they were told, and held still,
letting her finish. "There,"
she said, stepping back from him, satisfied. "Now put on your
tunic. It's on the bed, freshly pressed. I'll come and help you with
your leggings in a while." Chen
turned, about to object, but she had already gone to see to the
children. He could hear them in the living room, their voices
competing with the trivee, his second son, the six-year-old Wu,
arguing with the "baby" of the family, Ch'iang Hsin,
teasing her, as he so often did. Chen laughed, then went across to
the table, picking up the lacquered bowl he had bought her and
rubbing his ringer across its smooth surface, tracing the raised
figures of the household gods, remembering her expression of delight
when she had taken it from the paper. Things
were good. No, he thought; things had never been better. It was as if
the gods had blessed him. First Wang Ti. Then the children. And now
all this. He looked about him at the new apartment. Eight rooms they
had. Eight rooms! And only four stacks out from Bremen Central! He
laughed, surprised by it all, as if at any moment he might wake and
find himself back there, beneath the Net, that all-pervading stench
filling his nostrils, some pale, blind-eyed bug crawling across his
body while he slept. Back then, simply to be out of that hell had
been the sum total of his ambitions. While this—this apartment
that he rented in the upper third, in Level 224—had seemed as
far beyond his reach as the stars in the midnight sky. He
caught his breath, remembering, then shook his head. That moment on
the roof of the solarium—how long ago had that been now? Ten
years? No, twelve. And yet he remembered it as if it were yesterday.
That glimpse of the stars, of the snow-capped mountains in the
moonlight. And afterward, the nightmare of the days that followed.
Yet here he was, not dead like his companion, Kao Jyan, but alive:
the T'ang's man, rewarded for his loyalty. He set
the bowl down and went through, pulling on his tunic, then looked at
himself in the mirror. It was the first time he had worn the
azurite-blue ceremonial tunic and he felt awkward in it. "Where's
that rascal, Kao Chen?" he asked his image, noting how strange
his hair looked now that it was braided, how odd his blunt,
nondescript face seemed atop such elegant clothes. "You
look nice," Wang Ti said from the doorway. "You should wear
your dress uniform more often, Chen. It suits you." He
fingered the chest patch uncomfortably, tracing the shape of the
young tiger there—the symbol of his rank as Captain in the
T'ang's Security forces—then shook his head. "It doesn't
feel right, Wang Ti. I feel overdressed. Even my hair." He
sniffed in deeply, unconsciously mimicking the Marshal, then shook
his head again. He should not have let Wang Ti talk him into having
the implants. For all his adult life he had been happy shaving his
scalp, wearing its bareness like a badge, but for once he had
indulged her, knowing how little she asked of him. It was four months
now since the operation had given him a full head of long, glistening
black hair. Wang Ti had liked it from the first, of course, and for a
while that had been enough for him, but now his discontent was
surfacing again. "Wang
Ti. . . ?" he began, then fell silent. She
came across, touching his arm, her smile of pride for once making him
feel uncomfortable. "What is it, husband?" "Nothing
. . ." he answered. "It's nothing . . ." "Then
hold still. I'll do your leggings for you." the
woman was leaning over the open conduit, reaching in with the
fine-wire to adjust the tuning, when Leyden, the elder of the two
Security men, came up with a bulb of ch'a for her. She
straightened up and set the wire down, looking across at him as she
peeled off her elbow-length gloves. "Thanks,"
she said softly, and sipped at the steaming lip of the bulb. "How
much longer, Chi Li?" Ywe
Hao looked up, responding to the false name on her ID badge, then
smiled. It was a beautiful smile; a warm, open smile that transformed
her plain, rather narrow face. The old guard, seeing it, found
himself smiling in return, then turned away, flustered. She laughed,
knowing what he was thinking, but there was nothing mocking in her
laughter, and when he turned back, a trace of red lingering in the
paleness of his neck, he, too, was laughing. "If
you were my daughter . . ." he began. "Go
on. What would you do?" The smile remained, but fainter, a look
of unfeigned»curiosity in the young woman's eyes. Still
watching him, she tilted her head back and ran one hand through her
short dark hair. "Tell me, Wolfgang Leyden. If I were your
daughter ..." And again there was laughter—as if she
hadn't said this a dozen times before. "Why
... I'd lock you up, my girl. That's what I'd do!" "You'd
have to catch me first!" He
looked at her, the web of wrinkles about his eyes momentarily stark
in the brightness of the overhead light, then he nodded, growing
quieter. "So I would. . . . So I would. . . ." Their
nightly ritual over, they grew silent, serious. She drained the bulb,
then pulled on her gloves and got back to work, crouching there over
the conduit while he knelt nearby, watching her clever hands search
the tight cluster of filaments with the fine-wire, looking for weak
signals. There
was a kind of natural fellowship between them. They were both out of
their level, here at the top of the stack, both uniformed; his the
pale-green fatigues of Patrol Security, hers the yellow and orange of
Maintenance. From the first— almost
three weeks ago now—he had sensed something different in her;
in the way she looked at him, perhaps. Or maybe simply because she,
twenty years his junior, had looked at him; had noticed him and
smiled her beautiful smile, making him feel both young and old, happy
and sad. From that first day had come their game— the
meaningless banter that, for him at least, was too fraught with
meaning to be safe. "There!"
she said, looking up. "One more of the fiddly little buggers
done!" v Leyden nodded, but he was still remembering
how her top teeth pulled down the pale flesh of her lower lip when
she concentrated; how her eyes filled with a strange, almost
passionate intensity. As if she saw things differently. Saw more
finely, clearly than he. "How
many more?" She
sat back on her heels and drew in a deep breath, considering.
"Eighty-seven junctions, one hundred and sixteen conduits,
eleven switches, and four main panels." She smiled. "Two
weeks' work. Three at the outside." She
was part of a team of three—two women and a man—sent in
to give the deck its biannual service. The others were hard at work
elsewhere—checking the transportation grid for faults;
repairing the basic plumbing and service systems; cleaning out the
massive vents that threaded these upper decks like giant cat's
cradles. Their jobs were important, but hers was the vital one. She
was the communications expert. In her hands rested the complex
network of computer links that gave the deck its life. There were
backups, of course, and it was hard to cause real damage, but it was
still a delicate job—more like surgery than engineering. She
had said as much herself. "It's
like a huge head," she had told him. "Full of fine nerves
that carry messages. And it has to be treated like a living mind.
Gently, carefully. It can be hurt, you know." And he recalled
how she had looked at him, a real tenderness and concern in her face,
as if the thing really were alive. But
now, looking at her, he thought, Three weeks. Is that all? And
what then? What will I do when you're gone? Seeing
him watching her, she leaned across and touched his arm gently. "Thanks
for the ch'a, but hadn't you better get back? Shouldn't you be
checking on things?" He
laughed. "As if anything ever happens." But he sensed that
he had outstayed his welcome and turned to go, stopping only at the
far end of the long, dark shaft to look back at her. She
had moved on, further in toward the hub. Above her the overhead lamp,
secure on its track and attached to her waist by a slender, weblike
thread, threw a bright, golden light over her dark, neat head as she
bent down, working on the next conduit in the line. For a moment
longer he watched her, her head bobbing like a swimmer's between
light and shadow, then turned, sighing, to descend the rungs. CHEN
SAT there, watching the screen in the comer while Wang Ti dressed the
children. The set was tuned to the local MidText channel and showed a
group of a dozen or so dignitaries on a raised platform, a great mass
of people gathered in the Main in front of them. It was a live
broadcast, from Hannover, two hundred li to the southeast. At the
front of the group on-screen was the T'ang's Chancellor, Nan Ho,
there on his Master's behalf to open the first of the new Jade
Phoenix Health Centers. Behind him stood the Hsien Ling, the
Chief Magistrate of Hannover Hsien, Shou Chen-hai, a tall man
with a patrician air and a high-domed head that shone damply in the
overhead lights. The Chancellor was speaking, a great scroll held out
before him, outlining Li Yuan's "new deal" for the Lowers,
dwelling in particular upon the T'ang's plan to extend health
facilities considerably over the coming five years by building one
hundred and fifty of the new Health Centers throughout the lower
third. "About
time," said Wang Ti, not looking up from where she sat, lacing
up her young daughter's dress. "They've neglected things far too
long. You remember the problems we had when Jyan was born. Why, I
almost gave birth to him in the reception hall. And that was back
then. Things have gotten a lot worse in the years since." Chen
grunted, remembering; yet he felt uneasy at the implied criticism of
his T'ang. "Li Yuan means only well," he said. "There
are those who would not do one tenth as n»uch." Wang
Ti looked across at him, a measured look in her eyes, then looked
away. "I'm sure that's so, husband. But there are rumors. . . ." Chen
turned his head abruptly, the stiff collar of his jacket chafing his
neck. "Rumors? About the T'ang?" Wang
Ti laughed, fastening the lace, then pushed Ch'iang Hsin away from
her. "No. Of course not. And yet his hands . . ." Chen
frowned. "His hands?" Wang
Ti got up slowly, putting a hand to her lower back. "They say
that some grow fat on the T'ang's generosity, while others get but
the crumbs from his table." "I
don't follow you, Wang Ti." She
tilted her head slightly, indicating the figures on the screen, then
lowered her voice a fraction. "The big one. Our friend, the
Hsien Ling. It is said he has bought himself many things these
past six months. Bronzes and statues and silks for his concubines.
Yes, even a wife—a good wife, of First Level breeding. And more
besides..." Chen's
face had hardened. "You know this, Wang Ti? For a
certainty?" "No.
But the rumors . . ." Chen
stood, angered. "Rumors! Kuan Yin preserve us! Would you risk
all this over some piece of ill-founded tittle-tattle?" The
three children were staring up at him, astonished. As for Wang Ti,
she lowered her head, her whole manner suddenly submissive. "Forgive
me, husband, I—" The
sharp movement of his hand silenced her. He turned, agitated, and
went to the set, jabbing a finger angrily at the power button. At
once the room was silent. He turned back, facing her, his face
suffused with anger. "I
am surprised at you, Wang Ti. To slander a good man like Shou
Chen-hai. Who put this foolishness into your head? Do you know for a
fact what the Hsien Ling has or hasn't bought? Have you been
inside his mansion? Besides, he is a rich man. Why should he not have
such things? Why are you so quick to believe he has used the T'ang's
money and not his own? What evidence have you?" He
huffed impatiently. "Can't you see how foolish this is? How
dangerous? Gods, if you were to repeat to the wrong ear what you've
just said to me, we would all be in trouble! Do you want that? Do you
want us to lose all we've worked so long and hard to build? Because
it's still a crime to damage a man's reputation with false
allegations, whatever your friends may think. Demotion, that's what
I'm talking about, Wang Ti. Demotion. Back below the Net." Wang
Ti gave a tiny shudder, then nodded, When her voice came again it was
small, chastened. "Forgive me, Kao Chen. I was wrong to say what
I did. I will say no more about the Hsien L'ing." Chen
stared at her a moment longer, letting his anger drain from him, then
nodded, satisfied. "Good. Then we'll say no more. Now hurry or
we'll be late. I promised Karr we'd be there by second bell." SHOU
CHEN-HAI looked about him nervously; then satisfied that everything
in the banqueting room was prepared, he forced himself to relax. The
T'ang's Chancellor had departed an hour past, but though Nan Ho was
high, high enough to have the ear of a T'ang, Shou's next guest—a
man never seen on the media, his face unknown to the billions of City
Europe—was in many ways more important. For
Shou it had begun a year back, when he had been appointed to the
chair of the finance committee for the new Health Center. He had seen
then where it might lead . . . if he was clever enough, audacious
enough. He had heard of the merchant some time before, and—his
mind made up—had gone out of his way to win his friendship. But
it was only when Shih Novacek had finally called on him, impressed
more by his persistence than his gifts or offers of help, that he had
had a chance to win him to his scheme. And now, this afternoon, that
friendship would bear its first fruit. Shou
clapped his hands. At once the serving girls went to their places,
while in the kitchen the cooks began to prepare the feast. Novacek
had briefed him fully on how to behave. Even so, Shou's hands
trembled with a mixture of fear and excitement at the thought of
entertaining a Red Pole, a real-life 426, like on the trivee serials.
He called the Chief Steward over and wiped his hands on the towel the
man held out for him, dabbing his forehead nervously. When he had
first considered all this he had imagined a meeting with the 489
himself; had pictured himself at a large table somewhere below the
Net, facing the big boss, some special delicacy in a porcelain bowl
by his elbow as he spelled out his scheme, but Novacek had quickly
disillusioned him. The Triad bosses rarely met the people they dealt
with. No. They were careful—very careful—to use
intermediaries. Men like Novacek, or like their Red Poles, the
"Executioners" of the Triads; cultured, discreet men with
the manners of Mandarins and the instincts of sharks. As he
was fussing with one of the table decorations, the curtains at the
far end of the long room twitched back and four young,
muscular-looking Han entered, Novacek just behind. They wore yellow
headbands with a wheel—the symbol of the Big Circle
Triad—embroidered in blue silk above the forehead. Novacek
looked across and smiled reassuringly. Again, Shou had been prepared
for this— even so, the thought of being "checked out"
by the Red Pole was faintly disturbing. He watched the young men
spread out, their eyes searching for anything suspicious; looking
under tables, checking the walls for false panels where assassins
might hide, even lifting up the bowls of flowers on each table to
make sure there were no tiny devices hidden away. They worked with an
impressive thoroughness, as if this were much more than simple
precaution. If what Shih Novacek said were true, theirs was a
cutthroat world down there, and those who succeeded were not merely
the strongest but the most careful. Finished,
two of the men stood in the room while the others went into the
kitchens to continue their search. While they did so, Novacek came
across, bowing to Shou Chen-hai. "You
have done well, Hsien L'ing Shou," he said, indicating
the spread Shou had prepared for his guest. Shou
returned Novacek's bow, immensely gratified by the merchant's praise.
"It is but the humblest fare, I am afraid." Novacek
came closer, lowering his voice. "Remember what I said. Do not
smile at our friend when he comes. Nor should you show any sign of
familiarity. Yao Tzu, like most Red Poles, is a proud man—he
has great face—but understandably so. One does not become a Red
Pole through family influence or by taking exams. The HungMun, the
Secret Societies, are a different kind of school—the very
toughest of schools, you might say—and our friend the Red Pole
is its finest graduate. If any other man were qualified for the job,
then he would be Red Pole and our friend Yao Tzu would be
dead. You understand?" Shou
Chen-hai bowed his head, swallowing nervously, made aware once again
of the risks he was taking even in meeting this man. His eyes went to
the Hung Moo's face. "You will sit beside me, Shih Novacek?" Novacek
smiled reassuringly. "Do not worry, Hsien L'ing Shou. Just do as
I've said and all will be well. I'll be there at your elbow all the
time." Shou
Chen-hai gave a tiny shudder, then bowed again, grateful that the
merchant had agreed to this favor. It would cost him, he knew, but if
his scheme succeeded it would be a small price to pay. At the
entrance to the kitchen one of the runners appeared again, giving a
brief hand signal to one of his compatriots. At once the young man
turned and disappeared through the curtain. "All's
well, it seems," Novacek said, turning back. "Come, let's
go across. Our friend the Red Pole will be here any moment now." Little
was said during the meal. Yao Tzu sat, expressionless, facing Shou
Chen-hai across the main table, one of his henchmen seated on either
side of him. If what Novacek said were true, the Red Pole himself
would be unarmed, but that didn't mean that he was unprepared for
trouble. The henchmen were big, vicious-looking brutes who sat there,
eating nothing. They merely stared at Shou; stared and stared until
his initial discomfort became something else—a cold,
debilitating dread that seeped into his bones. It was something
Novacek had not prepared him for and he wondered why. But he let
nothing show. His fear and discomfort, his uncertainty and self-doubt
were kept hidden behind the thickness of his face. He
watched the Red Pole wipe at his lips delicately with the cloth, then
look across at him. Yao Tzu had tiny, almost childlike features; his
nose and ears and mouth dainty, like those of a young woman, his eyes
like two painted marbles in a pockmarked face that was almost Hung
Moo in its paleness. He stared at Shou Chen-hai with an impersonal
hostility that seemed of a piece with the rest of him. Meeting that
gaze, Shou realized that there was nothing this man would not do.
Nothing that could ever make him lose a moment's sleep at night. It
was this that made him so good at what he did—that made him a
426, an Executioner. He
almost smiled, but stopped himself, waiting, as he'd been told, for
Yao Tzu to speak first. But instead of speaking, the Red Pole half
turned in his seat and clicked his fingers, summoning one of his
runners. At once the man came across and placed a slender case on the
table by Yao Tzu's left hand. Yao
Tzu looked up, then pushed the case toward him. Shou
glanced at Novacek, then drew the case closer, looking to the Red
Pole for permission to open it. At the man's brief nod, he undid the
catches and lifted the lid. Inside, embedded in bright-red padded
silk, were three rows of tiny black-wrapped packages, Han pictograms
embossed on the wrappings in red and blue and yellow—a row of
each color. He stared at them a moment, then looked up, meeting the
Red Pole's eyes, understanding dawning on him. Again he had to fight
down the impulse to smile—to try to make some kind of personal
contact with the man facing him—but inside he felt exultant. If
these were what he thought they were then it was already agreed. He
glanced at Novacek for confirmation, then looked back at the Red
Pole, bowing his head. For
the first time in over an hour, Yao Tzu spoke. "You
understand then, Shou Chen-hai? You have there the complete range of
our latest drugs, designed to suit every need, manufactured to the
very highest quality in our laboratories." He leaned forward
slightly. "At present there is nothing like them in the whole of
Chung Kuo. We will supply you with whatever you require for the first
two months, free of charge, and you in turn will provide the capsules
without payment to your contacts in the Above. After that time,
however, we begin to charge for whatever we supply. Not much, of
course—nothing like what you will be charging your friends,
neh?—but enough to keep us both happy." Shou Chen-hai gave
the smallest nod, his throat dry, his hands trembling where they
rested on either side of the case. "And my idea?" Yao
Tzu looked down. "Your scheme has our approval, Hsien L'ing
Shou. It accords with our plans for future expansion. Indeed, we
had been looking for some while to move in this direction. It is
fortunate for us both that our interests coincide so closely, neh?" Shou
felt a shudder of relief pass through him. "And the other bosses
. . . they'll not contest you over this?" It was
his deepest worry—the one thing that had kept him sleepless
night after night—and now he had blurted it out. For a moment
he thought he had said the wrong thing, but beside him Novacek was
silent, and there was no sign in the Red Pole's face that he had been
offended by the words; even so, Shou sensed a new tension about the
table. "It
will be dealt with," Yao Tzu answered stiffly, meeting his eyes.
"When the well is deep, many can draw from it, neh? Besides, it
is better to make money than fight a war. I am certain the other
bosses will feel the same." Shou
took a long breath, letting the tension drain from him. Then it was
agreed. Again he felt a wave of pure elation wash through him. Yao
Tzu was watching him coldly. "You, of course, will be
responsible for your end of things. You will take care of recruitment
and marketing. You will also provide all tea money." Shou
bowed his head, concealing his disappointment. He had hoped they
would help him out with respect to "tea money"—bribes;
had assumed that they would pay well to buy his contacts, but it was
clear they saw things differently. His funds were large, admittedly,
since he had tapped into the Health Project finances, but they were
far from infinite and he had had extensive experience already of
dealing with officials. They were like whores, only whores were
cheap. He
kept his eyes lowered, thinking it through. Meeting the bill for
squeeze would stretch his resources to the limit, but he would cope,
even if he had to borrow steeply; for the return, when it came, would
be tremendous. He would be the Big Circle's man in the Above, buying
into legitimate concerns on their behalf, making friends, gaining
access where even men like Novacek could not go. And this other
matter—this unexpected business with the drugs—that, too,
could prove quite lucrative. He saw it now. He would recruit
gamblers—would finance their debts, then agree to pay off what
they owed in exchange for their becoming his men, dealing on his
behalf. Yes, he could see it clearly; could picture a great web of
connections with himself at the center. He
looked up, meeting the Red Pole's stare with a sudden confidence,
knowing he had not been wrong all those months back. He, Shou
Chen-hai, was destined for great things. And his sons would be great
men too. Maybe even ministers. When
they had gone he sat there, alone at the table, studying the contents
of the case. If what he had heard were true, this lot alone was worth
half a million. He touched his tongue to his teeth thoughtfully, then
lifted one of the tiny packages from its bed. It was
identical in size to all the others, its waxy, midnight-black wrapper
heat-sealed on the reverse with the blue wheel logo of the Big
Circle. The only difference was the marking on the front. In this
instance the pictograms were in red. Pan shuai ch'i, it
read—"half-life." The others had similarly strange
names: leng tuan—"cold leg"; ting
tui—"shutdown"; hsian hsiao ying—"yield
point." He set the package carefully in its place and sat back,
staring thoughtfully into the distance. He was still sitting there
when Novacek returned. "What
are these?" Novacek
hesitated, then laughed. "You know what they are." "I
know they're drugs, but why are they so different? He said there was
nothing like them in Chung Kuo. Why? I need to know if I'm going to
sell them." Novacek
studied him a moment, then nodded. "Okay, Shou Chen-hai. Let me
tell you what's happening . . . what's really happening here." "It's
all pipes now," said Vasska, his voice coming from the darkness
close by. "The shit goes down and the water comes up. Water and
shit. Growth and decay. Old processes, but mechanized now. Forced
into narrow pipes." A
warm, throaty laugh greeted Vasska's comment, the darkness hiding its
source. "Don't we just know it," said Erika, her knees
rubbing against Ywe Hao's in the cramped space. "They
fool themselves," Vasska continued, warming to his theme. "But
it isn't a real living space, it's a bloody machine. Switch it off
and they'd die, they're so cut off from things." "And
we're so different?" Ywe
Hao's comment was sharp, her irritation with Vasska mixed up with a
fear that they might be overheard. They were high up here, at the
very top of the stack, under the roof itself, but who knew what
tricks acoustics played in the ventilation system? She glanced at the
faintly glowing figure at her wrist and gritted her teeth. "Yes,
we're different, all right," said Vasska, leaning closer, so
that she could feel his breath on her cheek. "We're different
because we want to tear it down. To level it and get back to the
earth." It was
close to an insult. As if she had forgotten—she who had been in
the movement a good five years longer than this . . . this boy I
Nor was it what she had really meant. They, too, were cut off.
They, too, had lived their lives inside the machine. So what if they
only thought they were different? She
was about to respond, but Erika leaned forward, touching her arm
gently, as if to say, Don't mind him. We know his kind. But
aloud she said, "How much longer, Chi Li? I'm stifling." It was
true. The small space at the hub hadn't been designed for three, and
though it was well ventilated, it was cramped, hot, and rich with a
mixture of mildly unpleasant smells. "Anotrter
five at least," she said, covering Erika's hand with her own.
She liked the woman, for all her faults, whereas Vasska . . . Vasska
was a pain. She had met his sort before. Zealots. Bigots. They used
the Yu ideology as a substitute for thinking. The rest was
common talk. Shit and water. Narrow pipes. These were the catch
phrases of the old Ping Tiao intelligentsia. As if she
needed such reminders. She
closed her eyes a moment, thinking. The three of them had been
together as a team for only six weeks now—the first three of
those in training for this mission and in what they termed
"assimilation." Vasska, Erika—those weren't their
real names, no more than her own was Chi Li, the name on her ID
badge. Those were the names of dead men and women in the Maintenance
Service; men and women whose identities the Yu had stolen for
their use. Nor would she ever leam their real names. They were
strangers, brought in from other Yu cells for this mission. Once they
were finished here she would never see them again. It was
a necessary system, and it worked, but it had its drawbacks. From the
start Vasska had challenged her. He had never said as much, but it
was clear that he resented her leadership. Even though there was a
supposed equality between men and women in the movement, the men
still expected to be the leaders—the doers and the thinkers,
the formulators of policy and the agents of what had been decided.
Vasska was one such. He stopped short of open dissent, but not far.
He was surly, sullen, argumentative. Time and again she had been
forced to give him explicit orders. And he, in return, had questioned
her loyalty to the cause and to the underlying dogma of the Yu
ideology; questioned it until she, in her quiet moments, had begun to
ask herself, "Do 1 believe in what I'm doing? Do I believe in
Mach's vision of the new order that is to come once the City has been
leveled?" And though she did, it had grown harder than ever to
say as much—as though such lip service might make her like
Vasska. For a
while there was only the sound of their breathing and the faint,
ever-present hum of the life systems. Then, prefacing his remark with
an unpleasantly insinuating laugh, Vasska spoke again. "So how's
your boyfriend, Chi Li? How's. . . Wbl/-gang?" And he made the
older man's name sound petty and ridiculous. "Shut
up, Vasska," said Erika, defusing the sudden tension. Then,
leaning closer to Ywe Hao, she whispered, "Open the vent. Let's
look. It's almost time." In the
dark Ywe Hao smiled, grateful for Erika's intervention, then turned
and slipped the catch. Light spilled into the cramped, dark space,
revealing the huddle of their limbs. "What
can you see?" For a
moment it was too bright. Then, when her eyes had focused, she found
she was looking down into Main from a place some fifty or sixty ch'i
overhead. It was late—less than an hour from first dark—and
the day's crowds had gone from Main, leaving only a handful of
revelers and one or two workers, making their way to their
night-shift occupations. Ywe Hao looked beyond these to a small
doorway to her left at the far end of Main. It was barely visible
from where she was, yet even as her eyes went to it, a figure stepped
out, raising a hand in parting. "That's
him!" she said in an urgent whisper. "Vasska, get going. I
want that elevator secured." Dismissing him, she turned, looking
into the strong, feminine face close to her own. "Well? What do
you think?" Erika
considered, then nodded, a tight, tense smile lighting her features.
"If it's like last time, we have thirty minutes, forty at the
outside. Time enough to secure the place and get things ready." "Good.
Then let's get moving. There won't be another opportunity as good as
this." YWE
HAO looked about her, then nodded, satisfied. The rooms seemed
normal, no sign of the earlier struggle visible. Four of the servants
were locked away in the pantry, bound hand and foot and sedated. In
another room she had placed the women and children of the household;
Shou's two wives, the new concubine, and the two young boys. Those,
too, she had drugged, taking care to administer the exact dosage to
the boys. Now she turned, facing the fifth member of the household
staff, the Chief Steward, the number yi—one—emblazoned
in red on the green chest patch he wore on his pure white pau. He
stared back at her, his eyes wide with fear, his head slightly
lowered, wondering what she would do next. Earlier she had taped a
sticky-bomb to the back of his neck, promising him that at the
slightest sign or word of warning, she would set it off. "Remember,"
she said reassuringly, "it's not you we want, Steward Wong. Do
as I say and you'll live. But relax. Shou Chen-hai must suspect
nothing. He'll be back from seeing the girl soon, so run his bath and
tend to him as normal. But remember, we shall be watching your every
movement. At the least sign . . ." The
Steward bowed his head. .
"Good." She turned, double-checking the room, then patted
the pocket of her tunic. The papers were inside—the pamphlet
explaining their reasons for the execution and the official death
warrant, signed by all five members of the High Council of the Yu.
These would be left on Shou's body for Security to find.
Meanwhile, friends sympathetic to the cause would be distributing
copies of the pamphlet throughout the Lowers. More than fifty million
in all, paid for from the coffers of the long-defunct Ping Tiao.
Money that Mach had sifted away after Helmstadt and before the
debacle at Bremen that had brought about the Ping Tioo's demise. "Okay.
You know what to say? Good. Then get to work. I want things prepared
for when he returns." She
joined Erika at the desk in the tiny surveillance room. At once she
picked up the figure of the Chief Steward as he made his way down the
corridor to the main bathroom. Keeping an eye on what he did, she
glanced at the other screens, once more appalled by the luxury, by
the sheer waste of what she saw. Shou Chen-hai's family was no bigger
than many in the Mids and Lowers, and yet he had all this:
twenty-four rooms, including no less than two kitchens and three
private bathrooms. It was disgraceful. An insult to those he was
meant to serve. But that was not why she was here, for there were
many who l$ed as Shou Chen-hai lived, unaware of the misery and
suffering their greed relied upon. No, there were specific reasons
for singling out Shou Chen-hai. She
shuddered, indignation fueling her anger. Shou Chen-hai was a cheat.
And not just any cheat. His cheating was on a grand scale and would
result in untold suffering: in children not receiving treatment for
debilitating diseases; in good men bleeding to death in overcrowded
Accident Clinics; in mothers dying in childbirth because the
facilities promised by the T'ang had not been built. She laughed
coldly. That ceremony earlier had been a sham. The T'ang's Chancellor
had been shown around the new wards and operating theaters as if they
were typical of what existed in the rest of the facility. But she had
seen. With her own eyes she had seen the empty wards, the unbuilt
theatres, the empty spaces where real and solid things ought to have
been. Only a fifth of the promised facility had been built. The rest
did not exist—would never exist—because Shou
Chen-hai and his friends had taken the allocated funds and spent them
on their own personal schemes. She shook her head slowly, still
astonished by the scale of the deception. It was not unheard offer
officials to take ten, even fifteen, percent of any project. It was
even, in this crazy world of theirs, expected. But eighty
percent! Four billion yua.nl Ywe Hao gritted her teeth. It
could not be tolerated. Shou Chen-hai had to be made an example of,
else countless more would suffer while such as Shou grew bloated on
their suffering. She
turned, looking at Erika. "Who is Shou seeing?" Erika
smiled, her eyes never leaving the screen. "One of his
underling's daughters. A young thing of thirteen. The mother knows
but condones it. And who can blame her?" "No
. . ." Yet Ywe Hao felt sick at the thought. It was another
instance of Shou's rottenness; of his corrupt use of the power given
him. Power . . . that was what was at fault here. Power, given over
into the hands of petty, unscrupulous men. Men who were not fit to
run a brothel, let alone a hsien. Men no better than her Uncle
Chang. She
drew her knife, staring at it a moment, wondering what it would feel
like to thrust it into Shou Chen-hai, and whether that would be
enough to assuage the anger she felt. No. She could kill a million
Shous and it would not be enough. Yet it was a start. A sign, to be
read by High and Low alike. She
turned the knife in her hand, tested the sharpness of the edge, then
sheathed it again. "Are you ready?" Erika
laughed. "Don't worry about me. Just worry whether Vasska's done
his job and covered the elevators." "Yes
. . ." she said, then tensed, seeing the unmistakable figure of
Shou Chen-hai at the far end of the approach corridor. "Yes. But
first our man . . ." the
CEREMONY was far advanced. In the small and crowded room there was an
expectant silence as the New Confucian official turned back, facing
the couple. Karr
was dressed in his ceremonial uniform, the close-fitting azurite-blue
tunic emphasizing his massive frame. His close-cropped head was bare,
but about his neck hung the huge golden dragon pendant of the chia
ch'eng. It had been awarded to him by the T'ang himself at a
private ceremony only two months earlier, and Karr wore it now with
pride, knowing it was the highest honor a commoner could attain
outside of government, making him Honorary Assistant to the Royal
Household. Beside
Karr, soon to be his wife, stood the woman he had met at the Dragon
Cloud teahouse six months before, Marie Enge. In contrast to Karr she
wore bright scarlet silks, a simple one-piece, tied at the waist. The
effect, though simple, was stunning. She looked the perfect mate for
the big man. Karr
turned, meeting her eyes briefly, smiling, then turned back to face
the official, listening attentively as the wizen-faced old man
spelled out the marriage duties. "I
must remind you that in public it is neither seemly nor appropriate
to show your love. Your remarks must be restrained and considerate to
the feelings of those about you." The old man looked about him
severely. "Love must be kept in bounds. It must not be allowed
to interfere with the husband's work nor with his duties to the
family." He gave a little nod, then looked at the bride. "As
for you, Marie Enge, you must perform your household duties as a good
wife, without reproach or complaint. In social gatherings you should
not sit with your husband but should remain aloof. As a wife, all
ties of blood are broken. You will become part of your husband's
household." The
old man paused, becoming, for a moment, less formal. "I am told
that among the young it has become unfashionable to view things in
this light, but there is much to be said for our traditions. They
bring stability and peace, and peace breeds contentment and
happiness. In your particular case, Gregor Karr and Marie Enge, I
realize that there are no families to consider. For you the great
chain of family was broken, from no fault of your own. And yet these
traditions are still relevant to your situation, for in time you will
have children. You will be family. And so the chain will be reforged,
the ties remade. By this ceremony you reenter the great tidal flow of
life in Chung Kuo. By taking part in these most ancient of rituals,
you reaffirm their strength and purpose." Chen,
looking on from Karr's left, felt a tiny shiver ripple down his spine
at the words. So it had been for him, when he had married Wang Ti. It
had been like being reborn. No longer simply Chen, but Kao Chen,
Head of the Kao family, linked to the future by the sons he would
have. Sons who would sweep his grave and enact the rituals. In
marrying he had become an ancestor. He smiled, feeling deeply for
Karr at that moment, enjoying the way the big man looked at his
bride, and knowing that this was a marriage made in Heaven. After
the ceremony he went across and congratulated them, holding Karr to
him fiercely. "I am so pleased for you, Gregor. I always hoped—"
He stopped, choked by the sudden upsurge of feeling. Karr
laughed, then pushed him back to arm's length. "What's this, my
friend? Tears? No . . . this is a time for great joy, for today my
heart is fuller than it has ever been." He
turned, raising a hand. At the signal the doors behind him were
thrown open, revealing a long, high-ceilinged room, all crystal and
lace, the tables set for several hundred guests. "Well,
dear friends, let us go through. There is food and drink, and later
there will be dancing." He looked across at his bride, smiling
broadly, holding out his hand until she joined him. "So . . .
welcome, everyone. Tonight we celebrate!" THE
GOLDEN EYE of the security camera swiveled in its dragon-mouth
socket, following Shou Chen-hai as he approached. Moments later the
door hissed back. Beyond it, in the tiled entrance hall, the Chief
Steward was waiting, head bowed, a silken indoor robe over one arm. Shou
Chen-hai went inside and stood there, letting Wong Pao-yi remove his
outside garments and help him on with the lightweight pau. For
a moment he breathed deeply, enjoying the cool silence of the
anteroom, then turned, looking at his servant. "Where is
everyone?" Wong
Pao-yi lowered his head, repeating the words he had been told to say.
"Your first wife, Shou Wen-lo, is visiting her mother,
Excellency. She will be back in the morning. Your second wife, Shou
He, has taken the boys to buy new robes. She called not long ago to
say she would be another hour." Shou
nodded, satisfied. "And Yue Mi?" The
old servant hesitated. "She is asleep, Excellency. Would you
have me wake her and send her to your room?" Shou
laughed. "No, Steward Wong. Later, perhaps. Just now I'd like a
bath." Wong
Pao-yi bowed his head again. "It is already poured, Excellency.
If you will come through, I will see to your needs personally." "There's
no need. Just bring me a drink." Alone
in the bathroom, he kicked off his thin briefs, then set the wine cup
down and peeled the pau over his head. Naked, he stretched,
feeling good, enjoying the sight of his own well-muscled body in the
wall mirror, then picked up his wine cup again, toasting himself. The
girl had been good. Much less tense than before. Much more willing to
please him. Doubtless that was her mother's doing. Well, perhaps he
would reward the mother. Send her some small gift to encourage her
efforts. Or maybe he would have them both next time, mother and
daughter, in the same bed. The
thought made him laugh, but as he turned he slowed, sensing another
presence in the corridor outside. "Wong
Pao-yi? Is that you?" He
took a step forward, then stopped, the heavy porcelain wine cup
falling from his hand, clattering against the side of the bath. "What
the fuck ... ?" It was
a man, dressed in the orange and yellow work fatigues of Maintenance,
standing there, a handgun raised and pointed at him. "Wong
Pao-yi!" Shou called, staring back at the man, conscious of his
nakedness, his vulnerability. "Wong Pao-yi, where are you?" The
man laughed softly and shook his head. "Been having fun, Shou
Chen-hai? Been fucking little girls, have we?" Anger
made Shou take two more steps before he remembered the gun. He
stopped, frowning, seeing the odd look of enjoyment on the man's
face. "What
do you want?" he asked. "All I have is in the safe
in the study. Cards, cash, a few other bits and pieces—" The
man shook his head. "I'm no robber, Shou Chen-hai. If I were,
I'd have taken you earlier, in the corridors." Shou
nodded, forcing himself to stay calm. If this were one of the rival
Triad bosses trying to muscle in on the deal he had made with the Big
Circle, then it would not do to show any fear in front of one of
their messenger boys. He puffed out his chest, wearing his nakedness
like a badge of courage. "Who
sent you? Fat Wong? Li the Lidless? Or was it Whiskers Lu?" The
man waved the gun impatiently and thrust a piece of paper at Shou.
Shou Chen-hai turned his head slightly, not understanding, but at
second prompting took the paper. Looking down at it, his stomach
turned over. It was
a terrorist pamphlet. Itemizing his crimes. Saying why they had had
to kill him. "Look,
I..." Shou began. But there was no arguing with this. No way of
dealing with these bastards. His only chance was to jump the man. But
as if he knew this, the man took a step backward, pulling back the
safety. He was watching Shou intently, his eyes gloating now. "Been
having /un?" the man insisted, jerking the gun forward, making
Shou jump and give a tiny whimper of fright. "Been fucking
little girls?" Was
that it? Was it someone hired by his underling Fang Shuo? And was all
this business with the pamphlets merely a cover? He put out one hand,
as if to fend off the man. "I'll
pay you. Pay you lots. Much more than Fang Shou paid you. Look, I'll
take you to the safe now. I'll—" "Shut
up!" The
man's mouth was formed into a snarl, but his eyes were cold and
pitiless and Shou Chen'hai knew at once he had been mistaken. He was
a terrorist. There was no mistaking that mad gleam, that
uncompromising fanaticism. "Your
kind revolt me," he said, raising the gun and pointing it at
Shou's forehead. "You think you can buy anything. You think—"
He stopped and turned abruptly, following Shou's eyes. A
second figure had come into the corridor. She, too, wore the orange
and yellow of Maintenance. Taking one look at how things were, she
raised her gun and came forward. "You
stupid bastard! What the fuck do you think you're doing?" The
man gave a visible shudder of anger, then turned back, facing Shou
Chen-hai. Even so, his face had changed, had lost its look of hideous
amusement. Shou could see immediately how things stood between the
two—could sense the acid resentment in the man—and at
once began working on a way to use it. But it was too late. Ywe
Hao pointed her gun and fired twice, then, a moment later, a third
time, standing over the slumped, lifeless body to make sure it was
dead. There was blood on the ceramic tiles. Blood in the glasslike
water of the bath. She turned and looked at Vasska, her anger making
her voice shrill. "You
fucking idiot! I've had to send Erika to do what you should have
done. Now go! Go and link up with her. Now!" The
man huffed out his resentment, but lowered his gun and began to turn
away. He was two steps across the room when he stopped and turned
back. "Someone's
coming! I can hear footsteps!" She
looked up at him, shaking her head. He was such a fool. Such a bloody
amateur. Why had she had to get him on her team? Quickly she placed
the papers on the corpse. Then, straightening up, she went out past
Vasska and into the corridor. At the far end a man had come into
view—barefoot, it seemed, and in his indoor clothes. As he came
closer, she recognized who it was. It was the old Security guard,
Leyden. "No
. . ." she said softly. "Please no . . ." But he kept
coming. A few paces from her, he stopped. "Chi
Li... What's going on? 1 thought I heard shots. I..." His
voice tapered off. He was frowning and looking at the gun in her
hand, part of him understanding, another part refusing to understand. She
shook her head. There wasn't time to tie him up. No time even to
argue with him. Training and instinct told her to shoot him and get
out, but something held her back. Vasska, coming alongside her,
looked at the man and raised his gun. "No
. . ." she said, reaching out to restrain his hand. "Let
him go. He's not armed." Vasska
laughed. "You're a fool. Soft too," he sneered, forgetting
what she had done in the other room. "Let's kill him and get
out." Leyden
was looking frightened now. He glanced from one to the other and
began to back away. Vasska stepped forward, throwing off Ywe Hao's
arm, and aimed his gun. But he didn't have a chance to fire it. Two
more shots rang out and he fell forward, dead. Leyden
looked at Ywe Hao, his eyes wide, his mouth open. "Go!"
she said, her eyes pleading with him. "Go, before I have to kill
you too!" And she raised her gun at him—the gun that had
killed Shou Chen-hai and Vasska. He hesitated only a moment, then
turned and ran, back up the corridor. She watched him go—heard
his footsteps sound long after he was out of sight— then,
stepping over Vasska's corpse, walked slowly down the corridor, the
gun held out in front of her. THE
LIGHTS had been dimmed in the reception room, a space cleared for
dancing. A small troupe of Han musicians had set up their instruments
in one corner and were playing a sprightly tune, their faces beaming
as they watched the dancers whirl about the floor. Chen
stood to one side, watching as Karr led his new wife through the
dance. He had never seen the big man so happy; never seen that broad
mouth smile so much, those blue eyes sparkle so vividly. Marie,
facing him, seemed almost breathless with happiness. She gasped and
laughed and threw her head back, screeching with delight. And all
about them the crowd pressed close, sharing their happiness. Chen
grinned and turned his head, looking across at his own family. Jyan
and young Wu were sitting at a nearby table, sipping at their drinks
through straws, their eyes taking in everything. Beside them sat Wang
Ti, her heavily swollen belly forcing her to sit straight-backed, her
legs apart. Even so, she seemed not to notice her discomfort as she
held Ch'iang Hsin's hands, twirling her baby daughter this way and
that to the rhythms of the music. Chen
smiled, then took a deep swig of his beer. It felt good to be able to
let go. To relax and not have to worry about what the morning would
bring. The last six months had been murderously busy, getting the new
squad ready for active service, but after tonight both Karr and he
were on a week's furlough. Chen yawned, then put his hand up to
smooth his head, surprised, for the briefest moment, that his fingers
met not flesh but a soft covering of hair. He lowered his hand,
frowning. A lifetime's habits were hard to shift. He was always
forgetting. . . . Chen
drained his glass, then went across to the bar to get a refill,
glancing at the presents stacked high on the table as he passed.
Tolonen had sent a bolt of the finest silk, the T'ang a silver
platter, engraved by the Court's own Master Silversmith. But there
were hundreds of others too—evidence of the esteem in which
Karr was held. He
took his beer and made his way back, catching Karr's eye as he
circled the dance floor, lifting his glass in salute. "Are
you all right?" he asked Wang Ti, crouching at her side. "If
you're feeling tired . . . ?" She
smiled. "No, I'm fine. Just keep an eye on the boys. Make sure
they don't drink anything they shouldn't. Especially Wu. He's a
mischievous little soul." Chen
grinned. "Okay. But if you want anything, just let me know, eh?
And if you get tired . . ." "Don't
nag me, husband. Who's carrying this thing—you or me? I'll tell
you straight enough when I want to go. All right?" Chen
nodded, satisfied, then straightened up. As he did the door at the
far end swung open and a uniformed guard came into the room. Chen
narrowed his eyes, noting at once that the man was a Special Services
courier. In one hand he held a Security folder. As he came into the
room he looked about him, then swept off his cap, recognizing Karr. Chen
went across, intercepting the courier. "I
am Captain Kao," he said, standing between Karr and the man.
"What is your business here?" The
courier bowed. "Forgive me, Captain, but I have sealed orders
for Major Karr. From Marshal Tolonen. I was told to give them
directly into the Major's hands." Chen
shook his head. "But this is his wedding night. Surely . . . ?"
Then he caught up with what the man had said. From Tolonen . . . He
frowned. "What has been happening?" The
courier shrugged. "Forgive me, Captain, but I am not aware of
the contents, only that it is a matter of the most extreme urgency." Chen
stood back, letting the man pass, watching as he made his way through
the dancers to stand before Karr. Karr
frowned, then with a shrug tore open the wallet and pulled out the
pririted documents. For a moment he was silent, intent on what he was
reading; then, grim-faced, he came across. "What
is it?" Chen asked, disturbed by the sudden change in Karr's
mood. Karr
sighed, then handed Chen the photostat of the terrorist pamphlet that
had been among the documents. "I'm sorry, Chen, but for us the
party's over. We have work to do. It looks like the Ping Tiao are
active again. They've assassinated a senior official. A man named
Shou Chen-hai." "Shou
Chen-hai . . ." Chen looked up from the pamphlet, his mouth
fallen open. "The Hsien L'ing from Hannover?" Karr's
eyes widened. "That's right. You knew him?" But
Chen had turned and was looking at Wang Ti, remembering what she had
said only that morning—the argument they had had over the
rumors of the man's corruption. And now the man was dead, murdered by
assassins. He turned back. "But your wedding night. . . ?" Karr
smiled and held his arms briefly. "Marie will understand.
Besides, it will be sweeter for the waiting, neh?" And, turning
away, the big man went across to his bride. the
first corpse lay where it had fallen, faceup on the bathroom floor.
The face was unmarked, the eyes closed, as if sleeping, but the chest
was a mess. The first two high-velocity shells had torn the rib cage
apart and spattered the heart and most of the left lung over the far
wall, but whoever had killed him had wanted to make absolutely sure.
A third shot had been fired into the man's gut after he had fallen,
hemorrhaging the stomach and large intestine and destroying the left
kidney. Chen
had already seen the computer simulation produced by the Medical
Examiner on the scene, but he had wanted to see the damage for
himself; to try to picture what had happened. He knelt there a moment
longer, studying the dead man, fingering the fine silk of his
bathrobe, then he looked across at the fallen wine cup, the faintly
pink water of the low-edged marble bath. The medical report showed
that Shou Chen-hai had recently had sex. He had not had time to wash
himself before he was killed. As for the wine, he had barely sipped
at the cup before he had dropped it, presumably in surprise, for it
lay some way from the body, the thick stoneware chipped. He
stood and took a step back, taking in the whole of the scene, then
turned, looking out into the hallway where the second corpse lay,
facedown, the back of the orange and yellow Maintenance work suit
stained red in a figure eight where the wounds had overlapped. Chen
shook his head, trying to piece it together, but as yet it made no
sense. The second corpse was supposedly a terrorist. His ID was faked
and, as expected, they had found a fish pendant around his neck, a
copy of the pamphlet in his pocket. But was that what they had been
meant to find? Was this, in fact, a Triad killing and the rest of it
a front, meant to send them off on the wrong track? It would
certainly make sense of the explicit mention in the pamphlet of
Shou's dealings with the Big Circle. If a rival Triad boss wanted to
discredit Iron Mu, or more likely, to frighten off those who might
think of dealing with him, what better way than to resurrect old
fears of fanatical terrorists who struck like ghosts between the
levels? Because
the Ping Tiao were ghosts. They had been destroyed—their
cells smashed, their leaders killed—less than six months ago.
It was not possible that they could have rebuilt themselves in such a
short time. Chen
took the copy of the pamphlet from his tunic pocket and unfolded it.
There was no mention of the Ping Tiao anywhere on the
pamphlet, but the Han pictogram for the word "fish"—Yu—the
symbol of the old Ping Tiao was prominent in several places; and the
printing and style of the pamphlet were unmistakable. Even if the
Ping Tiao itself had not survived, one important aspect of it—one
man, perhaps, the brain and eye behind the original organization—had
come through. Unless this were an intricate fake: a mask designed to
confuse them and throw them off the scent. But why do that? He
walked through, skirting the corpse. First Level was meant to be
immune from attack—a haven from such violence. But that myth
had just been blown. Whoever it was, Ko Ming or Triad, had
just sent a ripple of fear throughout the whole of City Europe. Karr
was coming out of a room to his right. Seeing Chen, he beckoned him
inside. They
had set up an operations room here by the main entrance. The room had
been a store-cupboard, but they had cleared it and moved in their own
equipment. Karr's desk was at one end of the tiny room, piled high
with tapes and papers. In a chair in front of it sat a middle-aged
man wearing the uniform of Deck Security. "This is Wolfgang
Leyden," Karr said, taking his seat on the far side of the desk.
"It seems he knew the team who were responsible for this. More
than that, he was witness to one of the killings." Chen
stared.at the man in disbelief. "I don't understand." Karr
looked to the man. "Leyden, tell Captain Kao what you just told
me." Slowly, and with a faint tremor in his voice, Leyden
repeated his story. "Well?" Karr said. "Have you ever
heard the like?" Chen
shook his head. "No. But it makes sense. I had begun to think
this was some kind of Triad operation. One of the big bosses muscling
in on another's deals, but now . . ." Now he
understood. The Ping Tioo really were back. Or something like them.
"What else have we got?" Karr
looked up. "Surprisingly little. The woman did a thorough job on
the deck communications system. For the three weeks they were here
there's no visual record of them." Chen
laughed. "That isn't possible." "That's
what I thought. You've got Security guards checking the screens all
the time. They'd notice if anything were being blanked out, neh? But
that's not what she did. The cameras were working, but nothing was
being stored by the deck computer. The term for it is a white-out. It
would only get noticed if someone wanted to refer back to something
on the tapes, and with so little happening at this level, it's rare
that Security has to check on anything. I looked at their log. It's
almost nine weeks since they last called anything from memory.
There's no crime this high up. At least, nothing that would show as
being crime. So, as long as Security keeps the wrong people out of
these levels . . ." Chen
frowned. "You said 'she' just then when you were talking about
the tampering with the computer system. How do we know that?" Leyden
spoke up. "She was good. I've seen them before, many times, but
none of them were as good as her. I sat and watched her while she was
at work. It was like she was part of the system." He paused,
looking away, a sudden wistfulness in his face. "She was a nice
girl. I can't believe . . ." He looked down at his trembling
hands. "Why? I don't understand____" Chen
leaned toward him. "You're certain it happened as you said. The
other— Vasska,
you say his name was—he had already drawn his gun when she shot
him?" Leyden
nodded. "He was going to kill me, but she wouldn't let him. His
gun was pointed at me. At my head." A faint shudder went through
him, then he looked up, his eyes searching Chen's face. "You'll
kill her, won't you? You'll track her down and kill her." Chen
looked down, disturbed by the accusation in Leyden's voice. "I've
read their pamphlet," Leyden went on, "and it's true. I've
seen them come here for meetings. Businessmen. And others. Others who
had no legitimate business to be here. And I've seen the things he's
bought these last eight months. Things beyond his means. So maybe
they were right. Maybe—" Karr
raised a hand, interrupting him. "Take care what you say,
friend. Captain Kao here and I... we understand how you feel. The
girl saved your life and you're grateful to her. But there are others
who will be much less understanding. They will take your gratitude
for sympathy with the girl's ideals. I would advise you to keep your
opinion of the Hsien Ling to yourself, Shih Leyden. As
for your account. . ." Karr
hesitated, noting the guard who had appeared at the door. "Yes?" The
guard snapped to attention, bowing his head. "Forgive me, Major,
but an official from the T'ing Wei has arrived." "Shit,"
Karr said under his breath. "So soon?" The
T'ing Wei was the Superintendent of Trials, and his department
was responsible for keeping the wheels of justice turning in City
Europe; yet it was in the department's other role—as the
official mouthpiece of the State—that it was most active. Karr
turned to Leyden. "Forgive me, but I must attend to this.
However, as I was about to say, your account will be entered in the
official record, and if the matter comes to trial, will be offered in
mitigation of the woman's crime. That said, I'm afraid I can't vouch
that she'll ever come to trial. State policy toward terrorism is, and
must be, of the severest kind. To have exposed Shou Chen-hai would
have been one thing, to have murdered him is another." Leyden
shuddered, then stood, bowing his head first to Karr and then to
Chen. As he left, Chen looked across at Karr. "The
T'ing Wei were bloody quick getting here. What do you think
they want?" Karr snorted in disgust. "To meddle in things,
as ever. To bugger things up and muddy the clearest of streams. What
else are they good for?" Chen
laughed. "Then we'll be giving them our full cooperation?"
Karr nodded. "And dropping our pants for good measure, neh?"
The two men roared with laughter. They were still laughing when the
official from the T'ing Wei entered, trailing four youthful,
effeminate-looking assistants. All five were Han, and all had that
unmistakable air of self-contained arrogance that was the hallmark of
the T'ing Wei—a kind of brutal elegance that was
reflected in their clothes and manners. The
official looked about him distastefully, then began to speak, not
deigning to look at Karr. "I
understand that a pamphlet has been circulated linking the Hsien
L'ing with certain nefarious organizations." Karr
picked up a copy of the pamphlet and made to offer it, but the
official ignored him. "Our
task here is to make sure that the truth is known. That this
scurrilous tissue of lies is revealed for what it is and the
reputation of the late Shou Chen-hai returned to its former glorious
condition." Karr
stared at the official a moment, then laughed. "Then I'm afraid
you have your work cut out, Shih . . . ?" "My
name is Yen T'ung," the official answered coldly, turning to
take a folder from one of his assistants, "and I am Third
Secretary to the Minister, Peng Lu-hsing." "Well,
Third Secretary Yen, I have to inform you that it seems the
accusations are true. Our friend, the Hsien L'ing, has been having
meetings with people that a man of his . . . reputation . . . ought
not to have been seeing. As for the funds relating to the Phoenix
Health Center—" Yen
T'ung stepped forward, placing the folder carefully, almost
delicately, on the edge of Karr's desk. "Forgive
me, Major Karr, but inside you will find the official report on the
murder of Shou Chen-hai. It answers all of the points raised as well
as several others. Moreover, it paints a full and healthy picture of
the dead man." Yen T'ung stepped back, brushing his left hand
against his silks, as if to cleanse it. "Copies of the report
will be distributed to the media at twelfth bell tomorrow. Shortly
afterward I shall be making a statement regarding the capture of
those responsible for this heinous crime." "A
statement?" For once Karr looked nonplussed. "Are you
saying that we have until twelfth bell tomorrow to find the
culprits?" Yen
T'ung snapped his fingers. At once another of his assistants opened
the case he was carrying and handed a scroll to the Third Secretary.
With a flourish, Yen T'ung unrolled the scroll and read. "We
have been informed by our Security sources that the four-man Triad
assassination squad responsible for the murder of the Hsien L'ing of
Hannover, Shou Chen-hai, was, in the early hours of this morning,
surrounded by forces loyal to the T'ang, and after a brief struggle,
subdued and captured." "I
see," Karr said, after a moment. "Then we're to let things
drop?" "Not
at all, Major Karr. Your investigations will continue as before. But
from henceforth any discoveries made will be screened by my office. I
have the authority to that effect right here." He took a
document from another of his assistants and handed it across. Karr
studied the authority a moment, noting that it was signed by the
T'ang's Chancellor, Nan Ho, and countersigned by Tolonen, then looked
up again. "Then we're to paint black white, is that it?" Yen
T'ung was silent, a fixed smile on his lips. "And
the guard Leyden's account?" Yen
T'ung raised an eyebrow in query. "We
have a witness who saw exactly what happened. His account—" "Will
be screened by this office. Now, if you will excuse me, Major Karr,
there is much to be done." Karr
watched the Third Secretary and his retinue depart, then sat back
heavily, looking up at Chen. "Can
you believe that? The arrogance of the little shit. And they've got
it all worked out beforehand. Every last little detail." Chen
shook his head. "It won't work. Not this time." "Why
not? The T'ing Wei are pretty good at their job, and even if
you and I don't like what they do or the way they go about it, it is
necessary. Terrorist propaganda has to be countered. It softens
public opinion and that makes our job easier." "Maybe,
but this time I've got a feeling that they're up against people who
are better at this than they are." Karr
narrowed his eyes. "What do you mean?" Chen
hesitated, then said what had been on his mind all along. "Wang
Ti. She knew about Shou Chen-hai. When we were getting ready this
morning, she commented upon him—on his corruption. It was most
unlike her. Usually she has nothing to do with such tittle-tattle,
but it seems that the rumors were unusually strong. I suspect someone
seeded them long before the assassination. And then there are the
pamphlets." Karr
nodded. Yes, it would be hard to counter the effect of the pamphlets.
In the past they had been circulated on a small scale, but reports
were coming in that millions of the things had been distributed
throughout the Lowers. All of which spoke of a much larger scale of
activity than before. And the assassination itself was far more
subtle, far better planned than previous Ping Tiao attacks.
Far more audacious. Whoever was behind all this had learned a great
deal from past mistakes. Chen had gone to the door. He pulled it
shut, then turned, looking back at Karr. "So what now? Where do
we begin?" Karr
lifted the pamphlet. "We begin with this. I want to know how
much of it is true and I want to know how our friends the terrorists
got hold of the information." "And the two women?" Karr
smiled. "We've got good descriptions on both of them from
several sources—Leyden, the wives and servants, the three
guards who tried to intercept them at the elevator. We'll get one of
our experts to run a face match and see what comes out of the
computer files. Then we'll dig a little deeper. See what turns up." "And
then?" It
seemed an innocuous question, but Kan- knew what Chen meant. If they
got to the girl, what would they do? Would they kill her? Would they
hand her over, to be tortured and disposed of at the whim of the
T'ing Wei official, Yen T'ung? Or was there something else
they might do? Something that was not strictly by the book? Karr
sat back, sighing heavily. "I don't know, Chen. Let's find her
first, neh? Then we'll decide." IT WAS
A DARK and empty place, echoing silent, its ceiling lost in the
blackness overhead. They were gathered at one end, a single lamp
placed at the center of the circle of chairs. There were nine of
them, including Ywe Hao, and they spoke softly, leaning toward the
lamp, their faces moving from darkness into light, features forming
from the anonymity of shadow. Just now the one called Edel was
speaking. "Is
there any doubt?" he said, looking across at Ywe Hao as he
spoke. "There are many who have heard the guard's story. How she
killed my brother—shot him in the back—and spared the
guard." "So
you say," said Mach, his long, thin face stretching toward the
light. "But have you witnesses to bring forward? Written
statements?" Edel
laughed scathingly, moving back into shadow. "As if they'd come
here! As if they'd risk their names on paper to satisfy a Yu court!" "No
Yu, even?" Mach insisted. "Or is it only your
say-so? Chi Li here denies your charge. Without proof it is her word
against yours. Your dead brother has no voice here." "Send
someone. Get proof." A
woman leaned forward, one of the Council of Five. Her face, etched in
the light like a woodcut, showed strong, determined features. Her
voice, when she spoke, was hard, uncompromising. "You know we
cannot do that. You know also that you broke our strictest orders by
going yourself." "He was my brother*." "We
are all brothers." "Not all, it seems. Some are murderers." There
was a moment's silence, then Mach leaned forward. "You asked for
this hearing, Edel. As was your right. But you have made accusations
without supporting evidence. You have brought the reputation of a
good and proven comrade into question. She has answered your charges
fully and still you persist. Such, one might argue, is your duty as a
brother. But do not add insolence to the list of things against you." Edel
stood. His voice boomed, echoing in the dark and empty space. "So
it's wrong to want justice, is it? Wrong to want to unmask
this murdering bitch?" His
finger pointed unerringly across the circle at Ywe Hao, who kept her
head lowered, the lamplight shining in the crown of her dark, neat
hair. This tableau held for a moment, then without another word, Edel
sat back again, putting his trembling hands on his knees. From the
fierce look of hatred in his eyes there was no doubting he believed
what he said. "Chi
Li?" asked the woman, looking at her. "You stand by your
account?" Ywe
Hao looked up, the lamp's light catching in her dark, liquid eyes.
"Vasska was a fool. Erika and I barely got out alive. There was
a patrol at the elevator he should have secured. We had to shoot our
way out. Erika was badly wounded. These are facts. If I could, I
would have killed him for that. For risking others' lives. But I
didn't. Shou Chen-hai killed him. Killed him before I could get to
him." So ran
the official Security report, given to the media. Edel had done
nothing, provided nothing, to seriously counter this. His evidence
was rumor, hearsay, the kind of romantic legend that often attached
itself to this kind of event. The Five made their decision and gave
it. "I
find no case proven," said Mach, standing. "You must
apologize, Edel, or leave the Yu. That is our law." Edel
also stood, but there was no apology. Instead he leaned forward and
spat across the lamp at Ywe Hao. It fell short, but at once Veda, the
female Council member, stepped forward and pushed Edel back. She
spoke quickly, harshly now. "That's it. You have proved that
there's no place for you here. Go! And remember. Say nothing. Do
nothing to harm the Yu. The merest word and we shall hear of it. And
then . . ." She raised one finger to her throat and drew it
across. "So be silent, and go." Sullenly,
glaring back at Ywe Hao, Edel left the circle and walked slowly
across the factory floor, stopping only in the brightness of the
doorway at the far end to look back, as if to say it wasn't over yet. When
he'd gone, Mach signaled to one of the men at his side to follow
Edel. "Best do it now, Klaus. Veda's warning will have no effect
on him. He is past reasoning." The
man nodded, then ran across the dark floor, following Edel, his knife
already drawn. Mach turned, facing Ywe Hao. "I'm
sorry, Chi Li. This has been a sad day for us all." But
Ywe Hao was watching the man disappear in pursuit of Edel and asking
herself if her lie had been worth the life of another man; if this
baiter, his life for hers, could in any way be justified. And as if
in answer, she saw Leyden again, standing there, terrified, facing
Edel's brother, the man she had only known as Vasska, and knew she
had been right to spare the guard and kill her comrade. As right as
she had been in killing Shou Chen-hai. The
woman Veda came and stood by her, taking her hand, her words soft,
comforting. "It's all right, Chi Li. It wasn't your fault." But
the thing was, she had enjoyed killing Vasska. Had wanted to kill
him. And ^nd^dMat:±ngc.ose, turn,, her
to face him, "I have another task for you Ve's a place the
younger sons use. A place called the Dragonfly Club . . ."
CHAPTER
SIXTEEN Dragonflies THE
PAVILION of Elegant Sound rested on a great spur of pale rock, the
delicately carved tips of its six sweeping gables spread out like the
arms of white-robed giants raised in supplication to Heaven. To
either side, twin bridges spanned the ravine, the ancient wood of the
handrails worn smooth like polished jade by a million pilgrims'
hands. A
dark, lush greenery covered the flank of Mount Emei surrounding the
ancient building, filtering the early morning sunlight; while below,
long, twisted limbs of rock reached down to a shadowed gorge, their
dark, eroded forms slick with the spray of the two tiny falls that
met in a frenzy of mist and whiteness at their foot. Farther out, a
great heart-shaped rock, as black as night itself, sat peacefully
amid the chill, crystal-clear flow. Standing
at the low wooden balustrade, Li Yuan looked down into the waters.
For more than a thousand years travelers had stopped here on their
long journey up the sacred mountain, to rest and contemplate the
perfection of this place. Here two rivers met, the black dragon
merging with the white, forming a swirl of dark and light—a
perfect, natural tai ch'i. He
turned and looked across at his host. Tsu Ma stood by the table on
the far side of the pavilion, pouring wine. They were alone here, the
nearest servants five hundred ch'i distant, guarding the
approaches. From the gorge below came the melodious sound of the
falls, from the trees surrounding them the sweet, fluting calls of
wild birds. Li Yuan breathed in deeply, inhaling the heady scent of
pine and cypress, cinnamon and paulownia, that filled the air. It was
beautiful: a place of perfect harmony and repose. He smiled. It was
like Tsu Ma to choose such a place for their meeting. Tsu Ma
came across, handing Li Yuan one of the cups. For a moment he stood
there, looking out past Li Yuan at the beauty of the gorge, then
turned to face him, placing a hand lightly on his shoulder. "Life
is good, neh, Yuan?" Li
Yuan's smile broadened. "Here one might dream of an older,
simpler age." Tsu Ma
grunted. "Things have never been simple for those who have to
rule. Some problems are eternal, neh? Why, it is said that even the
great Hung Wu, founder of the Ming Dynasty, slept poorly at night.
Population pressures, famines, civil unrest, the corruption of
ministers, court intrigues, the ambitions of rivals— these were
as much his problems as they are ours. Nor was he much more
successful at solving them." Li
Yuan frowned. "Then you think we should do nothing?" "On
the contrary. As T'ang, it is our purpose in this life to attempt the
impossible—to try to impose some kind of order on the chaos of
this world. There would be no justification for our existence were it
not so. And where would we be then?" Li
Yuan laughed, then took a sip of the pale yellow wine, growing
serious again. "And in Council tomorrow? How are we to play
that?" Tsu Ma
smiled. Tomorrow's was an important meeting; perhaps the most
important since Li Shai Tung's death nine months earlier. "With
regard to GenSyn, I think you are right, Yuan. Wang Sau-leyan's
proposal must be opposed. His idea of a governing committee of
seven—one member appointed by each T'ang—while fair in
principle, would prove unworkable in practice. Wang's appointment
would be but a front for his own guiding hand. He would seize upon
the slightest excuse— the most petty of internal divisions on
policy—to use his veto. It would have the effect of closing
GenSyn down; and as few of GenSyn's facilities are based in City
Africa, our cousin would escape relatively unscathed, while you would
be harmed greatly. Which is why I shall support your counterproposal
of a single independent stewardship." "And
my candidate?" Tsu Ma
smiled. "I can see no reason why Wang should object to Wei
Feng's man Sheng, taking charge. No. It's the perfect choice. Wang
would not dare suggest that Minister Sheng is unsuited for the post."
He laughed, delighted. "Why, i would be tantamount to a slur on
Sheng's master, the T'ang of East Asia! And even our moon-faced
cousin would not dare risk that." Li
Yuan joined in Tsu Ma's laughter, but deep down he was not so sure.
Wang Sau-leyan made much of his power to offend. His sense of
Hsiao—of filial submission—was weak. If the man had
dared to have his father killed, his brother driven to suicide,
what else might he not do? And yet the question of GenSyn was the
least of the items that were to be discussed. As Tsu Ma knew, Li Yuan
was prepared to concede ground in this instance if Wang in his turn
would give way on more important matters. "Do
you think the balance of Council will be against us on the other
measures?" Tsu Ma
stared into his cup, then shrugged. "It is hard to say. I have
tried to sound Wu Shih and Wei Feng on the question of the proposed
changes, but they have been strangely reticent. On any other
matter—even the reopening of the House— I think we could
guarantee their support, but on this I am afraid they see things
differently." Li
Yuan huffed, exasperated. Without those concessions provided by the
changes to the Edict and the reopening of the House, there was no
chance of striking a deal with the Above over population controls.
The three items worked as a package or not at all. The Edict changes
were the sweetener in the package, creating new prosperity and new
opportunity for the merchant classes; whereas the reopening of the
House would not only satisfy the growing call for proper
representation of the Above in government but also provide the
vehicle for the passage of new laws. Laws controlling the number of
children a man might have. Laws that the Seven might find it
difficult to implement without Above support. Tsu Ma
looked at Yuan ruefully, knowing what he was thinking. "And the
perversity of it is that Wang Sau-leyan will oppose us not because he
disagrees— after all, he has made it quite clear that he would
like to see changes to the Edict, the House reopened—but
because it is his will to oppose us." Li
Yuan nodded. "Maybe so. But there is something else, Cousin Ma.
Something I have not mentioned before now." Tsu Ma
smiled, intrigued, conscious of a darker tone in Yuan's voice. "Which
is?" Li
Yuan laughed quietly, but his expression was somber, almost
regretful. "First fill my cup, then I will tell you a tale about
a nobleman and a T'ang and a scheme they have hatched to make all
plans of mine mere idle talk." IT WAS
ALL much dirtier than she remembered it. Dirtier and more crowded.
Ywe Hao stood there, her back to the barrier, and breathed out
slowly. Two boys, no taller than her knee, stood beside her, looking
up at her. Their faces were black with dirt, their heads covered in
sores and stubble. Their small hands were held up to her, palms open,
begging. They said nothing, but their eyes were eloquent. Even so,
she shooed them from her, knowing that to feed two would bring a
hundred more. Main
had become a kind of encampment. The shops she remembered from her
childhood had been turned into sleeping quarters, their empty fronts
covered with sheets. There were crude stalls in Main now, though what
they sold seemed barely worth selling. There was rubbish everywhere,
and the plain, clean walls she had glimpsed in memory were covered
with graffiti and posters for a hundred different political
groupings. And sometimes the symbol of a fish, done in blood-red
spray paint. Everything
stank here. Urchins with shaved heads ran about between the milling
adults. As she watched, an old woman pushed an empty soup-cart back
toward the elevators. Loose wiring hung from its empty undercarriage
and a worn sign on its scratched and battered side showed it had been
donated by one of the big Above companies. There
was no sign anywhere of Security, but there were other groupings
here. Men wearing armbands and looking better fed than the others,
stood at the intersections and about Main itself, wielding
ugly-looking clubs. Against the walls families huddled or lay, mother
and father on the outside, children between. These last were mainly
Han. They called them "little t'ang" down here, the irony
quite savage, for these t'ang had nothing—only the handouts
from Above. And an unfair share of that. It had
been only eight years since she had come from here. How could it have
changed so much in that brief time? Ywe
Hao pushed across Main, jostled by surly, ill-featured men who looked
at her with undisguised calculation. She glared back threateningly.
On the far side one of them came across and took her arm. She shook
herself free, reached out with a quicksilver movement that surprised
him, and held him beneath the chin, pushing his head back firmly.
"Don't. . ." she warned as she pushed him away. He backed
off respectfully, understanding what she was. Others saw it too, and
a whisper went out, but she was gone by then, down a side corridor
that, unlike the rest, seemed little changed. At the far end was her
mother's place. The
room was squalid. Three families were huddled into it. She knew none
of them. Angry, worried, she came out into the corridor and stood
there, her heart pounding. She hadn't thought. . . . From
across the corridor an old man called to her. "Is that you, Ywe
Hao? Is that really you?" She
laughed and went across, stepping over a child crawling in the
corridor. On either side people were watching her, standing in
doorways or out in the corridor itself. There was no privacy anywhere
down here. It was
her Uncle Chang. Her mother's brother. She went to him and held him
tightly to her, so glad to see him that for the moment she forgot
they had parted badly. "Come
in, girl! Come in out of the way!" He looked past her almost
haughtily at the watching faces, sniffing loudly before ushering her
inside and sliding back the panel. It was
quieter inside. While her uncle crouched at the kang, preparing
ch'a, she looked about her. Most of the floor was taken up by three
bedrolls, made neatly, tidily. To her left, beside the door panel,
was a small table containing holos and 2-D's of the family. In a
saucer in front of them was the stub of a burnt candle. The room
smelled of cheap incense. "Where's
Mother?" she asked, seeing her presence everywhere. Her
uncle looked around at her and smiled. "At market. With Su
Chen." "Su
Chen?" He
looked away, embarrassed. "My wife," he said. "Didn't
you hear?" She
almost laughed. Hear? How would she hear? For years she hadn't known
a thing. Had lived in fear of anyone finding out anything about them.
But she had never stopped thinking of them. Wondering how they were. "And
how is she?" "Older,"
he answered distractedly, then grunted his satisfaction at getting
the kang to work. Ywe Hao could see he did little here. There
was a Vid unit in the corner, but it was dead. She looked at it, then
back at him, wondering how he filled his days. She
had been right to get out. It was like death here. Like slow
suffocation. The thought brought back the memory of the last time she
had been here. The argument. She turned her face away, gritting her
teeth. How could they live like this? The
tiny silver fish hung on a chain about her neck, resting between her
breasts, its metal cool against her flesh. It was like a talisman
against this place; the promise of something better. And though it
was foolish to wear it, she could not have faced this place without
it. Her
uncle finished pottering about and sat back on the edge of the
nearest bedroll. "So how are you?" His eyes looked her up
and down. Weak, watery eyes, watching her from an old man's face. He
had been younger, stronger, when she'd last seen him, but the
expression in the eyes was no different. They wanted things. He was
a weak man, and his weakness made him spiteful. She had lived out her
childhood avoiding his spitefulness; avoiding the wanting in his
eyes. From his pettiness she had forged her inner strength. "I'm
fine," she said. And what else? That she was an expert killer
now? One of the most wanted people in the City? "No
man? No children, then?" Again
she wanted to laugh at him. He had never understood. But something of
her contempt must have shown in her face, for he looked away, hurt. "No.
No man. No children," she said, after a moment. "Only
myself." She
moved away from the door and crouched beside the table, studying the
small collection of portraits. There was one of her, younger, almost
unrecognizably younger, there beside her dead brother. "I
thought Mother didn't need this." Her
uncle breathed out deeply. "She gets comfort from it. You'd not
deny her that, surely?" There
was a holo of her father; one she had never seen before. No doubt her
mother had bought the image from the public records. There was a file
date at the foot of it that told her the holo had been made almost
eight years before she had been born. He would have been—what?—twenty
then. She shivered and straightened up, then turned, looking down at
her uncle. "Do you need money?" She
saw at once that she had been too direct. He avoided her eyes, but
there was a curious tenseness in him that told her he had been
thinking of little else since she'd shown up. But to admit it... that
was something different. He was still her uncle. In his head she was
still a little girl, dependent on him. He shrugged, not meeting her
eyes. "Maybe ... It would be nice to get a few things." She
was about to say something more when the panel behind her slid back
and her mother stepped into the room, a middle-aged Han female close
behind her. "Chang,
I—" The
old woman paused, then turned to face Ywe Hao, confused. At first it
didn't register; then with what seemed a complete transformation, her
face lit up. She dropped the package she was carrying and opened her
arms wide. "Hao! My little Hao!" Ywe
Hao laughed and hugged her mother tightly, having to stoop to do so.
She had forgotten how small her mother was. "Mama . . ."
she said, looking into her eyes and laughing again. "How have
you been?" "How
have I been?" The old lady shook her head. Her eyes were
brimming with tears and she was trembling with emotion. "Oh,
dear gods, Hao, it's so good to see you. All these years. . ."
There was a little sob, then with another laugh and a sniff, she
pointed to the beds. "Sit down. I'll cook you something. You
must be hungry." Ywe
Hao laughed, but did as she was told, squatting beside her uncle on
the bedroll. From the doorway Su Chen, unintroduced, looked on,
bewildered. But no one thought to explain things to her. After a
while she pulled the door closed and sat on the far side of her
husband. Meanwhile, the old lady pottered at the kang, turning
every now and then to glance at her daughter, wiping her eyes before
turning back, laughing softly to herself. Later,
after eating, they sat and talked. Of things that had happened long
ago, in her childhood; of happier, simpler times, when it had seemed
enough simply to be alive. And if their talk steered a course about
the darker things—those great unmentionables that lay like
jagged rocks in the flow of time—that was understandable, for
why destroy the moment's happiness? Why darken the waters with the
stain of ancient agonies? For a
time, it seemed almost as though the long years of parting had not
happened; that this day and the last were stitched together like
points on a folded cloth. But when, finally, she left them, promising
to return, she knew at last that there was no returning. She had gone
beyond this, to a place where even a mother's love could not keep
her. Looking
back at Main she saw the changes everywhere. Time had injured this
place, and there seemed no way to heal it. Best then to tear it down.
Level by level. Maybe then they would have a chance. Once they had
rid themselves of Cities. Shivering,
more alone now than she had been for many years, she turned from it
and stepped into the transit, going up, away from her past. the
DARK, heart-shaped ROCK was embedded deep in the earth beneath the
pool, like the last tooth in an ancient's jaw. Its surface was scored
and pitted, darker in places than in others, its long flank, where it
faced the Pavilion, smoother than those that faced away; like a dark,
polished glass, misted by the spray from the tiny falls. At its foot
the cold, clear waters of the pool swirled lazily over an uneven
surface of rock, converting the white-water turbulence of the two
rivers' convergence into a single, placid flow. From
the rock one could see the two figures in the Pavilion; might note
their gestures and hear the murmur of their words beneath the hiss
and rush of the falling water. Tsu Ma was talking now, his hand
moving to his mouth every so often, a thin thread of dark smoke
rising in the air. He seemed intensely agitated, angered even, and
his voice rose momentarily, carrying over the sound of the falls. "It
is all very well knowing, Yuan, but how will you get proof? If
this is true, it is most serious. Wang Sau-leyan must be called to
account for this. His conduct is outrageous! Unacceptable!" Li
Yuan turned to face his fellow T'ang. "No, Cousin Ma. Think what
damage it would do to confront Wang openly with this matter. At best
he might be forced to abdicate, and that would leave us with the
problem of a successor—a problem that would make the GenSyn
inheritance question a mere trifle, and the gods know that is proving
hard enough! At worst he might defy us. If he did, and Hou Tung-po
and Chi Hsing backed him, we could find ourselves at war among
ourselves." "That
cannot be." "No.
But for once the threat to expose Wang might prove more potent than
the actuality. If so, we might still use this to our benefit." Tsu Ma
sniffed. "You mean, as a bargaining counter?" Li
Yuan laughed; a hard, clear laughter. "Nothing so subtle. I mean
we blackmail the bastard. Force him to give us what we want." "And
if he won't?" "He
will. Like us all, he enjoys being a T'ang. Besides, he knows he is
too weak, his friends in Council unprepared for such a war. Oh, he
will fight if we push him to it, but only if he must. Meanwhile he
plays his games and bides his time, hoping to profit from our
failures, to build his strength while eroding ours. But this once he
has overstretched himself. This once we have him." Tsu Ma
nodded. "Good! But how do you plan to use this knowledge?" Li
Yuan looked outward, his face hardening to a frown of concentration.
"First we must let things take their course. Hsiang Shao-erh
meets with our cousin Wang on his estate in Tao Yuan an hour from
now. My friend in Wang's household will be there at that meeting. By
tonight I will know what transpired. And tomorrow, after Council, we
can confront Wang Sau-leyan with what we know. That is, if we need
to. If we haven't already achieved what we want by other, more direct
means." "And
your. . . friend? Will he be safe? Don't you think Wang might suspect
there is a spy in his household?" Li
Yuan laughed. "That is the clever part. I have arranged to have
Hsiang Shao-erh arrested on his return home. It will seem as if he
had . . . volunteered the information. As, indeed, he will." Tsu Ma
nodded thoughtfully. "Good. Then let us get back. All this
talking has given me an appetite." Li
Yuan smiled, then looked about him, conscious once more of the beauty
of the shadowed gorge, the harmony of tree and rock and water. And
yet that beauty was somehow insufficient. It wasn't enough to set his
soul at peace. Too much was happening inside. No. He could not break
the habit of his being; could not free himself from the turmoil of
his thoughts and let himself lapse into the beauty of the day. He
grasped the smooth wood of the rail, looking out at the great
heart-shaped rock that rested, so solid and substantial, at the
center of the flow, and felt a tiny tremor pass through him. This
place, the morning light, gave him a sense of great peace, of oneness
with things, and yet, at the same time, he was filled with a seething
mass of fears and expectations and hopes. And these, coursing like
twin streams in his blood, made him feel odd, distanced from himself.
To be so at rest and yet to feel such impatience, was that not
strange? And yet, was that not the condition of all things? Was that
not what the great Tao taught? Maybe, but it was rare to feel it so
intensely in the blood. Like a
dragonfly hovering above the surface of a stream. Tsu Ma
was watching him from the bridge. "Yuan? Are you coming?" Li
Yuan turned, momentarily abstracted from the scene, then with the
vaguest nod, he moved from the rail, following his friend. And
maybe peace never came. Maybe, like life, it was all illusion, as the
ancient Buddhists claimed. Or maybe it was himself. Maybe it was his
own life that was out of balance. On the bridge he turned, looking
back, seeing how the great swirl of white drifted out into the black,
how its violent energy was stilled and channeled by the rock. Then
he turned back, walking on through the shadow of the trees, the dark
image of the rock embedded at the center of his thoughts. IT was
midday and the sky over Northern Hunan was the cloudless blue of
early spring. In the garden of the palace at Tao Yuan, Wang Sau-leyan
sat on a tall throne, indolently picking from the bowls of delicacies
on the table at his side while he listened to the man who stood, head
bowed, before him. The
throne was mounted on an ancient sedan, the long arms carved like
rearing dragons, the thick base shaped like a map of the ancient
Middle Kingdom, back before the world had changed. Wang had had them
set him down at the very heart of the garden, the elegant whiteness
of the three-tiered Pagoda of Profound Significance to his right, the
stream, with its eight gently arching bridges, partly concealed
beyond a stand of ancient junipers to his left. To one
side Sun Li Hua, newly promoted to Master of the Royal Household,
stood in the shadow of the junipers, his arms folded into his
powder-blue sleeves, his head lowered, waiting to do his Master's
bidding. The
man who stood before Wang was a tall, elegant-looking Han in his
mid-fifties. He was wearing expensive dark-green silks embroidered
with flowers and butterflies; unfashionable, traditional clothes
that revealed he was of the Twenty-Nine, the Minor Families. His name
was Hsiang Shao-erh and he was Head of the Hsiang Family of City
Europe, Li Yuan's bondsman—his blood vassal. But today he was
here, speaking to his Master's enemy. Offering him friendship. And
more . . . For an
hour Hsiang had prevaricated; had talked of many things, but never of
the one thing he had come to raise. Now, tiring of his polite
evasions, Wang Sau-leyan looked up, wiping his fingers on a square of
bright red silk as he spoke. "Yes,
Cousin, but why are you here? What do you want from me?" For
the second time that day Hsiang was taken aback. Earlier he had been
terribly put out when Wang had invited him outdoors to talk. His
mouth had flapped uselessly, trying to find the words that would not
offend the T'ang; that might make clear this was a matter best
discussed behind closed doors or not at all. But Wang had insisted
and Hsiang had had to bow his head and follow, concealing his
discomfort. Now,
however, Hsiang was feeling much more than simple discomfort. He
glanced up, then looked away, troubled by Wang Sau-leyan's
directness. For him this was a major step. Once taken, it could not
be reversed. Even to be here today was a kind of betrayal. But this
next. . . With a
tiny shudder, Hsiang came to the point. "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia, but I am here because I can do you a great
service." He lifted his head slightly, meeting Wang's eyes
tentatively. "There is one we both . . . dislike immensely. One
who has offended us gravely. He ..." Wang
raised an eyebrow, then reached across and took another slice of the
sickly scented durian, chewing it noisily. «„,„ "Go
on, Hsiang Shao-erh . . ." Hsiang
looked down. "You know what happened, Chieh Hsia?" Wang
nodded, a faint smile on his lips. He did indeed. And, strangely
enough, it was one of the few things he actually admired Li Yuan for.
Faced with similar circumstances—with an outbreak of a deadly
strain of syphilis—he would have acted exactly as Li Yuan had
done, even to the point of offending his own Family Heads. But that
was not the issue. Hsiang Shao-erh was here because—quite
rightly—he assumed Wang hated Li Yuan as much as he did. But
though Hsiang's loss efface before his peers had been a great thing,
it was as nothing beside this act of betrayal. Hsiang
looked up, steeling himself, his voice hardening as he recalled his
humiliation; his anger momentarily overcoming the fear he felt. "Then
you understand why I am here, Chieh Hsia." Wang's
smile broadened. He shook his head. "You will have to be less
opaque, Cousin. You talk of one who has offended us both. Can you be
more specific?" Hsiang
was staring at him now. But Wang merely turned aside, picking a
lychee from one of the bowls and chewing leisurely at the soft, moist
fruit before looking back at Hsiang. "Well?" Hsiang
shook his head slightly, as if waking, then stammered his answer. "Li
Yuan. I mean Li Yuan." "Ah
. . ." Wang nodded. "But I still don't follow you, Cousin.
You said there was some great service you could do me." Hsiang's
head fell. He had clearly not expected it to be so hard. For a time
he seemed to struggle against some inner demon, then he straightened,
pushing out his chest exaggeratedly, his eyes meeting Wang's. "We
are tied, you and I. Tied by our hatred of this man. There must be
some way of using that hatred, surely?" Wang's
eyes narrowed slightly. "It is true. I dislike my cousin. Hatred
may be too strong a word, but. . ." He leaned forward, spitting
out the seeds. "Well, let me put it bluntly, Hsiang Shao-erh. Li
Yuan is a T'ang. Your T'ang, to be more accurate. My equal and your
Master. So what are you suggesting?" It
could not have been put more explicitly, and Wang could see how
Hsiang's eyes widened fearfully before he looked down again. Wang
reached out and took another fruit, waiting, enjoying the moment.
Would Hsiang dare take the next step, or would he draw back? "I
. . ." Hsiang shuddered, his unease showing in the way his body
swayed, his hands pulled at the silk over his thighs. Then, after
another titanic inner struggle, he looked up again. "There
is a substance I have heard of. An illegal substance that was
developed, I am told, in the laboratories of SimFic." "A
substance?" la
Hsiang moved his head uncomfortably. "Yes, Chieh Hsia.
Something that destroys the female's ability to produce eggs." "Ah
. . ." Wang sat back, staring up into the blueness. "And
this substance? You have it, I take it?" Hsiang
shook his head. "No, Chieh Hsia. As I understand, it was
taken in a raid on one of Shih Berdichev's establishments.
Your late father's Security forces undertook that raid, I believe,
yet the substance—" "Was
destroyed, I should think," Wang said brusquely. "But tell
me, Cousin. Had it existed—had there been some of this
substance remaining, held, perhaps illegally, in defiance of the
Edict—what would you have done with it?" Again
it was too direct. Again Hsiang shied back like a frightened horse.
Yet the desire for revenge—that burning need in him to reverse
the humiliation he had suffered at Li Yuan's hands—drove him
on, overcoming his fear. He spoke quickly, nervously, forcing the
words out before his courage failed. "I
plan to hold a party, Chieh Hsia. In celebration of Li Yuan's
official twentieth birthday. He will accept, naturally, and his wives
will accompany him, as they do to all such functions. It is there
that I will administer this substance to his wives." Wang
Sau-leyan had been sitting forward, listening attentively. Now he sat
back, laughing. "You mean, they will sit there calmly while you
spoon it down their throats?" Hsiang
shook his head irritably. "No, Chieh Hsia. I... The
substance will be in their drinks." "Oh,
of course!" Wang let out another burst of laughter. "And
the she t'ou, the official taster—what will he have been
doing all this while?" Hsiang
looked down, biting back his obvious anger at Wang Sau-leyan's
mockery. "I am told this substance is tasteless, Chieh Hsia.
That even a she t'ou would be unable to detect any trace
of its presence." Wang
sniffed deeply, calming himself, then sat forward, suddenly more
conciliatory. He looked across at Sun Li Hua, then back at Hsiang
Shao-erh, smiling. "Let
me make this absolutely clear, Hsiang Shao-erh. What you are
suggesting is that I provide you with a special substance—an
illegal substance—that you will then administer secretly to Li
Yuan's three wives. A substance that will prevent them from
ovulating." Hsiang
swallowed deeply, then nodded. "That is it, Chieh Hsia." "And
if our young friend marries again?" Hsiang
laughed uneasily. "Chieh Hsia7." "If
Li Yuan casts off these three and marries again?" Hsiang's
mouth worked uselessly. Wang
shook his head. "No matter. In the short term your scheme will
deny Li Yuan sons. Will kill them even before they are born, neh?" Hsiang
shuddered. "As he killed mine, Chieh Hsia." It was
not strictly true. Hsiang's sons had killed themselves. Or, at least,
had fallen ill from the yang mei ping—the willow-plum
sickness—that had spread among the Minor Families after the
entertainment at Hsiang's estate. If Li Yuan had helped Hsiang's sons
end their worthless lives a few days earlier than otherwise, that was
more to his credit than to theirs. They had been fated anyway. Their
deaths had saved others' lives. But Wang was unconcerned with such
sophistry. All that concerned him was how he might use this to his
benefit. Hsiang's sense of humiliation, more than the death of his
sons, drove him now. It made him useful, almost the perfect means of
getting back at Li Yuan. Almost. Wang
Sau-leyan leaned forward, thrusting out his right hand, the
matte-black surface of the Yu>e Lung, the ring of power, sitting
like a saddle on the index finger. Hsiang
stared at it a moment, not understanding, then, meeting Wang's eyes,
he quickly knelt, drawing the ring to his lips and kissing it once,
twice, a third time before he released it, his head remaining bowed
before the T'ang of Africa. KARR
HAD WASHED and put on a fresh uniform for the meeting. He turned from
the sink and looked across. Marie was in the other room, standing
before the full-length mirror. In the lamp's light her skin was a
pale ivory, the long line of her 1 backbone prominent as she leaned
forward.
7 For a
moment he was perfectly still, watching her, a tiny thrill of delight
rippling through him. She was so strong, so perfectly formed. He felt
his flesh stir and gave a soft laugh, going across. He
closed his eyes, embracing her from behind, the warm softness of her
skin, that sense of silk over steel, intoxicating. She turned,
folding into his arms, her face coming up to meet his in a kiss. "You
must go," she said, smiling. "Must
I?" "Yes,
you must. Besides, haven't you had enough?" He
shook his head, his smile broadening. "No. But you're right. I
must go. There's much to be done." Her
smile changed to a look of concern. "You should have slept. . ." He
laughed. "And you'd have let me?" She
shook her head. "No.
And nor could I with you beside me." "The
time will come ..." He
laughed. "Maybe. I can't imagine it, but. . . She
lifted her hand. "Here." He
took the two pills from her and swallowed them down. They would keep
him awake, alert, for another twelve to fifteen hours—long
enough to get things done. Then he could sleep. If she'd let him. "Is
it important?" Marie asked, a note of curiosity creeping into
her voice. "It
is the T'ang's business," he answered cryptically, stone-faced,
then laughed. "You must learn patience, my love. There are
things I have to do ... well, they're not always pleasant." She
put a finger to his lips. "I understand. Now go. I'll be here,
waiting, when you get back." He
stood back from her, at arm's length, his hands kneading her
shoulders gently, then bent forward, kissing her breasts. "Until
then . . ." She
shivered, then came close again, going up on tiptoe to kiss the
bridge of his nose. "Take care, my love, whatever it is." "Okay,
Major Karr. You can take off the blindfold." Karr
removed the green silk headband and looked about him, surprised.
"Where are we? First Level?" The
servant lowered his head respectfully, but there was a smile on his
face. He was too wary, too experienced in his Master's service, to be
caught by such a blatant attempt to elicit information, but he was
also aware that, blindfolded as he was, Karr knew he had been taken
down the levels, not up. "If
you would follow me . . ." Karr
smiled and followed, taken aback by the elegance of the rooms through
which they passed. He had not thought such luxury existed here just
above the Net, but it was not really that surprising. He had read the
report on the United Bamboo; had seen the financial estimates for the
last five years. With an annual turnover of one hundred and fifteen
billion yuan, Fat Wong, the big boss of United Bamboo, could
afford luxuries like these. Even so, it was unexpected to find them
in such a setting. Like finding an oasis on Mars. It was
nothing like the palace of a T'ang, of course; even so, there was
something impressive about this place, if only that it was set amid
such squalor. Karr
looked down, noting that the floor mosaic mirrored that of the
ceiling overhead. Nine long, thick canes of bamboo were gripped by a
single, giant hand, the ivory yellow of the canes and the hand
contrasted against the brilliant emerald green of a paddy field. Karr
smiled, thinking of how often he had seen that symbol, on the
headbands of dead runners trapped in Security ambushes, or on the
packaging of illicitly smuggled goods that had made their way up from
the Net. And now he was to meet the head behind that grasping
hand—the 489 himself. The servant had stopped. Now he turned,
facing Karr again, and bowed deeply. "Forgive me, Major Karr,
but I must leave you here. If you would go through, my Master will be
with you in a while." Karr
went through, past a comfortably furnished anteroom and out into a
long, spacious gallery with a moon door at each end. Here, on the
facing walls, were displayed the banners of the thirty or more minor
Triads that the United Bamboo had conquered or assimilated over the
centuries. Karr made his way down the row, stopping at the last of
the banners. He
reached up, touching the ancient silk gently, delicately, conscious
that it was much older than the others hanging there. The peacock
blue of the banner had faded, but the golden triangle at its center
still held something of its former glory. In the blue beside each
face of the triangle was embroidered a Han word, the original red of
the pictograms transformed by time into a dull mauvish-brown, like
ancient bloodstains. He gave a little shudder, then offered the words
softly to the air. "Tian.
Nan Jen. Tu." Heaven.
Man. Earth. He turned, meaning to study the banners on the other
wall, then stopped, noticing the figure that stood inside the moon
door at the far end of the gallery. "You
walk quietly, Wong Yi-sun. Like a bird." Fat
Wong smiled, then came forward, his cloth-clad feet making no sound
on the tiles. "I
am delighted to meet you, Major Karr. Your reputation precedes you." Karr
bowed, then looked up again, noting how the smile remained even as
Wong's eyes looked him up and down, assessing him. Contrary
to public expectations, Fat Wong was not fat at all. Quite the
contrary—he was a compact, wiry-looking man, who in his peach
silks and bound white feet looked more like a successful First Level
businessman than the reputedly savage leader of one of the seven
biggest Triads in City Europe. Karr had read the file and seen holos
of Wong; even so, he found himself unprepared for the soft-spokenness
of the man, for the air of sophistication that seemed to emanate from
him. "1
am honored that you would see me, Wong Yi-sun. A thousand blessings
upon your sons." "And
yours, Major. I understand you are recently married. A fine, strong
woman, I am told." Wong's smile broadened. "I am happy for
you. Give her my best regards. A man needs a strong wife in these
unhappy times, neh?" Karr
bowed his head. "Thank you, Wong Yi-sun. I will pass on your
kind words." Fat Wong smiled and let his eyes move from Karr's
figure for the first time since he had entered the room. Released
from his gaze, Karr had a better opportunity of studying the man.
Seen side-on, one began to notice those qualities that had made Wong
Yi-sun a 489. There was a certain sharpness to his features, a
restrained tautness, that equated with reports on him. When he was
younger, it was said, he had gone into a rival's bedroom and cut off
the man's head with a hatchet, even as he was making love to his
wife, then had taken the woman for his own. Later, he had taken the
name Fat Wong, because, he claimed, the world was a place where worm
ate worm, and only the biggest, fattest worm came out on top. From
then on he had worked day and night to be that worm—to be the
fattest of them all. And now he was. Or almost. "I
noticed you were admiring the ancient silk, Major. Do you know the
history of the banner?" Karr
smiled. "I have heard something of your history, Wong Yi-sun,
but of that banner I am quite ignorant. It looks very old." Wong
moved past Karr, standing beneath the banner, then turned, smiling up
at the big man. "It
is indeed. More than four hundred years old, in fact. You say you
know our history, Major Karr, but did you realize just how old we
are? Before the City was, we were. When the City no longer is, we
shall remain." Wong's
smile broadened, and Karr, watching him, remembered what Novacek had
told him—that the higher officials of the Triads never
smiled in the company of strangers—and felt wrong-footed
once more. Wong
Yi-sun moved down the row of banners, then turned, facing Karr again. "People
call us criminals. They say we seek to destroy the social fabric of
Chung Kuo, but they lie. Our roots are deep. We were founded in the
late seventeenth century by the five monks of the Fu Chou
monastery—honorable, loyal men, whose only desire was to
overthrow the Ch'ing, the Manchu, and replace them with the rightful
rulers of Chung Kuo, the Ming. Such was our purpose for a hundred
years. Before the Manchu drove us underground, persecuting our
members and cutting dff our resources. After that we were left with
no choice. We had to improvise." Karr
smiled inwardly. Improvise. It was a wonderfully subtle
euphemism for the crudest of businesses: the business of murder and
prostitution, gambling, drugs, and protection. "So
you see, Major Karr. We have always been loyal to the traditions of
Chung Kuo. Which is why we are always pleased to do business with the
Seven. We are not their enemies, you understand. All we wish for is
to maintain order in those lawless regions that have escaped the long
grasp of the T'ang." "And
the banner?" Fat
Wong smiled, then lowered his head slightly. "The banner comes
from Fu Chou monastery. It is the great ancestor of all such banners.
And whoever leads the Great Council holds the banner." Wong's
smile tightened. "And
you. . ." But it didn't need to be said. Karr understood. But
why had Wong told him? Not, surely, to impress him. Unless . . . Wong
turned slightly, his stance suggesting that Karr should join him.
Kan-hesitated, then went across, his mind racing. Fat Wong wanted
something. Something big. But to ask for help directly was
impossible for Wong: for to admit to any weakness—to admit that
there was something, anything, beyond his grasp—would involve
him in an enormous loss of face. And face was everything down here.
As Above. Karr
shivered, filled with a sudden certainty. Yes. Something was
happening down here. In that veiled allusion to the Triad Council and
the banner, Fat Wong had revealed more than he'd intended. Karr
looked at him in profile and knew he was right. Fat Wong was under
pressure. But from whom? From inside his own Triad, or from
without—from another of the 4895? Whichever, he had seized this
opportunity to broach the matter—to approach it subtly, without
having to ask directly. But
what precisely was going on? Wong
looked back at the banners, then with the briefest smile, moved on.
"Come, Major," he said. "We have much to say and it is
far more comfortable within." He
followed Wong through, up a broad flight of steps and out into a
huge, subtly lit room. Steps
led down into a sunken garden, at the center of which was a tiny,
circular pool. Within the pool seven golden fish seemed to float, as
if suspended in glass. But the garden and the pool were not the most
striking things about the room, for the eye was drawn beyond them to
where one whole wall—a wall fifty ch'i in length, ten in
height—seemed to look out onto the West Lake at Hang Chou,
providing a panoramic view of its pale, lacelike bridges and pagodas,
its willow-strewn islands and ancient temples. Here it was
perpetually spring, the scent of jasmine and apple blossom heavy in
the cool, moist air. From
somewhere distant, music sounded, carried on the breeze that blew
gently through the room. For a moment the illusion was so perfect
that Karr held himself still, enthralled by it. Then, realizing Wong
was watching him, he went down the steps and stood at the edge of the
pool. "You
know why 1 have come here, Wong Yi-sun?" "I
understand you want some information. About the Ko Ming who
assassinated the Hsien Ling." "We
thought you might know something about this group—for instance,
whether or not they were related to the Ping Tiao." "Because
they share the same symbol?" Wong sniffed, his face suddenly
ugly. "1 don't know what your investigations have thrown up,
Major Karr, but let me tell you this, the Hsien L'ing was meddling in
things he ought never to have been involved in." Karr
kept his face a mask, but behind it he felt an intense curiosity.
What was Shou Chen-hai involved in that could possibly anger Fat
Wong? For there was no doubting that Wong Yi-sun was furious. "And
the Ko Ming?" Fat
Wong gulped savagely at his drink, then took a deep breath, calming
himself. "Your assassins are called the Yu. Beyond that I
cannot say. Only that their name echoes throughout the Lowers." Karr
nodded thoughtfully. "That is unusual, neh?" Wong
met Karr's eyes steadily. "You are quite right, Major Karr. They
are something different. We have not seen their like for many years.
I—" Wong
paused, looking beyond Karr, toward the arched doorway. "Come,"
he said brusquely, one hand waving the servant in. The
servant handed Wong something, then leaned close, whispering. Then he
backed away, his head lowered, his eyes averted. For a
moment Wong stared at the three tiny packages, his hand trembling
with anger, then he thrust his hand out, offering them to Karr. "These
are yours, I understand." Karr
nodded, but made no attempt to take the three tiny, waxen packages
from the 489. "We found them in the Hsien L'ing's
apartment. I thought they might interest you." Wong
narrowed his eyes. "You know what was in them?" Again
Karr nodded. They had had them analyzed and knew they were something
special. But what did Fat Wong know about them? Karr watched the
movement in his face and began to understand. Wong hadn't been sure.
He had only suspected until he had seen the packages. But now he
knew. Wong
turned away and stood there, as if staring out across the lake. A
wisp of his jet black hair moved gently in the breeze. "They
have overstretched themselves this time. They have sought to destroy
the balance . . ." Then,
as if he realized he had said too much, he turned back, giving a tiny
shrug. But though Fat Wong smiled, his eyes gave him away. This was
what had been worrying him. This was the big something he could not
deal with on his own. He had been the biggest, fattest worm until
now. The keeper of the ancient banner. But now the Big Circle was
making its bid to oust him; a bid financed by the revenue from new
drugs, new markets. But
what did Fat Wong want? Did he want help to crush the Big Circle? Or
did he want something else—some other arrangement that would
keep the Big Circle in their place while keeping him supreme? And,
beyond that, what would his own master, Li Yuan, want from such a
deal? That was, if he wanted anything but to keep the Triads in their
place. Li
Yuan's father, Li Shai Tung, had tried to make such a deal. To forge
some kind of order in the Lowers by granting concessions to men like
Fat Wong. But would it work? Would it not merely give them too much
power? And, in the end, would they not have to crush them anyway? Or
see themselves displaced. Fat
Wong closed his hand over the three tiny packets, then threw them
down into the water. Reaching inside his silks, he withdrew a slender
envelope. "Give
this to your T'ang," he said, handing it across. "And
what am I to say?" "That
I am his friend. His very good friend." ON THE
TABLE by the bed was a holo plinth. Mach knelt, then placed his hand
on the pad. Nothing. He turned slightly, looking up at Ywe Hao,
curious. She leaned across him, holding her fingertips against the
pad. At once two tiny figures formed in the air above the plinth. "My
brother," she explained. "He died in an industrial
accident. At least, that's what the official inquiry concluded. But
that's not the story his friends told at the time. He was a union
organizer. Eighteen he was. Four years older than me. My big brother.
They say the pan chang threw him from a balcony. Eight levels
he fell, into machinery. There wasn't much left of him when,they
pulled him out. Just bits." Mach
took a breath, then nodded. For a moment longer Ywe Hao stared at the
two tiny images, then drew her hand back, the pain in her eyes sharp,
undiminished by the years. "I
wanted to see," he said, looking about him again. "I wanted
to be sure." "Sure?" "About
you." "Ah
..." He
smiled. "Besides which, I've got to brief you." She
frowned, then stood, moving back slightly. "About what?" "The
attack on the Dragonfly Club. We're bringing it forward." He
stood, then went over to his pack and took out a hefty-looking
folder, holding it out for her to take. She
looked down at the folder, then back at Mach. "What's this?" "It's
a full dossier on all those involved." He grimaced. "It's
not pleasant reading, but then it's not meant to be. You have to
understand why we need to do this. Why we have to kill these men." "And
the raid? When do we go in?" "Tonight." "Tonight?
But I thought you said it would take at least a week to set this up." "That's
what I thought. But our man is on duty tonight. And there's a meeting
on." She
shuddered, understanding. "Even so, we've not had time to
rehearse things. We'd be going in blind." Mach
shook his head, then sat on the edge of the bed, indicating that she
should sit next to him. "Let me explain. When I spoke to you the
other day—when I gave you this assignment—I had already
allocated a team leader. But after what happened I wanted to give you
a chance. An opportunity to prove yourself." She
made to speak, but he silenced her. "Hear
me out. I know what happened the other day. I know you killed Vasska.
But it doesn't matter. You were right. The other matter—his
brother—that's unfortunate, but we'll deal with it. What was
important was that you did the right thing. If you'd let him kill the
guard . . . well, it would have done us great harm, neh?" She
hesitated, then nodded, but he could see she was unhappy with his
oversimplification of events. Which was good. It showed that she
hadn't acted callously. He took the folder from her lap and opened it
up, turning one of the still photographs toward her. "This
is why we're going in tonight. To put an end to this kind of thing.
But it has to be done carefully. That's why I've drafted you in to
lead the team. Not to organize the raid—your team knows exactly
what they have to do; they've rehearsed it a hundred times. No, your
role is to keep it all damped down. To make sure the right people are
punished. I don't want anyone getting overexcited. We have to get
this right. If we get it wrong, we're fucked, understand me?" She
nodded, but her eyes stayed on the photo of the mutilated child.
After a moment she looked up at him, the disgust in her eyes touched
with a profound sadness. "What makes them do this, Jan? How in
the gods' names could anyone do this to a little boy?" He
shook his head. "I don't know. It's how they are." He put
his hand gently to her cheek. "AH I know is that all that anger
you feel, all that disgust and indignation . . . well, it's a healthy
thing. I want to harness that. To give it every opportunity to
express itself." He let
hisliand fall away, then laughed softly. "You know, you remind
me of an old friend. She was like you. Strong. Certain about what she
did." Ywe
Hao shivered, then looked down again. "What about my cover?" Mach
smiled, impressed by her professionalism, then turned, pointing
across at the pack beside the door. "It's all in there. All you
need to do is read the file. Someone will come for you at eleven. You
go in at second bell." He sat
back. "There's a lot there, but read it all. Especially the
statements by the parents. As I said, you need to know why you're
there. It'll make it easier to do what you have to do." She
nodded. "Good.
Now I must go. My shift begins in an hour and I've got to get back
and change. Good luck, Ywe Hao. May Kuan Yin smile on you tonight." IN
THETORCH-LiTSiLENCEofthe Hall of Eternal Peace and Tranquillity, Li
Yuan knelt on the cold stone tiles, facing the hologram of his
father. Thin threads of smoke from the offering sticks drifted slowly
upward, their rosewood scent merging with the chill dampness of the
ancient room. Beyond the ghostly radiant figure of the dead T'ang,
the red lacquer of the carved screen seemed to shimmer, as if it
shared something of the old man's insubstantiality, the Yuie Lung
at its center flickering, as if, at any moment, it might vanish,
leaving a smoking circle of nothingness. Li
Shai Tung stood there as in life, the frailty of his latter days
shrugged off, the certainty he had once professed shaping each
ghostly gesture as he spoke. "Your
dreams have meaning, Yuan. As a boy I was told by my father to ignore
my dreams, to focus only on what was real. But dreams have their own
reality. They are like the most loyal of ministers. They tell us not
what we would have them say, but that which is true. We can deny
them, can banish them to the farthest reaches of our selves, but we
cannot kill them, not without killing ourselves." Li
Yuan looked up, meeting his dead father's eyes. "And is that
what we have done? Is that why things are so wrong?" Li
Shai Tung sniffed loudly, then leaned heavily on his cane, as if
considering his son's words, but tonight Yuan was more than ever
conscious of what lay behind the illusion. In the slender case
beneath the image, logic circuits had instantly located and selected
from a score of possible responses, preprogrammed guidelines
determining their choice. It seemed spontaneous, yet the words were
given—were as predetermined as the fall of a rock or the decay
of atoms. And the delay? That, too, was deliberate; a machine-created
mimicry of something that had once been real. Even
so, the sense of his father was strong. And though the eyes were
blank, unseeing—were not eyes at all, but mere smoke and
light—they seemed to see right through him; through to the tiny
core of unrest that had robbed him of sleep and brought him here at
this unearthly hour. "Father?" The
old man lifted his head slightly, as if, momentarily, he had been
lost in his thoughts. Then, unexpectedly, he gave a soft laugh. "Dreams.
Maybe that's all we have, Yuan. Dreams. The City itself, was that not
a dream? The dream of our ancestors made tangible. And our long-held
belief in peace, in order and stability, was that not also a dream?
Was any of it ever real?" Li
Yuan frowned, disturbed by his father's words. For a moment his mind
went • back to the evening of his father's death, recalling how
sickly thin his body had \ been, how weak and vulnerable death
had found him. He shuddered, realizing that | the seed of his
father's illness had been sown long before the virus finished him.
No. i He understood now. His father had been dead long before his
heart had ceased I beating. Had died, perhaps, the day his brother,
Han Ch'in, had perished. Or was| it before? Had something died in his
father that night when he, Yuan, had forced his way prematurely from
his mother's womb? Had all his father's life since then been but a
waking dream, no more substantial than this shadow play? The
question hovered close to speech, then sank back into the darkness.
He returned to the matter of his dream. The dream that had awakened
him, fearful and sweating in the coolness of his room. "But
what does it mean, Father? How am I to read my dream?" The dead
T'ang stared at his son, then gave a tiny shudder. "You say you
dreamed of dragonflies?" Li
Yuan nodded. "Of great, emerald-green dragonflies, swarming on
the riverbank. Thousands upon thousands of them. Beautiful creatures,
their wings like glass, their bodies like burnished jade. The sun
shone down on them and yet the wind blew cold. And as I watched, they
began to fall, first one, and then another, until the river was
choked with their struggling forms. And even as I watched they
stiffened and the brilliant greenness was leached from their bodies,
until they were a hideous gray, their flesh flaking from them like
ash. And still the wind blew, carrying the ash away, covering the
fields, clogging every pool and stream, until all was gray and
ashen." • "And then?" "And
then I woke, afraid, my heart pounding." "Ah
. . ." The T'ang put one hand to his beard, his long fingers
pulling distractedly at the tightly braided strands, then shook his
head. "That is a strange and powerful dream, erh tzu. You
ask me what it means, yet I fear you know already." He looked
up, meeting his son's eyes. "Old glassy, he is the very symbol
of summer, neh? And the color green symbolizes spring. Furthermore,
it is said that when the color green figures in a dream, the dream
will end happily. Yet in your dream the green turns to ash. Summer
dies. The cold wind blows. How are you to read this but as an ill
omen?" Li
Yuan looked down sharply, a cold fear washing through him. He had
hoped against hope that there was some other way to read his dream,
but his father's words merely confirmed his own worst fears. The
dragonfly, though the emblem of summer, was also a symbol of weakness
and instability, of all the worst excesses of a soft and easy life.
Moreover, it was said that they swarmed in vast numbers just before a
storm. Yet
was the dream anything more than a reflection of his innermost fears?
He thought of his father's words—of dreams as loyal ministers,
uttering truths that could not otherwise be faced. Was that the case
here? Had this dream been sent to make him face the truth? "Then
what am I to do?" The
dead T'ang looked at him and laughed. "Do, Yuan? Why, you must
wear stout clothes and leam to whistle in the wind. You must look to
your wives and children. And then . . ." "And
then, Father?" The
old man looked away, as if he'd done. "Spring will come, erh
tzu. Even in your darkest hour, remember that. Spring always
comes." Li
Yuan hesitated, waiting for something more, but his father's eyes
were closed now, his mouth silent. Yuan leaned forward and took the
burning spills from the porcelain jar. At once the image shrank,
taking its place beside the other tiny, glowing images of his
ancestors. He
stood, looking about him at the torch-lit stillness of the Hall—at
the gray stone of the huge, funerary couch to his right, at the
carved pillars and tablets and lacquered screens—then turned
away, angry with himself. There was so much to be done—the note
from Minister Heng, the packet from Fat Wong, the last few
preparations for Council—yet here he was, moping like a child
before his dead father's image. And to what end? He
clenched his fist, then slowly let it open. No. His anger could not
be sustained. Nor would the dream be denied that easily. If he closed
his eyes he could see them—a thousand bright, flickering shapes
in the morning sunlight, their wings like curtains of the finest
lace. Layer upon layer of flickering, sunlit lace— "Chieh
Hsia . . ." Li
Yuan turned, almost staggering, then collected himself, facing his
Chancellor. "Yes,
Chancellor Nan. What is it?" Nan Ho
bowed low. "News has come, Chieh Hsia. The news you were waiting
for." He was
suddenly alert. "From Tao Yuan? We have word?" "More
than that, Chieh Hsia. A tape has come. A tape of the meeting
between Wang and Hsiang." "A
tape . . ." Li Yuan laughed, filled with a sudden elation that
was every bit as powerful as his previous mood of despair. "Then
we have him, neh? We have him where we want him." THE
doorman had done his job. The outer door slid back at her touch.
Inside it was pitch black, the Security cameras dead. Ywe Hao turned,
then nodded, letting the rest of the team move past her silently. The
doorman was in the cubicle to the left, facedown on the floor, his
hands on his head. One of the team was crouched there already,
binding him hand and foot. She
went quickly to the end of the hallway, conscious of the others
forming up to either side of the door. She waited until the last of
them joined her, then stepped forward, knocking loudly on the inner
door. There
was a small eye-hatch near the top of the reinforced door. She faced
it, clicking on the helmet lamp and holding up her ID card. The call
had gone out half an hour ago, when the outer power had "failed,"
so they were expecting her. The
hatch cover slid back, part of a face staring out from the square of
brightness within. "Move
the card closer." She did as she was told. "Shit
. . ." The face moved away, spoke to someone inside. "It's
a fuckiri woman." "Is
there a problem?" The
face turned back to her. "Well, it's like this. This is a mens'
club. Women ain't supposed to come in." She
took a breath, then nodded. "I understand. But look. I've only
got to cut the power from the box inside. I can do the repairs out
here in the hallway." The
guard turned, consulting someone inside, then turned back. "Okay,
but be quick, neh? And keep your eyes to yourself or there'll be a
report going in to your superior." Slowly
the door slid back, spilling light into the hallway. The guard moved
back, letting Ywe Hao pass, his hand coming up, meaning to point
across at the box, but he never completed the gesture. Her punch
felled him like a sack. She
turned, looking about her, getting her bearings. It was a big,
hexagonal room, corridors going off on every side. In its center was
a circular sunken pool of bright red tile, five steps leading down
into its depths. The
young men in the pool seemed unaware of her entrance. There were
eight of them, naked as newborns. One of them was straddling another
over the edge of the pool, his buttocks moving urgently, but no one
seemed to care. Behind him the others played and laughed with an
abandon that was clearly drug induced. She
took it all in at a glance, but what she was really looking for was
the second guard—the one her fallen friend had been speaking
to. Unable to locate him, she felt the hairs on her neck rise; then
she saw movement, a brief flash of green between the hinges of the
screen to her right. She
fired twice through the screen, the noise muted by the thick
carpeting underfoot, the heavy tapestries that adorned the walls, but
it was loud enough to wake the young men from their reverie. The
others stood behind her now, masked figures clothed from head to toe
in black. At her signal they fanned out, making for the branching
corridors. She
crossed the room slowly, the gun held loosely in her hand, until she
stood on the tiled lip of the pool. They had backed away from her,
the drug elation dying in their eyes as they began to realize what
was happening. The copulating couple had drawn apart and were staring
wide-eyed at her, signs of their recent passion still evident. Others
had raised their hands in the universal gesture of surrender. "Out!"
she barked, lifting the gun sharply. They
jerked at the sound of her voice, then began to scramble back,
abashed now at their nakedness, fear beginning to penetrate the drug
haze of their eyes. She
watched them climb the far steps, awkward, afraid to look away. One
stumbled and fell back into the water. He came up, gasping,
wide-eyed. "Out!"
she yelled again, making him jump, one hand searching for the steps
behind him as he backed away. She
knew them all. Faces and names and histories. She looked from face to
face, forcing them to meet her gaze. They were so young. Barely out
of childhood, it seemed. Even so, she felt no sympathy for them, only
disgust. There
were noises from the rest of the club now; thumps and angry shouts
and a brief snatch of shrieking that broke off abruptly. A moment
later one of the team reappeared at the entrance to one of the
corridors. "Chi
Li! Come quickly. . . ." "What
is it?" she said as calmly as she could, tilting her head
slightly, indicating her prisoners. He
looked beyond her, understanding, then came across, lowering his
voice. "It's Hsao Yen. He's gone crazy. You'd better stop him."
He drew the gun from his belt. "Go on. I'll guard these." She
could hear Hsao Yen long before she saw him, standing over the young
man in the doorway, a stream of obscenities falling from his lips as
he leaned forward, striking the prisoner's head and shoulders time
and again with his rifle butt. "Hsao
Yen!" she yelled. "Ai yal What are you doing!" He
turned, confronting her, his face livid with anger, then jerked his
arm out, pointing beyond the fallen man. She
moved past him, looking into the room, then drew back, shuddering,
meeting Hsao Yen's eyes almost fearfully. "He did that?" Hsao
Yen nodded. He made to strike the fallen man again, but Ywe Hao
stopped his hand, speaking to him gently. "I understand, Hsao
Yen. But let's do this-' properly, neh? After all, that's what we
came here for. To put an end to this." Hsao
Yen looked down at the bloodied figure beneath him and shivered, "All
right. As you say." She
nodded, then looked past him, torn by what she saw. "And the
boy? He's dead, I take it." Hsao
Yen shuddered, his anger transformed suddenly to pain. "How
could he do that, Chi Li? How could he do that to a child?" She
shook her head, unable to understand. "I don't know, Hsao Yen. I
simply don't know." They
were lined up beside the pool when she returned, three dozen of them,
servants included. The masked figures of the Yu stood off to one
side, their automatic pistols raised. She had two of their number
hold up their beaten fellow, then went down the line, separating out
the servants. "Tu
Li-shan, Rooke . . . take them through to the kitchens. I want them
gagged and bound. But don't harm them. Understand?" Ywe
Hao turned back, facing the remaining men. There were twenty-three of
them. Less than she had hoped to find here. Looking down the line she
noted the absence of several of the faces from the files. A shame,
she thought, looking at them coldly. She would have liked to catch
them all; every last one of the nasty little bastards. But this would
do. "Strip
off!" she barked angrily, conscious that more than half of them
were naked already, then turned away, taking the thickly wadded
envelope from within her tunic. These were the warrants. She unfolded
them and flicked through, taking out those that weren't needed and
slipping them back into the envelope, then turned back, facing them
again. They
were watching her, fearful now, several of them crying openly, their
limbs trembling badly. She went slowly down the line, handing each of
them a single sheet of paper; watching as they looked down, then
looked back up at her again, mouths open, a new kind of fear in their
eyes. They
were death warrants, individually drafted, a photograph of the
condemned attached to each sheet. She handed out the last, then stood
back, waiting, wondering if any of them would have the balls at the
last to say something, to try to argue their way out of this, perhaps
even to fight. But one glance down the line told her enough. Hsao Yen
was right. They were insects. Less than insects. For a
moment she tried to turn things around; to see it from their
viewpoint; maybe even to elicit some small trace of sympathy from
deep within herself. But there was nothing. She had seen too much;
read too much: her anger had hardened to something dark,
impenetrable. They were evil, gutless little shits. And what they had
done here—the suffering they had caused—was too vast, too
hideous, to forgive. Ywe
Hao pulled the mask aside, letting them view her face for the first
time, letting them see the disgust she felt, then walked back to the
end of the line and stood facing the first of them. Taking the paper
from his shaking hands, she began, looking directly into his face,
not even glancing at the paper, reciting from memory the sentence of
the Yu Inner Council, before placing the gun against his temple and
pulling the trigger. fifth
BELL was sounding as Wang Sau-leyan stood at the head of the steps,
looking down into the dimly lit cellar. It was a huge, dark space,
poorly ventilated and foul smelling. From its depths came a steady
groaning, not from one but from several sources; a distinctly human
sound, half-articulate with pained confession. The semblance of words
drifted up to him, mixing with the foul taste in his mouth, making
him shudder with distaste and spread his fan before his face. Seeing
him there, Hung Mien-lo tore himself away from the bench and hurried
across. "Chieh
Hsia," he said, bowing low. "We are honored by your
presence." The
T'ang descended the uneven steps slowly, with an almost finicky care.
At the bottom he glared at his Chancellor, as if words could not
express the vulgarity of this. It was
old-fashioned and barbaric, yet in that lay its effectiveness.
Torture was torture. Sophistication had nothing to do with it. Terror
was of the essence. And this place, with its dank, foul-smelling
miasma, was perfect for the purposes of torture. It stank of
hopelessness. The
bench was an ordinary workman's bench from an earlier age. Its hard
wooden frame was scrubbed clean, and four dark iron spikes—each
as long as a man's arm—jutted from the yellow wood, one at each
corner, the polished metal thick at the base, tapering to a
needle-sharp point. The prisoner's hands and feet were secured
against these spikes with coils of fine, strong chain that bit into
the flesh and made it bleed. Across his naked chest a series of
heated wires had been bound, pulling tight and searing the flesh even
as they cooled, making the prisoner gasp and struggle for each
breath; each painful movement chafing the cutting wires against the
blood-raw flesh. One
eye had been put out. Burned in its blackened socket. The shaved head
was crisscrossed with razor-fine scars. Both ears had been severed.
All four limbs were badly scarred and bruised, broken bone pushing
through the skin in several places. There were no nails on hands or
feet and the tendons of each finger had been cut neatly,
individually, with a surgeons skill. Lastly, the man's genitals had
been removed and the amputation sealed with a wad of hot tar. Wang
Sau-leyan looked, then turned away, moving his fan rapidly before his
face, but Hung Mien-lo had seen, mixed in with the horror and the
revulsion, a look of genuine satisfaction. The
prisoner looked up, his one good eye moving between the two men. Its
movements seemed automatic, lacking in curiosity, intent only on
knowing where the pain would come from next. All recognition was gone
from it. It saw only blood and heat and broken bone. Wang Sau-leyan,
looking down at it, knew it from childhood. It was the eye of his
father's Master of the Royal Household, Sun Li Hua. "You
have his confession?" "Yes,
Chieh Hsia," Hung answered, one hand resting lightly on
the edge of the bench. "He babbled like a frightened child when
I first brought him down. He couldn't take much pain. Just the
thought of it and the words spilled from him like a songbird." And
yet he's still alive, Wang thought. How can he still be
alive when all this has been done to him? The
thought brought him to a new realization, and his anger at the man's
betrayal was softened by a new respect for him. Even so, he deserved
no pity. Sun Li Hua had sold him to another. To Li Yuan, his enemy. Just
as he sold my father to me. Wang
leaned over and spat on the scarred and wounded body. And the eye,
following the movement, was passive, indifferent to the gesture, as
though to say, "Is that all? Is there to be no pain this time?" They
moved on, looking at the other benches. Some were less damaged than
Sun Li Hua, others were barely alive—hacked apart piece by
piece, like hunks of animal product on a butcher's table. They were
all old and trusted servants; all long-serving and "loyal"
men of his father's household. And Li Yuan had bought them all. No
wonder the bastard had been able to anticipate him in Council these
last few times. Wang
Sau-leyan turned, facing his Chancellor. "Well,
Chieh Hsia?" Hung Mien-lo asked. "Are you pleased?" There
was an unpleasant smile on the Chancellor's features, as if to say
there were nothing he liked better than inflicting pain on others.
And Wang Sau-leyan, seeing it, nodded and turned quickly away,
mounting the steps in twos, hurriedly, lest his face betray his true
feelings. It was
a side of Hung Mien-lo he would never have suspected. Or was there
another reason? It was said that Hung and Sun had never got on. So
maybe it was that. Whatever, there would come a time of reckoning.
And then Hung Mien-lo would really learn to smile. As a corpse
smiles. Li
yuan STOOD at the window, letting himself be dressed. Outside, the
garden lay half in shadow, half in light, the dew-misted top leaves
of the nearby rhododendron bushes glittering in the dawn's first
light. He held himself still as the maid drew the sashes tight about
his waist, then turned, facing his Master of the Inner Chamber. "And
have you no idea what they want, Master Chan?" Chan
Teng bowed low. "None at all, Chieh Hsia. Only that the
Marshal said it was of the utmost urgency. That I was to wake you if
you were not awake already." Li
Yuan turned away, hiding the smile that came to his lips at the
thought of Tolonen's bluntness. Even so, he felt a ripple of
trepidation run down his spine. What could Chancellor Nan and the
Marshal want at this hour? They
were waiting in his study. As he entered they bowed, Tolonen stiffly,
Nan Ho more elaborately. Impatient to hear what had happened, he
crossed the room and stood before them. "Well,
Knut? What is it?" Tolonen
held out a file. Li Yuan took it and flicked it open. After a moment
he looked up, giving a small, strange laugh. "How odd. Only last
night, I dreamed of dragonflies. And now this . . ." He studied
Tolonen a moment, his eyes narrowed. "But why show me this? It's
nasty, certainly, but it is hardly the kind of thing to wake a T'ang
over, surely?" Tolonen
bowed his head, acceding the point. "In ordinary circumstances
that would be so, Chieh Hsia. But this is a matter of the
utmost importance. The beginning of something we would do well to
take very seriously indeed." Li
Yuan turned, looking at his Chancellor. "So what makes this
different?" Nan Ho
lowered his head again. "This, Chieh Hsia." Li
Yuan set the file down on a nearby chair, then took the pamphlet from
his Chancellor. It was a single large sheet that had been folded into
four, the ice paper no more than a few mols thick, the print poor,
uneven. He realized at once that it had been hand set; that whoever
had produced this had wanted to avoid even the slightest chance of
being traced through the computer network. He
shrugged. "It's interesting, but I still don't understand." Nan Ho
smiled tautly. "Forgive me, Chieh Hsia, but it is not so much
the pamphlet, as the numbers in which it has been distributed. It's
hard to estimate exactly how many copies went out, but latest
Security estimates place it at between a quarter of a billion and a
billion." Li
Yuan laughed. "Impossible! How would they print that number? How
distribute them? Come to that, how on earth would they finance it?" And
yet he saw how grave the old man looked. "This
is something new, Chieh Hsia. Something dangerous. Which is why we
must deal with it at once. That is why I came. To seek your
permission to make the elimination of this new group our number-one
priority." Li
Yuan stared at his Marshal a moment, then turned away. A billion
pamphlets. If that were true it was certainly something to be
concerned about. But was Tolonen right to be so worried, or was he
overreacting? He went to his desk and sat, considering things. "What
is Major Karr doing right now?" Tolonen
smiled. "Karr is on their trail already, Chieh Hsia. I
put him in charge of investigating the murder of the Hsien L'ing
Shou Chen-hai." "And?" Tolonen
shook his head. "And nothing, I'm afraid. Our investigations
have so far drawn a blank." "Nothing even from our Triad
friends?" "I
am afraid not, Chieh Hsia." Li
Yuan looked down. "I see." Then Karr had told Tolonen
nothing about his meeting with Fat Wong. About the message he had
passed on from the Triad leader. That was interesting. It spoke
lucidly of where Karr's ultimate loyalty lay. "All
right. But I want Karr in charge, Knut, and I want a daily report on
my desk concerning any and every development. You will make sure he
gets whatever resources he needs." "Of
course, Chieh Hsia." He
watched Tolonen go, then turned his attention to his Chancellor. "Was
there something else?" The
Chancellor hesitated, as if weighing something, then came forward,
taking a small package from within his robes and offering it to his
T'ang, his head lowered, his eyes averted. "I was not certain
whether to give this to you, Chieh Hsia." Li
Yuan took the package, smiling, then felt his breath catch in his
throat. There was the faintest scent from the silk. The scent of Mei
hua. Of plum blossom. "Thank
you, Nan Ho. I. . ." But
the Chancellor had already gone. Even as Li Yuan looked up, the door
was closing on the far side of the room. He sat
back, staring at the tiny package on his desk. It was from her. From
Fei Yen. Though there were no markings on the wrapping, he knew no
other would have used that scent. No one else would have used his
Chancellor as a messenger. He
shuddered, surprised by the intensity of what he felt. Then, leaning
forward, his hand trembling, he began to unfasten the wrappings,
curious and yet afraid of what was inside. There
was a note, and beneath the note a tiny tape. He unfolded it and read
the brief message, then lifted the tape gingerly, his eyes drawn to
the gold-leaf picto-grams embossed into the black of the casing. Han
Ch'in, they read. His son. He
swallowed, then closed his eyes. What did she want? Why was she doing
this to him? For a moment he closed his hand tightly on the tiny
cassette, as if to break it, then loosened his grip, letting the
tension drain from him. No. He would have to see it. Suddenly he
realized just how much he had wanted to go to the estate at Hei Shui
and simply stand there, unobserved, watching his child at play. Even
so, the question still remained. What did she want? He went to the
long window. Already the sun was higher, the shadows on the eastern
lawn much shorter. He breathed deeply, watching the sunlight flicker
on the surface of the pond, then shook his head. Maybe she didn't
know. Maybe she didn't understand what power she had over him, even
now. Maybe it was a simple act of kindness. . . . He
laughed quietly. No. Whatever it was, it wasn't that. Or not simply
that. He turned, looking across at the tape, the note, then turned
back again, staring outward. Whatever, it would have to wait. Right
now he must prepare himself, clearing his mind of everything but the
struggle ahead. Tonight, after Council, he could relax; might let
himself succumb to his weakness. But not before. Not until he had
dealt with Wang Sau-leyan. He
sighed and turned from the window, making his way back to his rooms
and the waiting maids. Out on
the pond, in the early morning light, a dragonfly hovered over the
water, its wings flickering like molten sunlight, its body a bright
iridescent green. CHAPTER
SEVENTEEN In
a Darkened Eye IT
WAS just AFTER seven in the morning, but in the Black Heart business
was brisk. At the huge center table a crowd of men pressed close,
taking bets on the two tiny contestants crouched in the tight beam of
the spotlight. They
were mantises, brought up from the Clay, their long, translucent
bodies raised threateningly, switchblade forelegs extended before
their tiny, vicious-looking heads as they circled slowly. To Chen,
watching from the edge of the crowd, it was an ugly, chilling sight.
He had seen men—Triad gangsters—behave in this manner,
their every movement suggestive of a deadly stillness. Men whose eyes
were dead, who cared only for the perfection of the kill. Here, in
these cold, unsympathetic creatures, was their model; the paradigm of
their behavior. He shuddered. To model oneself on such a thing—what
made a man reduce himself so much? As he
watched, the larger of the creatures struck out, its forelegs moving
in a blur as it tried to catch and pin its opponent. There was a roar
of excitement from the watching men, but the attack faltered, the
smaller mantis struggling free. It scuttled back, twitching, making
small, answering feints with its forelegs. Chen
looked about him, sickened by the glow of excitement in every face,
then came away, returning to the table in the corner. "So
what's happened?" Karr
looked up from the map, smiling wearily. "It's gone cold. And
this time even our Triad friends can't help us." Chen
leaned across, putting his finger down where the map was marked with
a red line—a line that ended abruptly at the entrance to the
stack in which the Black Heart was located. "We've tracked them
this far, right? And then there's nothing. It's a—what
did you call it?—a white-out, right?" Karr
nodded. "The cameras were working, but the storage system had
been tampered with. There was nothing on record but white light." "Right.
And there's no trace of either of them coming out of this stack,
correct? The records have been checked for facial recognition?"
Again Karr nodded. "Then
what else remains? No one broke the seals and went down to the Net,
and no one got out by flyer. Which means they must be here." Karr
laughed. "But they're not. We've searched the place from top to
bottom, and found nothing. We've taken the place apart." Chen
smiled enigmatically. "Which leaves what?" Karr shrugged.
"Maybe they were ghosts." Chen
nodded. "Or maybe the images on the tape were. What if someone
tampered with the computer storage system farther down the line?"
He traced the red line back with his finger, stopping at the point
where it took a sixty-degree turn. "What if our friends turned
off earlier? Or went straight on? Have we checked the records from
the surrounding stacks?" Karr
shook his head. "I've done it. A sixty-stack search. And there's
nothing. They just disappeared." At the
gaming table things had changed dramatically. Beneath the spotlight's
glare the smaller mantis seemed to be winning. It had pinned the
larger creature's forelegs to the ground, trapping it, but it could
not take advantage of its position without releasing its opponent.
For a long time it remained as it was, moving only to prevent its foe
from rising. Then, with a suddenness that surprised the hushed
watchers, it moved back, meaning to strike at once and cripple its
enemy. But the larger beast had waited for that moment. The instant
it felt the relentless pressure of the other's forelegs lapse, it
snapped back, springing up from the floor, its back legs powering it
into the smaller insect, toppling it over. The snap of its forelegs
was followed instantly by the crunch of its opponent's brittle flesh
as it bit deep into its undefended thorax. It was over. The smaller
mantis was dead. For a
moment they looked across, distracted by the uproar about the central
table, then Karr turned back, his blue eyes filled with doubt. "Come
. . . let's get back. There's nothing here." They
were getting up as a messenger came to their table; one of the Triad
men they had met earlier. Bowing, he handed Karr a sheet of computer
printout—a copy of a Security report timed at 4:24 A.M. Karr
studied it a moment, then laughed. "Just when I thought it had
died on us. Look, Chen! Look what the gods have sent us!" Chen
took the printout. It was a copy of the first call-out on a new
terrorist attack. On a place called the Dragonfly Club. The details
were sketchy, but one fact stood out—a computer
face-recognition match. He looked at Karr, then shook his head,
astonished. "Why,
it's the woman . . . Chi Li, or whatever her real name is!"
"Yes," Karr laughed, his gloom dispelled for the first time
in two days. "So let's get there, neh? Before the trail
goes cold." YWE
HAO WOKE, her heart pounding, and threw back the sheet. Disoriented,
she sat up, staring about her. What in the gods' names . . . ? Then
she saw it—the winking red light of the warning circuit. Its
high-pitched alarm must have woken her. She spun about, looking to
see what time it was. 7:13. She had been asleep less than an hour. Dressing
took fifteen seconds, locating and checking her gun another ten. Then
she was at the door, breathing deeply, preparing herself, as the door
slid slowly back. The
corridor was empty. She walked quickly, her gun held out before her,
knowing that they would have to use this corridor if they were coming
for her. At the
first intersection she slowed, hearing footsteps, but they were from
the left. The warning had come from her friends—the two boys at
the elevator—which meant her assailants would be coming from
that direction; from the corridor directly ahead. She slipped the gun
into the pocket of her one-piece and let the old man pass, bowing,
then went to the right, breaking into a run, heading for the
interlevel steps. Even
as she reached their foot, she heard urgent whispering in the
corridor behind her—at the intersection. She flattened herself
against the wall, holding her breath. Then the voices were
gone—three, maybe more of them—heading toward her
apartment.
-^ Vasska's
brother Edel. She was certain of it. She had no idea how he had
traced her, but he had. She
was eight, nine steps up the flight when she remembered the case. "Shit!"
she hissed, stopping, annoyed with herself. But there hadn't been
time. If she'd stopped to dig it out from the back of the cupboard
she would have lost valuable seconds. Would have run into them in the
corridor. Even
so, she couldn't leave it there. It held full details of the raid;
important information that Mach had entrusted her with. People
were coming down the steps now; a group of Han students heading for
their morning classes. They moved past her, their singsong chatter
filling the stairwell briefly. Then she was alone again. For a moment
longer she hesitated, then went on up, heading for the maintenance
room at the top of the deck. karr
looked about him at the ruins. It was the same pattern as before—
broken Security cameras, deserted guard-posts, secured elevators, the
terrorists' trail
cleverly covered by white-outs. All spoke of a highly organized
operation, planned well in advance and carried out with a
professionalism that even the T'ang's own elite would have found hard
to match. Not
only that, but the Yu chose their targets well. Even here,
amid this chaos, they had taken care to identify their victims.
Twenty-four men had died here, all but one of them—a
guard—regular members of the club, each of them "tagged"
by the Yu, brief histories of their worthless lives tied about
their necks. The second guard had simply been beaten and tied up,
while the servants had again been left unharmed. Such discrimination
was impressive and rumors about it—passed from mouth to ear, in
defiance of the explicit warnings of the T'ing Wei—had
thus far served to discredit every effort of that Ministry to portray
the terrorists as uncaring, sadistic killers, their victims as
undeserving innocents. Karr shook his head, then went across to Chen. "Anything
new?" he asked, looking past Chen at the last of the corpses.
"Nothing," Chen answered, his weary smile a reminder that
they had been on duty more than thirty hours. "The only
remarkable thing is the similarity of the wounds. My guess is that
there was some kind of ritual involved." Karr
grimaced. "You're right. These men weren't just killed, they
were executed. And, if our Kb Ming friends are right, for good
reason." Chen
looked away, a shudder of disgust passing through him. He, too, had
seen the holos the assassins had left—studies of their victims
with young boys taken from the Lowers. Scenes of degradation and
torture. Scenes that the T'ing Wei were certain to keep from
popular consumption. Which
was to say nothing of the mutilated corpse of the child they had
found in the room at the-far end of the club. Karr
leaned across, touching Chen's arm. "It'll be some while before
we can move on what we know. We're waiting on lab reports, word from
our Triad contacts. There's little we can do just now, so why don't
you get yourself home? Spend some time with that wife of yours, or
take young Jyan to the Palace of Dreams. They tell me there's a new
Historical." Chen
laughed. "And Marie? I thought this was supposed to be your
honeymoon?" Karr
grinned. "Marie understands. It's why she married me." Chen
shook his head. "And I thought I was mad." He laughed.
"Okay. But let me know as soon as something happens." Karr
nodded. "All right. Now go." He
watched Chen leave, then stood, feeling the emotional weight of what
had happened here bearing down on him. It was rare that he was
affected by such scenes, rarer still that he felt any sympathy for
the perpetrators, but for once he did. The Yu had done society
a great service here tonight. Had rid Chung Kuo of the kind of scum
he had met so often below the Net. He
breathed out heavily, recalling Chen's disgust, knowing, at the very
core of him, that this was what all healthy, decent men ought to
feel. And yet the T'ing Wei would try to twist it, until these
good-for-nothing perverts, this shit masquerading as men, were
portrayed as shining examples of good citizenship. Yes,
he had seen the holes. Had felt his guts wrenched by the distress in
the young boys' eyes, by that helpless, unanswered plea. He
shuddered. The Oven Man had them now. And no evidence remained, but
for that small, pathetic corpse and these mementos—these
perverse records of a foul desire.
And was he to watch it
being whitewashed? Made pure and sparkling by a parcel of lies? He
spat, angered by the injustice of it. Was this why he had become
Tolonen's man? For this? He
looked about him. There was a tray of carapaced insects in a
glass-topped case like those one found beneath the Net, but these
were bright, sparkling, gaudily colored. Beside them was an ancient
radio set, shaped like a woman's private parts. He shook his head
then reached up, pulling a heavy, leather-bound volume down from a
shelf. He
stared at the cover, trying to make out the design—that of a
yellow eel curled about a fish—then caught his breath,
understanding. The book was a trade catalog, the trade in question
being that of young male prostitutes. He
thumbed through the pages. On each was displayed the naked figure of
a young man—Han or Hung Moo—each of them handsome,
athletic, well endowed. Fine young men, upright in their bearing,
they had the look of ancient heroes, yet for all their beauty they
were somehow tainted. One saw it in the slight curl of a lip or the
expression in the eyes. The beauty here was all outward. Curious,
Karr touched his fingers to the page and was surprised to find the
flesh of the model warm, the background cold. As he drew his fingers
back there was the slightest tingling of static. He
closed the book and put it back on the shelf, wiping his fingers
against his shirt as if they'd been sullied, then moved back into the
center of the room. He had seen enough. Enough to know he had been
right about these young men. It was not the eccentricity but the soft
luxury, the corruption of it, that nauseated him—that made him
shudder with a deep inner revulsion. They had no idea, these people.
No idea at all. Everywhere
he looked he found the signature of decadence; of sons given
everything by their fathers—everything but time and attention.
No wonder they turned out as they did, lacking any sense of value. No
wonder they pissed their time away, drinking and gambling and whoring
and worse—for inside them there was nothing. Nothing real,
anyway. Some of them were even clever enough to realize as much,
yet all their efforts to fill that nothingness were pointless. The
nothingness was vast, unbounded. To fill it was like trying to carry
water in a sieve. Karr
sighed, angered by the sheer waste of it all. He had seen enough to
know that it was not even their fault; they had had no choice but to
be as they were— spoiled and corrupt, vacuous and sardonic.
They had been given no other model to emulate, no stamp to mark them
out differently, and now it was too late. He
found the sheer sumptuousness of the room abhorrent. His own taste
was for the simple, the austere. Here, confronted by its opposite, he
found himself baring his teeth, as if at an enemy. Then, realizing
what he was doing, he laughed uncomfortably and turned, forcing
himself to be still. It
would be no easy task tracking down the Yu, for they were
unlike any of the other Kb Ming groups currently operating in City
Europe. They were fueled not by simple hatred—that obsessive
urge to destroy that had fired the Ping Tiao and their
like—but by a powerful indignation and a strong sense of
injustice. The first Ko Ming emperor, Mao Tse-tung, had once
said something about true revolutionaries being the fish that swam in
the great sea of the people. Well, these Yu— these
"fish"—were certainly that. They had learned from
past excesses. Learned that the people cared who died and who was
spared. Discrimination—moral discrimination—was
their most potent tool, and they took great pains to be in the right.
At least, from where he stood, it looked like that, and the failure
of the T'ing Wei to mold public opinion seemed to confirm his
gut instinct. And
now this. Karr looked about him. Last night's raid—this
devastatingly direct strike against the corrupt heart of the
Above—would do much to bolster the good opinion of the masses.
He smiled, imagining the face of the T'ing Wei's Third
Secretary, Yen T'ung, when he had seen the Yu's pamphlet. He would
have known that word had gone out already: a billion pamphlets this
time, if reports were true. Karr laughed, then fell silent, for his
laughter, like the tenor of his thoughts, was indicative of a deep
inner division. His
duty was clear. As Tolonen's man he owed unswerving loyalty. If the
Marshal asked him to track down the Yu, he would track them
down. Every last one of them. But for the first time ever he found
himself torn, for his instinct was for the Yu, not against
them. If one of those boys had been his son . . . He shivered. Yes,
and he shared their indignation too, their passionate belief in
justice. But he
was Tolonen's man; bound by the strongest of oaths. Sworn to defend
the Seven against Ko Ming activity, of whatever kind. He
spoke softly to the empty room. "Which is why I must find you,
Chi Li. You and all your Yu friends. Even if, secretly, I admire what
you have done here. For I am the T'ang's man, and you are the T'ang's
enemy. A Ko Ming." And
when he found her? Karr looked down, troubled. When he found her he
would kill her. Swiftly, mercifully, and with honor. the
first OF them was facing Ywe Hao as she came through the
door, his head half-turned, laughing at something. He fell back,
clutching his ruined stomach, the sound of the gun's detonation
echoing in the corridor outside. The
second was coming out of the kitchen. She shot him twice in the
chest, even as he fumbled for his weapon. Edel was behind him. He
came at Ywe Hao with a small butcher's knife, his face twisted with
hatred. She blew his hand off, then shot him through the temple. He
fell at her feet, his legs kicking impotently. She
looked about her. There had been five of them according to her
lookouts. So where were the others? There
was shouting outside. Any time now Security would investigate. She
went through to the kitchen, then came out again, spotting the case
on the bed. Nothing appeared to be missing. She
went across and took the case from the bed. It was only as she lifted
it that she realized she had been wrong. They had taken
something. She flipped the case open. It was empty. "Shit.
. . ." So
she'd killed them for nothing. She shuddered, trying to think, trying
to work out what to do. Where would they have taken the dossiers?
What would they have wanted them for? There
were footsteps, coming down the corridor. She
threw the case down and crossed the room, standing beside the open
door, clicking the spent clip from the handle of her gun. Outside the
footsteps stopped. "Edel?
Is that you?" She
nodded to herself, then slipped a new clip into the handle. The
longer she waited, the more jittery they'd get. At the same time,
they might just be waiting for her to put her head around the door. She
smiled. It was the kind of dilemma she understood. She
counted. At eight she turned and went low, the gun kicking noisily in
her hand as she moved out into the corridor. OVERHEAD,
tiny armies, tens of thousands strong, fought against a hazed
background of mountains, the roar of battle faint against the hubbub
of noise in the crowded Main. The giant hologram was suspended in the
air above the entrance to the Golden Emperor's Palace of Eternal
Dreams. Crowds
were pushing out from the Holo-Palace while others—young and
old alike—lined up to get in, their necks craned back to watch
the battle overhead. As Kao Chen pushed through, ushering his son
before him, he smiled, seeing how his head strained up and back,
trying to glimpse the air show. "Well,
Jyan? What did you think?" The
ten-year-old looked up at his father and beamed a smile. "It was
wonderful! That
moment when Liu Pang raised his banner and the whole army roared his
name. That was great!" Chen
laughed, holding his son to him briefly. "Yes, wasn't it? And to
think he was but Ch'en She, a poor man, before he became Son of
Heaven! Liu Pang, founder of the great Han Dynasty!" Jyan
nodded eagerly. "They should teach it like that at school. It's
far more interesting than all that poetry." Chen
smiled, easing his way through the crowds. "Maybe, but not all
poetry is bad. You'll understand that when you're older." Jyan
made a face, making Chen laugh. He, too, had always preferred history
to poetry, but then he'd never had Jyan's chances, Jyan's education.
No, things would be different for Jyan. Very different. He
slowed, then leaned close again. "Do you want to eat out, Jyan,
or shall we get back?" Jyan
hesitated, then smiled. "Let's get back, neh? Mother will be
waiting, and I want to tell her all about it. That battle between Liu
Pang and the Hegemon King was brilliant. It was like it was really
real. All those horsemen and everything!" Chen nodded. "Yes
... it was, wasn't it? I wonder how they did that?" "Oh,
it's easy," Jyan said, pulling him on by the hand. "We
learned all about it in school ages ago. It's all done with computer
images and simulated movement." "Simulated
movement, eh?" Chen laughed, letting himself be pulled through
the crowds and into one of the quieter corridors. "Still, it
seemed real enough. I was wincing myself once or twice during some of
those closeup fight scenes." Jyan laughed, then fell silent,
slowing to a halt. "What is it?" Chen said, looking up
ahead. "Those
two . . ." Jyan whispered. "Come. Let's go back. We'll take
the south corridor and cut through." Chen
glanced at Jyan, then looked back down the corridor. The two young
men—Han, in their mid-teens—were leaning against the
wall, pretending to be talking. Chen
bent down, lowering his voice. "Who are they?" Jyan
met his eyes. "They're senior boys at my school—part of a
tong, a gang. They
call themselves the Green Banner Guardians." "So what do
they want?" "I
don't know. All I know is that they're trouble." "You've
not done anything, then, Jyan? Nothing I should know of?" Jyan
looked back at him clear eyed. "Nothing, Father. I swear to
you." "Good. Then we've nothing to fear, have we?" He
straightened up. "Do you want me to hold your hand?" Jyan
shook his head. Chen
smiled, understanding. "Okay. Then let's go." They
were almost level with the two when they turned and stepped out,
blocking their way. "Where
do you think you're going, shit-brains?" the taller of them
said, smirking at Jyan. "What
do you want?" Chen asked, keeping the anger out of his voice. "Shut
your mouth, loo jen," said the second of them, moving
closer. "We've business with the boy. He owes us money." Chen
made himself relax. So that was it. They were out of funds and
thought they could shake down one of the junior boys. He smiled and
touched the tiny eye on his tunic's lapel, activating it. "I
don't think my son has any business with you, friend. So be on your
way." The
first youth laughed; a false, high laugh that was clearly a signal.
At the sound of it, four more youths stepped out from doorways behind
him. "As
I said, the boy owes us money. Twenty yuan." Chen
put his left arm out, moving Jyan back, behind him. "You have
proof of this?" "Not
on me," the first youth said, his face ugly now, his body
movements suddenly more menacing. "But he does. And I want it.
So unless you want to call me a liar . . ." Chen
smiled, moving his body slightly, so that the camera would capture
all| their faces. "Oh, I'm sure there's no need for that,
friend. But I'm afraid my son doesn't have a single fen on
him, let alone twenty yuan." The
youth's eyes flickered to the side, then looked back at Chen, a smile
coming to his lips. He was enjoying his game. "Well, what about
you, loo jen7. They say a father is responsible for
his son's debts. I reckon you're good for twenty yuan." Chen
smiled and shook his head, taking a step back. "I've spent my
money, friend. Now let us pass. Our home is up ahead." There
was a peal of mocking laughter from behind the two youths. The taller
of them stepped forward, resting his hand lightly on Chen's shoulder. "I'm
sorry. . . friend. . . but that's not possible. You see, I
don't believe you. I saw the note you paid with at the picture house.
You can't have spent all of that, can you?" Chen
looked at the hand on his shoulder. It was a thin, ugly hand. It
would be easy—and immensely satisfying—to take it from
his shoulder and crush it. But he could not do that. He was an
officer of the T'ang. And besides, Jyan had to leam the right way of
doing things. Chen
took a breath, then bowed his head, taking the slender, crumpled note
from his pocket and handing it to the youth. "Good.
. ." The youth squeezed Chen's shoulder reassuringly, then
stepped back, grinning. He turned, holding the note up triumphantly
for his friends to se They whooped and jeered, making face and hand
gestures at Chen. Then, with a final mocking bow to him, the youth
turned and strolled arrogantly away, his friends parting before him
then forming up behind, one of them turning to send a final gesture
of contempt back at Chen. Chen
watched them go, then turned, looking down at his son. Jyan was
standing there sullenly, his head turned away, held stiffly. "I
had to—" Chen began, but Jyan shook his head violently. "You
let them piss on us!" Chen
felt himself go still. He had never heard Jyan swear in front of him
before. Nor had he ever heard that tone of anger—of hurt and
fierce disapproval. "There
were six of them. Someone would have got hurt." Jyan
looked up, glaring at him. "You, you mean!" It
wasn't what he'd meant, but he didn't argue. He took a breath,
spelling it out clearly, trying to make his son understand. "I
am an officer of the T'ang's Security forces, Jyan, and I am off
duty. I am not empowered to brawl in the corridors." "They
pissed on us," Jyan said again, glaring at his father, close to
tears now. "And you let them get away with it. You just handed
the money over to them, like some low-level oaf!" Chen
lifted his hand abruptly, then let it fall. "You don't
understand, Jyan. I've got it all on camera. I—" Jyan
gave a huff of derision and turned, beginning to walk away. "Jyan!.
Listen to me!" The
boy shook his head, not looking back. "You let them piss on us!" Chen
stood there a moment longer, watching him, shaking his head, then
began to follow. Back
at the apartment, he went through to the end bedroom. Wang Ti was
sitting on the bed, packing his kit. "Where
is he?" he said quietly. She
looked up at him, then pointed to the closed door of Jyan's room.
There, she mouthed. But leave him be. He
looked at her, then looked down, sighing heavily. Seeing that, she
stopped and came across, holding him to her. "What is it?"
she asked quietly. He
closed the door, then told her what had happened, explaining what he
planned to do. If he acted now, they could trace the note to the
youths. That and the evidence of the camera eye would be enough to
have the boys demoted to a lower deck. It was the proper way of doing
things. The effective way, for it rid the level of that kind of scum.
But for once he felt a strong sense of dissatisfaction. "You
were right, Chen," she said softly, her face close to his. "And
what you did was right. There must be laws. We cannot live as they
did in the old days. It would be like the Net up here if it were
otherwise." "I
know," he said, "but I let him down. I could see it in his
face. He thinks I am a coward. He thinks I didn't have the guts to
face them out." Wang
Ti shook her head, a momentary pain in her eyes. "And you, Chen?
Do you consider yourself a coward? No. And nor do I. You are kwai,
husband. Whatever clothes you wear, beneath it you will always be
kwai. But sometimes it is right to step back, to avoid
trouble. You have said so yourself. Sometimes one must bend like a
reed." "A*
ya . . ." He turned his head aside, but she drew it back
gently. "Let
him be, Chen. He'll come around. Just now his head is filled with
heroics. That film you took him to see. His imagination was racing
with it. But life is not like that. Sometimes one must concede to get
one's way." He
stared back at her, knowing she was right, but some part of him
couldn't help thinking that he should have acted. Should have crushed
the boy's hand and broken a few of their hot heads. To teach them a
lesson. And
impress his son . . . He
looked down. "It hurts, Wang Ti. To have him look at me like
that. To have him say those things . . ." She
touched his cheek tenderly, her caress, like her voice, a balm. "I
know, my love. But that, too, is a kind of bravery, no? To face that
hurt and conquer it. For the good. Knowing you did right." She
smiled. "He'll come around, Chen. I know he will. He's a good
boy and he loves you. So just leave him be a while, neh?" He
nodded. "Well... I'd best get Deck Security onto it. I've got to
report back in a few hours, so there's not much time." She
smiled and turned away, returning to her packing. "And Chen?" "Yes?"
he said, turning at the door, looking back at her. "Don't
do anything silly. Remember what I said. You know what you are. Let
that be enough, neh?" He
hesitated, then nodded. But even as he turned away he knew it wasn't. Damn
them! he thought, wondering what it was that twisted men's souls
so much that they could not exist without tormenting others. IN the
LONG, BROAD HALLWAY that led to the Hall of the Serene Ultimate it
was cool and silent and dimly lit. From the dark, animal mouths of
cressets set high in the blood-red walls, naked oil-fed flames gave
off a thin watery glow that flickered on the tiled mosaic of the
floor and gave a dozen wavering shadows to the slender pillars that
lined each side. The long shapes of dragons coiled upward about these
pillars in alternating reds and greens, stretching toward the heavens
of the ceiling, where in the flicker of dark and light a battle
between gods and demons raged in bas relief. Between
the pillars stood the guards, unmoving, at attention, in seven rows
of eight, the variations of their ceremonial uniforms noticeable even
at first glance. Light glimmered dimly on their burnished armor,
revealing the living moistness of their eyes. They faced the outer
doors prepared, their lives a wall, defending their lords and
masters. At
their back was a second double door, locked now. Beyond it, the Seven
sat in conference. There it was warmer, brighter. Each T'ang sat easy
in a padded chair, relaxed, his ceremonial silks the only outward
sign of ritual. Wang Sau-leyan, host of this Council, was talking
now, discussing the package of proposals Li Yuan had set before them. Li
Yuan sat facing Wang, a hard knot of tension in his chest. Earlier,
he had been taken aback by the unexpected warmth of the young T'ang
of Africa's greeting. He had come expecting coldness, even overt
hostility, but Wang's embrace, his easy laughter, had thrown him. And
so now. For while his words seemed fair—seemed to endorse, even
to embrace Li Yuan's scheme for the days ahead—Li Yuan could
not shed the habit of suspicion. Wang Sau-leyan was such a consummate
actor—such a natural politician—that to take
anything he did or said at face value was to leave oneself open,
unguarded, vulnerable to the next twist or turn of his mood. Li
Yuan eased back into the cushions, forcing himself to relax, trying
to see through the veil of Wang's words. Beside him, he could sense
Tsu Ma shift in his chair. He had glanced at him earlier and seen his
own unease mirrored in his cousin's face. "And
so . . .*^Wang said, looking across at Li Yuan again, his smile
clear, untroubled. "My feeling is that we must support Li Yuan's
ideas. To do otherwise would be unwise, maybe even disastrous."
He looked about him, raising his plump hands in a gesture of
acceptance. "I realize that I have argued otherwise in the past,
but in the last six months I have wrestled with these problems and
have come to see that we must face them now, before it is too
late. That we must deal with them, resolutely, with the will to
overcome all difficulties." Li
Yuan looked down, aware of how closely Wang's words echoed his
father's. But was that deliberate on Wang's part or mere unconscious
echo? He drew a long breath, deeply uncertain. He had come prepared
to fight Wang, to lay siege to his fortress and batter down the door,
but Wang had put up no fight. His fortress was unmanned, the great
door open. He
looked up, noting how Wang was watching him, and nodded. "Good,"
Wang said, turning his head, looking first to Wu Shih, then to Wei
Feng, understanding that those two alone remained to be convinced.
"In that case, I propose that we draft a much fuller document to
be agreed and ratified by us at the next meeting of this Council." Li
Yuan looked to Tsu Ma, surprised. Was that it? Was there to be no
sting in the tail? Tsu Ma
leaned forward, a soft laugh forming a prologue to his words. "I
am glad that we see eye to eye on this matter, Cousin, but let me
make this clear. Are you proposing that we adopt Li Yuan's package of
measures, or are you suggesting some . . . alteration of their
substance?" Wang
Sau-leyan's smile was disarming. "In essence I see nothing wrong
with Li Yuan's proposals, yet in matters of this kind we must make
sure that the fine details—the drafting of the laws
themselves—are to our satisfaction, neh? To allow too little
would be as bad as to allow too much. The changes to the Edict must
be regulated finely, as must the laws on population growth. The
balance must be right, would you not agree, Wei Feng?" Wei
Feng, addressed unexpectedly, considered the matter a moment. He was
looking old these days, markedly tired, and for the last meeting he
had let his eldest son, Wei Chan Yin, sit in for him. But this time,
in view of the importance of the meeting, he had decided to attend in
person. He sat forward slightly, clearly in pain, and nodded. "That
is so, Wang Sau-leyan. And I am gratified to hear you talk of
balance. I have heard many things today that I thought not to hear in
my lifetime, yet I cannot say you are wrong. Things have changed
these last ten years. And if it takes this package of measures to set
things right, then we must pursue this course, as my cousin Wang
says, resolutely and with the will to overcome all difficulties. Yet
we would do well to take our own counsel on the extent and nature of
these changes before we make them. We must understand the likely
outcome of our actions." Wang
bowed his head respectfully. "1 agree, honored Cousin. There is
great wisdom in your words. And that is why I propose that a joint
committee be set up to investigate the likely consequences of such
measures. Moreover, might I suggest that my cousin Wei Feng's man,
Minister Sheng, be appointed head of that committee, reporting back
directly to this Council with his findings." Li
Yuan stared at Tsu Ma, astonished. Minister Sheng! It was Sheng whom
he and Tsu Ma had planned to propose as the new steward for GenSyn,
Sheng who was the linchpin of their scheme to keep the company from
financial ruin; yet somehow Wang Sau-leyan had found out, and now he
had preempted them, robbing them of their candidate, knowing they had
prepared no other. Wei Feng was nodding, immensely pleased by the
suggestion. A moment later a vote had carried the decision
unanimously, bringing them to the next piece of business, the
question of GenSyn and how it was to be administered. "But
first let us eat," Wang said, lifting his bulky figure from the
chair. "I don't know about you, cousins, but I could eat an ox,
raw if necessary." There
was laughter, but it was not shared by Li Yuan or Tsu Ma—they
were still reeling from the shock of Wang's final twist. Li Yuan
looked across, meeting Wang's eyes. Before they had been clear, but
now there was a hardness, a small gleam of satisfaction in them. Li
Yuan bit back his anger, then leaned forward and picked up the
silk-bound folder, gripping it tightly as he made his way across and
out onto the balcony. Only minutes ago he had decided not to use what
he knew—not to play his final card— but now he was
determined. No. He
was not finished yet. Let Wang Sau-leyan savor his tiny victory, for
this day would see him humbled, his power in Council broken for all
time. And
nothing—nothing—would stop him now. AT
THAT moment, twenty thousand Ji away, at Nanking spaceport a tall
Han, wearing the outworld fashions of the Mars Colony, was stepping
down from the interplanetary craft Wuhan. He had been through
one exhaustive security check on board the ship, but another lay
ahead. Ever since the attempt on Marshal Tolonen's life, security had
been tight here. He
joined the queue, staring out across the massive landing pit
dispassionately. The tests inside the ship had interested him. They
were looking for abnormalities; for differences in the rib structure
and the upper chest; signs of unusual brain scan patterns. He had had
to produce a sample of his urine and his fecal matter. Likewise, he
had had to spit into a small ceramic dish. And afterward the guard
had looked up at him and smiled. "It's all right," he'd
said, laughing as if he'd cracked the joke a thousand times, "you're
human." As
if that meant anything. "Tuan Wen-ch'ang . . ." He
stepped forward, presenting his papers. The guard ignored them,
taking his hand and placing it onto a lit-up pad on the desk in front
of him. After a moment the guard released his hand, then brought
around a swivel arm, indicating that he should put his eye to the
cup. He did so, holding there a moment longer than was necessary for
the machine to take a retinal scan. "Okay,"
the guard said, then leaned across, taking Tuan's papers. Holding
them under the high-density light he looked for signs of tampering or
falsification. Satisfied, he slipped the pass into the slim black box
at his side. A moment later it popped out again. At Security Central
in Bremen the computer had entered Tuan Wen-ch'ang's personal details
into the mainframe. "All
right. You're authorized for unobstructed passage in the four Cities
in which you have business, full access granted between Level 150 and
First Level." Tuan
gave the slightest bow then walked on, pocketing his papers. Deep
inside he felt a mild amusement. It had been much easier than he had
expected. But he understood why. This whole society had been
conditioned not to anticipate; to think of how things were and had
always been, not of their potential. Their security procedures, for
instance. They were testing for something that was already redundant;
that was as outmoded as the tests they used to find it. On Mars
things were different. There the pace was faster. Things had moved
on. He
climbed aboard the courtesy train and sat there, waiting, his
patience inexhaustible, his path through the great labyrinth of the
City mapped out clearly in his head, as if already traveled. It was
four hours by bolt to Luo Yang, then another hour and a half north to
Yang Ch'ian on the edge of the City, only a hundred It from Wang
Sau-leyan's palace at Tao Yuan. But the central computer records
would show something else; would show him traveling south down the
coast to catch the intercontinental shuttle from Fuchow to Darwin.
And if the central computer said it were so, who would argue with it?
Who would bother to check whether it reflected anything real—anything
happening in the solid, physical world? Tuan
Wen-ch'ang's face remained placid, almost inscrutable in its masklike
quality, yet deep down he was smiling. Yes, they had had all kinds of
things bred out of them down here. Things that the species needed if
it were to evolve beyond its present state. And that was why he was
here. To remind them of what could be done. To shake them up a
little. And to
push things one stage further. BEYOND
THE one-way GLASS the two youths sat, their backs to the wall, their
hands bound. The preliminary interrogation was over, the accusations
made and denied. Now it was time to take things further. Chen
followed the sergeant through, watching how the two boys glanced at
him, seeing the uniform, then looked again, their eyes widening as
they recognized who he was. "Ai
ya . . ." the younger of them murmured beneath his
breath, but the tall, thin youth—the ringleader—was
silent. "Well,
my friends," the sergeant said, a warm, ironic tone to his
voice, "you've met your accuser before, but I don't think you
knew his name. So let me present Captain Kao of the T'ang's special
elite force." The
thin youth's eyes came up, meeting Chen's briefly. Good,
thought Chen. So now you understand. "All
right," he said brusquely. "You have had your chance to
confess. Now you will be taken before a specially convened panel of
judges who will decide the matter." He paused. "Your
families will be present." He saw
the sudden bitterness in the thin youth's face. "You bastard,"
the boy said quietly. "You fucking bastard." Again,
he let it pass. He was the T'ang's man, after all. It was his duty to
do things properly. They
took them down, under armed escort, to the meeting hall at the far
end of the deck. There, in closed session, the three judges were
waiting, sitting behind their high lecterns. To one side of the hall,
on chairs set apart from the rest, sat the youths' four young
accomplices. Behind them were the families—men, women, and
children—numbering several hundred in all. AH
this, Chen thought, looking about him, surprised by the size of the
gathering. AH this because I willed it. Because I wanted things to
be done properly. And
yet it didn't feel right. He should have broken the little bastard's
hand. Should have given him a simple lesson in power. Whereas this .
. . It
began. Chen sat there, to the side, while the judges went through the
evidence, questioning the boys and noting down their replies. It was
a cold, almost clinical process. Yet when Chen stood to give his
statement, he could feel the silent pressure of all those eyes,
accusing him, angry at him for disturbing the balance of their lives.
He felt his face grow numb, his heart begin to hammer, but he saw it
through. He was kwai, after all. Besides, it was not he who
had threatened another; who had extorted money and then lied about
it. He
stared at the two youths, the desire to lash out—to smash their
ugly little faces—almost too much for him. The darkness
afterward came as a relief, and he sat there barely conscious of the
film being shown on the screen behind the judges—the film he
had taken only hours before. And when it was finished and the lights
came up again, he found it hard to turn his head and face that wall
of faces. He
listened carefully as the senior judge summed up the case; then,
steeling himself, he stood for the verdict. There was a moment's
silence, then an angry murmur of disapproval as the two ringleaders
were sent down—demoted fifty levels—their families fined
heavily, their accomplices fined and ordered to do one hundred days
community service. Chen
looked across, conscious of the pointing fingers, the accusing eyes,
and even when the senior judge admonished the families, increasing
the fines and calling upon the Heads to bring their clans to order,
he felt no better. Maybe they were right. Maybe it was too harsh. But
that wasn't really the point. It was the kind of punishment, not the
degree, that felt wrong. As the
families left, Chen stood there by the door, letting them jostle him
as they filed past, staring back at his accusers, defying them to
understand. You
saw what your sons did. You have seen what they've become. So why
hate me? Why blame me for your children's failings? And
yet they did. Ts'ui Wei, the father of the ringleader, came across,
leaning menacingly over Chen. "Well,
Captain Kao, are you happy now? Are you satisfied with what
you have done here today?" Chen
stared back at him silently. Ts'ui
Wei's lips curled slightly, the expression the mirror image of his
son's disdainful sneer. "I am sure you feel proud of yourself,
Captain. You have upheld the law. But you have to live here, neh? You
have children, neh?" Chen
felt himself go cold with anger. "Are you threatening me, Shih
Ts'ui?" Ts'ui
Wei leaned back, smiling; a hideously cynical smile. "You
misunderstand me, Captain. I am a law-abiding man. But one must live,
neh?" Chen
turned away, biting back his anger, leaving before he did something
he would regret. As Wang Ti said, he ought to be content that he had
done his part; satisfied that he had helped cleanse his level. Yet as
he made his way back it was anger not satisfaction that he felt. That
and a profound sense of wrongness. And as he walked, his hand went to
his queue, feeling the thick braid of hair then tugging at it, as if
to pull it from his head. IT WAS
AFTER three when they called Karr from his bed. There had been a
shoot-out at one of the stacks east-southeast of Augsburg Hsien.
Five men were dead, all visitors to the stack. That alone would
not have been significant enough to wake him, but some hours later, a
sack had been found near one of the interdeck elevators: a sack
containing items from the Dragonfly Club, plus a handwritten file ;
giving full details of how the raid had been planned. Now,
less than thirty minutes later, he stood in the bedroom of the
two-room apartment, trying to work out what had happened. As he
stood there the deck's duty officer knocked and entered. Coming to
attention, he bowed his head and handed Karr two printouts. "Ywe
Hao . . ." Karr mouthed softly, studying the flat,
black-and-white image of the apartment's occupant; noting at once how
like the artist's impression of the girl—the Yu terrorist Chi
Li—she was. This was her. There was no doubting it. But who
were the others? The
security scans on the five victims had revealed little. They were
from various parts of the City—though mostly from the
north-central hsien. All were engineers or technicians in the
maintenance industries: occupations that allowed them free access at
this level. Apart from that their past conduct had been exemplary.
According to the record, they were fine, upstanding citizens, but the
record was clearly wrong. So
what was this? A rival faction, muscling in on the action? Or had
there been a split in the ranks of the Yu—some internal
struggle for power, culminating in this? After all he'd seen of such
Ko Ming groups it would not have surprised him, but for once the
explanation didn't seem to fit. "What
do the cameras show?" "They're
being processed and collated, sir. We should have them in the next
ten to fifteen minutes." "And
the woman—this Ywe Hao—she's on them, neh?" The
Captain nodded. "I sent a squad up to where she was last seen by
the cameras, but there was no sign of her, sir. She vanished."
"Vanished?" Karr shook his head. "How do you mean?" The
man glanced away uneasily. "Our cameras saw her enter the
maintenance room at the top of the deck. After that there's no sign
of her. Neither of the cameras on the main conduit picked her up."
"So she must be there, neh?" "No,
sir. I had my men check that straight away. The room's empty and
there's no sign of her in the conduit itself." Karr
sighed. It was clear he would have to look for himself. "You
said earlier that she may have been warned, that there was a lookout
of some kind. . . ." "Two young boys, sir." "I
see. And you've traced them, neh?" "They're in custody,
sir. Would you like to see them?" Karr
looked about him at the mess. "Your men have finished here, I
take it?" The Captain nodded. "Good.
Then clear this up first. Remove the corpses and put some cloths
down. I don't want our young friends upset, understand me?"
"Sir!" "Oh,
and Captain . . . have one of your men run a file on the movements of
our friend Ywe Hao over the last three months. With particular
attention to those occasions when she doesn't show up on camera." The
Captain frowned but nodded. "As you wish, Major." "Good.
And bring me some ch'a. A large chung if you have one. We may
be here some while." CHEN
STOOD there in the doorway, looking about him at the carnage. "Kuan
Yin! What happened here?" Karr
smiled tiredly. "It looks like some kind of interfactional
rivalry. As to whether it's two separate groups or a struggle within
the Yu, maybe that's something we'll discover if and when we find the
woman. As for the woman herself, I'm certain she was involved in both
the Hannover assassination and the attack on the Dragonfly Club. I've
asked for files on her movements over the last three months. If I'm
right about her, then there ought to be blanks on the tape
corresponding with the white-outs surrounding the terrorist
incidents. We've no next-of-kin details, which is unusual, but you
can do a little digging on that, neh? Oh, yes, and the Duty Captain
is going to bring two young boys here. They were the woman's
lookouts, it seems. I want you to question them and find out what
they know about her. But be easy on them. I don't think they
understood for a moment what they were in on." "And
you, Gregor? What will you be doing?" Karr
straightened up, then laughed. "First I'm going to finish this
excellent ch'a, then I'm going to find out how a full-grown woman can
disappear into thin air." "Cousins,
we come to the question of the GenSyn inheritance." Wang
looked about him, his eyes resting briefly on Li Yuan and Tsu Ma
before they settled on the aging T'ang of East Asia, Wei Feng. "As
I see it, this matter has been allowed to drag on far too long. As a
result the Company has been harmed, its share price reduced
dramatically on the Index. Our immediate concern, therefore, must be
to provide GenSyn with a stable administrative framework, thus
removing the uncertainties that are presently plaguing the Company.
After that—" Li
Yuan cleared his throat. "Forgive me for interrupting, Cousin,
but before we debate this matter at any length, I would like to call
for a further postponement." Wang
laughed, a small sound of disbelief. "Forgive me, Cousin, but
did I hear you correctly? A further postponement?" Li
Yuan nodded. "If it would please my cousins. It is clear that we
need more time to find a satisfactory solution. Another month or
two." Wang
sat forward, his face suddenly hard. "Forgive me, Cousin, but I
do not understand. Since Klaus Ebert's death, this matter has been
brought before this Council twice. On both occasions there was a
unanimous agreement to postpone. For good reason, for no solution to
the problem was forthcoming. But now we have the answer. Hou
Tung-po's proposal is the solution we were looking for." Tsu
Ma's laugh was heavily sardonic. "You call that a solution,
Cousin? It sounds to me like a bureaucratic nightmare—a recipe
not for stability but for certain financial disaster." Hou
Tung-po sat forward, his face red with anger, but Wang's raised hand
silenced him. "Had
this matter not been raised before, Tsu Ma, and were there not
already a satisfactory solution before us—one you will have a
full opportunity to debate—I would understand your desire to
look for other answers, but the time for delay is past. As I was
saying, we must act now or see the Company damaged, perhaps
irreparably." Wang
paused, looking to Wei Feng, appealing to the old man directly. As
things stood, Hou Tung-po and Chi Ling would support Wang, while Tsu
Ma and Wu Shih would line up behind Li Yuan. If it came to a fight,
Wei Feng held the casting vote. Wang
smiled, softening his stance. "Besides,
what objections could my cousins possibly have to the idea of a
ruling committee? Would that not give us each a fair say in the
running of the Company? Would that not demonstrate—more clearly
than anything—that the Seven have full confidence in the
continuing prosperity of GenSyn?" Li
Yuan looked away. Although in terms of holdings it was second to the
giant MedFac Company on the Hang Seng Index, GenSyn was, without
doubt, the single most important commercial concern on Chung Kuo, and
as Tsu Ma had rightly said, any weakening of the Company would affect
him far more than it did Wang Sau'Ieyan. But
that could not be said. Not openly. For to say as much would give
Wang the chance to get back at Li Yuan for his family's special
relationship with GenSyn—a relationship that, though it had
existed for a century or more, was, in truth, against the spirit of
the Seven. Li
Yuan sat back, meeting Tsu Ma's eyes. They would have to give way.
Minister Sheng had been their winning card, and Wang had already
taken him from their hand. "Cousin
Wang," he said coldly. "I concede. Let us adopt Cousin
Hou's proposal. As you say, what possible objection could we have to
such a scheme?" He
drew a breath, finding comfort in the presence of the silk-bound
folder in his lap—in the thought of the humiliation he would
shortly inflict on Wang. Then— from nowhere, it seemed—a
new thought came to him. He leaned forward again, the sheer
outrageousness of the idea making him want to laugh aloud. "Indeed,"
he said softly, "let me make my own proposal. If the Council
permits, I would like to suggest that Marshal Tolonen be replaced in
his high post and appointed as Head of the ruling committee of
GenSyn." He looked at Wang directly. "As my cousin argued
so eloquently, we need to boost the market's confidence, and what
clearer sign could we give than to make a man of such experience and
integrity the head of our committee?" He saw
the movement in Wang's face and knew he had him. Wang could object,
of course, but on what grounds? On the unsuitability of the
candidate? No. For to argue that would be to argue that their
original ratification of Tolonen as Marshal had been wrong, and that
he could not—would not—do. Li
Yuan looked about him, seeing the nods of agreement from all
sides—even from Wang's own allies—and knew he had
succeeded in limiting the damage. With Tolonen in charge there was a
much greater chance of things getting done. It would mean a loss of
influence in the Council of Generals, but that was as nothing beside
the potential loss of GenSyn's revenues. He met
Wang's eyes, triumphant, but Wang had not finished. "I
am delighted that my cousin recognizes the urgency of this matter.
However, I am concerned whether my cousin really means what he says.
It would not, after all, be the
first time that he has promised this Council something, only to go
back on his word." Li
Yuan started forward, outraged by Wang's words. All around him there
was a buzz of astonishment and indignation. But it was Wei Feng who
spoke first, his deeply lined face grown stern and rocklike as he sat
stiffly upright in his chair. His gruff voice boomed, all sign of
frailty gone from it. "You
had best explain yourself, Wang Sau-leyan, or withdraw your words." "No
?" Wang stood in a flurry of silks, looking about him defiantly.
"Nor would you have, Cousin, had there not been good reason. I
am talking of Li Yuaris promise to this Council that he would release
the young sons—a promise that my cousins Wu Shih and Tsu Ma
were also party to." He shifted his bulk, looking about the
circle of his fellow T'ang. "It is six months since they gave
that promise and what has happened? Are the sons back with their
fathers? Is the matter resolved, the grievance of those high citizens
settled? No. The fathers remain unappeased, rightfully angry that
after we gave our word their sons remain imprisoned." Li
Yuan stood, facing Wang. "There is good reason why the sons have
not been released, and you know it." "Know
it?" Wang laughed contemptuously. "All I know is that you
gave your word. Immediately, you said." "And
so it would have been had the paperwork gone smoothly." "Paperwork
. . . ?" Wang's mocking laughter goaded Wu Shih to rise and
stand beside Li Yuan, his fists clenched, his face livid. "You
know as well as any of us why there have been delays, Wang Sau-leyan!
Considering the gravity of the circumstances, the terms of release
were laughable. All we asked of the fathers was that they should sign
a bond of good behavior. It was > the very minimum we could have
asked for, and yet they refused, quibbling over the i wording of the
papers." "With
every right, if what I've heard is true . . ." Wu
Shih bristled, his words like acid now. "And what have you
heard, Cousin?| Wang
Sau-leyan half turned away, then turned back, moving a step closer,
face thrust almost into Wu Shih's. "That your officials have
been obstructive, it has been your officials and not the fathers who
have quibbled over the precise" wording of these . . . bonds.
That they have dragged their heels and delayed until even the
best man's patience would be frayed. That they have found every
excuse— however absurd—not to come to terms. In short,
that they have been ordered to delay matters." "Ordered?"
Wu Shih shuddered with rage, then lifted his hand as if to strike
Wang, but Li Yuan put out his arm, coming between them. "Cousins,"
he said urgently, "let us remember where we are." He turned
his head, staring fiercely at Wang. "We will achieve nothing by
hurling insults at each other." "You
gave your word," Wang said, defiantly, meeting his eyes coldly.
"All three of you. Immediately, you said. Without conditions."
He took a breath, then turned away, taking his seat. Wu
Shih glared at Wang a moment longer, then stepped back, his disgust
at his cousin no longer concealed. Li Yuan stood there, looking about
him, feeling the tensions that flowed like electric currents in the
air about him and knew—for the first time knew beyond all
doubt—that this was a breach that could never be healed. He
took his seat again, leaning down to lift the folder from where it
had fallen. "Wang
Sau-leyan," he began, looking across at his moon-faced cousin,
calm now that he had taken the first step. "There is a small
matter I would like to raise before we continue. A matter of...
etiquette." Wang Sau-leyan smiled. "As you wish, Cousin." Li
Yuan opened the folder, looking down at the wafer-thin piece of black
plastic. It was the template of a hologrammic image: the image of
Wang Sau-leyan in the garden at Tao Yuan, meeting with Li Yuan's
bondsman, Hsiang Shao-erh. There were other things in the folder—a
taped copy of their conversation and the testimony of Wang's Master
of the Royal Household, Sun Li Hua, but it was the holo that was the
most damning piece of evidence. He
made to offer it to Wang, but Wang shook his head. "I know what
it is, Li Yuan. You have no need to show me." Li
Yuan gave a small laugh of astonishment. What was this? Was Wang
admitting his treachery? With
what seemed like resignation, Wang pulled himself up out of the chair
and went to the double doors, unlocking them and throwing them open.
At his summons a servant approached, head bowed, bearing a large
white lacquered box. Wang took it and turned, facing his fellow
T'ang. "I
wondered when you would come to this," he said, approaching to
within an arm's length of where Li Yuan was sitting. "Here. I
was saving this for you. As for the traitor Sun, he has found peace.
After telling me everything, of course." Li Yuan took the box,
his heart pounding. He
opened it and stared, horrified. From within the bright red wrappings
of the box Hsiang Shao-erh stared back at him, his eyes like
pale-gray bloated moons in an unnaturally white face, the lids peeled
back. And then, slowly, very slowly, as in a dream, the lips began to
move. "Forgive
... me ... Chieh . . . Hsia. ... I ... confess ... my ...
treachery . . . and . . . ask. . . you . . . not... to ... punish...
my ... kin ... for... my . . . abject. . . unworthiness. . . ."
There was a tiny shudder from the severed head, and then it went on,
the flat, almost gravelly whisper like the voice of stone itself.
"Forgive . . . them . . . Chieh . . . Hsia. ... I ... beg
. . . you. . . . Forgive . . .them____" Li
Yuan looked up, seeing his horror reflected in every face but one.
Then, with a shudder of revulsion he dropped the box, watching it
fall, the frozen head roll unevenly across the thick pile of the
carpet until it lay still, resting on its cheek beside Wang
Sau-leyan's foot. Bending down, the T'ang of Africa lifted it and
held it up, offering it to Li Yuan, the smile on his face like the
rictus of a corpse. "This
is yours, I believe, Cousin." Then he began to laugh, his
laughter rolling from him in great waves. "Yours . . ." "What's
your name?" "Kung
Lao." "And
yours?" "Kung
Yi-lung." "You're
brothers, then?" The
nine-year-old Yi-lung shook his head. "Cousins . . ." he
said quietly, still not sure of this man who, despite his air of
kindness, wore the T'ang's uniform. Chen
sat back slightly, smiling. "Okay. You were friends of Ywe
Hao's, weren't you? Good friends. You helped her when those men came,
didn't you? You let her know they were on their way." He saw
how the younger of the two, Lao, looked to his cousin before he
nodded. "Good.
You probably saved her life." He saw
how they looked down at that; how, again, they glanced at each other,
still not sure what this was all about. "She
must have been a very good friend for you to do that for her,
Yi-lung. Why was that? How did you come to be friends?" Yi-lung
kept his head lowered, almost stubbornly. "She was kind to us,"
he mumbled, the words offered reluctantly. "Kind?"
Chen gave a soft laugh, recalling what Karr had said about the guard
Leyden and how she had probably spared his life. "Yes, I can
imagine that. But how did you meet her?" No
answer. He tried another tack. "That's
a nice machine she's got. A MedRes Network-6. I'd like one like that,
wouldn't you? A top-of-the-range machine. It was strange, though. She
was using it to record news items. Things about transportation
systems." "That
was our project," the younger boy, Lao, said without thinking,
then fell quiet again. "Your
project? For school, you mean?" Both
boys nodded. Yi-lung spoke for them. "She was helping us with
it. She always did. She took the time. Not like the rest of them. Any
time we had a problem we could go to her." Chen
took a deep breath. "And that's why you liked her?" Both
boys were looking at him now, a strange earnestness in their young
faces. "She
was funny," Lao said reflectively. "It wasn't all work with
her. She made it fun. Turned it all into a game. We learned a lot
from her, but she wasn't like the teachers." "That's
right," Yi-lung offered, warming to things. "They made
everything seem dull and gray, but she brought it all alive for us.
She made it all make sense." "Sense?"
Chen felt a slight tightening in his stomach. "How do you mean,
Yi-lung? What kind of things did she used to say to you?" Yi-lung
looked down, as if he sensed there were some deeper purpose behind
Chen's question. "Nothing," he said evasively. "Nothing?"
Chen laughed, letting go, knowing he would get nothing if he pushed.
"Look, I'm just interested, that's all. Ywe Hao's gone missing
and we'd like to find her. To help her. If we can find out what kind
of woman she was . . ." "Are
you tracking her down?" Chen
studied the two a moment, then leaned forward, deciding to take them
into his confidence. "Ywe Hao's in trouble. Those men who came
tried to kill her, but she got away. So yes, Kung Lao, we have to
find her. Have to track her down, if that's how you want to put it.
But the more we know—the more good things we know about her—the
better it will be for her. That's why you have to tell me all you can
about her. To help her." Lao
looked at his cousin, then nodded. "Okay. We'll tell you. But
you must promise, Captain Kao. Promise that once you find her you'll
help her all you can." He
looked back at the two boys, momentarily seeing something of his own
sons in them, then nodded. "I promise. All right? Now tell me.
When did you first meet Ywe Hao, and how did you come to be friends?" THE
maintenance ROOM was empty, the hatch on the back wall locked, the
warning light beside it glowing red in the half-light. Karr crouched
down, squeezing through the low doorway, then stood there, perfectly
still, listening, sniffing the air. There was the faintest scent of
sweat. And something else . . . something he didn't recognize. He
went across, putting his ear against the hatch. Nothing. Or almost
nothing. There was a faint hum—a low, pulsing vibration—
the same sound one heard throughout the City, wherever one went. He
paused a moment, studying the hatchway, realizing it would be a tight
squeeze; that he would be vulnerable momentarily if she were waiting
just the other side. But the odds were that she was far away by now. He
ducked into the opening backward, head first, forcing his shoulders
through the narrow space diagonally, then grabbed the safety bar
overhead and heaved himself up, twisting sideways. He dropped and
spun around quickly, his weapon out, but even as he turned, he had to
check himself, staggering, realizing suddenly that the platform was
only five ch'i in width and that beyond . . . Beyond
was a drop of half a li. He
drew back, breathing slowly. The conduit was fifty ch'i across,
a great diamond-shaped space, one of the six great hollowed columns
that stood at the comers of the stack, holding it all up. Pipes went
up into the darkness overhead, massive pipes twenty, thirty times the
girth of a man, each pipe like a great tree, thick branches
stretching off on every side, crisscrossing the open space. Service
lights speckled the walls of the great conduit above and below, but
their effect was not so much to illuminate the scene as to emphasize
its essential darkness. It was
a cold, somber place, a place of shadows and silence. Or so it seemed
in those first few moments. But then he heard it—the sound that
underlay all others throughout the City, the sound of great engines
pushing the water up the levels from the great reservoirs below and
of other engines filtering what came down. There was a palpable hum,
a vibration in the air itself. And a trace of that same indefinable
scent he had caught a hint of in the room earlier, but stronger here.
Much stronger. Poking
his head out over the edge he looked down, then moved back, craning
his neck, trying to see up into the shadows. Which
way? Had she gone up or down? He
looked about him, locating the cameras, then frowned, puzzled. There
was no way the cameras wouldn't have seen her come out of the room
and onto the platform. No chance at all. Which meant that either she
hadn't gone into the v maintenance room in the first place or those
cameras had been tampered with. And she had gone into the
room.
: For a
moment Karr stared at the camera just across from him, then struck by
the absurdity of it, he laughed. It was all too bloody easy. Since
the City had first been 1 built Security had been dependent on their
eyes—their cameras—to be theirji watchdogs and do most of
their surveillance work for them, not questioning for a moment how
satisfactory such a system was, merely using it, as they'd been
taught. But others had. The Yu, for instance. They had seen at
once how weak, how vulnerable such a network was—how easily
manipulated. They had seen just how easy it was to blind an eye or
feed it false information. All they needed was access. And who had
access? Technicians. Maintenance technicians. Like the five dead men.
And the girl. And others. Hundreds of others. Every last one of them
tampering with the network, creating gaps in the vision of the world. False
eyes they'd made. False eyes. Like in wei chi, where a group
of stones was only safe if it had two eyes, and where the object was
to blind an eye and take a group, or to lull one's opponent into a
false sense of security by letting them think they had an eye,
whereas in fact. . . Pulling
his visor down, he leaned out, searching the walls for heat traces. Nothing.
As he'd expected, the trail was cold. He raised the visor, sighing
heavily. What he really needed was sleep. Twelve hours if possible,
four if he was lucky. The drugs he was taking to keep awake had a
limited effect after a while. Thought processes deteriorated,
reflexes slowed. If he didn't find her soon . . . He
leaned back, steadying himself with one hand, then stopped, looking
down. His fingers were resting in something soft and sticky. He
raised them to his mouth, tasting them. It was blood, recently
congealed. Hers?
It had to be. No one else had come here in the last few hours. So
maybe she'd been wounded in the firefight. He shook his head,
puzzled. If that were so, why hadn't they found a trail of blood in
the corridors outside? Unless they hadn't looked. He
went to the edge of the platform, feeling underneath, his fingers
searching until, at the top of the service ladder, three rungs down,
they met a second patch of stickiness. Down.
She had gone down. Karr
smiled; then, drawing his gun, he turned and clambered over the edge,
swinging out, his booted feet reaching for the ladder. toward
THE bottom of the shaft it became more difficult. The smaller service
pipes that branched from the huge arterials proliferated, making it
necessary for Karr to clamber out, away from the wall, searching for
a way down. The
trail of blood had ended higher up, on a platform thirty levels down
from where he had first discovered it. He had spent twenty minutes
searching for further traces, but there had been nothing. It was only
when he had trusted to instinct and gone down that he had found
something—the wrapping of a field-dressing pad, wedged tightly
into a niche in the conduit wall. It was
possible that she had gone out through one of the maintenance hatches
and into the deck beyond. Possible but unlikely. Not with all the
nearby stacks on special security alert. Neither would she have
doubled back. She had lost a lot of blood. In her weakened state the
climb would have been too much. Besides which, his instinct told him
where he would find her. Karr moved on, working his way down, alert
for the smallest movement, the least deviation in the slow, rhythmic
pulse that filled the air. That sound seemed to grow in intensity as
he went down, a deep vibration that was as much within his bones as
in the air. He paused, looking up through the tangled mesh of
pipework, imagining the great two-Zi-high conduit as a giant flute—a
huge k'un-ti—reverberating on the very edge of
audibility: producing one single, unending note in a song written for
titans. He
went down, taking greater care now, conscious that the bottom of the
shaft could not be far away. Even so, he was surprised when, easing
his way between a nest of overlapping pipes, his feet met nothing.
For a moment he held himself there, muscles straining, as his feet
searched blindly for purchase, then drew himself up again. He
crouched, staring down through the tangle of pipework. Below him
there was nothing. Nothing but darkness. In all
probability she was down there, in the darkness, waiting for him. But
how far down? Twenty ch'i? Thirty? He pulled his visor down and
switched to ultraviolet. At once his vision was filled with a strong
red glow. Of course ... he had felt it earlier—that warmth
coming up from below. That was where the great pumps were—just
beneath. Karr raised the visor and shook his head. It was no use. She
could move about as much as she wanted against that bright backdrop
of warmth, knowing that she could not be seen. Nor could he use a
lamp. That would only give his own position away, long before he'd
have the chance to find her. What then? A flash bomb? A disabling
gas? The
last made sense, but still he hesitated. Then, making up his mind, he
turned, making his way across to the wall. There
would be a way down. A ladder. He would find it and descend, into the
darkness. He
went down, tensed, listening for the slightest movement from below,
his booted feet finding the rungs with a delicacy surprising in so
big a man. His body was half turned toward the central darkness, his
weapon drawn, ready for use. Even so, it was a great risk he was
taking and he knew it. She didn't have night-sight—he was
fairly sure of that—but if she were down there, there
was the distinct possibility that she would see him first, if only as
a shadow against the shadows. He
stopped, crouching on the ladder, one hand going down. His foot had
met something. Something hard but yielding. It was
a mesh. A strong security mesh, stretched across the shaft. He
reached' out, searching the surface. Yes, there!—the raised
edge of a gate, set into the mesh. He traced it around. There was a
slight indentation on the edge farthest from the ladder, where a
spanner-key would fit, but it was locked. Worse, it was bolted from
beneath. If he were to go any further he would have to break it open. He
straightened up, gripping the rung tightly, preparing himself, then
brought his foot down hard. With a sharp crack it gave, taking him
with it, his hand torn from the rung, his body twisting about. He
fell. Instinctively, he curled into a ball, preparing for impact, but
it came sooner than he'd expected, jarring him. He
rolled to one side, then sat up, sucking in a ragged breath, his left
shoulder aching. If she
was there . . . He
closed his eyes, willing the pain to subside, then got up onto his
knees. For the briefest moment he felt giddy, disoriented, then his
head cleared. His gun . . . he had lost his gun. In the
silent darkness he waited, tensed, straining to hear the click of a
safety or the rattle of a grenade, but there was nothing, only the
deep, rhythmic pulse of the pumps, immediately beneath. And something
else—something so faint he thought at first he was imagining
it. Karr
got to his feet unsteadily, then, feeling his way blindly, he went
toward the sound. The
wall was closer than he'd thought. For a moment his hands searched
fruitlessly, then found what they'd been looking for. A passageway—a
small, low-ceilinged tunnel barely broad enough for him to squeeze
into. He stood there a moment, listening. Yes, it came from here. He
could hear it clearly now. Turning
sideways, he ducked inside, moving slowly down the cramped
passageway, his head scraping the ceiling. Halfway down he stopped,
listening again. The sound was closer now, its regular pattern
unmistakable. Reaching out, his fingers connected with a grille. He
recognized it at once. It was a storage cupboard inset into the wall,
like those they had in the dormitories. Slipping
his fingers through the grille, he lifted it, easing it slowly back
and up into the slot at the top. He paused, listening again, his hand
resting against the bottom edge of the niche, then began to move his
fingers inward, searching. . . Almost
at once they met something warm. He drew them back a fraction,
conscious of the slight change in the pattern of the woman's
breathing. He waited for it to become regular, then reached out
again, exploring the shape. It was a hand, the fingers pointing to
the left. He reached beyond it, searching, then smiled, his fingers
closing about a harder, colder object. Her gun. For a
moment he rested, his eyes closed, listening to the simple rhythm of
the woman's breathing, the deep reverberation of the pumps. In the
darkness they seemed to form a kind of counterpoint and for a moment
he felt himself at ease, the two sounds connecting somewhere deep
within him, yin and yang, balancing each other. The
moment passed. Karr opened his eyes into the darkness and shivered.
It was a shame. He would have liked it to end otherwise, but it was
not to be. He checked the gun, then pulled his visor down, clicking
on the lamp. At once the cramped niche filled with light and shadow. Karr
caught his breath, studying the woman. She lay on her side, her face
toward the entrance, one hand folded across her breasts. In the
pearled glow of the lamp she was quite beautiful, her Asiatic
features softened in sleep, her strength—the perfect bone
structure of her face and shoulders—somehow emphasized. Like
Marie, he thought, surprised by the notion. As he watched she
stirred, moving her head slightly, her eyes flickering beneath the
lids in dream. Again
he shivered, remembering all he had learned about her in the past few
days—recalling what the guard Leyden had said about her, and
what the two boys had told Chen. At the same time he could see the
murdered youth at the Dragonfly Club and the soft, hideous excess of
that place, and for a moment he was confused. Was she realty his
enemy? Was this strong, beautiful creature really so different from
himself? He
looked away, reminding himself of the oath of loyalty he had made to
his T'ang. Then, steeling himself, he raised the gun, placing it a
mere finger's length from her sleeping face and clicking off the
safety. The
sound woke her. She smiled and stretched, turning toward him. For a
moment her dark eyes stared out dreamily, then with a blink of
realization, she grew still. He
hesitated, wanting to explain, wanting, just this once, for her to
understand. UT
') "Don't.
. ." she said quietly. "Please . . ." The
words did something to him. He drew the gun back, staring at her,
then, changing its setting, he leaned forward again, placing it to
her temple. Afterward
he stood there, out in the darkness of the main shaft, the mesh
overhead glittering in the upturned light from his visor, and tried
to come to terms with what he'd done. He had been resolved to kill
her; to end it cleanly, honorably. But faced with her, hearing her
voice, he had found himself unmanned— incapable of doing what
he'd planned. He
turned, looking back at the shadowed entrance to the passageway. All
this| while he had been out of contact—operating under a
communications blackout— so in theory he might still kill her
or let her go and no one would be the wiser. But he knew now that he
would do what duty required of him—and deliver her, stunned,
her wrists and ankles bound, into captivity. Whether
it felt right or not. Because that was his job—the thing
Tolonen had chosen him to do all those years ago. Karr
sighed; then raising his right hand, he held down the two tiny
blisters on the wrist, reactivating the built-in comset. "Kao
Chen," he said softly, "can you read me?" There
was a moment's silence, then the reply came, sounding directly in his
head. "Gregor . . . thank the gods. Where are you?" He
smiled, comforted by the sound of Chen's voice. "Listen. I've
got her. She's bound and unconscious, but I don't think I can get her
out of here on my own. I'll need assistance." "Okay.
I'll get onto that straight away. But where are you? There's been no
trace of you for almost two hours. We were worried." Karr
laughed quietly. "Wait. There's a plaque here somewhere."
He lowered his visor, looking about, then went across. "All
right. You'll need two men and some lifting equipment—pulleys
and the like." "Yes," Chen said, growing impatient.
"I'll do all that. But tell me where you are You must have some
idea." "It's
Level Thirty-one,» Karr said, turning back, playing the beam
onto the surface of the plaque, making sure. "Level Thirty-one,
Dachau Hsien." CHAPTER
EIGHTEEN The Dead Brother LI
YUAN STOOD on the high terrace at Hei Shui, looking out across the
lake. He had come unannounced, directly from a meeting with his
ministers. Behind him stood eight of his retainers, their black silks
______merging with the shadows. A
light breeze feathered the surface of the lake, making the tall reeds
at the shoreline sway, the cormorants bob gently on the water. The
sky was a perfect blue, the distant mountains hard, clear shapes of
black. Sunlight rested like a honeyed gauze over everything, glinting
off the long sweep of steps, the white stone arches of j the bridge.
On the far bank, beyond the lush green of the water meadow, Fei Yens
f maids moved among the trees of the orchard, preparing their
mistress for the audience to come. From
where he stood he could see the child's cot—a large, sedanlike
thing of ~4 pastel-colored cushions and veils. Seeing it had
made his heart beat faster, the darkness at the pit of his stomach
harden like a stone. He
turned, impatient. "Come," he said brusquely, then turned
back, skipping down the broad steps, his men following like shadows
on the white stone. They
met on the narrow bridge, a body's length separating them. Fei Yen
stood there, her head lowered. Behind her came her maids, the cot
balanced between four of them. As Li
Yuan took a step closer, Fei Yen knelt, touching her head to the
stone. Behind her her maids did the same. "ChiehHsia.
. ." She
was dressed in a simple chi poo of pale lemon, embroidered
with butterflies. Her head was bare, her fine, dark hair secured in a
tightly braided bun at the crown. As she looked up again, he noticed
a faint color at her neck. "Your
gift—" he began, then stopped, hearing a sound from within
the cot. She
turned her head, following his gaze, then looked back at him. "He's
waking." He looked at her without recognition, then looked back
at the cot. Stepping past her, he moved between the kneeling maids
and, crouching, drew back the veil at the side of the cot. Inside,
amid a downy nest of cushions, young Han was waking. He lay
on his side, one tiny, delicate hand reaching out to grip the edge of
the cot. His
eyes—two tiny, rounded centers of perfect liquid blackness—were
open, staring up at him. Li
Yuan caught his breath, astonished by the likeness. "Han Ch'in .
. ." he said softly. Fei
Yen came and knelt beside him, smiling down at the child, evoking a
happy gurgle of recognition. "Do you wish to hold him, Chieh
Hsial" He
hesitated, staring down at the child, engulfed by a pain of longing
so strong it threatened to unhinge him, then nodded, unable to form
the words. She
leaned past, brushing against him, the faint waft of her perfume, the
warmth of the momentary contact, bringing him back to himself, making
him realize that it was she there beside him. He shivered, appalled
by the strength of what he was feeling, knowing suddenly that it had
been wrong for him to come. A weakness. But now he had no choice. As
she lifted the child and turned toward him, he felt the pain return,
sharper than before. "Your
son," she said, so faintly that only he caught the words. The
child nestled in his arms contentedly, so small and frail and
vulnerable that his face creased with pain at the thought that anyone
might ever harm him. Nine months old, he was—a mere thirty-nine
weeks—yet already he was the image of Yuan's brother, Han
Ch'in, dead these last ten years. Li
Yuan stood, then turned, cradling the child, cooing softly to him as
he moved between the kneeling maids. Reaching the balustrade, he
stood there, looking down at the bank, his eyes half-lidded, trying
to see. But there was nothing. No younger self stood there, his heart
in his throat, watching as a youthful Han Ch'in strode purposefully
through the short grass, like a proud young animal, making toward the
bridge and his betrothed. Li
Yuan frowned, then turned, staring across the water meadow, but again
there was nothing. No tent, no tethered horse or archery target. It
was gone, all of it, as if it had never been. And yet there was the
child, so like his long-dead brother that it was as if he had not
died but simply been away, on a long journey. "Where
have you been, Han Ch'in?" he asked softly, almost
inaudibly, feeling the warm breeze on his cheek; watching it stir and
lift the fine dark hair that covered the child's perfect, ivory brow.
"Where have you been all these years?" Yet
even as he uttered the words he knew he was deluding himself. This
was not Tongjiang, and his brother, Han Ch'in, was dead. He had
helped bury him himself. And this was someone else. A stranger to the
great world; a whole new cycle of creation. His son, fated to be a
stranger. He
shivered again, pained by the necessity of what he must do, then
turned, looking back at Fei Yen. She
was watching him, her hands at her neck, her eyes misted, moved by
the sight of him holding the child, all calculation gone from her.
That surprised him— that she was as unprepared for this as he.
Whatever she had intended by her gift— whether to wound him or
provoke a sense of guilt—she had never expected this. Beyond
her stood his men, like eight dark statues in the late morning
sunlight, watching, waiting in silence for their Lord. He
went back to her, handing her the child. "He is a good child,
neh?" She
met his eyes, suddenly curious, wondering what he meant by coming,
then lowered her head. "Like his father," she said quietly. He
looked away, conscious for the first time of her beauty. "You
will send me a tape each year, on the child's birthday. I wish. . ."
He hesitated, his mouth suddenly dry. He looked back at her. "If
he is ill, I want to know." She
gave a small bow. "As you wish, Chieh Hsia." "And,
Fei Yen . . ." She
looked up, her eyes momentarily unguarded. "Chieh Hsia?" He
hesitated, studying her face, the depth of what he had once felt for
her there again, just below the surface, then shook his head. "Just
that you must do nothing beyond that. What was between us is past.
You must not try to rekindle it. Do you understand me clearly?" For a
moment she held his eyes, as if to deny him; then with a familiar
little motion of her head, she looked away, her voice harder than
before. "As
you wish, Chieh Hsia. As you wish." A
SCREEN had been set up between the pillars at the far end of the
Hall, like a great white banner gripped between the teeth of the
dragons. Wang Sau-leyan's Audience Chair had been set before the
screen, some twenty ch'i back, the gold silk cushions plumped up
ready for him. He went to it and climbed up, taking his place, then
looked across at his Chancellor. "Well?" Hung
Mien-lo shuddered, then turning toward the back of the Hall, lifted a
trembling hand. At
once the lights in the Hall faded. A moment later the screen was lit
with a pure white light. Only as the camera panned back slightly did
Wang Sau-leyan realize that he was looking at something—at the
pale stone face of something. Then as the border of green and gray
and blue came into stronger focus, he realized what it was. A tomb.
The door to a tomb. And
not just any tomb. It was his family's tomb at Tao Yuan, in the
walled garden behind the Eastern Palace. He shivered, one hand
clutching at his stomach, a tense feeling of dread growing in him by
the moment. "What. . . ?" The
query was uncompleted. Even as he watched, the faintest web of cracks
formed on the pure white surface of the stone. For the briefest
moment these darkened, broadening, tiny chips of whiteness falling
away as the stone began to , crumble. Then with a suddenness that
made him jerk back, the door split asunder, ' revealing the inner
darkness. He
stared at the screen, horrified, his throat constricted, his heart
hammering in his chest. For a moment there was nothing—nothing
but the darkness—and then the darkness moved, a shadow forming
on the ragged edge of stone. It was a hand. Wang
Sau-leyan was shaking now, his whole body trembling, but he could not
look away. Slowly, as in his worst nightmare, the figure pulled
itself up out of the darkness of the tomb, like a drowned man
dragging himself up from the depths of the ocean bed. For a moment it
stood there, faintly outlined by the morning sunlight, a simple shape
of darkness against the utter blackness beyond; then it staggered
forward, into the full brightness of the sun. Wang
groaned. "Kuan Yin ..." It was
his brother, Wang Ta-hung. His brother, laid in a bed of stone these
last twenty months. But he had grown in the tomb, becoming the man he
had never been in life. The figure stretched in the sunlight, earth
falling from its shroud, then looked about it, blinking into the new
day. "It
cannot be," Wang Sau-leyan said softly, breathlessly. "I
had him killed, his copy destroyed." "And
yet his vault was empty, Chieh Hsia." The
corpse stood there, swaying slightly, its face up to the sun. Then,
with what seemed like a drunken lurch, it started forward again,
trailing earth. "And
the earth?" "Is
real earth, Chieh Hsia. I had it analyzed." Wang
stared at the screen, horrified, watching the slow, ungainly
procession of his brother's corpse. There was no doubting it. It was
his brother, but grown large and muscular, more like his elder
brothers than the weakling he had been in life. As it staggered
across the grass toward the locked gate and the watching camera, the
sound of it—a hoarse, snuffling noise—grew louder step by
step. The
gate fell away, the seasoned wood shattering as if rotten, torn
brutally from its massive iron hinges. Immediately the image shifted
to another camera, watching the figure come on, up the broad pathway
beside the Eastern Palace and then down the steps, into the central
gardens. "Did
no one try to stop it?" Wang asked, his mouth dry. Hung's
voice was small. "No one knew, Chieh Hsia. The first time
an alarm sounded was when it broke through the main gate. The guards
there were frightened out of their wits. They ran from it. And who
can blame them?" For
once Wang Sau-leyan did not argue with his Chancellor.
Watching the I figure stumble on he felt the urge to hide—somewhere
deep and dark and safe—or j to run and keep running, even to
the ends of the earth. The hair stood up on his neck, and his hands
shook like those of an old man. He had never felt so afraid. Never,
even as a child. And
yet it could not be his brother. Even as he feared it, a part of him
rejected it. He put
his hands out, gripping the arms of the chair, willing himself to be
calm, but it was hard. The image on the screen was powerful, more
powerful than his reasoning mind could bear. His brother was dead—he
had seen that with his eyes; J touched the cold and lifeless
flesh—and yet here he was once more, reborn—a new man,
his eyes agleam with life, his body glowing with a strange, unearthly
power. He
shuddered, then tore his eyes from the screen, looking down into the
pale, terrified face of his Chancellor. "So
where is it now, Hung? Where in the gods' names is it now?" Hung
Mien-lo looked up at him, wide-eyed, and gave the tiniest shrug. "In
the hills, Chieh Hsia. Somewhere in the hills." YWE
HAO WAS STANDING with her back to Karr, naked, her hands secured
behind her back, her ankles bound. To her right, against the bare
wall, was an empty examination couch. Beyond the woman, at the far
end of the cell, two members of the medical staff were preparing
their instruments at a long table. Karr
cleared his throat, embarrassed, even a touch angry, at the way they
were treating her. It had never worried him before—normally the
creatures he had to deal with deserved such treatment—but this
time it was different. He glanced at the woman uneasily, disturbed by
her nakedness, and as he moved past her, met her eyes briefly,
conscious once more of the strength there, the defiance—even,
perhaps, a slight air of moral superiority. He
stood by the table, looking down at the instruments laid out on the
white cloth. "What are these for, Surgeon Wu?" He
knew what they were for. He had seen them used a hundred, maybe a
thousand, times. But that was not what he meant. Wu
looked up at him, surprised. "Forgive me, Major. I don't
understand . . " Karr
turned, facing him. "Did anyone instruct you to bring these?" The
old man gave a short laugh. "No, Major Karr. No one instructed
me. But it isp standard practice at an interrogation. I assumed—" "You
will assume nothing," Karr said, angry that his explicit
instructions had not been acted on. "You'll pack them up and
leave. But first you'll give the prisoner a full medical
examination." "It
is most irregular, Major—" the old man began, affronted by
the request, but Karr barked at him angrily. "This
is my investigation, Surgeon Wu, and you'll do as I say! Now
get to it. I want a report ready for my signature in twenty minutes." Karr
stood by the door, his back turned on the girl, while the old man and
his assistant did their work. Only when they'd finished did he turn
back. The
girl lay on the couch, naked, the very straightness of her posture,
like the look in her eyes, a gesture of defiance. Karr stared at her
a moment, then looked away, a feeling of unease eating at him. If the
truth were told, he admired her. Admired the way she had lain there,
suffering all the indignities they had put her through, and yet had
retained her sense of self-pride. In that she reminded him of Marie. He
looked away, disturbed at where his thoughts had led him. Marie was
no terrorist, after all. Yet the thought was valid. He had only to
glance at the girl—at the way she held herself—and he
could see the similarities. It was not a physical resemblance—though
both were fine, strong women—but some inward quality that
showed itself in every movement, every gesture. He
went across and opened one of the cupboards on the far side of the
room, then returned, laying a sheet over her, covering her nakedness.
She stared up at him a moment, surprised, then looked away. "You
will be moved to another cell," he said, looking about him at
the appalling bareness of the room. "Somewhere more comfortable
than this." He looked back at her, seeing how her body was
tensed beneath the sheet. She didn't trust him. But then, why should
she? He was her enemy. He might be showing her some small degree of
kindness now, but ultimately it was his role to destroy her, and she
knew that. Maybe this was just as cruel. Maybe he should just have
let this butcher Wu get on with things. But some instinct in him
cried out against that. She was not like the others he had had to act
against—nothing like DeVore or Berdichev. There he had known
exactly where he stood, but here . . . He
turned away, angry with himself. Angry that he found himself so much
in sympathy with her; that she reminded him so much of his Marie. Was
it merely that—that deep resemblance? If so, it was reason
enough to ask to be taken off the case. But he wasn't sure that it
was. Rather, it was some likeness to himself; the same thing
he had seen in Marie, perhaps, that had made him want her for his
mate. Yet if that were so, what did it say about him? Had things
changed so much—had he changed so much—that he could now
see eye to eye with his Master's enemies? He
looked back at her—at the clear, female shape of her beneath
the sheet— and felt a slight tremor pass through him. Was he
deluding himself, making it harder for himself, by seeing in her some
reflection of his own deep-rooted unease? Was it that? For if it
were, if the problem lay with him ... "Major
Karr?" He
turned. Surgeon Wu stood beside the table, his assistant behind him,
holding the instrument case. On the table beside the old man was the
medical report. Karr
picked it up, studying it carefully, then took the pen from his
pocket and signed at the bottom, giving the undercopy to the surgeon. "Okay.
You can go now, Wu. I'll finish off here." Wu's
lips and eyes formed a brief, knowing smile. "As you wish, Major
Karr." Then, bowing his head, he departed, his assistant—silent,
colorless, like a pale shadow of the old man—following two
paces behind. Karr
turned back to the woman. "Is there anything you need?" She
looked at him a moment. "My freedom. A new identity, perhaps."
She fell silent, a look of sour resignation on her face. "No,
Major Karr. There's nothing I need." He
hesitated, then nodded. "You'll be moved in the next hour or so,
as soon as another cell is prepared. Later on, I'll be back to
question you. It has to be done, so it's best if you make it easy for
yourself. We know a great deal anyway, but it would be best for you—" "Best
for me?" She stared back at him, a look of disbelief in her
eyes. "Do what you must, Major Karr, but never tell me what's
best for me. Because you just don't know. You haven't an idea." He
felt a shiver pass through him. She was right. This much was fated.
Was like a script from which they both must read. But best. . . ? He
turned away. This was their fate, but at least he could make it easy
for her once they had finished—make it painless and clean. That
much he could do, little as it was. IN TAG
YUAN, in the walled burial ground of the Wang clan, it was raining.
Beneath a sky of dense gray-black cloud, Wang Sau-leyan stood before
the open tomb, his cloak pulled tight about him, staring wide-eyed
into the darkness below. Hung
Mien-lo, watching from nearby, felt the hairs rise on the back of his
neck. So it was true. The tomb had been breached from within, the
stone casket that had held Wang Ta-hung shattered like a plaster god.
And the contents? He
shuddered. There were footprints in the earth, traces of fiber, but
nothing conclusive. Nothing to link the missing corpse with the
damage to the tomb. Unless one believed the film. On the
flight over from Alexandria they had talked it through, the T'ang's
insistence bordering on madness. The dead did not rise, he argued, so
it was something else. Someone had set this up, to frighten him and
try to undermine him. But how? And who? Li
Yuan was the obvious candidate—he had most to gain from such a
move— but equally, he had the least opportunity. Hung's spies
had kept a close watch on the young T'ang of Europe and no sign of
anything relating to this matter had emerged—not even the
smallest hint. Tsu
Ma, then? Again, he had motive enough, and it was true that Hung's
spies in the Tsu household were less effective than in any other of
the palaces, but somehow it seemed at odds with Tsu Ma's nature. This
was not the kind of thing he would do. With Tsu Ma even his
deviousness had a quality of directness to it. So who
did that leave? Mach? The thought was preposterous. As for the other
T'ang, they had no real motive—even Wu Shih. Sun Li Hua had had
motive enough, but he was dead, his family slaughtered to the third
generation. All of
which made the reality of this—the shattered slabs, the empty
casket— that much more disturbing. Besides which, the thing was
out there somewhere, a strong, powerful creature, capable of
splitting stone and lifting a slab four times the weight of a man. Something
inhuman. He
watched the T'ang go inside, and he turned away, looking about him at
the layout of the rain-swept garden. Unless it was the real Wang
Ta-hung, it would have had to get inside the tomb before it could
break out so spectacularly; how would it have done that? Hung
Mien-lo paced to and fro slowly, trying to work things out. It was
possible that the being had been there a long time—placed there
at the time of Wang Ta-hung's burial ceremony, or before. But that
was unlikely. Unless it was a machine it would have had to eat, and
he had yet to see a machine as lifelike as the one that had burst
from the tomb. So
how? How would something have got into the tomb without their seeing
it? The
security cameras here worked on a simple principle. For most of the
time the cameras were inactive, but at the least noise or sign of
movement they would focus on the source of the disturbance, following
it until it left their field of vision. In the dark it was programmed
to respond to the heat traces of intruders. The
advantage of such a system was that it was easy to check each
camera's output. There was no need to reel through hours of static
film; one had only to look at what was there. Hung
could see how that made sense . . . normally. Yet what if, just this
once, something cold and silent had crept in through the darkness? He
went across, looking down into the tomb. At the foot of the steps, in
the candle-lit interior, Wang was standing beside the broken casket,
staring down into its emptiness. Sensing Hung there, above him, Wang
Sau-leyan turned, looking up. "He's
dead. I felt him. He was cold." Hung
Mien-lo nodded, but the T'ang's words had sent a shiver down his
spine. Something cold... He backed away, bowing low, as Wang came up
the steps, wiping the dust from his hands. "You'll
find out who did this, Master Hung. And you'll find that thing . . .
whatever it is. But until you do, you can consider yourself demoted,
without title. Understand me?" Hung
met the T'ang's eyes, then let his head drop, giving a silent nod of
acquiescence. "Good.
Then set to it. This business makes my flesh creep." And
mine, thought Hung Mien-lo, concealing the bitter anger he was
feeling. And mine. Jk. THE
CELL WAS CLEAN, the sheets on the bed freshly laundered. In one comer
stood a bowl and a water jar, in another a pot. On the narrow desk
were paper, brushes, and an ink block. Those and the holo plinth from
Ywe Hao's apartment. Ywe
Hao sat at the desk, brush in hand, her eyes closed, looking back,
trying to remember how it was, but it was hard to do. Painful. Even
so, the need was strong in her. To make sense of it all. To try and
explain it to the big man. She
let the brush fall, then sat back, knuckling her eyes. It was more
than three hours since the morning's interview with the Major, yet
she had managed no more than three brief pages. She sighed and lifted
the first sheet from the desk, reading it back, surprised by the
starkness of her description, by the way the words bristled with
pain, as if she'd changed them somehow. She
shivered, then put it down, wondering what real difference any of
this made. At the end of it they would find her guilty and have her
executed, whatever she said J or did. The evidence was too strong
against her. And even if it wasn't. . . Yes,
but the big man—the Major—had been scrupulously fair so
far. She looke away, disturbed by the direction of her thoughts. Even
so, she could not deny it. There was something different about him.
Something she had not expected to find in one of the T'ang's
servants. It was as if he had understood—maybe even sympathized
with—much of what she'd said. When she had spoken of the
Dragonfly Club, particularly, she had noted how he had leaned toward
her, nodding, as if he shared her contempt. And yet he was a Major in
Security, a senior officer, loyal to his T'ang. So maybe it was just
an act, a trick to catch her off her guard. Yet if it was, then why
hadn't he used it? Or was his a longer game? Was he aiming to catch
bigger fish through her? If so,
he would need the patience of the immortals, for she knew as little
as Karr when it came to that. Mach alone knew who the cell leaders
were, and Mach was much too clever to be taken by the likes of Karr. Again
the thought troubled her. Made her pause thoughtfully and look down
at her hands. Karr
had given her clothes, ensured that her food was okay, that she was
treated well by her guards. All of which had been unexpected. She had
been schooled to expect only the worst. But this one puzzled her. He
had the look of a brute—of some great, hulking automaton—yet
when he talked his hands moved with a grace that was surprising. And
his eyes . . . She
shook her head, confused. Whatever, she was dead. The moment he had
taken her she had known that. So why
did she feel the need to justify herself so strongly? Why couldn't
she let the acts speak for themselves? She
leaned across and pulled the plinth toward her. Maybe this was why.
Because he had asked. Because of the look in those deep-blue eyes of
his when she had told him about her brother. And because he had
returned this to her. So maybe. . . Maybe
what? she asked, some coldly cynical part of her suddenly
asserting itself. After all, what good was his understanding unless
it changed him? What good would all her explanations be if all they
did was make him better at what he did? And what he did was to track
down people like herself. Track them down and kill them, preventing
change. What
was the expression they had? Ah yes, 1 am my Master's hands. So
it was among them. And so it would remain. And nothing she could say
would ever change that. She
pushed the plinth and the papers aside and stood up, angry, annoyed
with herself that she had not been quicker, stronger than she'd
proved. She had had so much to offer the Yu, but now she had
destroyed all that. I
should have known, she told herself. I should have anticipated Edel
getting back at me. I should have moved from there. But there wasn't
time. Mach didn't give me time. And I was so tired. She
threw herself down onto the bed, letting it all wash through her for
the dozenth time. Nor was she any nearer to an answer. Not that
answers would help her now. And yet the urge remained. The urge to
explain herself. To justify herself to him. But
why? Why should that be? There
were footsteps outside and the sound of the electronic locks of the
door sliding back. A moment later the door eased back and Karr came
into the room, stooping to pass beneath the lintel. "Ywe
Hao," he said, in that faintly accented way he had of speaking.
"Get up now. It's time for us to talk again." She
turned, looking at him, then nodded. "I've been thinking,"
she said. "Remembering the past. . ." SINCE
THE FIRE that had destroyed it, Deck Fourteen of Central Bremen stack
had been rebuilt, though not to the old pattern. Out of respect for
those who had died here, it had been converted into a memorial park,
landscaped to resemble the ancient water gardens—the Chuo Cheng
Yuan—at Siichow. Guards walked the narrow paths, accompanied by
their wives and children, or alone, enjoying the peaceful harmony of
the lake, the rocks, the delicate bridges and stilted pavilions. From
time to time one or more would stop beside the great t'ing, named
"Beautiful Snow, Beautiful Clouds" after its original, and
stare up at the great stone—the Stone of Enduring Sorrow—that
had been placed there by the young T'ang only months before, reading
the red-painted names cut into its broad, pale gray flank. The names
of all eleven thousand and eighteen men, women, and children who had
been killed here by the Ping Tiao. Farther
down, on the far side of the lotus lake, a stone boat jutted from the
bank. This was the teahouse "Traveling by Sea." At one of
the stone benches near the prow Karr sat, alone, a chung of the
house's finest ch'a before him. Nearby two of his guards made
sure he was not disturbed. From
where Karr sat, he could see the Stone, its shape partially obscured
by the willows on the far bank, its top edge blunted like a filed
tooth. He stared at it awhile, trying to fit it into the context of
recent events. He
sipped at his ch'a, his unease returning, stronger than ever. However
he tried to argue it, it didn't feel right. Ywe Hao would never have
done this. Would never, for a moment, have countenanced killing so
many innocent people. No. He had read what she had written about her
brother and been touched by it. Had heard what the guard Leyden had
said about her. Had watched the tape of Chen's interview with the two
boys—her young lookouts—and seen the fierce love for her
in their eyes. Finally, he had seen with his own eyes what had
happened at the Dragonfly Club, and in his heart of hearts he could
find no wrong in what she had done. She
was a killer, yes, but then so was he, and who was to say what
justified the act of killing, what made it right or wrong? He killed
to order, she for consciences sake, and who could say which of those
was right, which wrong? And
now this—this latest twist. He looked down at the scroll on the
table beside the chung and shook his head. He should have killed her
while he had still had the chance. No one would have known. No one
but himself. He set
his bowl down angrily, splashing the ch'a. Where the hell was
Chen? What in the gods' names was keeping him? But
when he turned, it was to find Chen there, moving past the guards to
greet him. "So
what's been happening?" "This
. . ." Karr said, pushing the scroll across. Chen
unfurled it and began to read. "They've
taken it out of our hands," Karr said, his voice low and angry.
"They've pushed us aside, and I want to know why." Chen
looked up, puzzled by his friend's reaction. "All it says here
is that we are to hand her over to the T'ing Wei. That is
strange, I agree, but not totally unheard of." Karr
shook his head. "No. Look farther down. The second to last
paragraph. Read it. See what it says." Chen
looked back at the scroll, reading the relevant paragraph quickly,
then looked up again, frowning. "That cannot be right, surely?
SimFic? They are to hand her ovejr to SimFic? What is Tolonen
thinking of?" "It's
not the Marshal. Look. There at the bottom of the scroll. That's the
Chancellor's seal. Which means Li Yuan jnust have authorized this." Chen
sat back, astonished. "But why? It makes no sense." Karr
shook his head. "No. It makes sense all right's just that we
don't know how it fits together yet." "And
you want to know?" "Yes." "But
isn't that outside our jurisdiction? I mean ..." Karr
leaned toward him. "I've done a bit of digging and it seems that
the T'ing Wei are to hand her over to SimFic's African
operation." Chen
frowned. "Africa?" "Yes.
It's strange, neh? But listen to this. It seems she's destined for a
special unit in East Africa. A place named Kibwezi. The gods alone
know what they do there or why they want her, but it's certainly
important—important enough to warrant the T'ang's direct
intervention. And that's why I called for you, Chen. You see, I've
got another job for you—another task for our friend Tong Chou." Tong
Chou was Chen's alias. The name he had used in the Plantations when
he had gone in after DeVore. Chen
took a long breath. Wang Ti was close to term: the child was due
sometime in the next few weeks and he had hoped to be there at the
birth. But this was his duty. What he was paid to do. He met Karr's
eyes, nodding. "All right. When do I start?" "Tomorrow.
The documentation is being prepared. You're to be transferred to
Kibwezi from the European arm of SimFic. All the relevant background
informa-tion will be with you by tonight." "And
the woman? Ywe Hao? Am I to accompany her?" Karr
shook his head. "No. That would seem too circumstantial, neh?
Besides which, the transfer won't be made for another few days yet.
It'll give you time to find out what's going on over there." "And
how will I report back?" "You
won't. Not until you have to come out." Chen
considered. It sounded dangerous, but no more dangerous than before.
He nodded. "And when I have to come out—what do I do?" "You'll
send a message. A letter to Wang Ti. And then we'll come in and get
you out." "I
see." Chen sat back, looking past the big man thoughtfully. "And
the woman, Ywe Hao ... am I to intercede?" Karr
dropped his eyes. "No. Not in any circumstances. You are to
observe, nothing more. Our involvement must not be suspected. If the
T'ang were to hear. . ." "I
understand." "Good.
Then get on home, Kao Chen. You'll want to be with Wang Ti and the
children, neh?" Karr smiled. "And don't go worrying. Wang
Ti will be fine. I'll keep an eye on her while you're gone." Chen
stood, smiling. "I am grateful. That will ease my mind greatly." "Good.
Oh, and before you go ... what did you find out down there? Who had
Ywe Hao been meeting?" Chen
reached into his tunic pocket and took out the two framed pictures he
had taken from the uncle's apartment; the portraits of Ywe Hao's
mother with her husband and Ywe Hao with her brother. He looked at
them a moment, then handed them across. Karr
stared at the pictures, surprised. "But they're dead. She told
me they were dead." Chen
sighed. "The father's dead. The brother too. But the mother is
alive, and an uncle. That's who she went to see. Her family." Karr
stared at them a moment longer, then nodded. "All right. Get
going, then. I'll speak to you later." When
Chen had gone, Karr got up and went to the prow of the stone boat,
staring out across the water at the Stone. He could not save her. No.
That had been taken out of his hands. But there was something he
could do for her: one small but significant gesture, not to set
things right but to make things better—maybe to give her
comfort at the last. He
looked down at the portraits one last time, then let them fall into
the water, smiling, knowing what to do. LI
yuan looked about him at the empty stalls, sniffing the warm
darkness. On whim, he had summoned the Steward of the Eastern Palace
and had him bring the keys, then had gone inside, alone, conscious
that he had not been here since the day he had killed the horses. Though
the stalls had been cleaned and disinfected and the tiled floors
cleared of straw, the scent of horses was strong; was in each brick
and tile and wooden strut of the ancient building. And if he closed
his eyes. . . If
he closed his eyes . . . \He
shivered and looked about him again, seeing how the moonlight
silvered the huge square of the entrance; how it lay like a
glistening layer of dew on the end posts of the stalls. "I
must have horses. . . ." he said softly, speaking to himself. "I
must ride again and go hawking. I have kept too much to my office. I
had forgotten. . . ." Forgotten
what? he asked himself. How
to live, came the answer. You sent her away, yet still she
holds you back. You must break the chain, Li Yuan. You must learn to
forget her. You have wives, Li Yuan— good wives. And
soon you will have children. He
nodded, then went across quickly, standing in the doorway, holding on
to the great wooden upright, looking up at the moon. The
moon was high and almost full. As he watched, a ragged wisp of cloud
drifted like a net across its surface. He laughed, surprised by the
sudden joy he felt and looked to the northeast, toward Wang
Sau-leyan's palace at Tao Yuan, fifteen hundred li in the
distance. "Who
hates you more than I, Cousin Wang? Who hates you enough to send your
brother's ghost to haunt you?" And
was it that that brought this sudden feeling of well-being? No, for
the mood seemed unconnected to an event—was a sea change, like
the sunlight on the waters after the violence of the storm. He
went out onto the graveled parade ground and turned full circle, his
arms out, his eyes closed, remembering. It had been the morning of
his twelfth birthday and his father had summoned all the servants. If
he closed his eyes he could see it; could see his father standing
there, tall and imperious, the grooms lined up before the doors, the
Chief Groom, Hung Feng-chan, steadying the horse and offering him the
halter. He
stopped, catching his breath. Had that happened? Had that been he,
that morning, refusing to mount the horse his father had given him,
claiming his brother's horse instead? He nodded slowly. Yes, that had
been he. He
walked on, stopping where the path fell away beneath the high wall of
the East Gardens, looking out toward the hills and the ruined temple,
remembering. For so
long now he had held it all back, afraid of it. But there was nothing
to be afraid of. Only ghosts. And he could live with those. A
figure appeared on the balcony of the East Gardens, above him and to
his left. He turned, looking up. It was his First Wife, Mien Shan. He
went across and climbed the steps, meeting her at the top. "Forgive
me, my Lord," she began, bowing her head low, the picture of
obedience. "You were gone so long. I thought. . ." He
smiled and reached out, taking her hands. "I had not forgotten,
Mien Shan. It was just that it was such a perfect night I thought I
would walk beneath the moon. Come, join me." For a
time they walked in silence, following the fragrant pathways, holding
hands beneath the moon. Then, suddenly, he turned, facing her,
drawing her close. She was so small, so daintily made, the scent of
her so sweet that it stirred his blood. He kissed her, crushing her
body against his own, then lifted her, laughing at her tiny cry of
surprise. "Come,
my wife," he said, smiling down into her face, seeing how two
tiny moons floated in the darkness of her eyes. "I have been
away from your bed too long. Tonight we will make up for that, neh?
And tomorrow. . . Tomorrow we shall buy horses for the stables." THE
MORPH stood at the entrance to the cave, looking out across the
moonlit plain below. The flicker of torches, scattered here and there
across the darkened fields, betrayed the positions of the search
parties. All day it had watched them as they crisscrossed the great
plain, scouring every last copse and stream on the estate. They would
be tired now and hungry. If it amplified its hearing it could make
out their voices, small and distant on the wind—the throaty
encouragement of a sergeant or the muttered complaints of a guard. It
turned, focusing on the foothills just below where it stood. Down
there among the rocks, less than a li away, a six-man party
was searching the lower slopes, scanning the network of caves with
heat-tracing devices. But they would find* nothing. Nothing but the
odd fox or rabbit, that was. For the morph was cold, almost as cold
as the rocks surrounding it, its body heat shielded beneath thick •
layers of insulating flesh. In the
center of the plain, some thirty li distant, was the palace of
Tao Yuan. Extending its vision, it looked, searching, sharpening its
focus until it found what it was looking for—the figure of the
Chancellor, there in the south garden, crouched over a map table in
the flickering half-light of a brazier, surrounded by his men. "Keep
looking, Hung Mien-lo," it said quietly, coldly amused by all
this activity. "For your Master will not sleep until I'm found." No,
and that would suit its purpose well. For it was here not to hurt
Wang Sau-leyan but to engage his imagination, like a seed planted in
the soft earth of the young T'ang's mind. It nodded to itself,
remembering DeVote's final words to it on Mars. You
are the first stone, Tuan Wen-ch'ang. The first in a whole new game.
And while it may be months, years even, before I play again in
that part of the board, you are nonetheless crucial to my scheme, for
you are the stone within, placed deep inside my Quotient's
territory—a singk white stone, embedded in the darkness of
his skutt, shining like a tiny moon.
It was
true. He was a stone, a dragon's tooth, a seed. And in time the seed
would germinate and grow, sprouting dark tendrils in the young
T'ang's head. And then, when it was time ... The
morph turned, its tautly muscled skin glistening in the silvered
light, the smooth dome of its near-featureless head tilted back, its
pale eyes searching for handholds, as it began to climb.
CHAPTER
NINETEEN White
Mountain The
rocket came DOWN at Nairobi, on a strip dominated by the surrounding
mountains. It was late afternoon, but the air was dry and unbearably
hot after the coolness of the ship. Chen stood only a moment on the
strip; then, his pack clasped under one arm, he made hurriedly for
the shelter of the buildings a hundred ch'i off. He made it, gasping
from the effort, his shirt soaked with sweat. "Welcome
to Africa!" one of the guards said, then laughed, taking Chen's
ID. They took a skimmer southeast, over the old deserted town,
heading for Kib-wezi. Chen stared out through one of the skimmer's
side windows, drinking in the I strangeness of the view. Below him
was a rugged wilderness of green and brown, stretching to the horizon
in every direction. Huge bodies of rock thrust up from the plain,
their sides creased and ancient looking, like the flanks of giant,
slumbering beasts. He shivered and took a deep breath. It was all so
raw. He had been expecting something like the Plantations. Something
neat and ordered. Never for a moment had he imagined it would be so
primitive. Kibwezi
Station was a collection of low buildings surrounded by a high wire
fence, guard towers standing like machine-sentinels at each corner.
The skimmer came in low over the central complex and dropped onto a
small hexagonal landing pad. Beside the pad was an
incongruous-looking building; a long, old-fashioned construction made
of wood, with a high, steeply sloping roof. Two men stood on the
verandah, watching the skimmer land. As it settled, one of them came
down the open, slatted steps and out onto the pad; a slightly built
Hung Moo in his late twenties. He was wearing a broad-rimmed
hat and green fatigues on which were marked the double-helix logo of
SimFic. As Chen stepped down, the man moved between the guards and
took his pack, reaching out to shake his hand. "Welcome
to Kibwezi, Tong Chou. I'm Michael Drake. I'll be showing you the
ropes. But come inside. This damned heat. . ." Chen
nodded, looking around him at the low, featureless buildings. Then he
saw it. "Kuan Yin!" he said, moving out of the skimmer's
shadow and into the heat. "What's that?" Drake
came and stood beside him. "Kilimanjaro, they call it. The White
Mountain." Chen
stared out across the distance. Beyond the fence the land fell away.
In the late afternoon it seemed filled with blue, like a sea. Thick
mist obscured much of it, but from the mist rose up a giant shape of
blue and white, flat-topped and massive. It rose up and up above that
mist, higher than anything Chen had ever seen. Higher, it seemed,
than the City itself. Chen wiped at his brow with the back of his
hand and swore. "It's
strange, but you never quite get used to it." Chen
turned, surprised by the wistfulness in the man's voice. But before
he could comment, Drake smiled and touched his arm familiarly.
"Anyway, come. It's far too hot to be standing out here.
Especially without something on your head." Inside,
Chen squinted into shadow, then made out the second man seated behind
a desk at the far end of the room. "Come
in, Tong Chou. Your appointment came as something of a surprise—
we're usually given much more notice—but you're welcome all the
same. So ... take a seat. What's your poison?" "My.
. . ?" Then he understood. "Just a beer, if you have one.
Thanks." He crossed the room and sat in the chair nearest the
desk, feeling suddenly disoriented, adrift from normality. There
was a window behind the desk, but like all the windows in the room it
had a blind, and the blind was pulled down. The room was cool, almost
chilly after the outside, the low hum of the air-conditioning the
only background noise. The man leaned forward, motioning to Drake to
bring the drink, then switched on the old-fashioned desk lamp. "Let
me introduce myself. My name is Laslo Debrenceni and I'm Acting
Administrator of Kibwezi Station." »
The man half rose from his chair and extended his hand. Chen took it,
bowing his head.
~~\^ Debrenceni
was a tall, broad-shouldered Hung Mao in his late forties, a
few strands of thin blond hair combed ineffectually across his
sun-bronzed pate. He had a wide, pleasant mouth and soft green eyes
above a straight nose. Drake
returned with the drinks, handing Chen a tall glass beaded with
chilled drops of water. Chen raised his glass in a toast, then took a
long sip, feeling refreshed. "Good,"
said Debrenceni, as if he had said something. "The first thing
to do is get you acclimatized. This place takes some getting used to.
It's . . . different. Very different. You're used to the City. To
corridors and levels and the regular patterning of each day. But
here— Well, things are different here." He smiled
enigmatically. "Very different." THE
WHITE MOUNTAIN filled the sky. As the skimmer came closer it seemed
to rise from the very bowels of the earth and tower over them. Chen
pressed forward, staring up through the cockpit's glass, looking for
the summit, but the rock went up and up, climbing out of sight. "How
big is it?" he asked, whispering, awed by the great mass of
rock. Drake
looked up from the controls and laughed. "About twelve It at the
summit, but the plateau is less ... no more than ten. There are
actually two craters—Kibo and Mawenzi. The whole thing is some
five li across at the top, filled with glaciers and ice
sheets." "Glaciers?"
Chen had never heard the term before. "A
river of ice—real ice, I mean, not plastic. It rests on top
like the icing on some monstrous cake." He looked down at the
controls again. "You can see it from up to four hundred li
away. If you'd known it was here you could have seen it from
Nairobi." Chen
looked out, watching the mountain grow. They were above its lower
slopes now, the vast fists of rock below them like speckles on the
flank of the sleeping mountain. "How
old is it?" "Old,"
said Drake, softer than before, as if the sheer scale of the mountain
was affecting him too. "It was formed long before mankind came
along. Our distant ancestors probably looked at it from the plains
and wondered what it was." Chen
narrowed his eyes. "We'll
need breathing apparatus when we're up there," Drake continued.
"Thej air's thin and it's best to take no chances when you're
used to air-conditioning and corridors." Again
there was that faint but good-natured mockery in Drakes voice that
seemed to say, "You'll find out, boy, it's different out here."
MASKED,
Chen stood in the crater of Kibo, looking across the dark throat of
ti inner crater toward the crater wall, and beyond it, the high
cliffs and terraces of tt northern glacier. No, he thought, looking
out at it, not a river but a city. A vast, tiered city of ice,
gleaming in the midday sun. He had
seen wonders enough already: perfect, delicate flowers of ice in the
deeply shadowed caves beneath the shattered rocks at the crater's rim
and the yellowed, steaming mouths of fumeroles, rank-smelling
crystals of yellow sulphur clustered obscenely about each vent. In
one place he had come upon fresh snow, formed by the action of wind
and cold into strange fields of knee-high and razor-sharp fronds.
Neige penitant, Drake had called it. Snow in prayer. He
had stood on the inner crater's edge, staring down into its ashen
mouth, four hundred ch'i deep, and tried to imagine the forces
that had formed this vast, unnatural edifice. And failed. He had seen
wonders, all right, but this, this overtowering wall of ice,
impressed him most. "Five
more minutes and we'd best get back," Drake said, coming over
and standing next to him. "There's more to show you, but it'll
have to wait. There are some things back at Kibwezi you need to see
first. This"—he raised an arm and turned full circle,
indicating the vastness of the mountain—"it's an exercise
in perspective, if you like. It makes the rest easier. Much easier." Chen
stared at him, not understanding. But there was a look in the other's
masked face that suggested discomfort, maybe even pain. "If
you ever need to, come here. Sit a while and think. Then go back to
things." Drake turned, staring off into the hazed distance. "It
helps. I know. I've done it myself a few times now." Chen
was silent a while, watching him. Then, as if he had suddenly tired
of the place, he reached out and touched Drake's arm. "Okay.
Let's get back." the
GUARDS entered first. A moment later two servants entered the cell,
carrying a tall-backed sedan chair and its occupant. Four
others—young Han dressed in the blue of officialdom—followed,
the strong, acridly sweet scent of their perfume filling the cell. The
sedan was set down on the far side of the room, a dozen paces from
where Ywe Hao sat, her wrists and ankles bound. She
leaned forward slightly, tensed. From his dress—from the cut of
his robes and the elaborate design on his chest patch—she could
tell this was a high official. And from his manner—the brutal
elegance of his deportment—she could guess which Ministry he
represented. The T'ing Wei, the Superintendency of Trials. "I
am Yen T'ung," the official said, not looking-ather, "Third
Secretary to the Minister, and I am here to give judgment on your
case." She
caught her breath, surprised by the suddenness of his announcement,
then gave the smallest nod, her head suddenly clear of all illusions.
They had decided her fate already, in her absence. That was what Mach
had warned her to expect. It was just that the business with Karr—his
kindness and the show of respect he had made to her—had muddied
the clear waters of her understanding. But now she knew. It was War.
Them and us. And no possibility of compromise. She had known that
since her brother's death. Since that day at the hearing when the
overseer had been cleared of all blame, after all that had been said.
After the sworn statements of six good men—eyewitnesses to the
event. She
lifted her head, studying the official, noting how he held a silk
before his nose, how his lips formed the faintest moue of distaste. The
Third Secretary snapped his fingers. At once one of the four young
men produced a scroll. Yen T'ung took it and unfurled it with a
flourish. Then, looking at her for the first time, he began to read. "I,
Ywe Hao, hereby confess that on the seventh day of June in the year
two thousand two hundred and eight I did, with full knowledge of my
actions, murder the honorable Shou Chen-hai, Hsien L'ing to his most
high eminence, Li Yuan, Grand Counsellor and T'ang of City Europe.
Further, I confess that on the ninth day of the same month I was
responsible for the raid on the Dragonfly Club and the subsequent
murder of the following innocent citizens. . . ." She
closed her eyes, listening to the list of names, seeing their faces
vividly once more, the fear or resignation in their eyes as they
stood before her, naked and trembling. And for the first time since
that evening, she felt the smallest twinge of pity for them—of
sympathy for their suffering in those final moments. The
list finished, Yen T'ung paused. She looked up and found his eyes
were on her; eyes that were cruel and strangely hard in that soft
face. "Furthermore,"
he continued, speaking the words without looking at the scroll. "I,
Ywe Hao, daughter of Ywe Kai-chang and Ywe Sha . . ." She
felt her stomach fall away. Her parents . . . Kuan Yin! How had they
found that out? ".
. . confess also to the charge of belonging to an illegal
organization and to plotting the downfall of his most high eminence—" She
stood, shouting back at him. "This is a lie! I have confessed
nothing!" The guards dragged her down onto the stool again.
Across from her Yen 1 T'ung
stared at her as one might stare at an insect, with an expression of
profound 3 disgust. "What
you have to say has no significance here. You are here only to listen
to your confession and to sign it when I have finished." She
laughed. "You are a liar, Yen T'ung, in the pay of liars, and
nothing in Heaven or Earth could induce me to sign your piece of
paper." There
was a flash of anger in his eyes. He raised a hand irritably. At the
signal one of his young men crossed the room and slapped her across
the face, once, then again, stinging blows that brought tears to her
eyes. With a bow to his master, the man retreated behind the sedan. Yen
T'ung sat back slightly, taking a deep breath. "Good. Now you
will be quiet, woman. If you utter another word I will have you
gagged." White
Mountain
415 She
glared back at him, forcing her anger to be pure, to be the perfect
expression of her defiance. But he had yet to finish. "Besides,"
he said softly, "there is no real need for you to sign." He
turned the document, letting her see. There at the foot of it was her
signature—or, at least, a perfect copy of it. "So
now you understand. You must confess and we must read your confession
back to you, and then you must sign it. That is the law. And now all
that is done, and you, Ywe Hao, no longer exist. Likewise your
family. All data has been erased from the official record." She
stared back at him, gripped by a sudden numbness. Her mother. . .
they had killed her mother. She could see it in his face. In a
kind of daze she watched them lift the chair and carry the official
from the room. "You
bastard!" she cried out, her voice filled with pain. "She
knew nothing . . . nothing at all." The
door slammed. Nothing. . . "Come,"
one of the guards said softly, almost gently. "It's time." OUTSIDE
WAS hea T—F iFTYCH'iOFHEAT. Through a gate in the wire fencing,
a flight of a dozen shallow steps led down into the bunkers. There
the icy coolness was a shock after the thirty-eight degrees outside.
Stepping inside was like momentarily losing vision. Chen stopped
there, just inside the doorway, his heart pounding from exertion,
waiting for his vision to normalize, then moved on slowly, conscious
of the echo of his footsteps on the hard concrete floor. He looked
about him at the bareness of the walls, the plain unpainted-metal
doors, and frowned. Bracket lights on the long, low-ceilinged walls
gleamed dimly, barely illuminating the intense shadow. His first
impression was that the place was empty, but that, like the loss of
vision, was only momentary. A floor below—through a dark,
circular hole cut into the floor—were the cells. Down there
were kept a thousand prisoners, fifty to a cell, each shackled to the
floor at wrist and ankle, the shortness of the chains making them
crouch on all fours like animals. It was
Chen's first time below. Drake stood beside him, silent, letting him
judge things for himself. The cells were simple divisions of the
open-plan floor—no walls, only lines of bars, each partitioned
space reached by a door of bars set into the line. All was visible at
a glance, all the misery and degradation of these thin and naked
people. And that, perhaps, was the worst of it—the openness,
the appalling openness. Two lines of cells, one to the left and one
to the right. And between, not recognized until he came to them, were
the hydrants. To hose down the cells and swill the excrement and
blood, the piss and vomit, down the huge, grated drains that were
central to the floor of each cell. Chen
looked on, mute, appalled, then turned to face Drake. But Drake had
changed. Or, rather, Drake's face had changed; had grown harder, more
brutish, as if in coming here he had cast off the social mask he wore
above, to reveal his true face; an older, darker, more barbaric face. Chen
moved on, willing himself to walk, not to stop or turn back. He
turned his head, looking from side to side as he went down the line
of cells, seeing how the prisoners backed away—as far as their
chains allowed. Not knowing him, yet fearing him. Knowing him for a
guard, not one of their own. At the
end he turned and went to the nearest cell, standing at the bars and
staring into the gloom, grimacing with the pain and horror he was
feeling. He had thought at first there were only men, but there were
women too, their limbs painfully emaciated, their stomachs swollen,
signs of torture and beatings marking every one of them. Most were
shaven-headed. Some slouched or simply lay there, clearly hurt, but
from none came even the slightest whimper of sound. It was as if the
very power to complain, to cry out in anguish against what was being
done to them, had been taken from them. He had
never seen . , . never imagined . . . Shuddering,
he turned away, but they were everywhere he looked, their pale,
uncomplaining eyes watching him. His eyes looked for Drake and found
him there, at the far end. "Is
. . . ?" he began, then laughed strangely and grew quiet. But
the question remained close to his tongue and he found he had to ask
it, whether these thousand witnesses heard him or not. "Is this
what we do?" Drake
came closer. "Yes," he said softly. "This is what we
do. What we're contracted to do." Chen
shivered violently, looking about him, freshly appalled by the
passive suffering of the prisoners; by the incomprehensible
acceptance in every wasted face. "I don't understand," he
said, after a moment. "Why? What are we trying to do here?" His
voice betrayed the true depth of his bewilderment. He was suddenly a
child again, innocent, stripped bare before the sheer horror of it. "I'm
sorry," Drake said, coming closer. His face was less brutish
now, almost,! compassionate; but his compassion did not extend beyond
Chen; he spared noth-1 ing for the others. "There's no other
way. You have to see it. Have to come down| here and see it for
yourself, unprepared." He raised his shoulders. "This—what
you're feeling now. We've all felt that. Deep down we still do. But
you have to have that first shock. It's . . . necessary." "Necessary?"
Chen laughed, but the sound seemed inappropriate. It died in his
throat. He felt sick, unclean. "Yes.
Necessary. And afterward—once it's sunk in—we can begin
to explain it all to you. And then you'll see. You'll begin to
understand." But
Chen didn't see. In fact, he couldn't see how he would ever
understand. He looked at Drake afresh, as if he had never seen him
before that moment, and began to edge around him, toward the steps
and the clean, abrasive heat outside, and when Drake reached out to
touch his arm, he backed away, as if the hand that reached for him
were something alien and unclean. "This
is vile. It's ..." But
there wasn't a word for it. He turned and ran, back up the steps and
out—out through icy coolness to the blistering heat. it was
late NIGHT. A single lamp burned in the long, wood-walled room. Chen
sat in a low chair across from Debrenceni, silent, brooding, the
drink in his hand untouched. He seemed not to be listening to the
older man, but every word had his complete attention. "They're
dead. Officially, that is. In the records they've already been
executed. But here we find a use for them. Test out a few theories.
That sort of thing. We've been doing it for years, actually. At first
it was all quite unofficial. Back in the days when Berdichev ran
things there was a much greater need to be discreet about these
things. But now . . ." Debrenceni
shrugged, then reached out to take the wine jug and refill his cup.
There was a dreadful irony in his voice—a sense of profound
mistrust in the words even as he offered them. He sipped at his cup,
then sat back, his pale-green eyes resting on Chen's face. "We
could say no, of course. Break contract and find ourselves dumped one
morning in the Net, brain-wiped and helpless. That's one option. The
moral option, you might call it. But it's not much of a choice,
wouldn't you say?" He laughed; a sharp, humorless laugh. "Anyway...
we do it because we must. Because our 'side' demands that someone do
it, and we've been given the short straw. Those we deal with here are
murderers, of course—though I've found that helps little when
you're thinking about it. After all, what are we? I guess the point
is that they started it. They began the killing. As for us, well, I
guess we're merely finishing what they began." He
sighed. "Look, you'll find a dozen rationalizations while you're
here. A hundred different ways of evading things and lying to
yourself. But trust to your first instinct, your first response.
Never—whatever you do—question that. Your first response
was the correct one. The natural one. It's what we've grown used to
here that's unnatural. It may seem natural after a while, but
it isn't. Remember that in the weeks to come. Hold on to it." "I
see." "Some
forget," Debrenceni said, leaning forward, his voice lowered.
"Some even en/cry it." Chen
breathed in deeply. "Like Drake, you mean?" "No.
There you're wrong. Michael feels it greatly, more than any of us,
perhaps. I've often wondered how he's managed to stand it. The
mountain helps, of course. It helps us all. Somewhere to go.
Somewhere to sit and think things through, above the world and
all its pettiness." Chen
gave the barest nod. "Who are they? The prisoners, I mean. Where
do they come from?" Debrenceni
smiled. "I thought you understood. They're terrorists. Hotheads
and troublemakers. This is where they send them now. All of the
State's enemies." KIBWEZI
STATION was larger than Chen had first imagined. It stretched back
beneath the surface boundary of the perimeter fence and deep into the
earth, layer beneath layer. Dark cells lay next to stark-lit,
cluttered rooms, while bare, low-ceilinged spaces led through to
crowded guardrooms, banked high with monitor screens and the red and
green flicker of trace lights. All was linked somehow, interlaced by
a labyrinth of narrow corridors and winding stairwells. At first it
had seemed very different from the City, a place that made that
greater world of levels seem spacious—open-ended—by
comparison, and yet, in its condensation and contrasts, it was very
much a distillation of the City. At the lowest level were the
laboratories and operating theaters—the "dark heart of
things," as Drake called it, with that sharp, abrasive laugh
that was already grating on Chen's nerves. The sound of a dark,
uneasy humor. It was
Chen's first shift in the theaters. Gowned and masked he stood
beneath the glare of the operating lights and waited, not quite
knowing what to expect, watching the tall figure of Debrenceni
washing his hands at the sink. After a while two others came in and
nodded to him, crossing the room to wash up before they began. Then,
when all were masked and ready, Debrenceni turned and nodded to the
ceiling camera. A moment later two of the guards wheeled in a
trolley. The
prisoner was strapped tightly to the trolley, his body covered with a
simple green cloth, only his shaved head showing. From where Chen
stood he could see nothing of the man's features, only the
transparency of the flesh, the tight knit of the skull's plates in
the harsh overhead light. Then, with a small jerk of realization that
transcended the horrifying unreality he had been experiencing since
coming into the room, he saw that the man was still conscious. The
head turned slightly, as if to try to see what was behind it. There
was a momentary glint of brightness, of a moist, penetratingly blue
eye, straining to see, then the neck muscles relaxed and the head lay
still, kept in place by the bands that formed a kind of brace about
it. Chen
watched as one of the others leaned across and tightened the bands,
bringing one loose-hanging strap across the mouth and tying it, then
fastening a second across the brow, so that the head was held
rigidly. Satisfied, the man worked his way around the body,
tightening each of the bonds, making sure there would be no movement
once things began. Dry-mouthed,
Chen looked to Debrenceni and saw that he, too, was busy,
methodically laying out his scalpels on a white cloth. Finished, the
Administrator looked up and, smiling with his eyes, indicated that he
was ready. For a
moment the sheer unreality of what was happening threatened to
overwhelm Chen. His whole body felt cold and his blood seemed to
pulse strongly in his head and hands. Then, with a small, embarrassed
laugh, he saw what he had not noticed before. It was not a man. The
prisoner on the trolley was a woman. Debrenceni worked swiftly,
confidently, inserting the needle at four different points in the
skull and pushing in a small amount of local anesthetic. Then, with a
deftness Chen had not imagined him capable of, Debrenceni began to
cut into the skull, using a hot-wire drill to sink down through the
bone. The pale, long hands moved delicately, almost tenderly over the
woman's naked skull, seeking and finding the exact points where he
would open the flesh and drill down toward the softer brain beneath.
Chen stood at the head of the trolley, watching everything, -<
seeing how one of the assistants mopped and stanched the bleeding
while the other passed the instruments. It was all so skillful and so
gentle. And then it was done, the twelve slender filaments in place,
ready for attachment. Debrenceni
studied the skull a moment, his fingers checking his own work. Then
he nodded and, taking a spray from the cloth, coated the skull with a
thin, almost plastic layer that glistened wetly under the harsh
light. It had the sweet, unexpected scent of some exotic fruit. Chen
came around and looked into the woman's face. She had been quiet
throughout and had made little movement, even when the tiny,
hand-held drill let out its high, nerve-tormenting whine. He had
expected screams, the outward signs of struggle, but there had been
nothing; only her stillness, and that unnerving silence. Her
eyes were open. As he leaned over her, her eyes met his and the
pupils dilated, focusing on him. He jerked his head back, shocked
after all to find her conscious and undrugged, and looked across at
Debrenceni, not understanding. They had drilled into her skull . .
. He
watched, suddenly frightened. None of this added up. Her reactions
were wrong. As they fitted the spiderish helmet, connecting its
filaments to those now sprouting from the pale, scarred field of her
skull, his mind feverishly sought its own connections. He glanced
down at her hands and saw, for the first time, how they were
twitching, as if in response to some internal stimulus. For a moment
it seemed to mean something—to suggest something—but then
it slipped away, leaving only a sense of wrongness, of things not
connecting properly. When
the helmet was in place, Debrenceni had them lower the height of the
trolley and sit the woman up, adjusting the frame and cushions to
accommodate her new position. In doing this the green cover slipped
down, exposing the paleness of her shoulders and arms, her small,
firm breasts, the smoothness of her stomach. She had a young body.
Her face, in contrast, seemed old and abstract, the legs of the metal
spider forming a cage about it. Chen
stared at her, as if seeing her anew. Before he had been viewing her
only in the abstract. Now he saw how frail and vulnerable she was;
how individual and particular her flesh. But there was something
more—something that made him turn from the sight of her,
embarrassed. He had been aroused. Just looking at her he had felt a
strong, immediate response. He felt ashamed, but the fact was there
and turned from her, he faced it. Her helpless exposure had made him
want her. Not casually or coldly, but with a sudden fierceness that
had caught him off guard. Beneath
his pity for her was desire. Even now it made him want to turn and
look at her—to feast his eyes on her helpless nakedness. He
shuddered, loathing himself. It was hideous; more so for being so
unexpected, so incontestable. When
he turned back his eyes avoided the woman. But Debrenceni had seen.
He was watching Chen pensively, the mask pulled down from his face.
His eyes met Chen's squarely, unflinchingly. "They
say a job like this dehumanizes the people who do it, Tong Chou. But
you'll leam otherwise here. I can see it in you now, as I've seen it
in others who've come here. Piece by piece it comes back to us. What
we realty are. Not the ideal but the reality. The full, human reality
of what we are. Animals that think, that's all. Animals that think." Chen
looked away, hurt—inexplicably hurt. As if even Debrenceni's
understanding were suddenly too much to bear. And, for the second
time since his arrival, he found himself stumbling out into the
corridor, away from something that, even as he fled it, he knew he
could not escape. up
ABOVE, the day had turned to night. It was warm and damp and a full
moon bathed the open space between the complex and the huts with a
rich, silvery light. In the distance the dark shadow of Kilimanjaro
dominated the skyline, an intense black against the velvet blue. Debrenceni
stood there, taking deep breaths of the warm, invigorating air. The
moonlight seemed to shroud him in silver and for the briefest moment
he seemed insubstantial, like a projection cast against a pure black
backdrop. Chen started to put out his hand, then drew it back,
feeling foolish. Debrenceni's
voice floated across to him. "You should have stayed. You would
have found it interesting. It's not an operation I've done that often
and this one went very well. You see, I was wiring her." Chen
frowned. Many of the senior officers in Security were wired—adapted
for linking up to a comset—or, like Tolonen, had special slots
surgically implanted behind their ears so that tapes could be
direct'inputted. But this had been different. Debrenceni
saw the doubt in Chen's face and laughed. "Oh, it's nothing so
crude as the usual stuff. No, this is the next evolutionary step. A
pretty obvious one, but one that—for equally obvious
reasons—we've not taken before now. This kind of wiring needs
no input connections. It uses a pulsed signal. That means the
connection can be made at a distance. All you need is the correct
access code." "But
that sounds . . ." Chen stopped. He had been about to say that
it sounded like an excellent idea, but some of its ramifications had
struck him. The existence of a direct-input connection gave the
subject a choice. They could plug in or not. Without that there was
no choice. He—or she—became merely another machine, the
control of which was effectively placed in the hands of someone else. He
shivered. So that was what they were doing here. That was why
they were working on sentenced prisoners and not on volunteers. He
looked back at Debrenceni, aghast. "Good,"
Debrenceni said, yet he seemed genuinely pained by Chen's
realization. Chen
looked down, suddenly tired of the charade, wishing he could tell
Debrenceni who he really was and why he was there; angry that he
should be made a party to this vileness. For a moment his anger
extended even to Karr for sending him in here, knowing nothing; for
making him have to feel his way out of this labyrinth of half-guessed
truths. Then, with a tiny shudder, he shut it out. Debrenceni
turned, facing Chen fully. Moonlight silvered his skull, reduced his
face to a mask of dark and light. "An idea has two faces. One
acceptable, the other not. Here we experiment not only on perfecting
the wiring technique but on making the idea of it acceptable." "And
once you've perfected things?" Chen asked, a tightness forming
at the pit of his stomach. Debrenceni
stared back at him a moment, then turned away, his moonlit outline
stark against the distant mountain's shape. But he was silent. And
Chen, watching him, felt suddenly alone and fearful and very, very
small. CHEN
WATCHED them being led in between the guards; three men and two
women, loosely shackled to each other with lengths of fine chain,
their clothes unwashed, their heads unshaven. She
was there, of course, hanging back between the first two males, her
head turned from him, her eyes downcast. Drake
took the clipboard from the guard and flicked through the flimsy
sheets, barely glancing at them. Then with a satisfied nod, he came
across, handing the board to Chen. "The
names are false. As for the rest, there's probably nothing we can
use. Security
still thinks it's possible to extract factual material from
situations of duress, but we know better. Hurt a man and he'll
confess to anything. Why, he'd perjure his mother if it would take
away the pain. But it doesn't really matter. We're not really
interested in who they were or what they did. That's all in the
past." Chen
grunted, then looked up from the clipboard, seeing how the prisoners
were watching him, as if by handing him the board, Drake had
established him as the man in charge. He handed the clipboard back
and took a step closer to the prisoners. At once the guards moved
forward, raising their guns, as if to intercede, but their presence
did little to reassure him. It wasn't that he was afraid—he had
been in far more dangerous situations, many a time—yet he had
never had to face such violent hatred, such open hostility. He could
feel it emanating from the five. Could see it burning in their eyes.
And yet they had never met him before this moment. "Which
one first?" Drake asked, coming alongside. Chen
hesitated. "The girl," he said finally, "the one who
calls herself Chi Li." His
voice was strong, resonant. The very sound of it gave him a sudden
confidence. He saw at once how his outward calm, the very tone of his
voice, impressed them. There was fear and respect behind their hatred
now. He turned away, as if he had finished with them. He
heard the guards unshackle the girl and pull her away. There were
murmurs of protest and the sounds of a brief struggle, but when Chen
turned back she was standing away from the others, at the far end of
the cell. "Good,"
he said. "I'll see the others later." The
others were led out, a single guard remaining inside the cell, his
back to the door. He
studied the girl. Without her chains she seemed less defiant. More
vulnerable. As if sensing his thoughts she straightened up, facing
him squarely. "Try
anything and I'll break both your legs," he said, seeing how her
eyes moved to assess how things stood. "No one can help you now
but yourself. Cooperate and things will be fine. Fight us and we'll
destroy you." The
words were glib—the words Drake had taught him to say in this
situation— but they sounded strangely sinister now that things
were real. Rehearsing them, he had thought them stagey, melodramatic,
like something out of an old Han opera; but now, alone with the
prisoner, they had a potency that chilled him as he said them. He saw
the effect they had on her. Saw the hesitation as she tensed, then
relaxed. He wanted to smile, but didn't. Karr was right. She was an
attractive woman, even with that damage to her face. Her very
toughness had a beauty to it. "What
do you want to do?" Drake asked. Chen
took a step closer. "We'll just talk for now." The
girl was watching him uncertainly. She had been beaten badly. There
were bruises on her arms and face, unhealed cuts on the left side of
her neck. Chen felt a sudden anger. All of this had been done since
she'd been released to SimFic. Moreover, there was a tightness about
her mouth that suggested she had been raped. He shivered, then spoke
the words that had come into his head. "Have they told you that
you're dead?" Behind
him Drake drew in a breath. The line was impromptu. Was not scripted
for this first interview. The
girl looked down, smiling, but when she looked up again Chen was
still watching her, his face unchanged. "Did
you think this was just another Security cell?" he asked,
harsher now, angry, his anger directed suddenly at her—at the
childlike vulnerability beneath her outward strength; at the simple
fact that she was there, forcing him to do this to her. The
girl shrugged, saying nothing, but Chen could see the sweat beading
her brow. He took a step closer; close enough for her to hit out at
him, if she dared. "We
do things here. Strange things. We take you apart and put you back
together again. But different." She
was staring at him now, curiosity getting the better of her. His
voice was calm, matter-of-fact, as if what he was saying to her was
quite ordinary; but the words were horrible in their implication and
the very normality of his voice seemed cruel. "Stop
it," she said softly. "Just do what you're going to do." Her
eyes pleaded with him, like the hurt eyes of a child; the same
expression Ch'iang Hsin sometimes had when he teased her. That
similarity—between this stranger and his youngest child—made
him pull back; made him realize that his honesty was hurting her. Yet
he was here to hurt. That was his job here. Whether he played the
role or not, the hurt itself was real. He
turned from her, a small shiver passing down his spine. Drake
was watching him strangely, his eyes half-lidded. What are you up
to? he seemed to be saying. Chen
met his eyes. "She'll do." Drake
frowned. "But you've not seen the others..." Chen
smiled. "She'tt do." He was still smiling when she
kicked him in the kidneys. she
WAS beaten and stripped and thrown into a cell. For five days she
languished there, in total darkness. Morning and night a guard would
come and check on her, passing her meal through the hatch and taking
the old tray away. Otherwise she was left alone. There was no bed, no
sink, no pot to crap into, only a metal grille set into one corner of
the floor. She used it, reluctantly at first, then with a growing
indifference. What did it matter, after all? There were worse things
in life than having to crap into a hole. For
the first few days she didn't mind. After a lifetime spent in close
proximity to people it was something of a relief to be left alone,
almost a luxury. But from the third day on it was hard. On the
sixth day they took her from the cell, out into a brightness that
made her screw her eyes tight, tiny spears of pain lancing her head.
Outside, they hosed her down and disinfected her, then threw her into
another cell, shackling her to the floor at wrist and ankle. She
lay there for a time, letting her eyes grow accustomed to the light.
After the fetid darkness of the tiny cell she had the sense of space
about her, yet when finally she looked up, it was to find herself eye
to eye with a naked man. He was crouched on all fours before her, his
eyes lit with a feral glint, his penis jutting stiffly from between
his legs. She drew back sharply, the sudden movement checked by her
chains. And then she saw them. She
looked about her, appalled. There were forty, maybe fifty naked
people in the cell with her, men and women both. All were shackled to
the floor at wrist and ankle. Some met her eyes, but it was without
curiosity, almost without recognition. Others simply lay there,
listless. As she watched, one of them raised herself on her haunches
and let loose a bright stream of urine, then lay still again, like an
animal at rest. She
shuddered. So this was it. This was her fate, her final humiliation,
to become like these poor souls. She turned back, looking at her
neighbor. He was leaning toward her, grunting, his face brutal with
need, straining against his chains, trying to get at her. One hand
was clutched about his penis, jerking it back and forth urgently. "Stop
it," she said softly. "Please . . ." But it was as if
he was beyond the reach of words. She watched him, horrified; watched
his face grow pained, his movements growing more frantic, and then
with a great moan of pain, he came, his semen spurting across the
space between them. She
dropped her eyes, her face burning, her heart pounding in her chest.
For a moment—for the briefest moment—she had felt herself
respond; had felt something in her begin to surface, as if to answer
that fierce, animal need in his face. She
lay there, letting her pulse slow, her thoughts grow still, then
lifted her head, almost afraid to look at him again. He lay quietly
now, no more than two ch'i from her, his shoulders rising and
falling gently with each breath. She watched him, feeling an immense
pity, wondering who he was and what crime he had been sent here for. For a
time he lay still, soft snores revealing he was sleeping, then with a
tiny whimper, he turned slightly, moving onto his side. As he did she
saw the brand on his upper arm; saw it and caught her breath, her
soul shriveling up inside her. It was a fish. A stylized fish. chen
STOOD in the doorway to the Mess, looking into the deeply shadowed
room. There was the low buzz of conversation, the smell of mild
euphorics. Sitting at the bar, alone, a tall glass at his elbow, was
Debrenceni. Seeing Chen, he lifted his hand and waved him across. "How
are the kidneys?" Chen
laughed. "Sore, but no serious damage. She connected badly." "I
know. I saw it." Debrenceni was serious a moment longer, then he
smiled. "You did well, despite that. It looked as if you'd been
doing the job for years." Chen
dropped his head. He had been in the sick bay for the last six days,
the first two in acute pain. "What
do you want to drink?" Chen
looked up. "I'd best not." "No.
Maybe not." Debrenceni raised his glass, saluting Chen. "You
were right about the girl, though." "I
know." He hesitated, then. "Have you wired her yet?" "No.
Not yet." Debrenceni sat back a little on his stool, studying
him. "You know, you were lucky she didn't kill you. If the
Security forces hadn't worked her over before we'd got her, she
probably would have." Chen
nodded, conscious of the irony. "What happened to her?" "Nothing.
I thought we'd wait until you got back on duty." It was
not what Chen had expected. "You want me to carry on? Even after
what happened?" "No.
Because of what happened." Debrenceni laid his hand
lightly on Chen's shoulder. "We see things through here, Tong
Chou. To the bitter, ineluctable end." "Ineluctable?" "Ineluctable,"
repeated Debrenceni solemnly. "That from which one cannot escape
by struggling." "Ah
. . ." In his mind Chen could see the girl and picture the slow
working out of her fate. Ineluctable. Like the gravity of a
black hole, or the long, slow process of entropy. Things his son,
Jyan, had told him of. He gave a tiny, bitter laugh. Debrenceni
smiled tightly, removing his hand from Chen's shoulder. "You
understand, then?" Chen
looked back at him. "Do I have a choice?" "No.
No one here has a choice." "Then
I understand." "Good.
Then we'll start in the morning. At six sharp. I want you to bring
her from the cells. I'll be in the theater. Understand?" IT WAS
LATE when Chen returned to his room. He felt frayed and irritable.
More than that, he felt ashamed and—for the first time since
he'd come to Kibwezi—guilty of some awfulness that would
outweigh a lifetime's atonement. He sat heavily on his bed and let
his head fall into his hands. Today had been the day. Before now he
had been able to distance himself from what had been happening. Even
that last time, facing her in the cell, it had not really touched
him. It had been something abstract; something happening to someone
else—Tong Chou, perhaps—who inhabited his skin. But now
he knew. It was himself. No one else had led her there and strapped
her down, awaiting surgery. It was no stranger who had looked down at
her while they cut her open and put things in her head. "That
was me," he said, shuddering. "That was me in
there." He sat
up, drawing his feet under him, then shook his head in disbelief. And
yet he had to believe. It had been too real—too personal—for
disbelief. He
swallowed deeply. Drake had warned him. Drake had said it would be
like this. One day fine, the next the whole world totally different;
like some dark, evil trick played on your eyesight, making you see
nothing but death. Well, Drake was right. Now he, too, could see it.
Death. Everywhere death. And he a servant of it. There
was a knocking at the door. "Go
away!" The
knocking came again. Then a voice. "Tong Chou? Are you all
right?" He
turned and lay down, facing the wall. "Go away ..." Y w E
H A o had never run so far, or been so afraid. As she ran she seemed
to balance two fears in the pit of her stomach: her fear of what lay
behind outweighing her fear of the dark into which she ran. Instinct
took her toward the City. Even in the dark she could see its massive
shape against the skyline, blotting out the light-scattered velvet
backdrop. It was
colder than she had ever thought it could be. And darker. As she ran
she whimpered, not daring to look back. When the first light of
morning colored the sky at her back she found herself climbing a
gradual slope. Her pace had slowed, but still she feared to stop and
rest. At any moment they would discover her absence. Then they'd be
out, after her. As the
light intensified, she slowed, then stopped and turned, looking back.
For a while she stood there, her mouth open. Then, as the coldness,
the stark openness of the place struck her, she shuddered violently.
It was so open. So appallingly open. Another kind of fear, far
greater than anything she had known before, made her take a backward
step. The
whole of the distant horizon was on fire. Even as she watched, the
sun's edge pushed up into the sky; so vast, so threatening, it took
her breath away. She turned, away from it, horrified, then saw, in
the first light, what lay ahead. At
first the ground rose slowly, scattered with rock. Then it seemed to
climb more steeply until, with a suddenness that was every bit as
frightening as anything she had so far seen, it ended in a thick,
choking veil of whiteness. Her eyes went upward . . . No, not a veil,
a wall. A solid wall of white that seemed soft, almost
insubstantial. Again she shuddered, not understanding, a deep-rooted,
primitive fear of such things making her crouch into herself. And
still her eyes went up until, beyond the wall's upper lip, she saw
the massive summit of the shape she had run toward throughout the
night. The City . . . Again
she sensed a wrongness to what she saw. The shape of it seemed. . .
seemed what? Her arms were making strange little jerking movements
and her legs felt weak. Gritting her teeth, she tried to get her mind
to work, to triumph over the dark, mindless fear that was washing
over her, wave after wave. For a moment she seemed to come to herself
again. What
was wrong? What in the gods' names was it? And
then she understood. The shape of it was wrong. The rough, tapered,
irregular look of it. Whereas . . . Again her mouth fell open. But if
it wasn't the City . . . then what in hell's name was it? For a
moment longer she stood there, swaying slightly, caught between two
impulses, then, hesitant, glancing back at the growing circle of
fire, she began to run again. And as she ran—the dark image of
the sun's half circle stamped across her vision—the wall of
mist came down to meet her. IT was
just after DAWN when the two cruisers lifted from the pad and banked
away over the compound, heading northwest, toward the mountain. Chen
was in the second of them, Drake at the controls beside him. On
Chen's wrist, scarcely bigger than a standard Security field comset,
was the tracer unit. He glanced at it, then stared steadily out
through the windscreen, watching the grassy plain flicker by fifty
ch'i below. "We're
going to kill her, aren't we?" Drake
glanced at him. "She was dead before she came here. Remember
that." Chen
shook his head. "That's just words. No, what I mean is that we
are going to kill her. Us. Personally." "In
a manner of speaking." Chen
looked down at his hands. "No. Not in a manner of speaking. This
is real. We're going out to kill her. I've been trying not to think
about it, but I can't help it. It
seems . . ." He shook his head. "It's just that some days I
can't believe it's me, doing this. I'm a good man. At least, I
thought I was." Drake
was silent, hunched over the controls as if concentrating, but Chen
could see he was thinking; chewing over what he'd said. "So?"
Chen prompted. "So
we set down, do our job, get back. That's it." Again
Chen stared at Drake for a long time, not sure even what he was
looking for. Whatever it was, it wasn't there. He looked down at the
tiny screen. Below the central glass were two buttons. They looked
innocuous enough, but he wasn't sure. Only Drake knew what they were
for. He
looked away, holding his tongue. Maybe it was best to see it as Drake
saw it. I As just another job to be done. But his disquiet remained,
and as the mountain grew larger through the front screen, his sense
of unreality grew with it. It was
all so impersonal. As if what they were tracking was a thing, another
kind of machine—one that ran. But Chen had seen her close; had
looked into her eyes and stared down into her face while Debrenceni
had been operating. He had seen just how vulnerable she was. How
human... HE HAD
put ON the suit's heater and pulled the helmet visor down—even
so, his feet felt like ice and his cheeks were frozen. A cold breeze
blew across the mountain now, shredding the mist in places, but
generally it was thick, like a flaw in seeing itself. There
was a faint buzz on his headset, then a voice came through. "It's
clearing up here. We can see right up the mountain now, to the
summit." Chen
stared up the slope, as if to penetrate the dense mist, then glanced
back at Drake. "What now?" Drake
nodded distractedly, then spoke into his lip-mike, "Move to
within a hundred ch'i. It looks like she's stopped.
Gustaffson, you go to the north of where she is. Palmer, come around
to the east. Tong Chou and I will take the other points. That way
we've got a perfect grid." Drake
turned, looking up the mountain. "Okay. Let's give this thing a
proper test." Chen
spoke to Drake's back. "The trace ought to be built into a visor
display. This thing's vulnerable when you're climbing. Clumsy too." "You're
right," Drake answered, beginning to climb. "It's a bloody
nuisance. It should be made part of the standard Security headgear,
with direct computer input from a distance." "You
mean wire the guards too?" Drake
paused, mist wreathing his figure. "Why not? That way you could
have the coordinator at a distance, out of danger. It would make the
team less vulnerable. The runner couldn't get at the head—the
brains behind it. It makes sense, don't you think?" Halfway
up, Drake turned, pointing across. "Over there. Keep going until
you're due south of her. Then wait. I'll tell you what to do." Chen
went across, moving slowly over the difficult terrain, then stopped,
his screen indicating that he was directly south of the trace,
approximately a hundred ch'i down. He signaled back, then
waited, listening as the others confirmed they were in place. The
mist had cleared up where he was and he had eye contact with both
Gustaffson and Palmer. There was no sign of the runner. Drake's
voice sounded in his headset. "You should be clear any minute.
We'll start when you are." Chen
waited, while the mist slowly thinned out around him. Then, quite
suddenly, he could see the mountain above him, the twin peaks of Kibo
and Mawenzi white against the vivid blue of the sky. He shivered,
looking across, picking out the others against the slope. "I
see you," Drake said, before Chen could say anything. "Good.
Now come up the slope a little way. We'll close to fifty now. Palmer,
Gustaffson, you do the same." Chen
walked forward slowly, conscious of the others as they closed on him. Above
him was a steep shelf of bare earth. As he came closer he lost sight,
first of Drake, then of the other two. "I'll
have to come up," he said into his lip-mike. "I can't see a
thing from down here." He
scrambled up and stood there, on the level ground above the shelf,
where the thick grass began. He was only twenty ch'i from the trace
signal now. The others stood back at fifty, watching him. "Where
is she?" he said, softer than before. "Exactly
where the trace shows she is," said Drake into his head. "In
that depression just ahead of you." He had
seen it already, but it looked too shallow to hide a woman. "Palmer?"
It was Drake again. "I want you to test the left-hand signal on
your handset. Turn it slowly to the left." Chen
waited, watching the shallow pit in front of him. It seemed as if
nothing had happened. "Good,"
said Drake. "Now you, Gustaffson. I want you to press both your
controls at the same time. Hold them down firmly for about twenty
seconds. Okay?" This
time there was a noise from the depression. A low moaning that
increased as the seconds passed. Then it cut off abruptly. Chen
shuddered. "What was that?" "Just
testing," Drake answered. "Each of our signals is two-way.
They transmit, but they also have a second function. Palmer's cuts
off all motor activity in the cortex. Gustaffson's works on what we
call the pain gate, stimulating nerves at the stem of the brain." "And
yours?" asked Chen. He could hear the breathing of the others on
the line as they listened in. "Mine's
the subtlest. I can talk to our runner. Directly. Into her head." The
line went silent. From the depression in front of Chen came a sudden
whimper of pure fear. Then Drake was speaking again. "Okay. You
can move the signal back to its starting position. Our runner is
ready to come out." There
was a tense moment of waiting; then from the front of the shallow pit
a head bobbed up. Wearily, in obvious pain, the woman pulled herself
up out of the deep hole at the front lip of the shallow depression.
As her head came up and around she looked directly at Chen. For a
moment she stood there, swaying, then she collapsed and sat back,
pain and tiredness etched in her ravaged face. She looked ragged and
exhausted. Her legs and arms were covered in contusions and weeping
cuts. Drake
must have spoken to her again, for she jerked visibly and looked
around, finding him. Then she looked about her, seeing the others.
Her head dropped and for a moment she just sat there, breathing
heavily, her arms loose at her sides. "Okay,"
Drake said. "Let's wrap things up." Chen
turned and looked across at Drake. In the now brilliant sunlight, he
seemed a cold and alien figure. His suit, like all of them, was
nonreflective. Only the visor sparkled menacingly. Just now he was
moving closer in. Twenty ctii from the woman he stopped. Chen
watched as Drake made Palmer test his signal again. As it switched
off, the woman fell awkwardly to one side. Then, moments later, she
pushed herself up again, looking around, wondering what had happened
to her. Then it was Gustaffson's turn. He saw how the woman's face
changed, her teeth clamped together, her whole body arching as she
kicked out in dreadful pain. When
she sat up again, her face twitched visibly. Something had broken in
her. Her eyes, when they looked at him now, seemed lost. He
looked across at Drake, appalled, but Drake was talking to her again.
Chen could see his lips moving, then looked back and saw the woman
try to cover her ears, a look of pure terror on her face. Slowly,
painfully, she got up and, looking straight at Chen, clambered over
the lip and began to make her way toward him, almost hopping now,
each touch of her • damaged leg against the ground causing her
face to buckle in pain. But still she came. He
made to step back, but Drake's voice was suddenly in his headset, on
the discreet channel. "Your turn," it said. "Just hold
down the left-hand button and touch the right." She
was less than two body-lengths from him now, reaching out. Chen
looked down at the tiny screen, then held and touched. The air was
filled with a soft, wet sound of exploding matter, as if someone had
fired a gun off in the middle of a giant fruit. And there, where the
signal had been, was suddenly nothing. He looked up. The body was
already falling, the shoulders and upper chest ruined by the
explosion that had taken off the head. He turned away, sickened, but
the stench of burned flesh was in his nostrils and gobbets of her
ruptured, bloodied flesh were spattered all over his suit and visor.
He stumbled and almost went down the steep, bare bank, but stopped
there on the edge, swaying, keeping his balance, telling himself
quietly that he would not be sick, over and over again. After
a while he turned, and looking past the body, met Drake's eyes. "You
bastard . . . why did she come at me? What did you say to her?" Drake
pulled off his helmet and threw it down. "I told her you'd help
her," he said, then laughed strangely. "And you did. You
bloody well did."
CHAPTER
TWENTY Flames in a Glass wANG
TI ? ' ' Chen
stood just inside the door, surprised to find the apartment in
darkness. He put his hand out, searching the wall, then slowly
brought up the lights. Things looked normal, everything in its place.
He let out a breath. For the briefest moment. . . He
went out into the kitchen and filled the kettle, then plugged it in.
As he turned, reaching up to get the ch'a pot, he heard a noise. A
cough. He
went out, into the brightness of the living room. "Wang Ti?"
he called softly, looking across at the darkened doorway of their
bedroom. "Is that you?" The
cough came again, a strong, racking cough that ended with a tiny
moan. He
went across and looked into the room. It was Wang Ti beneath the
covers, he could see that at once, but Wang Ti as he had never seen
her before; her hair unkempt, her brow beaded with sweat. Wang Ti,
who had never suffered a day's illness in her life. "WangTi?" She
moaned, turning her head slightly on the pillow. "Nmmm . . ." He
looked about him, conscious that something was missing, but not
knowing what. "Wang Ti?" Her
eyes opened slowly. Seeing him, she moaned and turned away, pulling
the sheet up over her head. "Wang
Ti?" he said gently, moving closer. "Where are the
children?" Her
voice was small, muffled by the sheets. "I sent them below. To
Uncle Mai." "Ahh
. . ." He crouched down. "And you, my love?" She
hesitated, then answered in that same small, frightened voice. "I
am fine, husband." Something
in the way she said it—in the way her determination to be a
dutiful^ •i
uncomplaining wife faltered before the immensity of her
suffering—made him go ••; cold inside. Something
awful had happened. ; He
pulled back the sheet, studying her face in the half-light. It was
almost unrecognizable. Her mouth—a strong mouth, made for
laughter—was twisted into a thin-lipped grimace of pain. Her
eyes—normally so warm and reassuring— were screwed
tightly shut as if to wall in all the misery she felt, the lids heavy
and discolored. Pained by the sight, he put his fingers to her cheek,
wanting to comfort her, then drew them back, surprised. She had been
crying. There
was a moment's blankness, then he felt his stomach fall away. "The
child. . ." Wang
Ti nodded, then buried her face in the pillow, beginning to sob, her
body convulsing under the sheets. He sat
on the bed beside her, holding her to him, trying to comfort her, but
his mind was in shock. "No . . ." he said, after a while.
"You have always been so strong. And the child was well. Surgeon
Fan said so." She
lay there quietly—so quiet that it frightened him. Then it was
true. She had lost the child. "When
was this?" he asked, horrified. "A week ago." "A
week! Ai yal" He sat back, staring sightlessly into the
shadows, thinking of her anguish, her suffering, and him not there.
"But why wasn't I told? Why didn't Karr send word? I should have
been here." She
put out a hand, touching his chest. "He wanted to. He begged me
to, but I would not let him. Your job . . ." He
looked back at her. She was watching him now, her puffed and
blood-red eyes filled with pity. The sight of her—of her
concern for him—made his chest tighten with love. "Oh,
Wang Ti, my little pigeon. . . what in the gods' names happened?" She
shuddered and looked away again. "No one came," she said
quietly. "I waited, but no one came . . ." He
shook his head. "But the Surgeon ... we paid him specially to
come." "There were complications," she said, afraid to
meet his eyes. "I waited. Three hours I waited, but he never
came. Jyan tried—" "Never
came?" Chen said, outraged. "He was notified and never
came?" She gave a tight little nod. "I got Jyan to run up
to the Medical Center, but no one was free." She met his eyes
briefly, then looked away again, forcing the words out in a tiny
frightened voice. "Or so they said. But Jyan says they were
sitting there, in a room beyond the reception area, laughing—drinking
ch'a and laughing—while my baby was dying." Chen
felt himself go cold again; but this time it was the coldness of
anger. Of an intense, almost blinding anger. "And no one came?" She
shook her head, her face cracking again. He held her tightly, letting
her cry in his arms, his own face wet with tears. "My poor
love," he said. "My poor, poor love." But deep inside
his anger had hardened into something else—into a cold, clear
rage. He could picture them, sitting there, laughing and drinking
ch'a while his baby daughter was dying. Could see their
well-fed, laughing faces and wanted to smash them, to feel their
cheekbones shatter beneath his fist. And
young Jyan . . . How had it been for him, knowing that his mother was
in trouble, his baby sister dying, and he impotent to act? How had
that felt? Chen groaned. They had had such hopes. Such plans. How
could it all have gone so wrong? He
looked about him at the familiar room, the thought of the dead child
an agony, burning in his chest. "No . . ." he said softly,
shaking his head. "Nooooo!" He
stood, his fists bunched at his sides. "I will see Surgeon Fan." Wang
Ti looked up frightened. "No, Chen. Please. You will solve
nothing that way." He
shook his head. "The bastard should have come. It is only two
decks down. Three hours . . . Where could he have been for three
hours?" "Chen
. . ." She put out a hand, trying to restrain him, but he moved
back, away from her. "No,
Wang Ti. Not this time. This time I do it my way." "You
don't understand . . ." she began. "Karr knows everything.
He has all the evidence. He was going to meet you . . ." She
fell silent, seeing that he was no longer listening. His face was
set, like the face of a statue. "He
killed my daughter," he said softly. "He let her die. And
you, Wang Ti. . . you might have died too." She
trembled. It was true. She had almost died, forcing the baby from
her—no, would have died, had Jyan not thought to contact
Karr and bring the big man to her aid. She
let her head fall back. So maybe Chen was right. Maybe, this once, it
was right to act—to hit back at those who had harmed them, and
damn the consequences. Better that, perhaps, than let it fester deep
inside. Better that than have him shamed a second time before his
son. She
closed her eyes, pained by the memory of all that had happened to
her. It had been awful here without him. Awful beyond belief. She
felt his breath on her cheek, his lips pressed gently to her brow,
and shivered. "I
must go," he said quietly, letting his hand rest softly on her
flank. "You understand?" She
nodded, holding back the tears, wanting to be brave for him this
once. But it was hard, and when he was gone she broke down again,
sobbing loudly, uncontrollably, the memory of his touch glowing
warmly in the darkness. THE
ROOM WAS COLD and brightly lit, white tiles on the walls and floor
emphasizing the starkness of the place. In the center of the room was
a dissecting table. Beside the table stood the three surgeons who had
carried out the postmortem, their heads bowed, waiting. The
corpse on the table was badly burned, the limbs disfigured, the head
and upper torso crushed; even so, the body could still be identified
as GenSyn. In three separate places the flesh had been peeled back to
the bone, revealing the distinctive GenSyn marking—the bright
red G forming a not-quite-closed circle with a tiny blue S within. They
had cornered it finally in the caves to the north of the estate.
There, Hung Mien-lo and a small group of elite guards had fought it
for an hour before a well-aimed grenade had done the trick, silencing
the creature's answering fire and bringing the roof of the cave down
on top of it. Or so Hung's story went. Wang
Sau-leyan stood there, looking down at the corpse, his eyes taking in
everything. Hope warred with cynicism in his face, but when he looked
back at his Chancellor, it was with an expression of deep suspicion.
"Are you sure this is it, Hung? The face . . ." The
face was almost formless. Was the merest suggestion of a face. "1
am told this is how they make some models, Chieh Hsia. A certain
number are kept for urgent orders, the facial features added at the
last moment. I have checked with GenSyn records and discovered that
this particular model was made eight years back. It was stolen from
their West Asian organization—from their plant at
Karaganda—nearly five years ago." Wang
looked back at it, then shook his head. "Even so . . ." "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia, but we found some other things in the cave."
Hung Mien-lo turned and took a small case from his secretary, then
turned back, handing it, opened, to the T'ang. "This was among
them." Wang
Sau-leyan stared down at the face and nodded. It was torn and dirtied
and pitted with tiny holes, but it was recognizable all the same. It
was his brother's face. Or at least, a perfect likeness. He set it
down on the chest of the corpse. "So
this is how it did it, eh? With a false face and a cold body." "Not
cold, Chieh Hsia. Or not entirely. You see, this model was designed
for work in subzero temperatures or in the heat of the mines. It has
a particularly hard and durable skin that insulates the inner
workings of the creature from extremes of heat and cold. That was why
it did not register on our cameras. At night they are programmed to
respond only to heat patterns, and as this thing did not give off any
trace, the cameras were never activated." Wang
nodded, his mouth gone dry. Even so, he wasn't quite convinced.
"And the traces of skin and blood that it left on the stone?" Hung
lowered his head slightly. "It is our belief, Chieh Hsia,
that they were put there by the creature. Deliberately, to make
us think it really was your brother." Wang
looked down, then gave a small, sour laugh. "I would dearly like
to think so, Chancellor Hung, but that simply isn't possible. I have
checked with GenSyn. They tell me it is impossible to duplicate
individual DNA from scratch." "From
scratch, yes, Chieh Hsia. But why should that be the case? All
that is needed to duplicate DNA is a single strand of the original.
This can even, I am assured, be done from a corpse." "And
that is what you are suggesting? That someone broke into the tomb
before this creature broke out from it again? That they took a piece
of my brother's body and used it to duplicate his DNA?" "That
is one possibility, Chieh Hsia, but there is another. What if
someone close to your brother took a sample of his skin or blood
before his death? Took it and kept it?" Wang
shook his head. "That's absurd. I know my brother was a weakling
and a fool, but even he would not sit still and let a servant take a
sample of his blood." "Again,
that is not what I meant, Chieh Hsia. What if your brother had a
small accident and one of his servants tended to him? And what if
that servant kept the materials they used to tend your brother's
wound—a piece of bloodied gauze, perhaps, or a bowl with
bloodied water?" Wang
narrowed his eyes. "And you think that's what happened?" Hung
nodded. "That is exactly what happened, Chieh Hsia. We have a
signed confession." "A
confession? And how was this confession obtained? By your usual
means?" Hung
turned, taking the scroll from his secretary, then handed it across. "Wu
Ming!" Wang laughed with disbelief. "And is that all the
proof you have— Wu Ming's confession?" Hung
Mien-lo shook his head. "I am afraid not, Chieh Hsia. I went
back through the household records for details of any small accident
to your brother. It seems there were several such incidents over the
past five years, but in all but one instance the materials used to
tend his wounds were properly incinerated." "And
that single instance where it was not—that involved Wu Ming, I
take it?" "Yes,
Chieh Hsia. Wu Ming and one other. The traitor Sun Li Hua." Wang
made a noise of surprise. "This is certain?" "Absolutely,
Chieh Hsia. We have a tape of the incident, showing Wu and Sun
tending to your brother, but no subsequent record of the dressings
being destroyed." "Ah
. . ." Wang turned, looking down at the corpse again, his
fingers reaching out to touch and trace the contours of his brother's
face. "Then it was my cousin's hand behind all this," he
said softly. "This was Li Yuan's doing." "So
it seems, Chieh Hsia." "So
it seems . . ." Yet something still nagged at him. He turned
back, facing his Chancellor. "How long ago did this happen?" "Two
years ago, Chieh Hsia." "Two
years, or almost two years? Be precise, Hung Mien-lo." "Twenty-two
months, to be exact, Chieh Hsia." "A
month before his death?" "That
is so, Chieh Hsia." Wang
took a deep breath, satisfied. Any earlier and it would have made no
sense, for his father would still have been alive and Li Yuan would
have had no motive for his actions. As it was . . . He
smiled. "You have done well, Chancellor Hung. You have more than
repaid my trust in you. But there are still two things that remain to
be answered. First, how did the creature get into the tomb without
the cameras seeing it? Second, where is the body of my dead brother?" Hung
Mien-lo bowed low. "Both questions have troubled me greatly,
Chieh Hsia, but I think I have the answer." Straightening
up, he drew something from his pocket and held it out, offering it to
his T'ang. It was a small, glassy circle, like the lens cap to a
camera. Wang
turned it in his hand, then looked back at his Chancellor. "What
is this?" "It
is an imager, Chieh Hsia. Placed over a camera lens, it fixes
the image in the camera's eye and maintains it for a predetermined
period. After that time, the imager self-destructs—at a
molecular level—dispersing in the form of a gas. While it is
there, over the lens, you can walk about quite freely before the
camera without fear of it registering your presence, and afterward it
leaves no trace." "I
see. And you think a similar kind of thing—or several of
them—was used to mask the cameras about the tomb?" Hung
smiled. "It would explain how the tomb door was opened without
the cameras seeing anything." "And
my brother's body?" "Of
that there is no sign, Chieh Hsia. However, we did find a
trace of ashes in a hollow near a stream to the north of the palace.
Halfway between here and the foothills." "So
the creature burned the body?" Hung
gave a slight shrug. "I am not so sure. If he did, then why did
we see no sign of it? It takes a great deal of heat to consume a
human body and from the moment the alarms were sounded, every guard
in the palace was on alert for anything suspicious. If the creature
had burned the body, we would have seen it. So no, Chieh Hsia.
I would guess that the ashes were from something else—some
small religious ceremony, perhaps. As for the body, I think it is
still out there, hidden somewhere." Wang
considered a moment, then laughed. "Which is where we shall let
it rest, neh? Amongst the rocks and streams, like an exiled
minister." Again he laughed, a fuller, richer laughter now, fed
by relief and an ancient, unforgiving malice. He turned, looking down
at the corpse and the box holding his brother's face. "As for
these things, have them burned, Chancellor Hung. Outside, before the
palace gates, where all can see." IT WAS
quiet in the lobby of the Medical Center. As Chen entered, the nurse
behind the desk looked up, smiling, but Chen walked straight by,
pushing through the gate in the low barrier, heading for where he
knew they kept their records. Someone
called out to him as he passed, but Chen ignored it. There was no
time for formalities. He wanted to know right now who had killed his
child, and why. Two
men looked up from behind their screens as he entered the records
room, surprised to see him there. One began to object, then fell
silent as he saw the gun. "I
want details of a child mortality," Chen said, without preamble.
"The name is Kao. K-A-O. A week ago it was. A female child.
Newborn. I want the registered time of death, the precise time the
call-out inquiry was made at this office, and a duty roster for that
evening, complete with duty records for all on the roster." The
clerks glanced at each other, not sure what to do, but Chen's fierce
bark made them jump. He pointed his gun at the most senior of the
two. "Do it. Now! Hard print. And don't even think of fucking me
around. If I don't get what I want, I'll put a bullet through your
chest." Swallowing
nervously, the man bowed his head and began to tap details into his
comset. As the
printout began to chatter from the machine, there was a noise
outside. Chen turned. Three of the orderlies—big, heavily built
men—had come to see what was happening. From the way they stood
there, blocking the way, it was clear they had no intention of
letting him leave. "Get
back to work," he said quietly. "This is none of your
business." He
looked back. The younger of the clerks had his fingers on the keys of
his machine. Chen shook his head. "I wouldn't, if I were you . .
." The
man desisted. A moment later the other machine fell silent. Chen
reached out, taking the printout from the tray. A glance at it
confirmed what he had suspected. Jyan had been right. At the time of
his daughter's death, no less than four of the medical staff had been
free. So why hadn't they answered the emergency call? Or rather, who
had instructed them to ignore it? He
would visit Surgeon Fan, the senior consultant of the Center—the
man who should have come at Wang Ti's summons. He would find him and
wring a name from him. Then he would find out who it was and kill
them. Whoever they were. Chen
turned, facing the orderlies again. "Did you not hear me, ch'un
tju? Go back to work. This does not concern you." He
could see how edgy they were at the sight of his gun. Edgy but
determined. They thought they could jump him. Well, they could try.
But they were mistaken if they thought sheer determination would
triumph over him. He
tucked the gun into its holster, then reached down, taking the long,
sharp-edged knife from his boot. "You
want to stop me, is that it? Well, let's see you try, eh? Let's see
you try." MINUTES
LATER he was hammering at the door of Fan Tseng-li's apartment,
conscious that a Security alert would have been put out already. He
could hear movement inside and the babble of voices. Fearful, panicky
voices. He called to them, letting his voice fill out with
reassurance. "Security!
Open up! I am Lieutenant Tong and I have been assigned to protect
you!" He saw
the door camera swivel around and held his pass card up, his thumb
obscuring the name. A moment later the door hissed open and he was
ushered inside, the three servants smiling at him gratefully. The
smiles froze as he drew his gun. "Where
is he? Where is the weasel-faced little shit?" "I
don't know who you mean," the oldest of them, an ancient with
the number two on his chest began, but Chen cuffed him into silence. "You
know very well who I mean. Fan. I want to know where he is, and I
want to know now, not in two minutes' time. I'll shoot you first, loo
tzu, then you, you little fucker." The
elder—Number Two—looked down, holding his tongue, but
beside him the youngest of the three began to babble, fear freeing
his tongue wonderfully. Chen listened carefully, noting what he said. "And
he's there now?" The
young man nodded. "Right."
He looked past them at the house comset; a large, ornate machine
embellished with dragons. "Has anyone spoken to him yet?" The
young man shook his head, ignoring the ancient's glare. "Good."
Chen stepped past them and fired two shots into the machine. "That's
to stop you being tempted. But let me warn you. If I find that he has
been tipped off, I will come back for you. So be good, neh? Be
extra-specially good." the
HOUSE STEWARD smiled, lowering his head. "If you would wait
here, Captain Kao, I shall tell my master . . ." A
straight-arm to the stomach made the man double up, gasping. Chen
stepped over him, heading toward the sound of voices, the clink of
tumblers. A
servant came toward him, trying to prevent him from entering the
dining room. Chen stiff-fingered him in the throat. He
threw the doors open, looking about him, ignoring the startled faces,
then he roared ferociously as he spotted Surgeon Fan, there on the
far side of the food-heaped table. Fan
Tseng-li stood, staggering back from his chair, his face white, his
eyes wide with fear. Others were shouting now, outraged, looking from
Chen to Fan, trying to make sense of things. For a moment there was
hubbub, then a cold, fearful silence fell. Chen
had drawn his knife. "Ai
ya\" Fan cried hoarsely, looking about him anxiously.
"Who is this madman?" "You
know fucking well who I am," Chen snarled, coming around the
table. "And I know who you are, Fan Tseng-li. You are the evil
bastard who let my unborn daughter die." Fan's
face froze in a rictus of fear, then he began to babble. "You
have it wrong. I was detained. A client of mine was ill." Fan
fell silent. Chen was standing only an arm's length from him now,
glaring at him, the look of hatred, of sheer disgust, enough to
wither the man. "I
know what kind of insect you are, Fan. What I need to know is
who paid you to let my daughter die, my wife suffer." He reached
out savagely, gripping Fan's hair, then pulled him down onto his
knees, the big knife held to his throat. "Who was it, Fan
Tseng-li? Tell me." There
was a murmur of protest from around the table, but Chen ignored them.
He was looking down into Fan's face, a murderous hatred shaping his
lips into a snarl. "You
had better tell me," he said quietly, tightening his grip on
Fan's hair, "and you had best do it now, Fan Tseng-li. Unless
you want a second mouth below your chin." Fan
grimaced, then met Chen's eyes. "It was Ts'ui Wei. Ts'ui Wei
made me do it." "Ts'ui
Wei?" Chen frowned, trying to place the name. "Did he—?" He
stopped, making the connection. Ts'ui Wei. Of course! That was
the name of the youth's father. The tall, thin man who had threatened
him that time, after he'd had the youth demoted. Chen shuddered. So
that was it. That was why his child had died. He
sheathed the knife, then turned, looking about him at the faces
gathered around the table. "You heard," he said defiantly.
"And now you know what kind of creature your friend Fan Tseng-li
is." Chen
looked back down at Fan, then with a savage grunt, brought his face
down onto his knee. He let
Fan roll to the side, then walked back around the table, seeing how
they cowered from him. At the doorway the servants parted before him,
making no attempt to hinder him. They had seen what had happened and
understood. Some even bowed their heads as Chen passed, showing him
respect. Back in the dining room, however, voices were being raised;
angry, indignant voices, calling for something to be done. HE
STOOD there, in the darkness on the far side of the restaurant,
looking across. There were seven of them in all, five of them seated
at one of the tables near the pay desk, their figures back-lit, their
faces dark. The other two sat at nearby tables; big men, their
watchfulness as much as their size telling Chen what they were. The
five were huddled close, talking. "You
should go," one of them was saying. "There must be
relatives you could stay with for a time, Ts'ui Wei. Until this blows
over." Ts'ui
Wei leaned toward him aggressively. "I'm not running from that
bastard. He had my son sent down. I'll be fucked if he'll threaten
me." "You
do as you feel, Ts'ui Wei, but I've heard that Security has been
digging through deck records, putting together a file." Ts'ui
leaned back arrogantly. "So? He can't prove anything. All
Surgeon Fan has to do is keep his mouth shut." The
fat man bristled. "Fan Tseng-li is the model of discretion. He,
at least, is taking my advice and going away until this is all sorted
out." Ts'ui
Wei snorted. "That's typical of that self-serving shit! I should
never have listened to your sniveling nonsense. We could have hit
him. Hit him hard. And not just a fucking unborn child. We could have
hurt him bad. The little girl. . ." Chen
looked down, his anger refined to a burning point. They were not
expecting him. That gave him the element of surprise. But there were
still the bodyguards. He would have to deal with them first. Standing
there, listening to them scheme and plot, he had felt his anger turn
to a deep revulsion. For them, but also for himself—for what
had he been doing while all this was happening.7 He let
out a long, slow breath. No. It could never be the same. For wherever
he looked he could see the woman stumbling toward him like a broken
doll, could hear the sound of the detonation . . . And
the child? He closed his eyes, the pain returning, like an iron band
tightening about his chest. It was as if he had killed the child. As
if he had pressed a tiny button and . . . Chen
stepped from the darkness. One of the hired men looked up at him as
he came closer, then looked away, taking him for what he seemed—a
night worker stopped for a bowl of ch'a before retiring. It
was what Chen had hoped for. Three
paces from the man, he acted, swinging his fist around in a broad arc
that brought it crashing into the man's face, breaking his nose. As
he fell back, Chen turned and spun, high-kicking, catching the second
man in the chest, even as he was getting up from his chair. At once
he followed through, two quick punches felling the man. Chen
turned, facing the men at the table. They had moved back, scattering
their chairs. Now they stared at him, wide-eyed with fear. "Tell
me," Chen said quietly, taking a step closer. "My little
girl. . . What would you have done, Ts'ui Wei? Tell me what you had
planned." Ashen-faced,
Ts'ui Wei tried to back away, but the end wall was directly behind
him. He turned his head anxiously, looking for somewhere to run, but
his way was blocked on both sides. Chen
lifted the weighted table and threw it aside, then reached down,
taking the big hunting knife from his boot. "I have no stomach
for a fight, eh, Ts'ui Wei?" Chen laughed coldly, all of the
hatred and self-disgust he had been feeling suddenly focused in his
forearm, making the big knife quiver in the light. Ts'ui
Wei stared at him a moment longer, his mouth working soundlessly,
then he fell to his knees, pressing his head to the floor in front of
Chen, his body shaking with fear. "Have mercy," he pleaded.
"For the gods' sakes, have mercy!" Chen
took a shuddering breath, remembering how Wang Ti had looked,
remembering how it had felt, knowing he had not been there for
her—and Jyan, poor Jyan . . . how had it felt for him, knowing
he could do nothing? And this . . . this piece of shit. . . wanted
mercy? He
raised the knife, his whole body tensed, prepared to strike . . . "Father!
No! Pkase . . ." He
turned, letting the knife fall from his hand. It was Jyan. It was his
son, Jyan The boy ran across and threw his arms about him, embracing
him, holding hit so tightly that Chen felt something break in him. He
began to sob, the wore spilling from him. "Oh, Jyan . . . Jyan .
. . I'm so sorry ... I didn't know . didn't know. Was it awful, boy?
Was it really awful?" Jyan
clutched his father fiercely, looking up at him, his face wet with
tears. "It's all right, Father . . . It's all right now. You're
back. You're here now." He
kissed his son's brow, then lifted him up, hugging him tightly. Yes.
But it would never be the same. He
turned, looking back into the shadows. Karr was standing there, a
troop of his guards behind him. "Are you all right, Kao Chen?" Chen
nodded. "I . . ." He laughed strangely. "I would have
killed him." "Yes,"
Karr said quietly. "And I would have let you. But Jyan . . .
Well, Jyan knew best, neh? After all, you have a life ahead of you,
Kao Chen. A good life." Chen
shivered, tightening his grip on his son, then nodded. Karr let his
hand rest on Chen's shoulder briefly, then moved past him, taking
command of the situation. "All right!" he barked, towering
over the frightened men. "Let's get this sorted out, right now!
You!—all of you!—against the back wall, hands on your
heads! You're under arrest, as principles and accessories to the
murder of a child, and for conspiring to pervert the course of
justice." karr
sat on the ledge of the stone boat, staring across at the floodlit
shape of the Memorial Stone. It was after nine and the lotus lake was
dark. Elsewhere, beneath the lamps that lined the narrow pathways,
lovers walked, talking softly, keeping a proper distance between
them. Behind Karr, seated among the shadows of the teahouse, Chen
sat, his head fallen forward, his story told. For a
moment longer Karr sat there, motionless, and then he sighed and
shook his head, as if waking from a dark and threatening dream. "And
that is the truth?" Chen
was silent. Karr
closed his eyes, deeply pained. Of course it was the truth. A tale
like that— it was not something one made up about oneself. No.
But it was not only Chen he felt sorry for. He had liked the woman
greatly. Had respected her. If he had known for one moment. . . He
turned and stood, looking back at his friend. "This is wrong,
Kao Chen. Very wrong." Chen
looked up and nodded. "Then
what are we to do?" "Do?"
Chen laughed coldly. "What can we do?" Karr
was quiet a moment, fingering the dragon pendant about his neck, then
he drew it out, staring at it. He was Chia ch'eng, Honorary
Assistant to the Royal Household. By right he could claim audience
with his T'ang. He
sat, facing Chen across the table. "I will see Li Yuan. I will
tell him everything you told me just now." "You
think he does not know?" Karr
nodded. "I am convinced of it. He is a good man. Someone is
keeping these things from him. Well, then, we must be his eyes and
ears, neh? We must let him know what is being done in his name." Chen
turned his head. "And Tolonen? He will have the report of my
debriefing by the morning. What if he says you are to do nothing?" Karr
looked down. That was true. He was Tolonen's man, and by rights he
should talk to the old man first. But some things were greater than
such loyalties. "Then
I must do it now." THE
wall had changed. Had become a view of Tai Shan, the sacred mountain
misted in the early morning light, the great temple at the summit a
tiny patch of red against the blue of the sky, perched atop that mass
of gray and green. Within the room a faint breeze blew, spreading the
scent of pine and acacia. Fat
Wong turned from the wall, looking back at his guests, then raised
his cup. "Brothers. . ." There
were five men seated around the low table, each the equal of Wong
Yi-sun, each the Big Boss of one of the great Triads that ran the
lowest levels of City Europe. It had cost him much to get them here
tonight, but here they were. All of them. Or, at least, all that
mattered. They
stared back at him, cold-eyed, returning his smile with their mouths
alone, like alligators. "I
am glad you could all come. I realize what sacrifices you have made
to come here at such short notice, but when you have heard what I
have to say, I know you will agree that I was right to convene this
meeting of the Council." "Where
is Iron Mu?" Wong
turned, facing the old man seated at the table's end. "Forgive
me, General Feng, but I will come to that." The
Big Boss of the i4K stared back at him humorlessly. "The Council
has seven members, Wong Yi-sun, but I see only six about this table.
I thought it was agreed. . ." "Hear
Wong out, Feng Shang-pao," the short, shaven-headed man seated
two down from Feng said, leaning forward to take a cashew from a
bowl. "I am sure all your questions will be answered." Feng
sat back, glaring at his interrupter. "We must have laws among
us, Li Chin. Ways of conducting ourselves." Li
Chin—Li the Lidless as he was known, for obvious reasons—turned
his bony head and looked at Feng, his overlarge eyes fixing the older
man. "I do not dispute it, Feng Shang-pao. But the Wo Shih Wo
would like to know what Fat Wong has to say, and unless you let him
say it. . ." Feng
looked down, his huge chest rising and falling, then he nodded. "Good,"
Wong said. "Then let me explain. This afternoon, I received a
letter." Whiskers
Lu, Boss of the Kuei Chuan, leaned forward, the melted mask of his
face turned toward Wong, his one good eye glittering. "A letter,
Wong Yi-sun?" "Yes."
Wong took the letter from within his silks and threw it down in front
of Lu. "But before you open it, let me say a few words." Wong
drew himself up, his eyes moving from face to face. "We of the
Hung Mun are proud of our heritage. Rightly so. Since the time of our
founding by the five monks of the Fu Chou monastery, we have always
settled our disputes amicably. And that is good, neh? After all, it
is better to make money than make war." He smiled, then let the
smile fade. "This once, however, the threat was too great. Iron
Mu sought more than simple profit. He sought to build a power base—a
base from which to overthrow this Council. To replace it." He
nodded, his face stern. "Let us not hide behind words any
longer. Iron Mu sought to destroy us." Dead
Man Yun of the Red Gang cleared his throat. "I hear your words,
Wong Yi-sun, but I find them strange. You speak of things we all
know, yet you speak of them in the past. Why is this?" Wong
smiled, then turned, going across to the tiny pool. For a moment he
stood there, watching the seven golden fish swim lazily in the
crystal waters; then with a quicksilver motion, he scooped one up and
turned, holding it up for the others to see. For a moment it flapped
in the air, then Wong threw it down onto the dry flagstones. There
was a murmur of understanding around the table. "So
Iron Mu is dead. But how?" Three-Finger Ho asked, eyeing Wong
warily. Wong
came closer, a trace of self-satisfaction at the corners of his
mouth. "I will tell you how. All thirty-seven decks of the Big
Circle heartland were hit simultaneously, thirty minutes ago. A force
of one hundred and twenty thousand Hei went in, with a backup
of fifteen hundred regular guards." Hei.
. . That single word sent a ripple of fear through the seated
men. They had seen the Hei in action on their screens, the big
GenSyn half-men clearing decks of rioters with a ruthlessness even
their most fanatical runners could not match. For a moment they were
silent, looking among themselves, wondering what this meant, then Li
the Lidless leaned across Whiskers Lu and took the letter. He
unfolded it, studying it a moment, then looked up at Wong. "But
what does this mean . . . ?" Yet
even as he said it, he understood. This letter from Li Yuan—this
brief note of agreement—changed everything. Never before had
one of their number received such a favor from Above. Never before
had the Hung Mun worked hand-in-glove with the Seven. He shivered,
seeing it clearly now. Today Fat Wong had gained great face. Had
reestablished his position as Great Father of the brotherhoods. Li
turned his head, looking about him, seeing the look of understanding
in every face, then turned back, facing Wong again, lowering his head
in a gesture of respect. THE
tapestries were burning. Flames licked the ancient thread, consuming
mountain and forest, turning the huntsmen to ashes in the flicker of
an eye. The air was dark with smoke, rent with the cries of dying
men. Hei ran through the choking darkness, their long swords
flashing, their deep-set eyes searching out anything that ran or
walked or crawled. The
door to Iron Mu's mansion had been breached ten minutes ago, but
still a small group of Mu's elite held out. Hei swarmed at the
final barricade, throwing themselves at the barrier without thought
of self-preservation. Facing them, Yao Tzu, Red Pole to the Big
Circle, urged his men to one last effort. He was bleeding from wounds
to the head and chest, but still he fought on, slashing at whatever
appeared above the barricade. For a moment longer the great pile
held, then with a shudder, it began to slide. There was a bellowing,
and then the Hei broke through. Yao Tzu backed away, his knife
gone, three of his men falling in the first charge. As the first of
the Hei came at him, he leaped forward, screeching shrilly,
meeting the brute with a flying kick that shattered the great chest
bone of the half-man. Encouraged, his men attacked in a blur of
flying feet and fists, but it was not enough. The first wave of
Hei went down, but then there was the deafening roar of gunfire
as the Hei commander opened up with a big automatic from the
top of the collapsed barricade. There
was a moment's silence, smoke swirled, and then they moved on, into
the inner sanctum. His
WIVES were dead, his three sons missing. From outside he could hear
the screams of his men as they died. It would be only moments before
they broke into his rooms. Even so, he could not rush this thing. Iron
Mu had washed and prepared himself. Now he sat, his legs folded under
him, his robe open, the ritual knife before him on the mat. Behind
him his servant waited, the specially sharpened sword raised, ready
for the final stroke. He
leaned forward, taking the knife, then turned it, holding the
needle-sharp point toward his naked stomach. His head was strangely
clear, his thoughts lucid. It was the merchant Novacek who had done
this. It had to be. No one else had known enough. Even so, it did not
matter. He would die well. That was all that was important now. As he
tensed, the door shuddered, then fell open, the great locks smashed.
Two Hei stood there, panting, looking in at him. They started
to enter, but a voice called them back. A moment later a man stepped
through, a small, neat-looking Han wearing the powder-blue uniform
and chest patch of a Colonel. A filter-mask covered his lower face. Iron
Mu met the Colonel's eyes, holding them defiantly. In this, his last
moment, he felt no fear, no regret, only a clarity of purpose that
was close to the sublime. Nothing,
not even the watching Hei, could distract him now. A
breath, a second, longer breath, and then . . . The
Colonel's eyes dilated, his jaw tensed, and then he turned away,
letting his Hei finish in the room. He shivered, impressed despite
himself, feeling a new respect for the man. Iron Mu had died well.
Very well. Even so, it could not be known how Iron Mu had died. No.
The story would be put out that he had cried and begged for mercy,
hiding behind his wives. Because that was what the T'ing Wei
wanted. And what the T'ing Wei wanted, they got. Yes,
but while he lived, Iron Mu's death would live in his memory. And one
day, when the T'ing Wei were no more, perhaps he would tell
his story. Of how one of the great lords of the underworld had died,
with dignity, meeting the darkness without fear. FAT
WONG STOOD by the door, bringing things to a close, thanking his
fellow Bosses for coming. And as they left, he made each stoop and
kiss the ancient banner, reaffirming the ancient tradition that bound
them, and acknowledging that he, Wong Yi-sun, 489 of the United
Bamboo, was still the biggest, fattest worm of all. It
should have been enough. Yet when they were gone it was not elation
he felt but a sudden sense of hollowness. This victory was not his.
Not really his. It was like something bought. He
went across and stood there over the tiny pool, staring down into the
water, trying to see things clearly. For a moment he was still, as if
meditating, then, taking the letter from his pocket, he tore it
slowly in half and then in half again, letting it fall. No. He would
be beholden to no man, not even a Son of Heaven. He saw it now. Saw
it with opened eyes. Why had Li Yuan agreed to act, if not out of
fear? And if that were so ... He
took a long, deep breath; then drawing back his sleeve reached in,
plucking the fish from the water until five of the bloated golden
creatures lay there on the ledge, flapping helplessly in the hostile
air. His
way was clear. He must unite the underworld. Must destroy his
brothers one by one, until only he remained. And then, when that was
done, he would lift his head again and stare into the light. He
looked down, watching the dying gasps of the fish, then turned away,
smiling. No. His way was clear. He would not rest now until it was
his. Until he had it all. LI
YUAN STOOD on the terrace, beneath the bright full circle of the
moon, looking out across the palace grounds, conscious of how quiet,
how empty the palace seemed at this late hour. No gardeners knelt in
the dark, earth beneath the trellises of the lower garden, no maids
walked the dark and narrow path that led to the palace laundry. He
turned, looking toward the stable. There a single lamp threw its pale
amber light across the empty exercise circle. He
shivered and looked up at the moon, staring at that great white stone
a while, thinking of what Karr had said. Standing
there in the wavering lamplight, listening to the big man's account,
he had been deeply moved. He had not known—had genuinely not
known—what was being done at Kibwezi and, touched by the
rawness of the man's appeal, he had given his promise to close
Kibwezi and review the treatment of convicted terrorists. He had
returned to the reception, distracted by Karr's words, disturbed by
the questions they raised. And as he went among his cousins, smiling,
offering bland politeness, it had seemed, suddenly, a great pretense,
a nothingness, like walking in a hall of holograms. The more he
smiled and talked, the more he felt the weight of Karr's words
bearing down on him. But
now, at last, he could face the matter squarely, beneath the unseeing
eye of the moon. Until
this moment he had denied that there was a moral problem with the
Wiring Project. Had argued that it was merely a question of attitude.
But there was a problem, for—as Tolonen had argued from the
first—freedom was no illusion, and even the freedom to rebel
ought—no needed—to be preserved somehow, if only
for the sake of balance. Were
it simply a matter of philosophy—of words—it might
have been all right. But it was not. The population problem was real.
It could not be simply wished away. He
looked down, staring at his hands—at the great iron ring on the
first finger of his right hand. For men such as Kao Chen, a common
phrase like "We are our masters' hands" had a far greater
literal truth than he had ever imagined. And a far greater
significance. For what was a man? Was he a choosing being, forging
his own destiny, or was he simply a piece on the board, there to be
played by another, greater than himself? And
maybe that was what had troubled him, more than the fate of the
woman. That deeper question of choice. He
turned, looking back into his room, seeing Minister Heng's report
there on the desk where he had left it. It was
a full report on the "police action" against the Big Circle
Triad; a report that differed quite radically from the Ting Wei's
official account. He sighed, the deep unease he had felt at
reading the report returning. The Het riot squads had gone mad down
there. More than two hundred thousand had been killed, includ-ing
many women and children. Yes,
and that was another argument in favor of wiring. If only to prevent
such massacres, "necessary" as this one might have been. He
turned back, standing there a moment, his eyes closed, feeling the
cool night breeze on his face. Then, stirring himself, he went out
onto the terrace once more. The
moon was high. He looked up at it, surprised, his perception of it
suddenly reversed, such that it seemed to bum like a vast shining
hole in the blackness of the sky. A big circle of death. He shivered
violently and looked down, noting how its light silvered the gardens
like a fall of dust. Before
today he had striven always to do the right thing, to be a good
man—the benevolent ruler that Confucius bade him be—but
now he saw it clearly. In this there was no right course of action,
no pure solution, only degrees of wrongness. And so
he would make the hard choice. He would keep his word to Karr, of
course. Kibwezi Station would be closed. As for the other thing, he
had no choice. No real choice, anyway. The Wiring Project had to
continue, and so it would, elsewhere, hidden from prying eyes. Until
the job was done, the system perfected. He
sighed, turning his back on the darkness, returning inside. Yes.
Because the time was fast coming when it would be needed. broken
glass littered the terrace outside the guardhouse, glistening like
frosted leaves in the moonlight. Nearby, the first of the bodies lay
like a discarded doll, its face a pulp, the ragged tunic of its
uniform soaked with blood. Through the empty window a second body
could be seen, slumped forward in a chair, its head twisted at an
unusual angle, the unblemished face staring vacantly at a broken
screen. Behind
it, on the far side of the room, a door led through. There, on a bed
in the rest room, the last of the bodies lay, naked and broken, its
eyes bulging from its face, its tongue poking obscenely from between
its teeth. At the
end of the unlit corridor, in the still silence of the signal room,
the morph stood at the transmitter, its neutered body naked in the
half-light. To one side, a hand lay on the desk like a stranded crab,
the fingers upturned. The
morph tensed, the severed wrist of its left hand pressed against the
input socket, the delicate wires seeking their counterparts, making
their connections to the board, then it relaxed, a soft amber light
glowing on the eye-level panel in front of it. There was a moment's
stillness and then a faint tremor ran through the creature. At the
count of twelve it stopped, as abruptly as it had begun. The message
had been sent. It
waited, the minutes passing slowly, its stillness unnatural, like the
stillness of a machine, and then the answer came. It
shuddered, then broke connection, drawing its wrist back sharply from
the panel, a strange sigh, like the soughing of the wind through
trees, escaping its narrow lips. Reaching
across, it took the hand from where it lay and lined it up carefully
against the wrist, letting the twelve strong plastic latches—six
in the hand, six in the wrist—click into place. The hand
twitched, the fingers trembling, then was still again. It
turned, looking out through the dark square of the window. Fifty ch'i
away, at the edge of the concrete apron, was a wire fence. Beyond
the fence was the forest. For a time it stood there, staring out into
the darkness, then it turned, making its way through. For
the past few nights it had dreamed. Dreams of a black wind blowing
from beyond; of a dark and silent pressure at the back of it. A dream
that was like the rush of knowledge down its spine; that set its
nerve ends tingling in a sudden ecstasy. And with the dream had come
a vision—a bright, hard vision of a world beneath the surface
of this world. Of a world ruled by the game. A game of dark and
light. Of suns and moons. Of space and time itself. A game that tore
the dark veil from reality, revealing the whiteness of the bone. On the
terrace it stopped again, considering. From Tao Yuan to Tashkent was
six thousand li. If it traveled in the dark it could make
eighty, maybe a hundred li a night for the first ten days or
so. Later on, crossing the great desert, it could increase that,
traveling in the heat of the day, when no patrols flew. With any luck
it would be there in fifty days. It
smiled, recalling DeVore's instructions. In Tashkent it would be met
and given new papers. From there it would fly west, first to Odessa,
then on to Nantes. From Nantes it would take a ship—one of the
big ships that serviced the great floating cities of the Midatlantic.
There it would stay a while, biding its time, working for the big
ImmVac company of North America, putting down roots inside that
organization, until the call came. For a
moment longer it stood there, like a silvered god, tall, powerful,
elegant in the moonlight, then it jumped down, crossing the circle of
light quickly, making for the fence and the darkness beyond. DEVORE
LOOKED UP from the communications panel and stared out into the
darkness of the Martian night. It was just after two, local time, and
the lights of the distant city were low. Beyond them was a wall of
darkness. He
stood, yawning, ready for sleep now that the message had come, then
turned, looking across at the sleeping man. Hans
Ebert lay on the camp bed, fully clothed, his kit bag on the floor
beside him. He had turned up four days earlier, scared, desperate for
help, and had ended here, "rescued" by DeVore from the
Governor's cells. DeVore
went across and stood there over the sleeping man, looking down at
him. Ebert looked ill, haggard from exhaustion. He had lost a lot of
weight and— from the smell of him—had had to rough it in
ways he had never experienced before. His body had suffered, but his
face was still familiar enough to be recognized anywhere in the
system. Well,
maybe that was a problem, and maybe it wasn't. A familiar face might
prove advantageous in the days to come. Especially when behind that
face was a young prince, burning with ambition and eager for revenge.
And that was why— despite the obvious dangers—he had
taken Ebert in. Knowing that what was discarded now might prove
extremely useful later on. He
bent down, drawing the blanket up over Ebert's chest, then turned
away, looking outward, conscious once more of the guards patrolling
the frosted perimeter, the great, blue-white circle of Chung Kuo high
above them in the Martian sky. CHEN
crouched there on the mountainside, looking down the valley to where
the dark, steep slopes ended in a flat-topped arrowhead of whiteness.
It was like a vast wall, a dam two li in height, plugging the
end of the valley, its surface a faintly opalescent pearl, lit from
within. Ch'eng it was. City and wall. The
moon was high. Was a perfect circle of whiteness in the velvet dark.
Chen stared at it a moment, mesmerized, held by its brilliant,
unseeing eye, then looked down, his fingers searching amongst the
ashes. He
turned, looking across at Karr, then lifted the shard of broken
glass, turning it in his hand, remembering. "What
is this place?" Karr asked, coming closer, his face cloaked in
shadow. Chen
stared at him a while, then looked away. "This
is where it began. Here on the mountainside with Kao Jyan. We lit a
fire, just there, where you're standing now. And Jyan . . . Jyan
brought a bottle and two glasses. I remember watching him." A
faint breeze stirred dust and ash about his feet, carrying the scent
of the Wilds. He
stood, then turned, looking north. There, not far from where they
stood, the City began, filling the great northern plain of Europe.
Earlier, flying over it, they had seen the rebuilt Imperial Solarium,
which he had helped bomb a dozen years before. Chen took a long
breath, then turned back, looking at the big man. "Did
you bring the razor, as I asked?" Karr
stared at him fixedly a moment, then took the fine blade from his
tunic. "What did you want it for?" Chen
met his eyes. "Nothing stupid, I promise you." Karr
hesitated a moment longer, then handed him the razor. Chen stared at
it a moment, turning it in the moonlight, then tested it with the
edge of his thumb. Satisfied, he crouched again, and, taking his
queue in the other hand, cut the strong dark hair close to the roots. "Kao
Chen He looked up at the big man, then, saying nothing, continued
with the task. Finished, he stood again, offering Karr the blade, his
free hand tracing the shape of his skull, feeling the fine stubble
there. Karr took the razor, studying his friend. In the moonlight,
Chen's face had the blunt, anonymous look of a thousand generations
of Han peasants. The kind of face one saw everywhere below. A simple,
nondescript face. Until one met the eyes . . . "Why
are we here, my friend? What are we looking for?" Chen
turned, looking about him, taking in everything: the mountains, the
sky, the great City, stretched out like a vast glacier under the
brilliant moon. It was the same. Twelve years had done little to
change this scene. And yet it was quite different. Was, in the way he
saw it, utterly transformed. Back then he had known nothing but the
Net. Had looked at this scene with eyes that saw only the surfaces of
things. But now he could see right through. Through to the bone
itself. He
nodded slowly, understanding now why he had had to come here. Why he
had asked Karr to divert the craft south and fly into the foothills
of the Alps. Sometimes one had to go back—right back—to
understand. He
shivered, surprised by the strength of the returning memory. It was
strange how clearly he could see it, even now, after almost thirty
years. Yes, he could picture quite vividly the old Master who had
trained him to be kwai; a tall, willowy old Han with a long,
expressionless face and a wispy beard and who always wore red. Old
Shang, they had called him. Five of them, there had been, from Chi
Su, the eldest, a broad-shouldered sixteen-year-old, down to himself,
a thin-limbed, ugly little boy of six. An orphan, taken in by Shang. For
the next twelve years Old Shang's apartment had been his home. He had
shared the kang with two others, his sleeping roll put away at
sixth bell and taken out again at midnight. And in between, a long
day of work; harder work than he had ever known, before or since. He
sighed. It was strange how he had hidden it from himself all these
years, as if it had never been. And yet it had formed him, as surely
as the tree is formed from the seed. Shang's words, Shang's gestures
had become his own. So it was in this world. So it had to be. For
without that a man was shapeless, formless, fit only to wallow in the
fetid darkness of the Clay. He
turned, meeting Karr's eyes. "He had clever hands. I watched him
from where you're standing now. Saw how he looked into his glass,
like this, watching the flames flicker and curl like tiny snakes in
the darkness of his wine. At the time I didn't understand what it was
he saw there. But now I do." Karr
looked down. It was Kao Jyan he was talking about. Kao Jyan, his
fellow assassin that night twelve years ago. "A
message came," he offered. "From Tolonen." Chen
was still looking back at him, but it was as' if he were suddenly
somewhere else, as if, for that brief moment, his eyes saw things
that Karr was blind to. "He
confirms that Li Yuan has ordered the closure of Kibwezi." "Ah
. . ." Chen lowered his eyes. Karr
was silent a moment, watching his friend, trying to understand, to
empathize with what he was feeling, but for once it was hard. He
crouched, one hand sifting the dust distractedly. "Your friend,
Kao Jyan . . . what did he see?" Chen
gave a small laugh, as if surprised that the big man didn't know,
then looked away again, smoothing his hand over the naked shape of
his skull. "Change,"
he said softly, a tiny tremor passing through him. "And flames.
Flames dancing in a glass."
ChungKuo. The
words mean "Middle Kingdom," and since 221 B.C., when the
first emperor, Ch'in Shih Huang Ti, unified 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
3: THE
WHITE MOUNTAIN
published
by delacorte
press
Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing
Group, Inc. 666
Fifth Avenue New York, New York 10103
Copyright
© 1992 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 Delacorte Press® is registered in the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office.
Canadian
Cataloguing-in-Publication Data Wingrove,
David The white mountain (Chung
kuo ; v. 3) ISBN 0-385-29875-7 I.
Title. II. Series: Wingrove, David. Chung kuo ; v. 3. 1991
823'. 914 C9I-O949I4-X
Library
of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data (Revised
for vol. 3) Wingrove,
David. Chung Kuo. Contents:
bk. i . The Middle Kingdom — bk.
3. The White Mountain. I. Title. PR6o73.l54sC5
1990 823'. 914 89-16845 ISBN
0-385-29873-0 (v. i) ISBN
0-385-29874-9 (v. 2) ISBN
0-385-29875-7 (v. 3) .
Manufactured
in the United States of America Published
simultaneously in Canada by Doubleday Canada Limited, 105
Bond Street, Toronto, Ontario, January
1992
to lily jackson, from your
grandson David on the occasion of your 95th birthday, with a
lifetime's love.
CONTENTS
B
O O K 3 The White Mountain PART i
Summer 2207—AT THE BRIDGE OF CH'IN Chapter i:
Scorched Earth
3 Chapter 2:
Gods of the Flesh
31 Chapter 3:
The Way of Deception
51 Chapter 4:
Carp Pool and Tortoise Shell
71 Chapter 5:
The Broken Wheel
89 Chapter 6:
Chen Yen
122 Chapter 7:
New Blood
141 Chapter 8:
Mirrors
157 Chapter 9:
The Temple of Heaven
178 Chapter 10:
Ghosts
195 Chapter 11:
The Tiger's Mouth
223 Chapter 12:
Willow-Plum Sickness
242 Chapter 13:
In the Open
259 Chapter 14:
The Shattered Land
279 INTERLUDE
Winter 2207 —DRAGON'S TEETH
PART 2
Summer 22o8-THE WHITE MOUNTAIN Chapter 15: Between
Light and Shadow 307 Chapter 16:
Dragonflies
335 Chapter 17: In a
Darkened Eye
374 Chapter iS: The
Dead Brother
394 Chapter 19: White
Mountain 410 Chapter 20: Flames
in a Glass 432 Author's Note
453 A Glossary of Mandarin
Terms 456 Acknowledgments
461 In Times to Come . . .
4^3
PART
I SUMMER 2207 At
the Bridge of Ch’in
The
white glare recedes to the Western hills, High in the distance
sapphire blossoms rise. Where shall there be an end of old and new? A
thousand years have whirled away in the wind. The sands of the ocean
change to stone, Fishes puff bubbles at the bridge of Ch'in. The
empty shine streams on into the distance, The bronze pillars melt
away with the years. —LI
ho, On and On Forever, ninth century a.d.
CHAPTER
ONE Scorched
Earth LI
SHAI TUNG stood beside the pool. Across from him, at the entrance to
the arboretum, a single lamp had been lit, its light reflecting
darkly in the smoked-glass panels of the walls, misting a pallid
green through leaves of fern and palm. But where the great T'ang
stood it was dark. These
days he courted darkness like a friend. At night, when sleep evaded
him, he came here, staring down through layers of blackness at the
dark submerged forms of his carp. Their slow and peaceful movements
lulled him, easing the pain in his eyes, the tenseness in his
stomach. Often he would stand for hours, unmoving, his black silks
pulled close about his thin and ancient body. Then, for a time, the
tiredness would leave him, as if it had no place here in the cool,
penumbral silence. Then
ghosts would come. Images imprinted on the blackness, filling the
dark with the vivid shapes of memory. The face of Han Ch'in, smiling
up at him, a half-eaten apple in his hand from the orchard at
Tongjiang. Lin Yua, his first wife, bowing demurely before him on
their wedding night, her small breasts cupped in her hands, like an
offering. Or his father, Li Ch'ing, laughing, a bird perched on the
index finger of each hand, two days before the accident that killed
him. These and others crowded back, like guests at a death feast. But
of this he told no one, not even his physician. These, strangely,
were his comfort. Without them the darkness would have been
oppressive: would have been blackness, pure and simple. Sometimes
he would call a name, softly, in a whisper; and that one would come
to him, eyes alight with laughter. So he remembered them now, in joy
and at their best. Shades from a summer land. He had
been standing there more than two hours when a servant came. He knew
at once that it was serious; they would not have disturbed him
otherwise. He felt the tenseness return like bands of iron about his
chest and brow, felt the tiredness seep back into his bones. "Who
calls me?" The
servant bowed low. "It is the Marshal, Chieh Hsia." He
went out, shedding the darkness like a cloak. In his study the
viewing screen was bright, filled by Tolonen's face. Li Shai Tung sat
in the big chair, moving Minister Heng's memorandum to one side. For
a moment he sat there, composing himself, then stretched forward and
touched the contact pad. "What is it, Knut? What evil keeps you
from your bed?" "Your servant never sleeps," Tolonen
offered, but his smile was halfhearted and his face was ashen. Seeing
that, Li Shai Tung went cold. Who is it now? he asked himself.
Wei Feng? Tsu Ma? Who haw they killed this time? The
Marshal turned and the image on the screen turned with him. He was
sending from a mobile unit. Behind him a wide corridor stretched
away, its walls blackened by smoke. Further down, men were working in
emergency lighting. "Where are you, Knut? What has been
happening?" "I'm
at the Bremen fortress, Chieh Hsia. In the barracks of
Security Central." Tolonen's face, to the right of the screen,
continued to stare back down the corridor for a moment, then turned
to face his T'ang again. "Things are bad here, Chieh Hsia. I
think you should come and see for yourself. It seems like the work of
the Ping Tioo, but. . ." Tolonen hesitated, his old familiar
face etched with deep concern. He gave a small shudder, then began
again. "It's just that this is different, Chieh Hsia. Totally
different from anything they've ever done before." Li
Shai Tung considered a moment, then nodded. The skin of his face felt
tight, almost painful. He took a shallow breath, then spoke. "Then
I'll come, Knut. I'll be there as soon as I can." IT WAS
HARD to recognize the place. The whole deck was gutted. Over fifteen
thousand people were dead. Damage had spread to nearby stacks and to
the decks above and below, but that was minimal compared to what had
happened here. Li Shai Tung walked beside his Marshal, turning his
bloodless face from side to side as he walked, seeing the ugly mounds
of congealed tar—all that was left of once-human bodies—that
were piled up by the sealed exits, conscious of the all-pervading
stench of burned flesh, sickly-sweet and horrible. At the end of Main
the two men stopped and looked back. "Are
you certain?" There were tears in the old T'ang's eyes as he
looked at his Marshal. His face was creased with pain, his hands
clasped tightly together. Tolonen
took a pouch from his tunic pocket and handed it across. "They
left these. So that we would know." The
pouch contained five small, stylized fish. Two of the golden pendants
had melted, the others shone like new. The fish was the symbol of the
Ping Tiao. Li Shai Tung spilled them into his palm. "Where
were these found?" "On the other side of the seals. There
were more, we think, but the heat. . ." Li Shai Tung shuddered,
then let the fish fall from his fingers. They had turned the deck
into a giant oven and cooked everyone inside—men, women, and
their children. Sudden anger twisted like a spear in his guts. "Why7.
What do they want, Knut? What do they want?" One hand jerked
out nervously, then withdrew. "This is the worst of it. The
killings. The senseless deaths. For what?" Tolonen
had said it once before, years ago, to his old friend Klaus Ebert;
now he said the words again, this time to his T'ang. "They want
to pull it down. All of it. Whatever it costs." Li
Shai Tung stared at him, then looked away. "No. . ."he
began, as if to deny it; but for once denial was impossible. This was
what he had feared, his darkest dream made real. A sign of things to
come. He had
been ill of late. For the first time in a long, healthy life he had
been confined to bed. That, too, seemed a sign. An indication that
things were slipping from him. Control—it began with one's own
body and spread outward. He
nodded to himself, seeing it now. This was personal. An attack upon
his person. For he was the State. Was the City. There
was a sickness loose, a virus in the veins of the world. Corruption
was rife. Dispersionism, Leveling, even this current obsession in the
Above with longevity—all these were symptoms of it. The actions
of such groups were subtle, invidious, not immediately evident; yet
ultimately they proved fatal. Expectations had changed and that had
undermined the stability of everything. They want to pull it down. "What
did they do here, Knut? How did they do this?" "We've
had to make some assumptions, but a few things are known for certain.
Bremen Central Maintenance reports that all communications to Deck
Nine were cut at second bell." "All?"
Li Shai Tung shook his head, astonished. "Is that possible,
Knut?" "That was part of the problem. They didn't believe
it, either; so they wasted an hour checking for faults in the system
at their end. They didn't think to send anyone to make a physical
check." Li
Shai Tung grimaced. "Would it have made a difference?" "No.
No difference, Chieh Hsia. There was no chance of doing
anything after the first ten minutes. They set their fires on four
different levels. Big, messy chemical things. Then they rigged the
ventilators to pump oxygen-rich air through the system at increased
capacity." "And the seals?" Tolonen
swallowed. "There was no chance anyone could have gotten out.
They'd blown the transit and derailed the bolt. All the interlevel
lifts were jammed. That was part of the communications blackout. The
whole deck must have been in darkness." "And
that's it?" Li Shai Tung felt sickened by the callousness of it
all. Tolonen
hesitated, then spoke again. "This was done by experts, Chieh
Hsia, Knowledgeable men, superbly trained, efficiently organized.
Our own special services men could have done no better." Li
Shai Tung looked back at him. "Say it, Knut," he said
softly. "Don't keep it to yourself. Even if it proves wrong, say
it." Tolonen
met his eyes, then nodded. "All of this speaks of money. Big
money. The technology needed to cut off a deck's communications—it's
all too much for normal Ping Two funding. Out of their range. There
has to be a backer." The
T'ang considered a moment. "Then it's still going on. We didn't
win the War after all. Not finally." Tolonen
looked down. Li Shai Tung's manner disturbed him. Since his illness
he had been different. Off-balance and indecisive, withdrawn, almost
melancholy. The sickness had robbed him of more than his strength; it
had taken some of his sharpness, his quickness of mind. It fell upon
the Marshal to lead him through this maze. "Maybe.
But more important is finding out who is the traitor in our midst."
"Ah. . ." Li Shai Tung's eyes searched his face, then
looked away. "At what level have they infiltrated?" "Staff." He
said it without hesitation, knowing that it had to be that high up
the chain of command. No one else could have shaped things in this
manner. To seal off a deck, that took clout. More than the Ping Tioo
possessed. Li
Shai Tung turned away again, following his own thoughts. Maybe Yuan
was right. Maybe they should act now. Wire them all. Control them
like machines. But his instinct was against it. He had held back from
acting on the Project's early findings. Even this—this
outrage—could not change his mind so far. "It's
bad, Knut. It's as if you could not trust your own hands to shave
your throat ,» Tolonen
laughed, a short, bitter bark of laughter. The old T'ang turned. "You
have it in hand, though, Knut." He smiled. "You, at least,
1 trust." The
Marshal met his master's eyes, touched by what had been said, knowing
that this was what shaped his life and gave it meaning. To have this
man's respect, his total trust. Without thinking, he knelt at Li Shai
Tung's feet. "I
shall find the man and deal with him, Chieh Hsia. Were it my
own son, I'd deal with him." AT THE
MOMENT, on the far side of the world, Li Yuan was walking down a path
on the estate in Tongjiang. He could smell the blossoms in the air,
apple and plum, and beneath those the sharper, sweeter scent of
cherry. It reminded him of how long it had been since he had been
here; of how little had changed while he had been gone. At the
top of the terrace he stopped, looking out across the valley, down
the wide sweep of marble steps toward the lake. He smiled, seeing her
on the far side of the lake, walking between the trees. For a moment
he simply looked, his heart quickened just to see her; then he went
down, taking the steps in two's and three's. He was
only a few paces from her when she turned. "Li
Yuan! You didn't say . . ." "I'm
sorry, I ..." But his words faltered as he noted the roundness
of her, the fullness of her belly. He glanced up, meeting her eyes
briefly, then looked down again. My son, he thought. My
son. "I'm
well." "You
look wonderful," he said, taking her in his arms, conscious of
the weeks that had passed since he had last held her. But he was
careful now and released her quickly, taking her hands, surprised by
how small they were, how delicate. He had forgotten. Not,
not forgotten. Simply not remembered. He
laughed softly. "How far along are you?" She
looked away. "More than halfway now. Twenty-seven weeks." He
nodded, then reached down to touch the roundness, feeling how firm
she was beneath the silks she wore, like the ripened fruit in the
branches above their heads. "I
wondered . . ." she began, looking back at him, then fell
silent, dropping her head. "Wondered
what?" he asked, staring at her, realizing suddenly what had
been bothering him. "Besides, what's this? Have you no smiles to
welcome your husband home?" He
reached out, lifting her chin gently with his fingers, smiling; but
his smile brought no response. She turned from him petulantly,
looking down at her feet. Leaf shadow fell across the perfection of
her face, patches of sunlight catching in the lustrous darkness of
her hair, but her lips were pursed. "I've
brought you presents," he said softly. "Up in the house.
Why don't you come and see?" She
glanced at him, then away. This time he saw the coldness in her eyes.
"How long this time, Li Yuan? A day? Two days before you're gone
again?" He
sighed and looked down at her hand. It lay limply in his own, palm
upward, the fingers gently bent. "I'm
not just any man, Fei Yen. My responsibilities are great, especially
at this time. My father needs me." He shook his head, trying to
understand what she was feeling, but he could not help but feel
angered by her lack of welcome. It was not his fault, after all. He
had thought she would be pleased to see him. "If
I'm away a lot, it can't be helped. Not just now. I would rather be
here, believe me, my love. I really would . . ." She
seemed to relent a little; momentarily her hand returned the pressure
of his own, but her face was still turned from his. "I
never see you," she said quietly. "You're never here." A bird
alighted from a branch nearby, distracting him. He looked up,
following its flight. When he looked back it was to find her watching
him, her dark eyes chiding him. "It's
odd," he said, ignoring what she had said. "This place—it's
changed so little over the years. I used to play here as a child,
ten, twelve years ago. And even then I imagined how it had been like
this for centuries. Unchanged. Unchanging. Only the normal cycle of
the seasons. I'd help the servants pick the apple crop, carrying
empty baskets over to them. And then, later, I'd have quite
insufferable bellyaches from all the fruit I'd gorged." He
laughed, seeing how her eyes had softened as he spoke. "Like any
child," he added after a moment, conscious of the lie, yet
thinking of a past where it had really been so. Back before the City,
when such childish pleasures were commonplace. For a
moment longer he simply looked at her. Then, smiling, he squeezed her
hand gently. "Come. Let's go back." On the
bridge he paused and stood looking out across the lake, watching the
swans moving on the water, conscious of the warmth of her hand in his
own. "How
long this time?" she asked, her voice softer, less
insistent than before. "A
week," he said, turning to look at her. "Maybe longer. It
depends on whether things keep quiet." She
smiled—the first smile she had given him in weeks. "That's
good, Yuan. I'm tired of being alone. 1 had too much of it before." He
gave a single nod. "I know. But things will change. I promise
you, Fei. It will be better from now on." She
raised her chin, looking at him intently. "I hope so. It's so
hard here on my own." Hard?
He looked across the placid lake toward the orchard, wondering what
she meant. He saw only softness here. Only respite from the harsh
realities of life. From deals and duties. Smelled only the healthy
scents of growth. He
smiled and looked at her again. "I decided something, Fei. While
I was away." She
looked back at him. "What's that?" "The
boy," he said, placing his hand on her swollen belly once more.
"I've decided we'll call him Han." LEHMANN
WOKE HIM, then stood there while he dressed, waiting. DeVore
turned, lacing his tunic. "When did the news break?" "Ten
minutes ago. They've cleared all channels pending the announcement.
Wei Feng is to speak." DeVore
raised an eyebrow. "Not Li Shai Tung?" He laughed. "Good.
That shows how much we've rattled him." He turned, glancing
across the room at the timer on the wall, then looked back at
Lehmann. "Is that the time?" Lehmann
nodded. DeVore
looked down thoughtfully. It was almost four hours since the attacks.
He had expected them to react quicker than this. But that was not
what was worrying him. "Has
Wiegand reported back?" "Not
yet." DeVore
went into the adjoining room. He sat in the chair, facing the big
screen, his fingers brushing the controls on the chair's arm to
activate it. Lehmann came and stood behind him. The
Ywe Lung—the wheel of dragons, symbol of the
seven—filled the screen as it did before every official
announcement; but this time the backdrop to the wheel was white,
signifying death. Throughout
Chung Kuo, tens of billions would be sitting before their screens,
waiting pensively, speculating about the meaning of this break in
regular programming. It had been a common feature of the
War-that-wasn't-a-War, but the screens had been empty of such
announcements for some time. That would give it added flavor. He
looked back at Lehmann. "When Wiegand calls in, have him
switched through. I want to know what's been going on. He should have
reported back to me long before this." "I've
arranged it already." "Good."
He turned back, smiling, imagining the effect this was having on the
Seven. They would be scurrying about like termites into whose nest a
great stick had just been poked; firing off orders here, there, and
everywhere; readying themselves against further attacks; not knowing
where the next blow might fall. Things had been quiet these last few
months. Deliberately so, for he had wanted to lull the Seven into a
false sense of security before he struck. It was not the act itself
but the context of the act that mattered. In time of war, people's
imaginations were dulled by a surfeit of tragedy, but in peacetime
such acts took on a dreadful significance. So it was now. They
would expect him to follow up—to strike again while they were
in disarray—but this time he wouldn't. Not immediately. He
would let things settle before he struck again, choosing his targets
carefully, aiming always at maximizing the impact of his actions,
allowing the Seven to spend their strength fighting shadows while he
gathered his. Until their nerves were raw and their will to fight
crippled. Then—and only then—would he throw his full
strength against them. He let
his head fall back against the thick leather cushioning, relaxing for
the first time in days, a sense of well-being flooding through him.
Victory would not come overnight, but then that was not his aim. His
was a patient game and time was on his side. Each year brought
greater problems for Chung Kuo—increased the weight of numbers
that lay heavy on the back of government. He had only to wait, like a
dog harrying a great stag, nipping at the heels of the beast,
weakening it, until it fell. Martial
music played from the speakers on either side of the screen. Then,
abruptly, the image changed. The face of Wei Feng, T'ang of East
Asia, filled the screen, the old man's features lined with sorrow. "People
of Chung Kuo, I have sad news. . ." he began, the very
informality of his words unexpected, the tears welling in the comers
of the old man's eyes adding to the immense sense of wounded dignity
that emanated from him. DeVore sat forward, suddenly tense. What had
gone wrong? He listened as Wei Feng spoke of the tragedy that had
befallen Bremen, watching the pictures dispassionately, waiting for
the old man to add something more—some further piece of news.
But there was nothing. Nothing at all. And then Wei Feng was finished
and the screen cleared, showing the Ywe Lung with its pure
white backdrop. DeVore
sat there a moment longer, then pulled himself up out of the chair,
turning to face Lehmann. "They
didn't do it. The bastards didn't do it!" He was
about to say something more when the panel on his desk began to flash
urgently. He switched the call through, then turned, resting on the
edge of the desk, facing the screen. He had
expected Wiegand. But it wasn't Wiegand's face that filled the
screen. It was Hans Ebert. "What
in hell's name has been happening, Howard? I've just had to spend two
hours with the Special Investigation boys being grilled! Bremen, for
the gods' sakes! The stupid bastards attacked Bremen!" DeVore
looked down momentarily. He had deliberately not told Ebert anything
about their designs on Bremen, knowing that Tolonen would screen all
his highest-ranking officers—even his future son-in-law—for
knowledge of the attack. Caught out once that way, Tolonen's first
thought would be that he had once again been infiltrated at staff
level. It did not surprise him, therefore, to learn that Tolonen had
acted so quickly. .-.; "I know," he said simply, meeting
Ebert's eyes. "What
do you mean, you know? Were you involved in that?" Ignoring
Ebert's anger, he nodded, speaking softly, quickly, giving his
reasons. But Ebert wasn't to be placated so simply. "I
want a meeting," Ebert said, his eyes blazing. "Today! I
want to know what else you've got planned." DeVore
hesitated, not for the first time finding Ebert's manner deeply
offensive, then nodded his agreement. Ebert was too important to his
plans just now. He needn't tell him everything, of course. Just
enough to give him the illusion of being trusted. "Okay.
This afternoon," DeVore said, betraying nothing of his thoughts.
"At Mu Chua's. I'll see you there, Hans. After fourth bell." He
broke contact, then sat back. "Damn
him!" he said, worried that he had still heard nothing. He
turned. "Stefan! Find out where the hell Wiegand is. I want to
know what's been happening." He
watched the albino go, then looked about the room, his sense of
well-being replaced by a growing certainty. Lehmann
confirmed it moments later. "Wiegand's dead," he said,
coming back into the room. "Along with another fifty of our men
and more than a hundred and fifty Ping Tiao." DeVore
sat down heavily. "What happened?" Lehmann
shook his head. "That's all we know. We've intercepted Security
reports from the Poznan and Krakov garrisons. It looks like they knew
we were coming." DeVore
looked down. Gods! Then the harvest was untouched, City Europe's vast
granaries still intact. He could not have had worse news. He
shuddered. This changed things dramatically. What had been designed
to weaken the Seven had served only to make them more determined. He had
known all along what the probable effect of a single strike against
Bremen would have. Had known how outraged people would be by the
assault on the soldiers' living quarters, the killing of innocent
women and children. That was why he had planned the two things to hit
them at the same time. With the East European Plantations on fire and
the safe haven of Bremen breached, he had expected to sow the seeds
of fear in City Europe. But fear had turned to anger, and what ought
to have been a devastating psychological blow for the Seven had been
transformed into its opposite. No
wonder Wei Feng had spoken as he had. That sense of great moral
indignation the old man had conveyed had been deeply felt. And there
was no doubting that the watching billions would have shared it. So
now the Seven had the support of the masses of Chung Kuo. Sanction,
if they wanted it, to take whatever measures they wished against
their enemies. DeVore
sighed and looked down at his hands. No. Things could not have turned
out worse. But
how? How had they known? Despair turned to sudden anger in him. He
stood abruptly. Wiegand! It had to be Wiegand! Which meant that the
report of his death was false; a fabrication put out for them to
overhear. Which meant. . . For a
moment he followed the chain of logic that led out from that thought;
then he sat again, shaking his head. No, not Wiegand. His instinct
was against it. In any case, Wiegand didn't have either the balls or
the imagination for such a thing. And yet, if not Wiegand, then who? Again
he sighed, deciding to put the base on full alert. In case he was
wrong. In case Wiegand had made a deal and was planning to lead
Tolonen back here to the Wilds. EMILY
ASCHER was angry. Very angry. She trembled as she faced her tour
compatriots on the central committee of the Ping Tiao, her arm
outstretched, her finger stabbing toward Gesell, spitting the words
out venomously. "What you did was vile, Bent. You've tainted us
all. Betrayed us." Gesell glanced at Mach then looked back at
his ex-lover, his whole manner defensive. The failure of the attack
on the plantations had shaken him badly and he was only now beginning
to understand what effect the Bremen backlash would have on their
organization. Even so, he was not prepared to admit he had been
wrong. "I
knew you'd react like this. It's exactly why we had to keep it from
you. You would have vetoed it." She
gave a high-pitched laugh, astonished by him. "Of course 1
would! And rightly so. This could destroy us." Gesell
lifted his hand, as if to brush aside the accusation of her ringer.
"You don't understand. If our attack on the plantations had
succeeded—" She
batted his hand away angrily. "No. I understand things
perfectly. This was a major policy decision and I wasn't consulted."
She turned her head, looking across at the other woman in the room.
"And you, Mao Liang? Were you told?" Mao
Liang looked down, shaking her head, saying nothing. But that wasn't
sc surprising: since she had replaced Emily in Gesell's bed, it was
as if she had lost he own identity. Emily
looked back at Gesell, shaking her head slowly. "I understand,
all right It's back to old patterns. Old men meeting in closed rooms,
deciding things for others." She huffed, a sound of pure
disgust. "You know, I really believed we were beyond all that.
But it was all lip service, wasn't it, Bent? All the time you were
fucking me, you really despised me as a person. After all, I was only
a woman. An inferior being. Not to be trusted with serious
matters." "You're
wrong—" Gesell began, stung by her words, but she shook
her head, denying him. "I
don't know how you've the face to tell me I'm wrong after what you've
done." She turned slightly. "And you, Mach. I know this was
all your idea." Mach
was watching her, his eyes narrowed slightly. "There was good
reason not to involve you. You were doing so well at recruiting new
members." Again
she laughed, not believing what she was hearing. "And what's
that worth now? All that hard work, and now you've pissed it all
away. My word. I gave them my word as to what we were, and you've
shat on it." "We're
Ko Ming," Gesell began, a slight edge to his voice now.
"Revolutionaries, not fucking hospital workers. You can't change
things and have clean hands. It isn't possible!" She
stared back at him witheringly. "Murderers, that's what
they're calling us. Heartless butchers. And who can blame them? We
destroyed any credibility we had last night." "I
disagree." She
turned, looking at Mach. "You can disagree as much as you like,
Jan Mach, but it's true. As of last night this organization is dead.
You killed it. You and this prick here. Didn't you see the trivee
pictures of the children that died? Didn't you see the shots of those
beautiful, blond-haired children playing with their mothers? Didn't
something in you respond to that?" "Propaganda—"
began Quinn, the newest of them, but a look from Gesell silenced him. Ascher
looked from one to the other of them, seeing how they avoided her
eyes. "No? Isn't there one of you with the guts to admit it? We
did that. The Ping Two. And this time there's nothing we
can do to repair the damage. We're fucked." "No,"
Mach said. "There is a way." She
snorted. "You're impossible! What way? What could we possibly do
that could even begin to balance things in our favor?" "Wait
and see," Mach said, meeting her eyes coldly. "Just wait
and see." devore
SAT BACK on the sofa, looking about him at the once opulently
furnished room, noting how the fabrics had worn, the colors faded
since he had last come here. He picked up one of the cushions beside
him and studied it a moment, reading the Mandarin pictograms sewn
into the velvet. Here men forget their cares. He
smiled. So it was, once. But now? He
looked up as Mu Chua entered, one of her girls following with a fully
laden tray. She smiled at him, lines tightening about her eyes and at
the comers of her mouth. "1
thought you might like some ch'a while you were waiting, Shih
Reynolds." He sat
forward, giving the slightest bow of his head. "That's kind of
you, Mother." As the
girl knelt and poured the ch'a, DeVore studied Mu Chua. She, too, was
much older, much more worn than he remembered her. In her sixties
now, she seemed drawn, the legendary ampleness of her figure a thing
of the past. Death showed itself in her; in the sudden angularity of
her limbs and the taut wiriness of her muscles; in the slackness of
the flesh at neck and arm and breast. He had known her in better
days, though it was unlikely she remembered him. She
was watching him, as if aware of how he looked at her. Even so, when
she spoke again, her smile returned, as strong as ever. He smiled
back at her. Though the body failed, the spirit lived on, in spite of
all she'd suffered. "Shall
I let him know you're here?" He
shook his head, then took the offered bowl from the girl. "No,
Mu Chua. I'll wait." She
hesitated, her eyes flicking to the girl, then back to him. "In
that case, is there anything you'd like?" Again
he smiled. "No, Though I thank you. Just let him know I'm here.
When he's finished, that is." He
watched her go, then looked about him, wondering. Mu Chua's old
protector, Feng Chung, the Triad boss, had died three years earlier,
leaving a power vacuum down here below the Net. Rival Triads had
fought a long and bloody war for the dead man's territory,
culminating in the victory of Lu Ming-shao, or "Whiskers Lu,"
as he was better known. No respecter of fine detail, Lu had claimed
Mu Chua's House of the Ninth Ecstasy as his own, letting Mu Chua stay
on as Madam, nominally in charge of things. But the truth was that Lu
ran things his way these days, using Mu Chua's as a clearinghouse for
drugs and other things, as well as for entertaining his Above
clients. Things
had changed, and in the process Mu Chua's had lost its shine. The
girls here were no longer quite so carefree; and violence, once
banned from the house, was now a regular feature of their lives. So the
world changes, thought DeVore, considering whether he should make
Whiskers Lu an offer for the place. "Has
something amused you?" He
turned sharply, surprised that he'd not heard Ebert enter, then saw
that the Major was barefooted, a silk pan drawn loosely about
his otherwise naked body. DeVore
set the ch'a bowl down beside him and stood, facing Ebert. "I
thought you were in a hurry to see me." Ebert
smiled and walked past him, pulling at the bell rope to summon one of
the girls. He turned back, the smile still on his lips. "I was.
But I've had time to think things through." He laughed softly.
"I ought to thank you, Howard. You knew that Tolonen would
screen his staff officers, didn't you?" DeVore
nodded. "I
thought so." There
was a movement to their right, a rustling of the curtains, and then a
girl entered, her head lowered. "You called, Masters?" "Bring
us a bottle of your best wine and two"— he looked at
DeVore, then corrected himself—"no, make that just one
glass." When
she was gone, DeVore looked down, for the first time letting his
anger show. "What
the fuck are you up to, Hans?" Ebert
blinked, surprised by DeVore's sudden hostility. Then, bridling, he
turned, facing him. "What do you mean?" "I
ought to kill you." "Kill
me? Why?" "For
what you did. It didn't take much to piece it together. There was
really no other possibility. No one else knew enough about our plans
to attack the plantations. It had to be you who blew the whistle." Ebert
hesitated. "Ah . . . that." Then, unbelievably, he gave a
little laugh. "I'm afraid I had to, Howard. One of our captains
got a whiff of things. If it had been one of my own men I could have
done something about it, but the man had already put in his report. I
had to act quickly. If they'd taken them alive . . ." DeVore
was breathing strangely, as if preparing to launch himself at the
bigger man. "I'm
sure you see it, Howard," Ebert continued, looking away from
him. "It's like in wei chi. You have to sacrifice a group
sometimes, for the sake of the game. Well, it was like that. It was
either act or lose the whole game. I did it for the best." You
did it to save your own arse, thought DeVore, calming himself,
trying to keep from killing Ebert there and then. It wouldn't do to
be too hasty. And maybe Ebert was right, whatever his real motive.
Maybe it had prevented a far worse calamity. At least the fortresses
were safe. But it still left him with the problem of dealing with the
Ping Tiao. "So
Wiegand's dead?" Ebert
nodded. "I made sure of that myself." Yes,
he thought. I bet you did. He forced himself to unclench his
fists, then turned away. It was the closest he had come to losing
control. Don't let it get to you, he told himself, but it
did no good. There was something about Ebert that made him want to
let fly, whatever the consequences. But no—that was Tolonen's
way, not his. It was what made the old man so weak. And Ebert too.
But he was not like that. He used his anger; made it work for him,
not against him. The
girl brought the wine, then left them. As Ebert turned to pour,
DeVore studied him, wondering, not for the first time, what Hans
Ebert would have been had he not been bom heir to GenSyn. A low-level
bully, perhaps. A hireling of some bigger, more capable man; but
essentially the same callous, selfish type, full of braggadocio, his
dick bigger than his brain. Or was
that fair? Wasn't there also something vaguely heroic about Ebert—
something that circumstance might have molded otherwise? Was it his
fault that he had been allowed everything, denied nothing? He
watched Ebert turn, smiling, and nodded to himself. Yes, it was
his fault. Ebert was a weak man, beneath it all, and his weakness
had cost them dearly. He would pay for it. Not now—he was
needed now—but later, when he had served his purpose. "Kan
Pei!" Ebert said, raising his glass. "Anyway, Howard, I've
better news." DeVore
narrowed his eyes. What else had Ebert been up to? Ebert
drank heavily from his glass, then sat, facing DeVore. "You're
always complaining about being underfunded. Well. . ." his smile
broadened, as if at his own cleverness, "I've found us some new
backers. Acquaintances of mine." "Acquaintances?" Ebert
laughed. "Friends . . . People sympathetic to what we're doing."
DeVore felt the tension creep back into his limbs. "What have
you said?" Ebert's face cleared, became suddenly sharper. "Oh,
nothing specific, don't worry. I'm not stupid. I sounded them first.
Let them talk. Then, later on, I spoke to them in private. These are
people I trust, you understand? People IVe known a long time." DeVore
took a long breath. Maybe, but he would check them out himself.
Thoroughly. Because, when it came down to it, he didn't trust Ebert's
judgment. "What sums are you talking about?" "Enough
to let you finish building your fortresses." DeVore
gave a small laugh. Did Ebert know how much that was, or was-he just
guessing? One thing was certain; he had never told Hans Ebert how
much even one of the great underground fortresses cost. "That's
good, Hans. I'll have to meet these friends of yours." MU
chua closed the door behind her, furious with Ebert. She had seen the
bruises on the girl's arms and back. The bastard! There'd been no
need. The girl was only fourteen. If he'd wanted that he should have
said. She'd have sent in one of the older girls. They, at least, were
hardened to it. She
stood still, closing her eyes, calming down. He would be out
to see her any moment and it wouldn't do to let him see how angry she
was. Word could get back to Lu Ming-shao, and then there'd be hell to
pay. She
shuddered. Life here could still be sweet—some days—but
too often it was like today, a brutish struggle simply to survive. She
went to her desk and busied herself, making out his bill, charging
him for the two sessions and for the wine and ch'a. She
paused, frowning, as she thought of his guest. There was something
strangely familiar about Shih Reynolds—as if they'd met
some time in the past—but she couldn't place him. He seemed a
nice enough man, but could that really be said of anyone who
associated with that young bastard? For once she wished she had
overheard what they were talking about. She could have—after
all, Lu Ming-shao had put in the surveillance equipment only four
months back—but a lifetime's habits were hard to break. She had
never spied on her clients and she didn't intend to start now; not
unless Lu specifically ordered her to. Mu
Chua froze, hearing Ebert's voice outside, then turned in time to
greet him as he came through the door into her office. "Was
it everything you wished for, Master?" He
laughed and reached out to touch her breast familiarly. "It was
good, Mu Chua. Very good. I'd forgotten how good a house you run." Her
smile widened, though inside she felt something shrivel up at his
touch. Few men touched her these days, preferring younger flesh than
hers, even so there was something horrible about the thought of being
used by him. "I'm
pleased," she said, bowing her head. "Here," she said,
presenting her bill, the figures written in Mandarin on the
bright-red paper. He
smiled and, without looking at the bill, handed her a single credit
chip. She looked down, then bowed her head again. "Why,
thank you, Master. You are too generous." He
laughed, freeing her breasts from her robe and studying them a
moment. Then, as if satisfied, he turned to go. "Forgive
me, Major Ebert. . ." she began, taking a step toward him. He
stopped and turned. "Yes, Mother Chua?" "I
was wondering . . . about the girl." Ebert
frowned. "The girl?" Mu
Chua averted her eyes. "Golden Heart. You remember, surely? The
thirteen-year-old you bought here. That time you came with the other
soldiers." He
laughed; a strangely cold laugh. "Ah, yes ... I'd forgotten that
I got her here." "Well?" He
looked at her, then turned away, impatient now. "Look, I'm busy,
Mu Chua. I'm Major now, I have my duties." She
looked at him desperately, then bowed her head again, her lips formed
into a smile. "Of course. Forgive me, Major." But inwardly
she seethed. Busy! Not too busy, it seemed, to spend more than two
hours fucking her girls! As the
door closed behind him she spat at the space where he had been
standing, then stood there, tucking her breasts back inside her robe,
watching her spittle dribble slowly down the red lacquered surface of
the door. "You
bastard," she said softly. "I only wanted a word. Just to
know how she is— whether
she's still alive." She
looked down at the credit chip in her hand. It was for a thousand
yuan— more than four times what she had billed him—but
he had treated it as nothing. Perhaps
that's why, she thought, closing her hand tightly over it. You
have no values because you don't know what anything is really
worth. You think you can buy anything. Well,
maybe he could. Even so, there was something lost in being as he was.
He lacked decency. She
went to the drawer of her desk and pulled out the strongbox, opening
it with the old-fashioned key that hung about her neck. Rummaging
about among the credit chips she found two for two hundred and fifty
yuan and removed them, replacing them with Ebert's thousand. Then,
smiling to herself, she felt among her underclothes and after wetting
herself with her finger, placed the two chips firmly up her clout. She
had almost saved enough now. Almost. Another month—two at the
most—and she could get out of here. Away from Whiskers Lu and
bastards like Ebert. And maybe she would go into business on her own
again. For, after all, men were always men. They might talk and dress
differently up there, but beneath it all they were the same
creatures. She
laughed, wondering suddenly how many li of First Level cock she'd had
up her in the fifty years she had been in the business. No. In that
respect, nothing ever changed. They might talk of purity, but their
acts always betrayed them. It was why she had thrived over the
years—because of that darkness they all carried about in them.
Men. They might all say they were above it, but try as they would, it
was the one thing they could not climb the levels to escape. FEI
YEN STOOD before him, her silk robes held open, revealing her
nakedness. "Please,
Yuan ... It won't hurt me." His
eyes went to her breasts, traced the swollen curve of her belly, then
returned to her face. He wanted her so much that it hurt, but there
was the child to think of. "Please
. . ." The
tone in her voice, the need expressed in it, made him shiver,
then reach out to touch her. "The doctors. . ." he began,
but she was shaking her head, her eyes— those beautiful,
liquid-dark eyes of hers—pleading with him. "What
do they know? Can they feel what I feel? No. So come, Yuan. Make love
to me. Don't you know how much I've missed you?" He
shuddered, feeling her fingers on his neck, then nodded, letting her
undress him; but he still felt wrong about it. Lying
beside her afterward, his hand caressing her stomach tenderly, he
said, "I could have hurt you." She
took his hand and held it still. "Don't be silly. I'd have told
you if it hurt." She gave a little shudder, then looked down,
smiling. "Besides, I want our child to be lusty, don't you? I
want him to know that his mother is loved." Her
eyes met his provocatively, then looked away. TOLONEN
bowed deeply, then stepped forward, handing Li Shai Tung the report
Hans Ebert had prepared on the planned attack on the plantations. "It's
all here?" the T'ang asked, his eyes meeting Tolonen's briefly
before they returned to the opening page of the report. "Everything
we discussed, Chieh Hsia." "And
copies have gone to all the Generals?" "And
to their T'ang, no doubt." Li
Shai Tung smiled bleakly. "Good." He had been closeted with
his ministers since first light and had had no time to refresh his
mind about the details. Now, in the few minutes that remained to him
before the Council of the Seven met, he took the time to look through
the file. Halfway
through he looked up. "You know, Knut, sometimes I wish I could
direct-input all this. It would make things so much easier." Tolonen
smiled, tracing the tiny slot behind his ear with his right index
finger, then shook his head. "It would not be right to break
with tradition, Chieh Hsia. Besides, you have servants and
ministers to assist you in such matters." Yes,
thought the T'ang, and as you've so often said, it would only be
another way in which my enemies could get to me. I've heard they can
do it now. Programs that destroy the mind's ability to reason. Like
the food I eat, it would need to be "tasted." No, perhaps
you're right, Knut Tolonen. It would only build more walls between
Chung Kuo and me, and the gods know there are enough already. He
finished the document quickly, then closed it, looking back at
Tolonen. "Is there anything else?" Tolonen
paused, then lowered his voice slightly. "One thing, Chieh
Hsia. In view of how things are developing, shouldn't we inform
Prince Yuan?" Li
Shai Tung considered a moment, then shook his head. "No, Knut.
Yuan has worked hard these last few weeks. He needs time with that
wife of his." He smiled, his own tiredness showing at the comers
of his mouth. "You know how Yuan is. If he knew, he would be
back here instantly, and there's nothing he can really do to help. So
let it be. If I need him, I'll instruct Master Nan to brief him
fully. Until then, let him rest." "Chieh Hsia." Li
Shai Tung watched his old friend stride away, then turned, pulling at
his beard thoughtfully. The session ahead was certain to be difficult
and it might have helped to have Yuan at his side, but he remembered
the last time, when Wang Sau-leyan had insisted on the Prince's
leaving. Well, he would give him no opportunity to pull such strokes
this time. It was too important. For what he was about to suggest. .
. He shuddered. Twenty years too late, it was. He knew that now. Knew
how vulnerable they had become in that time. But it had to be said,
even if it split the Council. Because unless it was faced—and
faced immediately—there could be no future for them. He
looked about him at the cold grandeur of the marble hallway, his eyes
coming to rest on the great wheel of the Ywe Lung carved into
the huge double doors, then shook his head. This was the turning
point. Whatever they decided today, there was no turning back from
this, no further chance to right things. The cusp was upon them. And
beyond? Li
Shai Tung felt a small ripple of fear pass down his spine, then
turned and went across to the great doorway, the four shaven-headed
guards bowing low before they turned and pushed back the heavy doors. WEI
FENG, T'ang of East Asia, sat forward in his chair and looked about
him at the informal circle of his fellow T'ang, his face stem, his
whole manner immensely dignified. It was he who had called this
emergency meeting of the Council; he who, as the most senior of the
Seven, hosted it now, at his palace of Chung Ning in Ning Hsia
Province. Seeing him lean forward, the other T'ang fell silent,
waiting for him to speak. "Well,
cousins, we have all read the reports, and I think we would all agree
that a major disaster was only narrowly averted, thanks to the quick
action of Li Shai Tung's Security forces. A disaster that, while its
immediate consequences would have befallen one of our number alone,
would have damaged every one of us. For are not the seven One and the
one Seven?" There
was nodding from all quarters, even from Wang Sau-leyan. Wei Feng
looked about him, satisfied, then spoke again. "It
is, of course, why we are here today. The attack on Bremen and the
planned Uttmnwn Plantations are significant enough in
themselves, but they have far wider implications. It is to these
wider implications—to the underlying causes and the long-term
prospects for Chung Kuo—that we must address ourselves." Wei
Feng looked briefly to his old friend Li Shai Tung, then lifted one
hand from the arm of his chair, seventy-five years of command forming
that tiny, almost effortless gesture. All of his long experience, the
whole majesty of his power, was gathered momentarily in his raised
hand, while his seated form seemed to emanate an aura of solemn
purpose and iron-willed determination. His eyes traced the circle of
his fellow T'ang. "These
are special circumstances, my cousins. Very special. I can think of
no occasion on which the threat to the stability of Chung Kuo has
been greater than it is now." There
was a low murmur of agreement, a nodding of heads. To Li Shai Tung it
felt suddenly like old times, with the Council as one not merely in
its policy but in its sentiments. He looked across at Wang Sau-leyan
and saw how the young T'ang of Africa was watching him, his eyes
filled with a sympathetic understanding. It was unexpected, but not,
when he considered it, surprising, for this—as Wei Feng had
said—threatened them all. If some good were to come of all that
horror, let it be this—that it had served to unify the Seven. He
looked back at Wei Feng, listening. "Not
even in the darkest days of the War was there a time when we did not
believe in the ultimate and inevitable triumph of the order that we
represent. But can we say so with such confidence today? Bremen was
more than a tragedy for all those who lost friends and family in the
attack—it was a show of power. A statement of potentiality.
What we must discover is this—who wields that power?
What is that potentiality? The very fact that we cannot answer these
questions immediately concerns me, for it indicates just how much we
have lost control of things. For Bremen to have happened ought to
have been unthinkable. But now we must face facts—must begin to
think the unthinkable." Wei
Feng turned slightly, the fingers of his hand opening out, pointed
toward Li Shai Tung. "Cousins!
It is time to say openly what has hitherto remained unexpressed. Li
Shai Tung, will you begin?" Their
eyes turned to the T'ang of Europe expectantly. "Cousins,"
Li Shai Tung began softly. "I wish I had come to you in better
days and spoken of these things, rather than have had adversity push
me to it. But you must understand that what I say here today is no
hasty, ill-considered reaction to Bremen, but has matured in me over
many years. Forgive me also if what I say seems at times to border on
a lecture. It is not meant so, I assure you. Yet it seemed to me that
I must set these things out clearly before you, if only to see
whether my eyes, my brain, deceived me in this matter, or whether my
vision and my reason hold good." "We
are listening, Cousin Li," Tsu Ma said, his expression willing
Li Shai Tung to go on—to say what had to be said. Li Shai Tung
looked about him, seeing that same encouragement mirrored in the
faces of the other T'ang, even in the pallid, moonlike face of Wang
Sau-leyan. "Very
well," he said, keeping his eyes on Wang Sau-leyan, "but
you must hear me out." "Of
course," Wei Feng said quickly, wanting to smooth over any
possibility of friction between the two T'ang. "There will be
ample time afterward to discuss these matters fully. So speak out,
Shai Tung. We are all ears." He
looked down, searching inside himself for the right words, knowing
there was no easy way to put it. Then, looking up, his face suddenly
set, determined, he began. "You
have all read Major Ebert's report, so you understand just how close
the Ping Tiao came to succeeding in their scheme to destroy
large areas of the East European Plantations. What you haven't seen,
however, is a second report I commissioned. A report to ascertain the
probable economic and social consequences had the Ping Tiao
succeeded." He saw
how they looked at each other and knew that the matter had been in
all their minds. "It
was, of necessity, a hastily compiled report, and I have since
commissioned another to consider the matter in much greater detail.
However, the results of that first report make fascinating
and—without exaggerating the matter—frightening reading.
Before I come to those results, however, let me undertake a brief
resume of the situation with regard to food production and population
increase over the past fifteen-year period." He saw
how Wang Sau-leyan looked down and felt his stomach tighten, instinct
telling him he would have to fight the younger T'ang on this. Well,
so be it. It was too important a matter to back down over. He
cleared his throat. "Back in 2192 the official population figure
for the whole of Chung Kuo was just short of thirty-four billion—a
figure that excludes, of course, the populations of both Net and
Clay. I mention this fact because, while the figure for the Clay
might, with good reason, be overlooked, that for the Net cannot. The
relationship of Net to City is an important one economically,
particularly in terms of food production; for while we have no
jurisdiction over the Net, we nonetheless produce all of the food
consumed there. "Unofficial
estimates for 2192 placed the population of the Net at just over
three billion. However, the growing number of demotions over the
period, added to an ever-increasing birth-rate down there, have given
rise to latest estimates of at least twice that number, with the
highest estimate indicating a below-Net population of eight billion. "Over
the same period the population of the City has also climbed, though
not with anything like the same rate of growth. The census of 2200
revealed a rounded-up figure of 37,800,000,000—a growth
rate of just under a half-billion a year." Li Shai Tung paused,
recalling the reports his father had once shown him from more than
two hundred years ago—World Population Reports compiled by an
ancient body called the United Nations. They had contained an
underlying assumption that as Man's material condition improved, so
his numbers would stabilize, but the truth was otherwise. One law
alone governed the growth of numbers—the capacity of Humankind
to feed itself. As health standards had improved, so infant mortality
rates had plummeted. At the same time life expectancy had increased
dramatically. With vast areas of the City being opened up yearly, the
population of Chung Kuo had grown exponentially for the first century
of the City's existence. It had doubled, from four to eight billion,
from eight to sixteen, then from sixteen to thirty-two, each doubling
a matter of only thirty years. Against such vast and unchecked growth
the United Nations estimate of the world's population stabilizing at
10.2 billion was laughable. What had happened was more like the
ancient tale of the king and the uiei chi board. In the
tale the king had granted the peasant his wish—for one grain of
rice on the first square of the board, twice as much on the second,
twice as much again on the third, and so on—not realizing how
vast the final total was, how far beyond his means to give. So it was
with the Seven. They had guaranteed the masses of Chung Kuo unlimited
food, shelter, and medical care, with no check upon their numbers. It
was madness. A madness that could be tolerated no longer. He
looked about him, saw how they were waiting for him, as if they knew
where his words led. "That
rate of growth has not, thankfully, maintained itself over the last
seven years. However, births are still outstripping deaths by two to
one, and the current figure of thirty-nine-and-a-half billion is
still enough to cause us major concern, particularly in view of the
growing problems with food production." So here he was, at
last, speaking about it. He
looked across at Wu Shih, then back to Tsu Ma, seeing how tense his
fellow T'ang had grown. Even Wei Feng was looking down, disturbed by
the direction Li Shai Tung's words had taken. He pressed on. "As
you know, for the past twenty years I have been trying to anticipate
these problems—to find solutions without taking what seems to
me now the inevitable step. The number of orbital farms, for
instance, has been increased eight hundred percent in the past
fifteen years, resulting in fifty-five percent of all Chung Kuo's
food now being grown off-planet. That success, however, has caused us
new problems. There is the danger of cluttering up the skies; the
problem of repairing and maintaining such vast and complex
machineries; the need to build at least four and possibly as many as
twelve new spaceports, capacity at the present ports being strained
to the limit. Added to this, the cost of ferrying down the produce,
of processing it and distributing it, has grown year by year. And
then, as we all know, there have been accidents." He
saw, once again, how they looked at each other. This was the Great
Unsaid. If the Seven could be said to have a taboo it was this—the
relationship of food production to population growth. It was Chung
Kuo's oldest problem—as old as the First Emperor, Ch'in Shih
Huang Ti himself—yet for a century or more they had refused to
discuss it, even to mention it. And why? Because that relationship
underpinned the one great freedom they had promised the people of
Chung Kuo— the one freedom upon which the whole great edifice
of Family and Seven depended—the right to have an unlimited
number of children. Take that away and the belief in Family
was undermined; a belief that was sacrosanct—that was the very
foundation stone of their great State. For were they not themselves
the fathers of their people? Yes.
But now that had to change. A new relationship had to be forged, less
satisfactory than the old, yet necessary; because without it there
would be nothing. No Seven, no State, nothing but anarchy. "We
know these things," he said softly, "yet we say nothing of
them. But now it is time to do our sums: to balance the one against
the other and see where such figures lead us. All of which brings me
back to the report I commissioned and its central question—what
would have happened if the Ping Tioo had succeeded in their attack on
the plantations?" "Li
Shai Tung . . . ?" It was Wei Feng. "Yes,
Cousin?" "Will
we be given copies of this report of yours?" "Of
course." Wei
Feng met his eyes briefly, his expression deeply troubled. "Good.
But let me say how—unorthodox I find this: to speak of a
document none of us have seen. It is not how we normally transact our
business," Li
Shai Tung lowered his head, respecting his old friend's feelings. "I
understand, Cousin, but these are not normal times, nor is this
matter—orthodox, shall we say. It was simply that I did not
feel I could submit such a document for the record. However, when the
detailed report is ready I shall ensure each of you receive a copy at
once." Wei
Feng nodded, but it was clear he was far from happy with the way
things had developed, despite his words about "thinking the
unthinkable." Li Shai Tung studied him a moment, trying to gauge
how strongly he felt on the matter; then he looked away, resuming his
speech. "However,
from our first and admittedly hurried estimates, we believe that the
Ping Tioo attack would have destroyed as much as thirty-five percent
of the East European growing areas. In terms of overall food
production this equates with approximately ten percent of City
Europe's total." He
leaned forward slightly. "Were
this merely a matter of percentage reductions the problem would be a
relatively minor one—and, indeed, short term, for the growing
areas could be redeveloped within three months—but the fact is
that we have developed a distribution network that is immensely
fragile. If you will forgive the analogy, we are like an army
encamped in enemy territory that has tried to keep its supply lines
as short as possible. This has meant that food from the plantations
has traditionally been used to feed the eastern Hsien of City
Europe, while the food brought down from the orbitals—landed in
the six spaceports on the western and southern coasts—has been
used to feed the west and south of the City. If the plantations
failed, it would mean shipping vast amounts of grain, meat, and other
edibles across the continent. It is not impossible, but it would be
difficult to organize and immensely costly." He
paused significantly. "That, however, would be the least of our
problems. Because production has not kept pace with population
growth, the physical amount of food consumed by our citizenry has
dropped considerably over the past fifteen years. On average, people
now eat ten percent less than they did in 2192. To ask them to cut
their consumption by a further ten percent—as we would
undoubt-edly have to in the short term—would, I am told, return
us to the situation we faced a year ago, with widespread rioting in
the lower levels. The potential damage of that is, as you can
imagine, inestimable. "But
let me come to my final point—the point at which my worries
become your worries. For what we are really talking of here is not a
question of logistics—of finding administrative solutions to
large-scale problems—but an ongoing situation of
destabilization. Such an attack, we could be certain, would be but
the first, and each subsequent attack would find us more vulnerable,
our resources stretched much further, our options fewer. What we are
talking of is a downward spiral with the only end in sight our own.
My counsellors estimate that it would need only a twenty-five percent
reduction in food supplies to make City Europe effectively
ungovernable. And what can happen in Europe can, I am assured, be
duplicated elsewhere. So you see, cousins, this matter has brought to
our attention just how vulnerable we are in this, the most important
and yet most neglected area of government." He
fell silent, noting the air of uneasiness that had fallen over the
meeting. It was Wu Shih, T'ang of North America, who articulated what
they all were thinking. "And
what is your answer, Shai Tung?" Li
Shai Tung took a small, shuddering breath, then answered. "For
too long we have been running hard to try to catch up with ourselves.
The time has come when we can do that no longer. Our legs cannot hold
us. We must have controls. Now, before it is too late." "Controls?"
Wang Sau-leyan asked, a faint puzzlement in his face. Li
Shai Tung looked back at him, nodding. But even now it was hard to
say the words themselves. Hard to throw off the shroud of silence
that surrounded this matter and speak of it directly. He raised
himself slightly in his chair, then forced himself to say it. "What
I mean is this. We must limit the number of children a man might
have." The silence that greeted his words was worse than
anything Li Shai Tung had ever experienced in Council. He looked to
Tsu Ma. "You see the need, don't you, Tsu Ma?" Tsu Ma
met his eyes firmly, only the faintness of his smile suggesting his
discomfort. "I understand your concern, dear friend. And what
you said—there is undeniably a deal of truth in it. But is
there no other way?" Li
Shai Tung shook his head. "Do you think I would even raise the
matter if I thought there were another way? No. We must take this
drastic action and take it soon. The only real question is how we go
about it. How we can make this great change while maintaining the
status quo." Wei
Feng pulled at his beard, disturbed by this talk. "Forgive me,
Shai Tung, but I do not agree. You talk of these things as if they
must come about, but I cannot see that. The attack on the plantations
would, I agree, have had serious repercussions, yet now we are
forewarned. Surely we can take measures to prevent further attacks?
When you said to me earlier that you wished to take decisive action,
I thought you meant something else." "What
else could I have meant?" Wei
Feng's ancient features were suddenly unyielding. "It's obvious,
surely, Cousin? We must take measures to crush these revolutionaries.
Enforce a curfew in the lower levels. Undertake level-by-level
searches. Offer rewards for information on these bastards." Li
Shai Tung looked down. That was not what he meant. The solution was
not so simple. The dragon of Change had many heads—cut off one
and two more grew in its place. No, they had to be far more radical
than that. They had to go to the source of the problem. Right down to
the root. "Forgive
me, cousin Feng, but I have already taken such measures as you
suggest. I have already authorized young Ebert to strike back at the
Ping Tiao. But that will do nothing to assuage the problem I
was talking of earlier. We must act before this trickle of
revolutionary activity becomes a flood." Wu
Shih was nodding. "I understand what you are saying, Shai Tung,
but don't you think that your cure might prove more drastic than the
disease? After all, there is nothing more sacred than a man's right
to have children. Threaten that and you might alienate not just the
revolutionary elements but the whole of Chung Kuo." "And
yet there are precedents." Wei
Feng snorted. "You mean the Ko Ming emperors? And where did that
end? What did that achieve?" It was
true. Under Mao Tse Tung the Ko Ming had tried to solve this problem
more than two hundred years before, but their attempt to create the
one-child family had had only limited success. It had worked in the
towns, but in the countryside the peasants had continued having six,
often a dozen children. And though the situations were far from
parallel, the basic underlying attitude was unchanged. Chung Kuo was
a society embedded in the concept of the Family, and in the right to
have sons. Such a change would need to be enforced. He
looked back at Wu Shih. "There would be trouble, I agree. A
great deal of trouble. But nothing like what must ultimately come
about if we continue to ignore this problem." He looked about
him, his voice raised momentarily, passionate in its belief. "Don't
you see it, any of you? We must do this! We have no choice!" "You
wish to put this to a vote, Shai Tung?" Wei Feng asked, watching
him through narrowed eyes. A
vote? He had not expected that. All he had wanted was for them to
carry the idea forward—to agree to bring the concept into the
realm of their discussions. To take the first step. A vote at this
stage could prevent all that, could remove the idea from the agenda
for good. He
began to shake his head, but Wang Sau-leyan spoke up, taking up Wei
Feng's challenge. "I
think a vote would be a good idea, cousins. It would clarify how we
feel on this matter. As Shai Tung says, the facts are clear, the
problem real. We cannot simply ignore it. I for one support Shai
Tung's proposal. Though we must think carefully how and when we
introduce such measures, there is no denying the need for their
introduction." Li
Shai Tung looked up, astonished. Wang Sau-leyan—supporting him!
He looked across at Tsu Ma, then to Wu Shih. Then perhaps . . . Wei
Feng turned in his chair, facing him. "I take it you support
your own proposal, Shai Tung?" "I
do." "Then
that is two for the proposal." He
looked at Wu Shih. The T'ang of North America looked across at Li
Shai Tung, then slowly shook his head. "And
one against." Tsu Ma
was next. He hesitated, then nodded his agreement. "Three
for, one against." Next
was Chi Hsing, T'ang of the Australias. "No," he said,
looking to Li Shai Tung apologetically. "Forgive me, Shai Tung,
but I think Wu Shih is right." Three
for, two against. On the
other side of Wang Sau-leyan sat Hou Tung-po, T'ang of South America,
his smooth, unbearded cheeks making him seem even younger than his
friend, Wang. Li Shai Tung studied him, wondering if, in this as in
most things, he would follow Wang's line. "Well,
Tung-po?" Wei Feng asked. "You have two children now. Two
sons. Would
you have one of them not exist?" Li
Shai Tung sat forward angrily. "That is unfair, Wei Feng!" Wei
Feng lifted his chin. "Is it? You mean that the Seven would be
exceptions to the general rule?" Li
Shai Tung hesitated. He had not considered this. He had thought of it
only in general terms. "Don't
you see where all this leads us, Shai Tung?" Wei Feng asked, his
voice suddenly much softer, his whole manner conciliatory. "Can't
you see the great depth of bitterness such a policy would bring in
its wake? You talk of the end of Chung Kuo, of having no alternative;
yet in this we truly have no alternative. The freedom to have
children—that must be sacrosanct. And we must find other
solutions, Shai Tung. As we always have. Isn't that the very reason
for our existence? Isn't that the purpose of the Seven—to
keep the balance?" "And if the balance is already lost?" Wei
Feng looked back at him, a deep sadness in his eyes, then turned,
looking back at Hou Tung-po. "Well, Tung-po?" The
young T'ang glanced at Li Shai Tung, then shook his head. Three for.
Three against. And there was no doubt which way Wei Feng would vote.
Li Shai Tung shivered. Then the nightmare must come. As sure as he
saw it in his dreams, the City falling beneath a great tidal wave of
blood. And afterward? He thought of the dream his son Li Yuan had
had, so long ago. The dream of a great white mountain of bones,
filling the plain where the City had once stood. He thought of it and
shuddered. "And
you, Wei Feng?" he asked, meeting his old friend's eyes, his own
lacking all hope. "I
say no, Li Shai Tung. I say no." OUTSIDE,
in the great entrance hall, Tsu Ma drew Li Shai Tung aside, leaning
close to whisper to him. "I
wish a word with you, Shai Tung. In private, where no one can
overhear us." Li
Shai Tung frowned. This was unlike Tsu Ma. "What is it?" "In
private, please, Cousin." They
went into one of the small adjoining rooms and closed the door behind
them. "Well,
Tsu Ma? What is it?" Tsu Ma
came and stood very close, keeping his voice low, the movements of
his lips hidden from the view of any overseeing cameras. "I
must warn you, Shai Tung. There is a spy in your household. Someone
very close to you." "A
spy?" He shook his head. "What do you mean?" "I
mean just that. A spy. How else do you think Wang Sau-leyan has been
able to anticipate you? He knew what you were going to say to the
Council. Why else do you think he supported you? Because he knew he
could afford to. Because he had briefed those two puppets of his to
vote with Wei Feng." Li
Shai Tung stared back at Tsu Ma, astonished not merely at this
revelation, but by the clear disrespect he was showing to his fellow
T'ang, Hou Tung-po and Chi Hsing. "How
do you know?" he asked, his own voice a hoarse whisper now. It
was unheard of. Unthinkable. Tsu Ma
laughed softly, and leaned even closer. "I have my own spies,
Shai Tung. That's how I know." Li
Shai Tung nodded vaguely, but inside he felt a numbness, a real
shock, at the implications of what Tsu Ma was saying. For it meant
that the Seven could no longer trust each other. Were no longer, in
effect, Seven, but merely seven men, pretending to act as one. He
shuddered. This was an ill day. He shook his head. "And what—?" He
stopped, turning, as someone began knocking on the door. "Come
in!" said Tsu Ma, stepping back from him. It was
Wei Feng's Chancellor, Ch'in Tao Fan. He bowed low. "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia, but my master asks if you would kindly return.
Urgent news has come in. Something he feels you both should see." They
followed Ch'in into Wei Feng's study, finding the other five T'ang
gathered before a huge wallscreen. The picture was frozen. It showed
a shaven-headed Han, kneeling, a knife held before him. "What
is this?" Li Shai Tung asked, looking to Wei Feng. "Watch,"
Wei Feng answered. "All of you, watch." As the
camera backed away, a large "big-character" poster was
revealed behind the kneeling man, its crude message painted in
bright-red ink on white in Mandarin, an English translation
underneath in black. PING
TIAO INNOCENT OF BREMEN TRAGEDY
WE
OFFER OUR BODIES IN SYMPATHY WITH THOSE WHO DIED
The
camera focused on the man once more. He was breathing slowly now,
gathering himself about the point of his knife. Then, with a great
contortion of his features, he cut deep into his belly, drawing the
knife slowly, agonizingly across, disemboweling himself. Li
Shai Tung shuddered. Our bodies. . . did that mean? He turned to Wei
Feng. "How
many of them were there?" "Two,
maybe three hundred, scattered throughout the City. But the poster
was the same everywhere. It was all very tightly coordinated. Their
deaths were all within a minute of each other, timed to coincide with
the very hour of the original attack." "And
were they all Han?" Tsu Ma asked, his features registering the
shock they all felt. Wei
Feng shook his head. "No. They were evenly distributed, Han and
Hung Mao. Whoever arranged this knew what he was doing. It was
quite masterful." "And
a lie," said Wu Shih, angrily. "Of
course. But the masses will see it otherwise. If I had known I would
have stopped the pictures going out." "And
the rumors?" Tsu Ma shook his head. "No, you could not have
hushed this up, Wei Feng. It would have spread like wildfire. But you
are right. Whoever organized this understood the power of the
gesture. It has changed things totally. Before, we had a mandate to
act as we wished against them. But now . . ." Li
Shai Tung laughed bitterly. "It changes nothing, Cousin. I will
crush them anyway." "Is
that wise?" Wei Feng asked, looking about him to gauge what the
others felt. "Wise
or not, it is how I will act. Unless my cousins wish it otherwise?" Li
Shai Tung looked about him, challenging them, a strange defiance in
his eyes; then
he turned and hurried from the room, his every movement expressive of
a barely controlled anger. "Follow
him, Tsu Ma," Wei Feng said, reaching out to touch his arm.
"Catch up with him and try to make him see sense. I understand
his anger, but you are right— this changes things. You must
make him see that." Tsu Ma
smiled, then looked away, as if following Li Shai Tung's progress
through the walls. "I will try, Wei Feng. But I promise nothing.
Bremen has woken something in our cousin. Something hard and fierce.
I fear it will not sleep until he has assuaged it." "Maybe
so. But we must try. For all our sakes." CHAPTER
TWO
Gods
of the Flesh KUAN
YIN, preserve us! What is that?" DeVore
turned, looking at his new lieutenant. "Haven't you ever seen
one of these, Schwarz?" He stroked the blind snout of the
nearest head, the primitive nervous system of the beast responding to
the gentleness of his touch. "It's a jou tung wu, my
friend, a meat-animal." The
jou tung wu filled the whole of the left-hand side of the
factory floor, its vast pink bulk contained within a rectangular mesh
of ice. It was a huge mountain of flesh, a hundred ch'i to a
side and almost twenty ch'i in height. Along one side of it,
like the teats of a giant pig, three dozen heads jutted from the
flesh; long, eyeless snouts with shovel jaws that snuffled and
gobbled in the conveyor-belt trough that moved constantly before
them. The
stench of it was overpowering. It had been present even in the
elevator coming up, permeating the whole of the stack, marking the
men who tended it with its rich indelible scent. The
factory was dimly lit, the ceiling somewhere in the darkness high
overhead. A group of technicians stood off to one side, talking
softly, nervously, among themselves. Schwarz
shuddered. "Why does it have to be so dark in here?" DeVore
glanced at him. "It's light-sensitive, that's why," he
said, as if that were all there was to it; but he didn't like it
either. Why had Gesell wanted to meet them here? Was the lighting a
factor? Was the bastard planning something? DeVore
looked past Schwarz at Lehmann. "Stefan. Here." Lehmann
came across and stood there silently, like a machine waiting to be
instructed. "I
want no trouble here," DeVore said, his voice loud enough to
carry to the technicians. "Even if Gesell threatens me, I want
you to hold off. Understand me? He'll
be angry. Justifiably so. But I don't want to make things any more
difficult than they are." Lehmann
nodded and moved back. There
was the sound of a door sliding back at the far end of the factory. A
moment later five figures emerged from the shadows—Gesell; the
woman, Ascher; and three others, big men they hadn't seen before.
Looking at them, DeVore realized they were bodyguards and wondered
why Gesell had suddenly found the need to have them. The
Ping Tiao leader wasted no time. He strode across and planted
himself before DeVore, his legs set apart, his eyes blazing, the
three men formed into a crescent at his back menacingly. "You've
got some talking to do this time, Shih Turner. And you'd better make
it good!" It was
the second time Gesell had threatened DeVore. Schwarz started to take
a step forward, but found Lehmann's hand on his arm, restraining him. "You're
upset," DeVore said calmly. "I understand that. It was a
fuck-up and it cost us dearly. Both of us." Gesell
gave a small laugh of astonishment. "You7. What
did it cost you? Nothing! You made sure you kept your hands clean,
didn't you?" "Are
you suggesting that what happened was my fault? As I
understand it, one of your squads moved into place too early. That
tipped off a Security captain. He reported in to his senior
commander. At that point the plug had to be pulled. The thing
wouldn't have worked. If you calmed down a while and thought it
through you'd see that. My man on staff had to do what he did.
If he hadn't, they'd have been in place, waiting for your assault
squads. They'd have taken some of them alive. And then where would
you be? They may have been brave men, Shih Gesell, but the T'ang's
servants have ways of getting information from even the stubbornest
of men. "As
for what I lost. I lost a great deal. My fortunes are bound up with
yours. Your failure hurt me badly. My backers are very angry." DeVore
fell silent, letting the truth of what he'd said sink in. Gesell
was very agitated, on the verge of striking DeVore, but he had been
listening—thinking through what DeVore had been saying—and
some part of him knew that it was true. Even so, his anger remained,
unassuaged. He
drew his knife. "You unctuous bastard . . ." DeVore
pushed the blade aside. "That'll solve nothing." Gesell
turned away, leaning against the edge of the trough, the jou tung
uiu in front of him. For a moment he stood there, his whole body
tensed. Then, in a frenzy of rage, he stabbed at the nearest head,
sticking it again and again with his knife, the blood spurting with
each angry thrust, the eyeless face lifting in torment, the long
mouth shrieking with pain, a shriek that was taken up all along the
line of heads, a great ripple running through the vast slab of
red-pink flesh. Gesell
shuddered and stepped back, looking about him, his eyes blinking,
then threw the knife down. He looked at DeVore blankly, then turned
away, while, behind him the blind snouts shrieked and shrieked,
filling the fetid darkness with their distress. The
technicians had held back. Now one of them, appalled by what the Ping
Tiao leader had done, hurried across, skirting Gesell. He jabbed
a needle-gun against the wounded head, then began rubbing salve into
the cuts, murmuring to the beast all the while as if it were a child.
After a moment the head slumped. Slowly the noise subsided, the heads
grew calm again, those nearest falling into a matching stupor. "Still,"
DeVore said after a moment, "you've contained the damage rather
well. I couldn't have done better myself." He saw
how Gesell glanced uncertainly at Ascher and knew at once that he'd
had nothing to do with the ritual suicides. He was about to make
comment when a voice came from the darkness to his left. "You
liked that? It was my idea." DeVore
turned slowly, recognizing Mach's voice. He narrowed his eyes, not
understanding. Mach was the last person he would have expected to
have tried to save the reputation of the Ping Tiao. No. The
collapse of the "Levelers" could only bolster the fortunes
of his own secret movement-within-a-movement, the Yu. Unless ...
He turned back, watching Gesell's face as Mach came toward him. Of
course! Gesell was out! Mach was now the de facto leader of the Ping
Tiao. It was what he had sensed earlier—why Gesell had been
so touchy, why he had begun to surround himself with thugs. Gesell
knew. Even if it hadn't been said, he knew. And was afraid. Mach
seemed taller, broader at the shoulder than before. Then DeVore
understood. He was wearing a uniform—the uniform of the
Security Reserve Corps. His long dark hair was coiled tightly in a
bun at the back of his head and he had shaved off the beard he
usually wore. He strode across casually, smiling tightly at Gesell,
then turned his back on his colleagues. "You've
got balls, Turner, I'll grant you that. If I'd been in your shoes,
this is the last place I'd come." DeVore
smiled. "I gambled. Guessed that the surprise of seeing me here
would make you listen to me. Even your friend, the hothead over
there." Gesell
glared back at him, but said nothing. It was as if Mach's presence
neutralized him. Mach
was nodding. "I'm sorry about that. Bent lets things get on top
of him at times. But he's a good man. He wants what I want." DeVore
looked from one to the other, trying to make out exactly what their
new relationship was. But one thing was clear: Mach was number one.
He alone spoke for the Ping Tiao now. Overnight the illusion
of equality—of committee—had dissipated, leaving a naked
power struggle. A struggle that Mach had clearly won. But had he won
anything of substance? Had he won it only to see the Ping Tiao
destroyed? If so, he seemed remarkably calm about it. "And
what do you want?" he asked. "Something new, or the same
old formula?" Mach laughed. "Does it matter? Are you
interested any longer?" "I'm
here, aren't I?" Mach
nodded, a slightly more thoughtful expression coming to his face.
"Yes." Again he laughed. It was strange. He seemed more
relaxed than DeVore had ever seen him. A man free of cares, not
burdened by them. "You
know, 1 was genuinely surprised when you contacted us. I wondered
what you could possibly want. After Bremen I thought you'd have
nothing to do with us. I did what I could to repair the damage, but.
. ." He shrugged. "Well, we all know how it is. We are
small fish in the great sea of the people, and if the sea turns
against us . . ." DeVore
smiled inwardly. So Mach knew his Mao. But had he Mao's dour
patience? Had he the steel in him to wait long years to see his
vision made real? His creation of the Yu suggested that he had. And
that was why he had come. To keep in touch with Mach. To cast off the
Ping Tiao and take up with the Yu. But it seemed that Mach had not
yet finished with the Ping Tiao. Why? Were the Yu not ready yet? Did
he need the Ping Tiao a while longer—as a mask, perhaps, for
his other activities? He
looked down, deciding how to play it; then he smiled, meeting Mach's
eyes again. "Let's
just say that I believe in you, Shih Mach. What happened was
unfortunate. Tragic, let's say. But not irreparable. We have
patience, you and I. The patience to rebuild from the ashes, neh?" Mach
narrowed his eyes. "And you think you can help?" DeVore
reached into his tunic pocket and took out the ten slender chips,
handing them across to Mach. Mach
looked at them, then laughed. "Half a million yuan. And
that'll solve all our problems?" "That
and four of my best propaganda men. They'll run a leaflet campaign in
the lower levels. They'll reconstruct what happened at Bremen until
even the most cynical unbeliever will have it on trust that the Seven
butchered fifteen thousand of their own to justify a campaign against
the Ping Tiao." Mach
laughed. "And you think that will work?" DeVore
shook his head. "No. 1 know it'll work. The Big Lie
always does." "And
in return?" "You
attack the plantations." Mach's
eyes widened. "You're mad. They'll be waiting for us now." "Like
they were at Bremen?" Mach
considered. "I take your point. But not now. We've lost too many
men. It'll take time to heal our wounds, and even more to train
others to take the place of those we lost." "How
long?" "A
year, perhaps. Six months at the very least." DeVore
shook his head. "Too long. Call it a month and I can promise
twenty times the money I've just given you." Mach's
mouth opened slightly, surprised. Then he shook his head. "For
once it's not a question of money. Or haven't you heard? The T'ang's
men raided more than a dozen of our cells this afternoon. To all
intents and purposes the Ping Tiao has ceased to exist in large parts
of City Europe. Elsewhere we're down to a bare skeleton. That's where
I Ve been, inspecting the damage. Touring the ruins, if you like." DeVore
looked past Mach at the others. No wonder the woman had been so
quiet. They had known. Even so, his reasoning remained sound. Until
the fortresses were ready, he needed an organization like the Ping
Tiao to burrow away at the foundations of the City and keep the Seven
under pressure. The Ping Tiao, or maybe the Yu. When the Yu were
ready. He was
silent a moment, then nodded. "I see. Then you had best use my
men to bolster your numbers, Shih Mach. Five hundred should be
enough, don't you think? I'll arrange for Schwarz here to report to
you two days from now. You'll have command, naturally." Mach
narrowed his eyes. "I don't understand. Why don't you just
attack them yourself? I don't see what you get out of doing it this
way." "You
don't trust me, then?" "Damn
right, I don't!" Mach laughed and half turned away, then turned
back, coming right up close to DeVore. "Okay.
Let's have no more games between us, Major. I know who you are, and I
know what you've done. I've known it some while now. It explains a
lot. But this • • . this just doesn't fit together." DeVore
stared back at him, undaunted. Of course he knew. Who did he think
let him know? "Start
thinking clearly, Mach. How could I get that many men into position
without Security finding out about it? No. I need you, Mach. I need
you to find false identities for these men. To find them places to
live. To organize things for me. Beyond that we both need this. In my
case to placate my backers, to let them see that something real,
something tangible, is being done against the Seven. You to bring new
blood to your movement, to prove that the Ping Tiao isn't moribund." Mach
looked away thoughtfully, then nodded. "All right. We'll do as
you say. But I want the funds up front, and I want them three days
from now. As token of your good faith." It
would be difficult, but not impossible. In any case, Ebert would pay.
He'd fucked things up, so he could foot the bill. DeVore offered his
hand. "Agreed." Mach hesitated, then took his hand. "Good.
Three days then. I'll let you know where we'll meet and when." As he
made his way back to the transporter, DeVore considered what had been
said and done. Whatever happened now, Gesell was dead. After the raid
on the plantations if necessary, but before if it could be arranged.
That was the last time he would put himself at risk with that fool. He
smiled. It had all seemed very bleak yesterday, when the news had
first broken, but it was going to be all right. Maybe even better
than before, in fact, because this gave him a chance to work much
closer with Mach. To make him his tool. In
that Mach and the jou tung wu were alike. Neither was
conscious of the role they served. Of how they were fattened only to
be slaughtered. For that was their ultimate purpose in life. To eat
shit and feed others. The jou tung wu to feed the mei yujen
wen, the "subhumans" of the City, and Mach—a
finer, tastier meat—to feed him. He
laughed. Yes, Mach, I mean to eat you. To make your skull my rice
bowl and feast upon your brains. Because that's how it is in
this little world of ours. It's man eat man, and always has been. He
slowed as he came closer to the transporter, checking for signs that
anything was wrong; then, satisfied, he ducked inside, leaving his
lieutenants to follow in the second craft. He sat
down at once, strapping himself in, the craft rising steeply even
before the door was fully closed, the pilot following his earlier
instructions to the letter, making sure there was no possibility of
pursuit, no chance of ambush. As the
ground fell away he smiled, thinking of the equation he had made in
his head. Yes, they were all meat-animals, every last one of them,
himself included. But he could dream. Ah yes, he could dream. And in
his dreams he saw them— finer, cleaner beasts, all trace of
grossness excised from their natures. Tall, slender creatures,
sculpted like glass yet hard as steel. Creatures of ice, designed to
survive the very worst the universe could throw at them. Survivors. No . .
. More than that. Inheritors. He
laughed. That was it—the name he had been looking for.
Inheritors. He keyed the word into his wrist set, then closed his
eyes and let his head fall back, relaxing. Yes.
Inheritors. But first he must destroy what stopped them from coming
into being. In that, Tsao Ch'un had been right. The new could not
come into being while the old remained. His inheritors could not
stand tall and straight in that cramped little world of levels. So
the old must go. The levels must be leveled, the walls torn down, the
universe opened up again. In order that they might exist. In order
that things could go forward again, onward to the ultimate—the
mind's total control of matter. Only then could they stop. Only then
could there be surcease. He
shivered. That was the dream. The reason—no—the
motivating force behind each action that he took, the dark wind
blowing hard and cold at his back. To bring them into being.
Creatures of ice. Creatures better than himself. What
finer aim was there? What finer aim? HANS
EBERT stopped in the doorway, lowering his head in a bow of respect,
then went in, the fully laden tray held out before him. As he came
near, Nocenzi, Tolonen, and the T'ang moved back slightly, letting
him put it down in the space they had cleared. They had been closeted
together three hours now, discussing the matter of reprisals and the
new Security measures. Li
Shai Tung smiled, accepting a bowl of ch'a from the young Major. "You
shouldn't have, Hans. I would have sent a servant." Ebert's
head remained lowered a moment longer. "You were in deep
discussion, Chieh Hsia. I felt it best to see to things
myself." The
old T'ang laughed softly. "Well, Hans, I'm glad you did. I did
not realize how much time had passed or how thirsty I had grown." The
T'ang made to sip from the bowl, but Ebert cleared his throat.
"Forgive me, Chieh Hsia. But if you'd permit me?" Li
Shai Tung frowned, then saw what Ebert meant. He handed him the bowl,
then watched as the young man sipped, then wiped where his lips had
touched with a cloth before handing back the bowl. The
T'ang looked to Tolonen and Nocenzi and saw how his own pleasure was
mirrored in their faces. Ebert was a splendid young man, and he had
been right to insist on tasting the ch'a before he drank it. "One
cannot be too careful, Chieh Hsia." Li
Shai Tung nodded. "You are quite right, Hans. What would your
father say, eh?" "To
you, nothing, Chieh Hsia. But he would most certainly have chastised
me for failing in my duties as his son if I had let you sip the ch'a
untasted." Again
the answer pleased the three older men greatly. With a last bow to
his T'ang, Ebert turned and began to pour for the General and the
Marshal. "Well,
Knut," continued the T'ang where he had left off, "do you
think we got them all?" Tolonen
straightened slightly, taking the bowl from Ebert before he answered. "Not
all, Chieh Hsia, but I'd warrant it'll be a year or more before we
have any more trouble from them, if then. Hans did a fine job. And it
was good that we acted when we did. If we had left it even an hour
later we wouldn't have got anyone to inform on the scum and we would
never have got to those cells. As it was . . ." As it was they
had practically destroyed the Ping Tioo. After the awfulness of
Bremen there had been smiles again. Grim smiles of satisfaction at a
job well done. "I wish I had known," the T'ang said,
looking away. "I might have pushed things a little less hard in
Council. Might have waited a while and tried to convince my fellow
T'ang rather than coerce them." "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia, but you acted as you had to," Nocenzi said, his
voice free of doubt. "Whether the threat be from the Ping Tioo
or from another group, the problem remains. And as long as population
outstrips food production it can only get worse." "Yes,
Vittorio, but what can I do? The Council will hear nothing of
population measures and I have done all that can be done to increase
productivity. What remains?" Nocenzi
looked to Tolonen, who gave the slightest nod, then turned to young
Ebert. "Hans, you know the facts and figures. Would you like to
spell it out for us?" . Ebert looked to his T'ang, then set his
ch'a down. "Chieh Hsia?" "Go
ahead, Major." Ebert
hesitated, then bowed his head. "Forgive me, Chieh Hsia, but
when I learned what had been planned against the plantations, I
decided, after consultation with Marshal Tolonen, to commission a
report. One separate from those you had asked us to compile." The
T'ang looked briefly to Tolonen, then frowned. "I see. And what
was in this report?" "It
was quite simple, Chieh Hsia. Indeed, it asked but one highly
specific question. What would it cost in terms of manpower and
finances to adequately guard the plantations?" "And
the results of your report?" Tolonen
interrupted. "You must understand, Chieh Hsia, that Ebert acted
only under my strict orders. Nor would I have mentioned this had you
been successful in Council. It's just that I felt we should be
prepared for the worst eventuality. For the failure of our action
against the Ping Tioo and the—the hostility, let us say, of the
Seven to your scheme." The
T'ang looked down, then laughed. "I am not angry, Knut. Gods,
no. I'm glad to have such fine men as you three tending to my
interests. If I seem angry, it is at the need for us to take such
measures. At the wastefulness of it all. Surely there's no need for
us to breed and breed until we choke on our own excess of flesh!" He
looked about him angrily, then calmed, nodding to himself. "Well,
Hans? What would the cost be?" Ebert
bowed. "In men we're talking of a further half-million, Chieh
Hsia. Six-hundred-and fifty thousand to be absolutely safe. In
money—for food, billeting, equipment, salaries, and so forth—it
works out to something like eighty-five thousand yuan per man,
or a total somewhere between forty-two and fifty-five billion yuan
per year. "However,
this scenario presumes that we have half a million trained
Security guards ready for placement. The truth is, if we took this
number of men from their present duties there would be a substantial
increase in criminal activity throughout the levels, not to say a
dramatic rise in civil disturbance at the very bottom of the City. It
would reduce current strength by over twenty-five percent, and that
could well result in a complete breakdown of law and order in the
lowest fifty levels." "And
the alternative?" "To
take a much smaller number, say fifty thousand, from present
strength, then recruit to make up numbers. This, too, creates
problems, primarily in training. To accommodate such an influx we
would have to expand our training program considerably. And the cost
. . . forgive me, Chieh Hsia, but that alone would account for an
estimated twenty billion, even before we equipped and trained the
first recruit." Li
Shai Tung considered a moment, then shook his head. "I don't
like it, ch'un tzu. To finance this would mean making
cuts elsewhere, and who knows what troubles that would bring? But
what choice do we have? Without enough food. . ." He
shrugged. It came back to the same thing every time. Population and
food. Food
and population. How fill the ever-growing rice bowl of Chung Kuo? Tolonen
hesitated, then bowed his head. "Might I suggest a solution,
Chieh Hsia?" "Of
course." "Then
what of this? What if we were to adopt part of Hans's scheme? Aim for
a force of, say, a quarter-million, to be stationed on the
plantations, concentrated at key points to maximize their
effectiveness. This to be phased in by degrees, at a rate of, say,
fifty thousand every six months. That would take the strain off the
training facilities while at the same time minimizing the social
effects." "But that would take too long, surely?" "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia, but the one thing Hans neglects to mention in his
report is the effectiveness of his action against the Ping Tioo. If
our problems of recruitment and training are great, imagine theirs.
They've been routed. They won't easily recover from that. As I said
earlier, it'll be a year at the very least before they're in any fit
state to cause us problems, and there's no terrorist group of
comparable size to take their place." The
T'ang considered a moment, then nodded. "All right. We shall do
as you say, Knut. Draw up the orders and I'll sign them." He
turned, looking at Ebert. "You
have served me well today, Hans Ebert, and I shall not forget it. Nor
shall my son. But come, let's drink this fine ch'a you brought
before it cools. The three men bowed as one. "Chieh Hsw . . ." Li
YUAN looked up from the document he was reading and yawned. "You
should take a break, my Lord," Chang Shih-sen, his personal
secretary said, looking across at him from his desk on the far side
of the room. "I'll finish off. There are only a few things
remaining." Li
Yuan smiled. They had been working since seven and it was almost
midday. "A good idea, Shih-sen. But it's strange that my father
hasn't contacted me. Do you think he's all right?" "I
am certain of it, my Lord. You would be the first to hear were your
father ill." "Yes . . ." He looked down at Minister
Heng's memorandum again, then nodded. "It's interesting, this
business with the Shepherd boy, don't you think?"
-<. "My
Lord . . ." Chang Shih-sen was watching him, smiling, Li Yuan
laughed. "All right. I know when I'm being bullied for my own
good. I'll go, Shih-sen. But make sure you get an acknowledgment off
to Heng Yu this afternoon. I've kept him waiting two days as it is." "Of
course, my Lord. Now go. Enjoy the sunshine while you can." Li
Yuan went out into the brightness of the Eastern Courtyard, standing
there a moment at the top of the broad steps, his hand resting on the
cool stone of the balustrade. He looked about him, feeling totally at
peace with the world. There was such order here. Such balance. He
stretched, easing the tiredness of sitting from his limbs, then went
down, taking the steps two at a time before hurrying across the
grass, his silk pau flapping about him. There
was no sign of Fei Yen and her maids in the gardens, or in the long
walk. The ancient wall-enclosed space was still and silent. At the
stone arch he turned, considering whether he should go to her rooms,
then decided not to. She needed her rest. Now more than ever. For
their son's sake. As
ever the thought of it made him feel strange. He looked across at the
ancient, twisted shapes of the junipers that rested in the shade of
the palace walls, then turned his head, tracing the curved shape of
the pool with his eyes. He held himself still, listening, and was
rewarded with the singing of a bird, the sound distant, from across
the valley. He smiled, sniffing the cool, late morning air, finding a
faint scent of herbs underlying it. It was a good day to be alive. He
turned, looking at the great upright of the arch, then let his
fingers trace the complex interwoven patterns in the stone. All this
had stood here a thousand years and yet the pattern seemed freshly
cut into the stone. As if time had no power here. He
turned, making his way toward the stables. It had been some time
since he had seen his horses. Too long. He would spend an hour and
make a fuss over them. And later, perhaps, he would exercise Fei's
horse, Tai Huo. The
great barn of the stables was warm and musty. The grooms looked up
from their work as he entered, then hurried forward to form a line,
bowing from the waist. "Please,"
he said, "carry on. I'll not disturb you." They
backed away respectfully, then turned, returning to their chores. He
watched them a while, some part of him envying the simplicity of
their existence, then he looked upward, drawing in the strong, heady
scents of the barn—scents that seemed inseparable from the
darkly golden shadows of the stalls. Slowly
he went down the line, greeting each of the horses in its stall. The
dark-maned barb, Hei Jian, "Black Sword," lifted her broad
muzzle in greeting, letting him pat, then smooth her flank. Mei Feng,
"Honey Wind," the elegant akhal-teke, was more skittish,
almost petulant; but after a moment he relented, letting Li Yuan
smooth the honey-gold of his flank, his sharp ears pricked up. He was
the youngest of the six horses, and the most recently acquired, a
descendant of horses that had served the wild herdsmen of West Asia
thousands of years earlier. Next
was his brother's horse, the black Arab he had renamed Chi Chu,
"Sunrise." He spent some time with it, rubbing his cheek
against its neck, feeling a kinship with the mare that he felt with
none of the others. Beside it was the white Arab, the horse he had
bought for Fei Yen—Tai Huo, "Great Fire." He smiled,
seeing the creature, remembering the night he had brought Fei Yen
blindfolded to the stables to see him for the first time. That time
they had made love in the stall. He
turned, looking past the horse's rump, then frowned. The fifth stall
was empty. The Andalusian—his father's present to him on his
twelfth birthday—was not there. He stood at the head of the
stall, looking into the empty space, then turned, summoning the
nearest of the grooms. "Where
is the Andalusian?" The
groom bowed low, a distinct color in his cheeks. "I... I..."
he stammered. Li
Yuan turned, looking back at the stall, his sense of wrongness
growing. From outside he heard a clamor of voices. A moment later a
tall figure appeared in the great doorway. Hung Feng-chan, the Chief
Groom. "My
Lord . . ." he began hesitantly. Li
Yuan turned, facing him. "What is it, Hung?" Hung
Feng-chan bowed low. "The Andalusian is being . . . exercised,
my Lord." Li
Yuan frowned, his eyes returning to the empty stall. "Exercised,
Hung? I thought they were only exercised first thing. Is something
wrong with the animal?" "My
Lord, I . . ." "The
gods help us, Hung! What is it? Are you keeping something from me?" He
looked about him, seeing how the grooms had stopped their work and
were looking on, their flat Han faces frightened now. "Is
the horse dead, Hung? Is that it?" Hung
bowed his head lower. "No, my Lord ..." "Then
in the gods' names, what is it?" "Nan
Hsin is being ridden, my Lord." Li
Yuan straightened up, suddenly angry. "Ridden? By whom? We have
no guests. Who gave permission for anyone to ride the beast?" Hung
Feng-chan was silent, his head bowed so low that it almost touched
his slightly bent knees. Li
Yuan's bark of anger was unexpected. "Well, Hung? Who is riding
Nan Hsin? Or do
I have to have it beaten from you?" Hung
raised his head, his eyes beseeching his young master. "My Lord,
forgive me. I tried to talk her out of it. . ." "Tried
to—" He stopped, sudden understanding coming to him. Fei
Yen. He was ^ talking about Fei Yen. It couldn't be anyone else. No
one else would have dared countermand his orders. But Fei was seven
months pregnant. She couldn't go riding, not in her condition. The
child . . . He
rushed past the Chief Groom and stood in the great doorway, looking
out. The palace was to his left, the hills far off to the right. He
looked, scanning the long slope for a sight of her, but there was
nothing. Then he turned back, concern for her making him forget
himself momentarily, all control gone from his voice, a naked fear
shaping his words. "Where
is she, Hung? Where in the gods' names is she?" "I ... I
don't know, my Lord." Li
Yuan strode across to him and took his arms, shaking him. "Kuan
Yin preserve us, Hung! You mean you let her go out, alone,
unsupervised, in her condition?" Hung
shook his head miserably. "She forbade me, My Lord. She said—"
"Forbade you?! What nonsense is this, Hung? Didn't you realize
how dangerous, how stupid this is?" "My Lord, I—" Li
Yuan pushed him away. "Get out of my sight!" He looked
about him, furious now. "Go! All of you! Now! I don't want to
see any of you here again!" There
was a moment's hesitation, then they began to leave, bowing low as
they moved about him. Hung was last. "My Lord . . . ?" he
pleaded. But Li
Yuan had turned his back on the Chief Groom. "Just go, Hung
Feng-chan. Go now, before I make you pay for your foolishness." Hung
Feng-chan hesitated a moment longer, then, bowing to the back of his
Prince, he turned and left dejectedly, leaving Li Yuan alone. HANS
EBERT ran up the steps of the Ebert Mansion, grinning, immensely
pleased with his day's work. It had been easy to manipulate the old
men. They had been off-balance, frightened by the sudden escalation
of events, only too eager to believe the worst-case scenario he had
spelled out for them. But the truth was otherwise. A good general
could police the East European Plantations with a mere hundred
thousand men, and at a cost only one tenth of what he had mentioned.
As for the effect on the levels, that, too, had been exaggerated,
though even he had to admit that it wasn't known precisely what
effect such an attack would have at the lowest levels of the City. He
went through to his suite of rooms to shower and change. As he
stripped, he stood over his personal comset, scrolling through until
he came upon a cryptic message from his uncle. Beattie
asks if you'll settle his bar bill for him. He says a thousand will
cover it. Love, Uncle Lutz. Beattie
was DeVore. Now what did DeVore want ten million for? Ebert kicked
off his shorts and went across to the shower, the water switching on
as soon as he stepped beneath the spray. Whatever DeVore wanted, it
was probably best to give him just now. To pacify him. It would be
easy enough to reroute that much. He would get onto it later. Just
now, however, he felt like making his regular sacrifice to the gods
of the flesh. He closed his eyes, letting the lukewarm jets play on
him invigoratingly. Yes, it would be good to have an hour with the
mui tsai. To get rid of all the tensions that had built up
over the last few days. He
laughed, feeling his sex stir at the thought of her. "You
were a bargain, my lovely," he said softly. "If I'd paid
ten times as much, you'd have been a bargain." The
thought was not an idle one. For some time now he had thought of
duplicating her. Of transferring those qualities that made her such a
good companion to a vat-made model. After all, what wouldn't the
Supernal pay for such delicious talents? GenSyn could charge five
times the price of their current models. Fifty times, if they handled
the publicity properly. Yes,
he could see the campaign now. All the different, subtle ways of
suggesting it without actually saying it: of hiding the true function
of their latest model and yet letting it be known ... He
laughed, then stepped out, into the drying chamber, letting the warm
air play across his body. Or maybe he would keep her for himself.
After all, why should every jumped-up little merchant be able to buy
such pleasures? He
threw on a light silk gown and went down a small flight of steps into
the central space. The Mansion was shaped irregularly, forming a
giant G about the gardens. A small wooden bridge led across a narrow
stream to a series of arbors. Underfoot was a design of plum blossom,
picked out in small pale-pink and gray pebbles, while on every side
small red-painted wooden buildings, constructed in the Han style, lay
half-hidden among the trees, their gently sloping roofs overhanging
the narrow ribbon of water that threaded its way backward and forward
across the gardens. The
gardens were much older than the house. Or at least, their design
was, for his grandfather had had them modeled on an ancient Han
original, naming them the Gardens of Peace and Prosperity. The Han
character for Longevity was carved everywhere, into stone and wood,
and inlaid into mosaic at the bottom of the clear, fast-running
stream. Translucent, paper-covered windows surrounded the garden on
all sides, while here and there a moon-door opened onto new
vistas—onto another tiny garden or a suite of rooms. Hans
stopped in the middle of the gardens, leaning on the carved wooden
balustrade, looking down at his reflection in the still, green water
of the central pond. Life was good. Life was very good. He laughed,
then looked across at the three ancient pomegranate trees on the far
side of the pool, noting how their trunks were shaped like flowing
water, how they seemed to rest there, doubled in the stillness of the
water. Then, as he watched, a fish surfaced, rippling the mirror,
making the trees dance violently, their long, dark trunks undulating
like snakes. And
then he heard it, unmistakable. The sound of a baby crying. He
turned, puzzled. A baby? Here? Impossible. There were no children
here. He listened then heard it again, clearer now, from somewhere to
his left. In the servants' quarters. He
made his way around the pool and across the high-arched stone bridge,
then stood there, concentrating, all thoughts of the mui tsai
gone. A
baby. It was unmistakably a baby. But who would dare bring a baby
here? The servants knew the house rules. His mother's nerves were
bad. They knew that, and they knew the rules . . . He
pulled the robe tighter about him, then climbed the steps, hauling
himself up onto the terrace that ran the length of the servants'
quarters. The sound came regularly now; a whining, mewling sound,
more animal than human. An awful, irritating sound. He
went inside, finding the first room empty. But the noise was louder
here, much louder, and he could hear a second sound beneath it—the
sound of a woman trying to calm the child. "Hush
now," the voice said softly. "Hush, my pretty one." He
frowned, recognizing the voice. It was Golden Heart, the girl he had
bought from Mu Chua's singsong house ten years ago. The girl he had
taunted Fest with before he'd killed him. Yes,
Golden Heart. But what was she doing with a baby? He
made his way through, slowly, silently, until he stood there in the
doorway of her room, looking in. The girl was crouched over a cot,
her back to him, cooing softly to the child. The crying had stopped
now and the baby seemed to be sleeping. But whose child was it? And
who had given permission for it to be brought into the house? If his
mother found out she would have them dismissed on the spot. "Golden
Heart?" The
girl started, then turned to face him, the blood drained from her
face. "Excellency
. . ." she said breathlessly, bowing low, her body placed
between him and the cot, as if to hide the child. He
stepped into the room, looking past her. "What's happening
here?" She
half-turned her head, clearly frightened, taking one small step
backward so that she bumped against the edge of the cot. "Whose
child is that?" She
looked up at him, her eyes wide with fear. "Excellency . . ."
she repeated, her voice small, intimidated. He saw
and understood. He would get nothing out of her by frightening her,
but it was important that he know whose child it was and why it had
been brought here. Whoever it was, they would have to go, because
this was too serious a breach of house rules to be overlooked. He
moved closer, then crouched down before the girl, taking her hands
and looking up into her face. . "I'm
not angry with you, Golden Heart," he said softly, "but you
know the rules. The child shouldn't be here. If you'll tell me who
the mother is, I'll arrange for her to take the child away, but you
can't keep her here. You know you can't." He saw
doubt war with a strange, wild hope in her face and looked down,
puzzled. What was happening here? He looked up at her again, his
smile encouraging her. "Come,
Golden Heart. I'll not be angry. You were only looking after it,
after all. Just tell me who the mother is." She
looked away, swallowing almost painfully. Again there was that
strange struggle in her face, then she looked back at him, her eyes
burning wildly. "The
child is yours. Your son." "Mine?"
He laughed sourly, shaking his head. "How can it be mine?" "And
mine," she said softly, uncertainly. "Our child . . ." He
stood, a cold anger spreading through him. "What is this
nonsense? How could you have a child? You were sterilized
years ago." She
bowed her head, taken aback by the sudden sharpness of his voice. "I
know," she said, "but I had it reversed. There's a place—" "Gods!"
he said quietly, understanding what she had done. Of course. He saw
it now. She must have stolen some jewelery or something to pay for
it. But the child . . . He
pushed past her, looking down at the sleeping infant. It was a large
baby, five or six months in age, with definite Eurasian features. But
how had she kept him hidden? How had she kept her pregnancy from
being noticed? "No ... 1 don't believe you." She
came and stood beside him, resting her hands against the rail of the
cot, her chest rising and falling violently, a strange expectation in
her face. Then she bent down and lifted the child from the cot,
cradling him. "It's
true," she said, turning, offering the child to him. "He's
yours, Hans. When I knew I'd fallen I had him removed and tended in a
false uterus. After the birth I had him placed in a nursery. I'd
visit him there. And sometimes I'd bring him back here. Like today." "Secretly,"
he said, his voice calm, distant, a thousand li from his thoughts. "Yes
. . ." she said, lowering her head slightly, willing now to be
chastised. But still she held the child out to him, as if he should
take it and acknowledge it. "No,"
he said, after a moment. "No, Golden Heart. You had no child.
Don't you understand that? That thing you hold doesn't exist. It
can't be allowed to exist. GenSyn is a complex business and you had
no right to meddle in it. That thing would be an impediment. A legal
nightmare. It would—inconvenience things. Can't
you see that?" A
muscle twitched beneath her left eye, otherwise she made no sign that
she had understood the meaning of his words. "It's
all right," he said. "You won't be punished for your
foolishness. But this"— he lifted his hand vaguely,
indicating the sleeping child—"this can't be allowed. I'll
have someone take it now and destroy it." Her
whimper of fear surprised him. He looked at her, saw the tears that
were welling in her eyes, and shook his head. Didn't she understand?
Had she no sense at all? "You
had no right, Golden Heart. You belong to me. You do what I say, not
what you want. And this—this is ridiculous. Did you really
think you could get away with it? Did you really believe for a moment
. . . ?" He laughed, but the laughter masked his anger. No. It
was not acceptable. And now his mood was broken. He had been looking
forward to the mui tsai, but now even the thought of sex was suddenly
repugnant to him. Damn her! Damn the stupid girl with her
addle-brained broodiness! He should have known something was up.
Should have sensed it. Well, she'd not have another chance, that was
certain. He'd have the doctors make sure of it this time. Have them
make it irreversible. And
the child? It was as he'd said. The child didn't exist. It could not
be allowed to exist. Because GenSyn would be threatened by its
existence: the very structure of the company undermined by the
possibility of a long, protracted inheritance battle in the courts. He
looked at the girl again, at the pathetic bundle she held out before
her, and shook his head. Then he turned away, calling out as he did
so, summoning his servants to him. LI
SHAI TUNG'S figure filled the tiny overhead screen, his face grave,
the white robes of mourning he wore flowing loosely about him as he
came slowly down the steps to make his offering before the memorial
plaque. Beneath the screen, its polished surface illuminated by the
flickering light from the monitor, another, smaller plaque had been
set into the foot of the wall, listing all those who had died in this
small section of the deck. Axel
Haavikko knelt before the plaque, his head bowed, his shoulders
hunched forward. His face was gaunt, his eyes red from weeping. He
had not slept since the news had come. He had
thought himself alive again, reborn after years of
self-destruction—years spent in idle, worthless
dissipation—that moment in Tolonen's office twelve years
before, when Hans Ebert had betrayed him, put behind him finally, his
life redeemed by his friendship with Karr and Chen, made sense of by
their common determination to expose Ebert—to show him for the
hollow, lying shit he was. But all that was as nothing now. The light
that had burned in him anew had gone out. His sister was dead. Vesa,
his beloved Vesa, was dead. And nothing—nothing— could
redeem the waste of that. He
took a shivering breath, then looked up again, seeing the image of
the T'ang reflected in the plaque where Vesa's name lay. Vesa
Haavikko. It was all that remained of her now. That and the
relentless ghosts of memory. On
that morning he had gone walking with her. Had held her arm and
shared her laughter. They had got up early and gone down to see the
old men and their birds in the tree-lined Main at the bottom of
Bremen stack. Had sat at a cafe and talked about their plans for the
future. And afterward he had kissed her cheek and left her to go on
duty, never for a moment suspecting that it was the last time he
would ever see her. He
moaned softly, pressing his hands against his thighs in anguish. Why
her? She had done nothing. If anyone, it was he who deserved
punishment. So why her? He
swallowed painfully, then shook his head, but the truth would not be
denied. She was dead. His beloved Vesa was dead. Soulmate and
conscience, the best part of himself, she was no more. He
frowned, then looked down, suddenly bitter, angry with himself. It
was his fault. He had brought her here, after all. After long years
of neglect he had finally brought her to him. And to what end? A tear
welled and trickled down his cheek. He
shuddered, then put his hand up to his face. His jaw ached from
gritting his teeth, trying to fend off the images that came—those
dreadful imaginings of her final moments that tore at him, leaving
him broken, wishing only for an end to things. An end
. . . Yes, there would be an end to everything. But first he had a
score to settle. One final duty to perform. He
took a deep breath, summoning the energy to rise, then grew still,
hearing a noise behind him, a gentle sobbing. He half turned and saw
her there, kneeling just behind him to his right, a young woman, a
Hung Moo, dressed in mourning clothes. Beside her, his tiny hand
clutching hers, stood a child, a Han, bemusement in his
three-year-old face. He
looked down, swallowing. The sight of the boy clutching his mother's
hand threw him back across the years; brought back the memory of
himself, standing there before his mother's plaque; of looking down
and seeing Vesa's hand, there in his own, her fingers laced into his,
her face looking up at him, not understanding. Two
she had been, he five. And yet so old he had felt that day; so brave,
they'd said, to keep from crying. No, he
had never cried for his mother. But now he would. For mother and
sister and all. For the death of all that was good and decent in the
world. Li
yuan was standing in the stable doorway when she returned, his arms
folded across his chest, his face closed to her. He helped her from
the saddle, coldly silent, his manner overcareful, exaggeratedly
polite. She
stared at him, amused by this rare display of anger, trying to make
him acknowledge her presence, but he would not meet her eyes. "There,"
she said, pressing one hand against the small of her back to ease the
ache there. "No harm done." She
smiled and went to kiss him. He
drew back sharply, glaring at her, then took her hand roughly and led
her into the dark warmth of the stable. She went reluctantly, annoyed
with him now, thinking him childish. Inside
he settled the horse in its stall, then came back to her, making her
sit, standing over her, his hands on his hips, his eyes wide with
anger. "What
in hell's name do you think you were doing?" She
looked away. "1 was riding, that's all." "Riding
. . ." he murmured, then raised his voice. "1 said you
weren't to ride!" She
looked up, indignation rising in her. "I'm not a child, Li Yuan.
I can decide for myself what's best for me!" He
laughed scornfully, then turned, taking three steps away from her.
"You can decide, eh?" He stopped, looking directly at her,
his expression openly contemptuous. "You . . ." He
shook his head. "You're seven months pregnant and you think
riding is best for you?" "No
harm was done," she repeated, tossing her head. She would not
be lectured by him! Not in ten thousand years! She turned her
face aside, shaking now with anger. He
came across and stood over her, for a moment the image of his father,
his voice low but menacing. "You say that you're not a child,
Fei Yen, yet you've acted like one. How could you be so stupid?" Her
eyes flared. Who was he to call her stupid? This—this—boyl
He had gone too far. She pulled herself up awkwardly from the
chair and pushed past him. "I shall ride when I like! You'll not
prevent me!" "Oh,
won't I?" He laughed, but his mouth was shaped cruelly and his
eyes were lit with a sudden determination. "Watch! I'll show you
how—" She
was suddenly afraid. She watched him stride across the straw-strewn
tiles, a coldness in her stomach. He wouldn't. . . But then the
certainty of it hit her and she cried out "No-o-oh.1,"
knowing what he meant to do. She screamed it at his back, then went
after him, nausea mixing with her fear and anger. At the
far end of the stable he turned, so abruptly, that she almost ran
into him. He seized her upper arms, his fingers gripping the flesh
tightly, making her wince. "You'll
stand here and watch. You'll witness the price of your stupidity!" There
was so much anger, so much real venom in his words that she swayed,
feeling faint, paralyzed into inaction by this sudden change in him.
As she watched, he took the power-gun from the rack and checked its
charge, then went down the row of horses. At the
end stall he paused and turned to look at her, then went in, his hand
smoothing the flank of the dark horse, caressing its long face,
before he placed the stubby gun against its temple. "Good-bye,"
he whispered, then squeezed the trigger, administering the
high-voltage shock. The
horse gave a great snort, then collapsed onto the floor of the stall,
dead. Fei Yen, watching, saw how he shuddered, then stepped back,
looking at what he'd done, his face muscles twitching violently. Appalled,
she watched him move down the stalls, her horror mounting as the
seconds passed. Five
mounts lay dead on the straw. Only the last of them remained, the
horse in the third stall, the black Arab that had once been Han's.
She stood there, her hands clenched into tight fists, looking in at
it. She mouthed its secret name, a cold numbness gripping her, then
turned, looking at Li Yuan. Li
Yuan was breathing deeply now. He stood there in the entrance to the
stall, for a moment unaware of the woman at his side, looking in at
the beautiful beast that stood so proudly before him, its head
turned, its dark eyes watching him. His anger had drained from him,
leaving only a bitter residue: a sickness gnawing at the marrow of
his bones. He shook his head, wanting to cry out for all the pain and
anger she had made him feel, then turned and looked at her, seeing
now how ill her beauty sat on her. Like a
mask, hiding her selfishness. He bit
his lip, struggling with what he felt, trying to master it. There was
the taste of blood in his mouth. For a
moment longer he stood there, trembling, the gun raised, pointed at
her. Then
he threw it down. For a
time afterward he stood there, his hands empty, staring down at the
red-earth floor, at the golden spill of straw that covered it, a
blankness at the very core of him. When he looked up again she was
gone. Beyond the stable doors the sky was a vivid blue. In the
distance the mountains showed green and gray and white, swathed in
mist. He
went out and stood there, looking out into the beauty of the day,
letting his numbness seep down out of him, into the earth. Then he
turned back and went inside again, bending down to pick up the gun. The
child, that was all that mattered now; all that was important. To
make the Seven strong again. "I'm sorry, Han," he whispered
gently, laying his face against the horse's neck. "The gods know
1 didn't wish for this." Then, tears blurring his vision, he
stepped back and rested the gun against the horse's temple, easing
back the trigger.
CHAPTER THREE The
Way of Deception FEI
YEN went back to her father's house. For a week Li Yuan did nothing,
hoping she would return of her own free will; then when there was no
sign of her returning, he went to see her, taking time off from his
duties. The
Yin house defenses tracked him from twenty li out, checking
and rechecking his codes before granting him permission to set down.
He landed his private craft in the military complex at the back of
the estate, in a shadowy hangar where the sharp sweet scents of pine
and lemon mingled with the smell of machine oils. Two of
Yin Tsu's three sons, Sung and Chan, were waiting there to greet him,
bowed low, keeping a respectful silence. The
palace was on an island at the center of a lake; an elegant,
two-story building in the Ming style, its red, corbelled roof gently
sloped, its broad, paneled windows reminiscent of older times. Seeing
it, Li Yuan smiled, his past memories tinged with present sadness. The
two sons rowed him across the lake, careful not to embarrass him with
their attentions. Fei's father, Yin Tsu, was waiting on the landing
stage before the palace, standing beneath an ancient willow whose
shadow dappled the sunlit water. He
bowed low as Li Yuan stepped from the boat. "You
are welcome, Li Yuan. To what do I owe this honor?" Yin
Tsu was a small, neat man. His pure-white hair was cut short about
his neck in an almost occidental style, slicked back from his high
forehead. He held himself stiffly now, yet despite his white hair and
seventy-four years he was a sprightly man with a disposition toward
smiles and laughter. Just now, however, his small, fine features
seemed morose, the tiny webs of lines at the corners of his eyes and
mouth drawn much deeper than before. Li
Yuan took his hands. Small hands, like a woman's, the skin smooth,
almost silky, the fingernails grown long. "I
need to see my wife, Honored Father-in-Law. 1 must talk with her." A
faint breeze was blowing off the water. Fallen leaves brushed against
their feet then slowly drifted on. Yin
Tsu nodded his head. Looking at him, Li Yuan saw the original of his
wife's finely featured face. There was something delicate about it;
some quality that seemed closer to sculpture than genetic chance. "Come
through. I'll have her join us." Li
Yuan bowed and followed the old man. Inside it was cool. Servants
brought ch'a and sweetmeats while Yin Tsu went to speak to his
daughter. Li Yuan sat there, waiting, rehearsing what he would say. After
a while Yin Tsu returned, taking a seat across from him. "Fei
Yen will not be long. She wants a moment to prepare herself. You
understand?" "Of
course. I would have notified you, Yin Tsu, but I did not know when I
could come." The
old man lifted his chin and looked down his tiny nose at his
son-in-law. Unspoken words lay in the depth of his eyes. Then he
nodded, his features settling into an expression of sadness and
resignation. "Talk
to her, Yuan. But please, you must only talk. This is still my house. Agreed?" Li
Yuan bowed his head. Yin Tsu was one of his father's oldest friends.
An affront to him would be as an affront to his father. "If
she will not listen, then that will be an end to it, Yin Tsu. But I
must try. It is my duty as a husband to try." His
words, like his manner, were stilted and awkward. They hid how much
he was feeling at that moment: how much this meant to him. Yin
Tsu went to the window, staring out across the lake. It was difficult
for him too. There was a tenseness to each small movement of his that
revealed how deeply he felt about all this. But then, that was hardly
surprising. He had seen his hopes dashed once before, when Yuan's
brother Han had been killed. Li
Yuan sipped at his ch'a, then put it down. He tried to smile, but the
muscles in his cheeks pulled the smile too tight. From time to time a
nerve would jump beneath his eye, causing a faint twitch. He had not
been sleeping well since she had left. "How is she?" he
asked, turning to face Yin Tsu. "In
good health. The child grows daily." The old man glanced across,
then looked back at the lake. His tiny hands were folded together
across his stomach. "That's
good." On the
far side of the room, beside a lacquered screen, stood a cage on a
long, slender pole. In the cage was a nightingale. For now it rested
silently on its perch, but once it had sung for him—on that day
he had come here with his father to see Yin Tsu and ask him for his
daughter's hand in marriage. He sat
there, feeling leaden. She had left him on the evening of the
argument. Had gone without a word, taking nothing, leaving him to
think on what he had done. "And
how is Li Shai Tung?" Li
Yuan looked up blankly. "I beg your pardon, Honored Father?" "Your
father. How is he?" "Ah,"
he breathed in deeply, returning to himself. "He is fine now,
thank you. A little weak, but. . ." "None
of us are growing any younger." The old man shook his head, then
came across and sat again, a faint smile on his lips. "Not that
we would even if we could, eh, Yuan?" Yin
Tsu's remark was far from innocuous. He was referring to the new
longevity process. Already, it was said, more than a thousand of the
Above had had the operation and were taking the drugs
regularly—without concrete evidence of the efficacy of the
treatment, without knowing whether there were any traceable
side-effects. Such men were desperate, it seemed. They would grasp at
any promise of extended life. "Only
ill can come of it, Yuan. I guarantee." He leaned forward,
lifting the lid to look into the ch'a kettle, then summoned
the servant across. While the servant hurried to replenish it, Li
Yuan considered what lay behind his father-in-law's words. This was
more than small talk, he realized. Yin Tsu was talking to him not as
a son but as a future colleague. It was his way of saying that
whatever transpired they would remain friends and associates. The
interests of the Families—both Major and Minor—superseded
all else. As they had to. When
the servant had gone again, Yin Tsu leaned forward, his voice a
whisper, as if he were afraid of being overheard. "If
it helps at all, Li Yuan, my sympathy's with you. She acted rashly.
But she's a headstrong young woman, I warn you. You'll not alter that
with bit and bridle." Li
Yuan sighed, then sipped at his ch'a. It was true. But he had
wanted her both as she was and as he wanted her; like caging fire. He
glanced up at Yin Tsu and saw the concern there, the deep-rooted
sympathy. And yet in this the old man would support his daughter. He
had sheltered her; given her refuge against her husband. He might
sympathize but he would not help. There
was a sound, movement, from the far end of the long room. Li Yuan
looked up and saw her in the doorway. He stood up as Yin Tsu looked
around. "Fei
Yen, come in. Li Yuan is here to see you." Li
Yuan stepped forward, moving to greet her, but she walked past him,
as though he were not there. He turned, pained by her action,
watching her embrace her father gently. She
seemed paler than he remembered her, but her tiny form was well
rounded I now, seven and a half months into its term. He wanted
to touch the roundness of { the belly, feel the
movements of the growing child within. For all her coldness to him,
he felt as he had always felt toward her. All of it flooded back,
stronger than ever; all the tenderness and pain; all of his
unfathomable love for her. "Fei
Yen. . ." he began, but found he could say no more than that.
What could he say? How might he persuade her to return? He
looked pleadingly to Yin Tsu. The old man saw and giving the
slightest of nods, moved back, away from his daughter. "Forgive
me, Fei, but I must leave now. I have urgent business to attend to." "Father..."
she began, her hand going out to touch him, but he shook his head. "This
is between you two alone, Fei. You must settle it here and now. This
indecision is unhealthy." She
bowed her head, then sat. "Come,"
Yin Tsu beckoned to him. He hesitated, seeing how she was sitting,
her ' -head down, her face closed to him; then went across and
sat, facing her. Yin Tsu stood there a moment longer, looking from
one to the other. Then, without another word, he left. For a
time neither spoke or looked at the other. It was as if an
impenetrable screen lay between them. Then, unexpectedly, she spoke. "My
father talks as if there were something to decide. But I made my
decision when I left you." She looked up at him, her bottom lip
strangely curled, almost pinched. It gave her mouth a look of
bitterness. Her eyes were cold, defiant. And yet beautiful. "I'm
not coming back, Li Yuan. Not ever." He
looked at her, meeting her scorn and defiance, her anger and
bitterness, and finding only his own love for her. She was all he had
ever wanted in a woman. All he would ever want. He
looked down, staring at his perfectly manicured nails as if they held
some clue to things. "I
came to say that I'm sorry, Fei. That I was wrong." When
he looked up again he saw that she had turned her face aside. But her
body was hunched and tensed, her neck braced, the muscles stretched
and taut. She seemed to draw each breath with care, her hands pressed
to her breasts as if to hold in all she was feeling. "I
was wrong, Fei. I ... I overreacted." "You
killed them!" She spat the words out between her teeth. You
almost killed my child . . . But he bit back the retort that
had come to mind, closing his eyes, calming himself. "I know . .
." There
was a second silence, longer, more awkward than the first. Fei Yen
broke this one too. She stood, making to leave. He
went across and held her arm, keeping her there. She looked down at
his hand where it gripped her arm, then up at his face. It was a
harsh, unsparing look; a look of unfeigned dislike. There was
defiance in her eyes, but she made no move to take her arm away. "We
have not resolved this, Fei." "Resolved."
She poured all the scorn she could muster into the word. "I'll
tell you how you could resolve this, Li Yuan." She turned
to face him, glaring at him, the roundness of her stomach pressed up
hard against him. "You could take this from my belly and keep it
safe until its term is up! That's what you could do!" The words
were hard, unfeeling. She laughed bitterly, sneering at him. "Then
you could take your gun and—" He put
his hand over her mouth. She
stepped back, freeing herself from his grip. Then she looked at him,
rubbing her arm where he had held it, her eyes watching him all the
while, no trace of warmth in them. "You
never loved me," she said. "Never. I know that now. It was
envy. Envy of your brother. You wanted everything he had. Yes, that
was it, wasn't it?" She nodded, a look of triumph, a hideous
smile of understanding on her lips. It was
cruel. Cruel and untrue. He had loved his brother dearly. Had loved
her too. Still loved her, even now, for all she was saying. More than
the world itself. But he
could not say it. His face had frozen to a mask. His mouth was dry,
his tongue stilled by her anger and bitterness and scorn. For a
moment longer he watched her, knowing that it ended here, that all he
had wanted was in ruins now. He had killed it in the stables that
day. He turned and went to the door, determined to go, not to look
back, but she called out to him, "One thing you should know
before you leave." He
turned, facing her across the room. "What is it?" "The
child." She smiled, an ugly movement of the mouth that was the
imperfect copy of a smile. "It isn't yours." She shook her
head, still smiling. "Do you hear me, Li Yuan? I said the child
isn't yours." In the
cage at the far end of the room the bird was singing. Its sweet notes
filled the silence. He
turned away, moving one leg at a time until he was gone from there,
keeping his face a blank, his thoughts in check. But as he walked he
could hear her voice, almost kind for once. One thing, it
said, then laughed. One thing. "Is
this it?" DeVore asked, studying the statue of the horse
minutely, trying to discern any difference in its appearance. The
man looked across at him and smiled. "Of course. What were you
expecting? Something in an old lead bottle, marked with a skull and
crossbones? No, that's it, all right. It'd make arsenic seem like
honeydew, yet it's as untraceable as melted snow." DeVore
stood back, looking at the man again. He was nothing like the
archetypal scientist. Not in his dress, which was eccentrically Han,
nor in his manner, which was that of a low-level drug dealer. Even
his speech—scattered as it was with tiny bits of arcane
knowledge—seemed to smack of things illicit or alchemical. Yet
he was good. Very good indeed, if Ebert could be trusted on the
matter. "Well?
Are you happy with it, or would you like me to explain it once more?" DeVore
laughed. "There's no need. I have it by heart." The
lexicologist laughed. "That's good. And so will your friend, eh?
Whoever he is." DeVore
smiled. And if you knew exactly who that was, you would as soon
sell me this as cut your own throat. He
nodded. "Shall we settle, then? My friend told me you liked
cash. Bearer credits. Shall we call it fifty thousand?" He saw
the light of greed in the man's eyes and smiled inwardly. "1
thought a hundred. After all, it was a difficult job. That genetic
pattern—I've not seen its like before. I'd say that was someone
special. Someone well bred. It was hard finding the chemical key to
break those chains down. I—well, let's say I had to improvise.
To work at the very limit of my talents. I'd say that deserved
rewarding, wouldn't you?" DeVore
hesitated, going through the motions of considering the matter, then
bowed his head. "As you say. But if it doesn't work—" "Oh,
it will work, my friend. I'd stake my life on it. The man's as
good as dead, whoever he is. As I said, it's perfectly harmless to
anyone else, but as soon as he handles it the bacteria will be
activated. The rest," he said, laughing, "is history."
"Good." DeVore felt in his jacket pocket and took out the
ten bearer credits— the slender chips identical in almost every
respect to those he had given Mach a week earlier. Only in one
crucial respect were they different; these had been smeared with a
special bacteria—one designed to match the toxicologist's DNA.
A bacteria prepared only days earlier by the man's greatest rival
from skin traces DeVore had taken on his first visit here. DeVore
watched the man handle, then pocket the chips. Dead, he
thought, smiling, reaching out to pick up the statue the man had
treated for him. Or as good as, give a week or two. And
himself? Well, he was the last person to take such chances. He had
made sure he wore a false skin over both hands before handling the
things. Just in case. Because
one never knew, did one? And a poisoner was a poisoner, after
all. He
smiled, holding the ancient statue to his chest, then laughed, seeing
how the man joined his laughter, as if sharing the cruel joke he was
about to play. "And
there's no antidote? No possible way of stopping this thing once it's
begun?" The
man shook his head, then gave another bark of laughter. "Not a
chance in hell." IT WAS
DARK where Chen sat. Across from him a ceiling panel flickered
intermittently, as if threatening to come brightly, vividly, alive
again, but never managing more than a brief, fitful glow. Chen had
been nursing the same drink for more than an hour, waiting for
Haavikko to come, his ill ease growing with every passing minute.
More than ten years had passed since he had last sat in the Stone
Dragon—years in which he had changed profoundly—yet the
place remained unchanged. Still
the same shit-hole, he thought. A place you did well to escape from
as quickly as you could. As he had. But
now he was back, if only briefly. Still, Haavikko could hardly have
known, could he? No.
Even so, the coincidence made Chen's flesh crawl. He looked about him
uncomfortably, as if the ghost of Kao Jyan or the more substantial
figure of Whiskers Lu should manifest themselves from the darkness
and the all-pervading fug to haunt him. "You
want wings?" He
glanced at the thin young girl who had approached him and shook his
head, letting disgust and a genuine hostility shape his expression. "You
prefer I suck you? Here, at table?" He
leaned toward her slightly. "Vanish, scab, or I'll slit you
throat to tail." She
made a vulgar hand sign and slipped back into the darkness, but she
wasn't the first to have approached him. They were all out to sell
something. Drugs or sex or worse. For a price, you could do anything
you liked down here. It hadn't been so in his day, but now it was.
Now the Net was little different from the Clay. He sat
back. Even the smell of the place nauseated him. But that was hardly
surprising; the air filters couldn't have been changed in thirty
years. The air was recycled, yes, but that meant little here. He
swallowed, keeping the bile from rising. How many times had each
breath he took been breathed before? How many foul and cankered
mouths had sighed their last, drug-soured breath into this putrid
mix? Too
many, he thought. Far, far too many. He
looked across. There was someone in the doorway. Someone tall and
straight and wholly out of place in this setting. Haavikko. He'd come
at last. He got
up and went across, embracing his friend, then holding him off at
arm's length, staring up into his face. "Axel.
. . how are you? It's been a long time since you came to us. Wang Ti
and the boys . . . they've missed you. And I ... well, I was worried.
I'd heard . . ." He paused, then shook his head, unable to say. Haavikko
looked aside momentarily, then met his friend's eyes. "I'm
sorry, Chen, but it's been hard. Some days I've felt. . ." He
shrugged, then formed his face into a sad little smile. "Well. .
. I've got what you asked for. 1 had to cheat a little, and lie
rather a lot, not to mention a little bit of burglary, but then it's
hard being an honest man when all about you are thieves and liars.
One must pretend to take on their coloring a little simply to
survive, neh?"
; Chen
stared at him a moment, surprised by the hardness in his voice. His
sister's death had changed him. Chen squeezed his shoulder gently,
turning him toward his table. "Come.
Let's sit down. You can tell me what you've been up to while I go
through the file." Axel
sat. "You remember Mu Chua's?" Chen took the seat across
from him. "No. I don't think 1 do." "The House of the
Ninth Ecstasy?" Chen laughed. "Ah ... Is that still going?" Haavikko
stared down at his hands. "Yes, it's still going. And guess
what? Our friend Ebert is still frequenting it. It seems he visited
there no more than a week ago." Chen
looked up, frowning. "Ebert? Here? Why would he bother?"
Haavikko looked back at him, a bitter resentment in his eyes. "He
had a meeting, it seems. With a Shih Reynolds." "How do you
know this?" "The
Madam, Mu Chua, told me. It's funny ... I didn't even raise the
matter of Ebert, she just seemed to want to talk about him. She was
telling me about this girl she'd sold to Ebert—a
thirteen-year-old named Golden Heart. I remember it, strangely
enough. It was more than ten years ago, so the girl could well be
dead now; but Mu Chua was anxious to find out about her, as if the
girl were her daughter or something. Anyway, she told me about a
dream this girl had had— about a tiger coming from the west and
mating with her and about a pale-gray snake that died. It seems this
was a powerful dream—something she couldn't get out of her
mind—and she wanted me to find out what became of the girl. I
said I would and in return she promised to let me know if Ebert or
his friend returned. It could be useful, don't you think?" "This
Reynolds—do we know who he is or what he was meeting Ebert
about?" "Nothing,
I'm afraid. But Mu Chua thinks he's been there before. She said there
was something familiar about him." "Ping Tioo, perhaps?" "Perhaps
..." Chen
looked down at the file, touching his wrist band to make it glow,
illuminating the page beneath his fingers. For a while he was silent,
reading, then he looked up, frowning. "Is this all?" Haavikko
looked back at him blankly a moment, his mind clearly elsewhere, then
nodded. "That's it. Not much, is it?" Chen
considered a moment, then grunted. Hans Ebert had supposedly
instigated an investigation into the disappearance of his friend
Fest, but the investigation had never actually happened. No witnesses
had been called, no leads followed up. All that existed was this
slender file. "And
Fest? Is there any sign of him?" Haavikko
shook his head. "He's dead. That's what the file means. They did
it. Ebert and Auden. Because we'd got to Fest, perhaps, or maybe for
some other reason—I've heard since that Fest was getting a bit
too talkative for Ebert's liking even before we approached him. But
whatever, they did it. That file makes me certain of it." Chen
nodded. "So what now?" Haavikko
smiled tightly. "The girl, Golden Heart. I'm going to find out
what happened to her." "And
then?" Haavikko
shrugged. "I'm not sure. Let's see where this leads." "And
Ebert?" Haavikko
looked away, the tightness in his face revealing the depth of what he
felt. "At
first I thought of killing him. Of walking up to him in the Officers
Club and putting a bullet through his brain. But it wouldn't have
brought her back. Besides, I want everyone to know what he is. To see
him as I see him." Chen
was quiet a moment, then reached out and touched Haavikko's arm, as
if consoling a child. "Don't worry," he said softly. "We'll
get him, Axel. I swear we will." klaus
EBERT stood on the steps of his mansion, his hands extended to the
Marshal. Jelka watched as he embraced her father, then stood back,
one hand resting on Tolonen's shoulder. She could see how deep their
friendship ran, how close they were. More like brothers than friends. Ebert
turned, offering his hands to her, his eyes lighting at the sight of
her. He
held her close, whispering at her ear. "You really are quite
beautiful, Jelka. Hans is very lucky." But his smile only made
her feel guilty. Was it really so hard to do this for them? "Come.
We've prepared a feast," Ebert said, turning, putting his arm
about her shoulders. He led her through, into the vast high-ceilinged
hallway. She
turned her head, looking back at her father and saw how he was
smiling at her. A fierce, uncompromising smile of pride. It all
went well until she saw him. Until she looked across the room and met
his eyes. Then it came back to her: her deep-rooted fear of him,
something much greater than dislike. Dread, perhaps. Or the feeling
she had in her dreams sometimes. That fear of drowning in darkness.
Of a cold, sightless suffocation. She
looked down, afraid that her eyes would reveal what she was thinking.
It was a gesture that, to a watching eye, seemed the very archetype
of feminine modesty: the bride obedient, her husband's possession, to
be done with as he willed. But it wasn't so. Her
thoughts disturbed her. They hung like a veil at the back of her
eyes, darkening all she saw. Head bowed, she sat beside her future
mother-in-law, a sense of horror growing in her by the moment. "Jelka?" The
voice was soft, almost tender, but it was Hans Ebert who stood before
her, straight-backed and cruelly handsome. She looked up, past the
silvered buttons of his dark-blue dress uniform to his face. And met
his eyes. Cold, selfish eyes, little different from how she had
remembered them, but now alert to her. Alert and open to her
womanhood. Surprised by what he saw. She
looked away, frightened by what she saw, by the sudden interest where
before there had only been indifference. Like a curse, she thought.
My mother's curse, handed down to me. Her dying gift. But her mouth
said simply, "Hans," acknowledging
his greeting. "You're
looking very nice," he said, his voice clear, resonant. She
looked up, the strength of his voice, its utter conviction,
surprising her. Her beauty had somehow pierced the shell of his
self-regard. He was looking down at her with something close to awe.
He had expected a child, not a woman. And not a beautiful woman, at
that. Yes, he was surprised by her, but there was also something
else—something more predatory in that look. She
had changed in his eyes. Had become something he wanted. His sisters
stood behind him, no longer taller than her. They watched her
enviously. She had eclipsed them overnight and now they hated her.
Hated her beauty. "Come! Drinks everyone!" Klaus Ebert
called, smiling at her as he passed, oblivious of the dark, unseen
currents of feeling that swirled all about him in the room. And all
the while his son watched her. Her future husband, his eyes dark with
the knowledge of possession. She
looked away, studying the palatial vastness of the room. It was a
hundred ch'i across, high-ceilinged and six-sided, each wall
divided into five by tall, red-painted pillars. The walls were a
dark, almost primal green; double doors were set into the center of
each wall. Those doors filled the space between floor and ceiling,
pillar and pillar. Vast doors that made her feel as though she had
shrunk in size. GenSyn giants stood before the pillars to either side
of each door, the dark-green uniforms of the half-men blending in
with the studded leather of the door covering. A
border of tiles, glassy black and bright with darkness, surrounded
the central hexagonal space. Huge, claw-footed plinths rested on this
polished darkness, each bearing a man-sized vase; brutal-lipped and
heavy vases, decorated in violent swirls of red and green and black.
Elongated animals coiled about the thick trunk of each vase, facing
each other with bared fangs and flaring eyes. On the walls beyond
hung huge, wall-sized canvases in thick gilt frames, so dark as to
seem in permanent shadow; visions of some ancient forest hell, where
huntsmen ran on foot, ax or bow in hand, after a wounded stag. Again
there was the green of primal forest, the black of shadows, the red
of blood; these three repeated in each frame, melting into one
another as in a mist. A
dark-red carpet lay lush, luxuriant beneath her feet, while the
ceiling above was the black of a starless night. A
voice spoke to her, close by. She smelled a sickly sweetness, masking
some deeper, stronger scent. Turning, she met a pink-eyed stare. A
three-toed hand held out a glass. The voice was burred, deep,
sounding in the creature's throat. She looked at it aghast, then took
the offered glass. The
creature smiled and poured the blood-red liquid into the slender
crystal. Again she saw the lace at its cuffs, the neat whiteness of
its collar. But now she saw the bright, red roughness of the
sprouting hairs on its neck, the meat-pink color of its flesh, and
felt her skin crawl in aversion. She
stood and brushed past it, spilling her wine over the creature's
jacket, the stain a vivid slash of color on the ice-white velvet of
its sleeve. The
creature's eyes flared briefly, following her figure as she crossed
the room toward her father. Then it looked down at its sleeve, its
brutal lips curled back with distaste at the spoiled perfection
there. Li s H
AI TUNG sat at his desk, his hands resting lightly on either side of
the tiny porcelain figure, his face a mask of pain and bitter
disappointment. He had tried to deny it, but there was no doubting it
now. Tsu Ma's last message made it clear. It was Wang Ta Chuan. Wang,
his trusted Master of the Inner Palace, who was the traitor. The
old T'ang shuddered. First the boy Chung Hsin and now Wang Ta Chuan.
Was there no end to this foulness? Was there no one he could
trust? He had
done as Tsu Ma had suggested after the last meeting of the Council.
He had looked for the spy within his household and concluded that
only four people had been privy to the information Wang Sau-leyan had
used against him, four of his most senior and trusted men: Chung
Hu-yan, his Chancellor; Nan Ho, Master of Yuan's chambers; Li Feng
Chiang, his brother and advisor; and Wang Ta Chuan. At
first it had seemed unthinkable that any one of them could have
betrayed him. But he had done as Tsu Ma said; had brought each to him
separately and sown in them—casually, in confidence—a
single tiny seed of information, different in each instance. And
then he had waited to hear what Tsu Ma's spies reported back, hoping
beyond hope that there would be nothing. But this morning it had
come. Word that the false seed had sprouted in Wang Sau-leyaris ear. He
groaned, then leaned forward, pressing the summons pad. At once Chung
Hu-yan appeared at the door, his head bowed. "Chieh
Hsia?" Li
Shai Tung smiled, comforted by the sight of his Chancellor. "Bring
Wang Ta Chuan to me, Hu-yan. Bring him, then close the doors and
leave me with him," Li
Shai Tung saw the slight query in his Chancellor's eyes. Chung Hu-yan
had been with him too long not to sense his moods. Even so, he said
nothing, merely bowed and turned away, doing his master's bidding
without question. "A
good man . . ." he said softly, then sat back, closing his eyes,
trying to compose himself. Wang
Ta Chuan was a traitor. There was no doubt about it. But he would
have it from the man's lips. Would have him bow before him and admit
it. And
then? He
banged the table angrily, making the tiny porcelain statue shudder. The
man would have to die. Yet his family might live. If he confessed. If
he admitted of his own free will what he had done. Otherwise they,
too, would have to die. His wives, his sons, and all his pretty
grandchildren—all to the third generation as the law demanded.
And all because of his foolishness, his foulness. Why?
he asked himself for the hundredth time since he had known. Why
had Wang Ta Chuan betrayed him? Was it envy? Was it repayment for
some slight he felt had been made to him? Or was it something darker,
nastier than that? Did Wang Sau-leyan have some kind of hold on him?
Or was it simply greed? He
shook his head, not understanding. Surely Wang had all he wanted?
Status, riches, a fine, healthy family. What more did a man need? Li
Shai Tung reached out and drew the statue to him, studying it while
he mulled over these thoughts, turning it in his hands, some part of
him admiring the ancient craftsman's skill—the beauty of the
soft-blue glaze, the perfect, lifelike shape of the horse. It was
strange how this had returned to him. Young Ebert had brought it to
him only that morning, having recovered it in a raid on one of the
Ping Tioo cells. It was one of the three that had been taken from the
safe in Helmstadt Armory and its discovery in the hands of the Ping
Tioo had confirmed what he had always believed. But
now the Ping Tioo were broken, the horse returned. There would be no
more trouble from that source. There
was a knocking on the outer doors. He looked up, then set the statue
to one side. "Come!" he said imperiously, straightening in
his chair. Chung
Hu-yan escorted the Master of the Inner Palace into the room, then
backed away, closing the doors behind him. "Chieh
Hsial" Wang Ta Chuan said, bowing low, his manner no less
respectful, no less solicitous than it had always been. "Come
closer," Li Shai Tung ordered. "Come kneel before the
desk." Wang
Ta Chuan lifted his head briefly, surprised by his T'ang's request,
then did as he was told. "Have
I displeased you, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Shai Tung hesitated, then decided to broach the matter directly; but
before he could open his mouth, the doors to his study burst open and
Li Yuan stormed in. "Yuan!
What is the meaning of this?" he said, starting up from his
chair. "I
am sorry, Father, but I had to see you. It's Fei. . . She . .
." Li Yuan hesitated, taking in the sight of the kneeling man,
then went across and touched his shoulder. "Wang Ta Chuan, would
you leave us? I must talk with my father." "Yuan!"
The violence of the words surprised both the Prince and the kneeling
servant. "Be quiet, boy! Have you forgotten where you are?" Li
Yuan swallowed, then bowed low. "Good!"
Li Shai Tung said angrily. "Now hold your tongue and take a
seat. I have urgent business with Master Wang. Business that cannot
be put off." He
came from behind the desk and stood over Wang Ta Chuan. "Have
you something to tell me, Wang Ta Chuan?" "Chieh
Hsia?" The tone—of surprise and mild indignation—was
perfect, but Li Shai Tung was not fooled. To be a traitor—to be
the perfect copy of a loyal man— one needed such tricks. Tricks
of voice and gesture. Those and a stock of ready smiles. "You
would rather have it otherwise, then, Master Wang? You would rather I
told you?" He saw
the mask slip. Saw the sudden calculation in the face and felt
himself go cold. So it was true. Li
Yuan had stood. He took a step toward the T'ang. "What is this,
Father?" "Be
quiet, Yuan!" he said again, taking a step toward him, the hem
of his robes brushing against the kneeling man's hands. "Father.'" He
turned at Yuan's warning, but he was too slow. Wang Ta Chuan had
grabbed the hem of the T'ang's ceremonial pau, twisting the
silk about his wrist, while his other hand searched among his robes
and emerged with a knife. Li
Shai Tung tried to draw back, but Wang Ta Chuan tugged at the cloth
viciously, pulling him off balance. Yet even as the T'ang began to
fall, Li Yuan was moving past him, high-kicking the knife from Wang's
hands, then spinning around to follow through with a second kick that
broke the servant's nose. Li
Shai Tung edged back, watching as his son crouched over the fallen
man. "No,
Yuan— No!" But it
was no use. Li Yuan was as if possessed. His breath hissed from him
as he kicked and punched the fallen man. Then, as if coming to, he
stepped back, swaying, his eyes glazed. "Gods
. . ." Li Shai Tung said, pulling himself up against the edge of
the desk, getting his breath. Li
Yuan turned, looking at him, his eyes wide. "He tried to kill
you, Father! Why?
What had he done?" The
old T'ang swallowed dryly, then looked away, shaking his head, trying
to control himself, trying not to give voice to the pain he felt. For
a moment he could say nothing; then he looked back at his son. "He
was a spy, Yuan. For Wang Sau-leyan. He passed on information to our
cousin." The
last word was said with a venom, a bitterness that surprised them
both. Li
Yuan stared at his father, astonished. "A traitor?" He
turned, looking down at the dead man. "For a moment I thought it
was one of those things. Those copies that came in from Mars. I
thought. . ." He
stopped, swallowing, realizing what he had done. Li
Shai Tung watched his son a moment longer, then went back around his
desk and took his seat again. For a time he was silent, staring at
his hands, then he looked up again. "I must thank you, Yuan. You
saved my life just then. Even so, you should not have killed him. Now
we will never know the reason for his treachery. Nor can I confront
our cousin without the man's confession." "Forgive
me, Father. I was not myself." "No
... I could see that." He hesitated, then looked at his son more
thoughtfully. "Tell me. When you came in just now—what did
you want? What was so important that it made you forget yourself like
that?" For a
moment it seemed that Yuan would answer; then he shook his head.
"Forgive me, Father, it was nothing." Li
Shai Tung studied his son a moment longer, then nodded and reached
out, holding the tiny statue to him as if to draw comfort from it. klaus
ebert and the Marshal stood face to face, their glasses raised to
each other. "To
our grandchildren!" Ebert
nodded his satisfaction, then leaned closer. "1 must say, Jelka
is lovelier than ever, Knut. A real beauty she's become. She must
remind you of Jenny." "Very
much." Tolonen
turned, looking across. Jelka was sitting beside Klaus's wife, Berta,
her hands folded in her lap, her blond hair set off perfectly by the
flowing sky-blue dress she was wearing. As he watched, Hans went
across and stood over her, handsome, dashingly elegant. It was the
perfect match. Tolonen turned back, almost content, only the vaguest
unease troubling him. She was still young, after all. It was only
natural for her to have doubts. "Hans
will be good for her," he said, meeting his old friend's eyes.
"She needs a steadying influence." Klaus
nodded, then moved closer. "Talking of which, Knut, I've been
hearing things. Unsettling things." He lowered his voice, his
words for the Marshal only. "I hear that some of the young bucks
are up to old tricks. That some of them are in rather deep. And more
than youthful pranks." Tolonen
stared at him a moment, then nodded curtly. He had heard something
similar. "So it is, I'm sad to say. The times breed restlessness
in our young men. They are good apples gone bad." Ebert's
face showed a momentary distaste. "Is it our fault, Knut? Were
we too strict as fathers?" "You
and I?" Tolonen laughed softly. "Not we, Klaus. But
others?" He considered. "No, there's a rottenness at the
very core of things. Li Shai Tung has said as much himself. It is as
if Mankind cannot live without being at its own throat constantly.
Peace, that's at the root of it. We have been at peace too long, it
seems." It was
almost dissent. Klaus Ebert stiffened, hearing this bitterness from
his friend's lips. Things were bad indeed if the Marshal had such
thoughts in his head. "Ach,
I have lived too long!" Tolonen added, and the sudden ironic
tone in his voice brought back memories of their youth, so that both
men smiled and touched each other's arms. "All
will be well, Klaus, I promise you. We'll come to the root of things
soon enough. And then"—he made a movement that suggested
pulling up and discarding a plant—"then we shall be done
with it." They
looked at each other grimly, a look of understanding passing between
them. They knew the world and its ways. Few illusions remained to
them these days. Tolonen
turned to get a fresh drink, and caught sight of Jelka, getting up
hastily, the contents of her glass splashing over the serving
creature who stood beside her. He frowned as she came across. "What
is it, my love? You look like you've seen a ghost!" She
shook her head, but for the moment could not speak. There was a
distinct color in her cheeks. Klaus Ebert looked at her, concerned. "Did
my creature offend you, Jelka?" He looked at her tenderly, then
glared at the creature across the room. "No
. . ." She held on to her father's arm, surprised by her
reaction to the creature. "It's just. . ." "Did
it frighten you?" her father asked gently. She
laughed. "Yes. It did. It—surprised me, that's all. I'm
not used to them." Ebert relaxed. "It's my fault, Jelka. I
forget. They're such gentle, sophisticated creatures, you see. Bred
to be so." She
looked at him, curious now. "But why?" She was confused by
this. "I mean, why are they like that? Like goats?" Ebert
shrugged. "I suppose it's what we're used to. My
great-grandfather first had them as servants and they've been in the
household ever since. But they really are the most gentle of
creatures. Their manners are impeccable. And their dress sense is
immaculate." She
thought of the fine silk of the creature's sleeves, then shuddered,
recalling childhood tales of animals that talked. That
and the musk beneath the scent; the darkness at the back of those
blood-pink eyes. Impeccable, immaculate, and yet still an animal at
the back of all. A beast for all its breeding. She
turned to look, but the serving creature had gone, as if it sensed it
was no longer welcome. Good manners, she thought, but there was
little amusement to be had from it. The thing had scared her. "They
breed true," Ebert added. "In fact, they're the first of
our vat-bred creatures to attain that evolutionary step. We're justly
proud of them." Jelka
looked back at her future father-in-law, wondering at his pride in
the goat-thing he had made. But there was only human kindness in his
face. She
looked away, confused. So maybe it was her. Maybe she was out of
step. But it
was ugly, she thought. The thing was ugly. Then, relenting, she
smiled and took the glass of wine Klaus Ebert was holding out to her. AN
HOUR LATER the ritual began. Overhead
the lighting dimmed. At the far end of the room, the huge doors
slowly opened. It was
dark in the hallway beyond, yet the machine glowed from within. Like
a pearled and bloated egg, its outer skin as dark as smoked-glass, it
floated soundlessly above the tiled floor, a tightly focused circle
of light directly beneath it. Two GenSyn giants guided it, easing it
gently between the pillars of the door and out across the jet-black
marble of the tiles. Jelka
watched it come, her stomach tight with fear. This was her fate.
Unavoidable, implacable, it came, gliding toward her as in a dream,
its outer case shielding its inner brilliance, masking the stark
simplicity of its purpose. She
held her father's arm tightly, conscious of him at her side, of how
proudly he stood there. For him this moment held no threat. Today his
family was joined to Klaus Ebert's by contract—something he had
wished for since his youth. And how could that be wrong? The
machine stopped. The GenSyn servants backed away, closing the doors
behind them. Slowly the machine sank into the lush carpeting: dark
yet pregnant with its inner light. Beyond
it, in the shadows, a stranger stood at Klaus Ebert's side. The two
were talking, their hushed tones drifting across to where she stood.
The man was much smaller than Ebert, a tiny creature dressed entirely
in red. The Consensor. He looked at her with a brief, almost
dismissive glance, then turned back. Dry-mouthed,
she watched him turn to the machine and begin to ready it for the
ceremony. "Nu
shi Tolonen?" He stood before her, one hand extended. It
was time. She
took his hand. A small, cool hand, dry to the touch. Looking down,
she saw that he wore gloves, fine sheaths of black through which the
intense pallor of his skin showed. Holding her hand, he led her to
the machine. The
casing irised before her, spilling light. She hesitated, then stepped
up into the brilliance. He
placed her hands on the touch-sensitive pads and clamped them there,
then pushed her face gently but firmly against the molded screen of
transparent ice, reaching around her to attach the cap to her skull,
the girdle about her waist. The movements of his hands were gentle,
and for a time her fear receded, lost in the soothing comfort of his
touch; but then, abruptly, he moved back and the door irised closed
behind her, leaving her alone, facing the empty space beyond the
partition. There
was a moment of doubt so great her stomach seemed to fall away. Then
the wall facing her irised open and Hans Ebert stepped up into the
machine. Her
heart began to hammer in her breast. She waited, exposed to him, her
body held fast against the ice-clear partition. He
smiled at her, letting the Consensor do his work. In a moment he was
secured, his face pressed close against her own, his hands to hers,
only the thinnest sheet of ice between them. She
stared into his eyes, unable to look elsewhere, although she felt so
vulnerable, so hideously exposed to him that she wanted to close her
eyes and tear herself away. The feeling grew in her until she stood
there, cowed before his relentless stare, reduced to a frightened
child. And then he spoke. "Don't
be afraid. I'd never hurt you, Jelka Tolonen." The
words seemed to come from a thousand U away, distant,
disembodied, from the vast emptiness beyond the surface of his
pale-blue eyes. And yet it was as if the words had formed in her
head, unmediated by tongue or lip. And
still he looked at her. Looked through her. Seeing all she was
thinking. Understanding everything she was feeling. Emptying her.
Until there was nothing there but her fear of him. Then,
in her mind, something happened. A wall blew in and three men in
black stepped through. There was the smell of burning and something
lay on the floor beside her, hideously disfigured, bright slivers of
metal jutting from its bloodied flesh. She
saw this vividly. And in the eyes that faced hers something happened:
the pupils widened, responding to something in her own. For a moment
she looked outward, recognizing Hans Ebert, then the memory grabbed
at her again and she looked back inward, seeing the three men come
toward her, their guns raised. Strangely, the memory calmed her. I
survived, she thought. I danced my way to life. The
partition between them darkened momentarily, leaving them isolated.
Then it cleared, a circular pattern of pictograms forming in the ice;
a tiny circle of coded information displayed before each of their
pupils, duplicated so that each half of their brains could read and
comprehend. Genotypings. Blood samplings. Brain scans. Fertility
ratings. Jelka felt the girdle tighten, then a momentary pain as it
probed her. Figures
changed. The ice glowed green. They were a perfect genetic match. The
machine stored the figures dispassionately, noting them down on the
contract. The
green tinge faded with the pictograms. Again she found herself
staring into his eyes. He was
smiling. The skin surrounding his eyes was pulled tight in little
creases, his eyes much brighter than before. "You're
beautiful," said the voice in her head. "We'll be good
together. Strong, healthy sons you'll give me. Sons we'll both be
proud of." She
pictured the words forming in the darkness behind his eyes: saw them
lift and float across, piercing the ice between them; entering her
through her eyes. Her
fear had subsided. She was herself again. Now, when she looked at
him, she saw only how cruel he was, how selfish. It was there, at the
front of his eyes, like a coded pictogram. As the
machine began its litany she calmed herself, steeling herself to
outface him: No. You''II not defeat me, Hans Ebert. I'm stronger
than you think. I'll survive you. She smiled, and her lips
moved, saying yes, sealing the contract, putting her verbal mark to
the retinal prints and EGG traces the machine had already registered
as her identifying signature. But in her head the yes remained
conditional. I'll
dance my way to life, she thought. See if I don't. DEVORE
LOOKED DOWN at the indicator at his wrist, then peeled off the gas
mask. Outside his men were mopping up, stripping the corpses before
they set fire to the level. resell
was unconscious on the bed, the Han girl beside him. He
pulled back the sheet, looking down at them. The woman had small firm
breasts with large dark nipples and a scar that ran from her left hip
almost to her knee. DeVore smiled and leaned forward, running a
finger slowly down the cleanshaven slit of her sex. Too bad, he
thought. Too bad. He
looked across. Gesell lay on his side, one arm cradling his head. A
thick dark growth of hair covered his arms and legs, sprouted
luxuriantly at his groin and beneath his arms. His penis lay there,
like a newborn chick in a nest, folded softly into itself. Looking
at the man, DeVore felt a tight knot of anger constrict his throat.
It would be easy to kill them now. Never to let them wake. But it
wasn't enough. He wanted Gesell to know. Wanted to spit in his face
before he died. Yes.
For all the threats he'd made. All the shit he'd made him eat. He
drew the needle-gun from his pocket and fitted a cartridge, then
pushed it against GeselPs chest, just above the heart. Discarding the
empty cartridge, he fitted another and did the same to the girl. Then
he stepped back, waiting for the antidote to take effect. The
woman was the first to wake. She turned slightly, moving toward
Gesell, then froze, sniffing the air. "I'd
keep very still if I were you, Mao Liang." She
turned her head, her eyes taking in his dark form, then gave a tiny
nod. "Good.
Your boyfriend will be back with us in a moment. It's him I want. So
behave yourself and you won't get hurt. Understand?" Again
she nodded, then shifted back slightly as Gesell stirred. DeVore
smiled, drawing the gun from inside his tunic. "Good morning, my
friend. I'm sorry to have to disturb your sleep like this, but we've
business." Gesell
sat up slowly, rubbing his eyes, then went very still, seeing the gun
in DeVore's hand. "How
the fuck did you get in here?" he said softly, his eyes
narrowed. "I
bought my way in. Your guards were only too happy to sell you to me." "Sell.
. ." Understanding came to his face. He glanced at the girl,
then looked back at DeVore, some eternal element of defiance in his
nature making him stubborn to the last. "Mach
will get you for this, you fucker." DeVore
shrugged. "Maybe. But it won't help you, eh, Bent? Because
you're dead. And all those things you believed in—they're dead
too. I've wiped them out. There's only you left. You and the girl
here." He saw
the movement almost peripherally; saw how her hand searched beneath
the pillow and then drew back; heard the tiny click as she took off
the safety. He
fired twice as she lifted the gun, the weighted bullets punching two
neat holes in her chest, just below her heart. She fell back, dead. Gesell
moved forward sharply, then stopped, seeing how DeVore's gun was
trained on him, pointed directly at his head. "You
were always a loud-mouth, Gesell." Gesell
glared at him. "We should never have worked with you. Emily was
right. You never cared for anyone but yourself." "Did
I ever say otherwise?" Gesell
sat back, his face tense. "So why don't you do it? Get it over
with?" "I
will. . . don't worry, but not with this." He
threw the gun down. Gesell stared back at him a moment, then made his
move, scrambling for the gun. DeVore stepped back, drawing the spray
can from his pocket, watching as Gesell turned and pointed the gun at
him. "It's
empty." Gesell
pulled the trigger. It clicked then clicked again. DeVore
smiled, then stepped closer, lifting the spray, his finger holding
down the button as the fine particles hissed from the nozzle. He
watched Gesell tear at the thin film of opaque, almost translucent
ice that had formed about his head and shoulders; saw how his fingers
fought to free an airhole in the soft, elastic stuff, but already it
was growing hard. Desperation made ' Gesell throw himself about,
bellowing; but the sound was distant, muted. It came ; from
behind a screen that cut him off from the air itself. DeVore
emptied the can, then cast it aside, stepping back from the
struggling figure. GeselPs arms and hands were stuck now, welded
firmly to his face. For a moment longer he staggered about, then fell
down, his legs kicking weakly. Then he lay still. DeVore
stood over Gesell a moment, studying his face; satisfied by the look
of panic, of utter torment, he could see through the hard, glasslike
mask, then looked up. Mach was watching him from the door. "He's
dead?" DeVore
nodded. "And the woman, too, I'm afraid. She drew a gun on me." Mach
shrugged. "It's all right. It would have been difficult. She was
in love with him." "And
Ascher?" Mach
shook his head. "There's no trace of her." DeVore
considered that a moment, then nodded. "I'll find her for you." "Thanks."
Mach hesitated, then came in, looking down at Gesell. "I liked
him, you know. I really did. But sooner or later he would have killed
me. He was like that." DeVore
stood, then reached out, touching Mach's arm. "Okay. We've
finished here. Let's be gone. Before the T'ang's men get here."
CHAPTER
FOUR Carp Pool and Tortoise
Shell KIM
TURNED in his seat, looking at Hammond. "Well? What do you think
he wants?" Hammond
glanced at him, then looked away nervously, conscious of the overhead
camera. Kim
looked down. So it was like that. Spatz was putting pressure on him.
Well, it made sense. After all, it wasn't every day that Prince Yuan
came to visit the Project. He
looked about him, noting how Spatz had had his suite of offices
decorated specially for the occasion, the furnishings replaced. It
was a common joke on the Project that Spatz's offices were larger—and
cost more in upkeep—than the rest of the Project put together.
But that was only to be expected. It was how assholes like Spatz
behaved. Kim
had been on the Wiring Project for almost a year now, though for most
of that time he had been kept out of things by Spatz. Even so, he had
learned a lot, keeping what he knew from Spatz and his cronies. From
the outset he had been dismayed to learn how little they'd
progressed. It was not that they didn't know about the brain. The
basic information they needed had been discovered more than two
centuries before. No, it was simply that they couldn't apply it. They
had tried out various templates—all of them embellishments on
what already existed—but none of them had shown the kind of
delicacy required. In terms of what they were doing, they were crude,
heavy-handed models, more likely to destroy the brain than control
it; systems of blocks and stimulae that set off whole chains of
unwanted chemical and electrical responses. As it was, the wiring
system they had was worthless. A frontal lobotomy was of more use.
Unless one wanted a population of twitching, jerking puppets. And
now, in less than five hours, Prince Yuan would arrive for his first
annual inspection. Spatz, of course, was taking no chances. He
remembered the last visit he had had—from Marshal Tolonen—and
was determined to keep Kim away from things. Well,
let him try, Kim thought. Let him try. As if
on cue, Spatz arrived, Ellis, his assistant, trailing behind him with
a thick stack of paper files under his arm. He had seen this aspect
of officialdom before. Most of the time they shunned real paperwork,
preferring to keep as much as possible on computer; yet whenever the
big guns arrived, out would come thick stacks of paper. And
maybe it worked. Maybe it did impress their superiors. "Ward,"
Spatz said coldly, matter-of-factly, not even glancing at Kim as he
sat behind his desk. "Yes,
Shih Spatz?" He saw
the tightening of the man's face at his refusal to use his full
title. Spatz was a fool when it came to science, but he knew
disrespect when he saw it. Spatz looked up at Ellis and took the
files from him, sorting through them with a great deal of
self-importance before finally setting them aside and looking across
at Kim. "I
understand you've requested an interview with Prince Yuan." Kim
stared back at him, making no response, wanting to see how Spatz
would deal with his intransigence; how he would cope with this direct
assault on his authority. "Well.
. ." Spatz masked his anger with a smile. His face set, he
raised a hand and clicked his fingers. At once Ellis went across and
opened the door. Kim
heard footsteps behind him. It was the Communications Officer,
Barycz. He marched up to the desk and handed over two slender files
to add to the pile at Spatz's elbow. Are
you trying to build a wall against me, Spatz? Kim
thought, smiling inwardly. Because it won't work. Not toda^,
anyway. Because today Prince Yuan will be here. And I'II let him
know exactly what you've been doing. You know that, and it scares
you. Which is why I'm here. So that you can offer me some kind
of deal But it won't work. Because there's nothing you
can offer me. Nothing at all. Spatz
studied the first of the files for a while, then held it out to
Hammond. Kim
saw the movement in Hammond's face and knew, at once, that the file
had to do with himself. Hammond
read through the file, the color draining from his face, then looked
up at Spatz again. "But this . . ." Spatz
looked away. "What is the matter, Shih Hammond?" Hammond
glanced at Kim fearfully. "Is
it a problem, Shih Hammond?" Spatz said, turning to look at his
Senior Technician. "You only have to countersign. Or is there
something you wish to query?" Kim
smiled sourly. He understood. They had constructed a new personnel
file. A false one, smearing him. "Sign
it, Joel," he said. "It doesn't matter." Spatz
looked at him and smiled. The kind of smile a snake makes before it
unhinges its jaws and swallows an egg. Hammond
hesitated, then signed. "Good,"
Spatz said, taking the document back. Then, his smile broadening, he
passed the second file to Ellis. "Give this to the boy." Kim
looked up as Ellis approached, conscious of the look of apology in
the Assistant Director's eyes. "What
is this?" Spatz
laughed humorlessly. "Why don't you open it and see?" Kim
looked across. Hammond was looking down, his shoulders hunched
forward, as if he knew already what was in the second file. Kim
opened the folder and caught his breath. Inside was a sheaf of paper.
Hammond's poems and his own replies. A full record of the secret
messages they had passed between them. He
looked at Spatz. "So you knew?" But he knew at once that
neither Spatz nor Barycz was behind this. They were too dull-witted.
There was no way either of them could have worked out what was going
on. No, this was someone else. Someone much sharper than either of
them. But who? Spatz
leaned forward, his sense of dignity struggling with his need to
gloat. "You
thought you were being clever, didn't you, Ward? A regular little
smart-ass. I bet you thought you were so superior, neh?" He
laughed, then sat back, all humor drainin/g from his face. "For
your part in this, you're under report, Hammond, from this moment.
But you, Ward—you're out." "Out?"
Kim laughed. "Forgive me, Shih Spatz, but you can't do that. I'm
Prince Yuan's appointment. Surely only he can say whether I'm out or
not." Spatz
glanced at him disdainfully. "A formality. He'll have my
recommendation, backed by the personnel file and the complaints of
disruption filed against you by several staff members." Out of
the corner of his eye he saw Hammond start forward. "But you
promised—" Spatz
interrupted Hammond, his face hard. "I promised nothing, if you
recall. Now for the gods' sakes, hold your tongue! Even better, leave
the room. You've served your purpose." Hammond
rose slowly. "I've served my purpose, eh? Too fucking right I
have." He leaned forward, setting his hands firmly on the edge
of the desk, facing the Director. As if sensing what he intended,
Spatz drew the file toward him, then handed it to Ellis at his side. "If
you say another word—" Hammond
laughed, but his face was filled with loathing for the man in front
of him. "Oh, I've nothing more to say, Director Spatz. Just this
. . ." He
drew his head back and spat powerfully, cleanly, catching Spatz in
the center of his face. Spatz
cried out, rubbing at his face with the sleeve of his gown; then,
realizing what he had done, he swore. "You
bastard, Hammond! My silks . . ." Spatz
stood, his face livid with anger, his hands trembling. "Get
out! Get your things and be gone! As from this moment you're off the
Project." For a
moment longer, Hammond stood there, glaring at him, then he moved
back, a tiny shudder passing through him. "Joel,
I ..." Kim began, reaching out to him, but Hammond stepped back,
looking about him, as if coming to from a bad dream. "No.
It's fine, Kim. Really it is. I'll survive. The Net can't be worse
than this. At least I won't have to pawn myself every day to hsiao
jen like this pig-brained cretin here!" Spatz
trembled with rage. "Guards!" he yelled. "Get the
guards here, now!" Hammond laughed. "Don't bother, I'm
going. But fuck you, Spatz. Fuck you to hell. I hope Prince Yuan has
your ass for what you're trying to do here today." He I turned,
then bent down, embracing Kim. "Good luck, Kim," he
whispered. "I'm | sorry.
Truly I am." Kim
held him out at arm's length. "It's all right. I understand.
You're a good man, | Joel
Hammond. A good man." He
stood, watching him go, then turned back, facing Spatz. "So
what now?" Spatz
ignored him, leaning forward to talk into the intercom. "Send in
the nurse. We're ready now." Kim
looked at Ellis; saw how the man refused to meet his eyes. Then at
Barycz. Barycz was pretending to study the chart on the wall behind
Spatz. "Prince
Yuan will ask about me," Kim said. "He's certain to." Spatz
smiled coldly. "Of course he will. But you won't be there, will
you?" He
heard the door open, the nurse come in. "And
then he'll ask why I'm not there—" he began, but the words
were choked off. He felt the hypodermic-gun pressed against his neck
and tried to squirm away, struggling against the strong hand that
held his shoulder; but it was too late. The
hand released him. Slumping down into the chair, he felt a fiery cold
spreading through his veins, leaving him numb, his nerve ends frozen.
"I-wb . . ." he said, his eyes glazing. "I-jibw . . ."
Then he fell forward, scattering the sheaf of poems across the floor
beside him. LI
YUAN stepped down from his craft and sighed, looking about him. The
roof of the City stretched away from him like a vast field of snow,
empty but for the small group of officials who were gathered, heads
bowed, beside the open hatchway. He
looked north to where the City ended abruptly on the shores of the
icy Baltic, then turned to smile at his personal secretary, Chang
Shih-sen. "Have
you ever seen it when the cloud is low, Chang? The cloud seems to
spill from the City's edge like water over a fall. But slowly, very
slowly, as in a dream." "I
have never seen that, my Lord, but I should imagine it was
beautiful." Li
Yuan nodded. "Very beautiful. I saw it once at sunset. All the
colors of the sky seemed captured in those endless folds of
whiteness." Chang
Shih-sen nodded, then, softly, mindful of his place, added, "They
are waiting, my Lord." Li
Yuan looked back at him and smiled. "Let them wait. The day is
beautiful. Besides, I wish a moment to myself before I join them." "My
Lord . . ." Chang backed away, bowing. Li
Yuan turned, moving out from the shadow of the craft into the
mid-afternoon sunlight. Chang was a good man. Kind, hard-working,
thoughtful. But his father's Master of the Inner Palace, Wang Ta
Chuan, had been the same. It made one think. When the fate of so many
were in one person's hands, who could one trust? He
took a deep breath, enjoying the freshness, the warmth of the
sunlight on his arms and back. Last night, for the first time since
he had married Fei Yen, he had summoned a woman to his bed—one
of the serving girls from the kitchens— purging himself of the
need that had raged in his blood like a poison. Now he was himself
again. Or
almost himself. For he would never again be wholly as he was. Fei Yen
had changed that. Who
was it? he wondered for the thousandth time. Who slept with
you whik I was gone? Was it one of my servants? Or was it someone you
knew before our time together? He
huffed out his sudden irritation. It was no good dwelling on it.
Madness lay that way. No, best set such thoughts aside, lest he find
himself thinking of nothing else. And
what use would I then be to my father? He
shivered, then, calming himself, turned back, summoning Chang. "Is
this all?" Spatz,
stood before the seated Prince, bowed his head. "I am afraid so,
my Lord. But you must understand—I have been working under the
most severe restraints." Li
Yuan looked up, his disappointment clear. "Just what do you
mean, Director?" Spatz
kept his head lowered, not meeting the Prince's eyes. "To begin
with, I have been effectively two short on my team throughout my time
here." Li
Yuan leaned forward. "I do not understand you, Director. There
is no mention in your report of such a thing." "Forgive
me, my Lord, but the matter I am referring to is in the second file.
I felt it best to keep the main report to matters of—of
science, let us say." The
Prince sat back, irritated by the man's manner. If he'd had his way,
Spatz would have been replaced as Director, but Spatz was his
father's appointment, like Tolonen. He set
the top file aside, then opened the second one. It was a personnel
report on the boy, Ward. Li
Yuan looked up, surprised. Could Spatz have known? No. He couldn't
possibly have known about Kim and the special projects. But that,
too, had been a disappointment. After the first report he had heard
nothing from the boy. Nothing for ten months. At first he had assumed
that it was taking much longer than the boy had estimated or that his
work on the Project was taking up his time, but this explained it
all. He
read it through, then looked up again, shaking his head. The boy had
been at best lethargic, uncooperative, at worst disruptive to the
point of actual physical violence. "Why
was I not told of this before now?" Spatz
hesitated. "I. . .1 wished to be charitable to the boy, my Lord.
To give him every chance to change his ways and prove himself. I was
conscious of his importance to you. Of your special interest. So—" Li
Yuan raised his hand. "I understand. Can I see the boy?" "Of
course, my Lord. But you must understand his condition. I am told it
is a result of his 'restructuring' at the clinic. Occasionally he
falls into a kind of torpor' where he won't speak or even acknowledge
that anyone is there." "I
see." Li Yuan kept the depth of his disappointment from his
face. "And is he like that now?" "I
am afraid so, my Lord." "And
his tutor, T'ai Cho?" Spatz
gave a small shrug of resignation. "A good man, but his loyalty
to the boy is—shall we say, misguided. He is too involved, my
Lord. His only thought is to keep the boy from harm. I'm afraid
you'll get little sense from him either." Li
Yuan studied Spatz a moment longer, then closed the file. "You
wish to see the boy, my Lord?" Li
Yuan sighed, then shook his head. "No. I think I've seen
enough." He stood. "I'm disappointed, Spatz. Hugely
disappointed. I expected far greater progress than this. Still,
things are on the right lines. I note that youVe made some headway
toward solving things on the technical side. That's good, but I want
more. I want a working model twelve months from now." "My
Lord . . ." The note of pure panic in the Director's voice was
almost comical, yet Li Yuan had never felt less like laughing. "Twelve
months. Understand me? For my part, I'll make sure you have another
dozen men—the best scientists I can recruit from the Companies.
As for funding, you're quite correct, Director. It is inadequate.
Which is why I'm tripling it from this moment." For
the first time Spatz's head came up and his eyes searched him out.
"My Lord, you are too generous." Li
Yuan laughed sourly. "Generosity has nothing to do with it,
Director Spatz. I want a job done and I want it done properly. We
underfunded. We didn't see the scale of the thing. Well, now we'll
put that right. But I want results this time." "And
the boy?" Li
Yuan stood, handing the main copies of the files to Chang Shih-sen,
then looked back at Spatz. "The
matter of the boy will be dealt with. You need worry yourself no
further in that regard, Director." BARYCZ
LOCKED the door of the Communications Room, then went to his desk and
activated the screen. He tapped in the code and waited, knowing the
signal was being scrambled through as many as a dozen subroutes
before it got to its destination. The screen flickered wildly, then
cleared, DeVore's face staring out at him. "Is
it done?" Barycz
swallowed nervously, then nodded. "I've dispatched copies of the
files to your man. He should have them within the hour." "Good.
And the boy? He's out of it, I hope?" Barycz
bowed his head. "I've done everything as you ordered it, Shih
Loehr. However, there is one small complication. The Director has
ordered Hammond off the Project. With immediate effect." DeVore
looked away a moment, then nodded. "Fine. I'll see to that."
He looked back at Barycz, smiling. "You've done well, Barycz.
There'll be a bonus for you." Barycz
bowed his head again. "You are too kind." When he looked up
again the screen was dark. He
smiled, pleased with himself, then sat back, wondering how generous
Loehr planned to be. Maybe he'd have enough to move up a deck—to
buy a place in the Hundreds. Barycz
sniffed thoughtfully, then laughed, recalling how Hammond had spat in
the Director's face. "Served
the bastard right," he said quietly. Yes. He was not a spiteful
man, but he had enjoyed the sight of Spatz getting his deserts.
Enjoyed it greatly. LEHMANN
STOOD in the doorway, looking in. "Ebert's here." DeVore
looked up from the wei chi board and smiled. "Okay. I'll
be up in a while. Take him through into the private suite and get one
of the stewards to look after him. Tell him I won't be long." DeVore
watched his lieutenant go, then stood. He had been practicing new
openings. Experimenting. Seeing if he could break down old habits.
That was the only trouble with u>ei chi—it was not a
game to be played against oneself. One needed a steady supply of
opponents, men as good as oneself—better, if one really wished
to improve one's game. But he had no one. He
stretched and looked about him, feeling good, noticing his furs where
he had left them in the corner of the room. He had been out early,
before sunrise; he had gone out alone, hunting snow foxes. The
pelts of five were hanging in the kitchens, drying out, the scant
meat of the foxes gone into a stew—a special meal to celebrate.
Yes, things were going well. Only a few weeks ago the situation had
seemed bleak, but now the board was filling nicely with his plays. In
the north, the Ping Tiao were effectively destroyed and Mach's
Yu was primed to step into the resultant power vacuum. In the east
his men were in position, awaiting only his order to attack the
Plantations, while to the west he was building up a new shape—seeking
new allies among the elite of City North America. Added to these were
two much subtler plays—the poisoned statue and his plans for
the Wiring Project. All were coming to fruition. Soon the shapes on
the board would change and a new phase of the game would begin—the
middle game—in which his pieces would be in the ascendant. And
what was Ebert's role in all this? He had ambitions, that was clear
now. Ambitions above being a puppet ruler. Well, let Ebert have them.
When the time came, he would cut him down to size. Until then he
would pretend to trust him more. DeVore
laughed. In the meantime, maybe he would offer him the girl, the
lookalike. She had been meant for Tolonen—as a "gift"
to replace his murdered daughter—but Jelka's survival had meant
a change of plans. He studied the board thoughtfully, then nodded.
Yes, he would give Ebert the lookalike as an early wedding gift. To
do with as he wished. He
smiled, then leaned across and placed a white stone on the board,
breachin§ the space between two of the black masses, threatening
to cut. HANS
EBERT stood by the open hatchway of the transporter, his left hand
strao tiehtiv as the craft rose steeply from the mountainside. DeVore's
gift was crouched behind him against the far wall of the craft, as
far from the open hatchway as she could get. He could sense her there
behind him and felt the hairs rise along his spine and at the back of
his neck. The
bastard. The devious fucking bastard. He
smiled tightly and waved a hand at the slowly diminishing figure on
the hillside far below. Then, as the craft began to bank away, he
turned, looking at the girl, smiling at her reassuringly, keeping his
true feelings from showing. Games.
It was all one big game to DeVore. He understood that now. And this—
this gift of the girl—that was part of the play too. To
unsettle him, perhaps. Or mock him. Well, he'd not let him. He
moved past her brusquely and went through into the cockpit. Auden
turned, looking at him. "What
is it, Hans?" He
took a breath then shook his head. "Nothing. But you'd best have
this." He took the sealed letter DeVore had given him and handed
it across. "It's to Lever. DeVore wants you to hand it to him
when you meet the Americans at the spaceport. It's an invitation." Auden
tucked it away. "What else?" Ebert
smiled. Auden was a good man. He understood things without having to
be told. "It's just that I don't trust him. Especially when he
'puts all his stones on the table.' He's up to something." Auden
laughed. "Like what?" Ebert
stared out through the frosted glass, noting the bleakness of their
surroundings. "I don't know. It's just a feeling. And then
there's his gift . . ." Auden
narrowed his eyes. "So what are you going to do with her?" Ebert
turned back, meeting his eyes briefly, then jerked away, pulling the
cockpit door closed behind him. the
girl looked up as Ebert came back into the hold, her eyes wide,
filled with fear. He stopped, staring at her, appalled by the
likeness, then went across and stood by the open hatchway, looking
outward, his neat-cut hair barely moving in the icy wind. "I'm
sorry," he said, against the roar of the wind. "I didn't
mean to frighten you." He glanced around, smiling. "Here. .
. come across. I want to show you something." She
didn't move; only pressed tighter against the far wall of the cabin. "Come.
. ." he said, as softly as he could against the noise. "You've
nothing to be afraid of. I just want to show you, that's all." He
watched her: saw how fear battled in her with a need to obey. Yes,
he thought, DeVore would have instilled that in you, wouldn't
he? She kept looking down, biting her lip, then glancing up at
him again, of two minds. Yes,
and you're like her, he thought. Physically, anyway. But
you aren't her. You're just a common peasant girl he's had changed in
his labs. And the gods alone know what he's done to you. But the real
Jelka wouldn't be cowering there. She would have come across
of her own free will. To defy me. Just to prove
to me that I didn't frighten her. He smiled and looked
down, remembering that moment in the machine when she had glared back
at him. It had been then, perhaps, that he had first realized his
true feelings for her. Then that he had first articulated it inside
his head. I'm in love with you, Jelka Tolonen, he had thought,
surprised. In love. So unexpected. So totally unexpected. And
afterward, when she had gone, he had found himself thinking of her.
Finding the image of her entangled in his thoughts of other things.
How strange that had been. So strange to find himself so vulnerable.
And now this ... He
went to her and took her arm, coaxing her gently, almost tenderly,
across, then stood there, one arm holding tightly about her slender
waist, the other reaching up to hold the strap. The wind whipped her
long, golden hair back and chilled her face, but he made her look.
"There," he said. "Isn't that magnificent?" He
looked sideways at her; saw how she opened her eyes, fighting against
the fear she felt; battling with it; trying to see the beauty there
in that desolate place DeVore's thing. His "gift." For a
moment there was nothing. Then the tiniest of smiles came to her
lips, th< muscles about her eyes relaxing slightly as she saw. He
shivered, then drew his arm back and up, forcing her head down. He
watched the tiny figure fall away from the craft, twisting silently
in the air, a tiny star of darkness against the white, growing
smaller by the second; then he shuddered again, a strange mixture of
pain and incomprehension making him shake his head and moan. No.
There would be no impediments. Not this time. No possessive old women
or mad whores with their love children. And certainly no copies. No.
Because he wanted the real Jelka, not some copy. Even if she hated
him. Or maybe because she hated him. Yes, perhaps that was it.
Because underneath it all she was as strong as he and that strength
appealed to him, making her a challenge. A challenge he could not
turn his back on. For you will love me, Jelka Tblonen. You
will. He
watched the body hit in a spray of snow; then he turned away, the
roar of the wind abating as he drew the hatch closed behind him. emily
ASCHER turned from the door, then caught her breath, the pay-lock key
falling from her hand, clattering across the bare ice floor. "You
..." DeVore
looked back at her from where he sat on the edge of her bed and
smiled. "Yes, it's me." He saw
her look from him to the key, judging the distance, assessing the
possibility of getting out of the room alive, and smiled inwardly. She
looked back at him, her eyes narrowed. "How did you find me?" He
tilted his head, looking her up and down, his keen eyes searching for
the telltale bulge of a concealed weapon. "It
wasn't so hard. I've had someone trailing you since that meeting at
the meat warehouse. I knew then that you were planning to get out." "You
did?" She laughed, but her face was hard. "That's strange.
Because I had no plans to. Not until last night." He
smiled. "Then you got out in good time. They're all dead. Or had
you heard?" He saw
the way her breathing changed, how the color drained from her face. "And
Gesell?" He
nodded, watching her. "I made sure of him myself." Her
lips parted slightly, then she looked down. "I guess it was . .
. inevitable." But when she looked back at him he saw the hatred
in her eyes and knew he had been right. She was still in love with
Gesell. Such a
waste, he thought. Had the worm understood how lucky he had been to
share his bed with two such strong women? No.
Probably not. Like all his kind he took things without thinking of
their worth. "Mach
helped me," he said, watching her closely now, his hand resting
loosely on the gun in his pocket. "He arranged it all." "Why?"
she asked. "I don't understand. He wanted it to work more than
any of us." "He
still does. But he wants to start again, without the taint of Bremen.
New blood, with new ideals, fresh ideas." She
stared back at him a moment, then shook her head. "But still
with you, neh?" "Is
that why you got out? Because of my involvement?" She
hesitated, then nodded, meeting the challenge of his eyes. "It
changed, after you came. It was different before, sharper, but then .
. . well, you saw what happened. It wasn't like that before." "No
. . ." He seemed almost to agree. "Well, that's past, eh?" "Is
it?" He
nodded, sitting back slightly, the gun in his pocket covering her
now. "So
what now? What do you want of me?" His
smile broadened. "It's not what I want. It's what Mach wants." "And?" "And
he wants you dead." Again
that slight tremor of the breasts, that slight change in breathing,
quickly controlled. She had guts, that was certain. More, perhaps,
than any of them. But he had seen that much at once. Had singled her
out because of it. "I'm
unarmed," she said, raising her hands slowly. "So
I see," he said. "So?" She
laughed, almost relaxed. "No ... It wouldn't worry you at all,
would it? To kill an unarmed woman." "No,
it wouldn't. But who said I was going to kill you?" Her
eyes narrowed again. "Aren't you, then?" He
shook his head, then reached into his left pocket and pulled out a
wallet. It held a pass, a new set of identity documents, two
five-hundred yuan credit chips, and a ticket for the
intercontinental jet. "Here,"
he said, throwing it to her. She
caught it deftly, opened it, then looked up sharply at him. "I
don't under- stand
. . ." "There's
a price," he said. "I promised Mach I'd bring something
back. To prove I'd dealt with you. A finger." He saw
the small shiver pass through her. "I see." "It
shouldn't hurt. I'll freeze the hand and cauterize the wound.
There'll be no pain. Discomfort, yes, but nothing more." She
looked down, a strangely pained expression on her face, then looked
up again. "Why? I mean, why are you doing this? What's your
motive?" "Do
I have to have one?" She
nodded. "It's how you are." He
shrugged. "So you've told me before. But you're wrong." "No
strings, then?" "No
strings. You give me a finger and I give you your freedom, and a new
life in North America." She
laughed, still not trusting him, "It's too easy. Too — "
She shook her head. He
stood. "You're wondering why. Why should that cold, calculating
bastard DeVore do this for me? What does he want? Well, I'll tell
you. It's very simple. I wanted to prove that you were wrong about
me." She
studied him a moment, then went across and bent down, recovering the
pay-key. "Well?"
he asked. "Have we a deal?" She
looked up at him. "Have I a choice?" "Yes.
You can walk out of here, right now. I'll not stop you. But if you
do, Mach will come after you with everything he's got. Because he'll
not feel safe until you're dead." "And
you?" DeVore
smiled. "Oh, I'm safe. I'm always safe." SLOWLY
the great globe of Chung Kuo turned in space, moving through sunlight
and darkness, the blank faces of its continents glistening like ice
caps beneath huge swirls of cloud. Three hours had passed by the
measure of men; and in Sichuan Province, in the great palace at
Tongjiang, Li Shai Tung sat with his son in the dim-lit silence of
his study, reading through the report General Nocenzi had brought. Li
Yuan stood at his father's side, scanning each sheet as his father
finished with it. The
report concerned a number of items taken the previous evening in a
raid on a gaming club frequented by the sons of several important
company heads. More than a dozen of the young men had been taken,
together with a quantity of seditious material: posters and
pamphlets, secret diaries and detailed accounts of illicit meetings.
Much of the material confirmed what Tolonen had said only the day
before. There was a new wave of unrest; a new tide, running for
change. They
were good men—exemplary young men, it might be said—from
families whose ties to the Seven went back to the foundation of the
City. Men who, in other circumstances, might have served his father
well. But a disease was rife among them; a foulness that, once
infected, could not be shaken from the blood. And
the disease? Li Yuan looked across at the pile of folders balanced on
the far side of his father's desk. There were three of them, each
bulging with handwritten ice-vellum sheets. He had not had time to
compare more than a few paragraphs scattered throughout each text,
but he had seen enough to know that their contents were practically
identical. He reached across and picked one up, flicking through the
first few pages. He had seen the original in Berdichev's papers more
than a year earlier, among the material Karr had brought back with
him from Mars, but had never thought he would see another. He
read the title page. "The Aristotle File, Being the True History
of Western Science. By Soren Berdichev." The
document had become the classic of dissent for these young men, each
copy painstakingly written out in longhand. His
father turned in his seat, looking up at him. "Well, Yuan? What
do you think?" He set
the file down. "It is as you said, Father. The thing is a
cancer. We must cut it out, before it spreads." The
old T'ang smiled, pleased with his son. "If we can." "You
think it might already be too late?" Li
Shai Tung shrugged. "A document like this is a powerful thing,
Yuan." He smiled, then stood, touching his son's arm. "But
come ... let us feed the fish. It is a while since we had the chance
to talk." Li
Yuan followed his father into the semidarkness of the arboretum, his
mind filled with misgivings. Inside,
Li Shai Tung turned, facing his son, the carp pool behind him. "I
come here whenever I need to think." Li
Yuan looked about him and nodded. He understood. When his father was
absent, he would come here himself and stand beside the pool, staring
down into the water as if emptying himself into its depths, letting
his thoughts become the fish, drifting, gliding slowly, almost
listlessly in the water, then rising swiftly to breach the surface,
imbued with sudden purpose. The
old T'ang smiled, seeing how his son stared down into the water; so
like himself in some respects. "Sometimes
I think it needs a pike." Li
Yuan looked up surprised. "A pike in a carp pool, Father? But it
would eat the other fish!" Li
Shai Tung nodded earnestly. "And maybe that is what was wrong
with Chung Kuo. Maybe our great carp pool needed a pike. To keep the
numbers down and add that missing element of sharpness. Maybe that is
what we are seeing now. Maybe our present troubles are merely the
consequence of all those years of peace." "Things
decay . . ." Yuan said, conscious of how far their talk had
come, of how far his father's words were from what he normally
professed to believe. "Yes
. . ." Li Shai Tung nodded and eased himself back onto the great
saddle of a turtle shell that was placed beside the pool. "And
perhaps a pike is loose in the depths." Li
Yuan moved to the side of the pool, the toes of his boots overlapping
the tiled edge. "Have
you made up your mind yet, Yuan?" The
question was unconnected to anything they had been discussing, but
once again he understood. In this sense they had never been closer.
His father meant the boy, Kim. "Yes,
Father. I have decided." "And?" Yuan
turned his head, looking across at his father. Li Shai Tung sat with
his feet spread, the cane resting against one knee. Yuan could see
his dead brother, Han Ch'in, in that posture of his father's. Could
see how his father would have resembled Han when he was younger, as
if age had been given him and youth to Han. But Han was long dead and
youth with him. Only old age remained. Only the crumbling patterns of
their forefathers. "I
was wrong," he said after a moment. "The reports are
unequivocal. It hasn't worked out. And now this—this matter of
the sons and their 'New European' movement. I can't help but think
the two are connected—that the boy is responsible for this." Li
Shai Tung's regretful smile mirrored his son's. "It is
connected, Yuan. Without the boy there would be no file." He
looked clearly at his son. "Then you will act upon my warrant
and have the boy terminated?" Li
Yuan met his father's eyes, part of him still hesitant, even now.
Then he nodded. "Good.
And do not trouble yourself, Yuan. You did all you could. It seems to
me that the boy's end was fated." Li
Yuan had looked down; now he looked up again, surprised by his
father's words. Li Shai Tung saw this and laughed. "You find it
odd for me to talk of fate, neh?" "You
have always spoken of it with scorn." "Maybe
so. Yet any man must at some point question whether it is chance or
fate that brings things to pass, whether he is the author or merely
the agent of his actions." "And
you, Father? What do you think?" Li
Shai Tung stood, leaning heavily upon the silver-headed cane he had
come to use so often these days; the cane with the dragon's head,
which Han Ch'in had bought him on his fiftieth birthday. "It
is said that in the time of Shang they would take a tortoise shell
and cover it with ink, then throw it into a fire. When it dried, a
diviner would read the cracks and lines in the scorched shell. They
believed, you see, that the tortoise was an animal of great purity—in
its hard-soft form they saw the meeting of yin and yang, of
Heaven and Earth. Later they would inscribe the shells with questions
put to their ancestors. As if the dead could answer." Li
Yuan smiled, reassured by the ironic tone of his father's words. For
a moment he had thought. . . "And
maybe they were right, Yuan. Maybe it is all written. But then one
must ask what it is the gods want of us. They seem to give and take
without design. To build things up only to cast them down. To give a
man great joy, only to snatch it away, leaving him in great despair.
And to what end, Yuan? To what end?" Yuan
answered softly, touched to the core by his father's words. "I
don't know, Father. Truly I don't." Li
Shai Tung shook his head bitterly. "Bones and tortoise shells. .
." He laughed and touched the great turtle shell behind him with
his cane. "They say this is a copy of the great Luoshu shell,
Yuan. It was a present to your mother from my father, on the day of
our wedding. The pattern on its back is meant to be a charm, you see,
for easing childbirth." Yuan
looked away. It was as if his father felt a need to torture himself,
to surround himself with the symbols of lost joy. "You
know the story, Yuan? It was in the reign of Yu, oh, more than four
thousand years ago now, when the turtle crawled up out of the Luo
River, bearing the markings on its back." Yuan
knew the story well. Every child did. But he let his father talk,
finding it strange that only now should they reach this point of
intimacy between them; now when things were darkest, his own life
blighted by the failure of his dreams, his father's by ill health. "Three
lines of three figures were marked out there on the shell, as plain
as could be seen, the yin numbers in the corners, the yang
numbers in the center, and each line—horizontal, vertical,
and diagonal—adding up to fifteen. Of course, it was hailed at
once as a magic square, as a sign that supernatural powers were at
work in the world. But we know better, eh, Yuan? We know there are no
magic charms to aid us in our troubles, only our reason and our will.
And if they fail . . ." Li
Shai Tung heaved a sigh, then sat heavily on the great saddle of the
shell. He looked up at his son wearily. "But
what is the answer, Yuan? What might we do that wre have not already
done?" Li
Yuan looked across at his father, his eyes narrowed. "Cast
oracles?" The
T'ang laughed softly. "Like our forefathers, eh?" The
old man looked away; stared down into the depths of the pool. Beyond
him the moon was framed within the darkness of the window. The night
was perfect, like the velvet worn about the neck of a young girl. "I
hoped for peace, Yuan. Longed for it. But. . ." He shook his
head. "What
then, Father? What should we do?" "Do?"
Li Shai Tung laughed; a soft, unfamiliar sound. "Prepare
ourselves, Yuan. That's all. Take care our friends are true. Sleep
only when we're safe." It was
an uncharacteristically vague answer. Yuan
looked down, then broached the subject he had been avoiding all
evening. "Are you well, Father? I had heard—" "Heard?
Heard what?" Li Shai Tung turned, his tone suddemly sharp,
commanding. Li Yuan almost smiled, but checked himself, knowing his
(father's eagle eye was on him. "Only
that you were not your best, Father. No more than thiat. Headaches.
Mild stomach upsets. But do not be angry with me. A son should Ibe
concerned for his father's health." Li
Shai Tung grunted. "Not my best, eh? Well, that's true of us all
after thirty. We're never again at our best." He was silent a
moment, thenx turned, tapping his cane against the tiled floor.
"Maybe that's true of all things—that they're never at
their best after a while. Men and the things men build." "Particulars,
father. Particulars." The
old man stared at him a moment, then nodded. "So I've always
lectured you, Yuan. You learn well. You always did. You were always
suited! for this." There
was a long silence between them. Han Ch'in's death lay there in that
silence; cold, heavy, unmentionable, a dark stone of grief in the
guts of each that neither had managed to pass. "And
Fei Yen?" It was
the first time his father had mentioned the separation. The matter
was not yet public knowledge. Li
Yuan sighed. "It's still the same." There
was real pain in his Li Shai Tung's face. "You should command
her, Yuan. Order her to come home." Li
Yuan shook his head, controlling what he felt. "With great
respect, Father, I know what's best in this. She hates me. I know
that now. To have her in my home would . . . would weaken me." Li
Shai Tung was watching his son closely, his shoulders slightly
hunched. "Ah . . ." He lifted his chin. "I did not
know that, Yuan. I..." Again he sighed. "I'm sorry, Yuan,
but the child. What of the child?" Li
Yuan swallowed, then raised his head again, facing the matter
squarely. "The child is not mine. Fei Yen was unfaithful to me.
The child belongs to another man." The
old man came closer, came around the pool and stood facing his
son."You know this for certain?" "No,
but I know it. Fei Yen herself—" "No.
I don't mean 'know it' in some vague sense, I mean know; it, for good
and certain." His voice had grown fierce, commanding once more.
"This is important, Yuan. I'm surprised at you. You should have
seen to this." Li
Yuan nodded. It was so, but he had not wanted to face it. Had not
wanted to know for good and certain. He had been quite happy
accepting her word. "You
must go to her and offer her divorce terms, Yuan. At once. But you
will make the offer conditional. You understand?" Again
he nodded, understanding. There would need to be tests. Tests to
ascertain the father of the child. Genotyping. Then he would know.
Know for good and certain. He gritted his teeth, feeling the pain
like a needle in his guts. "Good,"
said the T'ang, seeing that what he had wanted was accomplished.
"There must be no room for doubt in the future. If your son is
to rule, he must be uncontested. Your son, not some cuckoo in
the nest." The
words stung Li Yuan, but that was their aim. His father knew when to
spare and when to goad. "And
then?" Li Yuan suddenly felt drained, empty of thought. "And
then you marry again. Not one wife, but two. Six if need be, Yuan.
Have sons. Make the family strong again. Provide." He
nodded, unable to conceive of life with any other woman but Fei Yen,
but for now obedient to his father's wishes. "Love!"
There was a strange bitterness to his father's voice. An edge.
"It's never enough, Yuan. Remember that. It always fails you in
the end. Always." Li
Yuan looked up, meeting his father's eyes, seeing the love and hurt
and pain there where for others there was nothing. "All
love?" The
T'ang nodded and reached out to hold his son's shoulder. "All
love, Yuan. Even this." THERE
was a pounding at the outer doors. Li Shai Tung woke, drenched in
sweat, the dream of his first wife, Lin Yua, and that dreadful night
so clear that, for a moment, he thought the banging on the doors a
part of it. He sat up, feeling weak, disoriented. The banging came
again. "Gods
help us... what is it now?" he muttered, getting up slowly and
pulling on his gown. He
went across and stood there, facing the doors. "Who is it?" "It
is I, Chieh Hsia. Your Chancellor, Chung Hu-yan." He
shivered. Chung Hu-yan. As in the dream. As on the night Lin Yua had
died giving birth to his son, Yuan. For a moment he could not answer
him. "Chieh
Hsia," came the voice again. "Are you all right?" He
turned, looking about him, then turned back. No. He was here. He
wasn't dreaming. Eighteen years had passed and he was here, in his
palace, and the knocking on the door, the voice—both were real. "Hold
on, Chung. I'm coming . . ." He
heard how weak his voice sounded, how indecisive, and shivered. Sweat
trickled down his inner arms, formed on his forehead. Why was
everything suddenly so difficult? He
fumbled with the lock, then drew back the catch. Stepping back, he
watched the doors open. Chung Hu-yan stood there, flanked by two
guards. "What
is it, Chung?" he said, his voice quavering, seeing the fear in
his Chancellor's face. Chung
Hu-yan bowed low. "News has come, Chieh Hsia. Bad news." Bad
news ... He felt his stomach tighten. Li Yuan was dead. Or Tsu Ma. Or
... "What
is it, Chung?" he said again, unconscious of the repetition. In
answer Chung moved aside. Tolonen was standing there, his face ashen. "Chieh
Hsia . . ." the Marshal began, then went down on one knee,
bowing his head low. "I have failed you, my Lord . . . failed
you." Li
Shai Tung half turned, looking to see who was standing behind him,
but there was no one. He frowned then turned back. "Failed,
Knut? How failed?" "The
Plantations . . ." Tolonen said, then looked up at him again,
tears in his eyes. "The Plantations are on fire." CHAPTER
FIVE
The Broken
Wheel
A
huge WINDOW filled the end of the corridor where the tunnel turned to
the right, intersecting with the boarding hatch. She stood there a
moment, looking out across the predawn darkness of the spaceport,
barely conscious of the passengers pushing by, knowing that this was
probably the last view she would ever have of City Europe—the
City in which she had spent her whole life. But that life was over
now and a new one lay ahead. Emily Ascher was dead, killed in a
fictitious accident three days ago. She was Mary Jennings now, a
blonde from Atlanta Canton, returning to the eastern seaboard after a
two-year secondment to the European arm of her company. She
had sat up until late learning the brief she had been sent, then
snatched three hours sleep before the call came. That had been an
hour ago. Now she stood, quite literally, on the threshold of a new
life, hesitating, wondering even now if she had done the right thing. Was it
really too late to go back—to make her peace with Mach? She
sighed and let her fingers move slowly down the dark, smooth surface
of the glass. Yes. DeVore might have been lying when he said he had
no motive in helping her, but he was right about Mach wanting her
dead. She had given Mach no option. No one left the Ping Tioo. Not
voluntarily, anyway. And certainly not alive. Even
so, wasn't there some other choice? Some other option than putting
herself in debt to DeVore? She
looked down at her bandaged left hand then smiled cynically at her
reflection in the darkened glass. If there had been she would not be
here. Besides, there were things she had to do. Important things. And
maybe she could do them just as well in America. If DeVore let her. It was
a big if, but she was prepared to take the chance. The only other
choice was death, and while she didn't fear death, it was hardly
worth preempting things. No.
She would reserve that option. Would keep it as her final bargaining
counter. Just in case DeVore proved difficult. And maybe she'd even
take him with her. If she could. Her
smile broadened, lost its hard edge. She turned, joining the line of
boarding passengers, holding out her pass to the tiny Han stewardess,
then moved down the aisle toward her seat. She
was about to sit when the steward touched her arm. "Forgive
me, Fu Jen, but have you a reserved ticket for that seat?" She
turned, straightening up, then held out her ticket for inspection,
looking the man up and down as she did so. He was a squat,
broad-shouldered Han with one of those hard, anonymous faces some of
them had. She knew what he was at once—one of those minor
officials who gloried in pettiness. He
made a great pretense of studying her ticket, turning it over, then
turning it back. His eyes flicked up to her face, then took in her
clothes, her lack of jewelry, before returning to her face again, the
disdain in them barely masked. He shook his head. "If
you would follow me, Fu Jen . . ." He
turned, making his way back down the aisle toward the cramped third-
and fourth-class seats at the tail of the rocket, but she stood where
she was, her stomach tightening, anticipating the tussle to come. Realizing
that she wasn't following him, he came back, his whole manner
suddenly quite brutally antagonistic. "You
must come, Fu Jen. These seats are reserved for others." She
shook her head. "1 have a ticket." He
tucked the ticket down into the top pocket of his official tunic.
"Forgive me, Fu Jen, but there has been a mistake. As I said,
these seats are reserved. Paid for in advance." The
emphasis on the last few words gave his game away. For a moment she
had thought that this might be DeVore's final little game with her,
but now she knew. The steward was out to extract some squeeze from
her. To get her to pay for what was already rightfully hers. She
glared at him, despising him, then turned and sat. If he just so much
as tried to make her budge . . . He
leaned over her, angry now. "Fu Jen! You must move! Now! At
once! Or I will call the captain!" She
was about to answer him when a hand appeared on the steward's
shoulder and drew him back sharply. It was
a big man. A Hung Moo. He pushed the Han steward back
unceremoniously, a scathing look of contempt on his face. "Have
you left your senses, man? The lady has paid for her seat. Now give
her her ticket back and leave her alone, or I'll report you to the
port authorities—understand me, Hsiao jen?" The
steward opened his mouth, then closed it again, seeing the Security
warrant card the man was holding out. Lowering his eyes, he took the
ticket from his pocket and handed it across. "Good!"
The man handed it to her with a smile, then turned back, shaking his
head. "Now get lost, you little fucker. If I so much as see you
in this section during the flight. . ." The
Han swallowed and backed away hurriedly. The
man turned back, looking at her. "I'm sorry about that. They
always try it on a single woman traveling alone. Your kind is usually
good for fifty yuan at least." She
looked at her ticket, a small shudder of indignation passing through
her, then looked back at him, smiling. "Thank you. I appreciate
your help, but I would have been all right." He
nodded. "Maybe. But a mutual friend asked me to look after you." "Ah
. . ." She narrowed her eyes, then tilted her head slightly,
indicating the warrant card he still held in one hand. "And
that's real?" He
laughed. "Of course. Look, can I sit for a moment? There are one
or two things we need to sort out." She
hesitated, then gave a small nod. No strings, eh? But it was just as
she'd expected. She had known all along that DeVore would have some
reason for helping her out. "What
is it?" she asked, turning in her seat to study him as he sat
down beside her. "These
..." He handed her a wallet and a set of cards. The cards were
in the name of Rachel DeValerian; the wallet contained a set of
references for Mary Jennings, including the documentation for a
degree in economics and a letter of introduction to Michael Lever,
the director of a company called MemSys. A letter dated two days from
then. She
looked up at him. "I don't understand." He
smiled. "You'll need a job over there. Well, the Levers will
have a vacancy for an economist on their personal staff. As of
tomorrow." How
do you know? she was going to ask, but his smile was answer
enough. If DeVore said there was going to be a vacancy, there would
be a vacancy. But why the Levers? And what about the other identity? "What's
this?" she asked, holding out the De Valerian cards. He
shrugged. "I'm only the messenger. Our friend said you would
know what to do with them." "I
see." She studied them a moment, then put them away. Then DeVore
meant her to set up her own movement. To recruit. She smiled and
looked up again. "What else?" He
returned her smile, briefly covering her left hand with his right.
"Nothing. But I'll be back in a second if you need me. Enjoy the
flight." He stood. "Okay. See you in Boston." "Boston?
I thought we were going to New York." He
shook his head, then leaned forward. "Hadn't you heard? New York
is closed. Wu Shih is holding an emergency meeting of the Seven and
there's a two-hundred U exclusion zone about Manhattan." She
frowned. "I didn't know. What's up?" He
laughed, then leaned forward and touched his finger to the panel on
the back of the seat in front of her. At once the screen lit up,
showing a scene of devastation. "There!"
he said. "That's what's up." THE
TWO MEN sat on the high wall of the dyke as the dawn came, looking
out across the flat expanse of blackened fields, watching the figures
move almost somnolently in the darkness below. The tart smell of
burned crops seemed to taint every breath they took, despite the
filters both wore. They were dressed in the uniform of reserve-corps
volunteers; and though only one of the two wore it legitimately, it
would have been hard to tell which. Great
palls of smoke lifted above the distant horizon, turning the dawn's
light ochre, while, two li out, a convoy of transporters sped
westward, heading back toward the safety of the City. DeVore
smiled and sat back. He took a pack of mint drops from his top pocket
and offered one to his companion. Mach looked at the packet a moment,
then took one. For a while both men were quiet, contemplating the
scene, then Mach spoke. "What
now?" DeVore
met Mach's eyes. "Now we melt away. Like ghosts." Mach
smiled. "And then?" . "Then
nothing. Not for a long time. You go underground. Recruit. Build your
movement up again. I'll provide whatever financing you need. But you
must do nothing. Not until we're ready." "And
the Seven?" DeVore
looked down. "The Seven will look to strengthen their defenses.
But they will have to spread themselves thin. Too thin, perhaps.
Besides, they've got their own problems. There's a split in Council." Mach
stared at the other man a moment, wide-eyed, wondering, as he had so
often lately, how DeVore came to know so much. And why it was that
such a man should want to fight against the Seven. "Why
do you hate them so much?" he asked. DeVore
looked back at him. "Why do you?" "Because
the world they've made is a prison. For everyone. But especially for
those lower down." "And
you care about that?" Mach
nodded. "Out here . . . this is real, don't you think? But that
inside . . ." He
shuddered and looked away, his eyes going off to the horizon. "Well,
it's never made sense to me, why human beings should have to live
like that. Penned in like meat-animals. Hemmed in by rules. Sorted by
money into their levels. I always hated it. Even when I was a child
of five or six. And I used to feel so impotent about it." "But
not now?" "No.
Not now. Now I've got a direction for my anger." They
were silent again, then Mach turned his head, looking at DeVore.
"What of Ascher?" DeVore
shook his head. "She's vanished. I thought we had her, but she
slipped through our fingers. She's good, you know." Mach
smiled. "Yes. She was always the best of us. Even Gesell
realized that. But she was inflexible. She was always letting her
idealism get in the way of practicalities. It was inevitable that
she'd break with us." "So
what will you do?" "Do?
Nothing. Oh, I'll cover my back, don't worry. But if I know our
Emily, she'll have found some way of getting out of City Europe. She
was always talking of setting up somewhere else—of spreading
our influence. She's a good organizer. I'd wager good money we'll
hear from her again." DeVore
smiled, thinking of her—at that very moment—on the jet to
America, and of her left index finger, frozen in its medical case,
heading out for Mars. "Yes," he said. "We shall. I'm
sure we shall." THEY
STOOD on the high stone balcony, the seven great Lords of Chung Kuo,
the sky a perfect blue overhead, the early morning sunlight
glistening from the imperial yellow of their silks. Below them the
great garden stretched away, flanked by the two great rivers, the
whole enclosed within a single, unbroken wall, its lakes and pagodas,
its tiny woods and flower beds, its bridges and shaded walkways a
pleasure to behold. A curl of red-stone steps, shaped like a dragon's
tail, led down. Slowly, their talk a low murmur barely discernible
above the call of the caged birds in the trees, they made their way
down, Wu Shih, their host, leading the way. At the
foot of the steps he turned, looking back. Beyond the gathered T'ang
his palace sat atop its artificial mound, firmly embedded, as if it
had always been there, its pure white walls topped with steep roofs
of red tile, the whole great structure capped by a slender six-story
pagoda that stood out, silhouetted against the sky. He nodded,
satisfied, then put out his arm, inviting his cousins into his
garden. There
was the soft tinkling of pagoda bells in the wind, the scent of
jasmine and forsythia, of gardenia and chrysanthemum, wafting to them
through the great moon-door in the wall. They stepped through, into
another world—a world of ancient delights, of strict order made
to seem like casual occurrence, of a thousand shades of green
contrasted against the gray of stone, the white of walls, the red of
tile. It was, though Wu Shih himself made no such claim, the greatest
garden in Chung Kuo—the Garden of Supreme Excellence—formed
of a dozen separate gardens, each modeled on a famous original. Their
business was done, agreement reached as to the way ahead. Now it was
time to relax, to unburden themselves, and where better than here
where symmetry and disorder, artistry and chance, met in such perfect
balance? Wu
Shih looked about him, immensely pleased. The garden had been built
by his great-great-grandfather, but like his father and his father's
father, he had made his own small changes to the original scheme,
extending the garden to the north so that it now filled the whole of
the ancient island of Manhattan. "It
is a beautiful garden, Cousin," Wang Sau-leyan said, turning to
him and smiling pleasantly. "There are few pleasures as sweet in
life as that derived from a harmoniously created garden." Wu
Shih smiled, surprised for the second time that morning by Wang
Sau-leyan. It was as if he were a changed man, all rudeness, all
abrasiveness, gone from his manner. Earlier, in Council, he had gone
out of his way to assure Li Shai Tung of his support, even preempting
Wei Feng's offer of help by giving Li Shai Tung a substantial amount
of grain from his own reserves. The generosity of the offer had
surprised them all and had prompted a whole spate of spontaneous
offers. The session had ended with the seven of them grinning
broadly, their earlier mood of despondency cast aside, their sense of
unity rebuilt. They were Seven again. Seven. Wu
Shih reached out and touched the young T'ang's arm. "If there is
heaven on earth it is here, in the garden." Wang
Sau-leyan gave the slightest bow of his head, as if in deference to
Wu Shih's greater age and experience. Again Wu Shih found himself
pleased by the gesture. Perhaps they had been mistaken about Wang
Sau-leyan. Perhaps it was only youth and the shock of his father's
murder, his brother's suicide, that had made him so. That and the
uncertainty of things. Wang
Sau-leyan turned, indicating the ancient, rusted sign bolted high up
on the trunk of a nearby juniper. "Tell
me, Wu Shih. What is the meaning of that sign? All else here is Han.
But that. . ." "That?"
Wu Shih laughed softly, drawing the attention of the other T'ang.
"That is a joke of my great-great-grandfather's, Cousin Wang.
You see, before he built this garden, part of the greatest city of
the Americans sat upon this site. It was from here that they
effectively ran their great Republic of sixty-nine states. And here,
where we are walking right now, was the very heart of their financial
empire. The story goes that my great-great-grandfather came to see
with his own eyes the destruction of their great city and that seeing
the sign, he smiled, appreciating the play on words. After all, what
is more Han than a wall? Hence he ordered the sign kept. And so this
path is know, even now, by its original name. Wall Street." The
watching T'ang smiled, appreciating the story. "We
would do well to learn from them," Wei Feng said, reaching up to
pick a leaf from the branch. He put it to his mouth and tasted it,
then looked back at Wang Sau-leyan, his ancient face creased into a
smile. "They tried too hard. Their ambition always exceeded
their grasp. Like their ridiculous scheme to colonize the stars." Again
Wang Sau-leyan gave the slightest bow. "I agree, Cousin. And yet
we still use the craft they designed and built. Like much else they
made." "True,"
Wei Feng answered him. "I did not say that all they did was bad.
Yet they had no sense of Tightness. Of balance. What they did, they
did carelessly, without thought. In that respect we would do well not
to be like them. It was thoughtlessness that brought their Empire
low." "And
arrogance," added Wu Shih, looking about him. "But come.
Let us move on. I have arranged for ch'a to be served in the
pavilion beside the lake. There will be entertainments too." There
were smiles at that. It had been some time since they had had the
chance for such indulgences. Wu Shih turned, leading them along the
long, the covered walkway, then up a twist of wooden steps and
out onto a broad gallery above a concealed lake. A low
wooden balustrade was raised on pillars above a tangle of sculpted
rock, forming a square about the circle of the lake, the wood painted
bright red, the pictogram for immortality cut into it in a repeated
pattern. The broad, richly green leaves of lotus choked the water,
while in a thatched ting on the far side of the lake, a group of
musicians began to play, the ancient sound drifting across to where
the Seven sat. Li
Shai Tung sat back in his chair, looking about him at his fellow
T'ang. For the first time in months the cloud had lifted from his
spirits, the tightness in his stomach vanished. And he was not alone,
he could see that now. They all seemed brighter, refreshed and
strengthened by the morning's events. So it was. So it had to be. He
had not realized how important it was before now; had not understood
how much their strength depended on their being of a single mind. And
now that Wang Sau-leyan had come to his senses they would be strong
again. It was only a matter of will. He
looked across at the young T'ang of Africa, and smiled. "I am
grateful for your support, Cousin Wang. If there is something I might
do for you in return?" Wang
Sau-leyan smiled and looked about him, his broad face momentarily the
image of his father's when he was younger; then he looked down. It
was a gesture of considerable modesty. "In the present
circumstances it is enough that we help each other, neh?" He
looked up, meeting Li Shai Tung's eyes. "I am a proud man, Li
Shai Tung, but not too proud to admit it when I have been wrong—and
I was wrong about the threat from the Ping Tiao. If my offer
helps make amends I am satisfied." Li
Shai Tung looked about him, a smile of intense satisfaction lighting
his face. He turned back to the young T'ang, nodding. "Your kind
words refresh me, Cousin Wang. There is great wisdom in knowing when
one is wrong. Indeed, I have heard it called the first step on the
path to true benevolence." Wang
Sau'leyan lowered his head but said nothing. For a while they were
quiet, listening to the ancient music. Servants moved among them,
serving ch'a and sweetmeats, their pale-green silks blending
with the colors of the garden. "Beautiful,"
said Tsu Ma, when it had finished. There was a strange wistfulness to
his expression. "It is some time since I heard that last piece
played so well." "Indeed—"
began Wu Shih, then stopped, turning as his Chancellor appeared at
the far end of the gallery. "Come, Fen," he said, signaling
him to come closer. "What is it?" Fen
Cho-hsien stopped some paces from his T'ang, bowing to each of the
other T'ang in turn before facing his master again and bowing low. "I
would not have bothered you, Chieh Hsia, but an urgent message
has just arrived. It seems that Lord Li's General has been taken
ill." Li
Shai Tung leaned forward anxiously. "Nocenzi, ill? What in the
gods' names is wrong with him?" Fen
turned, facing Li Shai Tung, lowering his eyes. "Forgive me,
Chieh Hsia, but no one seems to know. It seems, however, that he is
extremely ill. And not just him, but his wife and children too.
Indeed, if the report is accurate, his wife is already dead, and two
of his children." Li
Shai Tung looked down, groaning softly. Gods, was there no end to
this? He looked up again, tears in his eyes, the tightness returned
to his stomach. "You
will forgive me, cousins, if I return at once?" There
was a murmur of sympathy. All eyes were on the old T'ang, noting his
sudden frailty, the way his shoulders hunched forward at this latest
calamity. But it was Wang Sau-leyan who rose and helped him from his
chair, who walked with him, his arm about his shoulder, to the steps. Li
Shai Tung turned, looking up into the young T'ang's face, holding his
arm briefly, gratefully. "Thank you, Sau-leyan. You are your
father's son." Then he turned back, going down the twist of
steps, letting Wu Shih's Chancellor lead him, head bowed, back down
Wall Street to the dragon steps and his waiting craft. KIM
woke and lay there in the darkness, strangely alert, listening. For a
moment he didn't understand. There was nothing. Nothing at all. Then
he shivered. Of course. . . that was it. The silence was too perfect.
There was always some noise or other from the corridors outside, but
just now there was nothing. He sat
up, then threw back the sheet. For a moment he paused, stretching,
working the last traces of the drug from his limbs, then crouched,
listening again. Nothing. He
crossed the room and stood by the door, his mind running through
possibilities. Maybe they had moved him. Or maybe they had closed
down the Project and abandoned him. Left him to his fate. But he was
not satisfied with either explanation. He reached out, trying the
lock. The
door hissed back. Outside, the corridor was dark, empty. Only at the
far end was there a light. On the wall outside the guard room. He
shivered, the hairs on his neck and back rising. The overhead cameras
were dead, the red wink of their operational lights switched off. And
at the far end of the corridor, beyond the wall-mounted lamp, the
door to the Project was open, the barrier up. Something
was wrong. He
stood there a moment, not certain what to do, then let instinct take
over. Turning to his left, he ran, making for T'ai Cho's room and the
labs beyond, hoping it wasn't too late. T'ai
Cho's room was empty. Kim turned, tensing, hearing the soft murmur of
voices further along the corridor, then relaxed. They were voices he
knew. He hurried toward them, then slowed. The door to the labs was
wide open, as if it had been jammed. That, too, was wrong. It was
supposed to be closed when not in use, on a time-lock. He
twirled about, looking back down the dimly lit corridor. The few wall
lights that were working were backups. Emergency lighting only. The
main power system must have gone down. But was that an accident? Or
had it been done deliberately? He stepped inside, cautious now,
glancing across to his right where Spatz's office was. He could see
the Director through the open doorway, cursing, pounding the keyboard
on his desk computer, trying to get some response from it. As he
watched, Spatz tried the emergency phone, then threw the handset down
angrily. Then
maybe it had just happened. Maybe the shutdown had been what had
wakened him. He
ducked low and scuttled across the open space between the door and
the first row of desks, hoping Spatz wouldn't catch a glimpse of him,
then ran along the corridor between the desks until he came to the
end. The main labs were to the left, the voices louder now. He could
hear T'ai Cho's among them. He
hesitated, turning his head, staring back the way he'd come, but the
corridor was empty. He went on, coming out into the labs. They
were seated on the far side, some in chairs, some leaning on the
desk. All of them were there except Hammond. They looked around as he
entered, their talk faltering. "Kim!"
T'ai Cho said, getting up. Kim
put up his hand, as if to fend off his friend. "You've got to
get out! Now! Something's wrong!" Ellis,
the Director's Assistant, smiled and shook his head. "It's all
right, Kim. It's only a power failure. Spatz has gone to sort things
out." Kim
looked about him. A few of them were vaguely uneasy, but nothing
more. It was clear they agreed with Ellis. "No!"
he said, trying to keep the panic from his voice. "It's more
than that. The guards have gone and all the doors are jammed open.
Can't you see what that means? We've got to get out! Something's
going to happen!" Ellis
stood up. "Are you sure? The guards really aren't there?" Kim
nodded urgently. He could feel the tension like a coil in him; could
feel responses waking in him that he hadn't felt since—well,
since they'd tried to reconstruct him. He could feel his heart
hammering in his chest, his blood coursing like a dark, hot tide in
his veins. And above all he could feel all his senses heightened by
the danger they were in. It was as if he could hear and see, smell
and taste better than before. He
lunged forward, grabbing at T'ai Cho's arm, dragging him back. T'ai
Cho began resisting, but Kim held on tenaciously. "Come on!"
he begged. "Before they come!" "What
in the gods' names are you talking of, Kim?" "Come
on!" he pleaded. "You've got to come! All of you!" He
could see how his words had changed them. They were looking to each
other now anxiously. "Come
on!" Ellis said. "Kim could be right!" They
made for the outer offices, but it was too late. As Kim tugged T'ai
Cho around the corner he could see them coming down the corridor, not
forty ch'i away. There were four of them, dressed in black,
suited up and masked, huge lantern guns cradled against their chests.
Seeing the tall figure of T'ai Cho, the first of them raised his gun
and fired. Kim
pulled T'ai Cho down, then scrambled back, feeling the convected
warmth of the gun's discharge in the air, accompanied by a sharp,
sweet scent that might almost have been pleasant had it not signaled
something so deadly. "Get
back!" he yelled to the others behind him, but even as he said
it he understood. They were trapped here. Like the GenSyn apes they
had been experimenting on. Unarmed and with no means of escape. "Dead
. . ." he said softly to himself. Dead. As if they'd never
been. the
assassin backed away, shuddering, glad that his mask filtered out the
stench of burned flesh that filled the room. He felt a small shiver
ripple down his back. He hadn't expected them to act as they had.
Hadn't believed that they would just get down on their knees and die,
heads bowed. But
maybe that was what made them different from him. Made them watchers,
not doers; passive, not active. Even so, the way they had just
accepted their deaths made him feel odd. It wasn't that he felt pity
for them; far from it—their passivity revolted him. Himself, he
would have died fighting for his life, clawing and scratching his way
out of existence. But it was the way they made him feel. As if they'd
robbed him of something. He
turned away. The others had gone already, to fetch the boy and plant
the explosives. Time then to get out. He took a couple of paces, then
stopped, twisting around. Nerves,
he thought. It's only nerves. It's only one of the apes, scuttling
about in its cage. Even so, he went back, making sure, remembering
what DeVore had said about talking pains. He
stopped, his right boot almost touching the leg of one of the dead
men, and looked about him, frowning. The four apes lay on the floor
of their cages, drugged. "Funny. . ." he began. Then,
without warning, his legs were grabbed from behind, throwing him
forward onto the pile of bodies He turned, gasping, his gun gone from
him. The creature was on him in an instant, something hard smashing
down into his face, breaking his nose. He groaned, the hot pain of
the blow flooding his senses, stunning him. He put his hands up to
his face, astonished. "What the hell?" This time the blow
came to the side of his head, just beside his left eye. "Kuan
Yin!" He screeched, pulling his head back sharply, coughing as
the blood began to fill his mouth. He reached out wildly, trying to
grasp the creature, but it had moved away. He sat forward, squinting
through a blood haze at what looked no more than a child. But not
just a child. This was like something out of nightmare. It stood
there, hunched and spindly, the weight held threateningly in one tiny
hand, its big, dark, staring eyes fixed murderously on him, its mouth
set in a snarl of deadly intent. "Gods
. . ." He whispered, feeling himself go cold. Was this what they
were making here? These . . . things? But
even as the thought came to him, the creature gave an unearthly yell
and leaped on him—leaped high, like something demented—and
brought the weight down hard, robbing him of breath. li
shai tung turned, angered by what he had seen, and confronted the
Chief Surgeon. "What
in the gods' names did this to him, Chang Li?" Chang
Li fell to his knees, his head bent low. "Forgive me, Chieh
Hsia, but the cause of the General's affliction is not yet known.
We are carrying out an autopsy on his wife and children, but as yet—" "The
children?" Li Shai Tung took a long breath, calming himself. His
eyes were red, his cheeks wet with tears. His right hand gripped at
his left shoulder almost convulsively, then let it go, flinging
itself outward in a gesture of despair. "Will
he live?" Again
the Chief Surgeon lowered his head. "It is too early to say,
Chieh Hsia. Whatever it was, it was strong enough to kill his
wife and two of his children within the hour. Nocenzi and his other
daughter—well—they're both very ill." "And
you've definitely ruled out some kind of poison in the food?" Chang
Li nodded. "That is so, Chieh Hsia. It seems the Nocenzis were
eating with friends when they were stricken—sharing from the
same serving bowls, the same rice pot. And yet the three who ate with
them are totally unharmed." Li
Shai Tung shuddered, then beckoned the man to get up. "Thank
you, Chang Li. But let me know, eh? As soon as anything is known. And
do not tell the General yet of the loss of his wife or children. Let
him grow stronger before you break the news. I would not have him
survive this only to die of a broken heart." Chang
Li bowed his head. "It shall be as you say, Chieh Hsia." "Good."
He turned away, making his way across to the great hallway of the
hospital, his guards and retainers at a respectful distance. Nocenzi
had been conscious when he'd seen him. Even so, he had looked like a
ghost of his former self, all his ch'i, his vital energy, drained
from him. His voice had been as faint as the whisper of a breeze
against silk. "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia," he had said, "but you will need a new
General now." He had
taken Nocenzi's hand, denying him, but Nocenzi had insisted,
squeezing his hand weakly, not releasing it until the T'ang accepted
his resignation. He
stopped, remembering the moment, then leaned forward slightly, a mild
wash of pain in his arms and lower abdomen making him feel giddy. It
passed and he straightened up, but a moment later it returned,
stronger, burning like a coal in his guts. He groaned and stumbled
forward, almost falling against the tiled floor, but one of his
courtiers caught him just in time. "Chieh
Hsia!" There
was a strong babble of concerned voices, a thicket of hands reaching
out to steady him, but Li Shai Tung was conscious only of the way his
skin stung as if it were stretched too tightly over his bones, how
his eyes smarted as if hot water had been thrown into them. He took a
shuddering breath, then felt the pain spear through him again. Gods!
What was this? Doctors
were hurrying to him now, lifting him with careful, expert hands,
speaking soothingly as they helped support him and half-carry him
back toward the wards. The
pain was ebbing now, the strength returning to his limbs. "Wait.
. ." he said softly. Then, when they seemed not to hear him, he
repeated it, stronger this time, commanding them. "Hold there!" At
once they moved back, releasing him, but stayed close enough to catch
him if he fell. Chang Li was there now. He had hurried back when he
had heard, "Chieh Hsia . . . what is it?" Li
Shai Tung straightened, taking a breath. The pain had left him
feeling a little lightheaded, but otherwise he seemed all right. "I'm
fine now," he said. "It was but a momentary cramp, that's
all. My stomach. Hasty eating and my anxiety for the General's
welfare, I'm sure." He saw
how Chang Li looked at him, uncertain how to act, and he almost
laughed. "If
it worries you so much, Surgeon Chang, you might send two of your
best men to accompany me on the journey home. But I must get back.
There is much to be done. I must see my son and speak to him. And I
have a new General to appoint." He
smiled, looking about him, seeing his smile mirrored uncertainly in
thirty faces. "I, above all others, cannot afford to be ill.
Where would Chung Kuo be if we who ruled were always being sick?" There
was laughter, but it lacked the heartiness, the sincerity of the
laughter he was accustomed to from those surrounding him. He could
hear the fear in their voices and understood its origin. And, in some
small way, was reassured by it. It was when the laughter ceased
altogether that one had to worry. When fear gave way to relief and a
different kind of laughter. He
looked about him, his head lifted, his heart suddenly warmed by their
concern for him, then turned and began making his way back to the
imperial craft. yin
TSU welcomed the Prince and brought him ch'a. "You
know why I've come?" Li Yuan asked, trying to conceal the pain
he felt. Yin
Tsu bowed his head, his ancient face deeply lined. "I know, Li
Yuan. And I am sorry that this day has come. My house is greatly
saddened." Li
Yuan nodded uncomfortably. The last thing he had wished for was to
hurt the old man, but it could not be helped. Even so, this was a
bitter business. Twice Yin Tsu had thought to link his line with
kings, and twice he had been denied that honor. "You
will not lose by this, Yin Tsu," he said softly, his heart going
out to the old man. "Your sons ..." But it
was only half true. After all, what could he give Yin's sons to
balance the scale? Nothing. Or as good as. Yin
Tsu bowed lower. "Can
I see her, Father?" It was
the last time he would call him that and he could see the pain it
brought to the old man's face. This was not my doing, he
thought, watching Yin Tsu straighten up then go to bring her. He was
back almost at once, leading his daughter. Fei
Yen sat across from him, her head bowed, waiting. She was more than
eight months pregnant now, so this had to be dealt with at once. The
child might come any day. Even so, he was determined to be gentle
with her. "How
are you?" he asked tenderly, concerned for her in spite of all
that had happened between them. "I
am well, my Lord," she answered, subdued, unable to look at him.
She knew how things stood. Knew why he had come. "Fei
Yen, this is—painful for me. But you knew when we wed that I
was not as other men—that my life, my choices, were not those
of normal men." He sighed deeply, finding it hard to say what he
must. He raised his chin, looking at Yin Tsu, who nodded, his face
held rigid in a grimace of pain. "My Family—I must ensure
my line. Make certain." These
were evasions. He had yet to say it direct. He took another breath
and spoke. "You
say it is not my child. But I must be sure of that. There must be
tests. And then, if it is so, we must be divorced. For no claim can
be permitted if the child is not mine. You must be clear on that, Fei
Yen." Again
Yin Tsu nodded. Beside him his daughter was still, silent. He
looked away, momentarily overcome by the strength of what he still
felt for her, then forced himself to be insistent. "Will
you do as I say, Fei Yen?" She
looked up at him. Her eyes were wet with tears. Dark, almond eyes
that pierced him with their beauty. "I will do whatever you
wish, my Lord." He
stared at her, wanting to cross the space between them and kiss away
her tears, to forgive her everything and start again. Even now. Even
after all she had done to him. But she had left him no alternative.
This thing could not be changed. In this he could not trust to what
he felt, for feeling had failed him. His father was right. What good
was feeling when the world was dark and hostile? Besides, his son
must be his son. "Then
it shall be done," he said bluntly, almost angrily. "Tomorrow." He
stood, then walked across the room, touching the old man's arm
briefly, sympathetically. "And we shall speak again tomorrow,
Yin Tsu. When things are better known." the
old han squatted at the entrance to the corridor, waiting patiently,
knowing the dream had been a true dream, one of those he could not
afford to ignore. Beside him, against the wall, he had placed those
things he had seen himself use in the dream—a blanket and his
old porcelain water bottle. This
level was almost deserted. The great clothing factory that took up
most of it had shut down its operations more than four hours ago and
only a handful of Security guards and maintenance engineers were to
be found down here now. The old man smiled, recalling how he had
slipped past the guards like a shadow. His
name was Tuan Ti Fo, and though he squatted like a young man, his
muscles uncomplaining under him, he was as old as the great City
itself. This knowledge he kept to himself, for to others he was
simply Old Tuan, his age, like his origins, undefined. He lived
simply, some would say frugally, in his rooms eight levels up from
where he now waited. And though many knew him, few could claim to be
close to the peaceful, white-haired old man. He kept himself very
much to himself, studying the ancient books he kept in the box beside
his bed, doing his exercises, or playing himself at wei chi—long
games that could take a day, sometimes even a week to complete. The
corridor he was facing was less than twenty ch'i long, a
narrow, dimly lit affair that was little more than a feeder tunnel to
the maintenance hatch in the ceiling at its far end. Tuan Ti Fo
watched, knowing what would happen, his ancient eyes half-lidded, his
breathing unaltered as the hatch juddered once, twice, then dropped,
swinging violently on the hinge. A moment later a foot appeared—
a child's foot—followed by a leg, a steadying hand. He watched
the boy emerge, legs first; then drop. Tuan
Ti Fo lifted himself slightly, staring into the dimness. For a time
the boy lay where he had fallen; then he rolled over onto his side, a
small whimper—of pain, perhaps, or fear—carrying to where
the old Han crouched. In the
dream this was the moment when he had acted. And so now. Nodding
gently to himself, he reached beside him for the blanket. Tuan
Ti Fo moved silently, effortlessly through the darkness. For a moment
he knelt beside the boy, looking down at him; again, as in the dream,
the reality of it no clearer than the vision he had had. He smiled,
and unfolding the blanket, began to wrap the sleeping boy in it. The
boy murmured softly as he lifted him, then began to struggle. Tuan Ti
Fo waited, his arms cradling the boy firmly yet reassuringly against
his chest until he calmed. Only then did he carry him back to the
entrance. Tuan
Ti Fo crouched down, the boy balanced in his lap, the small, dark,
tousled head resting against his chest, and reached out for the water
bottle. He drew the hinged stopper back and put the mouth of the
bottle to the child's lips, wetting them. Waiting a moment, he placed
it to the boy's mouth again. This time the lips parted, taking in a
little of the water. It was
enough. The mild drug in the liquid would help calm him, make him
sleep until the shock of his ordeal had passed. Tuan
Ti Fo stoppered the bottle and fixed it to the small hook on his
belt, then straightened up. He had not really noticed before but the
boy weighed almost nothing in his arms. He looked down at the child,
surprised, as if the boy would vanish at any moment, leaving him
holding nothing. "You're
a strange one," he said softly, moving outside the dream a
moment. "It's many years since the gods sent me one to tend." So it
was. Many, many years. And why this one? Maybe it had something to do
with the other dreams—the dreams of dead, dark lands and of
huge brilliant webs, stretched out like stringed beads, burning in
the darkness of the sky. Dreams of wells and spires and falling
Cities. Dreams filled with suffering and strangeness. And
what was the boys role in all of that? Why had the gods chosen him
to do their work? Tuan
Ti Fo smiled, knowing it was not for him to ask, nor for them to
answer. Then, letting his actions be shaped once more by the dream,
he set off, carrying the boy back down the broad main corridor toward
the guard post and the lift beyond. THE
DOCTORS were gone, his ministers and advisors dismissed. Now, at
last, the great T'ang was alone. Li
Shai Tung stood there a moment, his arm outstretched, one hand
resting against the door frame as he got his breath. The upright
against which he rested stretched up like a great squared pillar into
the ceiling high overhead, white-painted, the simplicity of its
design emphasized by the seven pictograms carved into the wood and
picked out in gold leaf—the characters forming couplets with
those on the matching upright. Servants had opened the two huge
white-lacquered doors earlier; now he stood looking into the Hall of
Eternal Peace and Tranquility. To one side, just in view, stood a
magnificent funerary couch, the gray stone of its side engraved with
images of gardens and pavilions in which ancient scholars sat
enthroned while the women of the household wove and prepared food,
sang or played the ancient p'i p'a. Facing it was a broad,
red-lacquered screen, the Ywe Lung—the circle of
dragons, symbolizing the power and authority of the Seven— set
like a huge golden mandala in its center. He
sighed heavily, then went inside, leaving the great doors ajar, too
tired to turn and pull them closed behind him. It was true what they
had said: he ought to get to bed and rest; ought to take a break from
his duties for a day or so and let Li Yuan take up his burden as
Regent. But it was not easy to break the habits of a lifetime.
Besides, there was something he had to do before he rested. Something
he had put off far too long. He
crossed the room and slowly lowered himself to his knees before the
great tablet, conscious of how the gold leaf of the Ywe Lung
seemed to flow in the wavering light of the candles, how the red
lacquer of the background seemed to hum. He had never noticed that
before. Nor had he noticed how the smoke from the perfumed candles
seemed to form words—Han pictograms—in the still, dry
air. Chance, meaningless words, like the throw of yarrow stalks or
the pattern on a fire-charred tortoise shell. He
shivered. It was cold, silent in the room, the scent of the candles
reminding him of the tomb beneath the earth at Tongjiang. Or was it
just the silence, the wavering light? He
swallowed dryly. The ache in his bones was worse than before. He felt
drawn, close to exhaustion, his skin stretched tight, like parchment,
over his brittle bones. It would be good to rest. Good to lie there,
thoughtless, in the darkness. Yes . . . but he would do this one last
thing before he slept. Reaching
out, he took two of the scented sticks from the porcelain jar in
front of him and held them in the thread of laser light until they
ignited. Then, bowing respectfully, he set them in the jar in front
of the tiny image of his great-greatgrandfather. At once the image
seemed to swell, losing a degree of substance as it gained in size. The
life-size image of the old man seemed to look down at Li Shai Tung,
its dark eyes magnificent, its whole form filled with power. His
great-great-grandfather, Li Hang Ch'i, had been a tall, immensely
dignified man. For posterity he had dressed himself in the imperial
style of one hundred and ten years earlier, a simpler, more brutal
style, without embellishment. One heavily bejeweled hand stroked his
long white, unbraided beard, while the other held a silver riding
crop that was meant to symbolize his love of horses. "What
is it, Shai Tung? Why do you summon me from the dead lands?" Li
Shai Tung felt a faint ripple of unease pass through him. "I...
I wished to ask you something, Honorable Grandfather." Li
Hang Ch'i made a small motion of his chin, lifting it slightly as if
considering his grandson's words; a gesture that Li Shai Tung
recognized immediately as his own. Even
in that we are not free, he thought. We but ape the actions
of our ancestors, unconsciously, slavishly. Those things we consider
most distinctly ours—that strange interplay of mind and
nerve and sinew that we term gesture—are formed a
hundred generations before their use in us. Again
he shivered, lowering his head, conscious of his own weariness, of
how far below his great-great-grandfather's exacting standards he had
fallen. At that moment he felt but a poor copy of Li Hang Ch'i. "Ask,"
the figure answered, "whatever you wish." Li
Shai Tung hesitated, then looked up. "Forgive me, most respected
Grandfather, but the question I would ask you is a difficult one. One
that has plagued me for some while. It is this. Are we good or evil
men?" The
hologram's face flickered momentarily, the program uncertain what
facial expression was called for by the question. Then it formed
itself into the semblance of a frown, the whole countenance becoming
stem, implacable. "What
a question, Shai Tung! You ask whether we are good or evil men. But
is that something one can ask? After all, how can one judge? By our
acts? So some might argue. Yet are our acts good or evil in
themselves? Surely only the gods can say that much." He shook
his head, staring down at his descendant as if disappointed in him.
"I cannot speak for the gods, but for myself I say this. We did
as we had to. How else could we have acted?" Li
Shai Tung took a long, shuddering breath. It was as if, for that
brief moment, his great-great-grandfather had been there, really
there, before him in the room. He had sensed his powerful presence
behind the smokescreen of the hologrammic image. Had felt the
overpowering certainty of the man behind the words, and again,
recognized the echo in himself. So he had once argued. So he had
answered his own son, that time when Yuan had come to him with his
dream—that awful nightmare he had had of the great mountain of
bones rilling the plain where the City had been. Back
then, he had sounded so certain—so sure of things—but
even then he had questioned it, at some deeper level. He had gone to
his room afterward and lain there until the dawn, unable to sleep,
Yuan's words burning brightly in his skull. Are we good or evil
men? But it
had begun before then, earlier that year, when he had visited Hal
Shepherd in the Domain. It was then that the seed of doubt had
entered him; then—in that long conversation with Hal's son,
Ben—that he had begun to question it all. He sat
back, studying the hologram a moment, conscious of how it waited for
him, displaying that unquestioning patience that distinguished the
mechanical from the human. It was almost solid. Almost. For through
the seemingly substantial chest of his great-great-grandfather he
could glimpse the hazed, refracted image of the Ywe Lung, the
great wheel of dragons broken by the planes of his ancestor's body. He
groaned softly and stretched, trying to ease the various pains he
felt. His knees ached and there was a growing warmth in his back. I
ought to be in bed, he thought, not worrying myself about such
things. But he could not help himself. Something urged him on. He
stared up into that ancient, implacable face and spoke again. "Was
there no other choice then, Grandfather? No other path we might have
taken? Were things as inevitable as they seem? Was it all written?" Li
Hang Ch'i shook his head, his face like the ancient, burnished ivory
of a statue, and raised the silver riding crop threateningly. "There
was no other choice." Li
Shai Tung shivered, his voice suddenly small. "Then we were
right to deny the Hung Mao their heritage?" "It
was that or see the world destroyed." Li
Shai Tung bowed his head. "Then. . ." He paused, seeing how
the eyes of the hologram were on him. Again it was as if something
stared through them from the other side. Something powerful and
menacing. Something that, by all reason, should not be there. "Then
what we did was right?" The
figure shifted slightly, relaxing, lowering the riding crop. "Make
no mistake, Shai Tung. We did as we had to. We cannot allow ourselves
the empty luxury of doubt." "Ah
. . ." Li Shai Tung stared back at the hologram a moment longer,
then, sighing, he plucked the scented sticks from the offering bowl
and threw them aside. At once the image shrank, diminishing to its
former size. He leaned back, a sharp sense of anger overwhelming him.
Anger at himself for the doubts that ate at him and at his ancestor
for giving him nothing more than a string of empty platitudes. We
did as we had to ... He shook his head, bitterly disappointed.
Was there to be no certainty for him, then? No clear answer to what
he had asked? No.
And maybe that was what had kept him from visiting this place these
last five years: the knowledge that he could no longer share their
unquestioning certainty. That and the awful, erosive consciousness of
his own inner emptiness. He shuddered. Sometimes it felt as if he had
less substance than the images in this room. As if, in the blink of
an eye, his being would turn to breath as the gods drew the scent
sticks from the offering bowl. He
rubbed at his eyes, then yawned, his tiredness returned to him like
ashes in the blood. It was late. Much too late. Not only that, but it
was suddenly quite hot in here. He felt flushed and there was a
prickling sensation in his legs and hands. He hauled his tired bones
upright, then stood there, swaying slightly, feeling breathless, a
sudden cold washing through his limbs, making him tremble. It's
nothing, he thought. Only my age. Yet for a moment he found his mind
clouding. Had he imagined it, or had Chung Hu-yan come to him only an
hour ago with news of another attack? He put
his hand up to his face, as if to clear the cobwebs from his
thoughts, then shrugged. No. An hour past he had been with his
Ministers. Even so, the image of Chung Hu-yan waking him with awful
news persisted, until he realized what it was. "Lin Yua . . ."
he said softly, his voice broken by the sudden pain he felt. "Lin
Yua, my little peach . . . Why did you have to die? Why did you have
to leave me all alone down here?" He
shivered, suddenly cold again, his teeth chattering. Yes, he would
send for Surgeon Hua. But later—in the morning—when he
could put up with the old boy's fussing. Sleep,
he heard a voice say, close by his ear. Skep now, Li Shai
Tung. The day is done. He
turned, his eyes resting momentarily upon the dim gray shape of the
funerary couch. Then, turning back, he made a final bow to the row of
tiny images. Like breath, he thought. Or flames, dancing in
a glass. IT WAS
DARK in the room. Li Yuan lay on his back in the huge bed, staring up
into the shadows; the woman beside him was sleeping, her leg
against his own warm and strangely comforting. It was
a moment of thoughtlessness, of utter repose. He lay there, aware of
the weight of his body pressing down into the softness of the bed, of
the rise and fall of his chest with each breath, the flow of his
blood. He felt at rest, the dark weight of tension lifted from him by
the woman. In the
darkness he reached out to touch the woman's flank, then lay back,
closing his eyes. For a
time he slept. Then, in the depths of sleep he heard the summons and
pulled himself up, hand over hand, back to the surface of
consciousness. Nan Ho
stood in the doorway, his eyes averted. Li Yuan rose, knowing it was
important, letting Master Nan wrap the cloak about his nakedness. He
took the call in his study, beneath the portrait of his grandfather,
Li Ch'ing, knowing at once what it was. The face of his father's
surgeon, Hua, filled the screen, the old man's features more
expressive than a thousand words. "He's
dead," Li Yuan said simply. "Yes,
Chieh Hsia," the old man answered, bowing his head. Chieh
Hsia ... He shivered. "How
did it happen?" "In
his sleep. There was no pain." Li
Yuan nodded, but something nagged at him. "Touch nothing,
Surgeon Hua. I want the room sealed until I get there. And Hua, tell
no one else. I must make calls first. Arrange things." "Chieh
Hsia." Li
Yuan sat there, looking up at the image of his father's father,
wondering why he felt so little. He closed his eyes, thinking of his
father as he'd last seen him. Of his strength, masked by the surface
frailness. For a
moment longer he sat there, trying to feel the sorrow he knew he owed
his father, but it was kept from him. It was not yet real.
Touch—touch alone—would make it real. Momentarily his
mind strayed and he thought of Fei Yen and the child in her belly. Of
Tsu Ma and of his dead brother, Han Ch'in. All of it confused,
sleep-muddled in his brain. Then it cleared and the old man's face
came into focus. "And
so it comes to me," he said quietly, as if to the painting. But
the burden of it, the reality of what he had become while he slept,
had not yet touched him. He thought of the calls he must make to tell
the other T'ang, but for the moment he felt no impulse toward action.
Time seemed suspended. He looked down at his hands, at the Prince's
ring of power, and frowned. Then, as a concession, he made the call
to summon the transporter. He
went back to his room, then out onto the verandah beyond. The woman
woke and came to him, naked, her soft warmth pressed against his back
in the cool, predawn air. He
turned to her, smiling sadly. "No. Go back inside." Alone
again, he turned and stared out across the shadowed lands of his
estate toward the distant mountains. The moon was a low, pale
crescent above one of the smaller peaks, far to his right. He stared
at it a while, feeling hollow, emptied of all feeling, then looked
away sharply, bitter with himself. Somehow
the moment had no meaning. It should have meant so much, but it was
empty. The moon, the mountains, the man—himself—standing
there in the darkness: none of it made sense to him. They were
fragments, broken pieces of some nonsense puzzle, adding up to
nothing. He turned away, his feeling of anguish at the nothingness of
it all overwhelming him. It wasn't death, it was life that frightened
him. The senselessness of life. He
stood there a long time, letting the feeling ebb. Then, when it was
gone, he returned to his study, preparing himself to make his calls. TOLONEN
STOOD in the center of the chaos, looking about him. The floor was
cluttered underfoot, the walls black with soot. A pile of dark
plastic sacks was piled up against the wall to one side. They were
all that remained of the men who had worked here on the Project. "There
were no survivors, Captain?" The
young officer stepped forward and bowed. "Only the tutor, sir.
We found him thirty levels down, bound and drugged." Tolonen
frowned. "And the others?" "Apart
from T'ai Cho there were eighteen men on the Project, excluding
guards. We've identified seventeen separate corpses. Add to that the
other one— Hammond—and it accounts for everyone." "I
see. And the records?" "All
gone, sir. The main files were destroyed in the explosion, but they
also managed to get to the backups and destroy them." Tolonen
stared at him, astonished. "All of them? Even those held by
Prince Yuan?" "It
appears so. Of course, the Prince himself has not yet been spoken to,
but his secretary, Chang Shih-sen, advises me that the copies he was
given on his last visit are gone." "Gone?"
Tblonen swallowed dryly. He was still too shocked to take it in. How
could it have happened? They had taken the strictest measures to
ensure that the Project remained not merely "invisible" in
terms of its security profile, but that in the unlikely event of
sabotage, there would be copies of everything. But somehow all their
endeavors had come to nothing. The assassins had walked in here as if
they owned the place and destroyed everything, erasing every last
trace of the Project. DeVore.
It had to be DeVore. But why? How in the gods' names could he
possibly benefit from this? "Let
me see the reports." The
officer turned away, returning a moment later with a clipboard to
which were attached the preliminary, hand-written reports. Tolonen
took them from him and flicked through quickly. "Very
good," he said finally, looking up. "You've been very
thorough, Captain. I ..." He
paused, looking past the Captain. His daughter, Jelka, was standing
in the doorway at the end of the corridor. "What
is it?" Jelka
smiled uncertainly at him, then came closer. "I wanted to see.
I..." Tolonen
looked back at her a moment, then shrugged. "All right. But it's
not very pleasant." He
watched her come into the room and look about her. Saw how she
approached the sacks and lifted one of the labels, then let it fall
from her hand with a slight shudder. Even so, he could see something
of himself in her, that same hardness in the face of adversity. But
there was more than that—it was almost as if she were looking
for something. "What
is it?" he said after a moment. She
turned, looking at him, focusing on the clipboard he still held. "Can
I see that?" "It's
nothing," he said. "Technical stuff mainly. Assessments of
explosive materials used. Post-mortem examinations of remains. That
kind of thing." "I
know," she said, coming closer. "Can I see it? Please,
Daddy." Out of
the corner of an eye he saw the Captain smile faintly. He had been
about to say no to her, but that decided him. After all, she was a
Marshal's daughter. He had taught her much over the years. Perhaps
she, in turn, could teach the young officer something. He
handed her the file, watching her flick through it quickly again, as
if she were looking for something specific. Then, astonishingly, she
looked up at him, a great beam of a smile on her face. "I
knew it!" she said. "I sensed it as soon as I came in. He's
alive! This proves it!" Tolonen
gave a short laugh, then glanced briefly at the Captain before taking
the clipboard back from his daughter and holding it open at the place
she indicated. "What in the gods' names are you talking about,
Jelka? Who? Who's alive?" "The
boy. Ward. He isn't there! Don't you see? Look at the Chief
Pathologist's report. All the corpses he examined were those of
adults—of fully grown men. But Kim wasn't more than a child.
Not physically. Which means that whoever the seventeenth victim was,
he wasn't on the Project." "And
Kim's alive." "Yes
. . ." He
stared back at her, realizing what it might mean. The boy had a
perfect memory. So good that it was almost impossible for him to
forget anything. Which meant... He
laughed, then grew still. Unless they'd taken him captive. Unless
whoever had done this had meant to destroy everything but him. But
then why had they taken the tutor T'ai Cho and afterward released
him? Or had that been a mistake.7 "Gods
. . ." he said softly. If DeVore had the boy, he also had the
only complete record of the Project's work—the basis of a
system that could directly control vast numbers of people. It was a
frightening thought. His worst nightmare come true. If DeVore
had him. He
turned, watching his daughter. She was looking about her, her eyes
taking in everything, just as he'd taught her. He followed her
through, the young Captain trailing them. "What
is it?" he said quietly, afraid to disturb her concentration.
"What are you looking for?" She
turned, looking back at him, the smile still there. "He got out.
I know he did." He
shivered, not wanting to know. But she had been right about the other
thing, so maybe she was right about this. They went through the ruins
of the outer office and into the dark, fire-blackened space beyond
where they had found most of the bodies. "There!"
she said, triumphantly, pointing halfway up the back wall. "There!
That's where he went." Tolonen
looked. Halfway up the wall there was a slightly darker square set
into the blackness. He moved closer, then realized what it was. A
ventilation shaft. "I
don't see how . . ." he began, but even as he said it he changed
his mind and nodded. Of course. The boy had been small enough, wiry
enough. And after all, he had come from the Clay. There was his past
record of violence to consider. If anyone could have survived this,
it was Kim. So maybe Jelka was right. Maybe he had got out
this way. Tolonen
turned, looking at the young officer. "Get one of your experts
in here now, Captain. I want him to investigate that vent for any
sign that someone might have used it to escape. "Sir!" He
stood there, Jelka cradled against him, his arm about her shoulders,
while they tested the narrow tunnel for clues. It was difficult,
because the vent was too small for a grown man to get into; but with
the use of extension arms and mechanicals they worked their way
slowly down the shaft. After
twenty minutes the squad leader turned and came across to Tolonen. He
bowed, then gave a small, apologetic shrug. "Forgive
me, Marshal, but it seems unlikely he got out this way. The vent is
badly charred. It sustained a lot of fire damage when the labs went
up. Besides that, it leads down through the main generator rooms
below. He would have been sliced to pieces by the fans down there." Tolonen
was inclined to agree. It was unlikely that the boy had got out, even
if DeVore hadn't taken him. But when he looked down and met his
daughter's eyes, the certainty there disturbed him. "Are
you sure?" "I'm
certain. Trust me, Father. I know he got out. I just know." Tolonen
sniffed, then looked back at the squad leader. "Go in another
five ch'i. If there's nothing there we'll call it off." They
waited, Tolonen's hopes fading by the moment. But then there was a
shout from one of the men controlling the remote. He looked up from
his screen and laughed. "She's right. Damn me if she isn't
right!" They
went across and looked. There, enhanced on the screen, was a set of
clear prints, hidden behind a fold in the tunnel wall and thus
untouched by the blast. "Well?"
said Tolonen, "Are they the boy's?" There
was a moment's hesitation, then the boy's prints were flashed up on
the screen, the computer superimposing them over the others. There
was no doubt. They were a perfect match. "Then
he's alive!" said Tolonen. He stared at his daughter, then shook
his head, not understanding. "Okay," he said, turning to
the Captain, "this is what we'll do. I want you to contact Major
Gregor Karr at Bremen Headquarters and get him here at once. And
then—" He
stopped, staring open-mouthed at the doorway. "Hans . . . what
are you doing here?" Hans
Ebert bowed, then came forward. His face was pale, his whole manner
unnaturally subdued. "IVe
got news," he said, swallowing. "Bad news, I'm afraid,
Uncle Knut. It's the T'ang. I'm afraid he's dead." HANS
EBERT paused on the terrace, looking out across the gardens at the
center of the Mansion where the Marshal's daughter stood, her back to
him. Jelka
was dressed in the southern Han fashion, a tight silk samfu of
a delicate eggshell-blue wrapped about her strong yet slender body.
Her hair had been plaited and coiled at the back of her head, but
there was no mistaking her for Han. She was too tall, too blond to be
anything but Hung Moo. And not simply Hung Moo, but Nordic. New
European. He
smiled, then made his way down the steps quietly, careful not to
disturb her reverie. She was standing just beyond the bridge, looking
down into the tiny stream, one hand raised to her neck, the other
holding her folded fan against her side. His
wife. Or soon to be. He was
still some distance from her when she turned, suddenly alert, her
whole body tensed as if prepared against attack. "It's
all right," he said, raising his empty hands in reassurance.
"It's only me." He saw
how she relaxed—or tried to, for there was still a part of her
that held out against him—and smiled inwardly. There was real
spirit in the girl, an almost masculine hardness that he admired. His
father had been right for once: she would make him the perfect match. "What
is it?" she asked, looking back at him as if forcing herself to
meet his eyes. Again he smiled. "I'm
sorry, Jelka, but I have to go. Things are in flux and the new T'ang
has asked for me. But please . . . our home is yours. Make yourself
comfortable. My mui tsai, Sweet Flute, will be here in a while
to look after you." She
stared back at him a moment, her lips slightly parted, then gave a
small bow of her head. "And my father?" "He
feels it best that you stay here for the moment. As I said, things
are in flux and there are rumors of rioting in the lower levels. If
it spreads ..." She
nodded, then turned away, looking across at the ancient pomegranate
trees, flicking her fan open as she did so. It was a strange, almost
nervous gesture and for a moment he wondered what it meant. Then,
bowing low, he turned to go. But he had gone only a few paces when
she called to him. "Hans?" He
turned, pleased that she had used his name. "Yes?" "Will
you be General now?" He
took a long breath and shrugged. "If the new T'ang wishes it.
Why?" She
made a small motion of her head, then looked down. "I... I just
wondered, that's all." "Ah
. . ." He stood there a moment longer, watching her, then turned
and made his way back along the path toward the house. And if he
were? Well, maybe it would be a reason for bringing his marriage
forward. After all, a General ought to have a wife, a family,
oughtn't he? He grinned and spurred himself on, mounting the steps
two at a time. Yes. He would speak to Tolonen about it later. SHE
STOOD there after he was gone, her eyes following the slow swirl of a
mulberry leaf as it drifted on the artificial current. So the
boy Kim was alive. But how had she known? She
shivered and turned, hearing footsteps on the pathway. It was a young
woman, a girl little older than herself. The mui tsai. The
girl came closer, then stopped, bowing low, her hands folded before
her. "Excuse me, Hsiao Chi, but my Master asked me to see to
your every wish." Jelka
turned, smiling at the girl's use of Hsiao Chi—Lady—to
one clearly no older than herself. But it was obvious that the girl
was only trying to be respectful. "Thank
you, Sweet Flute, but I wish only to wait here until my father
comes." The
mui tsai glanced up at her, then averted her eyes again. "With
respect, Hsiao Chi, I understand that that might be some while. Would
you not welcome some refreshments while you wait? Or perhaps I could
summon the musicians. There is a pavilion ..." Jelka
smiled again, warmed by the girl's manner. Even so, she wanted to be
left alone. The matter with the boy disturbed her. The preliminary
search of the levels below the Project had found no trace of him. She
sighed, then gave a tiny laugh. "All right, Sweet Flute. Bring
me a drink. A cordial. But no musicians. The birds sing sweetly
enough for me. And I do wish to be left alone. Until my father
comes." The
mui tsai bowed. "As you wish, Hsiao Chi." Jelka
looked about her, letting herself relax for the first time since she
had heard of the attack on the Project, drinking in the harmony of
the garden. Then she stiffened again. From
the far side of the gardens came a strange, high-pitched keening,
like the sound of an animal in pain. For almost a minute it
continued, and then it stopped as abruptly as it had begun. What
in the gods' names? She
hurried across the bridge and down the path, then climbed the wooden
steps up onto the terrace. It had come from here, she was sure of it. She
paused, hearing the low murmur of male voices from the doorway just
ahead of her. Slowly, step by step, she crept along the terrace until
she stood there, looking in. There
were four of them, dressed in the pale-green uniforms of the Ebert
household. In the midst of them, a gag tied tightly about her mouth,
was a woman. A Han woman in her early twenties. Jelka
watched, astonished, as the woman kicked out wildly and threw herself
about, trying to escape her captives, her face dark, contorted. But
there was no escaping. As Jelka watched, the men subdued her, forcing
her into a padded jacket, the overlong arms of which they fastened at
the back. Shuddering
with indignation, she stepped inside. "Stop it! Stop it at
once!" The
men turned, disconcerted by her sudden appearance, the woman in their
midst suddenly forgotten. She fell and lay there on the floor, her
legs kicking impotently. Jelka
took another step, her whole body trembling with the anger she felt.
"What in the gods' names do you think you're doing?" They
backed away as she came on, bowing abjectly. "Forgive
us, Mistress Tolonen," one of them said, recognizing her, "but
we are only acting on our Master's orders." She
looked at the man witheringly, then shook her head. "Unbind her.
Unbind her at once." "But,
Mistress, you don't understand-—" "Quiet,
man!" she barked, the strength in her voice surprising him. He
fell to his knees, head bowed, and stayed there, silent. She
shivered, then looked to the others. "Well? Must I ask you
again?" There
was a quick exchange of glances, then the men did as she said,
unbinding the woman and stepping back, as if afraid of the
consequences. But the woman merely rolled over and sat up, easing the
jacket from her, calm now, the fit—if that was what it had
been—gone from her. "Good,"
Jelka said, not looking at them, her attention fixed upon the strange
woman. "Now go. I wish to be alone with the woman." "But,
Mistress—" "Go!" There
was no hesitation this time. Bowing furiously, the four men departed.
She could hear the dull murmur of their voices outside, then nothing.
She was alone with the woman. Jelka
went to her and knelt, letting her hand rest on the woman's arm.
"What is it?" The
woman looked up at her. She was pretty. Very pretty. In some ways
more like a child than Jelka herself. "What's your name?"
Jelka asked, touched by the expression of innocence in the woman's
eyes. "My
baby . . ." the woman said, looking past Jelka distractedly.
"Where's my baby?" Jelka
turned, looking about the room, then saw it. A cot, there, on the far
side of the room. And as she saw, she heard it—a strange,
persistent snuffling. "There,"
she said gently. "Your baby's there." She
stood to one side as the woman got up, and casting the straitjacket
aside, went across to the cot, bending down over it to lift and
cradle the child. "There, there . . ." she heard her say, a
mother's softness in her voice. "There, they'll not harm you.
I'll see to that, my little darling. Mumma's here now. Mumma's here." Jelka
felt a ripple of relief pass through her. But she was still angry.
Angry with Hans, if it really was he who had given the order to
subdue the woman. He had no right to torment the woman. She went
across, touching the woman's back. "Let
me see ..." The
woman turned, smiling, offering the child. A small, helpless little
bundle, that snuffled and snuffled ... Jelka
felt herself go cold, then stepped back, shaking her head, her mouth
suddenly dry, appalled by what she saw. "No . . ." It
stared up at her, red-eyed, its pink face too thin to be human, the
hair that sprouted indiscriminately from its flesh too coarse,
despite the silks in which it was wrapped. As she stared at it, one
tiny three-toed hand pushed out at her, as if to grasp her hand. She
jerked away, feeling the bile rise in her throat. "Golden
Heart!" The voice came from the doorway behind her. "Put
that dreadful thing away, right now! What in the gods' names do you
think you're doing?" It was
the mui tsai, Sweet Flute. She came into the room, putting the
drink down on the table, then went across to the woman, taking the
bundle from her and setting it back in the cot. "It's
all right," she said, turning back to face Jelka. "I can
explain . . ." But
Jelka was no longer there. She was outside, leaning over the balcony,
gulping in air, the image of the tiny goat-creature like a mocking
demon burning indelibly in the redness behind her closed lids. T u A
N TI F O looked up from where he was making ch'a to where the
boy lay sleeping on the bedroll in the far corner of the room. He had
been asleep for some time, physically exhausted after his ordeal, but
now he tossed and turned, held fast in the grip of some awful
nightmare. The
old man put down the ch'a bowl and the cloth and went across
to the boy, balancing on his haunches beside him. The
boy seemed in pain, his lips drawn back from his teeth in what was
almost a snarl, his whole body hunched into itself, as if something
ate at him from within. He thrashed this way and that, as if fighting
himself; then, with a shudder that frightened the old man, went
still. "Gweder
. . ." the boy said quietly. "Gweder . . ." It was
said softly, almost gently, yet the word itself was hard, the two
sounds of which it was made stranger than anything Tuan Ti Fo had
ever heard. For a
moment there was silence, then the boy spoke again, the whole of him
gathered up into the movement of his lips. "PandY'a
bos ef, Lagasek?" This
time the voice was harsh, almost guttural. Tuan Ti Fo felt a small
ripple of fear pass through him; yet he calmed himself inwardly, a
still, small voice chanting the chen yen to dispense with
fear. "Travyth,
Gweder. Travyth . . ." He
narrowed his eyes, understanding. Two voices. The first much softer,
gentler than the second. Gweder and Lagasek . . . But what did it
mean? And what was this language? He had never heard its like before. He
watched, seeing how the face changed, ugly one moment, peaceful,
almost innocent the next. Now it was ugly, the mouth distorted.
Gweder was speaking again, his voice harsh, spitting out the words in
challenge. "Praga
obery why crenna? Bos why yeyn, Lagasek?" The
boy shivered violently and the face changed, all spite, all anger
draining from it. Softly now it answered, the brittle edges of the
words rounded off. Yet there was pain behind the words. Pain and a
dreadful sense of loss. "Yma
gweras yn aw ganow, Gweder . . . gweras ... ha an pyth bos
tewl." The
abruptness of the change made him shudder. And the laughter . . . The
laughter was demonic. The face now shone with a dark and greedy
malice. With evil. "Nyns-us
pyth, Lagasek." There
was such an awful mockery in that face that it made Tuan Ti Fo want
to strike it with his fist. Slowly,
very slowly, the malice sank down into the tissue of the face. Again
the boy's features settled into a kinder, more human form. "A'dhywar-lur
. . ." it breathed. "A-dhywar-lur." Then,
in a cry of anguish, "My bos yn annown . . . Yn annown!" A
ragged breath escaped Tuan Ti Fo. He stood abruptly, then crossed the
room to the tiny bookshelf. He brought the book back, then squatted
there again, closing his eyes and opening the pages at random,
reading the first thing his eyes opened upon. He
smiled. It was a passage from midway through Book One. One of his
favorites. He read, letting his voice be an instrument to soothe the
boy. "Thirty
spokes share one hub. Adapt the nothing therein to the purpose in
hand, and you will have the use of the cart. Knead clay in order to
make a vessel. Adapt the nothing therein to the purpose in hand, and
you will have the use of the vessel. Cut out doors and windows in
order to make a room. Adapt the nothing therein to the purpose in
hand, and you will have the use of the room. Thus what we gain is
Something, yet it is by virtue of Nothing that this can be put to
use." He
looked down, seeing how still the boy had become, as if listening to
his words; yet he was still asleep. "Who
are you, boy?" he asked softly, putting the book down. He
reached across and pulled up the blanket until it covered the boy's
chest. Yes, he thought, and what brought you here tome? For
the fates as surely directed you to me as they directed my feet
this morning to a path 1 never took before. He
leaned back, then took up the book and began to read again, letting
Lao Tzu's words—words more than two-and-a-half thousand years
old—wash over the sleeping boy and bring him ease. "Well?" Karr
stared back morosely at his friend, then put his ch'a bowl
down. "Nothing.
The trail's gone cold. I tracked the boy as far as the factory, but
there it ended. It's as if he vanished. There's no way he could have
got past that guard post." Chen
sat down, facing Karr across the table. "Then he's still there.
In the factory." Karr
shook his head. "We've taken it apart. Literally. I had a
hundred men in there, dismantling the place back to the bare walls.
But nothing." "We've
missed something, that's all. I'll come back with you. We can go
through it again." Karr
looked down. "Maybe. But I've been through it a dozen, twenty
times already. It's as if he was spirited away." Chen
studied his friend a moment. He had never seen Karr looking so down
in the mouth. "Cheer
up," he said. "It can't be that bad." "No?"
Karr sat back, drawing himself up to his full height. "It seems
Ebert's to be appointed General. The old T'ang accepted Nocenzi's
resignation before he died. Tolonen was to step back into the job,
but it seems the new T'ang wants a new man in the post." Chen
grimaced, then sat back. "Then our lives aren't worth a beggar's
shit." Karr stared at him a moment, then laughed. "You
think?" "And
you don't?" Karr
stood up. "Let a thousand devils take Hans Ebert. We'll
concentrate on finding the boy. After all, that's our job, isn't
it—finding people?" li
yuan was the first to arrive. Walking from the hangar, he felt
detached, as if outside himself, watching. The meaning of this death
had come to him slowly; not as grief but as nakedness, for this death
exposed him. There was no one now but him; a single link from a
broken chain. Outside
his father's rooms he stopped, in the grip of a strong reluctance,
but the eyes of others were upon him. Steeling himself, he ordered
the doors unlocked, then went inside. The
doors closed, leaving him alone with his dead father. Li
Shai Tung lay in his bed, as if he slept, yet his face was pale like
carved ivory, his chest still. Li
Yuan stood there, looking down at him. The old man's eyes were
closed, the thin lids veined, mauve leaf patterns on the milky white.
He knelt, studying the patterns in the white, but like the rest it
meant nothing. It was merely a pattern, a repetition. He
shook his head, not understanding, knowing only that he had never
seen his father sleeping. Never seen those fierce, proud eyes closed
before this moment. He put
his hand out, touching his father's cheek. The flesh was cold.
Shockingly cold. He drew his hand back sharply, then shuddered. Where
did it go? Where did all that warmth escape to? Into
the air, he said silently to himself. Into the air. He
stood, then drew the covers back. Beneath the silken sheets his
father lay there naked, the frailty of his body revealed. Li Yuan
looked, feeling an instinctive pity for his father. Not love, but
pity. Pity for what time had done to him. Death
had betrayed him. Had found him weak and vulnerable. His
eyes moved down the body, knowing that others had looked before he
had. Surgeons with their dispassionate eyes; looking, as he looked
now. He
shuddered. The body was thin, painfully emaciated, but unmarked. His
father had been ill. Badly ill. That surprised him, and he paused a
moment before putting back the sheet. It was unlike his father not to
comment on his health. Something was amiss. Some element beyond
simple senility had been the cause of this. He had
no proof and yet his sense of wrongness was strong. It made him turn
and look about him, noting the presence of each object in the room,
questioning their fiinction. All seemed well, and yet the sense of
wrongness persisted. He
went outside, into the hallway. Surgeon Hua was waiting there with
his assistants. "How
has my father been, Hua? Was he eating well?" The
old man shook his head. "Not for some time, Chieh Hsia. Not
since Han's death. But. . ." he pursed his lips, considering,
"well enough for an old man. And your father was old, Li
Yuan." Li
Yuan nodded, but he was still troubled. "Was he ... clear? In
his mind, I mean?" "Yes,
Chieh Hsia. Even last night." Hua paused, frowning, as if
he, too, were troubled by something. "There was nothing
evidently wrong with him. We've . . . examined him and . . ." "Evidently!" Hua
nodded, but his eyes were watchful. "But
you think that appearances might be deceptive, is that it, Hua?" The
old surgeon hesitated. "It isn't something I can put my finger
on, Chieh Hsia. Just a ... a feehng I have. Confucius
says—" "Just
tell me, Hua," Li Yuan said, interrupting him, reaching out to
hold his arm, his fondness for the old man showing in his face. "No
proverbs, please. Just tell me what made you feel something was
wrong." "This
will sound unprofessional, Chieh Hsia, but as you've asked." Hua
paused, clearing his throat. "Well, he was not himself. He was
sharp, alert, and in a sense no different from his old self, but he
was not—somehow—Li Shai Tung. He seemed like an actor,
mimicking your father. Playing him exceptionally well, but not. . ." He
faltered, shaking his head, grief overwhelming him. "Not
like the real thing," Li Yuan finished for him. Hua
nodded. "He was . . . uncertain. And your father never was
uncertain." Li
Yuan considered a moment, then gave his instructions. "I want
you to perform an autopsy, Hua. I want you to find out why he died. I
want to know what killed him." TSU MA
was dressed in white, his hair tied back in a single elegant bow. The
effect was striking in its simplicity, its sobriety; while his face
had a gentleness Li Yuan had never seen in it before. He came forward
and embraced Li Yuan, holding him to his breast, one hand smoothing
the back of his neck. It was this, more than the death, more than the
coldness of his father's cheek, that broke the ice that had formed
about his feelings. At last he let go, feeling the sorrow rise and
spill from him. "Good,
good," Tsu Ma whispered softly, stroking his neck. "A man
should cry for his father." And when he moved back, there were
tears in his eyes, real grief in his expression. "And
Wei Feng?" Li Yuan asked, wiping his eyes with the back of his
hand. "He's
waiting below." Tsu Ma smiled, a friend's strong smile. "We'll
go when you're ready." "I'm
ready," Li Yuan answered, straightening, unashamed now of his
tears, feeling much better for them. "Let us see our cousin." Wei
Feng was waiting in the viewing room, wearing a simple robe of white
gathered at the waist. As Li Yuan came down the stairs Wei Feng came
across and embraced him, whispering his condolences. But he seemed
older than Li Yuan remembered him. Much older. "Are
you all right, Wei Feng?" he asked, concerned for the old man's
health. Wei
Feng laughed. A short, melodic sound. "As well as could be
expected, Yuan." His expression changed subtly. "But your
father . . ." He sighed. Wei Feng was the oldest now. By almost
twenty years the oldest. "So much has changed, Yuan. So much.
And now this. This seems . . ." He shrugged, as if it were
beyond words to say. "I
know." Li Yuan frowned, releasing him. "They killed him,
Wei Feng." Wei
Feng simply looked puzzled, but Tsu Ma came close, taking his arm.
"How do you know? Is there proof?" "Proof?
No. But I know. I'm sure of it, Tsu Ma. I've asked Surgeon Hua
to ... to do an autopsy. Maybe that will show something, but even so,
I know." "So
what now?" Wei Feng had crossed his arms. His face was suddenly
hard, his tiny figure filled with power. "So
now we play their game. Remove the gloves." Beside
him Tsu Ma nodded. "We
know our enemies," Li Yuan said, with an air of finality. "We
have only to find them." "DeVore,
you mean?" Tsu Ma looked across at Wei Feng. The old man's face
was troubled, but his jaw was set. Determination weighed the heavier
in his conflicting emotions. Tsu Ma narrowed his eyes, considering.
"And then?" Li
Yuan turned. His eyes seemed intensely black, like space itself;
cold, vacant, all trace of life and warmth gone from them. His face
was closed, expressionless, like a mask. "Arrange a meeting of
the Council, Tsu Ma. Let Chi Hsing host it. We must talk." Li
Yuan was barely eighteen, yet the tone, the small movement of the
left hand that accompanied the final words, were uncannily familiar,
as if the father spoke and acted through the son. CHAPTER
SIX
Chen Yen The
ch'a bowl lay to one side, broken, its contents spilled across the
floor. Beside it Tuan Ti Fo crouched, his back to the door, facing
the boy. "Yn-mes
a forth, cothwasl" the boy snarled, the sound coming from
the back of his throat. "Yn-mes a forthl" Tuan
Ti Fo felt the hairs rise on the back of his neck. The boy was down
on all fours, his face hideously ugly, the features distorted with
rage, the chin thrust forward aggressively, his round, dark eyes
filled with animal menace. He made small movements with his body,
feinting this way and that, gauging Tuan Ti Fo's response to each, a
low growling coming from his throat. It was
the third time the boy had tried to get past him, and, as before, he
seemed surprised by the old man's quickness; shocked that, whichever
way he moved, Tuan Ti Fo was there, blocking his way. The
old man swayed gently on his haunches, then, as the boy threw himself
to the left, moved effortlessly across, fending off the child with
his palms, using the least force possible to achieve his end. The boy
withdrew, yelping with frustration, then turned and threw himself
again, like a dog, going for Tuan's throat. This
time he had to fight the boy. Had to strike him hard and step back,
aiming a kick to the stomach to disable him. Yet even as the boy fell
back, gasping for breath, that strange transformation overcame him
again. As Tuan Ti Fo watched, the harshness faded from the boys
features, becoming something softer, more human. "Welcome
back, Lagasek," he said, taking a long, shuddering breath. But
for how long? He looked about him, noting the broken bowl, the
spilled ch'a, and shook his head. He would have to bind the boy while
he slept, for in time he would have to sleep. He could not guard
against this "Gweder" thing forever. He
moved closer, crouching over the boy. He was peaceful now, his face
almost angelic in its innocence. But beneath? Tuan Ti Fo narrowed his
eyes, considering, then began to speak, softly, slowly, as if to
himself. "Look
at you, child. So sweet you look just now. So innocent. But are you
good or evil? Is it Gweder or Lagasek who rules you? And which of
them brought you here to my rooms?" He smiled, then got up,
moving across the room to fetch a small towel to mop up the ch'a,
a brush to gather up the tiny pieces of broken porcelain. And as
he did so he continued to speak, letting his voice rise and fall like
a flowing stream, lulling the sleeping child. "Kao
Tzu believed that each man, at birth, was like a willow tree, and
that righteousness was like a bowl. To become righteous, a man had
therefore to be cut and shaped, like the willow, into the bowl. The
most base instincts—the desire for food or sex—were, he
argued, all that one could ever find in the unshaped man, and human
nature was as indifferent to good or evil as free-flowing water is to
the shape it eventually fills." He
turned, looking at the child, seeing how the boy's chest now rose and
fell gently, as if soothed by his voice, then turned back, smiling,
beginning to mop up the spill. "Meng
Tzu, of course, disagreed. He felt that if what Kao Tzu said were
true, then the act of becoming righteous would be a violation of
human nature—would, in fact, be a calamity. But I have my own
reason for disagreeing with Kao Tzu. If it were so—if
human nature were as Kao Tzu claimed—then why should any
goodness come from evil circumstances? And why should evil come from
good?" He gave a soft laugh. "Some men are water
drops and willow sprouts, it's true; but not all. For there are those
who determine their own shape, their own direction, and the mere
existence of them demonstrates Kao Tzu's claim to be a
misrepresentation." He
finished mopping, then carried the towel to the basin in the corner
and dropped it in. Returning, he set the two large pieces of the
broken bowl to one side then began to sweep the tiny slivers of
porcelain into a pile. "Of
course, there is another explanation. It is said that shortly after
the Earth was separated from Heaven, Nu Kua created human beings. It
appears that she created the first men by patting yellow earth
together. She labored at this a long time, taking great care in the
shaping and molding of the tiny, human forms; but then she grew
tired. The work was leaving her little time for herself and so she
decided to simplify the task. Taking a long piece of string, she
dragged it to and fro through the mud, heaping it up and turning that
into men. But these were crude, ill-formed creatures compared to
those she had first made. Henceforth, it is said, the rich and the
noble are those descended from the creatures who were formed before
Nu Kua tired of her task—the men of yellow earth—whereas
the poor and the lowly are descendants of the cord-made men—the
men of mud." He
laughed quietly and looked up, noting how restful the boy now
was. "But
then, as the Tien Wen says, 'Nu Kua had a body. Who formed and
fashioned it?" He
turned, taking the thin paper box in which the ch'a brick had
come and put it down, sweeping the fragments up into it; then he
dropped in the two largest pieces. "Ah,
yes, but we live in a world gone mad. The bowl of righteousness was
shattered long ago, when Tsao Ch'un built his City. It is left to
individual men to find the way—to create small islands of
sanity in an ocean of storms." He looked about him. "This
place is such an island." Or had
been. Before the child had come. Before the bowl had been broken, his
peace disturbed. For a
moment Tuan Ti Fo closed his eyes, seeking that inner stillness deep
within himself, his lips forming the chen yen—the "true
words"—of the mantra. With a tiny shudder he passed the
hard knot of tension from him then looked up again, a faint smile at
the corners of his mouth. "Food,"
he said softly. "That's what you need. Something special." He
stood, went across to the tiny oven set into the wall on the far side
of the room, and lit it. Taking a cooking bowl from a shelf, he
partly filled it from the water jar and set it down on the ring. Tuan
Ti Fo turned, looking about him at the simple order of his room.
"Chaos. The world is headed into chaos, child, and there is
little you or I can do to stop it." He smiled sadly, then took
up the basin, carrying it across to the door. He would empty it
later, after the child had been fed. The
boy had turned onto his side, the fingers of one hand lightly
touching his neck. Tuan Ti Fo smiled, and taking a blanket, took it
across and laid it over the child. He
crouched there a moment, watching him. "You know, the Chou
believed that Heaven and Earth were once inextricably mixed together
in a state of undifferenti-ated chaos, like a chicken's egg. Hun
tun they called that state. Hun tun . . ." He
nodded, then went back to the oven, taking a jar from the shelf on
the wall and emptying out half its contents onto the board beside the
oven. The tiny, saclike dumplings looked like pale, wet, unformed
creatures in their uncooked state. Descendants of the mud men. He
smiled and shook his head. Hun tun, they were called. He had
made them himself with the things the girl Marie had brought last
time she'd come. It was soy, of course, not meat, that formed the
filling inside the thin shells of dough, but that was as he wished
it. He did not believe in eating flesh. It was not The Way. As the
water began to boil he tipped the dumplings into the bowl and stirred
them gently before leaving them to cook. There were other things he
added— herbs sent to him from friends on the plantations, and
other, special things. He leaned forward, sniffing the concoction
delicately, then nodded. It was just what the child needed. It
would settle him and give him back his strength. That
precious strength that "Gweder" spent so thoughtlessly. He
turned, expecting to see the child sitting up, his face transformed
again into a snarl, but the boy slept on. He
turned back, for a while busying himself preparing the food. When it
was cooked, he poured half of the broth into a small ceramic bowl and
took it to the boy. It was
a shame to wake him, but it was twelve hours now since he had eaten.
And afterward he would sleep. The herbs in the soup would ensure that
he slept. He set
the bowl down, then lifted the boy gently, cradling him in a
half-sitting position. As he did so the boy stirred and struggled
briefly, then relaxed. Lifting the spoon from the bowl, Tuan Ti Fo
placed it to the boy's lips, tilting it gently. "Here,
child. I serve you Heaven itself." The
boy took a little of the warm broth, then turned his head slightly.
Tuan Ti Fo persevered, following his mouth with the spoon, coaxing a
little of the liquid into him each time, until the child's mouth was
opening wide for each new spoonful. At
last the bowl was empty. Tuan Ti Fo smiled, holding the boy to him a
while, conscious again of how insubstantial he seemed. As if he were
made of something finer than flesh and bone, finer than yellow earth.
And again he wondered about his presence in the dream. What did that
mean? For it had to mean something. He
drew a pillow close, then set the boy's head down, covering him with
the blanket. "Maybe
you'll tell me, eh? When you wake. That's if that strange tongue is
not the only one you speak." He
went back to the oven and poured the remains of the hun tun into the
bowl, spooning it down quickly, then took bowls and basin outside,
locking the door behind him, going to the washrooms at the far end of
the corridor. It didn't take long, but he hurried about his tasks,
concerned not to leave the child too long. And when he returned he
took care in opening the door, lest "Gweder" should slip
out past him. But the boy still slept. Tuan
Ti Fo squatted, his legs folded under him, watching the boy. Then,
knowing it would be hours before he woke, he got up and fetched his
<wei chi set, smoothing the cloth "board" out on
the floor before him, placing the bowls on either side, the white
stones to his left, the black to his right. For a time he lost
himself in the game, his whole self gathered up into the shapes the
stones made on the board, until it seemed the board was the great Tao
and he the stones. Once
he had been the First Hand Supreme in all Chung Kuo, Master of
Masters and eight times winner of the great annual championship held
in Siichow. But that had been thirty—almost forty—years
ago. Back in the days when he had still concerned himself with the
world. He
looked up from the board, realizing his concentration had been
broken. He laughed, a quotation of Ch'eng Yi's coming to mind:
"Within the universe all things have their opposite: when there
is the yin, there is the yang; where there is goodness,
there is evil." And in
the boy? He took a deep breath, looking across at him. Gweder and
Lagasek. Yin and }ang. As in all men. But in this one the Tao was at
war with itself. Yin and yang were not complementary but
antagonistic. In that sense the child was like the world of Chung
Kuo. There, too, the balance had been lost. Yes, like the boy, Chung
Kuo was an entity at war with itself. But
the thought brought with it an insight. Just as this world of theirs
had been tampered with, so had the child. Something had happened to
split him and make him fight himself. He had lost his oneness. Or had
it taken from him. Tuan
Ti Fo cleared the board slowly, concerned for the boy. Yet maybe that
was his role in this—to make the boy whole again, to reconcile
the animal and the human in him. For what was a man without balance? "Nothing,"
he answered himself softly. "Or worse than nothing." He
began again, the shapes of black and white slowly filling the board
until he knew there were no more stones to play, nothing left to win
or lose. Tuan
Ti Fo looked up. The boy was sitting up, watching him, his dark,
overlarge eyes puzzling over the shapes that lay there on the cloth. He
looked down, saying nothing, then cleared the board and set up
another game. He began to play, conscious now of the boy watching,
edging slowly closer as the stones were laid and the board filled up
again. Again
he laid the final stone, knowing there was no more to be won or lost.
He looked up. The boy was sitting only an arm's length from him now,
studying the patterns of black and white with a fierce intensity, as
if to grasp some meaning from them. He
cleared the board and was about to play again when the boy's hand
reached out and took a white stone from the bowl to his left. Tuan Ti
Fo started to correct him—to make him take from the bowl of
black stones—but the boy was insistent. He slapped a stone down
in the comer nearest him on the right. In Tsu, the north. They
played, slowly at first, then faster, Tuan Ti Fo giving nothing to
the boy, punishing him for every mistake he made. Yet when he began
to take a line of stones he had surrounded from the board, the boy
placed his hand over Tuan's, stopping him, lifting his hand so that
he might study the position, his face creased into a frown, as if
trying to take in what he had done wrong. Only then did he move his
hand back, indicating that Tuan Ti Fo should take the stones away. The
next game was more difficult. The boy repeated none of the simple
errors he had made first time around. This time Tuan Ti Fo had to
work hard to defeat him. He sat back, his eyes narrowed, staring at
the boy, surprised by how well he'd played. "So,"
he said, "you can play." The
boy looked up at him, wide-eyed, then shook his head. No, Tuan
thought; its not possible. You must have played before. He
cleared the board and sat back, waiting, feeling himself go very
still, as if something strange—something wholly out of the
ordinary—were about to happen. This
time the boy set the stone down in the south, in Shang, only a
hand's length from Tuan Ti Fo's knee. It was a standard opening—the
kind of play that made no real difference to the final outcome—yet
somehow the boy made it seem a challenge. An hour later Tuan Ti Fo
knew he had been defeated. For the first time in over forty years
someone had humbled him on the board he considered his own. He sat
back, breathing deeply, taking in the elegance of the shapes the boy
had made, recollecting the startling originality of his strategies—as
if he had just reinvented the game. Then he bowed low, touching his
forehead almost to the board. The
boy stared back at him a moment, then returned his bow. So you
are human, after all, Tuan Ti Fo thought, shaking his
head, amused by the gesture. And now I'm certain that the gods
sent you. He laughed. Who knows? Perhaps you're even
one of them. The
boy sat with his legs crossed under him, perfectly still, watching
Tuan Ti Fo, his eyes narrowed as if trying to understand why the old
man was smiling. Tuan
Ti Fo leaned forward, beginning to clear the board, when a knock
sounded at the door. A casual rapping that he knew at once was Marie. He saw
how the boy froze—how his face grew rigid with fear—and
reached out to hold his arm. "It's
all right. . ." he whispered. "There!" he said,
indicating the blanket. "Get under there, boy, and stay hidden.
I'll send them away." marie
turned, hearing noises behind her, then broke into a smile, bowing to
the two elderly gentlemen who were passing in the corridor. She
turned back, frowning. Where was he? It was not like him to delay. Marie
Enge was a tall, good-looking woman in her late twenties with the
kind of physical presence that most men found daunting. They
preferred their women more delicately made, more deferent. Nor was
the impression of physical strength deceptive. She was a powerful
woman, trained in the arts of self-defense, but that was not to say
that she lacked feminine charm. At a second glance one noticed signs
of a softer side to her nature: in the delicate primrose pattern of
the edging to her tunic; in the strings of pearl and rose-colored
beads at her wrists; in the butterfly bow on her otherwise
masculine-looking pigtail. She
waited a moment longer, then knocked again. Harder this time, more
insistent. "Tuan
Ti Fo? Are you there? It's me. Marie. I've come for our game." She
heard a shuffling inside and gave a small sigh of relief. For a
moment she had thought he might be ill. She moved back, waiting for
the door to open, but it remained firmly shut. "TuanTiFo?" The
slightest edge of concern had entered her voice now. She moved
forward, about to press her ear against the door, when it slid open a
little. "What
is it?" the old man said, eyeing her almost suspiciously. "It's
me, Shih Tuan. Don't you remember? It's time for our game." "Ah
..." He pulled the door a fraction wider, at the same time
moving forward, blocking her view into the room. "Forgive me,
Marie, I've just woken. I didn't sleep well and—" "You're
not ill, are you?" she said, concerned. "No
. . ." He smiled, then gave a bow. "However, I do feel
tired. So if, for once, you'll excuse me?" She
hesitated, then returned his bow. "Of course, Shih Tuan.
Tomorrow, perhaps?" He
tilted his head slightly, then nodded. "Perhaps. . ." She
stood back, watching the door slide closed, then turned away. But she
had gone only a few paces before she turned and stared back at the
door, a strong sense of oddness—of wrongness—holding her
in its grip. He had never before spoken of sleepless nights: neither,
as far as she knew, had he ever complained of any kind of illness.
Indeed, a fitter old boy she had never known. Nor had he ever put her
off before. She frowned, then turned away again, moving slowly,
reluctantly, away. For a
moment she hesitated, not quite knowing what to do, then she nodded
to herself and began to move quicker. She would go straight to the
Dragon Cloud. Would ask Shang Chen if she could work an extra hour
this end of her shift and leave an hour earlier. Yes. And then she
would return. Just
in case the old man needed her. the
dragon CLOUD filled one end of the Main, dominating the market that
spread below its eaves. It was a big, traditional-looking building
with a steeply sloping roof of red tile, its five stories not
walled-in but open to the surroundings, each level linked by broad
mock-wooden steps. Greenery was everywhere, in bowls and screens and
hanging from the open balustrades, giving the teahouse the look of an
overgrown garden. Waiters dressed in pale-blue gowns—male and
female, Han and Hung Moo—hurried between the levels, carrying
broad trays filled with exquisite ceramics, the bowls and pots a pure
white, glazed with blue markings. At strategic points about the house
the ch'a masters, specialists in ch'a shu, the art of
tea, sat at their counters preparing their special infusions. If
need be the Dragon Cloud could seat five thousand. More than enough,
one would have thought, to cater to the surrounding levels. Even so,
it was packed when they got there, not a table free. Chen looked
about him, then looked back at Karr. "Let's
go elsewhere, Gregor. It'll be an hour at least before we get a
table." Karr
turned, beckoning to one of the waiters. Chen saw how the man came
across, wary of Karr, eyeing the big man up and down as if to assess
how much trouble he might be. Behind him, at the counter, several of
the other waiters, mostly Han, turned, following him with their eyes. Chen
watched; saw Karr press something into the waiter's hand; saw the man
look down, then look up again, wide-eyed. Karr muttered something,
then pressed a second tiny bundle into the man's hand. This time the
waiter bowed. He turned, and summoning two of his fellows across,
hurried away, whispering something to his companions. In a
little while the waiter was back, bowing, smiling, leading them up
two flights of steps to a table at the center of the house. As they
moved between the tables, three elderly Han came toward them, bowing
and smiling. Chen
leaned toward Karr, keeping his voice low. "You bought their
table?" Karr
smiled, returning the old gentlemen's bows before allowing one of the
waiters to pull a chair out for him. When Chen was seated across from
him, he answered. "I've
heard that the Dragon Cloud is the cultural center of these levels.
The place where everybody who is anybody comes. Here, if anywhere, we
shall hear news of the boy. You understand?" "Ah
. . ." Chen smiled and sat back, relaxing. It was not like Karr
to use his privilege so crudely and for a moment he had been
concerned by his friend's behavior. "Besides,"
Karr added, accepting the ch'a menu the waiter held out to him, "I
have heard that the Dragon Cloud is the paragon among teahouses. Its
fame spreads far and wide, even to the Heavens." This
was said louder, clearly for the benefit of the waiters. The one who
had first dealt with Karr bowed his head slightly, responding to his
words. "If
the ch'un tzu would like something . . . special?" Karr
leaned back. Even seated he was still almost a head taller than the
Han. "You
would not have a hsiang p'ien, by any chance?" The
waiter bowed his head slightly lower, a smile of pleasure splitting
his face. "It is the speciality of the Dragon Cloud, ch'un tzu.
What kind of Hsiang p'ien would you like?" Kan-
looked across at his friend. "Have you any preference, Kao
Chen?" Chen
studied the menu a moment, trying to recognize something he knew
among the hundred exotic brews, then looked up again, shrugging. "I
don't know. I guess I'll have what you have." Karr
considered a moment, then turned his head, looking at the waiter.
"Have you a ch'ing ch'a with a lotus fragrance?" "Of
course, Master. A poo yun, perhaps?" Karr
nodded. "A Jeweled Cloud would be excellent." The
man bowed, then, his head still lowered, took the ch'a menus from
them. "I will have the girl bring the ch'a and some
sweetmeats. It will be but a few minutes, ch'un tzu." He
bowed again, then backed away. Chen
waited until the man had gone, then leaned across, keeping his voice
low. "What in the gods' names is a hsiang J/ien?" Karr
smiled, relaxing for the first time in almost twelve hours of
searching. "Hsiang p'ien are flower ch'a. And a
ch'ing ch'a is a green, unfermented ch'a. The one we're having
is placed into a tiny gauze bag overnight with the calix of a freshly
plucked lotus." He laughed. "Have you not read your Shen
Fu, Chen?" Chen
laughed and shook his head. "When would I have time, my friend?
With three children there is barely time to shit, let alone read!" Karr
laughed, then studied him a moment. He reached out and touched his
arm gently. "Maybe so, Kao Chen, but a man ought to read. I'll
give you a copy of Shen Fu sometime. His Six Records of a Floating
Life. He lived four centuries ago, before the great City was
built. It was another age, I tell you, Chen. Cruder, and yet in some
ways better than ours. Even so, some things don't change. Human
nature, for instance." Chen
lowered his head slightly. So it was. He looked about him, enjoying
the strange peacefulness of the place. Each table was cut off from
the next by screens of greenery; even so, from where he sat he had a
view of what was happening at other tables and on other levels. Above
the nearest serving counter a huge banner portrait of the ch'a god Lu
Yu fluttered gently in the breeze of the overhead fans. It was an
image that even Chen recognized, flying, as it did, over every
teahouse in Chung Kuo. "Where
do we begin?" Chen asked after a moment. "I mean, we can't
simply go from table to table asking, can we?" Karr
had been staring away almost abstractedly; now he looked back at
Chen. "No. You're quite right, Chen. It must be done subtly.
Quietly. If necessary, we will sit here all day, and all tomorrow
too. Until we hear something." "And
if we don't?" Chen shook his head. "Besides, I hate all
this sitting and Chen ten
131 waiting.
Why don't we just empty this whole deck and search it room by room?" Karr
smiled. "You think that would be a good idea, Chen? And what
reason would we give?" "What
reason would we need to give? We are on the T'ang's business,
surely?" Karr
leaned toward him, lowering his voice to a whisper. "And if
rumor were to go about the levels that the T'ang has lost something
important and would clear a deck to find it? Surely such a rumor
would have a price? Would find ears we'd rather it didn't reach?" Chen
opened his mouth then closed it again. "Even so, there must be
something else we can do." Karr
shook his head. "The trail has gone cold. It would not do to
rush about blindly elsewhere. The boy is here somewhere. I know he
is. The only course now is to wait. To bide our time and listen to
the faint whispers from the tables." Chen
leaned forward, about to say something, then sat back again. One of
the waiters was approaching their table—a woman this time, a
tall, blond-haired Hung Mao. He glanced at her as she set the
tray down on the table between them, then frowned, seeing how Karr
was staring at her. "Your
hsiang p'ien," she said, moving back slightly from the
table, her head bowed. "Shall I pour for you, ch'un tzul"
Karr smiled. "That would be most pleasant." The
teapot was square in shape with a wicker handle; a white-glazed
ceramic pot with a blue circular pattern on each side—the
stylized pictogram for long life. Beside it was a chung, a lidded
serving bowl, and two ordinary ch'a bowls. Moving forward, the woman
poured some of the freshly brewed ch'a into their bowls, then the
rest into the chung, putting the lid back on. She
was a big woman, yet her movements were precise, almost delicate. She
touched the bowls as if each were alive, while the ch'a itself fell
daintily, almost musically into the bowls, not a drop splashed or
spilled. Chen,
watching Karr, saw a small movement in the big man's face; saw him
look up at the woman appreciatively. "Thank
you," Karr said, smiling up at her. "It is good to be
served by someone who cares so much for the art." She
looked at him for the first time, then lowered her eyes again. "We
try our best to please, ch'un tzu." "And
these bowls . . ." Karr continued, as if reluctant to let her
go. "I have rarely seen such elegance, such grace of line, such
sobriety of color." For
the first time she smiled. "They are-nice, aren't they? I've
often commented how pleasant it is to serve ch'a from such bowls.
They have—yu ya, no?" Karr
laughed softly, clearly delighted. "Deep elegance. Yes . . ."
He sat back, appraising her more closely. "You know a great
deal, Fu Jen . . . ?" Again
she lowered her eyes, a faint color coming to her neck and cheeks. "I
had a good teacher. And it is Hsiao Chieh Enge, not Fu Jen.
I am not married, you understand?" Karr's
smile faded momentarily. "Ah . . . forgive me." He sat
forward slightly. "Anyway, I thank you again, Hsiao Chieh Enge.
As I said, it is very pleasing to be served by one who knows so much
about the great art of ch'a shw." She
bowed one final time, and turned to go. Then, as if changing her
mind, she turned back, leaning closer to Karr. "And if it is not
too forward, ch'un tzu, you might call me Marie. It is how I
am known here in these levels. Ask for Marie. Anyone will know me." Chen
watched her go, then turned, looking back at Karr. The big man was
still watching her, staring across where she was preparing her next
order. "You
like her, Gregor?" Karr
looked back at him almost blankly, then gave a brief laugh. "I
think we have our contact, Chen. What did she say? Anyone will know
me. And likewise, she will know anyone, neh?" He raised one
eyebrow. Chen
was smiling. "You didn't answer me, Gregor. You like her, don't
you?" Karr
stared back at him a moment longer, then shrugged and looked away. As
he did so, a commotion started up behind them, at the ch'a counter. Chen
turned to look. There were three men—Han, dressed in dark silks
with blood-red headbands about their foreheads. He glanced at Karr
knowingly, then looked back. "Triad
men," he said quietly. "But what are they doing up this
high?" Karr
shook his head. "Things are changing, Chen. They've been
spreading their net higher and higher these last few years. The
unrest has been their making." "Even
so . . ." He shook his head, angered by what he saw. Karr
reached out and held his arm, preventing him from getting up.
"Remember why we're here. We can't afford to get involved." One of
them was shouting at the men behind the counter now—a stream of
threats and curses in Kuo'yu, Mandarin—while the two
behind him looked about them threateningly. It was a classic piece of
Triad mischief, an attempt to unsettle the owners of the Dragon Cloud
before they moved in in force. "I'd
like to kick their asses out of here," Chen said beneath his
breath. Karr
smiled. "It would be fun, neh? But not now. After the boy's
found, maybe. We'll find out who's behind it and pay them a visit,
neh? In force." Chen
looked at him and smiled. "That would be good." "In
the meantime . . ." Karr stopped, then leaned forward, his eyes
suddenly narrowed. Chen
turned and looked across. The leader of the three was still shouting,
but now his curses were directed at the woman who was confronting
him. Chen stood up, a cry coming to his lips as he saw the bright
flash of a knife being drawn. This
time Karr made no attempt to stop him. Rather, Karr was ahead of him,
moving quickly between the tables. Chen
saw the knife describe an arc through the air and felt himself
flinch. But then the Triad thug was falling backward, the knife
spinning away harmlessly through the air. A moment later he saw the
second of the men go down with a sharp groan, clutching his balls.
The third turned and began to run, but the woman was on him like a
tigress, pulling him backward by his hair, her hand chopping down
viciously at his chest. Chen
pulled up sharply, almost thudding into Karr, who stood there, his
hands clenched at his sides, his great chest rising and falling
heavily as he stared down at the three prone gangsters. The
woman turned, meeting Karr's eyes briefly, her own eyes wide, her
whole body tensed as if to meet some other threat; then she turned
away, a faint shudder passing through her, letting her co-workers
carry the three men off. Karr
hesitated a moment, then went after her. He caught up with her on the
far side of the teahouse, in an area that was roped off for the
staff's use only. She
turned, seeing he was following her, and frowned, looking down. "What
do you want?" Karr
shook his head. "That was . . . astonishing. I..." He
shrugged and opened his hands. "I meant to help you, but you
didn't need any help, did you?" He laughed strangely. "Where
did you learn to fight like that?" Again
she looked at him, almost resentful now, a reaction to the fight
beginning to set in. He could see that her hands were trembling
faintly and remembered how that felt. He nodded, feeling a mounting
respect for her. "I've
never seen a woman fight like that," he began again. "Look,"
she said, suddenly angry. "What do you want?" "I'm
looking for someone," he said, trusting her, knowing that she
had acted from more than self-interest. "My nephew. He had an
accident, you see, and he ran away. He can't remember who he is, but
I know he's here somewhere. I tracked him down here, but now he's
disappeared." She
stared at him a long while, then shrugged. "So what's that to do
with me?" He
swallowed, conscious that others were listening, then pressed on.
"It's just that you might be able to help me. You know these
levels. Know the people. If anything odd happened, you'd know about
it, neh?" She
gave a grudging nod. "I guess so." "Well,
then. You'll help me, neh? He's my dead brother's son and he means a
great deal to me. I. . ." He
looked down, as if unable to go on, then felt her move closer. "All
right," she said quietly, touching his arm. "I'll help.
I'll listen out for you." He
looked up, meeting her eyes. "Thanks. My name's Karr. Gregor
Karr." She
looked back at him a moment longer, then smiled. "Well. . .
you'd best get back to your ch'a, Gregor Karr. Hsiang p'ien
tastes awful when it's cold." AS
before, the old man was slow coming to the door, but this time she
was ready for him. This time when he slid the door back, she moved
toward him, as if expecting him to let her pass, beginning to tell
him about the incident at the Dragon Cloud, the wicker basket of
leftovers from the teahouse held out before her. It
almost worked, almost got her into the room; but then, unexpectedly,
she found herself blocked. "I
am sorry, Marie, but you cannot stay. It would benefit neither of us
to have our session now." She
turned her head, staring at him, noting how he looked down rather
than meet her eyes, and knew at once that he was lying to her. It
came as a shock, but it was also confirmation of the feeling she had
had back at the restaurant when the man Karr had spoken to her. The
boy was here. She knew he was. But what was Tuan Ti Fo up to? "Forgive
me," he was saying, the gentle pressure of his hand forcing her
slowly back, "but I am in the worst of humors, Marie. And when a
man is in an ill humor he is fit company only for himself, neh?" The
faint, apologetic smile was more like the old Tuan Ti Fo. She
tried to look past him, but it was almost impossible to see what or
who was in the room beyond. Stalling for time, she pushed the basket
at him. "You
will at least take these, Master Tuan. You must eat, after all, bad
humor or no." He
looked down at the basket, then up at her, smiling. "I am
extremely grateful, Marie, and yes, I would be a foolish old man
indeed if I did not welcome your gift." The
small bow he made was all she needed. For that brief moment she could
see the room beyond him and there, jutting out from what seemed at
first glance to be a pillow beneath the blanket, the naked foot of a
youth. She
shivered; then, backing away a step, returned Tuan Ti Fo's bow. "Tomorrow,"
he said. "When the mood has passed." "Tomorrow,"
she said, watching the door slide shut again. Then, turning away, she
began to make her way back to her apartment, confused, a dark
uncertainty at the core of her. TUAN
TI F O stood there for some time, staring at the door, the wicker
basket resting lightly in his hand. Then, hearing a movement behind
him, he turned. The boy had crawled out from beneath the blanket and
knelt looking across at Tuan Ti Fo, his eyes wide with fear. "It
was a friend," the old man said reassuringly. "But it seems
best not to take any chances, neh?" He set
the basket down on the low table by the oven, then turned back,
looking at the boy. "But
we must leave here now. I cannot stall her forever, and soon she will
grow suspicious, if she hasn't already. She is not a bad woman—quite
the contrary—but curiosity can be a destructive thing." He
eyed the boy a moment longer, not certain how much he understood,
then gave a small shrug. "I
have lived in this world a long time, child. I have been many things
in my time. I have worked in their factories and on their
plantations. I have served in their officialdom and lived among the
criminal element down beneath the Net. I know their world. Know it
for the madhouse it is. Even so, sometimes the way ahead is
uncertain. So it is now. We must leave here. That much is clear. But
where should we go?" "The
Clay," the boy answered him, staring back at him with a strange
intensity. "Take me down to the Clay. That's where I belong.
Where I came from." "The
Clay. . ." he whispered, then nodded, understanding. As in the
dream he had had. "Spiders," he said and saw the boy nod
his head slowly. Yes, spiders. Tiny, beautiful spiders, infused with
an inner light, spinning their vast webs across the endless darkness.
He had seen them, their strong yet delicate webs anchored to the
Clay. And there—how clearly he remembered it suddenly—there,
watching them climb into the dark, was the boy, smiling
beatifically, his big dark eyes filled with wonder. Tuan
Ti Fo shivered, awed by the power of the vision. "What's
your name, boy? What did they call you in the Clay?" The
boy looked away, as if the memory disturbed him, then looked back,
his eyes searching Tuan Ti Fo's. "Lagasek,"
he said finally. "Lagasek, they called me. Starer." Tuan
Ti Fo caught his breath. "And Gweder?" The
boy frowned and looked down, as if he were having trouble
recollecting the word. "Gweder? Gweder means mirror. Why? What
have I been saying? I..." He shuddered and looked about him.
"Something happened, didn't it? Something . . ." He shook
his head. "I feel funny. My voice, it's . . . different."
He stared down at his hands. "And my body, it's . . ." He
looked back at Tuan Ti Fo, puzzled. "It feels like I've been
asleep for a long, long time. Trapped in a huge, deep well of sleep.
I was working in the Casting Shop. I remember now. Chan Shui was
away. And then. . ." His face creased into a fierce frown of
concentration, then he let it go, shaking his head. "I don't
understand. T'ai Cho was going to . . ." "T'ai
Cho? Who's T'ai Cho?" The
boy looked up again. "Why, T'ai Cho's my friend. My tutor at the
Project. He . . ." The
frown came back. Again the boy looked down at his hands, staring at
his arms and legs as if they didn't belong to him. "What's
the matter, Lagasek? What's wrong?" "Laga.
. ." The boy stared at him, then shook his head again. "No.
It's Kim. My name is Kim. Lagasek was down there." "In
the Clay?" "Yes,
and. . ." he shook his head, "I feel. . . strange. My
body... It doesn't feel like it's mine. It's as if. . ." He
stopped, staring up at the old man, his face filled with an intent
curiosity. "What
did I say? Those words. You must have heard me say them. So what else
did I say?" Tuan
Ti Fo met his eyes, remembering the savagery of the face within his
face— the face of Gweder, the mirror—then shook his head. "You
said nothing, Kim. Nothing at all. But come. We must pack now and be
away from here. Before they find us." Kim
stood there a moment longer, staring up at the old man. Then, letting
his eyes fall, he nodded. "Shih
Karr! Please . . . stop a moment!" Karr
turned, prepared for trouble, then relaxed, seeing who it was. "Ah,
it's you, Marie Enge. How did you find me?" She
drew one hand back through her hair, then smiled uncertainly. "As
I said, I know everyone in these levels. And you . . ." She
looked him up and down admiringly. "Well, who could overlook a
man like you, Shih Karr?" He
laughed. "That's true. But what can I do for you, Marie Enge?" She
seemed to study him a moment before she spoke. "The thing you
were talking of. . ." He was
immediately alert. "The boy," he said quietly, leaning
toward her. "You know where he is?" Again
she hesitated, but this time he preempted her. "Look.
Come inside a moment. I've got a private room. We can talk more
easily there, if you wish." She
nodded and let herself be led to his room on the second level of the
travelers' hostel. As such places went it was a clean, respectably
furnished room, but it was a "transient" all the same, and
looking at him, she could not help but think he looked out of place
there. She had seen at once, back in the Dragon Cloud, how his
brutish exterior concealed a cultured manner. He
offered her the only chair, then set himself down on the edge of the
bed, facing her. "Well? What do you know?" She
looked away momentarily, thinking of Tuan Ti Fo. Was she doing the
right thing in coming to see Karr? Or was this all a mistake? She
looked back. "I've heard something. Nothing definite, but. . ." She
saw how Karr narrowed his eyes. Saw him look down, then look back at
her, some small change having taken place in his face. "Can I
trust you, Marie Enge?" The
strange openness of his deeply blue eyes took her by surprise. Some
quality that had previously been hidden now shone through them. She
stared back at him, matching his openness with her own. "I'm
honest, if that's what you mean, Shih Karr. And I can keep a
secret if I'm asked. That is, if it's someone I trust." He
lifted his chin slightly. "Ah... I understand. You're thinking,
can I trust Shih Karr? Well, let's see what we can do about
that. First I'll take a chance on you. And then, if you still want to
help me, maybe you'll trust me, neh?" She studied him a moment,
then nodded. "Good.
Then first things first. My name is Karr, but I'm not Shih Karr."
He fished into his tunic pocket and took out his ID, handing it
across to her. "As you can see, I'm a Major in the T'ang's
Security forces, and my friend Chen, whom you met earlier, is a
Captain. The boy we're looking for is not my nephew but we still need
to find him. Alive and unharmed." She
looked up from the ID card, then handed it across. "Why do you
need to find him? I don't understand. If he's just a boy . . ." Karr
slipped the card back, took out something else—a flat,
matte-black case— and handed that to her. "That's
a hologram of the boy. You can keep that. I've got others. But
that'll help you check he's the one we're looking for." She
rested the case on her knee, then pressed her palm on it briefly, the
warmth of her flesh activating it. She studied the image a while,
then killed it, looking back at Karr. "He's
a strange-looking boy. Why are you interested in him?" "Because
he's the only survivor of a terrorist raid on one of the T'ang's
installations. A very important scientific installation. The whole
place was destroyed and all Kim's fellow workers killed." "Kim?" "That's
his name. But as I was saying—" She
reached out and touched his arm, stopping him. "I don't follow
you. You said 'his fellow workers.' But he's just a boy. What would
he be doing on a scientific installation?" Karr
looked down at her hand, then sat back slightly. "Don't
underestimate him, Marie Enge. He may be just a boy, but he's also
something of a genius. Or was, before the attack. And he might be the
only surviving link we have to the Project. That's if he's still
alive. And if we can get to him before the terrorists find out that
he escaped." She
was looking at him strangely. "This is very important, then?" Karr
narrowed his eyes. "You want to be paid for your help?" "Did
I say that?" He
winced slightly at the sharpness in her voice, then bowed his head.
"I'm sorry. It's just. . ." "It's
all right, Major Karr. I understand. You must deal with some unsavory
types in the work you do." He
smiled. "Yes, But to answer you—I have the T'ang's own
personal authority to find the boy. If I wanted to I could tear this
place apart to find him. But that's not my way. Besides, I want the
boy unharmed. Who knows what he might do if he felt threatened." "I
see." She looked down, suddenly very still. "Look,"
he said, "why don't we simplify this? Why don't you act as
intermediary? It might be best if you and not one of us were to deal
with the boy. He might find it easier to trust you." She
looked back at him, grateful. Karr
smiled. "Then you know where he is." She
caught her breath, a strange little movement in her face betraying
the fact that she thought she had been tricked by him. Then she
nodded, looking up at him. "Yes.
At least, I think so." She
watched him a moment longer, a lingering uncertainty in her face,
then gave a small laugh. "You mean it, then? You'll let me
handle it?" He
nodded. "I gave my word to you, didn't I? But take this."
He handed her a necklace. "When you're ready, just press the
stud on the neck. We'll trace it and come." Again
the uncertainty returned to her face. He
smiled reassuringly. "Trust me, Marie Enge. Please. We will do
nothing until you call for us. I shall not even have you followed
when you leave this room. But I'm relying on you; so don't let me
down. Much depends on this." "All
right." She stood, slipping the necklace over her head. "But
what if he's afraid? What if he doesn't want to go back?" Karr
nodded, then reached into his tunic pocket again. "Give this to
him. He'll understand." It was
a pendant. A beautiful silver pendant. And inside, in the tiny
circular locket, was the picture of a woman. A beautiful dark-haired
woman. She snapped it closed, then held it up, watching it turn,
flashing, in the light. She
slipped the pendant into her apron pocket and turned to leave, but he
called her back. "By the way," he said. "How good are
you at wei chi?" She
turned in the doorway and looked back at him, smiling. "How
good? Well, maybe I'll play you sometime and let you find out for
yourself, eh, Major Karr?" Karr
grinned. "I'd like that, Marie Enge. I'd like that very much." SHE
WAS STANDING there when the door opened. It was just after two in the
morning and the corridors were empty. Tuan Ti Fo took one step into
the hall, then stopped, seeing her there in the shadows. "Marie
. . ." "I
know," she said quickly, seeing how he was dressed, how he was
carrying his bedroll on his back. Behind him the boy looked out,
wide-eyed, wondering what was going on. He
took a breath. "Then you will understand why we must go. The boy
is in great danger here." She
nodded. "I know that too. There are men trying to kill him. They
killed his friends." He
narrowed his eyes, his voice a whisper. "How do you know all
this, Marie?" "Inside,"
she said, moving closer. "Please, Tuan Ti Fo. I must talk with
you." When he hesitated, she reached out and touched his arm.
"Please, Master Tuan. For the boy's sake." They
went inside. The boy had backed away. He was crouched against the
back wall, his eyes going from Tuan Ti Fo to the newcomer, his body
tensed. "It's
all right, Kim," Tuan Ti Fo said, going across and kneeling next
to him. "She's a friend." He half turned, looking back at
Marie. "This is Kim. Kim, this is Marie." She
came across and stood there, shaking her head. "You're the boy,
all right, but it doesn't make sense." She looked from him to
Tuan Ti Fo. "I was told he was a scientist, a genius, but. . ."
She turned back. "Well, he's just a boy. A frightened little
boy." Tuan
Ti Fo's eyes had widened at her words. Now he laughed. "A boy he
may be, but just a boy he's certainly not. Do you know
something, Marie? He beat me. In only his third game." "I
don't understand you, Master Tuan. Beat you at what?" "At
the game. At wei chi. He's a natural." She
stared at Tuan Ti Fo, then looked back at the boy, a new respect
entering her expression. "He beat you?" Her voice
dropped to a whisper. "Gods . . ." "Yes."
Tuan Ti Fo chuckled. "And by five stones, no less. Not just
beaten, but humiliated." He looked back at Kim and gave him a
small bow. "Which makes our friend here unofficial First Hand
Supreme of all Chung Kuo, neh?" She
laughed, a small laugh of astonishment. "No wonder they want him
back." Tuan
Ti Fo stiffened, his face hardening. "They?" Marie
nodded, suddenly more sober. "Li Yuan. The new T'ang. Kim was
working for him." She
explained. Tuan
Ti Fo sighed. "I see. And you're certain of this?" "I.
. ." She hesitated, remembering her meeting with Karr, then
nodded. "Yes. But there's something I have to give the boy. They
said it would mean something to him." She
took the pendant from her pocket and crouched down, holding it out to
the boy. For a
moment he seemed almost not to see the bright silver circle that lay
in her palm. Then, a growing wonder filling his eyes, he reached out
and touched the hanging chain. She
placed it in his hand, then moved back slightly, watching him. Slowly
the wonder faded, shading into puzzlement. Then, like cracks
appearing in the wall of a dam, his face dissolved, a great flood of
pain and hurt overwhelming him. He
cried out—a raw, gut-wrenching sound in that tiny room—then
pressed the pendant to his cheek, his fingers trembling, his whole
face ghastly now with loss. "T'ai
Cho," he moaned, his voice broken, wavering. "T'ai Cho . .
. they killed T'ai Cho!" CHAPTER
SEVEN
New Blood THE
statues stood at the center of the Hall of Celestial Destinies in
Nantes spaceport, the huge, bronze figures raised high above the
executive-class travelers who bustled like ants about its base. Three
times life-size and magnificently detailed, the vast human figures
seemed like giants from some golden age, captured in the
holo-camera's triple eye and cast in bronze. "Kan
Ying bows to Pan Chao after the Battle of Kazatin," read the
description, the huge letters cut deep into the two-ch'i thick base,
the Mandarin translation given smaller underneath, as though to
emphasize the point that the message was aimed at those who had been
conquered in that great battle—the Hung Mao. Michael
Lever stopped and stared up at it. Kazatin was where the dream of
Rome, of the great Ta Ts'in emperors, had failed. The defeat of Kan
Ying— Domitian as he was known by his own people—had let
the Han into Europe. The rest was history. "What
do you make of it?" Kustow said into his ear. "It looks
like more of their crowing to me." Like
Lever, Kustow was in his late twenties, a tall man with close-cropped
blond hair. He wore the same somber clothes as Lever, wine-red pan.
that made them seem more like clerks than the heirs to great
Companies. Facially the two men were very different, Kustow's face
blunt, Lever's hawkish; but the similarity of dress and the starkness
of their haircuts made them seem like brothers or members of some
strange cult. So, too, the third of them, Stevens, who stood to one
side, looking back at the wall-length window and its view of the
great circle of the spaceport's landing apron. They
were strangers here. Americans. Young men on their fathers' business.
Or so their papers claimed. But there were other reasons for coming
to City Europe. This
was where things were happening just now. The pulsing heart of
things. And they had come to feel that pulse. To find out if there
was something they could learn from looking around. Lever
turned, smiling back at his best friend. "They say Kan Ying was
a good man, Bryn. A strong man and yet fair. Under him the lands of
la Ts'in were fairly governed. Had his sons ruled, they say
there would have been a golden age." Kustow
nodded. "A good man, yes, until the great Pan Chao arrived." The
two men laughed quietly, then looked back at the statue. Kan
Ying knelt before Pan Chao, his back bent, his forehead pressed into
the bare earth. He was unarmed, while Pan Chao stood above him, legs
apart, his great sword raised in triumph, two daggers in his belt.
Behind Kan Ying stood his four generals, their arms and insignia
stripped from them, their faces gashed, their beards ragged from
battle. There was honor in the way they held themselves, but also
defeat. Their armies had been slaughtered on the battlefield by the
superior Han forces. They looked tired, and the great, empty coffin
they carried between them looked too much for their wasted strength
to bear. Nor
would it grow any lighter. For, so the story went, Pan Chao had
decapitated Kan Ying there and then and sent his body back to Rome,
where it had lain out in the open in the great square, slowly
rotting, waiting for the triumphal entry into the city three years
later of the young Emperor Ho Ti. Two
thousand years ago, it had been. And still the Han crowed about it.
Still they raised great statues to celebrate the moment when they had
laid the Hung Moo low. Lever
turned. "Carl! Bryn! Come on! We're meeting Ebert in an hour,
don't forget." Stevens
turned, smiling, then hurried across. "I was just watching one
of the big interplanetary craft go up. They're amazing. I could feel
the floor trembling beneath me as it turned on the power and
climbed." Kustow
laughed. "So that's what it was . . . And there was I thinking
it was the chow mein we had on the flight." Stevens
smiled back at them, then put his arms about their shoulders. He was
the oldest of the three, an engineering graduate whose father owned a
near-space research and development company. His fascination with
anything to do with space and space flight bordered upon obsession
and he had been horrified when the New Hope had been blown out
of the sky by the Seven. Something had died in him that day, and at
the same time, something had been born. A determination to get back
what had been taken from them. To change the Edict and get out there,
into space again, whatever it took. "We'll
be building them one day, I tell you," he said softly. "But
bigger than that, and faster." Kustow
frowned. "Faster than that?" He shook his head. "Well,
if you say so, Carl. But I'm told some of those craft can make the
Mars trip in forty days." Stevens
nodded. "The Tientsin can do it in thirty. Twenty-six at
perihelion. But yes, Bryn. Give me ten years and I'll make something
that can do it in twenty." "And
kill all the passengers! I can see it now. It's bad enough crossing
the Atlantic on one of those things, but imagine the g-forces that
would build up if you—" "Please
..." Lever interrupted, seeing how things were developing. "Hans
will be waiting for us. So let's get on." They
went through to the main City Transfer barrier, ignoring the long
line of passengers at the gates, going directly to the duty officer,
a short, broad-shouldered man with neat black hair. "Forgive
me, Captain," Lever began, "but could you help us?" He
took his documentation from his pocket and pushed it into the
officer's hand. "We've an appointment with Major Ebert at eleven
and—" The
officer didn't even look at the card. "Of course, Shih Lever.
Would you mind following me? You and your two companions. There's a
transporter waiting up above. Your baggage will be sent on." Lever
gave a small nod of satisfaction. So Ebert had briefed his men
properly. "And the other two in our party?" The
officer smiled tightly. His information was not one hundred percent
perfect then. "They . . . will join you as quickly as possible." "Good."
Lever smiled. No, even Ebert hadn't known he was bringing two experts
with him. Nor had he wanted him to know. In business—even in
this kind of business—it was always best to keep your opponent
wrong-footed; even when your opponent was your friend. To make him
feel uncertain, uninformed. That way you kept the advantage. "Then
lead on," he said. "Let's not keep our host waiting." stevens
was the first to notice it. He leaned across and touched Lever's arm.
"Michael—something's wrong." "What
do you mean?" Stevens
leaned closer. "Look outside, through the window. There are
mountains down below. And the sun—it's to the left. We're
heading south. At a guess I'd say we're over the Swiss Wilds." Lever
sat up, staring outward, then looked down the aisle of the
transporter. "Captain?
Can you come here a moment?" The
Security officer broke off his conversation with his adjutant and
came across, bowing respectfully. "What
is it, Shih Lever?" Lever
pointed out at the mountains. "Where are we?" The
Captain smiled. "You've noticed. I'm sorry, ch'un tzu, but
I couldn't tell you before. My orders, you understand. However, Shih
Stevens is right. We're heading south. And those below are the
Swiss Wilds." He reached into his tunic and withdrew a folded
handwritten note, handing it to Lever. "Here, this will explain
everything." Lever
unfolded the note and read it quickly. It was from Ebert. Lever
smiled, his fingers tracing the wax seal at the foot of the note,
then looked up again. "And you, Captain? What's your role in
this?" The
officer smiled, then began to unbutton his tunic. He peeled it off
and threw it to one side; then sat down facing the three Americans. "Forgive
the deception, my friends, but let me introduce myself. My name is
Howard DeVore and I'm to be your host for the next eight hours." LEHMANN
SAT at the back of the room, some distance from the others. A huge
viewing screen filled the wall at the far end, while to one side, on
a long, wide table made of real mahogany, a detailed map of City
Europe was spread out, the Swiss Wilds and the Carpathians marked in
red, like bloodstains on the white. DeVore,
Lever, and the others sat in big leather chairs, drinks in hand,
talking. Above them, on the screen, the funeral procession moved
slowly through the walled northern garden at Tongjiang—the Li
family, the seven T'ang, their Generals, and their chief retainers.
Thirty shaven-headed servants followed, the open casket held high
above their heads. DeVore
raised his half-filled glass to indicate the slender, dark-haired
figure in white who led the mourners. "He
carries his grief well. But then he must. It's a quality he'll need
to cultivate in the days ahead." DeVore's
smile was darkly ironic. Beside him, Lever laughed; then he leaned
forward, cradling his empty glass between his hands. "And look
at our friend Hans. A study in solemnity, neh?" Lehmann
watched them laugh, his eyes drawn to the man who sat to the extreme
right of the group. He was much older than Lever and his friends, his
dark hair tied back in two long pigtails. There was a cold elegance
about him that contrasted with the brashness of the others. He was a
proud, even arrogant man; the way he sat, the way he held his head,
expressed that eloquently. Even so, he was their servant, and that
fact bridled his tongue and kept him from being too familiar with
them. His
name was Andrew Curval and he was an experimental geneticist; perhaps
the greatest of the age. As a young man he had worked for GenSyn as a
commodity slave, his time and talents bought by them on a
fifteen-year contract. Twelve years ago that contract had expired and
he had set up his own Company, but that venture had failed after only
three years. Now he was back on contract; this time to Old Man Lever. Lehmann
looked back at the others. Kustow was talking, his deep voice
providing a commentary on the proceedings. He was pointing up at Li
Yuan, there at the center of the screen. "Look
at him! He's such an innocent. He hasn't the faintest idea of how
things really stand." "No,"
Lever agreed. "But that's true of all of them. They're cut off
from the reality of what's happening in the Cities. There's real
dissent down there, real bitterness, and the Seven simply don't know
about it. They're like the Emperors of old: they don't like bad news,
so their servants make sure the truth never gets through to them.
That's bad enough, but as we all know, the system's corrupt to the
core. From the pettiest official to the biggest Minister, there's not
one of them you can't put a price to." The
camera closed in. Li Yuan's face, many times its natural size, filled
the screen. His fine, dark hair was drawn back tightly from his
forehead, secured at the nape of his neck in a tiny porcelain bowl of
purest white. His skin was unmarked, unlined—the flesh of
youth, untouched by time or the ravages of experience. Even
so, he knows, Lehmann thought, looking up into the young T'ang's
eyes. He knows we murdered his father. Or at least suspects. Irritated
by their arrogance, he stood and walked across the room, filling
Lever's glass from the wine kettle. "I think you underestimate
our man," he said quietly. "Look at those eyes. How like
his father's eyes they are. Don't misjudge him. He's no fool, this
one." He turned, looking directly at DeVore. "You've said
so yourself often enough, Howard." "I
agree," said DeVore, eyeing Lehmann sharply. "But there are
things he lacks, things the Seven miss now that Li Shai Tung is dead.
Experience, wisdom, an intuitive sense of when and how to act. Those
things are gone from them now. And without them . . ." He
laughed softly. "Well, without them the Seven are vulnerable." On the
screen the image changed, the camera panning back, the figures
diminishing as the larger context was revealed. A gray stone wall,
taller than a man, surrounded everything. Beyond it the mountains of
the Ta Pa Shan formed faint shapes in the distance. The tomb was to
the left, embedded in the earth, the great white tablet stretching
out toward its open mouth. To the right was the long pool, still,
intensely black, its surface like a mirror. Between stood the seven
T'ang and their retainers, all of them dressed in white, the color of
mourning. "One
bomb," said Kustow, nodding to himself. "Just one bomb and
it would all be over, neh?" He turned in his seat, looking
directly at DeVore. "How do you come by these pictures? I
thought these ceremonies were private?" "They
are," DeVore said, taking a sip from his glass. He leaned
forward, smiling, playing the perfect host, knowing how important it
was for him to win these young men over. "The camera is a
standard Security surveillance device. They're all over Tongjiang.
I've merely tapped into the system." All
three of the Americans were watching DeVore closely now, ignoring
what was happening on the screen. "I
thought those systems were discrete," Lever said. "They
are." DeVore set his drink down on the table at his side, then
took a small device from his pocket and handed it to Lever. "This
was something my friend Soren Berdichev developed at SimFic before
they shut him down. It looks and functions like the backup battery
packs they have on those Security cameras, but there's more to it
than that. What it does is to send a tight beam of information up to
a satellite. There the signal is scrambled into code and rerouted
here, where it's decoded." Lever
studied the device, then handed it to Kustow. He turned, looking back
at DeVore. "Astonishing. But how did you get it into place? I'm
told those palaces are tighter than a young whore's ass when it comes
to security." DeVore
laughed. "That's true. But whatever system you have, it always
relies on men. Individual men. And men can be bought, or won, or
simply threatened. It was relatively easy to get these installed." Lehmann,
watching, saw how that impressed the young men, but it was only half
true. The device worked exactly as DeVore had said, but the truth was
that he had access only to Tbngjiang, and that only because Hans
Ebert had been daring enough to take the thing in, risking the
possibility that an overzealous officer might search him, Tolonen's
favorite or no. Elsewhere his attempts to plant the devices had
failed. They
looked back at the screen. Li Yuan stood at the edge of the family
tablet, the freshly inscribed name of his father cut into the
whiteness there. Behind the young T'ang stood the rest of the Seven,
and at their back the Generals. Bringing up the rear of this small
but powerful gathering stood members of the Li Family— cousins,
uncles, wives, concubines, and close relations, a hundred in all. The
ranks were thin, the weakness of the Family exposed to view, and yet
Li Yuan stood proudly, his eyes looking straight ahead, into the
darkness of the tomb. "All
the trappings of power," said Kustow, shaking his head as if in
disapproval. "Like the Pharaohs, they are. Obsessed with death." Lehmann
studied Kustow a moment, noting the strange mixture of awe and
antagonism in his blunt, almost rectangular face. You admire this,
he thought. Or envy it, rather. Because you, too, would like
to create a dynasty and be buried in a cloth of gold. For
himself, he hated it all. He would have done with kings and
dynasties. They
watched as the casket was carried to the mouth of the tomb. Saw the
six strongest carry it down the steps into the candle-lit interior.
And then the camera focused once more upon Li Yuan. "He's strong
for one so young." They
were the first words Curval had spoken since he had come into the
room. Again Lehmann looked, admiring the manner of the man, his
singleness of being. In his face there was a hard, uncompromising
certainty about things; in some strange way it reminded Lehmann of
Berdichev, or of how Berdichev had become, after his wife's death. On the
screen Li Yuan bowed to the tablet, then turned, making his slow way
to the tomb. "He
looks strong," DeVore said after a moment, "but
there are things you don't know about him. That outward presence of
his is a mask. Inside he's a writhing mass of unstable elements. Do
you know that he killed all his wife's horses?" All
eyes were on DeVore, shocked by the news. To kill horses—it was
unthinkable! "Yes,"
DeVore continued. "In a fit of jealousy, so I understand. So you
see, beneath that calm exterior lies a highly unstable child. Not
unlike his headstrong brother. And a coward too." Lever
narrowed his eyes. "How so?" "Fei
Yen, his brother's wife, is heavily pregnant. Rumor has it that it is
not his child. The woman has been sent home to her father in
disgrace. And they say he knows whose bastard it is. Knows and does
nothing." "I
see," Lever said. "But does that necessarily make the man a
coward?" DeVore gave a short laugh. "If you were married
you would understand it better, Michael. A man's wife, his
child—-these things are more than the world to him. He would
kill for them. Even a relatively passive man. But Li Yuan holds back,
does nothing. That, surely, is cowardice?" "Or
a kind of wisdom?" Lever looked back up at the screen, watching
the young T'ang step down into the darkness. "Forgive me, Shih
DeVore, but I feel your friend here is right. It would not do to
underestimate Li Yuan." "No?" DeVore shrugged. "Even
so," Lever said, smiling, "I take your point. The Seven
have never been weaker than they are right now. And their average age
has never been younger. Why, we're old men by comparison to most of
them!" There was laughter at that. DeVore
studied the three Americans, pleased by Lever's unconscious echo of
his thoughts. It was time. He
raised his hand. At the prearranged signal the screen went dark and a
beam of light shone out from above, spotlighting the table and the
map on the far side of the room. "Ch'un
tzu. . ." DeVore said, rising to his feet, one arm extended,
indicating the table. "You've seen how things stand with the
Seven. How things are now. Well, let us talk of how things might be." Lever
stood, studying DeVore a moment, as if to weigh him, then smiled and
nodded. "All right, Shih DeVore. Lead the way. We're all ears." BACK
INSIDE, Li Yuan drew Wang Sau-leyan aside. "Cousin
Wang," he said softly. "May I speak to you in private? News
has come." Wang
Sau-leyan stared back at him, faintly hostile. "News, Cousin?" Li
Yuan turned slightly to one side, indicating the door to a nearby
room. Wang hesitated, then nodded and went through. Inside, Li Yuan
pulled the doors closed then turned, facing his fellow T'ang. "Your
grain ships . . ." he began, watching Wang Sau-leyan's face
closely. "Yes?"
Wang's expression was mildly curious. "I'm
afraid your ships are at the bottom of the ocean, Cousin. An hour
ago. It seems someone blew them up." Wang's
expression of angry surprise was almost comical. He shook his head as
if speechless; then, unexpectedly, he reached out and held Li Yuan's
arm. "Are you certain, Li Yuan?" Li
Yuan nodded, looking down at the plump, bejeweled hand that rested on
the rough cloth of his sleeve. "It's true. Your Chancellor, Hung
Mien-lo, has confirmed it." Wang
Sau-leyan let his hand fall. He turned his head away, then looked
back at Li Yuan, a strange hurt in his eyes. "I
am so sorry, Li Yuan. So very sorry. The grain was my gift to your
father. My final gift to him." He shook his head, pained. "Oh,
I can spare more grain—and, indeed, you will have it,
Cousin—but that's not the point, is it? Someone destroyed my
gift! My gift to your father!" Li
Yuan's lips parted slightly in surprise. He had not expected Wang to
be so upset, so patently indignant. Nor had he for one moment
expected Wang to offer another shipment. No, he had thought this all
some kind of clever ruse, some way of shirking his verbal obligation.
He frowned, then shook his head, confused. "Your
offer is very generous, Cousin, but you are in no way to blame for
what has happened. Indeed, I understand that the Ping Tiao have
claimed responsibility for the act." "The
Ping Tiao!" Again there was a flash of anger in Wang's face that
took Li Yuan by surprise. "Then the Ping Tiao will pay for their
insult!" "Cousin
. . ." Li Yuan said softly, taking a step closer. "The
matter is being dealt with, I assure you. The insult will not be
allowed to pass." Wang
gave a terse nod. "Thank you, Cousin. I—" There
was a loud knocking on the door. Li Yuan half turned, then looked
back at Wang. "You wished to say ... ?" A
faint smile crossed Wang's features. "Nothing, Cousin. But
again, thank you for telling me. I shall instruct my Chancellor to
send a new shipment at once." Li
Yuan lowered his head. "I am most grateful." Wang
smiled and returned the bow to the precise degree—tacitly
acknowledging their equality of status—then moved past Li Yuan,
pulling the door open. Hans
Ebert stood outside, in full-dress uniform, his equerry three paces
behind him. Seeing Wang Sau-leyan, he bowed low. "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia. I didn't realize . . ." Wang
Sau-leyan smiled tightly. "It is all right, Major Ebert. You may
go in. Your Master and I have finished now." ebert
turned, then, taking a deep breath, stepped into the doorway,
presenting himself. "Chieh
Hsia?" Li
Yuan was standing on the far side of the room, beside the ceremonial
fcang, one foot up on the ledge of it, his right hand stroking his
unbearded chin. He looked across, then waved Ebert in almost
casually. Ebert
marched to the center of the room and came smartly to attention,
lowering his head respectfully, waiting for his T'ang to speak. Li
Yuan sighed, then launched into things without preamble. "These
are troubled times, Hans. The old bonds must be forged stronger than
ever, the tree of state made firm against the storm to come, from
root to branch." Ebert
raised his head. "And my role in this, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan looked down. "Let me explain. Shortly before his death, my
father went to see General Nocenzi in hospital. As you may have
heard, he accepted Nocenzi's resignation. There was no other choice.
But who was to be General in his place?" He paused
significantly. "Well, it was my father's intention to ask
Marshal Tolonen to step down from his post of seniority to be General
again, and he drafted a memorandum to that effect. There were good
reasons for his decision, not least of which was the stability that
the old man's presence would bring to the Security forces. He also
felt that to bring in a loo woi—an outsider—might
cause some resentment. Besides which, it takes some time for a new
General to adapt to his command, and time was something we did not
have." Li
Yuan turned away, silent a moment, then looked back at him. "Don't
you agree, Hans?" Ebert
bowed his head. "It is so, Chieh Hsia. Moreover, there is no one
in all Chung Kuo with more experience than the Marshal. Indeed, I can
think of nobody your enemies would less welcome in the post." He saw
Li Yuan smile, pleased by his words. Even so, his sense of
disappointment was acute. After what Tolonen had said to him earlier
he had hoped for the appointment himself. Li
Yuan nodded, then spoke again. "However, my father's death
changes many things. Our enemies will think us weak just now. Will
think me callow, inexperienced. We need to demonstrate how wrong they
are. Tolonen's appointment as General would certainly help in that
regard, but I must also show them that I am my own man, not merely my
father's shadow. You understand me, Hans?" "I
understand, Chieh Hsia." Only
too well, he thought. Only too well. "Yes
. . ." Li Yuan nodded thoughtfully. "In that we are alike,
neh, Hans? We know what it is to have to wait. To be our fathers'
hands. Yet in time we must become them, and more, if we are to gain
the respect of the world." "It
is so," Ebert said quietly. "Besides
which," Li Yuan continued, "things are certain to get worse
before they get better. In consequence we must grow harder, more
ruthless than we were in the days of ease. In that, Wang Sau-leyan is
right. It is a new age. Things have changed, and we must change with
them. The days of softness are past." Ebert
watched Li Yuan's face as he spoke the words and felt a genuine
admiration for the young T'ang. Li Yuan was much harder, much more
the pragmatist than his father; his ideas about the Wiring Project
were proof of that. But Ebert was too far along his own road now to
let that color his thinking; too deeply committed to his own dream of
inheritance. One
day he would have to kill this man, admire him or not. It was that or
see his own dream die. "Trust,"
Li Yuan said. "Trust is the cornerstone of the state. In that,
as in many things, my father was right. But in an age of violent
change who should the wise man trust? Who can he trust?" Li
Yuan looked back at Ebert, narrowing his eyes. "I'm sorry, Hans.
It's just that I must talk this through. You understand?" Ebert
bowed his head. "I am honored that you feel you can talk so
freely in my presence, Chieh Hsia." Li
Yuan laughed, then grew serious again. "Yes, well... I suppose
it is because I consider you almost family, Hans. Your father was
chief among my Father's counselors since Shepherd's illness and will
remain among my Council of Advisors. However, it is not about your
father that I summoned you today; it is about you." Ebert
raised his head. "Chieh Hsia?" "Yes,
Hans. Haven't you guessed, or have I been too indirect? I want you
for my General—my most trusted man. I want you to serve me as
Tolonen served my father. To be my sword arm and my scourge, the bane
of my enemies, and the defender of my children." Ebert's
mouth had fallen open. "But, Chieh Hsia, I thought. . ." "Oh,
Tolonen is appointed temporarily. As caretaker General. He agreed an
hour ago. But it is you I want to stand behind me at my coronation
three days from now. You who will receive the ceremonial dagger that
morning." Ebert
stared at him, open-mouthed, then fell to his knees, bowing his head
low. "Chieh Hsia, you do me a great honor. My life is yours to
command." He had
rehearsed the words earlier, yet his surprise at Li Yuan's sudden
reversal gave them force. When he glanced up, he could see the
pleasure in the young T'ang's face. "Stand
up, Hans. Please." Ebert
got to his feet slowly, keeping his head bowed. Li
Yuan came closer. "It might surprise you, Hans, but I have been
watching you for some time now. Seeing how well you dealt with your
new responsibilities. It did not escape my notice how loyal your
officers were to you. As for your courage . . ." He reached out
and touched the metal plate on the back of Ebert's head, then moved
back again. "Most important of all, though, you have
considerable influence among the elite of First Level. An important
quality in a General." Li
Yuan smiled broadly. "Your appointment will be posted throughout
the levels, tonight at twelfth bell. But before then I want you to
prepare a plan of action for me." "A
plan, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan nodded. "A plan to eradicate the Ping Tioo. To finish off
what my father began. I want every last one of them dead, a month
from now. Dead and their bodies laid before me." Ebert's
mouth fell open again. Then he bowed his head. But for a moment he
had almost laughed. Eradicate the Ping Tioo? Little did Li Yuan know.
It was done already! And done by Li Yuan's chief enemy, DeVore! Li
Yuan touched his shoulder. "Well... go now, Hans. Go and tell
your father. I know he will be proud. It was what he always wanted." Ebert
smiled, then bowed his head again, surprised by the pride he felt. To
be this man's servant—what was there to be proud of in that?
And yet, strangely enough, he was. He turned to leave, but Li Yuan
called him back. "Oh,
and Hans ... we found the boy." Ebert
turned back, his stomach tightening. "That's excellent, Chieh
Hsia. How was he?" Li
Yuan smiled. "It could not have been better, Hans. He remembered
everything. Everything . . ." DEVORE
TOOK his eye from the lens of the electron-microscope and looked
across at the geneticist, smiling, impressed by what he'd seen. "It's
clever, Shih Curval. Very clever indeed. And does it always
behave like that, no matter what the host?" Curval
hesitated a moment, then reached across DeVore to take the sealed
slide from the microscope, handling it with extreme delicacy. As
indeed he should, for the virus it contained was deadly. He looked
back at DeVore. "If
the host has had the normal course of immunization, then, yes, it
should follow near enough the same evolutionary pattern. There will
be slight statistical variations, naturally, but such 'sports' will
be small in number. For all intents and purposes you could guarantee
a one hundred percent success rate." DeVore
nodded thoughtfully. "Interesting. So, in effect, what we have
here is a bug that evolves—that's harmless when it's first
passed on, but which, in only a hundred generations, evolves into a
deadly virus. A brain-killer." He laughed. "And what's a
hundred generations in the life of a bug?" For
the first time, Curval laughed. "Exactly . . ." DeVore
moved back, letting the scientist pass, his mind reeling with an
almost aesthetic delight at the beauty of the thing. "Moreover,
the very thing that triggers this evolutionary pattern is that which
is normally guaranteed to defend the body against disease—the
immunization program!" "Exactly.
The very thing that all First Level children have pumped into their
systems as six-month fetuses." DeVore
watched him place the sealed slide back into the padded, shock-safe
case and draw another out. "Come
. . . here's another. Slightly different this time. Same principal,
but more specific." DeVore
leaned forward, fascinated. "What do you mean, more specific?" Curval
slipped the slide into the slot, then stood back. "Just watch.
I'll trigger it when you're ready." DeVore
put his eye to the lens. Again he saw the thing divide and grow and
change, like the ever-evolving pattern in a kaleidoscope, but this
thing was real, alive—as alive as only a thing whose
sole purpose was to kill could be. DeVore
looked up. "It looks the same." Curval
looked at him closely. "You noticed no difference then?" DeVore
smiled. "Well, there were one or two small things midway
through. There was a brief stage when the thing seemed a lot bigger
than before. And afterward, there was a slight color change. Then it
normalized. Was the same as before." Curval
laughed. "Good. So you did see." "Yes,
but what did I see?" Curval
took out the slide—not as carefully as before, it seemed—and
put it down on the table beside him. "This
. . ." he tapped it almost carelessly, "is as harmless to
you or I as spring water. We could take in a huge dose of it and it
wouldn't harm us one tiny little bit. But to a Han . . ." DeVore's
eyes widened. Curval
nodded. "That's right. What you saw was the virus priming itself
genetically, like a tiny bacteriological time bomb, making itself
racially specific." DeVore
laughed, then reached across to pick it up. The slide seemed empty,
yet its contents could do untold damage. Not to him or his kind, but
to the Han. He smiled broadly. "Wonderful! That's wonderful!" Curval
laughed. "I thought you'd like it. You know, I had you in mind
constantly while I was making it. I would sit there late nights and
laugh, imagining your reaction." DeVore
looked at him a moment, then nodded. The two had known each other
more than twenty years, ever since their first fateful meeting at one
of Old Man Ebert's parties. Curval had been restless even
then—wanting to break out on his own, burdened by the remaining
years of his contract. It had been DeVore who had befriended him.
DeVore who had found him his first important contacts in City
America. DeVore who had shown him the top-security files detailing
the deals Klaus Ebert had struck with various companies to destroy
CurvaPs own enterprise. DeVore who had arranged the deal whereby he
worked for the Levers and yet had his own private laboratories. And
now Curval was returning the favor. With only one string attached. A
minor thing. DeVore could have the virus, but first he must promise
to kill Old Man Ebert. He had agreed. "Does
Michael know about this?" Curval
smiled. "What do you think? Michael Lever is a nice young man
for all his revolutionary fervor. He wants to change things—but
fairly. He'll fight if he must, but he won't cheat. He'd kill me if
he knew I'd made something like this." DeVore
considered that a while, then nodded. "You're sure of that?"
Curval laughed sourly. "I know that young man too well. He seems
different, but underneath it all he's the same as the rest of them.
They've had it too easy, all of them. What fires them isn't ambition
but a sense of bitterness. Bitterness that their fathers still treat
them as children. For all they were saying back there in the screen
room, they don't want change. Not real change like you and I want.
When they talk of change what they mean is a change of leadership.
They'd as soon relinquish their privileges as the Seven." "Maybe,"
DeVore said, watching Curval pack up the microscope. "By the
way, has the virus a name?" Curval
clicked the case shut and turned, looking back at DeVore. "Yes,
as a matter of fact it does. I've named it after the viral strain I
developed it from. That, too, was a killer, though not as lethal or
efficient as mine. And it was around for centuries before people
managed to find a cure for it. Syphilis, they called it. What the Han
call yang mei ping, 'willow-plum sickness.' " DeVore
laughed, surprised. "So it's sexually transmitted?" Curval
stared at DeVore, then laughed quietly. "Of course! I thought
you understood that. It's the only way to guarantee that it will
spread, and spread widely. Fucking. . . it's the thing the human race
does most of and says least about. And when you consider it, it's the
perfect way of introducing a new virus. After all, they're all
supposed to be immune to sexual disease. From birth." DeVore
touched his tongue against his top teeth, then nodded. Errant
husbands and their unfaithful wives, bored concubines and their
casual lovers, lecherous old men and randy widows, singsong girls and
libertine young sons—he could see it now, spreading like the
leaves and branches of a great tree until the tree itself rotted and
fell. He laughed, then slapped Curval on the back. "YouVe
done well, Andrew. Very well." Curval
looked at him. "And you, Howard? You'll keep your promise?" DeVore
squeezed his shoulder. "Of course. Have I ever let you down? But
come, let's go. Our young friends will be wondering why we've been
gone so long. Besides, I understand our friend Kustow has brought his
wei chi champion with him and I fancied trying myself out
against him." Curval
nodded. "He's good. I've seen him play." DeVore
met his eyes. "As good as me?" Curval
turned and took the tiny, deadly slide from the table. "They say
he might even challenge for the championship next year." DeVore
laughed. "Maybe so, but you still haven't answered me. YouVe
seen me play. Would you say he's as good as me?" Curval
slotted the slide back into the case and secured the lid, then looked
back at DeVore, hesitant, not certain how he'd take the truth. "To
be honest with you, Howard, yes. Every bit as good. And maybe a lot
better." DeVore
turned away, pacing the tiny room, lost in his own thoughts. Then he
turned back, facing Curval again, a smile lighting his face. "Our
friend Kustow ... do you know if he likes to gamble?" devore
looked UP from the board, then bowed to his opponent, conceding the
game. It was the fifth the two had played and the closest yet. This
time he had come within a stone of beating the Han. Even so, the
result of the tournament was conclusive; Kustow's champion had
triumphed five-nothing, two of those games having been won by a
margin of more than twenty stones. "Another
five?" Kustow said, smiling. He had done well by the contest—
DeVore had wagered five thousand yuan on each game and a
further ten thousand on the tournament. DeVore
looked back at him, acknowledging his victory. "I wish there
were time, my friend, but you must be at the Ebert Mansion by nine
and it's six already. I'll tell you what, though. When I come to
America, I'll play your man again. It will give me the opportunity to
win my money back." Lever
leaned forward in his chair. "You plan to come to America, then,
Shih DeVore? Wouldn't that be rather dangerous for you?" DeVore
smiled. "Life is dangerous, Michael. And while it pays to
take care, where would any of us be if we did not take risks?" Lever
looked to his two friends. "True. But one must choose one's
friends well in these uncertain times." DeVore
bowed his head slightly, understanding what was implied. They were
inclined to work with him but had yet to commit themselves fully. He
would need to give them further reasons for allying with him. "And
one's lieutenants. My man Mach, for instance. He served me well in
the attack on the T'ang's plantations." Lever gave a laugh of
surprise. "That was you? But I thought. . ." "You
thought as everyone was meant to think. That it was the Ping Tiao.
But no, they were my men." "I
see. But why? Why not claim credit for yourself?" "Because
sometimes it suits one's purpose to make one's enemies believe the
truth is other than it is. You see, the Ping Tiao is now
defunct. I destroyed the last vestiges of that organization two days
back. Yet as far as the Seven are concerned, it still exists—still
poses a threat to them. Indeed, the new T'ang, Li Yuan, plans to
launch a major campaign against them. He has given instructions to
his new General to use whatever force it takes to destroy them, and
at whatever cost. Such a diversion of funds and energies is to be
welcomed, wouldn't you say?" Lever
laughed. "Yes! And at the same time it draws attention away from
your activities here in the Wilds. I like that." DeVore
nodded, pleased. Here were young men with fire in them. They were not
like their European counterparts. Their anger was pure. It had only
to be channeled. He
stood, and with one final bow to his opponent, came around the table,
facing the three young men. "There's
one more thing before you go from here. Something I want to give
you." Lever
looked to his friends, then lowered his head. "We thank you,
Shih DeVore, but your hospitality has been reward enough." DeVore
understood. Lever was accustomed to the use of gifts in business to
create obligations. It was a trick the Han used a great deal. He
shook his head. "Please, my friends, do not mistake me; this
gift carries no obligation. Indeed, I would feel greatly offended if
you took it otherwise. I am no trader. I would not dream of seeking
any material advantage from our meeting. Let this be a simple token
of our friendship, neh?" He
looked to each of them; to Lever, Kustow, and finally to Stevens,
seeing how each had been won by the simplicity of his manner. "Good.
Then wait here. I have it in the other room." He
left them, returning a moment later with a bulky, rectangular parcel
wrapped in red silk. "Here,"
he said, handing it to Lever. "You are to open it later—on
the flight to Ebert's if you must, but later. And whatever you
finally decide to do with it, bear in mind that great sacrifices have
been made to bring this to you. Let no one see it who you do not
trust like a brother." Lever
stared at the parcel a moment, his eyes burning with curiosity, then
looked up again, smiling. "IVe
no idea what this is, but I'll do as you say. And thank you, Howard.
Thank you for everything. You must be our guest when you come to
America." DeVore
smiled. "That's kind of you, Michael. Very kind indeed." "Well,
Stefan, what do you think?" Lehmann
stood there a moment longer at the one-way mirror, then turned back,
looking at DeVore. He had witnessed everything. "The
contest. . . You lost it deliberately, didn't you?" DeVore
smiled, pleased that Lehmann had seen it. "I
could have beaten him. Not at first, maybe, but from the third game
on. There's a pattern to his game. That's the way it is with these
Americans. There's a pattern to their thinking and I feel as if I'm
beginning to discern it. Which is why I have to go there myself.
Europe is dead as far as we're concerned. WeVe milked it dry. If we
want to complete the fortresses, we've got to get funds from the
Americans. WeVe got to persuade them to invest in us—to make
them see us as the means | by which they can topple the Seven." "And
Curval? You promised him you'd kill Old Man Ebert. Is that wise?" DeVore
laughed. "If the gods will it that the old man dies in the next
six months, he will die, and I will claim the credit. But I shall do
nothing to aid them. I have no great love for Klaus Ebert—I
think he's a pompous old windbag, to tell the truth— but he is
Hans's father. Kill him and we risk all. No, we will leave such
things to fate. And if Curval objects . . ." He laughed. "Well,
we can deal with that as and when, neh? As and when." CHAPTER
EIGHT
Mirrors IT
WAS NIGHT. Li Yuan stood on the bridge, staring down into the lake,
watching the full moon dance upon the blackness. Tongjiang was quiet
now, the guests departed. Guards stood off at a distance, perfectly
still, like statues in the silvered darkness. It had
been a long and busy day. He had been up at four, supervising the
final arrangements for his father's funeral, greeting the mourners as
they arrived. The ceremony had taken up the best part of the morning,
followed by an informal meeting of the Seven. Interviews with
ministers and various high officials had eaten up the rest of the
afternoon as he began the task of tying up the loose strands of his
father's business and making preparations for his own coronation
ceremony three days hence. And other things. So many other things. He
felt exhausted, yet there was still more to do before he retired. He
turned, looking back at the palace, thinking how vast and desolate it
seemed without his father's presence. There was only him now—only
Li Yuan, second son of Li Shai Tung. The last of his line. The last
of the house of Li. A
faint wind stirred the reeds at the lake's edge. He looked up, that
same feeling of exposure—that cold, almost physical sense of
isolation—washing over him again. Where were the brothers, the
cousins he should have had? Dead, or never born. And now there was
only him. A thin
wisp of cloud lay like a veil across the moon's bright face. In the
distance a solitary goose crossed the sky, the steady beat of its
wings carrying to where he stood. He
shivered. Today he had pretended to be strong; had made his face
thick, like a wall against his inner feelings. And so it had to be,
from this time on, for he was T'ang now, his life no longer his own.
All day he had been surrounded by people— countless
people, bowing low before him and doing as he bid—and yet he
had never felt so lonely. No,
never in his life had he felt so desolate, so empty. He
gritted his teeth, fighting back what he felt. Be strong, he told
himself. Harden yourself against what is inside you. He took a deep
breath, looking out across the lake. His father had been right. Love
was not enough. Without trust— without those other qualities
that made of love a solid and substantial thing—love was a
cancer, eating away at a man, leaving him weak. And he
could not be weak, for he was T'ang now, Seven. He must put all human
weakness behind him. Must mold himself into a harder form. He
turned away, making his way quickly down the path toward the palace. At the
door to his father's rooms he stopped, loath to go inside. He looked
down at the ring that rested, heavy and unfamiliar, on the first
finger of his right hand, and realized that nothing could have
prepared him for this. His father's death and the ritual of burial
had been momentous occasions, yet neither was quite as real as this
simpler, private moment. How
often had he come in from the garden and found his father sitting at
his desk, his secretaries and ministers in attendance? How often had
the old man looked up and seen him, there where he now stood, and
with a faint, stern smile, beckoned him inside? And
now there was no one to grant him such permission. No one but
himself. Why,
then, was it so difficult to take that first small step into the
room? Why did he feel an almost naked fear at the thought of sitting
at the desk—of looking back at where he now was standing? Perhaps
because he knew the doorway would be empty. Angry
with himself, he took a step into the room, his heart hammering in
his chest as if he were a thief. He laughed uncomfortably as he
looked about him, seeing it all anew. It was
a long, low-ceilinged room, furnished in the traditional manner, his
father's desk, its huge scrolled legs shaped like dragons, raised up
on a massive plinth at the far end of the chamber, a low,
gold-painted balustrade surrounding it, like a room within a room,
the great symbol of the Ywe Lung set into the wall behind.
Unlike his own, it was a distinctly masculine room, no hanging bowls,
no rounded pots filled with exotic plants breaking up its rich yang
heaviness; indeed, there was not a single trace of greenery, only
vases and screens and ancient wall hangings made of silk and golden
thread. He
moved further in, stopping beside a huge bronze cauldron. It was
empty now, but he recalled when it had once contained a thousand tiny
objects carved from jade; remembered a day when he had played there
on his father's floor, the brightly colored pieces—exquisite
miniatures in blue and red and green—scattered all about him.
He had been four then, five at most, but still he could see them
vividly, * could feel the cool, smooth touch of them between his
fingers. He
turned. On the wall to his right was a mirror, an ancient metallic
mirror of the T'ang Dynasty, its surface filled with figures and
lettering arrayed in a series of concentric circles emanating outward
from the central button. Li Yuan moved closer, studying it. The
button—a simple unadorned circle—represented the
indivisibility of all created things. Surrounding it were the animals
of the Four Quadrants: the Tiger, symbol of the west and of
magisterial dignity, courage, and martial prowess; the Phoenix,
symbol of the south and of beauty, peace, and prosperity; the Dragon,
symbol of the east, of fertility and male vigor; and the Tortoise,
symbol of the north, of longevity, strength, and endurance. Beyond
these four were the Eight Trigrams and surrounding those the Twelve
Terrestrial Branches of the zodiac—rat, ox, and tiger; hare,
dragon and serpent; horse, goat, and monkey; cock, dog, and boar. A
band of twenty-four pictograms separated that from the next circle of
animals—twenty-eight in all—representing the
constellations. He
looked past the figures a moment, seeing his face reflected back at
him through the symbols and archetypes of the Han universe. Such a
mirror was hu hsin ching and was said to have magic powers,
protecting its owner from evil. It was also said that one might see
the secrets of futurity in such a mirror. But he had little faith in
what men said. Why, he could barely see his own face, let alone the
face of the future. He
turned his head away, suddenly bitter. Mirrors: they were said to
symbolize conjugal happiness, but his own was broken now, the pieces
scattered. He
went across to the desk. Nan Ho had been in earlier to prepare it for
him. His father's things had been cleared away and his own put in
their place—his inkblock and brushes, his sandbox and the tiny
statue of Kuan Ti, the god of war, which his brother, Han Ch'in, had
given him on his eighth birthday. Beside those were a small pile of
folders and one large, heavy-bound book, its thick spine made of red
silk decorated with a cloud pattern of gold leaf. Mounting
the three small steps he stood with his hands resting on the low
balustrade, his head almost brushing the ceiling, looking across at
the big, tall-backed chair. The great wheel of seven dragons—the
Yuie Lung or Moon Dragon— had been burned into the back
of the chair, black against the ochre of the leather, mirroring the
much larger symbol on the wall behind. This chair had been his
father's and his father's father's before that, back to his
great-great-great-grandfather in the time of Tsao Ch'un. And
now it was his. Undoing
the tiny catch, he pushed back the gate and entered this tiny
room-within-a-room, conscious of how strange even that simple action
felt. He looked about him again, then lowered himself into the chair.
Sitting there, looking out into the ancient room, he could feel his
ancestors gathered close: there in the simple continuity of place,
but there also in each small movement that he made. They
lived, within him. He was their seed. He understood that now. Had
known it even as they had placed the lid upon his father's casket. He
reached across and drew the first of the folders from the pile.
Inside was a single sheet from Klaus Ebert at GenSyn, a document
relinquishing thirteen patents granted in respect of special
food-production techniques. Before his father's death, Ebert had
offered to release the patents to his competitors to help increase
food production in City Europe. They were worth an estimated
two-hundred-and-fifty million yuan on the open market, but
Ebert had given them freely, as a gift to his T'ang. Li
Yuan drew the file closer, then reached across and took his brush,
signing his name at the bottom of the document. He set
the file aside and took another from the pile. It was the summary of
the post-mortem report he had commissioned on his father. He read it
through, then signed it and set it atop the other. Nothing. They had
found nothing. According to the doctors, his father had died of old
age. Old age and a broken heart. Nonsense, he thought. Utter
nonsense. He
huffed out his impatience, then reached across for the third file,
opening it almost distractedly. Then, seeing what it was, he sat
back, his mouth gone dry, his heart beating furiously. It was the
result of the genotyping test he had had done on Fei Yen and her
child. He
closed his eyes, in pain, his breathing suddenly erratic. So now he
would know. Know for good and certain who the father was. Know to
whom he owed the pain and bitterness of the last few months. He
leaned forward again. It was no good delaying. No good putting off
what was inevitable. He drew the file closer, forcing himself to read
it; each word seeming to cut and wound him. And then it was done. He
pushed the file away and sat back. So ... For a
moment he was still, silent, considering his options, then reached
across, touching the summons bell. Almost
at once the door to his right swung back. Nan Ho, his Master of the
Inner Chamber, stood there, his head bowed low. "Chieh Hsia?" "Bring
ch'a, Master Nan. I need to talk." Nan Ho
bobbed his head. "Should I send for your Chancellor, Chieh
Hsia?" "No, Master Chan, it is you I wish to speak
with." "As you wish, Chieh Hsia." When
he had gone, Li Yuan leaned across and drew a large, heavy-bound book
toward him. A stylized dragon and phoenix—their figures drawn
in gold—were inset into the bright-red silk of the cover.
Inside, on the opening page was a handwritten quotation from the Li
Chi, the ancient Book of Rites, the passage in the original
Mandarin. The
point of marriage is to create a union between two persons of
different families, the object of which is to serve first the
ancestors in the temple and second,
the generation to come. He
shivered. So it was. So it had always been among his kind. Yet he had
thought it possible to marry for love. In so doing he had betrayed
his kind. Had tried to be what he was not. For he was Han. Han to the
very core of him. He recognized that now. But it
was not too late. He could begin again. Become what he had failed to
be. A good Han, leaving all ghosts of other selves behind. He
flicked through the pages desultorily, barely seeing the faces that
looked up at him from the pages. Here were a hundred of the most
eligible young women selected from the Twenty-Nine, the Minor
Families. Each one was somewhat different from the rest, had some
particular quality to recommend her, yet it was all much the same to
him. One thing alone was important now—to marry and have sons.
To make the family strong again, and fill the emptiness surrounding
him. For
anything was better than to feel like this. Anything. He
closed the book and pushed it away, then sat back in the chair,
closing his eyes. He had barely done so when there was a tapping on
the door. "Chieh
Hsia?" "Come!"
he said, sitting forward again, the tiredness like salt in his blood,
weighing him down. Nan Ho
entered first, his head bowed, the tray held out before him. Behind
him came the she t'ou—the "tongue," or taster.
Li Yuan watched almost listlessly as Nan Ho set the ch'a things
down on a low table, then poured, offering the first bowl to the she
t'ou. The
man sipped, then offered the bowl back, bowing gracefully, a small
smile of satisfaction crossing his lips. He waited a minute, then
turned to Li Yuan and bowed low, kneeling, touching his head against
the floor before he backed away. Nan Ho
followed him to the door, closing it after him; then he turned,
facing Li Yuan. "Shall
I bring your ch'a up to you, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan smiled. "No, Nan Ho. I will join you down there." He
stood, yawning, stretching the tiredness from his bones, then leaned
forward, picking up the heavy-bound volume. "Here,"
he said, handing it to Nan Ho, ignoring the offered bowl. Nan Ho put
the bowl down hastily and took the book from his T'ang. "You
have decided, then, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan stared at Nan Ho a moment, wondering how much he knew—whether
he had dared look at the genotyping—then, dismissing the
thought, he smiled. "No, Master Nan. I have not decided. But you
will." Nan Ho looked back at him, horrified. "Chieh
Hsial" "You
heard me, Master Nan. I want you to choose for me. Three wives, I
need. Good, strong, reliable women. The kind that bear sons. Lots of
sons. Enough to fill the rooms of this huge, empty palace." Nan Ho
bowed low, his face a picture of misery. "But Chieh Hsia ...
It is not my place to do such a thing. Such responsibility. . ."
He shook his head and fell to his knees, his head pressed to the
floor. "I beg you, Chieh Hsia. I am unworthy for such a task." Li
Yuan laughed. "Nonsense, Master Nan. If anyone, you are the very
best of men to undertake such a task for me. Did you not bring Pearl
Heart and Sweet Rose to my bed? Was your judgment so flawed then? No!
So, please, Master Nan, do this for me, I beg you." Nan Ho
looked up, wide-eyed. "Chieh Hsia . . . you must not say such
things! You are T'ang now." "Then
do this thing for me, Master Nan," he said tiredly. "For I
would be married the day after my coronation." Nan Ho
stared at him a moment longer, then bowed his head low again,
resigned to his fate. "As my Lord wishes." "Good.
Now let us drink our ch'a and talk of other things. Was I mistaken or
did I hear that there was a message from Hal Shepherd?" Nan Ho
put the book down beside the table, then picked up Li Yuan's bowl,
turning back and offering it to him, his head bowed. "Not
Hal, Chieh Hsia, but his son. Chung Hu-yan dealt with the
matter." "I see. And did the Chancellor happen to say what
the message was?" Nan Ho hesitated. "It was ... a picture,
Chieh Hsia." "A picture? You mean, there were no words? No
actual message?" "No, Chieh Hsia." "And
this picture—what was in it?" "Should I bring it,
Chieh Hsia?" "No. But describe it, if you can." Nan Ho
frowned. "It was odd, Chieh Hsia. Very odd indeed. It was
of a tree—or rather, of twin apple trees. The two were closely
intertwined, their trunks twisted about each other; yet one of the
trees was dead, its leaves shed, its branches broken and rotting.
Chung Hu-yan set it aside for you to look at after your coronation."
He averted his eyes. "He felt it was not something you would
wish to see before then." Like
the gift of stones his father had tried to hide from him—the
white u>ei chi stones DeVore had sent to him on the day he
had been promised to Fei Yen. Li
Yuan sighed. For five generations the Shepherds had acted as advisors
to his family. Descended from the original architect of the City,
they lived beyond its walls, outside its laws. Only they, in all
Chung Kuo, stood equal to the Seven. "Chung Hu-Yan acted as he
felt he ought, and no blame attaches to him; but in future any
message—worded or otherwise—that comes from the Shepherds
must be passed directly to me, at once, Master Nan. This picture—you
understand what it means?" "No, Chieh Hsia." "No.
And neither, it seems, does Chancellor Chung. It means that Hal
Shepherd is dying. The tree was a gift from my father to him. I must
go and pay my respects at once." "But, Chieh Hsia . . ." Li
Yuan shook his head. "I know, Master Nan. I have seen my
schedule for tomorrow. But the meetings will have to be cancelled.
This cannot wait. He was my father's friend. It would not do to
ignore such a summons, however strangely couched." "A
summons, Chieh Hsial" "Yes, Master Nan. A summons." He
turned away, sipping at his ch'a. He did not look forward to seeing
Hal Shepherd in such a state, yet it would be good to see his son
again; to sit with him and talk. A faint, uncertain smile came to his
lips. Yes, it would be good to speak with him, for in truth he needed
a mirror just now: someone to reflect him back clearly to himself.
And who better than Ben Shepherd? Who better in all Chung Kuo? THE
MAN staggered past him, then leaned against the wall unsteadily, his
head lowered, as if drunk. For a moment he seemed to lapse out of
consciousness, his whole body hanging loosely against his
outstretched arm, then he lifted his head, stretching himself
strangely, as if shaking something off. It was only then that Axel
realized what he was doing. He was pissing. Axel
looked away, then turned back, hearing the commotion behind him. Two
burly-looking guards—Han, wearing the dark green of GenSyn, not
the powder-blue of Security—came running across, batons drawn,
making for the man. They
stood on either side of the man as he turned, confronting him. "What
the fuck you think you do?" one of them said, prodding him
brutally, making him stagger back against the wall. He was
a big man, or had been, but his clothes hung loosely on him now. They
were good clothes, too, but like those of most of the people gathered
there, they were grime-ridden and filthy. His face, too, bore
evidence of maltreatment. His skin was blotched, his left eye almost
closed, a dark, yellow-green bruise covering the whole of his left
cheek. He stank, but again that was not uncommon, for most were
beggars here. He
looked back at the guards blearily, then lifted his head in a
remembered but long-redundant gesture of pride. "I'm
here to see the General," he said uncertainly, his pride leaking
from him slowly until his head hung once again. "You know . . ."
he muttered, glancing up apologetically, the muscle in his cheek
ticking now. "The handout... I came for that. It was on the
newscast. I heard it. Come to this place, it said, so I came." The
guard who had spoken grunted his disgust. "You shit bucket,"
he said quietly. "You fucking shit bucket. What you think you up
to, pissing on the T'ang's walls?" Then, without warning, he hit
out with his baton, catching the beggar on the side of the head. The
man went down, groaning loudly. As he did, the two guards waded in,
standing over him, striking him time and again on the head and body
until he lay still. "Fucking
shit bucket!" the first guard said as he stepped back. He
turned, glaring at the crowd that had formed around him. "What
you look at? Fuck off! Go on! Fuck off! Before you get same!" He
raised his baton threateningly, but the message had gotten through
already. They had begun to back off as soon as he had turned. Axel
stood there a moment longer, tensed, trembling with anger, then
turned away. There was nothing he could do. Nothing, at least, that
would not land him in trouble. Two he could have handled, but there
were more than fifty of the bastards spread out throughout the hall,
jostling whoever got in their way and generally making themselves as
unpleasant as they could. He knew the type. They thought themselves
big men—great fighters, trained to take on anything—but
most of them had failed basic training for Security or had been
recruited from the plantations, where standards were much lower. In
many cases their behavior was simply a form of compensation for the
failure they felt at having to wear the dark green of a private
security force and not the imperial blue. He
backed away, making his way through the crowd toward the end of the
hall, wondering how much longer they would be forced to wait. They
had started lining up three hours ago, the corridors leading to the
main transit packed long before Axel had arrived. For a brief while
he had thought of turning back—even the smell of the mob was
enough to make a man feel sick—but he had stayed, determined to
be among the two thousand "fortunates" who would be let
into the grounds of the Ebert Mansion for the celebrations. He had
dressed specially. Had gone out and bought the roughest, dirtiest
clothes he could lay his hands on. Had put on a rough workman's hat—a
hard shell of dark plastic, like an inverted rice bowl—and
dirtied his face. Now he looked little different from the rest. A
beggar. A shit-bucket bum from the lowest of the levels. He
looked about him, his eyes traveling from face to face, seeing the
anger there and the despair, the futility and the incipient madness.
There was a shiftiness to their eyes, a pastiness to their
complexions, that spoke of long years of deprivation. And they were
thin, every last one of them; some of them so painfully
undernourished that he found it difficult to believe that they were
still alive, still moving their wasted, fragile limbs. He stared at
them, fascinated, his revulsion matched by a strong instinctive pity
for them; for many, he knew, there had been no choice. They had
fallen long before they were born, and nothing in this world could
ever redeem them. In that he differed. He, too, had fallen, but for
him there had been a second chance. Lowering
his head, he glanced at the timer at his wrist, keeping it hidden
beneath the greasy cuff of his jacket. It was getting on toward
midnight. They would have to open the gates soon, surely? Almost
at once he felt a movement in the crowd, a sudden surge forward, and
knew the gates had been opened. He felt himself drawn forward, caught
up in the crush. Hei
were manning the barriers, the big GenSyn half-men herding the
crowd through the narrow gates. Above the crowd, on a platform to one
side, a small group of Han officials looked on, counting the people
as they went through. Past
the gates, crush barriers forced the crowd into semi-orderly lines,
at the head of which more officials—many of them masked against
the stench and the possibility of disease—processed the
hopeful. As
movement slowed and the crush grew more intense, he heard a great
shouting from way back and knew the gates had been closed, the quota
filled. But he was inside. The
pressure on him from all sides was awful, the stink of unwashed
bodies almost unbearable; but he fought back his nausea, reminding
himself why he was there. To bear witness. To see for himself the
moment when Hans Ebert was declared General-Elect. As he
passed through the second barrier, an official drew him aside and
tagged his jacket with an electronic trace, then thrust a slice of
cake and a bulb of drink into his hands. He shuffled on, looking
about him, seeing how the others crammed their cake down feverishly
before emptying the bulb in a few desperate swallows. He tried a
mouthful of the cake, then spat it out. It was hard, dry, and
completely without flavor. The drink was little better. Disgusted, he
threw them down, and was immediately pushed back against the wall as
those nearby fought for what he had discarded. The
big transit lift was just ahead of them now. Again Hei herded
them into the space, cramming them in tightly, until Axel felt his
breath being forced from him. Like the others surrounding him, he
fought silently, desperately, for a little space— pushing out
with his elbows, his strength an asset here. The
doors closed, the huge elevator—used normally for goods, not
people— began
its slow climb up the levels. As it did, a voice sounded overhead,
telling them that they must cheer when the masters appeared on the
balcony; that they would each receive a five-^uan coin if they
cheered loud enough. "The
cameras will be watching everyone," the voice continued. "Only
those who cheer loudly will get a coin." The
journey up-level seemed to last an eternity. Two hundred and fifty
levels they climbed, up to the very top of the City. Coming
out from the transit was like stepping outside into the open.
Overhead was a great, blue-black sky, filled with moonlit cloud and
stars, the illusion so perfect that for a moment Axel caught his
breath. To the right, across a vast, landscaped park, was the Ebert
Mansion, its imposing facade lit up brilliantly, the great balcony
festooned with banners. A human barrier of Hei prevented them from
going that way—the brute, almost porcine faces of the guards
lit grotesquely from beneath. All around him people had slowed,
astonished by the sight, their eyes wide, their mouths fallen open;
but masked servants hurried them on, ushering them away to the left,
into an area that had been fenced off with high transparent barriers
of ice. They
stumbled on, only a low murmur coming from them now, most of them
awed into silence by the sight of such luxury, intimidated by the
sense of openness, by the big sky overhead. But for Axel, shuffling
along slowly in their midst, it reminded him of something else—of
that day when he and Major DeVore had called upon Representative
Lehmann at his First Level estate. And he knew, almost without
thinking it, that there was a connection between the two. As if such
luxury bred corruption. Stewards
herded them down a broad gravel path and out into a large space in
front of the Mansion. Here another wall barred their way, the
translucent surface of it coated with a nonreflective substance that
to the watching cameras would make it seem as if there were no
wall—no barrier—between the Eberts and the cheering
crowd. As the
space filled up, he noticed the stewards going out into the crowd,
handing out flags and streamers—the symbols of GenSyn and the
Seven distributed equally—before positioning themselves at
various strategic points. Turning, he sought out one of the stewards
and took a banner from him, aiming to conceal himself behind it when
the cheering began. It was unlikely that Hans Ebert would study the
film of his triumph that closely, but it was best to take no chances. He
glanced at his timer. It was almost twelve. In a few moments ... The
stewards began the cheering, turning to encourage the others standing
about them. "Five yuanl" they shouted. "Only
those who shout will get a coin!" As the
Eberts stepped out onto the balcony, the cheering rose to a
crescendo. The cameras panned about the crowd, then focused on the
scene on the balcony again. Klaus Ebert stood there in the
foreground, a broad beam of light settling on him, making his hair
shine silver-white, his perfect teeth sparkle. "Friends!"
he began, his voice amplified to carry over the cheering. "A
notice has been posted throughout our great City. It reads as
follows." He turned and took a scroll from his secretary, then
turned back, clearing his throat. Below, the noise subsided as the
stewards moved among the crowd, damping down the excitement they had
artificially created. Ebert
opened out the scroll, then began. "I,
Li Yuan, T'ang designate of Ch'eng Ou Chou, City Europe,
declare the appointment of Hans Joachim Ebert, currently Major in my
Security services, as Supreme General of my forces, this appointment
to be effective from midday on the fifteenth day of September in the
year two thousand two-hundred'and-seven." He stepped back,
beaming with paternal pride. There
was a moment's silence and then a ragged cheer went up, growing
stronger as the stewards whipped the crowd into a fury of enthusiasm. Up on
the balcony, Hans Ebert stepped forward, his powder-blue uniform
immaculate, his blond hair perfectly groomed. He grinned and waved a
hand as if to thank them for their welcome, then stepped back,
bowing, all humility. Axel,
watching from below, felt a wave of pure hatred pass through him. If
they knew—if they only knew all he had done. The cheating and
lying and butchery; the foulness beneath the mask of perfection. But
they knew nothing. He looked about him, seeing how caught up in it
they suddenly were. They had come for the chance of food and drink
and for the money, but now that they were here their enthusiasm was
genuine. Up there they saw a king—a man so high above them that
to be at such proximity was a blessing. Axel saw the stewards look at
each other and wink, laughing, sharing the joke, and he felt more
sick than he had ever felt among the unwashed masses. They, at least,
did not pretend that they were clean. One could smell what they were.
But Ebert? Axel
looked past the fluttering banner, saw how Ebert turned to talk to
those behind him, so at ease in his arrogance, and swore again to
bring him low. To pile the foul truth high, burying his flawless
reputation. He
shuddered, frightened by the sheer intensity of what he felt; knowing
that if he had had a gun and the opportunity, he would have tried to
kill the man, right there and then. Up on the balcony, the Eberts
turned away, making their way back inside. As the doors closed behind
them the lights went down, leaving the space before the Mansion in
darkness. The
cheering died. Axel threw the banner down. All about him the crowd
was dispersing, making for the barriers. He turned, following them,
then stopped, looking back. Was it that? Was it excess of luxury that
corrupted a man? Or were some men simply bom evil and others good? He
looked ahead, looked past the barriers to where small knots of
beggars had gathered. Already they were squabbling, fighting each
other over the pittance they had been given. As he came closer he saw
one man go down and several others fall on him, punching and kicking
him, robbing him of the little he had. Nearby the guards looked on,
laughing among themselves. Laughing...
He wiped his mouth, sickened by all he'd seen, then pushed past the
barrier, ignoring the offered coin. INSIDE
THE MANSION the celebrations were about to begin. At the top of the
great stairway, Klaus Ebert put his arm about his son's shoulders and
looked out across the gathering that-filled the great hall below. "My
good friends!" he said, then laughed. "What can 1 say? 1 am
so full of pride! My son . . ." He
drew Hans closer and kissed his cheek, then looked about him again,
beaming and laughing, as if he were drunk. "Come,
Father," Hans said in a whisper, embarrassed by his father's
sudden effusiveness. "Let's get it over with. I'm faint with
hunger." Klaus
looked back at him, smiling broadly, then laughed, squeezing his
shoulder again. "Whatever you say, Hans." He turned back,
putting one arm out expansively. "Friends! Let us not stand on
formalities tonight. Eat, drink, be merry!" They
made their way down the stairs, father and son, joining the crowd
gathered at the foot. Tolonen was among those there, lean and elegant
in his old age, his steel-gray hair slicked back, the dress uniform
of General worn proudly for the last time. "Why,
Knut," Klaus Ebert began, taking a glass from a servant, "I
see you are wearing Hans's uniform!" Tolonen
laughed. "It is but briefly, Klaus. I am just taking the creases
out of it for him!" There
was a roar of laughter at that. Hans smiled and bowed, then looked
about him. "Is Jelka not here?" Tolonen
shook his head. "I'm afraid not, Hans. She took an injury in her
practice session this morning. Nothing serious—only a
sprain—but the doctor felt she would be better off resting. She
was most disappointed, I can tell you. Why, she'd spent two whole
days looking for a new dress to wear tonight!" Hans
lowered his head respectfully. "I am sorry to hear it,
Father-in-Law. I had hoped to dance with her tonight. But perhaps you
would both come here for dinner—soon, when things have
settled." Tolonen
beamed, delighted by the suggestion. "That would be excellent,
Hans. And it would make up for her disappointment, I am sure." Hans
bowed and moved on, circulating, chatting with all his father's
friends, making his way slowly toward a small group on the far side
of the hall, until, finally, he came to them. "Michael!"
he said, embracing his old friend. "Hans!"
Lever held Ebert to him a moment, then stood back. They had been
classmates at Oxford in their teens, before Lever had gone on to
Business College and Ebert to the Academy. But they had stayed in
touch all this time. Ebert
looked past his old friend, smiling a greeting to the others. "How
was your journey?" "As
well as could be expected!" Lever laughed, then leaned closer.
"When in the gods' names are they going to improve those things,
Hans? If you've any influence with Li Yuan, make him pass an
amendment to the Edict to enable them to build something more
comfortable than those transatlantic rockets." Ebert
laughed, then leaned closer. "And my friend? Did you enjoy his
company?" Lever
glanced at his companions, then laughed. "I can speak for us all
in saying that it was a most interesting experience. I would never
have guessed . . ." Ebert
smiled. "No. And let's keep it that way, neh?" He turned,
looking about him, then took Lever's arm. "And his gift?" Lever's
eyes widened. "You knew about that?" "Of
course. But come. Let's go outside. It's cool in the garden. We can
talk as we go. Of Chung Kuo and Ta Ts'in and dreams of empire." Lever
gave a soft laugh and bowed his head. "Lead on ..." ITWASJUST
after four when the last of the guests left the Ebert Mansion. Hans,
watching from the balcony, stifled a yawn, then turned, and went back
inside. He had not been drinking and yet he felt quite drunk—buoyed
up on a vast and heady upsurge of well-being. Things had never been
better. That very evening his father had given over a further sixteen
companies to him, making it almost a quarter of the giant GenSyn
empire that he now controlled. Life, at last, was beginning to open
to him. Earlier he had taken Tolonen aside to suggest that his
marriage to Jelka be brought forward. At first, the old man had
seemed a little put out, but then when Hans had spoken of the sense
of stability it would bring him, Tolonen had grown quite keen—almost
as if the idea had been his own. Ebert
went down the stairs and out into the empty hall, standing there a
moment, smiling, recollecting Tolonen's response. "Let
me speak to her," Tolonen had said, as he was leaving. "After
the coronation, when things have settled a little. But I promise you,
Hans, I'll do my best to persuade her. After all, it's in no one's
interest to delay, is it?" No, he
thought. Especially not now. At least, not now that they had come to
an arrangement with the Americans. He
went out and said good night to his father and mother, then came
back, running across the hall and out through the back doors into the
garden. The night seemed fresh and warm and for the briefest moment
he imagined himself outside, beneath a real moon, under a real sky.
Well, maybe that would happen soon. In a year, two years perhaps.
When he was King of Europe. On the
ornamental bridge he slowed, looking about him. He felt a great
restlessness in his blood; an urge to do something. He thought of the
mui tsai, but for once his restlessness was pure,
uncontaminated by a sense of sexual urgency. No, it was as if he
needed to go somewhere, do something. All of this waiting—for
his inheritance, his command, his wife—seemed suddenly a
barrier to simple being. Tonight he wanted to be, to
do. To break heads or ride a horse at breakneck speed. He
kicked out, sending gravel into the water below, watching the ripples
spread. Then he moved on, jumping down the steps to the path and
vaulting up onto the balcony above. He turned, looking back. A
servant had stopped, watching him. Seeing Ebert turn, he moved on
hurriedly, his head bowed, the huge bowl he held making slopping
sounds in the silence. Ebert
laughed. There were no heads to break, no horses here to ride. So
maybe he would fuck the mui tsai anyway. Maybe that would
still his pulse and purge the restlessness from his system. He
turned, making his way along to his suite of rooms. Inside he began
to undress, unbuttoning his tunic. As he did so, he went over to the
comset and touched in the code. He
turned away, throwing his tunic down on a chair, then tapped on the
inner door. At once a servant popped his head around the door. "Bring
the mui tsai to my room; then go. I'll not need you any more tonight,
Lo Wen." The
servant bowed and left. Ebert turned back, looking at the screen.
There were a great number of messages for once, mainly from friends
congratulating him on his appointment. But among them was one he had
been expecting. DeVore's. He
read it through and laughed. So the meeting with the Americans had
gone well. Good. The introduction was yet another thing DeVore owed
him for. What's more, DeVore wanted him to do something else. He
smiled, then sat down, pulling off his boots. Slowly, by small
degrees, DeVore was placing himself in his debt. More and more he had
come to rely on him—for little things at first, but now for
ever larger schemes. And that was good. For he would keep account of
all. There
was a faint tapping at the inner door. He
turned in the chair, looking across. "Come in," he said
softly. The
door slid back. For a moment she stood there, naked, looking in at
him, the light behind her. She was so beautiful, so wonderfully made
that his penis grew hard simply looking at her. Then she came across,
fussing about him, helping him with the last few items of his
clothing. Finished,
she looked up at him from where she knelt on the floor in front of
him. "Was your evening good, Master?" He
pulled her up onto his lap, then began to stroke her neck and
shoulders, looking up into her dark and liquid eyes, his blood
inflamed now by the warmth of her flesh against his own. "Never
better, Sweet Flute. Never in my whole life better." DEVORt
slipped the vial back into its carrying case, sealed the lid, and
handed ii^to Lehmann. "Don't
drop it, Stefan, whatever else you do. And make sure that Hans knows
what to do with it. He knows it's coming, but he doesn't properly
know what it is. He'll be curious, so it's best if you tell him
something, if only to damp down his curiosity." The
albino slipped the cigar-shaped case into his inner pocket, then
fastened his tunic tight. "So what should I say?" DeVore
laughed. "Tell him the truth for once. Tell him it kills Han.
He'll like that." Lehmann
nodded, then bowed and turned away. He
watched Lehmann go, then took his furs from the cupboard in the
comer. It was too late now to sleep. He would go hunting instead.
Yes, it would be good to greet the dawn on the open mountainside. DeVore
smiled, studying himself in the mirror as he pulled on his furs;
then, taking his crossbow from the rack on the wall, he went out,
making his way toward the old tunnels, taking the one that came out
on the far side of the mountain beside the ruins of the ancient
castle. As he
walked along he wondered, not for the first time, what Lever had made
of the gift he'd given him. The
Aristotle File. A copy of Berdichev's original, in his own
handwriting. The true history of Chung Kuo. Not the altered and
sanitized version the Han peddled in their schools, but the truth,
from the birth of Western thought in Aristotle's Yes/No logic, to the
splendors of space travel, mass communications, and artificial
intelligence systems. A history of the West systematically erased by
the Han. Yes, and that was another kind of virus. One, in its own
way, every bit as deadly for the Han. DeVore
laughed, his laughter echoing down the tunnel. All in all it had been
a good day. And it was going to get better. Much better. IT was
EXACTLY ten minutes past five when the scouts moved into place on the
mountainside, dropping the tiny gas pellets into the base's
ventilation outlets. At the entrance to the hangar, four masked men
sprayed ice-eating acids onto the snow-covered surface of the doors.
Two minutes later, Karr, wearing a mask and carrying a lightweight
air cannister, kicked his way inside. He
crossed the hangar at a quick march, then ran down the corridor
linking it to the inner fortress, his automatic searching this way
and that, looking for any sign of resistance; but the colorless,
odorless gas had done its work. Guards lay slumped in several places.
They would have had no chance to issue any kind of warning. He
glanced down at his wrist timer, then turned, looking back.
Alreadythe first squad was busy, binding and gagging the unconscious
defenders before the effects of the gas wore off. Behind them a
second squad was coming through, their masked faces looking from side
to side, double-checking as they came along. He
turned back, pushing on, hyper-alert now, knowing that it would not
be long before he lost the advantage of surprise. There
were four elevators spaced out along a single broad corridor. He
stared at them a moment, then shook his head. A place like this, dug
deep into the mountainside, would be hard to defend unless one
devised a system of independent levels, and of bottlenecks linking
them—bottlenecks that could be defended like the barbican in an
ancient castle, the killing ground. So here. These lifts—
seemingly so innocuous—were their barbican. But unlike in a
castle there would be another way into the next level of the
fortress. There had to be, because if the power ever failed, they had
to have some way of ensuring that they still got air down in the
lower tunnels. There
would be shafts. Ventilation shafts. As above. Karr
turned and beckoned the squad leader over. "Locate
the down shafts. Then I want one man sent down each of them straight
away. They're to secure the corridors beneath the shafts while the
rest of the men come through. Understand?" The
young lieutenant bowed, then hurried away, sending his men off to do
as Karr had ordered. He was back a moment later. "They're
sealed, Major Karr." "Well?
Break the seals!" "But
they're alarmed. Maybe even boobytrapped." Karr
grunted, impatient now. "Show me!" The
shaft was in a tiny corridor leading off what seemed to be some kind
of storeroom. Karr studied it a moment, noting its strange
construction; then, knowing he had no alternative, he raised his fist
and brought it down hard. The seal cracked but didn't break. He
struck it again, harder this time, and it gave, splintering into the
space below. Somewhere
below he could hear a siren sounding, security doors slamming into
place. "Let's
get moving. They know we're here now. The sooner we hit them the
better, neh?" He
went first, bracing himself against the walls of the narrow tunnel as
he went down, his shoulders almost too wide for the confined space.
Others followed, almost on top of him. Some
five ch'i above the bottom seal he stopped and brought his gun
around, aiming it down between his legs. He opened fire. The seal
shattered with a great upward hiss of air, tiny splinters thrown up
at him. He
narrowed his eyes, then understood. The separate levels were kept at
different pressures, which meant there were air locks. But why? What
were they doing here? He scrambled down, then dropped. As he hit the
floor he twisted about. A body lay to one side of the shaft's exit
point, otherwise the corridor was empty. It was
a straight stretch of corridor, sixty ch'i long at most,
ending in a T-junction at each end. There were no doors, no windows,
and as far as he could make out, no cameras. Left
or right? If the ground plan followed that of the level above, the
lifts would be somewhere off to the left, but he didn't think it
would be that simple. Not if Devore had designed this place. Men
were jumping down behind him, forming up either side, kneeling, their
weapons raised to their shoulders, covering both ends of the
corridor. Last
down was the squad leader. Karr quickly dispatched him off to the
left with six men, while he went right with the rest. He had
not gone more than a dozen paces when there was a loud clunk and a
huge metal fire door began to come down. From
the yells behind him, he knew at once that the same was happening at
the other end of the corridor. No cameras, eh? How could he have been
so naive! He
ran, hurling himself at the diminishing gap, half sliding, half
rolling beneath the door just before it slammed into the floor. As he
thudded into the end wall he felt his gun go clattering away from
him, but there was no time to think of that. As he came up from the
floor the first of them was on him, slashing down with a knife the
length of his forearm. Karr
blocked the blow and counterpunched, feeling the man's jaw shatter.
Behind him, only a few paces off, a second guard was raising his
automatic. Kan-ducked, using the injured guard as a shield, thrusting
his head into the man's chest as he began to fall, pushing him upward
and back, into the second man. Too
late, the guard opened fire, the shells ricocheting harmlessly off
the end wall as he stumbled backwards. Karr
kicked him in the stomach, then stood over him, chopping down
savagely, finishing him off. He stepped back, looking about him. His
gun was over to the right. He picked it up and ran on, hearing voices
approaching up ahead. He
grinned fiercely. The last thing they would expect was a single man
coming at them. Even so, it might be best to give himself some
additional advantage. He looked up. As he'd thought, they hadn't
bothered to set the pipework and cabling into the rock, but had
simply secured it to the ceiling of the tunnel with brackets. The
brackets looked firm enough—big metallic things—but were
they strong enough to bear his weight? There
was only one way to find out. He tucked his gun into his tunic and
reached up, pulling himself up slowly. Bringing his legs up, he
reached out with his boots to get a firmer grip. So far so good. If
he could hold himself there with his feet and one hand, he would be
above them when they came into view. The rest should be easy. They
were close now. At any moment they would appear at the end of the
corridor. Slowly he drew the gun from his tunic, resting the stock of
it against his knee. There!
Four of them, moving quickly but confidently, talking among
themselves, assuming there was no danger. He let them come on four,
five paces, then squeezed the trigger. As he
opened fire, the bracket next to his feet jerked, then came away from
the wall. At once a whole section of cabling slewed toward him, his
weight dragging it down. Along the whole length of the ceiling the
securing brackets gave, bringing down thick clouds of rock and
debris. Karr
rolled to one side, freeing himself from the tangle, bringing his gun
Up to his chest. Through the dust he could see that two of them were
down. They lay still, as if dead, pinned down by the cables. A third
was getting up slowly, groaning, one hand pressed to the back of his
head where the cabling had struck him. The fourth was on his feet,
his gun raised, looking straight at Karr. There
was the deafening noise of automatic fire. Shells hammered into the
wall beside him, cutting into his left arm and shoulder, but he was
safe. His own fire had ripped into the guards an instant earlier,
throwing them backward. Karr
got up slowly, the pain in his upper arm intense, the shoulder wound
less painful but more awkward. The bone felt broken—smashed
probably. He crouched there a moment, feeling sick, then straightened
up, gritting his teeth, knowing there was no option but to press on.
It was just as it had been in the Pit all those years ago. He had a
choice. He could go on and he could live, or he could give up and let
himself be killed. A
choice? He laughed sourly. No, there had never really been a choice.
He had always had to fight. As far back as he could remember, it had
always been the same. It was the price for being who he was, for
living where he'd lived, beneath the Net. He
went on, each step jolting his shoulder painfully, taking his breath.
The gun was heavy in his right hand. Designed for two-handed use, its
balance was wrong when used one-handed, the aim less certain. Surprise.
It was the last card left up his sleeve. Surprise and sheer audacity. He was
lucky. The guard outside the control room had his back to Karr as he
came out into the main corridor. There was a good twenty ch'i between
them, but his luck held. He was on top of the man before he realized
he was there, smashing the stock of the gun into the back of his
head. As the
man sank to his knees, Karr stepped past him into the doorway and
opened fire, spraying the room with shells. It was messy—not
the way he'd normally have done it—but effective. When his gun
fell silent again, there were six corpses on the floor of the room. One
wall had been filled with a nest of screens, like those they'd found
in the Overseer's House in the plantation. His gunfire had destroyed
a number of them, but more than three-quarters were still
functioning. He had the briefest glimpse of various scenes, showing
that fighting was still going on throughout the fortress, and then
the screens went dead, the overhead lights fading. He
turned, listening for noises in the corridor, then turned back,
knowing his only hope was to find the controls that operated the
doors and let his men into this level. He
scanned the panels quickly, cursing the damage he'd done to them,
then put his gun down beside a keyboard inset into the central panel.
Maybe this was it. The
keyboard was unresponsive to his touch. The screen stayed blank.
Overhead a red light began to flash. Karr grabbed his gun and backed
out. Just in time. A moment later a metal screen fell into place,
sealing off the doorway. What
now? Karr
turned, looking to his left. It was the only way. But did it lead
anywhere? Suddenly he had a vision of DeVore sitting somewhere,
watching him, laughing as he made his way deeper and deeper into the
labyrinth he had built; knowing that all of these tunnels led
nowhere. Nowhere but into the cold, stone heart of the mountain. He
shuddered. The left side of his tunic was sodden now, the whole of
his left side warm, numb yet tingling, and he was beginning to feel
lightheaded. He had lost a lot of blood and his body was suffering
from shock, but he had to go on. It was too late now to back off. He
went on, grunting with pain at every step, knowing he was close to
physical collapse. Every movement pained him, yet he forced himself
to keep alert, moving his head from side to side, his whole body
tensed against a sudden counterattack. Again
his luck held. The long corridor was empty, the rooms leading off
deserted. But did it go anywhere? Karr
slowed. Up ahead the wall lighting stopped abruptly, but the tunnel
went on, into the darkness. He
turned, looking back, thinking he'd heard something, but there was
nothing. No one was following him. But how long would it be before
someone came? He had to keep going on. Had
to. He
thpw off4iis mask, pulled the heat-sensitive glasses down over his
eyes, and went on\ After
a while the tunnel began to slope downward. He stumbled over the
first of the steps and banged his damaged shoulder against the wall.
For a moment he crouched there, groaning softly, letting the pain
ease, then went on, more careful now, pressing close to the
right-hand wall in case he fell. At
first they were not so much steps as broad ledges cut into the rocky
floor, but soon that changed as the tunnel began to slope more
steeply. He went on, conscious of the sharp hiss of his breathing in
the silent darkness. Partway
down he stopped, certain he had made a mistake. The wall beside him
was rough, as if crudely hacked from the rock. Moreover, the dank,
musty smell of the place made him think that it was an old tunnel,
cut long before DeVore's time. For what reason he couldn't guess, but
it would explain the lack of lighting, the very crudeness of its
construction. He
went on, slower now, each step an effort, until, finally, he could go
no further. He sat, shivering, his gun set down beside him in the
darkness. So
this was it? He laughed painfully. It was not how he had expected to
end his days—in the cold, dank darkness at the heart of a
mountain, half his shoulder shot away—but if this was what the
gods had fated, then who was he to argue? After all, he could have
died ten years ago, had Tolonen not bought out his contract; and they
had been good years. The very best of years. Even
so, he felt a bitter regret wash over him. Why now? Now that he had
found Marie. It made no sense. As if the gods were punishing him. And
for what? For arrogance? For being bom the way he was? No ... it made
no sense. Unless the gods were cruel by nature. He
pulled the heat-sensitive glasses off, then leaned back a little,
seeking some posture in which the pain would ease; but it was no
good. However he sat, the same fierce, burning ache seized him again
after a few moments, making him feel feverish, irrational. What
then? Go back? Or go on, ever down? The
question was answered for him. Far below he heard a heavy rustling
noise, then the sharp squeal of an unoiled door being pushed back.
Light spilled into the tunnel. Someone was coming up, hurriedly, as
if pursued. He
reached beside him for his gun, then sat back, the gun lying across
his lap, its barrel facing down toward the light. It was
too late now to put his glasses back on, but what the hell? Whoever
it was, he had the light behind him, while Karr sat in total
darkness. Moreover, he knew someone was coming, while the other man
had no idea Karr was there. The advantages were all his. Even so, his
hand was trembling so badly now that he wondered if he could even
pull the trigger. Partway
up the steps the figure stopped, moving closer to the right-hand
wall. There
was a moment's banging, then it stopped, the figure turning toward
him again. It sniffed the air, then began to climb the steps, slower
now, more cautiously, as if it sensed his presence. Up it came,
closer and closer, until he could hear the steady pant of its breath,
not twenty ch'i below. New.'
he thought, but his fingers were dead, the gun a heavy weight in his
lap. He
closed his eyes, awaiting the end, knowing it was only a matter of
time. Then he heard it. The figure had stopped; now it was moving
back down the steps. He heard it try the lock again and opened his
eyes. For a
moment his head swam, then, even as his eyes focused, the door below
creaked open, spilling light into the dimly lit passageway. Karr
caught his breath, praying the other wouldn't turn and see him there.
Yet even as the figure disappeared within, he recognized the profile. DeVore.
It had been DeVore. CHAPTER
NINE
The Temple of Heaven THE
TOWER was built into the side of the mountain; a small, round
two-story building, dominated by a smooth, gray overhang of rock.
Beneath it only the outlines of ancient walls remained, huge
rectangles laid out in staggered steps down the mountainside, the low
brickwork overgrown with rough grasses and alpine flowers. Lehmann
stood at the edge of the ruins, looking out across the broad valley
toward the east. There was nothing human here; nothing but the sunlit
mountains and, far below, the broad stretch of the untended meadows
cut by a slow-moving river. Looking at it, he could imagine it
remaining so a thousand years, while the world beyond the mountains
tore itself apart. And so
it would be. Once the disease of humanity had run its course. He
looked across. On the far side of the valley bare rock fell half a li
to the green of the valley floor, as if a giant had cut a crude
path through the mountains. Dark stands of pine crested the vast wall
of rock; then as the eye traveled upward, that, too, gave way—to
snow and ice and, finally, to the clear, bright blue of the sky. He
shivered. It was beautiful. So beautiful it took his breath away. All
else—all art, however fine—was mere distraction compared
to this. This was real. Was like a temple. A temple to the old gods.
A temple of rock and ice, of tree and stream, thrown up into the
heavens. He
turned, looking back at Reid. The man was standing by the tower,
hunched into himself, his furs drawn tight about him as if unaware of
the vast mystery that surrounded him. Lehmann shook his head, then
went across. It was
only a hunch, but when he had seen the Security craft
clustered on the slopes, his first thought had been of the old
tunnel. He'll be there, he'd thought. Now, an hour later, he wasn't
quite so sure. "What
are we doing?" Reid asked anxiously. He, too, had seen the
extent of the Security operation; had seen the rows of corpses
stretched out in the snow. Lehmann
stared back at him a moment, then climbed the narrow path to the
tower. The doorway was empty. He went inside and stood looking about
him. The tower was a shell, the whole thing open to the sky, but the
floor was much newer. The big planks there looked old, but that was
how they were meant to look. At most they were ten years old. Reid
came and stood there in the doorway, looking in at him. "What is
this? Are we going to camp here until they've gone?" Lehmann
shook his head, then turned and came out, searching the nearby slope.
Then, with a grunt of satisfaction, he crouched down, parting the
spiky grasses with his gloved hands. "Here,"
he said. "Give me a hand." Reid
went across. It was a hatch of some kind. An old-fashioned circular
metal plate less than a ch'i in circumference. There were two
handles set into either side of the plate. Lehmann took one, Reid the
other. Together they heaved at the thing until it gave. Beneath
was a shallow shaft. Lehmann leaned inside, feeling blindly for
something. "What
are you doing?" Reid asked, looking out past him, afraid that a
passing Security craft would spot them. Lehmann
said nothing, simply carried on with his search. A moment later he
sat back, holding something in his hand. It looked like a knife. A
broad, flat knife with a circular handle. Or a spike of some kind. Lehmann
stood, then went back to the tower. He
went inside and crouched down, setting the spike down at his side.
Groaning with the effort, he pushed one of the planks back tight
against the far wall, revealing a small depression in the stonework
below, its shape matching that of the spike perfectly. Lehmann hefted
the spike a moment, then slotted it into the depression. Reid,
watching from the open doorway, laughed. It was a key. Lehmann
stepped back into the doorway. As he did so there was a sharp click
and the whole floor began to rise, pushing up into the shell of the
tower, until it stopped two ch'i above their heads. It was
an elevator. Moreover, it was occupied. Reid made a small sound of
surprise, then bowed his head hurriedly. It was DeVore. "About
time!" DeVore said, moving out past the two men, his face livid
with anger. "Another hour and they'd have had me. I could hear
them working on the seal at the far end of the tunnel." "What
happened?" Lehmann asked, following DeVore out into the open. DeVore
turned, facing him. "Someone's betrayed us! Sold us down the
fucking river!" Lehmann
nodded. "They were Security," he said. "The craft I
saw were Special Elite. That would mean orders from high up, wouldn't
you say?" There
was an ugly movement in DeVore's face. His incarceration in the
tunnel had done nothing for his humor. "Ebert! But what's the
bastard up to? What game's the little fucker playing now?" "Are
you sure it's him?" DeVore
looked away. "No. I can't see what he'd gain from it. But who
else could it be? Who else knows where we are? Who else could hit me
without warning?" "So
what are you going to do?" DeVore
laughed sourly. "Nothing. Not until I've spoken to the little
weasel. But if he hasn't got a bloody good explanation, then he's
dead. Useful or not, he's dead, hear me?" HAL
SHEPHERD turned his head, looking up at the young T'ang, his eyes wet
with gratitude. "Li
Yuan . . . I'm glad you came." His
voice was thin, almost transparently so, matching perfectly the face
from which it issued; a thin-fleshed, ruined face that was barely
distinguishable from a skull. It pained Li Yuan to see him like this.
To see all the strength leeched from the man and death staring out
from behind his eyes. "Ben
sent me a note," he said gently, almost tenderly. "But you
should have sent for me before now. I would have spared the time. You
know I would." The
ghost of a smile flickered on Shepherd's lips. "Yes. You're like
Shai Tung in that. It was a quality I much admired in him." It
took so long for him to say the words—took such effort—that
Li Yuan found himself longing for him to stop. To say nothing. Simply
to lie there, perhaps. But that was not what Shepherd wanted. He knew
his death lay but days ahead of him, and now that Li Yuan was here,
he wanted his say. Nor was it in Li Yuan's heart to deny him. "My
father missed you greatly after you returned here. He often remarked
how it was as if he had had a part of him removed." Li Yuan
looked aside, giving a small laugh. "You know, Hal, I'm not even
sure it was your advice he missed, or simply your voice." He
looked back, seeing how the tears had formed again in Shepherd's
eyes, and found his own eyes growing moist. He looked away, closing
his eyes briefly, remembering another time, in the long room at
Tongjiang, when Hal had shown him how to juggle. How, with a laugh,
he had told him that it was the one essential skill a ruler needed.
So he always was—part playful and part serious, each game of
his making a point, each utterance the distillation of a wealth of
unspoken thought. He had been the very best of Counselors to his
father. In that the Li family had always been fortunate, for who else
among the Seven could draw from such a deep well as they did with the
Shepherds? It was what gave them their edge. Was why the other
Families always looked to Li for guidance. But
now that chain was broken. Unless he could convince Hal's son
otherwise. He
looked back at Shepherd and saw how he was watching him, the eyes
strangely familiar in that unrecognizably wasted face. "I'm
not a pretty sight, I realize, Yuan. But look at me. Please. I have
something important to say to you." Li
Yuan inclined his head. "Of course, Hal. I was . . .
remembering." "I
understand. I see it all the time. In Beth. You grow accustomed to
such things." Shepherd
hesitated, a brief flicker of pain passing across his face; then he
went on, his voice a light rasp. "Well...
let me say it simply. Change has come, Yuan, like it or not. Now you
must harness it and ride it like a horse. I counseled your father
differently, I know, but things were different then. Much has
changed, even in this last year. You must be ruthless now.
Uncompromising. Wang Sau-leyan is your enemy. I think you realize
that. But do not think he is the only one who will oppose you. What
you must do will upset friend as well as foe, but do not shrink from
it merely because of that. No. You must steer a hard course, Yuan. If
not, there is no hope. No hope at all." Hal
lay there afterward, quiet, very still, until Yuan realized that he
was sleeping. He sat, watching him a while. There was nothing
profound in what Hal had said; nothing he had not heard a thousand
times before. No. What made it significant was that it was Hal who
had said it. Hal, who had always counseled moderation, even during
the long War with the Dispersionists. Even after they had seeded him
with the cancer that now claimed him. He sat
there until Beth came in. She looked past him, seeing how things
were, then went to the drawer and fetched another blanket, laying it
over him. Then she turned, looking at Li Yuan. "He's
not. . . ?" Li Yuan began, suddenly concerned. Beth
shook her head. "No. He does this often now. Sometimes he falls
asleep in mid-sentence. He's very weak now, you understand. The
excitement of your coming will have tired him. But please, don't
worry about that. We're all pleased that you came, Li Yuan." Li
Yuan looked down, moved by the simplicity of her words. "It was
the least I could do. Hal has been like a father to me." He
looked up again, meeting her eyes. "You don't know how greatly
it pains me to see him like this." She
looked away, only a slight tightening of her cheek muscles revealing
how much she was holding back. Then she looked back at him, smiling. "Well.
. . let's leave him to sleep, eh? I'll make some ch'a." He
smiled, then gave the smallest bow, understanding now why his father
had talked so much about his visit here. Hal's pending death or no,
there was contentment here. A balance. And
how could he find that for himself? For the wheel of his own life was
broken, the axle shattered. He
followed her out down the narrow twist of steps, then stood staring
out through the shadows of the hallway at the garden—at a
brilliant square of color framed by the dark oak of the doorway. He
shivered, astonished by the sight; by the almost hallucinatory
clarity of what could be seen within that frame. It was as if, in
stepping through, one might enter another world. Whether it was
simply a function of the low ceiling and the absence of windows
inside and the contrasting openness of the garden beyond he could not
say, but the effect took away his breath. It was like nothing he had
ever seen. The light seemed embedded in the darkness, like a lens. So
vivid it was. As if washed clean. He went toward it, his lips parted
in wonder, then stopped, laughing, putting his hand against the warm
wood of the upright. "Ben?" The
young man was to the right, in the kitchen garden, close by the
hinged door. He looked up from where he was kneeling at the edge of
the path, almost as if he had expected Li Yuan to appear at that
moment. "Li
Yuan . . ." Li
Yuan went across and stood there over him, the late morning sunlight
warming his neck and shoulders. "What are you doing?" Ben
patted the grass beside him. "I'm playing. Won't you join me?" Li
Yuan hesitated, then, sweeping his robes beneath him, knelt at Ben's
side. Ben
had removed a number of the rocks from the border of the flower beds,
exposing the dark earth beneath. Its flattened surface was
crisscrossed with tiny tunnels. On the grass beside him lay a long
silver box with rounded edges, like an overlong cigar case. "What's
that?" Li Yuan asked, curious. Ben
laughed. "That's my little army. I'll show you in a while. But
look. It's quite extensive, isn't it?" The
maze of tiny tunnels spread out several ch'i in each
direction. "It's
part of an ants' nest," Ben explained. "Most of it's down
below, under the surface. A complex labyrinth of tunnels and levels.
If you could dig it out in one big chunk it would be huge. Like a
tiny city." "I
see," said Li Yuan, surprised by Ben's interest. "But what
are you doing with it?" Ben
leaned forward slightly, studying the movement in one of the tracks.
"They've been pestering us for some while. Getting in the sugar
jar and scuttling along the back of the sink. So Mother asked me to
deal with them." "Deal
with them?" Ben
looked up. "Yes. They can be a real nuisance if you don't deal
with them. So I'm taking steps to destroy their nest." Li
Yuan frowned, then laughed. "I don't understand, Ben. What do
you do—use acid or something?" Ben
shook his head. "No. I use these." He picked up the silver
case and handed it across to the young T'ang. Li
Yuan opened the case and immediately dropped it, moving back from it
sharply. "It's
all right," Ben said, retrieving the case. "They can't
escape unless I let them out." Li
Yuan shivered. The box was full of ants—big, red,
brutal-looking things; hundreds of them, milling about menacingly. "You
use them?" Ben
nodded. "Amos made them. He based them on polyergus—Amazon
ants. They're a soldier caste, you see. They go into other ants'
hives and enslave them. These are similar, only they don't enslave,
they simply destroy." Li
Yuan shook his head slowly, horrified by the notion. "They're
a useful tool," Ben continued. "I've used them a lot out
here. We get new nests every year. It's a good thing Amos made a lot
of these. I'm forever losing half a dozen or so. They get clogged up
with earth and stop functioning or occasionally the real ants fight
back and take them apart. Usually, however, they encounter very
little resistance. They're utterly ruthless, you see. Machines,
that's all they are. Tiny, super-efficient little machines. The
perfect gardening tool." Ben
laughed, but the joke was lost on Li Yuan. "Your
father tells me I must be ruthless." Ben
looked up from the ants and smiled. "It was nothing you didn't
know." Li
Yuan looked back at Ben. As on the first occasion they had met—the
day of his engagement to Fei Yen—he had the feeling of being
with his equal, of being with a man who understood him perfectly. "Ben?
Would you be my Counselor? My Chief Advisor? Would you be to me what
your father was to my father?" Ben
turned, looking out across the bay, as if to take in his
surroundings, then he looked back at Li Yuan. "I
am not my father, Li Yuan." "Nor
I mine." "No."
Ben sighed and looked down, tilting the case, making the ants run
this way and that. There was a strange smile on his lips. "You
know, I didn't think it would tempt me, but it does. To try it for a
while. To see what it would be like." He looked up again. "But
no, Li Yuan. It would simply be a game. My heart wouldn't be in it.
And that would be dangerous, don't you think?" Li
Yuan shook his head. "You're wrong. Besides, I need you, Ben.
You were bred to be my helper, my advisor . . ." He
stopped, seeing how Ben was looking at him. "I
can't be, Li Yuan. I'm sorry, but there's something else I have to
do. Something more important." Li
Yuan stared at him, astonished. Something more important? How could
anything be more important than the business of government? "You
don't understand," Ben said. "I knew you wouldn't. But you
will. It may take twenty years, but one day you'll understand why I
said no today." "Then
I can't persuade you?" Ben
smiled. "To be your Chief Advisor—to be what my father was
to Li Shai Tung—that I can't be. But I'll be your sounding
board if you ever need me, Li Yuan. You need only come here. And we
can sit in the garden and play at killing ants, neh?" Li
Yuan stared back at him, not certain whether he was being gently
mocked, then let himself relax, returning Ben's smile. "All
right. I'll hold you to that promise." Ben
nodded. "Good. Now watch. The best bit is always at the start.
When they scuttle for the holes. They're like hounds scenting blood.
There's something pure— something utterly pure—about
them." Li
Yuan moved back, watching as Ben flipped back the transparent cover
to the case, releasing a bright red spill. They fell like sand onto
the jet-black earth, scattering at once into the tiny tracks, the
speed at which they moved astonishing. And then they were gone, like
blood-soaked water drained into the thirsty earth, seeking out their
victims far below. It was
as Ben had said; there was something pure—something quite
fascinating—about them. Yet at the same time they were quite
horrifying. Tiny machines, they were. Not ants at all. He shuddered.
What in the gods' names had Amos Shepherd been thinking when he made
such things? He looked at Ben again. "And
when they've finished . . . what happens then?" Ben
looked up at him, meeting his eyes. "They come back. They're
programmed to come back. Like the Hei you use beneath the Net. It's
all the same, after all. All very muchvthe same." hans
EBERT sat back in his chair, his face dark with anger. "Karr
did what!" Scott
bowed his head. "It's all here, Hans. In the report." "Report?"
Ebert stood and came around the desk, snatching the file from the
Captain. He opened it, scanning it a moment, then looked back at
Scott. "But
this is to Tolonen." Scott
nodded, "I took the liberty of making a copy. I knew you'd be
interested." "You did, eh?" Ebert took a breath, then
nodded. "And DeVore?" "He got away. Karr almost had
him, but he slipped through the net." Ebert swallowed, not
knowing what was worse, DeVore in Karr's hands or DeVore loose and
blaming him for the raid. He had
barely had time to consider the matter when his equerry appeared in
the doorway. "There's
a call for you, sir. A Shih Beattie. A business matter, I
understand." He felt his stomach tighten. Beattie was DeVore. "Forgive
me, Captain Scott. I must deal with this matter rather urgently. But
thank you. I appreciate your prompt action. I'll see that you do not
go unrewarded for your help." Scott
bowed and left, leaving Ebert alone. For a moment he sat, steeling
himself, then leaned forward. "Patch
Shih Beattie through." He sat
back, watching as the screen containing DeVore's face tilted up from
the desk's surface, facing him. He had never seen DeVore so angry.
"What the fuck are you up to, Hans?" Ebert
shook his head. "I heard only five minutes ago. Believe me,
Howard." "Crap! You must have known something was going on.
You've got your finger on the pulse, haven't you?" Ebert
swallowed back his anger. "It wasn't me, Howard. I can
prove it wasn't. And I didn't know a fucking thing until just now.
All right? Look . . ." He held up the file, turning the opening
page so that it faced the screen. DeVore was silent a moment,
reading, then he swore. "You
see?" Ebert said, glad for once that Scott had acted on his own
initiative. "Tolonen ordered it. Karr carried it out. Tsu Ma's
troops were used. I was never, at any stage, involved." DeVore
nodded. "All right. But why? Have you asked yourself that yet,
Hans? Why were you excluded from this?" Ebert
frowned. He hadn't considered it. He had just assumed that they had
done it because he was so busy preparing to take over the
generalship. But now that he thought about it, it was odd. Very odd
indeed. Tolonen, at the very least, ought to have let him know that
something was going on. "Do you think they suspect some kind of
link?" DeVore
shook his head. "Tolonen would not have recommended you, and Li
Yuan certainly wouldn't have appointed you. No, this has to do with
Karr. I'm told his men were poking about the villages recently. I was
going to deal with that, but they've preempted me." "So
what do we do?" DeVore
laughed. "That's very simple. You'll be General in a day or so.
Karr, instead of being your equal, will be your subordinate." Ebert
shook his head. "That's not strictly true. Karr is Tolonen's
man. He always was. He took a direct oath to the old man when he
joined Security eleven years ago. He's only technically in my
command." "Then
what about that friend of his. Kao Chen? Can't you start
court-martial proceedings against him?" Ebert
shook his head, confused. "Why? What will that achieve?" "They're
close. Very close, so I've heard. If you can't get at Karr, attack
his friends. Isolate him. I'm sure you can rig up enough evidence to
convict the Han. You've got friends who would lie for you, haven't
you, Hans?" Hans
laughed. More than enough. Even so, he wasn't sure he wanted to take
on Karr. Not just yet. "Isn't
there an alternative?" "Yes.
You might have Karr killed. And Tolonen, too, while you're at it." "Kill
Tolonen?" Ebert sat forward, startled by the suggestion. "But
he's virtually my father-in-law!" "So?
He's dangerous. Can't you see that, Hans? He almost had me killed
last night. And where would we have been then, eh? Besides, what if
he discovers the link between us? No, Hans, this is no time to play
Shih Conscience. If you don't have him killed, I will." Ebert
sat back, a look of sour resignation on his face. "All right. I
take your point. Leave it with me." "Good.
And Hans . . . congratulations. You'll make a good General. A very
good General." Ebert
sat there afterward, thinking back on what had been said between
them. To kill Karr; he could think of nothing more satisfying or—when
he considered it—more difficult. In contrast, having Tolonen
killed would be all too easy, for the old man trusted him implicitly. He
understood DeVore's anger—understood and even agreed with the
reasons he had given—yet the thought of killing the old man
disturbed him. Oh, he had cursed the old man often enough for a fool,
but he had never been treated badly by him. No, Tolonen had been like
a father to him these past years. More of a father than his own. At
some level he rather liked the old dog. Besides, how could he marry
Jelka, knowing he had murdered her father? He
stood, combing his fingers back through his hair, then came out from
behind his desk. And
yet, if he didn't, DeVore would. And that would place him at a
disadvantage in his dealings with the Major. Would place him in his
debt. He laughed bitterly. In reality there was no choice at all. He
had to have Tolonen killed. To keep the upper hand. And to
demonstrate to DeVore that, when it came to these matters, he had the
steel in him to carry through such schemes. He
paused, contemplating the map. Beginning tomorrow, all this was his
domain. Across this huge continent he was the arbiter, the final
word, speaking with the T'ang's tongue. Like a prince, trying out the
role before it became his own. There was a tapping on the door behind
him. He turned. "Come!" It was the Chancellor, Chung
Hu-yan. "What is it, Chung? You look worried." Chung
held out a sheaf of papers to him, the great seal of the T'ang of
Europe appended to the last of them. "What are these?" Chung
shook his head, clearly flustered. "They are my orders for the
coronation ceremony tomorrow, Major Ebert. They outline the protocol
I am to follow." Ebert
frowned. "So what's the problem? You follow protocol. What is
unusual in that?" "Look!"
Chung tapped the first sheet. "Look at what he wants them all to
do." Ebert read the passage Chung was indicating, then looked up
at him, wide-eyed. "He wants them to do that?" Chung
nodded vigorously. "I tried to see him, this morning, but he is
not at the palace. And the rehearsal is to be in an hour. What shall
I do, Major Ebert? Everyone who is to be there tomorrow is
attending—the very cream of the Above. They are bound to feel
affronted by these demands. Why, they might even refuse." Ebert
nodded. It was a distinct possibility. Such a ritual had not been
heard of since the tyrant Tsao Ch'un's time, and he had modeled it
upon the worst excesses of the Ch'ing dynasty—the Manchu. "I
feel for you, Chung Hu-yan, but we are our masters' hands, neh? And
the T'ang's seal is on that document. My advice to you is to follow
it to the letter." Chung Hu-yan stared at the sheaf of papers a
moment longer, then quickly furled them and with a bow to Ebert,
turned, hurrying away. Ebert watched him go, amused by how ruffled
the normally implacable Chancellor was. Even so, he had to admit to a
small element of unease on his own account. What Li Yuan was asking
for was a radical departure from the traditional ceremony and there
was bound to be resentment, even open opposition. It would be
interesting to see how he dealt with that. Very interesting indeed. THE
BIG man mounted the steps, pressing his face close to the
Chancellor's, ignoring the guards who hurried to intercede. "Never!"
he said, his voice loud enough to carry to the back of the packed
hall. "I'd as soon cut off my own bollocks as agree to that!" There
was laughter at that, but also a fierce murmur of agreement. They had
been astonished when Chung Hu-yan had first read Li Yuan's
instructions to them. Now their astonishment had turned to outrage. Chung
Hu-yan waved the guards back, then began again. "Your T'ang
instructs you—" but his words were drowned out by a roar
of disapproval. "Instructs
us?" the big man said, turning now, looking back into the hall.
"By what right does he instruct us?" "You
must do as you are told," Chung Hu-yan began again, his voice
quavering. "These are the T'ang's orders." The
man shook his head. "It is unjust. We are not hsiaojen—little
men. We are the masters of this great City. It is not right to try to
humiliate us in this manner." Once
more a great roar of support came from the packed hall. Chung Hu-yan
shook his head. This was not his doing! Not his doing at all! Even
so, he would persist. "You
must step down, Shih Tarrant. These are the T'ang's own
instructions. Would
you disobey them?" Tarrant
puffed out his huge chest. "YouVe heard what I have to say,
Chancellor Chung. I'll not place my neck beneath any man's foot,
T'ang or no. Nor will anyone in this room, I warrant. It is asking
too much of us. Too much by far!" This
time the noise was deafening. But as it faded the great doors behind
Chung Hu-yan swung back and the T'ang himself entered, a troop of his
elite guards behind him. A hush
fell upon the crowd. Li
Yuan came forward until he stood beside his Chancellor, looking back
sternly at the big man, unintimidated by his size. "Take
him away," he said, speaking over his shoulder to the captain of
the guard. "What he has said is in defiance of my written order.
Is treason. Take him outside at once and execute him." There
was a hiss of disbelief. Tarrant stepped back, his face a picture of
astonishment, but four of the guards were on him at once, pinning his
arms behind his back. Shouting loudly, he was frog-marched past the
T'ang and out through the doors. Li
Yuan turned his head slowly, looking out across the sea of faces in
the hall, seeing their anger and astonishment, their fear and
surprise. "Who
else will defy me?" he demanded. "Who else?" He
paused, looking about him, seeing how quiet, how docile they had
become. "No. I thought not." "This
is a new age," he said, lifting his chin commandingly. "And
a new age demands new rules, new ways of behaving. So do not mistake
me for my father, ch'un tzu. I am Li Yuan, T'ang of City
Europe. Now bow your heads." HE WAS
LIKE the sun, stepping down from the Tien Tan, the Temple of
Heaven. His arms were two bright flashes of gold as he raised the
imperial crown and placed it on his brow. Sunlight beat from his
chest in waves as he moved from side to side, looking out across the
vast mass of his subjects, who were stretched out prone before him in
the temple grounds. No one
looked. Only the cameras took this in. All other eyes were cast into
the dust, unworthy of the sight. "This
is a new age," Li Yuan said softly to himself. "A new time.
But old are the ways of power. As old as Man himself." One by
one his servants came to him, stretched out on the steps beneath him,
their heads turned to one side, the neck exposed. And on each
preferred neck he trod, placing his weight there for the briefest
moment before releasing them. His vassals. This time they'd learn
their lesson. This time they would know whose beasts they were. Officers
and Administrators, Representatives and Company Executives, Ministers
and Family Heads—all bowed before him and exposed their necks,
each one acknowledging him as their Lord and Master. Last
was Tolonen. Only here did Li Yuan's reluctance take a shape, his
naked sole touching the old man's neck as if he kissed it, no
pressure behind the touch. Then
it was done. The brute thing made manifest to all. He was an Emperor,
like the emperors of old, powerful and deadly. And afterward he saw
how changed they were by this; how absolute he'd made them think his
power. He almost smiled, wondering what his father would have made of
this. So powerful was this ritual, so naked its meaning. You
are mine, it said, to crush beneath my heel, or raise
to prominence. The
ceremony over, he dismissed all but those closest to him, holding
audience in the great throne room. First to greet him there were his
fellow T'ang. They climbed the marble steps to bow their heads and
kiss his ring, welcoming him to their number. Last of these was Wei
Feng, wearing the white of mourning. Wei's eyes were filled with
tears, and when he had kissed the ring, he leaned forward to hold Li
Yuan to him a moment, whispering in his ear. Li
Yuan nodded and held the old man's hands a moment, then relinquished
them. "I shall," he said softly, moved deeply by the words
his father's friend had uttered. Others
came, pledging loyalty in a more traditional way. And last of all his
officers, led by General Tolonen. The
General knelt, unsheathing his ceremonial dagger and offering it up
to his T'ang, hilt first, his eyes averted. Li Yuan took it from him
and laid it across his lap. "You
served my father well, Knut. I hope you'll serve me just as well in
future. But new lords need new servants. I must have a General to
match my youth." The
words were a formality, for it was Tolonen who had pushed to have
Ebert appointed. The old man nodded and lifted his head. "1 wish
him well, Chieh Hsia. He is as a son to me. I have felt
honored to have served, but now my time is done. Let another serve
you as I tried to serve your father." Li
Yuan smiled, then summoned the young man forward. Hans
Ebert came toward the throne, his head bowed, his shoulders stooped,
and knelt beside Tolonen. "I am yours," he said ritually,
lowering his forehead to touch the step beneath the throne, once,
twice, and then a third time. The sheath at his belt was empty. No
mark of rank lay on his powder-blue uniform. He waited, abased and
"naked" before his Lord. "Let
it begin here," said Li Yuan, speaking loudly over the heads of
the kneeling officers to the gathered eminences. "My trust goes
out from me and into the hands of others. So it is. So it must be.
This is the chain we forge, the chain that links us all." He
looked down at the young man, speaking more softly, personally now.
"Raise your head, Hans Ebert. Look up at your Lord, who is as
the sun to you and from whom you have your life. Look up and take
from me my trust." Ebert
raised his head. "I am ready, Chieh Hsia," he said,
his voice steady, his eyes meeting those of Li Yuan unflinchingly. "Good."
Li Yuan nodded, smiling. "Then take the badge of your office." He
lifted the dagger from his lap and held it out. Ebert took it
carefully, then sheathed it, curtly lowering his head once more. Then
both he and Tolonen backed down the steps, their eyes averted, their
heads bowed low. THAT
SAME evening they met in a room in the Purple Forbidden City—the
Seven who ruled Chung Kuo. One thing remained before they went from
there, one final task to set things right. Tsu Ma
stood before Li Yuan, grasping his hands firmly, meeting him eye to
eye. "You're sure you want this?" "The
genotyping is conclusive. It must be done now, before the child is
born. Afterward is too late." Tsu Ma
held him a moment longer, then released his hands. "So be it
then. Let us all sign the special Edict." Each
signed his name and sealed it with his ring, in the old manner. Later
it would be confirmed with retinal prints and ECG patterning, but for
now this was sufficient. Wei
Feng was last to sign and seal the document. He turned, looking back
at the new T'ang. "Good sits with ill this day, Li Yuan. I would
not have thought it of her." "Nor
I," said Li Yuan, staring down at the completed Edict. And so it
was done. Fei Yen was no longer his wife. The child would not
inherit. "When
is the marriage to be?" Tsu Ma stood close. His voice was
gentle, sympathetic. "Tomorrow,"
Yuan answered, grateful for Tsu Ma's presence. "How strange that
is. Tonight I lose a wife. And tomorrow ..." "Tomorrow
you gain three." Tsu Ma shook his head. "Do you know who it
was, Yuan? Whose son Fei Yen is carrying?" Li
Yuan looked at him, then looked away. "That does not concern
me," he said stiffly. Then, relenting, he laid his hand on Tsu
Ma's arm. "It was a mistake ever to have begun with her. My
father was right. I know that now. Only my blindness kept it from
me." "Then
you are content?" Li
Yuan shook his head. "Content? No. But it is done." TOLONEN
turned from the screen and the image of the boy and faced the
Architect. "From
what I've seen, the experience seems not to have done Ward too much
harm, but what's your opinion? Is he ready for this yet, or should we
delay?" The
Architect hesitated, remembering the last time, years before, when he
had been questioned about the boys condition. Then it had been
Berdichev, but the questions were much the same. How is the boy? Is
he ready to be used? He smiled tightly, then answered Tolonen. "It's
too early to know what the long-term effects are going to be, but in
the short-term you're right. He's emerged from this whole episode
extremely well. His reaction to the attack—the trauma and loss
of memory—seems to have been the best thing that could have
happened to him. I was concerned in case it had done lasting damage,
particularly to his memory, but if anything the experience seems to
have"—he shrugged—"toughened him up, I guess
you'd say. He's a resilient little creature. Much tougher than we
thought. The psychological blocks we created during his restructuring
four years ago seem to have melted away—as if they'd never
been. But instead of regressing to that state of savagery in which we
first encountered him, he appears to have attained a new balance.
I've never seen anything like it, to be honest. Most minds are too
inflexible—too set in their ways—to survive what Kim has
been through without cracking. He, on the other hand, seems to have
emerged stronger, saner than ever." Tolonen
frowned. "Maybe. But you say that the psychological blocks have
gone. That's a bad thing, surely? I thought they were there to
prevent the boy from reverting into savagery." "They
were." "Then
there's a chance he might still be dangerous?" "There's
a chance. But that's true of anyone. And I mean anyone. We've all of
us a darker side. Push us just so far and we'll snap. I suspect now
that that was what happened the first time, that Kim was simply
responding to extreme provocation from the other boy. My guess is
that unless Kim were pushed to the same extreme again he'd be
perfectly safe. After all, he's not a bomb waiting to go off; he's
only a human being, like you or me." "So
what you're saying is that, in your opinion, he's not dangerous. He
won't be biting people's ears off or clawing out their eyes?" The
Architect shook his head. "1 doubt it. The fact that his friend
survived has helped greatly. Their reunion was a major factor in his
recuperation. If T'ai Cho had been killed our problems might have
been of a different order, but as it is, I'd say Kim's fine. As fine
as you or I." Tolonen
turned, looking back at the screen. "Then you think he's up to
it?" The Architect laughed. "I do. In fact, I think it
would be positively good for him. He has a mind that's ever-hungry
for new things and an instinct for seeking them out. From what I've
heard of it, the North American scene should prove a good hunting
ground in that regard." Tolonen
frowned, not certain he liked the sound of that, but it was not in
his brief to query what was happening in Wu Shih's city; his job was
to find out whether Kim was fit to travel to North America, and from
all indications, he was. He
sniffed deeply, then nodded, his mind made up. "Good. Then
prepare the boy at once. There's a flight from Nantes spaceport at
tenth bell. I want Ward and his tutor on it." "And
the wire? Shall we remove that now that our tests are finished?"
Tolonen looked away. "No. Leave it in. It won't harm him, after
all." He looked back at the Architect, his face a mask.
"Besides, if something does go badly wrong—if he goes
missing again—we'll be able to trace him, won't we?" The
Architect looked down, beginning to understand what was really
happening. "Of course. Of course ..." "Would
you like anything, sir?" The
boy looked up, startled, his dark eyes wide, then settled back in his
seat again, shaking his head. "Nothing
... I ... I'm all right." The
Steward backed off a pace, noting how tense the bodyguards had grown,
and bowed his head. "Forgive me, sir, but if you change your
mind you have only to press the summons button." The
boy returned a tense smile. "Of course." The
Steward moved on, settling the passengers, making sure they were
securely strapped into the seats, asking if there was anything he
could do for them before the launch; but all the while his mind was
on the boy. Who
was he? he wondered. After all, it wasn't every day they received an
order direct from Bremen; nor was it customary for Security to
reserve a whole section of the cabin for a single passenger. Knowing
all this he had expected some high-ranking Han—a Minor Family
prince at the very least, or a Minister—so the boy's appearance
had surprised him. At first he had thought he might be a prisoner of
some kind, but the more he thought about it the more that seemed
ridiculous. Besides, he wasn't bound in any way, and the men with him
were clearly bodyguards, not warders. He had only to ask for
something and one of them would go running. No. Whoever he was, he
was important enough to warrant the kind of treatment reserved only
for the very highest of the Above—the Supernal, as they
were known these days—and yet he seemed merely a boy, and a
rather odd, almost ugly little boy at that. There was a curious
angularity to his limbs, a strange darkness in his overlarge eyes. The
Steward came to the end of the walkway and turned, looking back down
the cabin. It was five minutes to takeoff. The young Americans were
settled now. Like so many of their kind they were almost totally
lacking in manners. Only the quiet one—Lever—had even
seemed to notice he was there. The rest had snapped their fingers and
demanded this and that, as if he were not Steward but some half-human
creature manufactured in the GenSyn vats. It was things like that
that he hated about this new generation. They were not like their
fathers. No, not at all. Their fathers understood that other men had
their own pride, and that it was such pride that held the vast fabric
of society together. These youngsters had no idea. They were blind to
such things. And one day they would pay—and pay dearly—for
their blindness. He
turned and went through the curtain. The Security Captain was sitting
there, the file open on his knee. He looked up as the Steward came
in, giving him a brief smile. "Are
they all settled?" The
Steward nodded. "Even the two women. I had to give them a
sedative each, but they seem all right now." He shook his head.
"They shouldn't let women travel. I have nothing but trouble
with them." The Captain laughed, closing the file. "And the
boy?" "He's fine. I wondered—" The
Captain shook his head. "Don't ask me. All I was told was that
there was to be a special guest on board. A guest of the T'ang
himself. But who he is or what . . ." He shrugged, then laughed
again. "I know. I'm as curious as you. He's a strange one, neh?" The
Steward nodded, then moved away, satisfied that the Captain knew no
more than he. Even so, he thought he had glimpsed a picture of the
boy, earlier, when he had first come back behind the curtain—in
the file the Captain was reading. He could have been mistaken, but. .
. "Are
you on business?" he asked, pulling the webbing harness out from
the wall behind the Captain. "Liaison,"
the Captain answered, moving forward in his seat, letting himself be
fastened into the harness. "My job is to increase cooperation
between the two Cities." The
Steward smiled politely. "It sounds very interesting. But I'd
have thought there was little need." "You'd
be surprised. The days of isolation are ended for the Cities. The
Triads have spread their nets wide these days. And not only the
Triads. There's a lot of illicit trade going on. Some of it via these
rockets, I've no doubt!" The
Steward stared at him a moment, then turned away. "Anyway, I'll
leave you now. I have one last check to make before I secure myself." The
Captain nodded, then called him back. "Here. I almost forgot. I
was told to deliver this to the boy before we took off." He
handed the Steward a sealed envelope. "It was in my file. Along
with a picture of the boy. All very mysterious, neb?" The
Steward stared at the envelope a moment, then nodded. He turned away,
disappearing through the curtain once again. DeVore
watched the man go, breathing a sigh of relief. Then he laughed. It
was easy—all so bloody easy. Why, he could have taken the boy
out earlier, in the lobby, if he'd wished. He'd had a clear shot. But
that wasn't what he wanted. No, he wanted the boy. Besides, Li Yuan
was up to something. It would be interesting to find out what. He
smiled, then opened the file again, picking up from where he'd left
off. After a moment he looked up, nodding thoughtfully. Ebert had
done him proud. There was everything here. Everything. The report
Tolonen had made on the attack on the Project, the medical and
psychological reports on Ward, and a full transcript of the
debriefing. The only thing missing—and it was missing only
because it didn't exist—was something to indicate just why Li
Yuan had decided to ship the boy off to North America. Well,
maybe he could clarify things a little over the next few days. Maybe
he could find out—through the Levers—what it was Li Yuan
wanted. And at the same time he might do a little business on his own
account: he would take up young Lever's invitation to meet his father
and have dinner. Yes,
and afterward he would put his proposal to the son. Would see just
how deep his enthusiasm for change was. And then . . . ? He
smiled and closed the file. And then he would begin again, building
new shapes on a new part of the board, constructing his patterns
until the game was won. For it would be won. If it took him a dozen
lifetimes he would win it.
CHAPTER TEN
Ghosts IT
WAS A COLD, gray morning, the sky overcast, the wind whipping off the
surface of the West Lake, bending back the reeds on the shoreline of
Jade Spring Island. In front of the great pavilion—a huge,
circular, two-tiered building with tapered roofs of vermillion
tile—the thousand bright red-and-gold dragon banners of the
T'ang flapped noisily, the ranks of armored bearers standing like
iron statues in the wind, their red capes fluttering behind them. To the
south of the pavilion, a huge platform had been built, reaching
almost to the lake's edge. In its center, on a dais high above the
rest, stood the throne, a great canopy of red silk shielding it from
the rain that gusted intermittently across the lake. Li
Yuan sat on the throne, his red silks decorated with tiny golden
dragon-and-phoenix emblems. Behind him, below the nine steps of the
great dais, his retainers and ministers were assembled, dressed in
red. Facing
Li Yuan, no more than a hundred ch'i distant, a wide bridge
linked the island to the eastern shore. It was an ancient bridge,
built in the time of the Song Dynasty, more than a thousand years
before, its white-stone spans decorated with lions and dragons and
other mythical beasts. Li
Yuan stared at it a moment, then turned his head, looking out
blank-eyed across the lake, barely conscious of the great procession
that waited on the far side of the bridge. News had come that
morning. Fei Yen had had her child. A boy, it was. A boy. The
music of the ceremony began, harsh, dissonant—bells, drums, and
cymbals. At once the New Confucian officials came forward, making
their obeisance to him before they backed away. On the eastern shore
the procession started forward, a great tide of red, making its slow
way across the bridge. He
sighed and looked down at his hands. It had only been two days since
he had removed her wedding ring. A single day ... He shivered. So
simple it had been. He had watched himself remove it from his finger
and place it on the gold silk cushion Nan Ho held out to him. Had
watched as Nan Ho turned and took it from the room, ending the life
he had shared with her, destroying the dream for good and all. He
took a shuddering breath, then looked up again. This was no time for
tears. No. Today was a day for celebrations, for today was his
wedding day. He
watched them come. The heads of the three clans walked side by side
at the front of the procession; proud old men, each bearing his honor
in his face like a badge. Behind them came the ranks of brothers and
cousins, sisters and wives, many hundreds in all; and beyond them the
lung t'ing—the "dragon pavilions"— each
one carried by four bare-headed eunuch servants. The tiny sedan
chairs were piled high with dowry gifts for the T'ang: bolts of silk
and satin, boxes of silver, golden plates and cups, embroidered
robes, delicate porcelain, saddles and fans and gilded cages filled
with songbirds. So much, indeed, that this single part of the
procession was by far the longest, with more than a hundred lung
t'ing to each family. An
honor guard was next. Behind that came the three feng yu, the
phoenix chairs, four silver birds perched atop each canopy, each
scarlet and gold sedan carried aloft by a dozen bearers. His
brides . . . He had
asked Nan Ho to get the heads of the three clans to agree to waive
the preliminary ceremonies—had insisted that the thing be done
quickly if at all—yet it had not been possible to dispense with
this final ritual. It was, after all, a matter of face. Of pride. To
marry a T'ang—that was not done without due celebration,
without due pomp and ceremony. And would the T'ang deny them that? He
could not. For to be T'ang had its obligations as well as its
advantages. And so here he was, on a cold, wet, windy morning,
marrying three young women he had never seen before this day. Necessary,
he told himself. For the Family must be strong again. Even so, his
heart ached and his soul cried out at the wrongness of it. He
watched them come, a feeling of dread rising in him. These were the
women he was to share his life with. They would bear his sons, would
lie beneath him in his bed. And what if he came to hate them? What if
they hated him? For what was done here could not easily be undone. No. A
man was forgiven one failure. But any more and the world would
condemn him, wherever lay the fault. Wives.
These strangers were to be his wives. And how had this come about? He
sat there, momentarily bemused by the fact. Then, as the music
changed and the chant began below, he stood and went to the top of
the steps, ready for the great ceremony to begin. An
hour later it was done. Li Yuan stepped back, watching as his wives
knelt, bowing low, touching their foreheads to the floor three times
before him. Nan Ho
had chosen well, had shown great sensitivity; for not one of the
three reminded him in the least of Fei Yen, yet each was, in her own
way, quite distinct. Mien Shan, the eldest and officially his First
Wife, was a tiny thing with a strong build and a pleasantly rounded
face. Fu Ti Chang, the youngest, just seventeen, was also the
tallest; a shy, elegant willow of a girl. By way of contrast, Lai Shi
seemed quite spirited; she was a long-faced girl, hardly a beauty,
but there was a sparkle in her eye that made her by far the most
attractive of the three. Li Yuan had smiled when she'd pulled back
her veil, surprised to find an interest in her stirring in himself. Tonight
duty required him to visit the bed of Mien Shan. But tomorrow? He
dismissed his wives, then turned, summoning Nan Ho to him. "Chieh
Hsia?" He
lowered his voice. "I am most pleased with this morning's
events, Master Nan. You have done well to prepare things so quickly."
Nan Ho bowed low. "It was but my duty, Chieh Hsia." "Maybe
so, but you have excelled yourself, Nan Ho. From henceforth you are
no longer Master of the Inner Chamber but Chancellor." Nan
Ho's look of amazement was almost comical. "Chieh Hsia!
But what of Chung Hu-yan?" Li
Yuan smiled. "I am warmed by your concern, Nan Ho, but do not
worry. I informed Chung yesterday evening. Indeed, he confirmed my
choice." Nan Ho's puzzlement deepened. "Chieh Hsia?" "I
should explain, perhaps, Master Nan. It was all agreed long before my
father's death. It was felt that I would need new blood when I became
T'ang, new men surrounding me. Men I could trust. Men who would grow
as I grew and would be as pillars, supporting me in my old age. You
understand?" Nan
Ho bowed his head. "I understand, Chieh Hsia, and am
honored. Honored beyond words." "Well
. . . Go now. Chung Hu-yan has agreed to stay on as your advisor
until you feel comfortable with your new duties. Then he is to become
my Counselor." Nan Ho
gave the briefest nod, understanding. Counselor. It would make Chung
virtually an uncle to Li Yuan; a member of Li Yuan's inner council,
discussing and formulating policy. No wonder he had not minded
relinquishing his post as Chancellor. "And
when am I to begin, Chieh HsJa?" Li
Yuan laughed. "You began two days ago, Master Nan, when you came
to my room and took the book of brides from me. I appointed you then,
in here." He tapped his forehead. "You have been my
Chancellor ever since." JELKA
WAS STANDING at her father's side, among the guests in the great
pavilion, when Hans Ebert came across and joined them. "Marshal
Tolonen . . ." Ebert bowed to the old man, then turned, smiling,
to Jelka. In his bright-red dress uniform he looked a young god, his
golden hair swept back neatly, his strong, handsome features formed
quite pleasantly. Even his eyes, normally so cold, seemed kind as he
looked at her. Even so, Jelka hardened herself against the illusion,
reminding herself of what she knew about him. He
lowered his head, keeping his eyes on her face. "It's good to
see you here, Jelka. I hope you're feeling better." His
inquiry was soft-spoken, his words exactly what a future husband
ought to have said, yet somehow she could not accept them at face
value. He was a good actor—a consummately good actor, for it
seemed almost as if he really liked her— but she knew what he
was beneath the act. A shit. A cold, self-centered shit. "I'm
much better, thank you," she said, lowering her eyes, a faint
blush coming to her cheeks. "It was only a sprain." The
blush was for the lie she had told. She had not sprained her ankle at
all. It was simply that the idea of seeing Hans Ebert made General in
her father's place had been more than she could bear. To have spent
the evening toasting the man she most abhorred!—she could think
of nothing worse. She
kept her eyes averted, realizing the shape her thoughts had taken.
Was it really that bad? Was Hans Ebert really so abhorrent? She
looked up again, meeting his eyes, noting the concern there. Even so,
the feeling persisted. To think of marrying this man was a mistake. A
horrible mistake. His
smile widened. "You will come and dine with us, I hope, a week
from now. My father is looking forward to it greatly. And I. It would
be nice to speak with you, Jelka. To find out who we are." "Yes
. . ." She glanced up at him, then lowered her eyes again, a
shiver of revulsion passing through her at the thought. Yet what
choice had she? This man was to be her husband—her life
partner. Ebert
lifted her hand, kissing her knuckles gently before releasing it. He
smiled and bowed, showing her the deepest respect. "Until then .
. ." He turned slightly, bowing to her father, then turned away. "A
marvelous young man," Tolonen said, watching Ebert make his way
back through the crowd toward the T'ang. "Do you know, Jelka, if
I'd had a son, I'd have wished for one like Hans." She
shivered. The very thought of it made her stomach tighten, reminded
her of the mad girl in the Ebert Mansion and of that awful pink-eyed
goat-baby. A son like Hans . . . She shook her head. No! It could
never be! IN THE
SEDAN traveling back to Nanking, Jelka sat facing her father,
listening to him, conscious, for the first time in her life, of how
pompous, how vacuous his words were. His notion that they were at the
beginning of a new "Golden Age," for instance. It was
nonsense. She had read the special reports on the situation in the
lower levels and knew how bad things were. Every day brought growing
disaffection from the Seven and their rule, brought strikes and riots
and the killing of officials; yet he seemed quite blind to all that.
He spoke of growth and stability and the glorious years to come,
years that would recapture the glory of his youth. She
sat a long while, simply listening, her head lowered. Then, suddenly,
she looked up at him. "I
can't." He
looked across at her, breaking off. "Can't what.7"
- She
stared back into his steel-gray eyes, hardening herself against him.
"I can't marry Hans Ebert." He
laughed. "Don't be silly, Jelka. It's all arranged. Besides,
Hans is General now." "I
don't care.'" she said, the violence of her words surprising
him. "I simply can't marry him!" He
shook his head, then leaned forward. "You mustn't say that,
Jelka. You mustn't!" She
glared back at him defiantly. "Why not? It's what I feel. To
marry Hans would kill me. I'd shrivel up and die." "Nonsense!"
he barked, angry now. "You're being ridiculous! Can't you see
the way that boy looks at you? He's besotted with you!" She
looked down, shaking her head. "You don't understand. You really
don't understand, do you?" She shuddered, then looked up at him
again. "I don't like him, Daddy. I ..." She gave a
small, pained laugh. "How can I possibly marry someone I don't
like?" He had
gone very still, his eyes narrowed. "Listen, my girl, you will,
and sooner than you think. I've agreed to a new date for the
wedding. A month from now." She
sat back, open-mouthed, staring at him. He
leaned closer, softening his voice. "It's not how I meant to
tell you, but there, it's done. And no more of this nonsense. Hans is
a fine young man. The very best of young men. And you're a lucky
girl. If only you'd get these silly notions out of your head, you'd
come to realize it. And then you'll thank me for it." "Thank
you?" The note of incredulity in her voice made him sit
back, bristling. "Yes.
Thank me. Now no more. I insist." She
shook her head. "You don't know him, Father. He keeps a girl in
his house— a mad girl whose baby he had killed. And I've
heard—" "Enough!" Tolonen
got to his feet, sending the sedan swaying. As it slowed, he sat
again, the color draining slowly from his face. "I
won't hear another word from you, my girl. Not another word. Hans is
a fine young man. And these lies—" "They're
not lies. I've seen her. I've seen what he did to her." "Lies.
. ." he insisted, shaking his head. "Really, I would
not have believed it of you, Jelka. Such behavior. If your mother
were alive . . ." She
put her head down sharply, trembling with anger. Gods! To talk of her
mother at such a time. She slowed her breathing, calming herself,
then said it one more time. "I
can't." She
looked up and saw how he was watching her—coldly, so far from
her in feeling that it was as if he were a stranger to her. "You
will," he said. "You will because I say you will." THE
DOCTOR was still fussing over Karr's shoulder when they brought the
man in. Karr turned, wincing, waving the doctor away, then leaned
across the desk to study the newcomer. "You're
sure this is him?" he asked, looking past the man at Chen. Chen
nodded. "We've made all the checks. He seems to be who he claims
he is." Karr
smiled, then sat back, a flicker of pain passing across his face.
"All right. So you're Reid, eh? Thomas Reid. Well, tell me, Shih
Reid, why are you here?" The
man looked down, betraying a moment's fear; then he girded up his
courage again and spoke. "I
was there, you see. After you raided the fortress. I was there with
the Man's lieutenant—" "The
Man?" "DeVore.
That's what we call him. The Man." Karr
glanced at Chen. "And?" "Just
that 1 was there, afterward. Lehmann and I—" "Lehmann?" "Stefan
Lehmann. The albino. Under-Secretary Lehmann's son." Karr
laughed, surprised. "And he's DeVore's lieutenant?" "Yes.
I was with him, you see. We'd been off to deliver something for the
Man. But when we got back, shortly after eight, we saw your
transporters from some distance away and knew there had been trouble.
We flew south and doubled back, crossing the valley on foot; then we
climbed up to the ruins." "The
ruins?" "Yes,
there's a castle ... or at least the remains of one. It's on the
other side of the mountain from the base. There's an old system of
tunnels beneath it. The Man used them when he built the base. Linked
up to them." "Ah
. . ." The light of understanding dawned in Karr's eyes. "But
why did you go there?" "Because
Lehmann had a hunch. He thought DeVore might be there, in the old
tunnel." "And
was he?" "Yes." Karr
looked at Chen. It was as he'd said. But now they knew for sure.
DeVore had got out: he was loose in the world to do his mischief. "Do
you know where he is?" Reid
shook his head. "So
why are you here? What do you want?" Reid
looked aside. "I was . . . afraid. Things were getting desperate
out there. Out of hand. DeVore, Lehmann . . . they're not people you
can cross." "And
yet you're here. Why?" "Because
I'd had enough. And because I felt that you, if anyone, could protect
me." "And
why should I do that?" "Because
I know things. Know where the other bases are." Karr
sat back, astonished. Other bases . . . "But I thought—"
He checked himself and looked at Chen, seeing his own surprise
mirrored back at him. They had stumbled onto the Landek base by
complete chance in the course of their sweep of the Wilds, alerted by
its heat-emission patterns. They had blessed their luck, but never
for an instant had they thought there would be others. They assumed
all along that DeVore was working on a smaller scale: that he'd kept
his organization much tighter. This
changed things. Changed them dramatically. Reid
was watching Karr. "I know how things are organized out there. I
was in charge of several things in my time. I've pieced things
together in my head. I know where their weak spots are." "And
you'll tell us all of this in return for your safety?" Reid
nodded. "That and ten million yuan." Karr
sat back. "I could have you tortured. Could wring the truth from
you." "You
could. But then, Ebert might come to know about it, mightn't he? And
that would spoil things for you. I understand he's already instigated
a special investigation into your activities." Karr
jerked forward, grimacing, the pain from his shoulder suddenly
intense. "How do you know this?" Reid
smiled, amused by the effect his words had had. "I overheard it.
The Man was speaking to Ebert. It seems the new General plans a purge
of his ranks. And you and your friend Kao Chen are top of the
list." "But
ten million. Where would I get hold of ten million yuan7." Reid
shrugged. "That's your problem. But until you agree to my terms
I'm telling you nothing. And the longer you wait, the more likely it
is that Ebert will close you d,, own. Chen
broke his silence. "And what good would that do you, Shih Reid?" Reid
turned, facing Chen. "The way I figure it, Kao Chen, is that
either I'm dead or I'm safe and very, very rich. It's the kind of
choice I understand. The kind of risk I'm willing to take. But how
about you? You've got children, Kao Chen. Can you look at things so
clearly?" Chen
blanched, surprised that Reid knew so much. It implied that DeVore
had files on them all: files that Ebert, doubtlessly, had provided.
It was a daunting thought. The possibility of Wang Ti and the
children being threatened by DeVore made him go cold. He looked past
Reid at Karr. "Gregor
. . ." Karr
nodded and looked back at Reid, his expression hard. "I'll find
the money, Shih Reid. I give you my word. You'll have it by this
evening. But you must tell me what you know. Now. While I can still
act on it. Otherwise my word won't be worth a dead whore's coonie." Reid
hesitated, then nodded. "All right. Get me a detailed map of the
Wilds. I'll mark where the bases are. And then we'll talk. I'll tell
you a story. About a young General and an ex-Major, and about a
meeting the two had at an old skiing lodge a year ago." LI YU
AN s AT in his chair in the old study at Tongjiang, the package on
the desk before him. He looked about him, remembering. Here he had
learned what it was to shoulder responsibility, to busy himself with
matters of State. Here he had toiled—acting as his father's
hands—until late into the night, untangling the knotted thread
of events to find solutions to his father's problems. And
now those problems were his. He looked down at the package and
sighed. He
turned, looking across at the big communications screen. "Connect
me with Wu Shih," he said, not even glancing at the overhead
camera. "Tell him I have something urgent to discuss." There
was a short delay and then the screen lit up, the T'ang of North
America's face filling the screen, ten times life size. "Cousin
Yuan. I hope you are well. And congratulations. How are your wives?" "They
are wives, Wu Shih. But listen. I have been considering that matter
we talked about and I believe I have a solution." Wu
Shih raised his eyebrows. Some weeks before, his Security sources had
discovered the existence of a new popular movement, "The Sons of
Benjamin Franklin." Thus far there was nothing to link them to
anything even resembling a plot against the Seven, nor could any acts
of violence or incitement be laid at their door. In that respect they
kept scrupulously within the letter of the law. However, the mere
existence of such a secret society—harking, as its name
implied, back to a forbidden past—was cause for grave concern.
In other circumstances he might simply have rounded up the most
prominent figures and demoted them. But these were no ordinary
hotheads. The "Sons" were, without exception, the heirs to
some of the biggest companies in North America. Wu Shih's problem was
how to curtail their activities without alienating their powerful and
influential fathers. It was a tricky problem, made worse by the fact
that because no crime had been committed, there was no pretext upon
which he might act. "A solution, Li Yuan? What kind of
solution?" "I
have sent someone into your City, Wu Shih. As my envoy, you might
say, though he himself does not know it." Wu
Shih frowned and sat forward slightly, his image breaking up
momentarily, then re-forming clearly. "An envoy?" Li
Yuan explained. Afterward Wu Shih sat back, considering. "I see.
But why do you think this will work?" "There
is no guarantee that it will, but if it fails we have lost nothing,
neh?" Wu Shih smiled. "That sounds reasonable enough."
"And you will look after the boy for me?" "Like my own
son, Li Yuan." "Good.
Then I must leave you, Wu Shih. There is much to do before this
evening." Wu
Shih laughed. "And much to do tonight, neh?" There
was a momentary hesitation in Li Yuan's face, then he returned Wu
Shih's smile tightly, bowing his head slightly to his fellow T'ang
before he cut contact. Tonight. He shivered. Tonight he wished only
to be alone. But that was not his fate. He was married now. He had
duties to his wives. And to his ancestors. For it was up to him now
to provide a son. To continue the line so that the chain should
remain unbroken, the ancestral offerings made, the graves tended. Even
so, his heart felt dead in him. Ever since this morning he had kept
thinking of the new child, seeing it in his mind, resting in Fei
Yen's arms as she lay there propped up in bed on her father's estate. He
shook his head, then stood. It hurt. It hurt greatly, but it was
behind him now. It had to be. His life lay ahead of him, and he could
not carry his hurt about like an open wound. Nor could he wait for
time to heal the scars. He must press on. For he was T'ang now.
T'ang. He
stood with his hands resting against the edge of the desk, staring
down at the package, still undecided about sending it; then he leaned
forward, pressing the summons bell. "Send in Nan Ho." The
boy's debriefing had proved more successful than any of them had
dared hope and had put the lie to what Director Spatz had said about
Ward's "nil contribution" to the Project. Ward had
remembered everything. In fact, the extent of his knowledge about the
Wiring Project had surprised them all. With what he had given them,
they would be able to reconstruct the facility within months. A
facility that, in theory anyway, would be far more advanced than the
one Spatz had so spectacularly mismanaged. This
time he would do it right. Would ensure that the right men were
appointed, that it was adequately funded and properly protected. No,
there would be no mistakes this time. Mistakes.
He shook his head. He had misjudged things badly. He ought to have
trusted to his instinct about the boy, but he had been off-balance.
That whole business with Fei Yen had thrown him. He had been unable
to see things clearly. But now he could put things right. Could
reward the boy. Indeed, what better way was there of making Ward
loyal to him than through the ties of gratitude? And he needed the
boy to be loyal. He saw that now. Saw what he had almost lost through
his inadvertence. Such
talent as Kim possessed appeared but rarely in the world. It was a
priceless gift. And whoever had the use of it could only benefit.
Change was coming to Chung Kuo, like it or not, and they must find a
way to harness it. Ward's skills—his genius—might prove
effective, not in preventing change—for who could turn back the
incoming tide—but in giving it a shape better suited to the
wishes of the Seven. For
now, however, Li Yuan would use him in a different role. As an eye,
peering into the darkness of his enemies' hearts. As an ear,
listening to the rhythms of their thought. And then, when he was done
with that, he would fly him on a long leash, like a young hawk,
giving him the illusion of freedom, letting him stretch his wings
even as he restrained and directed him. There
was a faint knock. "Come," he said. "You
sent for me, Chieh Hsial" He
picked up the package and offered it to his Chancellor. "Have
this sent to Shih Ward at once. I want it to be in his room
when he returns tonight." "Of
course, Chieh Hsia." Nan Ho hesitated. "Is that
all?" As
ever, he had read Li Yuan's mood. Had understood without the need for
words. "One
thing, Nan Ho. You will carry a note for me. Personally. To Fei Yen.
To wish her well." Nan Ho
bowed his head. "Forgive me, Chieh Hsia, but is that
wise? There are those who might construe such a note to mean—" Li
Yuan cut him off. "Nan Ho! Just do it. Wise or not, I feel it
must be done. So please, take my message to her and wish her well. I
would not be bitter about the past, understand me? I would be strong.
And how can I be strong unless I face the past clear-eyed,
understanding my mistakes?" Nan Ho
bowed, impressed by his master's words. "I will go at once,
Chieh Hsia." "Good.
And when you return you will find me a new Master of the Inner
Chambers. A man who will serve me as well as you have served me." Nan Ho
smiled. "Of course, Chieh Hsia. I have the very man in
mind." IT WAS
AFTER midnight and Archimedes' Kitchen was packed. The club was dimly
lit, like the bottom of the ocean, the air heavy with exotic scents.
As one stepped inside, under the great arch, the deep growl of a
primitive bass rhythm obliterated all other sound, like a slow,
all-pervasive heartbeat, resonating in everything it touched. The
architecture of the club was eccentric but deliberate. All things Han
were absent here. Its fashions looked backward, to the last years of
the American Empire, before the Great Collapse. From
its position at the top edge of the City, the Kitchen overlooked the
dark-green, island-strewn waters of Buzzards Bay. Through the vast,
clear windows of the upper tiers you could, on a clear day, see the
southwestern tip of Martha's Vineyard, distant and green, unspoiled
by any structure. Few were so inclined. For most of the time the
magnificent view windows were opaqued, arabesques of vivid color
swirling across their blinded surfaces. Inside,
the place was cavernous. Tier after tier spiraled up about the
central circle of the dance floor, a single, broad ramp ascending
smoothly into the darkened heights. Along the slowly winding length
of this elegantly carpeted avenue, tables were set. Ornate,
impressive tables, in Empire style, the old insignia of the
sixty-nine States carved into the wooden surfaces, bronzed eagles
stretching their wings across the back of each chair.
Gold-and-black-suited waiters hovered—literally hovered—by
the rail to take orders. Their small backpack jets, a memory of the
achievements of their technological past, flaunted the Edict. Like
bees, they tended the needs of the crowded tiers, fetching and
carrying, issuing from the darkness high above their patrons' heads. In the
center of all was a huge light sculpture, a twisting double band of
gold stretching from floor to ceiling. It was a complex double helix,
detailed and flowing, pulsing with the underlying bass rhythm, by
turns frail and intense, ghostly thin and then broad, sharply
delineated, like a solid thing. This, too, bordered on the illicit;
it was a challenge of sorts to those who ruled. Membership
of the Kitchen was exclusive. Five, almost six thousand members
crowded the place on a good night—which this was—but five
times that number were members and twenty times that were on the
club's waiting list. More significantly, membership was confined to
just one section of the populace. No Han were allowed here, nor their
employees. In this, as in so many other ways, the club was in
violation of statutes passed in the House some years before, though
the fact that most of the North American Representatives were also
members of the Kitchen had escaped no one's notice. It was
a place of excess. Here, much more was permitted than elsewhere.
Eccentricity seemed the norm, and nakedness, or a partial nakedness
that concealed little of importance, was much in evidence. Men wore
their genitalia dressed in silver, small fins sprouting from the
sides of their drug-aroused shafts. The women were no less overt in
their symbolism; many wore elaborate rings of polished metal about
their sex—space gates, similar in form to the docking apertures
on spacecraft. It was a game, but there was a meaning behind its
playfulness. Of
those who were dressed—the majority, it must be said—few
demonstrated a willingness to depart from what was the prevalent
style: a style that might best be described as Techno-Barbarian, a
mixture of space suits and ancient chain mail. Much could be made of
the curious opposition of the fine—in some cases
beautiful—aristocratic faces and the brutish, primitive dress.
It seemed a telling contrast, illustrative of some elusive quality in
the society itself, of the unstated yet ever-present conflict in
their souls. Almost a confession. It was
almost two in the morning when Kim arrived at the "gateway"
and presented his invitation. The sobriety of his dress marked him as
a visitor, just as much as his diminutive status. People stared at
him shamelessly as he was ushered through the crowded tunnel and out
into the central space. He
boarded a small vehicle to be taken to his table—a replica of
the four-wheeled, battery-powered jeep that had first been used on
the moon two hundred and thirty-eight years before. At a point
halfway up the spiral it stopped. There was an empty table with
spaces set. Nearby two waiters floated, beyond the brass-and-crystal
rail. Kim
sat beside the rail, looking down at the dance floor more than a
hundred ch'i below. The noise was not so deafening up here.
Down there, however, people were thickly pressed, moving slowly,
sensuously, to the stimulus of a Mood Enhancer. Small firefly clouds
of hallucinogens moved erratically among the dancers, sparking
soundlessly as they made contact with the moist warmth of naked
flesh. Kim
looked up. His hosts had arrived. They stood on the far side of the
table— two big men, built like athletes, dressed casually in
short business pau, as if to make him more at ease. The
older of the two came around the table to greet him. "I'm
glad you could come," he said, smiling broadly. "My name is
Charles Lever." "I
know," Kim said simply, returning his smile. <* Old
Man Lever; he was Head of the biggest pharmaceuticals company in
North America, possibly in the whole of Chung Kuo. The other man, his
personal assistant, was his son, Michael. Kim shook Lever's hand and
looked past him at his son, noting how alike they were. They
sat, the old man leaning toward him across the table. "Do you
mind if I order for you, Kim? I know the specialties of this place." Kim
nodded and looked around, noting the occupants of the next table
down. His eyes widened in surprise. Turning, he saw it was the same
at the next table up. A group of aristocrats now sat at each table.
They had not been there before, so they must have slipped into their
places after the Levers had arrived. There was nothing especially
different about the way they dressed, yet they were immediately
noticeable. They were bald. The absence of hair drew the eye first,
but then another detail held the attention: a cross-hatching of
scars, fine patterns like a wiring grid in an ancient circuit. These
stood out, blue against the whiteness of each scalp, like some alien
code. Kim
studied them a moment, fascinated, not certain what they were; he
looked back to find Old Man Lever watching him, a faint smile of
amusement on his lips. "I see you've noticed my friends." Lever
rose and went from table to table, making a show of introducing them.
Kim watched, abstracted from the reality of what was happening,
conscious only of how uniform they seemed despite a wide variation of
features, of how this one thing erased all individuality in their
faces, making things of them. "What
you see gathered here, Kim, is the first stage of a grand experiment.
One I'd like you to help me in." The old man stood there, his
arms folded against his broad chest, relaxed in his own power and
knowledge, confident of Kim's attention. "These people are the
first to benefit from a breakthrough in ImmVac's research program.
Trailblazers, you might call them. Pioneers of a new way of living." Kim
nodded, but he was thinking how odd it was that Lever should do this
all so publicly, should choose this way of presenting things. "These,"
Lever paused and smiled broadly, as if the joke was all too much for
him. "These are the first immortals, Kim. The very first." Kim
pursed his lips, considering, trying to anticipate the older man. He
was surprised. He hadn't thought anyone was close enough yet. But if
it were so, then what did it mean? Why did Lever want to involve him?
What was the flaw that needed ironing out? "Immortals,"
the old man repeated, his eyes afire with the word. "What
Mankind has always dreamed of. The defeat of death itself." There
were whispers from the nearby tables, like the rustle of paper-thin
metal streamers in a wind. At Kim's back the coiled and spiraling
threads of light pulsed and shimmered, while waiters floated between
the levels. The air was rich with distracting scents. It all seemed
dreamlike, almost absurd. / "Congratulations,"
he said. "I assume . . ." He
paused, holding the old man's eyes. What did he assume? That
it worked? That Lever knew he was flouting the Edict? That it was
"what Mankind had always dreamed of"? All of these,
perhaps, but he finished otherwise. "1 assume you'll pay me well
for my help, Shih Lever." The
son turned his head sharply and looked at Kim, surprised. His father
considered a moment, then laughed heartily and took his seat again. "Why,
of course you'll be paid well, Shih Ward. Very well indeed. If you
can help us." The
waiters arrived, bringing food and wine. For a moment all speech was
suspended as the meal was laid out. When it was done Kim poured
himself a glass of water from the jug, ignoring the wine. He sipped
the ice-cold liquid, then looked across at Old Man Lever again. "But
why all this? Why raise the matter here, in such a public place?" Lever
smiled again and began eating his appetizer. He chewed for a while,
then set his fork down. "You aren't used to our ways yet, are
you? All this"— he gestured with his knife— "It's
a marketplace. And these"— he indicated his "friends"—
"these are my product." He grinned and pointed at Kim with
his knife. "You, so I'm told on good authority, come with a
reputation second to none. Forget connections." There was a
brief flicker in the comer of one eye. "By meeting you here,
like this, I signal my intention to work with you. The best with the
best." He took a second forkful, chewed, and swallowed. Beside
him his son watched, not eating. "So
it's all publicity?" "Of
a kind." The son spoke for the father. "It does our shares
no harm. Good rumor feeds a healthy company." Old
Man Lever nodded. "Indeed. So it is, Kim. And it won't harm your
own career one jot to be seen in harness with ImmVac." Yes,
thought Kim, unless the Seven start objecting to what you're
doing and close you doitm. Aloud he said, "You know I
have other plans." The
old man nodded. "I know everything about you, Kim." It
sounded ominous and Kim looked up from his plate, momentarily
alarmed, but it was only a form of words. Not everything, he thought. "It
would be ... theoretical work," continued Lever. "The sort
of thing I understand you're rather good at. Synthesizing-." Kim
tilted his head, feeling uneasy, but not knowing quite why he had the
feeling. Perhaps the words had simply thrown him. He didn't like to
be known so readily. "We
have a drug that works. A stabilizer. Something that in itself
prevents the error catastrophe that creates aging in human beings.
But we don't want to stop there. Longevity shouldn't just be for the
young, eh, Kim?" There was a slight nervousness in his laughter
that escaped no one at the table. The son looked disconcerted by it,
embarrassed. To Kim, however, it was the most significant thing Lever
had said. He knew now what it was that drove him. You
want it for yourself. And the drug you have won't give it to you.
It doesn't reverse the process, it only holds it in check. You want
to be young again. You want to live forever. And right now you can't
have either. "And
your terms?" . Again
Lever laughed, as if Kim were suddenly talking his own language.
"Terms we'll discuss when we meet. For now just enjoy this
marvelous food. Dig in, Kim. Dig in. You've never tasted anything
like this fish, I guarantee." Kim
took a bite and nodded. "It's good. What is it?" There
was laughter at the surrounding tables. Lever raised a hand to
silence it, then leaned across the table toward the boy. "They
only serve one kind offish here. Shark." Kim
looked across at the watchful faces of the new immortals, then back
at the Levers, father and son, seeing how much they enjoyed this
little joke. "Like
Time," he said. "How's
that?" asked the old man, sitting back in his chair, one arm
curled about the eagle's wing. "Time,"
said Kim, slowly cutting a second mouthful from the fish steak in
front of him. "It's like a shark in a bloodied sea." He saw
their amusement fade, the biter bit, a flicker in the corner of the
old man's eye. And something else. Respect. He saw how Lever looked
at him, measuring him anew. "Yes," he said, after a moment.
"So it is, boy. So it is." TOLONEN
climbed the twist of stairs easily, two at a time, like a man half
his age. As he turned to say something to the leader of the honor
guard, he realized he was alone. The stairs behind were empty, the
door at their foot closed. Up ahead the corridor was silent, dimly
lit, doors set off on either side. At the far end a doorway led
through to the central control room. "What
in hell . . ." he began, then fell silent. Something had not
been right. His instincts prickled, as if to alert him. Something
about their uniforms . . . He
reacted quickly, turning to shoot the first of them as they came
through the far door, but they were moving fast and the second had
aimed his knife before Tolonen could bring him down. He
fell to his knees, crumpled against the right-hand wall, blood oozing
from his left arm, his gun arm, his weapon fallen to the floor. He
could hear shooting from below, from back the way he'd come, but
there was no time to work out what it meant. As he pulled the knife
from his arm and straightened up, another of the assassins appeared
at the far end of the corridor. Grabbing
up the gun, he opened fire right-handed, hitting the man almost as he
was on him. The assassin jerked backward, then lay there, twitching,
his face shot away, the long knife still trembling in his hand. He
understood. They had instructions to take him alive. If not, he would
have been dead already. But who was it wanted him? He
barely had time to consider the question when he heard the door slide
open down below and footsteps on the stairs. He swung around, a hot
stab of pain shooting up his arm as he aimed his gun down into the
stairwell. It was
Haavikko. Tolonen felt a surge of anger wash through him. "You
bastard!" he hissed, pointing his gun at him. "No!"
Haavikko said urgently, putting his hands out at his sides, the big
automatic he carried pointing away from the Marshal. "You don't
understand! The honor guard. Their chest patches. Think, Marshal!
Think!" Tolonen
lowered his gun. That was right. The recognition band on their chest
patches had been the wrong color. It had been the green of an African
banner, not the orange of a European one. Haavikko
started up the steps again. "Quick! We've got to get inside." Tolonen
nodded, then turned, covering the corridor as Haavikko came
alongside. "I'll
check the first room out," Axel said into his ear. "We can
hole up there until help comes. It'll be easier to defend than this." The
old man nodded, gritting his teeth against the pain in his arm.
"Right. Go. I'll cover you." He
moved out to the right, covering the doorway and the corridor beyond
as Haavikko tugged the door open and stepped inside. Then Haavikko
turned back, signaling for him to come. Inside,
the room was a mess. This whole section was supposed to be a safe
area— a heavily guarded resting place for visiting Security
staff—but someone had taken it apart. The mattresses were
ripped, the standing lockers kicked over, papers littered the floor. Haavikko
pointed across the room. "Get behind there—between the
locker and the bed. I'll take up a position by the door." Tolonen
didn't argue. His arm was throbbing painfully now and he was
beginning to feel faint. He crossed the room as quickly as he could
and slumped against the wall, a wave of nausea sweeping over him. It was
not a moment too soon. Tolonen heard the door slam further down the
corridor and the sound of running men. Then Haavikko's big gun opened
up, deafening in that confined space. Haavikko
turned, looking back at him. "There are more of them coming.
Down below. Wait there. I'll deal with them." Through
darkening vision, Tolonen saw him draw the grenade from his belt and
move out into the corridor. It was a big thing; the kind they used to
blast their way through a blocked Seal. He closed his eyes, hearing
the grenade clatter on the steps. And
then nothing. AXEL
CROSSED the room swiftly, throwing himself on top of the locker,
shielding the Marshal with his body. It was not a moment too soon. An
instant later the blast shook the air, ripping at his back, rocking
the whole room. He
pulled himself upright. There was a stinging pain in his right
shoulder and a sudden warmth at his ear and neck. He looked down.
Tolonen was unconscious now and the wound in his arm was still
seeping blood, but the blast seemed not to have harmed him any
further. Axel
turned. The room was slowly filling with smoke and dust. Coughing, he
half-lifted the old man, then dragged him across the room and out
into the corridor. He stopped a moment, listening, then hauled the
old man up onto his shoulder, grunting with the effort, his own pain
forgotten. Half-crouching, the gun strangely heavy in his left hand,
he made his way along the corridor, stepping between the fallen
bodies. At the far end he kicked the door open, praying there were no
more of them. The
room was empty, the door on the far side open. Taking a breath he
moved on, hauling the old man through the doorway. He could hear
running feet and shouts from all sides now, but distant, muted, as if
on another level. Ping
Tiaol If so, he had to get the Marshal as far away as
possible. The
Marshal was breathing awkwardly now, erratically. The wound in his
arm was bad, his uniform soaked with blood. He
carried the old man to the far side of the room then set him down
gently, loosening his collar. He cut a strip of cloth from his own
tunic and twisted it into a cord, then bound it tightly about the
Marshal's arm, just above the wound. The old man hadn't been
thinking. Pulling the knife out had been the worst thing he could
have done. He should have left it in. Now it would be touch and go. He
squatted there on his haunches, breathing slowly, calming himself,
the gun balanced across his knee, one hand combing back his thick
blond hair. Waiting ... Seconds
passed. A minute ... He had almost relaxed when he saw it. The
thing scuttled along the ceiling at the far end of the corridor.
Something new. Something he had never seen before. A probe of some
kind. Slender, camouflaged, it showed itself only in movement, in the
tiny shadows it cast. It
came a few steps closer and stopped, focusing on them. Its tiny
camera eye rotated with the smallest of movements of the lens. He
understood at once. This was the assassin's "eyes." The man
himself would be watching, out of sight, ready to strike as soon as
he knew how things stood. Axel
threw himself forward, rolling, coming up just as the assassin came
around the corner. The
tactic worked. It gave him the fraction of a second that he needed.
He was not where the man thought he'd be, and in that split second of
uncertainty the assassin was undone. Axel
stood over the dead man, looking down at him. His limbs shook badly
now, adrenaline changed to a kind of naked fear, realizing how close
it had been. He
turned away, returning to Tolonen. The bleeding had stopped, but the
old man was still unconscious, his breathing slow, laborious. His
face had an unhealthy pallor. Axel
knelt astride the Marshal, tilting his head backward, lifting his
neck. Then, pinching his nostrils closed, he breathed into his mouth. Where
was the backup? Where was the regular squad? Or had the Ping Tiao
taken out the entire deck? He
shuddered and bent down again, pushing his breath into the old man,
knowing he was fighting for his life. And
then there was help. People were milling about behind him in the
room— special elite Security and medics. Someone touched his
arm, taking over for him. Another drew him aside, pulling him away. "The
Marshal will be all right now. We've regularized his breathing." Haavikko
laughed. Then it had failed! The assassination attempt had failed! He
started to turn, to go over to Tolonen and tell him, but as he moved
a huge wave of blackness hit him. Hands
grabbed for him as he keeled over, cushioning his fall, then settled
him gently against the wall. "Kuan
Yin!" said one of them, seeing the extent of his burns. "We'd
better get him to a special unit fast. It's a wonder he got this
far." TEN
THOUSAND li away, on the far side of the Atlantic, DeVore was
sitting down to breakfast at the Lever Mansion. The Levers—father
and son—had come straight from Archimedes' Kitchen. DeVore had
got up early to greet them, impressed by the old man's energy. He
seemed as fresh after a night of wining and dining as he had when
he'd first greeted DeVore more than thirty hours before. While
servants hurried to prepare things, they went into the Empire Room.
It was a big, inelegant room, its furnishings rather too heavy, too
overbearing for DeVore's taste. Even so, there was something
impressive about it, from the massive pillars that reached up into
the darkness overhead to the gallery that overlooked it on all four
sides. The table about which they sat was huge—large enough to
sit several dozen in comfort—yet it had been set for the three
of them alone. DeVore sat back in the tall-backed chair, his hands
resting on the polished oak of the arms, looking down the full length
of the table at Lever. The
old man smiled, raising a hand to summon one of his servants from the
shadows. "Well, Howard? How did you get on?" DeVore
smiled. Lever was referring to the return match against Kustow's wei
chi champion. "I
was very fortunate. I lost the first two. But then . . ." Lever
raised an eyebrow. "You beat him?" DeVore
lowered his head, feigning modesty, but it had been easy. He could
have won all five. "As I say, I was fortunate." Michael
Lever stared at him, surprised. "Your
friends were most hospitable," DeVore said. "They're good
fellows, Michael. I wish we had their like in City Europe." "And
you, Howard? Did you win your money back?" DeVore
laughed. "Not at all. I knew how weak Kustow's man was. It would
not have been fair to have wagered money on the outcome." Michael
Lever nodded. "I see . . ." But it was clear he was more
impressed than he was willing to say. So it had been with the others
last night: their eyes had said what their mouths could not. DeVore
had seen the new respect with which they looked at him. Ten stones he
had won by, that last game. Kustow's champion would never live it
down. The
old man had been watching them from the far end of the table. Now he
interrupted. "It's
a shame you're not staying longer, Howard. I would have liked to take
you to see our installations." DeVore
smiled. He had heard rumors of how advanced they were, how openly
they flouted the Edict's guidelines. But then, the War with the
Dispersionists, which had so completely and devastatingly crushed the
Above in City Europe, had barely touched them here. Many of the
Dispersionists' natural allies here had kept out of that war. As a
result, things were much more buoyant, the Company Heads filled with
a raw self-confidence that was infectious. Everywhere he'd been there
was a sense of optimism; a sense that here, if nowhere else, change
could be forced through, Seven or no. He
looked back at Old Man Lever, bowing his head. "I would have
liked that, Charles. But next time, perhaps? I've been told your
factories are most impressive: a good few years ahead of their
European counterparts." Lever
laughed, then leaned forward. "And so they should be! I've spent
a great deal of money rebuilding them these past few years. But it
hasn't been easy. No. We've had to go backward to go forward, if you
see what I mean." DeVore
nodded, understanding. Indeed, if he needed any further clue to what
Lever meant, he had only to look about him. Mementos of the American
Empire were everywhere in the room, from the great spread eagles on
the backs of the chairs to the insignia on the silverware. Most
prominent of all was the huge map on the wall behind Old Man Lever: a
map of the American Empire at its height in 2043, five years after
the establishment of the sixty-nine States. The year of President
Griffin's assassination and the Great Collapse. On the
map, the red, white, and blue of the Empire stretched far into the
southern continent. Only the triple alliance of Brazil, Argentina,
and Uruguay had survived the massive American encroachments, forming
the last outposts of a onetime wholly Latin continent, while to the
north the whole of Canada had been swallowed up, its vastness divided
into three huge administrative areas. He
looked down. To him such maps were vivid testimonies to the
ephemerality of Empires, the certain dissolution of all things human
in the face of Time. But to Lever and his kind they were something
different. To them the map represented an ideal, a golden age to
which they must return. America.
He had seen how the word lit them from within, how their eyes
came alive at its sound. Like their European cousins, they had been
seduced by the great dream of return. A dream that his gift of the
Aristotle File was sure to feed, like coals on the fire of their
disaffection, until this whole vast City erupted in flames. He
sighed. Yes, the day would come. And he would be there when it did.
To see the Cities in flames, the Seven cast down. He
turned in his chair, taking a cup of coffee from the servant, then
looked across again, meeting Lever's eyes. "And the boy? How was
your dinner? I understand you took him to the Kitchen." Lever
smiled thoughtfully. "It went well. He's sharp, that one. Very
sharp. And I'm grateful for your introduction, Howard. It could prove
a most valuable contact." "That's
what I thought—" "However,"
Lever interrupted, "I've been wondering." DeVore
took a sip of his coffee and set the cup down, pushing it away from
him. "Wondering?" "Yes.
Think a moment. If the boy is so valuable, then why has Li Yuan sent
him here? Why hasn't he kept him close at hand, in Europe, where he
can use him?" DeVore
smiled. "To be honest with you, Charles, I'm not sure. I do know
that the old T'ang intended to have the boy terminated. Indeed, if it
hadn't been for the attack on the Project, the boy wouldn't be here
now. It seems Li Yuan must have reconsidered." "Yes.
But what's he up to now?" DeVore
laughed. "That's what we'd all like to know, neh? But to be
serious, I figure it like this. The boy suffered a great shock.
Certain psychological blocks that were induced in him during his
personality reconstruction aren't there any longer. In a very real
sense he's not the same person he was before the attack. Li Yuan has
been told that. He's also been told that, as a result, the boy is not
one hundred percent reliable. That he needs a rest and maybe a change
of setting. So what does he do? He ships the boy off here, with a
complete medical backup, hoping that the trip will do him good and
that he'll return refreshed, ready to get to work again." Lever
nodded thoughtfully. "So you think Li Yuan will use him, after
all?" DeVore
raised his eyebrows. "Maybe. But then maybe not. I have heard
rumors." "Rumors?" DeVore
smiled, then shrugged apologetically. "I can't say just yet. But
when I hear more I'll let you know, I promise you." Lever
huffed impatiently, then turned in his chair, snapping his fingers.
"Come! Quickly now! I'm starving." Across
from him his son laughed. "But, Father, you only ate three hours
back. How can you be starving?" Lever
stared back at his son a moment, then joined his laughter. "I
know. But I am, all the same." He looked back at DeVore. "And
you, Howard, what will you eat?" DeVore
smiled. The world, he thought. I'll eat die world. But
aloud he said, "Coffee will do me fine, Charles. I've no
appetite just now. Maybe later, neh?" He
turned, looking at the son. "Are you eating, Michael, or can I
interest you in a breath of air?" The
young man sat back, drawing one hand through his short blond hair. "I
was going to get a few hours sleep, but half an hour won't make much
difference." He turned, looking across. "You'll excuse us,
Father?" Lever
nodded. "That's fine, Michael. But remember there's a lot still
to be done before Friday night." Young
Lever smiled. "It's all in hand." "Good!"
Lever lifted his fork, pointing at DeVore. "Why don't you change
your mind and stay over, Howard? We're holding a Thanksgiving Ball.
You could see how we Americans celebrate things. Besides, there'll be
a lot of interesting and important people there. People you ought to
meet." DeVore
bowed his head. "Thanks, but I really must get back tonight.
Another time, perhaps?" Lever
shrugged, then waved them away, lowering his head as he dug into his
breakfast. Outside
it was cooler. Subtle lighting gave the impression that it really was
morning, that they really were walking beneath a fresh, early autumn
sky, a faint breeze whispering through the branches of the nearby
trees. DeVore,
watching the younger Lever, saw how he changed once out of his
father's presence, how the tense pose of formality slipped from him. "Was
I right?" he asked, as soon as they were out of earshot of the
mansion. Lever
turned. "You're a clever man, Howard, but don't underestimate my
father." "Maybe.
But was I right?" Lever
nodded. "It was all he talked about. But then, that's not
surprising. It's an obsession with him. Immortality . . ." He
shook his head. DeVore
put his hand on the young man's arm. "I understand how you must
feel, Michael. I've not said anything before now—after all, it
would hardly be good manners to talk of it in front of your
father—but to you I can speak freely. You see, I find the idea
of living forever quite absurd. To think that we could outwit death—
that we could beat the old Master at his own game!" He laughed
and shook his head ruefully, seeing how he had struck a chord in the
other man. "Well, I'm sure you agree. The very idea is
ludicrous. Besides, why perpetuate the weakness of the old
creature—the mei yu jen went Why not strive to make some
better, finer being?" "What
do you mean?" DeVore
lowered his voice. "You've seen what I've achieved so far. Well,
much more has yet to be done. The fortresses are but a small part of
my scheme. It's my belief that we must look beyond the destruction of
the Seven and anticipate what happens afterward. And not merely
anticipate. The wise man seeks to shape the future, surely?" Lever
nodded thoughtfully. "It's what I've always said," "Good.
Then hear me out, for I have a plan that might benefit us both." "Apian?" "Yes.
Something that will keep everyone happy." Lever
laughed. "That's a tall order." "But
not impossible. Listen. What if we were to set up an Immortality
Research Center in the Wilds?" Lever
started. "But I thought you said—?" "I
did. And I meant what I said. But look at it this way; you want one
thing, your father another. However, he has the power—the
money, to be precise—and you have nothing. Or as good as." He
could see from the sourness in the young man's face that he had
touched a raw nerve. "Well,
why not channel a little of that money into something for yourself,
Michael?" Lever's
eyes widened, understanding. "I see. When you talk of a research
center, you don't mean that, do you? You're talking of a front. A way
of channeling funds." "Of
course." "You're
asking me to fool my father. To draw on his obsession, hoping he'll
be blind to what I'm doing." DeVore
shook his head. "I'm asking nothing of you, Michael. You'll act
as you choose to act. And if that accords with what I want, then all
well and good. If not . . ." He shrugged and smiled pleasantly,
as if it didn't matter. "And
what do you want?" DeVore
hesitated. He had been asked that question so many times now that he
had even begun to ask it of himself. For a brief moment he was
tempted to spell it out—the whole grand scheme he carried in
his head—then changed his mind. "I
think you know what I want. But let me just ask you this, Michael. If
your father got his dearest wish—if he finally found a way of
becoming immortal—what then? Wouldn't that simply prove a curse
to all involved? After all, if he were to live forever, when
would you inherit?" Lever
met DeVore's eyes briefly, then looked away. But DeVore, watching,
had seen how his words had touched him to the quick. It was what he
feared—what his whole generation feared. To be a son forever,
bound by a living ghost. Lever
shivered, then shook his head. "And this Center—how would
you go about selling the idea to my father?" DeVore
smiled, then took the young man's arm again, leading him on,
beginning to outline his plan. But the most difficult part now lay
behind him. The rest would be easy. Immortality.
It was a nonsense, but a useful nonsense. And he would milk it to the
last drop. But before then he would carry out a few last schemes of
his own. To tidy things up, and settle a few last scores. IT was
AFTER six in the morning when Kim got back to the
high-security complex where he was staying. The guards checked his
ID, then passed him through. The
apartment was in darkness, only the faint glow of the console display
showing from the room at the far end of the hallway. He stood there a
moment, feeling uneasy. His bedroom was just up a little on the
right. He went through, closing the door behind him, then turned on
the bedside lamp. He
stiffened, then turned slowly, looking about him. The red silk
package on the bedside table had not been there when he had left.
Someone had been into the room. He
stared at it a moment, wondering what to do. If it were a bomb it
might already be too late—merely coming into the room could
have triggered the timer. Then he saw the note poking out from
beneath, and smiled, recognizing the hand. He
sat, placing the package beside him on the bed while he read the
note. It was in Mandarin, the black-ink characters formed with
confident, fluent strokes. At the foot of the small, silken sheet was
the young T'ang's seal, the Ywe Lung impressed into the bright
gold wax. He read it quickly. Shi/i
Ward, At our
first meeting I said that if you did as I wished I would tear up my
father's warrant. You have more than fulfilled your part of our
agreement, therefore I return my father's document, duly enacted. I
would be honored if you would also accept these few small gifts with
my sincere gratitude for your help in restoring the Project. I look
forward to seeing you on your return from my cousin's City.
With deepest respect, Li Yuan
Kim
looked up. The note was most unusual. With deepest respect. These
were not words a T'ang normally used to a subject. No, he knew enough
of the social mechanics of Chung Kuo to know that this was
exceptional behavior on the young T'ang's part. But why? What did he
want from him? Or was
that fair? Did Li Yuan have to want something? He put
the note down and picked up the package. Beneath the silk wrapping
was a tiny box, a black lacquered box, the letters of Kim's name
impressed into the lid in bright gold lettering. He felt a tiny
tremor of anticipation ripple through him as he opened it. Inside the
box, wrapped in the torn pieces of Li Shai Tung's warrant, were four
small cards. He spilled them onto the bed. They were little different
from the computer cards that were in use everywhere throughout Chung
Kuo: multipurpose cards that served to store information in every
shape and form. There was no guessing what these were until he fed
them into a comset. They might be credit chips, for instance, or
holograms, or special programs of some kind. The only clue he had was
the number Li Yuan had hand-written on each. He
scooped them up and went into the end room, turning on the desk lamp
beside the console before slipping the first of the cards—numbered
yi, one—into the slot in front of him. He sat
back, waiting. There
was the sound of a tiny bell being rung, the note high and pure, then
two words appeared on the screen. PASS
CODE? He
placed his hand palm down on the touchpad and leaned forward over the
dark, reflective surface, opening his eyes wide, letting the machine
verify his retinal print. He spoke four words of code, then sat back. There
was a fraction of a second's delay before the response came up on the
screen. AUDIO
OR VISUAL? "Visual,"
he said softly. The
surface rippled in acknowledgment, like the calm surface of a pool
dis- turbed
by a single small stone falling cleanly into its center. A moment
later the screen lifted smoothly from the desktop, tilting up to face
him. He
gave the code again. At once the screen filled with information. He
scanned through quickly, then sat back. It was an amended copy of his
contract with SimFic, buying out their interest in him. And the new
owner? It was written there at the foot of the contract. Kim Ward.
For the first time in his life he owned himself. He
shivered, then took the file from the slot, replacing it with the one
marked er, two. As the
screen lit up again, he nodded to himself. Of course. It would have
meant nothing being his own master without this—his citizenship
papers. But Li Yuan had gone further: he had authorized an all-levels
pass that gave Kim clearance to travel anywhere within the seven
Cities. Few people—even among the Above— were allowed
that. Two
more. He stared at the tiny cards a moment, wondering; then he placed
the third, marked san, into the slot. At
first he didn't understand. Maybe one of Li Yuaris servants had made
a mistake and placed the wrong card in the package. Then, as the
document scrolled on, he caught his breath, seeing his name in the
column marked "Registered Head." A
company! Li Yuan had given him his own company—complete with
offices, patents, and enough money to hire staff and undertake
preliminary research. He shook his head, bewildered. All this ... he
didn't understand. He
closed his eyes. It was like a dream, a dream he would shortly wake
from; yet when he opened his eyes again, the information was still
there on the screen, Li Yuan's personal verification codes rippling
down the side of the file. But
why? Why had Li Yuan given him all this? What did he want in return? He
laughed strangely, then shook his head again. It always came back to
that. He had grown so used to being owned—to being used—that
he could not think of such a gesture in any other way. But what if Li
Yuan wanted nothing? What if he meant what he had said in his note?
What had he to lose in making such a gesture? And
what gain? He
frowned, trying to see through the confusion of his feelings to the
objective truth, but for once it proved too difficult. He could think
of no reason for Li Yuan's generosity. None but the one his words
appeared to give. He
removed the file, then placed the last of the cards, marked si, into
the slot. What
noui? What else could Li Yuan possibly give him? It was
a different kind of file—he saw that at once. For a start, Li
Yuan's personal code was missing. But it was more than that. He could
tell by the length and complexity of the file that it had been
prepared by experts. He
gave the access code. At once the screen filled with brilliant
colors, like a starburst, quickly resolving itself into a complex
diagram. He sat back, his mouth wide open. It was a genotyping. No.
Not just a genotyping. He knew at once what it was without needing to
be told. It was his genotyping. He
watched, wide-eyed, as the program advanced, one detail after another
of the DNA map boldly emphasized on the screen. Then, lifting the
details from the flat screen one by one, it began to piece the
building blocks together until a holo-image of a double helix floated
in the air above the desk, turning slowly in the darkness. He
studied the slowly turning spiral, memorizing it, his heart pounding
in his chest, then gave the verbal cue to progress the file. The
next page gave a full probability set. It numbered just short of six
billion possible candidates: the total number of adult male Hung Mao
back in 2190. He shivered, beginning to understand, then cued the
file again. The next display itemized close-match candidates. Ten
names in all. He scanned the list, his mouth fallen open again. His
father . . . One of these was his father. One by
one he was given details of the ten: genotypes, full-face portraits,
potted biographies, each file quite frightening in its detail. When
the last had faded from the screen he called hold, then sat back, his
eyes closed, his breathing shallow. He felt strange, as if he were
standing on the edge of a deep well, ill-balanced, about to fall. He
shivered, knowing he had never felt like this before. Knowledge had
always been an opening, a breaching of the dark, but this . . . For
once he was afraid to know. He let
the giddiness pass and opened his eyes again, steeling himself. "All
right. Move on." There
was a full-second's hesitation and then the screen lit up. This time
it gave details of the known movements of the ten candidates over a
three-month period in the Winter of 2190, details compiled from
Security files. It
narrowed things down to a single candidate. Only one of the ten had
visited the Clay during that period. Only one, therefore, could
possibly have been his father. He
swallowed dryly, then cued the file again. The
image appeared immediately, as sharp as if it had been made earlier
that day. A youngish man in his late twenties or early thirties, a
tall, slightly built man, fine-boned and elegant, with distinctly
aristocratic features. His light-brown hair was cut neatly but not
too severely and his dark-green eyes seemed kind, warm. He was
dressed simply but stylishly in a dark-red pau, while around
both of his wrists were a number of slender tiao tuo, bracelets
of gold and jade. Kim
narrowed his eyes, noticing an oddity about the man. It was as if his
head and body were parts of two different, separate beings; the head
too large, somehow, the chin and facial features too strong for the
slender, almost frail body that supported them. Kim frowned, then
mouthed his father's name. "Edmund . . . Edmund Wyatt." It was
an old image. Looking at it, he felt something like regret that he
would never meet this man or come to know him; for, as the file
indicated, Edmund Wyatt had been dead for eight years—executed
for the murder of the T'ang's minister, Lwo Kang. A crime for which
he had later, privately, been pardoned. Kim shuddered. Was that
the reason for Li Yuan's generosity? To square things up somehow?
Or was a T'ang above such moral scruples? He
leaned forward, about to close the file, when the image of Wyatt
vanished. For a moment the screen was blank; then it lit up again.
GENOTYPE PREDICT: FEMALE SOURCE. He
called hold, his voice almost failing him, his heart hammering once
more. For a long time he sat there, hunched forward in his chair,
staring at the heading; then in a voice that was almost a whisper, he
gave the cue. First
came the genotype, the puzzle pieces of DNA that would interlock with
Edmund Wyatt s to produce his own. He watched as they formed a
double-helix in the air. Then, dramatically, they vanished, replaced
not by further figures, but by a computer-graphics simulation—a
full-length 3-D portrait of a naked woman. He
gasped, then shook his head, not quite believing what he saw. It was
his mother. Though he had not seen her in almost a dozen years, he
knew at once that it was she. But not as she had been. No, this was
not at all like the scrawny, lank-haired, dugless creature he had
known. He
almost laughed at the absurdity of the image, but a far stronger
feeling—that of bitterness—choked back the laughter. He
moaned and looked away, the feeling of loss so great that for a
moment it threatened to unhinge him. "Mother
. . ." he whispered, his eyes blurring over. "Mother ..."
The computer had made assumptions. It was programmed to assume a
normal Above diet, normal Above life-expectations. These it had fed
into its simulation, producing something that, had such conditions
prevailed down in the Clay, would have been quite accurate. But as it
was . . . Kim
looked at the image again, staring, open-mouthed at a portrait of his
mother as she might have been: a dark-haired beauty, strong-limbed
and voluptuous, full-breasted and a good two ch'i taller than
she had been in life. A strong, handsome woman. He
shuddered, angered. It was awful, like some dreadful mockery. He
shook his head. No. The reality—the truth—that was
grotesque. And this? He
hesitated, afraid to use the word; but there was no other way of
describing the image that floated there in the darkness. It was
beautiful. Beautiful. The
image was a li<e. And yet it was his mother. There was no
doubt of that. He had thought her gome from mind, all trace of her
erased. After all, he had been little more than four when the tribe
had taken him. But now the memories came back, like ghosts,
tauinting, torturing him. He had
only to close his eyes and he could see her crouched beneath the low
stone wall, just after tthey had escaped from the Myghtern's brothel,
her eyes bright with excitement. Coiuld see her lying beside him in
the darkness, reaching out to hold him close, her tthin arms curled
about him. Could see her, later, scrambling across the rocks in tlhe
shadow of the Wall, hunting, her emaciated form flexing and unflexing
as she tracked some pallid, ratlike creature. Could see her turn,
staring back at him, a smile on her lips and in her dark,
well-rounded eyes. Could
see her . . . He
covered his eyes, pressing his palms tight into the sockets as if to
block out these visions, a singlle wavering note of hurt—a low,
raw, animal sound, unbearable in its intensity—welling up from
deep inside him. For a
time there was nothing but his pain. Nothing but the vast,
unendurable blackness of loss. Then, as it ebbed, he looked up once
more, and with a shuddering breath, reached out ito touch her. His
fingers brushed the air, passed through the beautiful, insubstantial
image. He
sighed. Oh, hie could see her now. Yes. And not only as she was but
as she should have been. Glorious. Wonderful. . . He sat
back, wiping the wetness from his cheeks; then he shook his head,
knowing that it was wrong to live like this, the City above, the Clay
below. Knowing, with a certainty he had never felt before, that
something had gone wrong. Badly wrong,. He
leaned forward, closing the file, then sat back again, letting out a
long, shuddering breath. Yes, he knew it now. Saw it with a clarity
that allowed no trace of doubt. Chung Kuo was like himself:
motherless, ghost-haunted, divided against itself. It might seem
(teeming with life, yet in reality it was a great, resounding shell,
its emptiness echoirug down the levels. Kim
picked up the four tiny cards and held them a moment in his palm. Li
Yuan had given him back his life. More than that, he had given him a
future. But who would give Chung Kuo such a chance? Who would give
the great world back its past and seek to heail it? He
shook his head. No, not even Li Yuan could do that. Not even if he
wished it. CHAPTER
ELEVEN
The
Tiger's Mouth EBERT
LOOKED about him, then turned back to Mu Chua, smiling. "You've
done well, Mu Chua. I'd hardly have recognized the place. They'll be
here any time now, so remember these are important business contacts
and I want to impress them. Are the new girls dressed as I asked?" Mu
Chua nodded. "Good.
Well, keep them until after my entrance. These things must be done
correctly, neh? One must whet their appetites before giving them the
main course." "Of
course, General. And may I say again how grateful I am that you honor
my humble House. It is not every day that we play host to the
nobility." Ebert
nodded. "Yes . . . but more is at stake than that, Mother Chua.
If these ch'un tzu like what they see, it is more than likely
you will receive an invitation." "An
invitation?" "Yes.
To a chao ted hid, an entertainment, at one of the First Level
mansions. This afternoon, I am told, there is to be a gathering of
young princes. And they will need—how shall I put it?—special
services." Mu
Chua lowered her head. "Whatever they wish. My girls are the
very best. They are shen nu, god girls." Again
Ebert nodded, but this time he seemed distracted. After a moment he
looked back at Mu Chua. "Did the wine from my father's cellar
arrive?" "It
did, Excellency." "Good.
Then you will ensure that our guests drink that and nothing else.
They are to have nothing but the best." "Of
course, General." "I
want no deceptions, understand me, Mu Chua. Carry this off for me and
I will reward you handsomely. Ten thousand yuan for you alone.
And a thousand apiece for each of your girls. That's on top of your
standard fees and expenses." Mu
Chua lowered her head. "You are too generous, Excellency." Ebert
laughed. "Maybe. But you have been good to me over the years,
Mother Chua. And when this proposition was put before me, my first
thought was of you and your excellent House. 'Who better,' I said to
myself, 'than Mu Chua at entertaining guests.'" He smiled
broadly at her, for once almost likable. "I am certain you will
not let me down." Mu
Chua lowered her head. "Your guests will be transported." He
laughed. "Indeed." After
Ebert had gone, she stood there a moment, almost in a trance at the
thought of the ten thousand yuan he had promised. Together
with what she would milk from this morning's entertainment, it would
be enough. Enough, at last, to get out of here. To pay off her
contacts in the Above and climb the levels. Yes.
She had arranged it all already. And now, at last she could get away.
Away from Whiskers Lu and the dreadful seediness of this place. Could
find somewhere up-level and open up a small, discreet, cozy little
house. Something very different, with its own select clientele and
its own strict rules. She
felt a little shiver of anticipation pass through her; then stirred
herself, making the last few arrangements before the two men came,
getting the girls to set out the wine and lay a table with the
specially prepared sweetmeats. She
had no idea what Ebert was up to, but it was clear that he set a
great deal of importance on this meeting. Only two days ago his man
had turned up out of the blue and handed her twenty-five thousand
yuan to have the House redecorated. It had meant losing custom
for a day, but she had still come out of it ahead. Now it seemed
likely that she would gain much more. Even
so, her suspicions of Hans Ebert remained. If he was up to something
it was almost certain to be no good. But was that her concern? If she
could make enough this one last time she could forget Ebert and his
kind. This was her way out. After today she need never compromise
again. It would be as it was, before the death of her protector, Feng
Chung. The
thought made her smile; made her spirits rise. Well, as this was the
last time, she would make it special. Would make it something that
£ven Hans Ebert would remember. She
busied herself, arranging things to perfection, then called in the
four girls who were to greet their guests. Young girls, as Ebert had
specified, none of them older than thirteen. She
looked at herself in the mirror, brushing a speck of powder from her
cheek, then turned, hearing the bell sound out in the reception room.
They were here. She
went out, kneeling before the two men, touching her forehead against
her knees. Behind her, the four young girls did the same, standing at
the same time that she stood. It was a calculated effect, and she saw
how much it pleased the men. Ebert
had briefed her fully beforehand; providing her with everything she
needed to know about them, from their business dealings down to their
sexual preferences. Even so, she was still surprised by the contrast
the two men made. Hsiang
K'ai Fan was a big, flabby-chested man, almost effeminate in his
manner. His eyes seemed to stare out of a landscape of flesh,
triple-chinned and slack-jowled; yet his movements were dainty and
his dress was exquisite. His lavender silks followed the fashion of
the Minor Families—a fashion that was wholly and deliberately
out of step with what was being worn elsewhere in the Above—with
long wide sleeves and a flowing gown that hid his booted feet.
Heavily perfumed, he was nonetheless restrained in his use of
jewelry, the richest item of his apparel being the broad, red velvet
ta lian, or girdle pouch, that he wore about his enormous
waist, the two clasps of which were studded with rubies and emeralds
in the shape of two butterflies. His nails were excessively long, in
the manner of the Families; the ivory-handled fan he held moved
slowly in the air as he looked about him. An
Liang-chou, on the other hand, was a tiny, ratlike man, stringily
built and astonishingly ugly even by the standard of some of the
clients Mu Chua had entertained over the years. Flat-faced and
beady-eyed, he was as nervous as Hsiang was languid; his movements
jerky, awkward. Meeting his eyes, Mu Chua smiled tightly, trying to
keep the aversion she felt from showing. Rumor had it that he fucked
all six of his daughters—even the youngest, who was only six.
Looking at him, it was not hard to imagine. She had seen at once how
his eyes had lit up at the sight of her girls. How a dark, lascivious
light had come to them: the kind of look a predatory insect gives its
victim before it pounces. Unlike
Hsiang, An Liang-chou seemed to have no taste at all when it came to
dress. His gaudily colored pau hung loosely on him, as if he
had stolen it from another. Like Hsiang he was heavily perfumed, but
it was an unpleasantly sickly scent, more sour than sweet, as if
mixed with his own sweat. She saw how his hand—the fingers
thickly crusted with jeweled rings—went to his short ceremonial
dagger; how his lips moved wetly as he considered which girl he would
have first. "My
lords . . . you are welcome to my humble House," she said,
lowering her head again. "Would you care for something to
drink?" Hsiang
seemed about to answer, but before he could do so, An Liang-chou
moved past her and after pawing two of the girls, chose the third.
Gripping her upper arm tightly he dragged her roughly after him,
through the beaded curtain and into the rooms beyond. Mu
Chua watched him go, then turned back to Hsiang, smiling, all
politeness. "Would
the Lord Hsiang like refreshments?" Hsiang
smiled graciously and let himself be led into the next room. But in
the doorway to the Room of Heaven he stopped and turned to look at
her. "Why,
this is excellent, Mu Chua. The General was not wrong when he said
you were a woman of taste. I would not have thought such a place
could have existed outside First Level." She
bowed low, immensely pleased by his praise. "Ours is but a
humble House, Excellency." "However,"
he said, moving on, into the room, "I had hoped for—well,
let us not prevaricate, eh?—for special pleasures." She
saw how he looked at her and knew at once that she had misjudged him
totally. His silken manners masked a nature far more repugnant than
An Liang-chou's. "Special
pleasures, Excellency?" He
turned, then sat in the huge silk-cushioned chair she had bought
specially to accommodate his bulk, the fan moving slowly, languidly
in his hand. He
looked back at her, his tiny eyes cold and calculating amid the flesh
of his face. "Yes," he said smoothly. "They say you
can buy anything in the Net. Anything at all." She
felt herself go cold. Ebert had said nothing about this. From what
he'd said, Hsiang's pleasures were no more unnatural than the next
man's. But this . . . She
waved the girls away, then slid the door across and turned to face
him, reminding herself that this was her passage out, the last time
she would have to deal with his kind. "What
is it you would like?" she asked, keeping her voice steady. "We
cater for all tastes here, my Lord." He
smiled, a broad gap opening in the flesh of his lower face, showing
teeth that seemed somehow too small to fill the space. His voice was
silken, like the voice of a young woman. "My
needs are simple, Mu Chua. Very simple. And the General promised me
that you would meet them." She
knelt, bowing her head. "Of course, Excellency. But tell me,
what exactly is it that you want?" He
clicked the fan shut, then leaned forward slightly, beckoning her
across. She
rose, moving closer, then knelt, her face only a hand's width from
his knees. He leaned close, whispering, a hint of aniseed on his
breath. "I
have been told that there is a close connection between sex and
death, that the finest pleasure of all is to fuck a woman at the
moment of her death. I have been told that the death throes of a
woman bring on an orgasm so intense . . ." She
looked up at him, horrified, but he was looking past her, his eyes
lit with an intense pleasure, as if he could see the thing he was
describing. She let him spell it out, barely listening to him now,
then sat back on her heels, a small shiver passing through her. "You
want to kill one of my girls, is that it, Lord Hsiang? You wish to
slit her throat while you are making love to her?" He
looked back at her, nodding. "I will pay well." "Pay
well . . ." She looked down. It was not the first time she had
had such a request. Even in the old days there had been some like
Hsiang who linked their pleasure to the pain of others, but even
under Whiskers Lu there had been limits to what she would allow. She
had never had one of her girls die while with a client, intentionally
or otherwise; and it was on her tongue to tell this bastard, Prince
or no, to go fuck himself. But. . . She
shuddered, then looked up at him again, seeing how eagerly he awaited
her answer. To say no was to condemn herself at best to staying here,
at worst to incurring the anger of Hans Ebert. And who knew what he
would do to her if she spoiled things now for him? But to say yes was
to comply with the murder of one of her girls. It would be as if she
herself had held the knife and drawn it across the flesh. "What
you ask . . ." she began, then hesitated. "Yes?" She
stood, then turned away, moving toward the door before turning back
to face him again. "You must let me think, Lord Hsiang. My girls
. . ." "Of course," he said, as if he understood. "It
must be a special girl." His laughter chilled her blood. It was
as if what he was discussing were commonplace. As for the girl
herself... In all her years she had tried to keep it in her mind that
what her clients bought was not the girl, but the services of the
girl, as one bought the services of an accountant or a broker. But
men like Hsiang made no such distinction. To them the girl was but a
thing to be used and discarded as they wished. But how to say no?
What possible excuse could she give that would placate Hsiang K'ai
Fan? Her mind raced, turning back upon itself time and again, trying
to find a way out, some way of resolving this impossible dilemma.
Then she relaxed, knowing, at last, what to do. She
smiled and moved closer, taking Hsiang's hands gently and raising him
from his chair. "Come,"
she said, kissing his swollen neck, her right hand moving down his
bloated flank, caressing him. "You wanted special pleasures,
Hsiang K'ai Fan, and special pleasures you will have. Good wine, fine
music, the very best of foods . . ." "And
after?" He stared at her expectantly. Mu
Chua smiled, letting her hand rest briefly on the hard shape at his
groin, caressing it through the silk. "After, we shall do as you
wish." charles
lever's son Michael sat at his desk, facing Kim across the vastness
of his office. "Well?
Have you seen enough?" Kim
looked about him. Huge tapestries filled the walls to the left and
right of him, broad panoramas of the Rockies and the great American
plains; while on the end wall, beyond Lever's big oak desk and the
leather-backed swivel chair, was a bank of screens eight deep and
twenty wide. In the center of the plushly carpeted room, on a big low
table, under glass, was a 3-D map of the east coast of City North
America, ImmVac's installations marked in blue. Kim moved closer,
peering down through the glass. "There's
an awful lot to see." Lever
laughed. "That's true. But I think you've seen most of the more
interesting parts." Kim
nodded. They had spent the day looking over Imm Vac's installations,
but they had still seen only a small fraction of Old Man Lever's vast
commercial empire. More than ever, Kim had been conscious of the
sheer scale of the world into which he had come. Down in the Clay, it
was not possible to imagine the vastness of what existed a wartha—up
Above. At times he found himself overawed by it all, wishing for
somewhere smaller, darker, cozier in which to hide. But that feeling
never lasted long. It was, he recognized, residual; part of the
darker self he had shrugged off. No, this was his world now. The
world of vast continent-spanning cities and huge corporations
battling for their share of Chung Kuo's markets. He
looked up. Lever was searching in one of the drawers of his desk. A
moment later he straightened, clutching a bulky folder. Closing the
drawer with his knee, he came around, thumping the file down beside
Kim. "Here.
This might interest you." Kim
watched as Lever crossed the room and locked the big double doors
with an old-fashioned key. "You
like old things, don't you?" Lever
turned, smiling. "I've never thought about it really. We've
always done things this way. Hand-written research files, proper
keys, wooden desks. I guess it makes us ... different from the other
North American companies. Besides, it makes good sense. Computers are
untrustworthy, easily accessed, and subject to viruses. Likewise
doorlocks and recognition units. But a good, old-fashioned key can't
be beaten. In an age of guile, people are reluctant to use force—to
break down a door or force open a drawer. The people who'd be most
interested in our product have grown too used to sitting at their own
desks while they commit their crimes. To take the risk of entering
one of our facilities would be beyond most of them." He laughed.
"Besides, it's my father's policy to keep them happy with a
constant flow of disinformation. Failed research, blind alleys, minor
spin-offs of a more important research program—that kind of
thing. They tap into it and think they've got their finger on the
pulse." Kim grinned. "And they never learn?" Lever
shook his head, amused. "Not yet they haven't." Kim looked
down at the file. "And this?" "Open it and see. Take
it across to my desk if you want." Kim flipped back the cover
and looked, then turned his head sharply, staring at Lever. "Where
did you get this?" "You've seen it before?" Kim
looked down at it again. "I have ... of course I have,
but not in this form. Who . . . ?" Then he recognized the
handwriting. The same handwriting that had been on the copy of the
cancelled SimFic contract he had been given by Li Yuan. "Soren
Berdichev . . ." Lever
was looking at him strangely now. "You knew?" Kim
gave a small, shuddering breath. "Six years ago. When I was on
the Project." "You
met Berdichev there?" "He
bought my contract. For his company, SimFic." "Ah . . . Of
course. Then you knew he'd written the File?" Kim laughed
strangely. "You think Berdichev wrote this?" "Who
else?" Kim
looked away. "So. He claimed it for his own." Lever
shook his head. "Are you trying to tell me he stole it from
someone?" In a small voice, Kim began to recite the opening of
the File; the story of the pre-Socratic Greeks and the establishment
of the Aristotelian yes/no mode of thought. Lever stared back at him
with mounting surprise. "Shall I continue?" Lever
laughed. "So you do know it. But how? Who showed it to you?"
Kim handed it back. "I know because I wrote it." Lever
looked down at the folder, then back at Kim, giving a small laugh of
disbelief. "No," he said quietly. "You were only a
boy." Kim
was watching Lever closely. "It was something I put together
from some old computer records I unearthed. I thought Berdichev had
destroyed it. I never knew he'd kept a copy." "And
yet you knew nothing about the dissemination?" "The
dissemination?" "You
mean, you really didn't know?" Lever shook his head,
astonished. "This is the original, but there are a thousand more
copies back in Europe, each one of them like this, hand-written. Now
we're going to do the same over here— disseminate them among
those sympathetic to the cause." "The
cause?" "The
Sons of Benjamin Franklin. Oh, we'd heard rumors about the File and
its contents some time ago, but until recently we'd never seen it.
Now, however—" He laughed, then shook his head again in
amazement. "Well, it's like a fever in our blood. But you
understand that, don't you, Kim? After all, you wrote the
bloody thing!" Kim
nodded, but inside he felt numbed. He had never imagined . . . "Here,
look . . ." Lever led Kim over to one of the tapestries. "I
commissioned this a year ago, before I'd seen the File. We put it
together from what we knew about the past. It shows how things were
before the City." Kim
looked at it and shook his head. "It's wrong." "Wrong?" "Yes,
all the details are wrong. Look." He touched one of the animals
on the rocks in the foreground. "This is a lion. But it's an
African lion. There never were any lions of this kind in America. And
those wagons crossing the plains, they would have been drawn by
horses. The gasoline engine was a much later development. And these
tents here—they're Mongol in style. North American Indian tents
were different. And then there are these pagodas—" "But
in the File it says—" "Oh,
it's not that these things didn't exist, it's just that they didn't
exist at the same time or in the same place. Besides, there were
Cities even then—here on the east coast." "Cities?
But I thought—" "You
thought the Han invented Cities? No. Cities have been in Man's blood
since the dawn of civilization. Why, Security Central at Bremen is
nothing more than a copy of the great ziggurat at Ur, built more than
five thousand years ago." Lever
had gone very still. He was watching Kim closely, a strange intensity
in his eyes. After a moment he shook his head, giving a soft laugh. "You
really did write it, didn't you?" Kim
nodded, then turned back to the tapestry. "And this"—he
bent down, indicating the lettering at the foot of the picture—"this
is wrong too." Lever
leaned forward, staring at the lettering. "How do you mean?" "A.D.
It doesn't mean what's written here. That was another of Tsao Ch'un's
lies. He was never related to the Emperor Tsao He, nor to any of
them. So all of this business about the Ancestral Dynasties is a
complete nonsense. Likewise B.C. It doesn't mean 'Before the Crane.'
In fact, Tsao He, the 'Crane,' supposedly the founder of the Han
Dynasty and ancestor of all subsequent dynasties, never even existed.
In reality, Liu Chi-tzu, otherwise known as P'ing Ti, was Emperor at
the time—and he was the twelfth of the great Han dynasty
emperors. So, you see, the Han adapted parts of their own history
almost as radically as they changed that of the West. They had to—to
make sense of things and keep it all consistent." "So
what do they really mean?" "A.D.
. . . that stands for anno Domini. It's Latin—TaTs'in—for'the
year of our Lord.'" "Our
Lord?" "Jesus
Christ. You know, the founder of Christianity." "Ah
. . ." But Lever looked confused. "And B.C.? Is that Latin
too?" Kim
shook his head. "That's 'before Christ.' " Lever
laughed. "But that doesn't make sense. Why the mixture of
languages? And why in the gods' names would the Han adopt a Christian
dating for their calendar?" Kim
smiled. When one thought about it, it didn't make a great deal of
sense, but that was how it was—how it had been for more than a
hundred years before Tsao Ch'un arrived on the scene. It was the Ko
Ming—the Communists—who had adopted the Western
calendar; and Tsao Ch'un, in rewriting the history of Chung Kuo, had
found it easiest to keep the old measure. After all, it provided his
historians with a genuine sense of continuity, especially after he
had hit upon the idea of claiming that it dated from the first real
Han dynasty, ruled, of course, by his ancestor, Tsao He, "the
Crane." "Besides
. . ." Lever added, "I don't understand the importance of
this Christ figure. I know you talk of all these wars fought in his
name, but if he was so important why didn't the Han incorporate him
into their scheme of things?" Kim
looked down, taking a long breath. So they had read it but they had
not understood. In truth, their reading of the File was, in its way,
every bit as distorted as Tsao Ch'un's retelling of the world. Like
the tapestry, they would put the past together as they wanted it, not
as it really was. He met
Lever's eyes. "You forget. I didn't invent what's in the File.
That's how it was. And Christ. . ." he sighed. "Christ was
important to the West, in a way that he wasn't important to the Han.
To the Han he was merely an irritation. Like the insects, they didn't
want him in their City, so they built a kind of net to keep him out." Lever
shivered. "It's like that term they use for us—t'e an
tsan, 'innocent westerners.' All the time they seek to denigrate
us. To deny us what's rightfully ours." "Maybe
..." But Kim was thinking about Li Yuan's gifts. He, at least,
had been given back what was his. ebert
STRODE into the House of the Ninth Ecstasy, smiling broadly; then he
stopped, looking about him. Why was there no one to greet him? What
in the gods' names was the woman up to? He
called out, trying to keep the anger from his voice, "Mu Chua!
Mu Chua, where are you?" then crossed the room, pushing through
the beaded curtain. His
eyes met a scene of total chaos. There was blood everywhere. Wine
glasses had been smashed underfoot, trays of sweetmeats overturned
and ground into the carpet. On the far side of the room a girl lay
facedown, as if drunk or sleeping. He
whirled about, drawing his knife, hearing sudden shrieking from the
rooms off to his left. A moment later a man burst into the room. It
was Hsiang K'ai Fan. Hsiang
looked very different—his normally placid face was bright,
almost incandescent, with excitement; his eyes popping out from the
surrounding fat. His clothes, normally so immaculate, were
disheveled, the lavender silks ripped and spattered with blood. He
held his ceremonial dagger out before him, the blade slick, shining
wetly in the light; while, as if in some obscene parody of the blade,
his penis poked out from between the folds of the silk, stiff and wet
with blood. "Lord
Hsiang . . ." Ebert began, astonished by this transformation.
"What has been happening here?" Hsiang
laughed; a strange, chilling cackle. "Oh, it's been wonderful,
Hans . . . simply wonderful! IVe had such fun. Such glorious fun!" Ebert
swallowed, not sure what to make of Hsiang's "fun," but
quite sure that it spelt nothing but trouble for himself. "Where's
An Liang-chou? He's all right, isn't he?" Hsiang
grinned insanely, lowering the dagger. His eyes were unnaturally
bright, the pupils tightly contracted. He was breathing strangely,
his flabby chest rising and falling erratically. "An's fine.
Fucking little girls, as usual. But Hans . . . your woman . . . she
was magnificent. You should have seen the way she died. Oh, the
orgasm I had. It was just as they said it would be. Immense it was. I
couldn't stop coming. And then—" Ebert
shuddered. "You what7." He took a step
forward. "What are you saying? Mu Chua is dead?" Hsiang
nodded, his excitement almost feverish now, his penis twitching as he
spoke. "Yes, and then I thought. . . why not do it again? And
again . . . After all, as she said, I could settle with Whiskers Lu
when I was done." Ebert
stood there, shaking his head. "Gods . . ." He felt his
fingers tighten about his dagger, then slowly relaxed his hand. If he
killed Hsiang it would all be undone. No, he had to make the best of
things. To make his peace with Whiskers Lu and get Hsiang and An out
of here as quickly as possible. Before anyone else found out about
this. "How
many have you killed?" Hsiang
laughed. "I'm not sure. A dozen. Fifteen. Maybe more." "Gods
. . ." Ebert
stepped forward, taking the knife from Hsiang. "Come on,"
he said, worried by the look of fierce bemusement in Hsiang's face.
"Fun's over. Let's get An and go home." Hsiang
nodded vaguely, then bowed his head, letting himself be led into the
other room. Toward
the back of the House things seemed almost normal. But as Ebert came
to the Room of Heaven, he slowed, seeing the great streaks of blood
smeared down the door frames, and guessed what lay within. He
pushed Hsiang aside, then went inside. A girl lay to one side, dead,
her face bloody, her abdomen ripped open, the guts exposed; on the
far side of the room lay Ma Chua, naked, face up, on the huge bed,
her throat slit from ear to ear. Her flesh was ashen, as if bleached,
the sheets beneath her dark with her blood. He
stood there, looking down at her a moment, then shook his head.
Whiskers Lu would go mad when he heard about this. Mu Chua's House
had been a key part of his empire, bringing him a constant flow of
new contacts from the Above. Now, with Mu Chua dead, who would come? Ebert
took a deep breath. Yes, and Lu Ming-shao would blame him—for
making the introduction, for not checking up on Hsiang before he let
him go berserk down here. If he had known . . . He
twirled about, his anger bubbling over. "Fuck you, Hsiang! Do
you know what you've done?" Hsiang
K'ai Fan stared back at him, astonished. "I b-beg your pardon?"
he stammered. "This!"
Ebert threw his arm out, indicating the body on the bed; then he
grabbed Hsiang's arm and dragged him across the room. "What the
fuck made you want to do it, eh? Now we've got a bloody war on our
hands! Or will have, unless you placate the man." Hsiang
shook his head, bewildered. "What man?" "Lu
Ming-shao. Whiskers Lu. He's the big Triad boss around these parts.
He owns this place. And now you've gone and butchered his Madam.
He'll go berserk when he finds out. He'll hire assassins to track you
down and kill you." He saw
how Hsiang swallowed at that, how his eyes went wide with fear, and
felt like laughing. But no, he could use this. Yes, maybe things
weren't quite so bad after all. Maybe he could turn this to his
advantage. "Yes, he'll rip your throat out for this, unless . .
." Hsiang pushed his head forward anxiously. "Unless . . .
?" Ebert looked about him, considering. "This was one of
his main sources of income. Not just from prostitution, but from
other things, too—drugs, illicit trading, blackmail. It must
have been worth, oh, fifteen, twenty million yuan a year to
him. And now it's worth nothing. Not since you ripped the throat out
of it." "I didn't know. . ." Hsiang shook his head,
his hands trembling. His words came quickly now, tumbling from his
lips. "I'll pay him off. Whatever it costs. My family is rich.
Very rich. You know that, Hans. You could see this Whiskers Lu,
couldn't you? You could tell him that. Please, Hans. Tell him I'll
pay him what he asks." Ebert
nodded slowly, narrowing his eyes. "Maybe. But you must do
something for me too." Hsiang
nodded eagerly. "Anything, Hans. You only have to name it." He
stared at Hsiang contemptuously. "Just this. I want you to throw
your party this afternoon—your chao tai hui—just
as if nothing happened here. You understand? Whatever you or An did
or saw here must be forgotten. Must never, in any circumstances, be
mentioned. It must be as if it never was. Because if news of this
gets out there will be recriminations. Quite awful recriminations.
Understand?" Hsiang
nodded, a look of pure relief crossing his face. "And
Hsiang. This afternoon . . . don't worry about the girls. I'll
provide them. You just make sure your friends are there." Hsiang
looked down, chastened, the madness gone from him. "Yes ... As
you say." "Good.
Then find your friend and be gone from here. Take my sedan if you
must, but go. I'll be in touch." Hsiang
turned to go, but Ebert called him back one last time. "And,
Hsiang . . ." Hsiang
stopped and turned, one hand resting against the blood-stained
upright of the door. "Yes?" "Do
this again and I'll kill you, understand?" Hsiang's
eyes flickered once in the huge expanse of flesh that was his face;
then he lowered his head and backed away. Ebert
watched him go, then turned, looking down at Mu Chua again. It was a
shame. She had been useful—very useful—over the years.
But what was gone was gone. Dealing with Whiskers Lu was the problem
now. That and rearranging things for the party later. It had
all seemed so easy when he'd spoken to DeVore earlier, but Hsiang had
done his best to spoil things for him. Where, at this late stage,
would he find another fifteen girls—special girls of the
quality Mu Chua would have given him? Ebert
sighed, then, seeing the funny side of it, began to laugh,
remembering the sight of Hsiang standing there, his penis poking out
stiffly, for all the world like a miniature of his ratlike friend, An
Liang-chou, staring out from beneath the fat of Hsiang's stomach. Well,
they would get theirs. They and all their friends. But he would make
certain this time. He would inject the girls he sent to entertain
them. He
smiled. Yes, and then he'd watch as one by one they went down.
Princes and cousins and all; every last one of them victims of the
disease DeVore had bought from his friend Curval. How
clever, he thought, to catch them that way. For who would think that
was what it was. He laughed. Syphilis ... it had not been heard of in
the Above for more than a century. Not since Tsao Ch'un had had his
own son executed for giving it to his mother. No, and when they did
find out it would be too late. Much too late. By then the sickness
would have spread throughout the great tree of the Families,
infecting root and branch, drying up the sap. And then the tree would
fall, like the rotten, stinking thing it was. He
shivered, then put his hand down, brushing the hair back from the
dead woman's brow, frowning. "Yes.
But why did you do it, Mother? Why in hell's name did you let him do
it to you? It can't have been the money . . ." Ebert
took his hand away, then shook his head. He would never understand—
never in ten thousand years. To lie there while another cut your
throat and fucked you. It made no sense. And yet... He
laughed sourly. That was exactly what his kind had done for the last
one hundred and fifty years. Ever since the time of Tsao Ch'un. But
now all that had changed. From now on things would be different. He
turned and looked across. Three of Mu Chua's girls were standing in
the doorway, wide-eyed, huddled together, looking in at him. "Call
Lu Ming-shao," he said, going across, holding the eldest by the
arm. "Tell him to come at once, but say nothing more. Tell him
Hans Ebert wants to talk to him. About a business matter." He let
her go, then turned, facing the other two, putting his arms about
their shoulders. "Now, my girls. Things seem uncertain, I know,
but I've a special task for you, and if you do it well..." HSIANG
WANG leaned his vast bulk toward the kneeling messenger and let out a
great huff of annoyance. "What
do you mean, my brother's ill? He was perfectly well this morning.
What's happened to him?" The
messenger kept his head low, offering the hand-written note. "He
asks you to accept his apologies, Excellency, and sends you this
note." Hsiang
Wang snatched the note and unfolded it. For a moment he grew still,
reading it, then threw it aside, making a small, agitated movement of
his head, cursing beneath his breath. "He
says all has been arranged, Excellency," the messenger
continued, made uncomfortable by the proximity of Hsiang Wang's huge,
trunklike legs. "The last of the girls—the special
ones—was hired this morning." The
messenger knew from experience what a foul temper Hsiang K'ai Fan's
brother had and expected at any moment to be on the receiving end of
it, but for once Hsiang Wang bridled in his anger. Perhaps it was the
fact that his guests were only a few ch'i away, listening
beyond the wafer-thin wall, or perhaps it was something else: the
realization that, with his elder brother absent, he could play host
alone. Whatever, it seemed to calm him, and with a curt gesture of
dismissal he turned away, walking back toward the great double doors
that led through to the Hall of the Four Willows. Hsiang
Wang paused in the doorway, taking in the scene. From where he stood,
five broad grass-covered terraces led down, like crescent moons, to
the great willowleaf-shaped pool and the four ancient trees from
which the Hall derived its name. There were more than a hundred males
from the Minor Families here this afternoon, young and old alike.
Many of the Twenty-Nine were represented, each of the great clans
distinguishable by the markings on the silk gowns the princes wore,
but most were from the five great European Families of Hsiang and An,
Pei, Yin, and Chun. Girls went among them, smiling and laughing,
stopping to talk or rest a gentle hand upon an arm or about a waist.
The party had yet to begin and for the moment contact was restrained,
polite. The sound oierhu and k'un ti—bow and
bamboo flute—drifted softly in the air, mixing with the scents
of honeysuckle and plum blossom. Low
tables were scattered about the terraces. The young princes
surrounded these, lounging on padded couches, talking or playing
Chou. On every side tall shrubs and plants and lacquered
screens—each decorated with scenes of forests and mountains,
spring pastures and moonlit rivers—broke up the stark geometry
of the hall, giving it the look of a woodland glade. Hsiang
Wang smiled, pleased by the effect, then clapped his hands. At once
doors opened to either side of him and servants spilled out down the
terraces, bearing trays of wine and meats and other delicacies. Still
smiling, he went down, moving across to his right, joining the group
of young men gathered about Chun Wu-chi. Chun
Wu-chi was Head of the Chun Family; the only Head to honor the Hsiang
clan with his presence this afternoon. He was a big man in his
seventies, long-faced and bald, his pate polished like an ancient
ivory carving, his sparse white beard braided into two thin plaits.
Coming close to him, Hsiang Wang knelt in san k'ou, placing
his forehead to the ground three times before straightening up again. "You
are most welcome here, Highness." Chun
Wu-chi smiled. "I thank you for your greeting, Hsiang Wang, but
where is your elder brother? I was looking forward to seeing him
again." "Forgive
me, Highness," Hsiang said, lowering his head, "but K'ai
Fan has been taken ill. He sends his deep regards and humbly begs
your forgiveness." Chun
looked about him, searching the eyes of his close advisors to see
whether this could be some kind of slight; then, reassured by what he
saw, he looked back at Hsiang Wang, smiling, putting one bejeweled
hand out toward him. "I
am sorry your brother is ill, Wang. Please send him my best wishes
and my most sincere hope for his swift recovery." Hsiang
Wang bowed low. "I will do so, Highness. My Family is most
honored by your concern." Chun
gave the smallest nod, then looked away, his eyes searching the lower
terraces. "There are many new girls here today, Hsiang Wang. Are
there any with—special talents?" Hsiang
Wang smiled inwardly. He had heard of Chun Wu-chi's appetites.
Indeed, they were legendary. When he was younger, it was said, he had
had a hundred women, one after the other, for a bet. It had taken him
three days, so the story went, and afterward he had slept for fifty
hours, only to wake keen to begin all over. Now, in his seventies,
his fire had waned. Voyeurism had taken the place of more active
pursuits. "There
is one girl, Highness . . ." he said, remembering what K'ai Fan
had said. "I have been told that she can manage the most
extraordinary feats." "Really?"
Chun Wu-chi's eyes lit up. Hsiang
Wang smiled. "Let me bring her, Highness." He looked about
him at the younger men. "In the meantime, if the ch'un tzu
would like to entertain themselves?" On cue
the lights overhead dimmed, the music grew more lively. From vents
overhead subtle, sweet-scented hallucinogens wafted into the air. As he
made his way down to the pool, he saw how quickly some of the men,
eager not to waste a moment, had drawn girls down onto the couches
next to them; one—a prince of the Pei Family—had one girl
massaging his neck and shoulders while another knelt between his
legs. Hsiang
Wang laughed softly. There would be more outrageous sights than that
before the day was done. Many more. He slowed, looking about him,
then saw the girl and lifted his hand, summoning her. She
came across and stopped, bowing before him. A dainty little thing,
her hair cut in swallow bangs. She looked up at him, revealing her
perfect features, her delicate rosebud lips. "Yes, Excellency?" He
reached in his pocket and took out the thousand-^uan chip he had
stashed there earlier, handing it to her. "You know what to do?" She
nodded, a smile coming to her lips. "Good.
Then go and introduce yourself. I'll have the servants bring the
beast." He
watched her go, glad that he had gone through all this with his
brother two days before. Sick.
What a time for K'ai Fan to fall sick! Surely he knew how important
this occasion was for the Family? Hsiang Wang shuddered, then threw
off his irritation. It could not be helped, he supposed. And if he
could please Old Chun, who knew what advantages he might win for
himself? He
hurried back in time to see the servants bring the beast. The ox-man
stood there passively, its three-toed hands at its sides, looking
about it nervously, its almost-human eyes filled with anxiety. Seeing
it, some of the younger princes laughed among themselves and leaned
close to exchange words. Hsiang Wang smiled and moved closer,
standing at Chun's shoulder. At once another girl approached and
knelt at Chun's side, her flank against his leg, one hand resting
gently on his knee. Chun
looked down briefly, smiling, then looked back, studying the girl and
the beast, one hand tugging at his beard, an expression of interest
on his long, heavily lined face. Hsiang
raised his hand. At once the servants came forward, tearing the fine
silks from the ox-man's back, tugging down its velvet trousers. Then
they stood back. For a moment it stood there, bewildered, trembling,
its big dark-haired body exposed. Then, with a low, cowlike moan, it
turned its great head, as if looking to escape. At
once the girl moved closer, putting one hand up to its chest, calming
it, whispering words of reassurance. Again it lowed, but now it was
looking down, its eyes on the girl. From
the couches to either side of Chun Wu-chi came laughter. Laughter and
low, excited whispers. Slowly
she began to stroke the beast, long, sensuous strokes that began high
up in the beast's furred chest and ended low down, between its
heavily muscled legs. It was not long before it was aroused, its huge
member poking up stiffly into the air, glistening, long and wet and
pink-red in the half-light—a lance of quivering, living matter. As the
girl slipped her gown from her shoulders, there was a low murmur of
approval. Now she stood there, naked, holding the beast's huge
phallus in one hand, while with the other she continued to stroke its
chest. Its
lowing now had a strange, inhuman urgency to it. It turned its head
from side to side, as if in pain, its whole body trembling, as if at
any moment it might lose control. One hand lifted, moving toward the
girl, then withdrew. Then,
with a small, teasing smile at Chun Wu-chi, the girl lowered her head
and took the beast deep into her mouth. There
was a gasp from all around. Hsiang, watching, saw how the girl he had
assigned to Chun was working the old man, burrowed beneath his
skirts, doing to him exactly what the other was doing to the ox-man.
He smiled. Judging from the look of pained pleasure on the old man's
face, Chun Wu-chi would not forget this evening quickly. IT WAS
JUST after nine in the evening and in the great Hall of Celestial
Destinies at Nantes spaceport a huge crowd milled about. The 8:20
rocket from Boston had come in ten minutes earlier and the final
security clearances were being made before its passengers were passed
through into the hall. .
Lehmann stood at the base of the statue in the center of the hall,
waiting. DeVore had contacted him an hour and a half ago to say he
would be on the 8:20. He had sounded angry and irritable, but when
Lehmann had pressed him about the trip, he had seemed enthusiastic.
It was something else, then, that had soured his mood—something
that had happened back here, in his absence—and there was only
one thing that could have done that: the failure of the assassination
attempt on Tolonen. Was
that why DeVore had asked him to meet him here? To try again? It made
sense, certainly, for despite all their "precautions" the
last thing Security really expected was a new attempt so
shortly after the last. He
turned, looking up at the giant bronze figures. He knew that the
composition was a lie, part of the Great Lie the Han had built along
with their City; even so there was an underlying truth to it, for the
Han had triumphed over the Ta Ts'in. Kan Ying had
bowed before Pan Chao. Or at least, their descendants had. But
for how much longer would the dream of Rome be denied? For
himself, it was unimportant. Han or Hung Mao, it did not matter who
ruled the great circle of Chung Kuo. Even so, in the great struggle
that was to come, his ends would be served. Whoever triumphed, the
world would be no longer as it was. Much that he hated would, of
necessity, be destroyed, and in that process of destruction—of
purification—a new spirit would be unleashed. New and yet quite
ancient. Savage and yet pure, like an eagle circling in the cold
clear air above the mountains. He
looked away. A new beginning, that was what the world needed. A new
beginning, free of all this. Lehmann
looked about him, studying the people making their way past him,
appalled by the emptiness he saw in every face. Here they were, all
the half-men and half-women and all their little halflings, hurrying
about their empty, meaningless lives. On their brief, sense-dulled
journey to the Oven Man's door. And
then? He
shivered, oppressed suddenly by the crush, by the awful perfumed
stench of those about him. This now—this brief moment of time
before it began—was a kind of tiger's mouth; that moment before
one surrounded one's opponent's stone, robbing it of breath. It was a
time of closing options. Of fast and desperate plays. There
was a murmuring throughout the hall as the announcement boards at
either end showed that the passengers from the 8:20 Boston rocket
were coming through. Lehmann was about to go across to the gate when
he noticed two men making their way through the crowd, their faces
set, their whole manner subtly different. Security?
No. For a start they were Han. Moreover, there was something fluid,
almost rounded about their movements; something one never found in
the more rigorously and classically trained Security elite. No. These
were more likely Triad men. Assassins. But who were they after? Who
else was on DeVore's flight? Some Company Head? Or was this a gang
matter? He
followed them surreptitiously, interested, wanting to observe their
methods. The
gate at the far end of the hall was open now and passengers were
spilling out. Looking past the men, he saw DeVore, his neat, tidy
figure making its way swiftly but calmly through the press. The men
were exactly halfway between him and DeVore, some ten or fifteen ch'i
in front of him, when he realized his mistake. "Howard/" DeVore
looked up, alerted, and saw at once what was happening. The two
assassins were making directly for him now, less than two body
lengths away, their blades out, slashing at anyone who got in their
way, intent on reaching their quarry. Beyond them Lehmann was pushing
his way through the crowd, yelling at people to get out of his way;
but it would be several seconds before he could come to DeVore's aid. DeVore
moved forward sharply, bringing the case he was carrying up into the
face of the first man as he came out of the crowd in front of him.
Hampered by a woman at his side, the assassin could only jerk his
head back, away. At once DeVore kicked out, making him stagger back.
But even as he did, the second assassin was upon him, his notched
knife swinging through the air at DeVore's head. The
speed at which DeVore turned surprised the man. One hand countered
the knife blow at the wrist while the other punched to the ribs. The
assassin went down with a sharp cry. DeVore
turned, facing the first assassin, feinting once, twice, with his
fists before he twisted and kicked. The assassin moved back expertly,
but before he could counter, he sank to his knees, Lehmann's knife
embedded in his back. There
was shouting and screaming from all sides of them now. "Come
away," Lehmann said quietly, taking DeVore's arm. "Before
Security comes!" But DeVore shrugged him off, going over to the
second man. The
would-be assassin lay there, helpless, clutching his side, gasping
with pain. DeVore had shattered his rib cage, puncturing his lung. He
crouched close, over the man, one hand at his throat. "Who
sent you?" The
man pushed his face up at DeVores and spat. DeVore
wiped the blood-stained phlegm from his cheek and reached across to
pick up the assassin's blade. Then, as the man's eyes widened, he
slit open his shirt and searched his torso for markings. DeVore
turned, looking up at Lehmann, a fierce anger in his face. "He's
not Triad and he's not Security, so who the fuck . . . ?" The
third man came from nowhere. DeVore
had no time to react. It was only accident that saved him. As Lehmann
turned, he moved between DeVore and the man, glancing against the
assassin's knife arm. The knife, which would have entered DeVore's
heart, was nudged to one side, piercing DeVore between neck and
shoulder. The
assassin jerked the serrated knife out savagely from DeVore's flesh;
but before he could strike again, Lehmann had lashed out, punching
his nose up into his skull. The man fell and lay still. DeVore
sank to his knees, holding one hand over the wound, a look of
astonishment on his bloodless face. This time Lehmann didn't ask.
With a single blow he finished off the second man, then turned and
did the same to the other. Then, lifting DeVore up onto his shoulder,
ignoring the shouts of protest from all about him, he began to carry
him toward the exit and the safety of the transit, praying that their
man in Security could hold his fellows off a minute longer. As for
DeVore's question, he had his answer now; for that last man had been
a Hung Mao, a face they'd often seen in the past, one of
several who had always been in the background at their meetings with
the Ping Tiao. A guard. One of the ones who had defected to
the Yu. So it
was Mach, Jan Mach, who'd tried to have DeVore killed. CHAPTER
TWELVE
Willow Plum Sickness 0N
THE OPEN windswept hillside the small group gathered about the grave.
Across the valley, cloud shadow drew a moving line that descended,
crossing the water, then came swiftly up the slope toward them. Ben
watched the shadow sweep toward him, then felt the sudden chill as
the sun passed behind the cloud. So it
is, he thought. As swift as that it comes. The
wooden casket lay on thick silken cords beside the open grave. Ben
stood facing the casket across the darkness of the hole, his feet
only inches from the drop. Earth.
Dark earth. It had rained and tiny beads of moisture clung to the
stems of grass overhanging the grave. In the sunlight they seemed
strange, incongruous. It was
still unreal. Or not yet real. He felt no grief as yet, no strong
feeling for what he had lost, only a vacancy, a sense of his own
inattentiveness. As if he had missed something . . . They
were all in black, even Li Yuan. Blackness for death. The old Western
way of things. His mother stood beside the casket, her face veiled,
grieving heavily. Beside him stood his sister, and next to her Li
Yuan's Chancellor, Nan Ho. A cold
wind gusted from the south across the hilltop, blowing his hair into
his eyes. A sea breeze, heavy with brine. He combed strands back into
place with his fingers, then left his hand there, the fingers buried
in his fine, thick hair, his palm pressed firmly against his
forehead. Like an amnesiac. A sleeper. He
felt like an actor, the outer shell dissociated from the inner core
of himself: the "boy in black" at the graveside. An
impostor. Neither loving nor dutiful. Cuckoo in the nest. Too
distanced from things to be his father's son, his brother's brother. Had he
ever even said he loved him? Two of
Li Yuan's men came and lifted the casket on its cords. Ben
moved back as they lowered the casket into the earth. A cassette of
death, slotting into the hillside. And no
rewind ... no playback. Hal Shepherd existed only in the memories of
others now. And when they in their turn died? Was it all simply a
long process of forgetting? Of blinded eyes and decaying images?
Maybe... but it didn't have to be. The
earth fell. He closed his eyes and could see it falling, covering the
pale wood of the casket. Could hear the sound of the earth tumbling
against the wood. A hollow, empty sound. He
opened his eyes. The hole was a shallow depression of uneven
darkness. The T'ang's men had ceased shoveling. He
felt the urge to bend down and touch the cold, dark earth. To crush
it between his fingers and feel its gritty texture, its cool,
inanimate substance. Instead he watched as Li Yuan stepped forward
and pressed the young tree into the pile of earth, firming it down,
then moving back to let the servants finish their task. No
words. No graven stones. This was his father's wish. Only a tree. A
young oak. Ben
shivered, his thoughts drawn elsewhere. What was the darkness like on
the other side of being? Was it only a nothingness? Only
blank, empty darkness? They
walked back along the path, down to the cottage by the bay—Li
Yuan holding his mother's arm, consoling her; Nan Ho walking beside
his sister. Ben came last, alone, several paces behind. His
father's death. Expected so long, it had nonetheless come like a blow
of evil fate to his mother. He had heard her crying in the night: a
sound that could not be described, only heard and remembered. A
wordless noise, connected to the grieving animal deep within the
human—a sound drawn from the great and ancient darkness of our
racial being. An awful, desolate sound. Once heard, it could never be
forgotten. He
turned and looked back. There was no sign of the grave, the fledgling
tree. Banks of iron-gray clouds were massed above the hillside. In a
while it would rain. He
turned and looked down the slope at the cottage and the bay beyond,
seeing it all anew. Where was its paradigm? Where was the designer of
all this? The shaping force? Death
had unlocked these questions, forcing his face relentlessly against
the glass. He
sighed, then walked on, making his slow way down. LI
yuan stood in the center of Ben's room, looking about him. Ben was
hunched over his desk, working, making notations in a huge
loose-leafed book, the pages of which were covered in strange
diagrams. It was
not what Li Yuan had expected. The room was cluttered and untidy,
totally lacking, it seemed, in any organizational principle. Things
were piled here, there, and everywhere, as if discarded and
forgotten; while one whole wall was taken up by numerous
half-completed pencil sketches depicting parts of the human anatomy. He
looked back at Ben, seeing how tense he was, crouched over the big
square-paged book, and felt a ripple of unease pass through him. It
did not seem right, somehow, to be working on the day of his father's
funeral. Li Yuan moved closer, looking over Ben's shoulder at the
diagram he was working on—seeing only a disorganized mess of
lines and shapes and coded instructions set down in a dozen brilliant
colors on the underlying grid, like the scribblings of a child. "What
is that?" Ben
finished what he was doing, then turned, looking up at the young
T'ang. "It's
a rough." "A
rough?" Li Yuan laughed. "A rough of what?" "No.
. . that's what I call it. All of these are instructions. The dark
lines—those in brown, orange, and red, mainly—are
instructions to the muscles. The small circles in blue, black, and
mauve are chemical input instructions; the nature of the chemical and
the dosage marked within the circle. The rectangular blocks are just
that—blocks. They indicate when no input of any kind is passing
through the particular node." "Nodes?"
Li Yuan was thoroughly confused by this time. Ben
smiled. "Pai pi. You know, the old artificial reality
experiments. I've been working on them for the last fifteen months. I
call them 'shells.' This is an input instruction diagram. As I said,
a rough. These eighty-one horizontal lines represent the input
points, and these forty vertical lines represent the dimension of
time— twenty to a second." Li
Yuan frowned. "I still don't understand. Inputs into what?" "Into
the recipient's body. Come. I'll show you. Downstairs." They
went down, into the basement workrooms. There, at one end of the
long, low-ceilinged room, almost hidden by the clutter of other
machinery, was the shell. It was a big, elaborately decorated casket;
like something one might use for an imperial lying-in-state, the lid
lacquered a midnight black. Ben
stood beside it, looking back at Li Yuan. "The recipient climbs
in here and is wired up—the wires being attached to eighty-one
special input points both in the brain and at important nerve centers
throughout the body. That done, the casket is sealed, effectively
cutting the recipient off from all external stimuli. That absence of
stimuli is an unnatural state for the human body: if denied sensory
input for too long the mind begins to hallucinate. Using this
well-documented receptivity of the sensory apparatus to false
stimuli, we can provide the mind with a complete alternative
experience." Li
Yuan stared at the apparatus a moment longer, then looked back at the
Shepherd boy. "Complete? How complete?" Ben
was watching him, as a hawk watches a rabbit. An intense, predatory
stare. "As
complete as the real thing. If the art is good enough." "The
art... I see." Li Yuan frowned. It seemed such a strange thing
to want to do. To create an art that mimicked life so closely. An art
that supplanted life. He reached out and touched the skeletal
frame that hung to one side of the shell, noting the studded inputs
about the head and chest and groin. Eighty-one inputs in all. "But
why?" Ben
stared at him as if he didn't understand the question, then handed
him a book similar to the one he had been working on in his room.
"These, as I said, are the roughs. They form the diagrammatic
outline of an event-sequence—a story. Eventually those lines
and squiggles and dots will become events. Sensory actualities. Not
real, yet indistinguishable from the real." Li
Yuan stared at the open page and nodded, but it still didn't explain.
Why this need for fictions? For taking away what was and filling it
with something different? Wasn't life itself enough? Ben
was leaning close now, looking into his face, his eyes filled with an
almost insane intensity, his voice a low whisper. "It's
like being a god. You can do whatever you want. Create whatever you
want to create. Things that never happened. That never could
happen." Li
Yuan laughed uncomfortably. "Something that never happened? But
why should you want to do that? Isn't there enough diversity in the
world as it is?" Ben
looked at him curiously, then looked away, as if disappointed. "No.
You miss my point." It was
said quietly, almost as if it didn't matter. As if in that brief
instant between the look and the words, he had made his mind up about
something. "Then
what is the point?" Li Yuan insisted, setting the book
down on the padded innards of the casket. Ben
looked down, his hand reaching out to touch the apparatus. For the
first time Li Yuan noticed that the hand was artificial. It seemed
real, but the deeply etched ridge of skin gave it away. Once
revealed, other signs added to the impression. There was an added
subtlety of touch, a deftness of movement just beyond the human
range. "Your
question is larger than you think, Li Yuan. It questions not merely
what I do, but all art, all fiction, all dreams of other states. It
asserts that 'what is' is enough. My argument is that 'what is' is
insufficient. We need more than 'what is.' Much more." Li
Yuan shrugged. "Maybe. But this takes it too far, surely? It
seems a kind of mockery. Life is good. Why seek this false
perfection?" "Do
you really believe that, Li Yuan? Are you sure there's nothing my art
could give you that life couldn't?" Li
Yuan turned away, as if stung. He was silent for some time; then he
looked back, a grim expression of defiance changing his features.
"Only illusions, my friend. Nothing real. Nothing solid and
substantial." Ben
shook his head. "You're wrong. I could give you something so
real, so solid and substantial that you could hold it in your
arms—could taste it and smell it and never for a moment know
that you were only dreaming." Li
Yuan stared at him, aghast, then looked down. "I don't believe
you," he said finally. "It could never be that good." "Ah,
but it will." Li
Yuan lifted his head angrily. "Can it give you back your father?
Can it do that?" The
boy did not flinch. His eyes caught Li Yuan's and held them. "Yes.
Even that, if I wanted it." li
YUAN ARRIVED at Tongjiang two hours later to find things in chaos,
the audience hall packed with his ministers and advisors. While the
T'ang changed his clothes, Nan Ho went among the men to find out what
had been happening in their brief absence. When
Li Yuan returned to his study, Nan Ho was waiting for him, his face
flushed, his whole manner extremely agitated. "What
is it, Nan Ho? What has got my ministers in such a state?" Nan Ho
bowed low. "It is not just your ministers, Chieh Hsia. The
whole of the Above is in uproar. They say that more than two hundred
people are ill already, and that more than a dozen have died." Li
Yuan sat forward. "111? Died7. What do you
mean?" Nan Ho
looked up at him. "There is an epidemic, Chieh Hsia, sweeping
through the Minor Families. No one knows quite what it is." Li
Yuan stood angrily and came around his desk. "No one knows? Am I
to believe this? Where are the Royal Surgeons? Have them come to me
at once." Nan Ho
lowered his head. "They are outside, Chieh Hsia, but—" "No
buts, Master Nan. Get them in here now. If there is an epidemic, we
must act fast." Nan Ho
brought them in, then stood back, letting his T'ang question the men
directly. The
eight old men stood there, their ancient bodies bent forward
awkwardly. "Well?"
he said, facing the most senior of them. "What has been
happening, Surgeon Yu? Why have you not been able to trace the source
of this disease?" "Chieh
Hsia . . ." the old man began, his voice quavering. "Forgive
me, but the facts contradict themselves." "Nonsense!"
Li Yuan barked, clearly angry. "Do you know the cause of the
disease or not?" The
old man shook his head, distressed. "Forgive me, Chieh Hsia, but
it is not possible. The Families are bred immune. For more than one
hundred and fifty years—" Li
Yuan huffed impatiently. "Impossible? Nothing is
impossible! I've just come from Hal Shepherd's funeral. They killed
him, remember? With a cancer. Something that, according to you, was
quite impossible. So what have they come up with now?" The
old man glanced sideways at his colleagues, then spoke again. "It
seems, from our first tests, that what the victims are suffering from
is what we term yang mei ping, willow-plum sickness." Li
Yuan laughed. "A fancy name, Surgeon Yu, but what does it mean?" Nan Ho
answered for the old man. "It is syphilis, Chieh Hsia. A
sexually transmitted disease that affects the brain and drives its
victims insane. This strain, apparently, is a particularly virulent
and fast-working one. Besides side-stepping the natural immunity of
its victims, it has a remarkably short incubation period. Many of its
victims are dead within thirty hours of getting the dose." Surgeon
Yu looked at Nan Ho gratefully, then nodded. "That is so, Chieh
Hsia. However, it seems that this particular strain affects only
those of Han origin. As far as we can make out, no Hung Moo are
affected." Li
Yuan turned away, recognizing at once the implications of the thing.
Willow-plum sickness ... He had a vague recollection of reading about
the disease. It was one of those many sicknesses the Hung Moo had
brought with them when they had first opened China up, in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. But this was worse, far worse
than anything those ancient sea-traders had spread among the port
women, because this time his kind had no natural immunity to it. None
at all. He
turned back. "Are you certain, Surgeon Yu?" "As
certain as we can be, Chieh Hsia." "Good.
Then I want you to isolate each victim and question them as to who
they have slept with in the past thirty days. Then I want all
contacts traced and isolated. Understand?" He
looked past Yu at his Chancellor. "Nan Ho, I want you to contact
all the Heads of the Minor Families and have them come here, at once.
By my express order." Nan Ho
bowed. "Chieh Hsia." And
meanwhile he would call his fellow T'ang. For action must be taken.
Immediate action, before the thing got out of hand. KARR
WAS buttoning his tunic when Chen came into the room, barely stopping
to knock. He turned from the mirror, then stopped, seeing the look of
delight on Chen's face. "What
is it?" Chen
handed Karr a file. "It's our friend. There's no doubt about it.
These are stills taken from a Security surveillance film thirty-two
hours ago at Nantes spaceport." Karr
flipped the folder open and flicked through the stills a moment, then
looked back at Chen, his face lit up. "Then we've got him, neh?" Chen's
face fell. He shook his head. "What?" "I'm
afraid not. It seems his man Lehmann just picked him up and carried
him out of there." "And
no one intercepted him? Where was Security?" "Waiting
for orders." Karr
started to speak, then understood. "Gods . . . Again?" Chen
nodded. "And
the Security Captain. He committed suicide, neh?" Chen
sighed. "That's right. It fits the pattern. I checked back in
their surveillance records. The computer registers that a man
matching DeVore's description passed through Nantes spaceport four
times in the past month." "And
there was no Security alert?" "No.
Nor would there have been. The machine was reprogrammed to ignore the
instruction from Bremen. As he was wearing false retina, the only way
they could have got him was by direct facial recognition, and because
they rely so heavily on computer-generated alerts, the chance of that
was minimal." "So
how did we get these?" Chen
laughed. "It seems there was a fairly high-ranking junior
minister on the same flight as DeVore. He complained about the
incident direct to Bremen, and when they discovered they had no
record of the event they instigated an immediate inquiry. This
resulted." Karr
sat down heavily, setting the file to one side, and began to pull on
his boots. For a moment he was quiet, thoughtful, then he looked up
again. "Do
we know where he'd been?" "Boston.
But who he saw there or what he was doing we don't know yet. Our
friends in North American Security are looking into it right now." "And
the assassins?" Karr asked, pulling on the other boot. "Do
we know who they were?" Chen
shrugged. "The two Han look like Triad assassins, but the
third—well, we have him on record as a probable Ping Tiao
sympathizer." Karr
looked up, raising his eyebrows. "Ping Tiao? But they don't
exist any longer. At least, that's what our contacts down below tell
us. Our friend Ebert is supposed to have wiped them out." Chen
nodded. "You don't think . . . ?" Karr
laughed. "Even Ebert wouldn't be stupid enough to try to work
with the Ping Tiao. DeVore wouldn't let him." "So
what do you think?" Karr
shook his head. "We don't know enough, that's clear. Who besides
ourselves would want DeVore dead?" "Someone
he's crossed?" Karr
laughed. "Yes. But that could be anyone, neh? Anyone at all." LI
YUAN LOOKED out across the marbled expanse of the Hall of the Seven
Ancestors and nodded to himself, satisfied. The space between the
dragon pillars was packed. More than two thousand men—all the
adult males of the Twenty-Nine—were gathered here this
afternoon. All, that was, but those who had already succumbed to the
sickness. He sat
on the High Throne, dressed in the dragon robe of imperial yellow
edged with blue. In one hand he held the Special Edict, in the other
the bamboo cane with the silver cap that had been his brother's
present to his father. There
was the faintest murmur from below, but when he stood, the hall fell
silent, followed a moment later by a loud rustling of expensive silks
as in a single movement, the great crowd knelt, touching their heads
to the floor three times in the ritual Uu k'ou. Li Yuan smiled
bleakly, remembering another day, nine years ago—the day his
father had summoned the leaders of the Dispersionists before him,
here in this very hall, and humbled them, making their leader,
Lehmann, give up his friend Wyatt. Much had changed since then, but
once again the will of the T'ang had to be imposed. By agreement it
was hoped; but by force, if necessary. Li
Yuan came down, stopping three steps from the bottom, facing the five
elderly men who stood at the front of the crowd. His Chancellor, Nan
Ho, stood to the right, the list scrolled tightly in one hand. Behind
him, just beyond the nearest of the dragon pillars, a troop of elite
guards waited, their shaved heads bowed low. He
looked past the five Family Heads at the great press of men behind
them. All had their heads lowered, their eyes averted, acknowledging
his supremacy. Right now they were obedient, but would they remain so
when they knew his purpose? Would they understand the need for this,
or would they defy him? He shivered, then looked back at the five who
stood closest. He saw
how the hands of nephews and cousins reached from behind Chun Wu-chi,
supporting him, keeping him from falling; saw how frail his
once-father-in-law, Yin Tsu had become; how the first signs of
senility had crept into the eighty-three-year-old face of Pei Ro-hen.
Only An Sheng and Hsiang Shao-erh, both men in their fifties, seemed
robust. Even so, the Minor Families had thrived—a dozen,
fifteen, sons not uncommon among them—while the Seven had
diminished. Why was that? he wondered for the first time. Was it
merely the pressures of rule, the depredations of war and politics,
or was it symptomatic of some much deeper malaise? There
was silence in the hall, but underneath it he could feel the
invisible pressure of their expectations. Many of them had heard
rumors of the sickness; even so, most were wondering why he had
summoned them. Why they were standing here, in this unprecedented
manner, in the Great Hall at Tongjiang, waiting for him to speak. Well,
now they would know. He would put an end to all speculation. "Ch'un
tzul" he began, his voice resonant, powerful. "I
have summoned you here today because we face a crisis—perhaps
the greatest crisis the Families have ever faced." Li
Yuan looked across the sea of lowered heads, aware of the power he
exercized over these men, but conscious also of what that power
rested upon. They obeyed him because they had agreed among themselves
to obey him. Take away that agreement—that mandate—and
what followed? He
took a breath, then continued. "More
than fifty of our number are dead. Another three hundred, I am told,
are sick or close to death. And the cause of this mysterious illness?
Something we thought we had rid ourselves of long ago—yang
mei ping. Willow-plum sickness!" There
was a murmur of surprise and a number of heads moved agitatedly, but
as yet no one dared meet his eyes. He moved on, keeping his voice
calm, letting the authority of his position fill his words. "In
the past, I am told, the disease would have killed only after long
months of suffering, leading to blindness and eventual madness, but
this is a new, more virulent strain—one that our Families are
no longer immune to. It is a brain-killer. It can strike down a
healthy man—or woman—in less than thirty hours; although,
as is the way of such diseases, not all succumb immediately to the
virus but become carriers. That, in itself, is horrible enough; but
this strain, it seems, is particularly j vile, for it is racially
specific. It affects only us Han." Shocked
faces were looking up at him now, forgetting all propriety.
Deliberately' ignoring this lapse, Li Yuan pressed on, saying what
must be said. "Such
are the facts. What we must now ask ourselves is what are we to do to
combat this disease? There is no cure, nor is there time to find one.
No cure, that is, but the most drastic of preventive measures." Hsiang
Shao-erh looked up at him, his eyes half-lidded, deeply suspicious.
"What do you mean, Chieh Hsia?" Li
Yuan met the older man's gaze firmly. "I mean that we must test
everyone in this hall. Wives and children too. And then we must find
those outside the Families—men or women—who have been in
contact with anyone from the Families." "In
contact, Chieh Hsial" The
words were framed politely, but he noted Hsiang's hostility. Hsiang
had already lost his oldest son to the virus and it was clear that he
saw the drift of Li Yuan's speech. He
answered unflinchingly. "In sexual contact. How else do
you think the disease was spread?" Again
he felt the ripples of shock pass through the Hall. Despite his
reference to willow-plum sickness, many had simply not understood
until that moment. A low buzz ran from one end of the hall to the
other. "But
surely, Chieh Hsia—?" Li
Yuan cut Hsiang off sharply, his patience snapping. "Silence!
All of you, be silent now! I have not finished." The
hall fell silent, heads were lowered again; but only a pace or so
from him, Hsiang glared back at him, bristling with anger. Li Yuan
looked past him, addressing the great mass. "We
must test everyone. We must track down every last victim—especially
the carriers—of this disease." "And
then?" The voice was Hsiang Shao-erh's. Stubborn, defiant. Li
Yuan looked back at him. "And then they must die." The
hall erupted. Li Yuan looked out across the seething crowd, seeing
the angry opposition—but also the strong agreement—his
words had engendered. Arguments raged on every side. Just beneath
him, Hsiang Shao-erh and An Sheng were protesting loudly, their arms
gesticulating, their faces dark with anger; while Yin Tsu and Pei
Ro-han attempted to remonstrate with them. For a while he let it go
on, knowing that this violent flood of feelings must be allowed its
channel, then he raised one hand, palm outward. Slowly the Hall fell
silent again. He
looked down at Hsiang Shao-erh. "You wish to say something,
Cousin?" Hsiang
took a pace forward, placing one foot on the first step of the High
Throne, seeming almost to threaten his T'ang. He spat the words out
angrily. "I
protest, Chieh Hsia! You cannot do this! We are Family, not hsioo
jenl Never in our history have we been subjected to such
humiliation! To make us take this test of yours would be to undermine
our word, our honor as ch'un tzul Why, it is tantamount to
saying that we are all fornicators and unfaithful to our wives!" Li
Yuan shook his head. "And the deaths? The spread of the disease?
Are these things mere ghosts and idle rumors?" "There
are a few, I admit. Young bucks . . . but even so—" "A
few!" Li Yuan spat the words back angrily, almost
contemptuously, taking a step forward, almost pushing his face into
Hsiang's, forcing him to take a step back. "You
are a fool, Hsiang, to think of face at such a time! Do you really
believe I would do this if it were not necessary? Do you think I
would risk damaging my relationship with you, my cousins, if there
were not some far greater threat?" Hsiang
opened his mouth, then closed it again, taken aback by the unexpected
violence of Li Yuan's counterattack. "This
is a war," Li Yuan said, looking past him again, addressing the
massed sons and cousins. "And upon its outcome depends how Chung
Kuo will be in years to come. Whether there will be good, stable
rule—the rule of Seven and Twenty-Nine—or chaos. To think
that we can fight such a war without losses—without
sacrifices—is both ridiculous and untenable." He
looked back directly at Hsiang. "Do not mistake me, Hsiang
Shao-erh. Face, honor, a man's word—these are the very things
that bind our society in times of peace, and I would defend them
before any man. Yet in times of war we must let go sometimes of our
high ideals, if but briefly. We must bow, like the reeds before the
wind, or go down, like a great tree in a storm." Hsiang
lowered his eyes. "Chieh Hsia . . ." "Good.
Then you will sign the paper, Hsiang Shao-erh?" Hsiang
looked up again. "The paper?" Nan Ho
brought the scroll across. Li Yuan turned, offering it to Hsiang.
"Here. I have prepared a document. I would not have it said that
the compact between Seven and Twenty-Nine was broken. There must be
agreement between us, even in this matter." Li
Yuan held the document out toward Hsiang Shao-erh. As his father had,
so he now seemed the very embodiment of imperial power; unyielding,
like the famous rock in the Yellow River that, for centuries, had
withstood the greatest of floods. Hsiang
stared at the scroll, then looked up at his T'ang, his voice smaller
suddenly, more querulous. "And if any here refuse?" Li
Yuan did not hesitate. "Then the compact is ended, the Great
Wheel broken." Hsiang
shuddered. For a moment longer he stood there, hesitant, staring at
the document. Then, suddenly, he lowered his head. "Very well,
Chieh Hsia. I will sign." AFTERWARD,
while the Families were lining up to be tested, Nan Ho went to Li
Yuan in his study. "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia," he said, bowing low, "but I did not
understand. Why did Hsiang Shao-erh oppose you just now? I would have
thought, with his eldest son dead, he would have been the first to
sanction your actions—to prevent the deaths of more of his
sons." Li
Yuan sighed. "So it would have been, I'm sure, Master Nan, but
the chao tai hut where the sickness was originally spread, was
held on Hsiang's estate. Oh, he had nothing to do with the
organization of the affair—that was all his son K'ai Fan's
doing—nor was Hsiang Shao-erh responsible for the sickness
itself. However, he feels responsible. Many among the
Twenty-Nine blame him, irrational as that is. As a consequence he has
lost great face. That display today was an attempt to regain his
face. Unfortunately, I could not allow it. Now, I am afraid, I have
made an enemy." "Things
can be smoothed over, surely, Chieh Hsia7. A gift,
perhaps . . ." Li
Yuan shook his head. "I made him challenge me. And then I broke
him before his equals. It had to be done, but there is no repairing
it. No, so we must watch ourselves from that quarter henceforth. Wang
Sau-leyan is sure to hear of what happened here today. No doubt he
will try to exploit the division between Hsiang and me." The
Chancellor shook his head, then looked up again. "Forgive me,
Chieh Hsia, but do you not think death too extreme a penalty? After
all, it was not their fault that they picked up this sickness. Have
you not considered, perhaps, castrating those found with the virus?
Those, that is, who would not die of it anyway." "No,
Master Nan. Had they been servants we might well have done that, but
these are Family. Such a humiliation would be worse than death for
them. Besides, what of the women they have infected? What are we to
do with them? Sew them up?" Nan Ho
gave a brief, uncomfortable laugh, then bowed his head. "I had
not thought, Chieh Hsia." Li
Yuan smiled sadly. "Never mind. Go now, Master Nan. Go and
supervise the screening. I will expect you three hours from now to
give your report on the proceedings." "Chieh
Hsia . . ." Li
Yuan sat back. There were other things to consider now; other
sicknesses to rid the world of. The Young Sons, for instance, and the
virus of the Aristotle File. He sighed and leaned forward again,
punching in the code that would connect him with Tsu Ma in Astrakhan. It was
time to act. Time to draw in the nets and see what fish they had
caught. W u s
h I h, T'ang of North America, raised his eyes from the small screen
inset into his desk and looked across at the huge image of Li Yuan's
face that filled the facing wall. He
gave a deep sigh, then placed his hands palm down on the desk,
clearly disturbed by what he had just seen. "Well,
Cousin, I must thank you. The tape is quite conclusive. Even so, I
feel nothing but sadness that it has come to this. I had hoped that I
could persuade them somehow from their folly, but it is much more
than mere folly, isn't it? More than boredom or high spirits. This
can lead to one thing only—rebellion and the overthrow of the
Seven. I have to act. You understand that?" Li
Yuan nodded. "Of course," he said sympathetically. "Which
is why I have already spoken with Tsu Ma. He agrees. And the sooner
the better. The Sons of Benjamin Franklin are not the only group.
There are similar factions in the other Cities, linked to the Young
Sons. If we are to act, it would be best if we acted in concert, neh?
Tonight, if possible. At twelfth bell." "And
the other T'ang?" Li
Yuan shook his head. "There's no time for that. Besides, if Wang
Sau-leyan were to learn, it's likely there would be no one there to
arrest. He has a funny way with 'secrets.'" Wu
Shih looked down, considering, then nodded. "All right. Twelfth
bell. And you will act elsewhere? You and Tsu Ma?" "At
twelfth bell." He started to cut the connection. "Li
Yuan! Wait! What of the boy? Do you think they will suspect his role
in this?" Li
Yuan laughed. "How could they? Even he doesn't know what he has
been these past few days." Wu
Shih gave a small laugh. "Even so, should I take steps to get
him out?" Li
Yuan shook his head. "No. Any such move might alert them. Ensure
only that your men do not harm him by mistake." Wu
Shih lowered his head slightly, a mark of respect that he had often
made to Yuan's father, Li Shai Tung, and an implicit acknowledgment
of where the real leadership lay within the Seven. Li
Yuan smiled. "Then goodnight, Cousin. We shall speak in the
morning. Once things are better known." THE
lever MANSION was a huge, two-story house with gables, standing in
its own wooded grounds. Outside it was dark, the house lights
reflected brightly in the dark waters of the nearby lake. In the
center of the mansion's bold facade was a pillared entrance, its
wide, double doors open, light spilling out onto a gravel drive. Dark
sedans, some antique, some reproduction, lined the entrance road,
their drivers dressed in a black-suited livery that matched the
ancient crest on the sides of the sedans. All evening they had gone
back and forth, ferrying guests between the house and the transit,
almost a li away. The
illusion was almost perfect. The darkness hid the walls of the
surrounding decks, while above the house a thick, dark-blue cloth
masked the ice of the stack's uppermost floor, like a starless night
sky. Kim
stood between the trees, in darkness, looking back at the house. This
was the third time he had come to Richmond, to the Lever Mansion, but
it was the first time he had seen the house in darkness. Tonight they
were throwing a ball. A party for the elite of their City—the
Supernal, as they called themselves. It was the first time he had
heard the term used and it amused him to think of himself, so loui
in birth, mixing in such high company. He was not drunk—he
took care never to touch alcohol or drugs—but merely mixing in
the atmosphere of the house was enough to create a mild euphoria. The
air was chill, sharp. In the trees nearby the leaves rustled in a
mild, artificial breeze. Kim smiled, enjoying the strangeness of it
all, and reached out to touch the smooth bark of one of the pines. "Kim?" A
tall, elegant young man in old-fashioned evening dress stood at the
edge of the gravel, calling him. It was Michael Lever. "I'm
here," he said, stepping out from the trees. "I was just
getting some air." Lever
greeted him, more than a ch'i taller than he, straight-backed and
blond, an American . . . "Come
on in," he said, smiling. "Father has been asking for you." Kim
let himself be ushered inside once more, through reception room and
ballroom and out into a smaller, quieter space beyond. Leather doors
closed behind him. The room was dimly lit, pervaded by the tart smell
of cigar smoke. Old Man Lever was sitting on the far side of the
room, beside the only lamp, his friends gathered about him in
high-backed leather chairs. Old men, like himself. By the window
stood a group of younger men. Michael joined them, accepting a drink
from one; then he turned back, looking across at Kim. Charles
Lever lit up a new cigar, then beckoned Kim over. "Here, Kim.
Take a seat." He indicated the empty chair beside him. "There
are some people here— friends of mine—I want you to
meet." Old
men. The thought flashed through Kim's mind. Old men, afraid
of dying. He sat
in the huge, uncomfortable chair, ill at ease, nodding acknowledgment
to each of the men in turn; noting each face and placing it. These
were big men. Powerful men. Each of them Lever's equal. So what had
Lever said? What had Lever promised he could do for them? "We
were talking," Lever said, turning in his chair to look at Kim.
"Chewing things over among ourselves. And I was telling my
friends here about your new company. About Chi Chu. Potentially a
nice little outfit, but small, undercapitalized." Kim
looked down, surprised that Lever knew already. Lever
cleared his throat, then nodded, as if satisfied by his own
evaluation of things. "And I was saying what a shame it was.
Because I've seen your like before, Kim. A hot property with plenty
of good, strong ideas and lots of get-up-and-go, but nothing to back
it up. There's a pattern to it too. I've seen how they've built
things up—how they've grown real fast. Up to a certain point.
And then . . ." He shook his head and looked down at the cigar
smoldering between his ringers. "Then they've tried to move up
a league. Into manufacturing. Because it's a shame to let the big
industrials take so large a share of the cut. Galling, even." The
young men by the window were watching him intently, almost
suspiciously. Kim could feel their eyes on him; could almost sense
what they were thinking. What would this mean for them? For if their
fathers lived forever . . . "I've
seen them try to take that step," Lever continued. "And
I've seen them flounder, unable to cope with the sheer size of the
market. I've watched the big companies move in, like those sharks we
were talking of, and gobble up the pieces. Because that's what it's
really all about, Kim. Not ideas. Not potential. Not get-up-and-go.
But money. Money and power." He
paused and sucked at his cigar. All around him the old men nodded,
but their eyes never left Kim's face. "So
I was saying to my friends here, let's make things happen a little
differently this time. Use some of our money, our power to help this
young man. Because it's a shame to see potential go to waste. A damn
shame, if you ask me." He
leaned back, drawing on the cigar, then puffed out a narrow stream of
smoke. Kim waited, silent, not knowing what to say. He wanted nothing
from these men. Neither money nor power. But that was not the point.
It was what they wanted from him that mattered here. "CosTech
has offered for your contract. Right?" Kim
opened his mouth, then snapped it shut. Of course Lever would know.
He had spies, hadn't he? They all had spies. It was how things worked
at this level. You weren't in business unless you knew what the
competition was up to. "Yes.
But I haven't decided yet." He lied, wanting to hear what they
were going to offer. "I'm meeting them again in two weeks to
talk terms." Lever
smiled, but it was a smile tinged with sourness. "Working for
the competition, eh?" He laughed. "Rather you than me,
boy." There
was laughter from the gathered circle. Only by the window was there
silence. "But
why's this, Kim? Why would you want to waste a year of your life
slaving for CosTech when you could be pushing Eureka on to bigger
things?" Make
your offer, Kim thought. Spell it out. What you want. What
you're offering. Make a deal, old man. Or would that embarrass
you, being so direct? "You
know what they've offered?" he asked. Lever
nodded. "It's peanuts. An insult to your talent. And it ties
you. Limits what you could do." Ah,
thought Kim, that's more to the point. Working for CosTech, he could
not work for ImmVac. And they needed him. The old men needed him,
because, after a certain age, it was not possible to stop the aging
process. Not as things stood. They had to catch it before the
molecular signal triggered it. Afterward was no good. What ImmVac had
developed was no good for any of these men. The complex system of
cell-replication began to break down, slowly at first, but
exponentially, until the genetic damage was irreparable. And then
senility. And
what good was money or power against senility and death? "I'm
a physicist," he said, looking at the old man directly. "What
good am I to you? You want a biochemist. Someone working in the field
of defective protein manufacture. In cell repair. Not an engineer." Lever
shook his head. "You're good. People say you're the best. And
you're young. You could learn. Specialize in self-repair mechanisms."
He stared at Kim fiercely. The cigar in his hand had gone out. "We'll
pay what you ask. Provide whatever you need." Kim
rubbed at his eyes. The cigar smoke had made them sore. He wanted to
say no and have an end to it, but knew these were not men he could
readily say no to. "Two
weeks, Shih Lever. Give me two weeks, then I'll let you know." Lever
narrowed his eyes, suspicious of the young, childlike man. "Two
weeks?" "Yes.
After all, you're asking me to change the direction of my life. And
that's something I have to think about. I've got to consider what it
means. What I might lose and what gain. I can't see it right now.
Which is why I need to think it through." But he
had thought it through already and dismissed it. He knew what he
wanted; had known from the first moment he had glimpsed the vision of
the web. Death—what was death beside that vision? Lever
looked to the other men in the room, then nodded his agreement. "All
right, Shih Ward. Two weeks it is." IT was
LATE. The crowd in the ballroom had thinned out, but the dancing went
on. On the balcony overlooking the hall, a ten-man orchestra played a
slow waltz, their bows rising and falling in the fragmented light.
Kim stood at the back of the hall, beside Michael Lever, watching the
couples move about the floor, realizing that this, too, was an
illusion, a dream of agelessness. As if time could be restored, its
flow reversed. "I
love their dresses," he said, looking up at the tall young man.
"They're like jellyfish." Lever
roared, then turned to his friends and repeated Kim's comment. In a
moment their laughter joined his own. Lever turned back to Kim,
wiping his eyes with the back of his hand. "That's
rich, Kim. Marvelous! Like jellyfish!" And again he burst into
laughter. Kim
looked at him, surprised. What had he said? It was true, wasn't it?
The bobbing movement of their many-layered dresses was like those of
jellyfish in the ocean, even down to the frilled edges. "I
was only saying—" he began, but he never finished
the sentence. At that moment the main lights came up. The orchestra
played on for a moment or two, then ended in sudden disarray. The
dancers stopped circling and stood looking toward the doorway at the
far end of the ballroom. Suddenly it felt much colder in the hall.
There was the sound of shouting from outside. "What
in hell's name?" Lever said, starting to make his way toward the
doors. Then he stopped abruptly. Soldiers had come out onto the
balcony above the dance floor. More came into the ballroom through
the doorway. Security troops in powder-blue fatigues, black-helmeted,
their visors down. Kim
felt his mouth go dry. Something was wrong. The
soldiers formed a line along the edge of the balcony and along the
lower walls, covering the dancers with their weapons. Only a few of
their number went among the dancers, their visors up, looking from
face to face. Up above, on the balcony, a lieutenant began to read
out a warrant for the arrest of fifteen men. In the
ballroom there was disbelief and anger. One young man jostled a
Security guard and was brought down by a sharp blow with a rifle
butt. When the soldiers left the hall they took more than a dozen
young men, Lever and his friends among them. Kim,
watching, saw the anger in surrounding faces after the soldiers had
gone. More anger than he'd ever seen. And different, very different
from the anger of the Clay. This anger smoldered like red-hot ashes
fanned by a breath. It was a deep-rooted, enduring anger. Beside
Kim a young man's face was distorted, black with rage. "He'll
pay! The bastard will pay for this!" Others gathered about him,
shouting, their fists clenched, the dance forgotten. Kim
stood a moment longer, then turned away, going quickly from the hall.
Things had changed. Suddenly, dramatically, the rules had changed,
and he was no longer safe here. He passed through, glancing from side
to side, seeing only outrage on the faces of those he passed. Outside
he walked past the waiting sedans and on, out across the darkness
toward the transit. In a
sober moment they would remember. Old Man Lever would remember. And
in his anger, who knew how he would act? It was a time for taking
sides, and he was Li Yuan's man. He.
saw soldiers up ahead, guarding the transit entrance, and began to
run, knowing his safety lay with them. But nearer the barrier he
turned and looked back at the house, remembering the dresses bobbing
to the music, the swish of lace in the air. And a circle of old men,
offering him the earth. CHAPTER
THIRTEEN
In
the Open TOLONEN
STOOD at Haavikko's bedside, looking down at him, a faint smile on
his lips. It had been only two days since his own operation and he
was still feeling weak, but he had had to come. A
nurse brought him a chair and he sat, content to wait until the young
man woke. His new arm ached at the shoulder, despite the drugs, but
it was feeling better than it had. Besides,
he was alive. Thanks to Haavikko, he was alive. The
nurse hovered but he waved her away, then settled to watch the
sleeping man. All
his life he had been self-reliant. All his life he had fought his own
fights, keeping himself always one step ahead of his enemies. But now
he was growing old. At last he had proof of it. His old eyes had
missed the discrepancy of the color codings on the soldiers' chests,
his reactions had been just a fraction of a second too slow, and he
had lost his arm as a result. Almost his life. He
smiled, studying the young man. Haavikko was cradled in bandages,
special healants creating new skin growth on his badly burned
shoulder and back. Tolonen
shook his head as if to clear it, feeling both sad and happy at once.
He had been told what Haavikko had done for him, like a son for a
father; risking himself when all bonds of duty or obligation had long
ago been severed between them. Yes,
he had sorely misjudged the boy; had believed him other than he was. Haavikko
stirred and opened his eyes. "Marshal. . ." He made to sit
up, then winced and eased back, closing his eyes again. The blast had
removed most of the skin at the top of his back and taken off his
ear. "Lie
still, boy. Please. You need your rest." Haavikko
opened his eyes again and looked up at the Marshal. "Your arm .
. ." he said, clearly pained by the sight. Tolonen
laughed gruffly. "You like it? It hurts a bit just now, but that
doesn't matter. I'm alive, that's the thing." He sat back, his
right hand reaching up to scratch at the stubble on his left cheek;
an awkward, embarrassed gesture, indicative of just how hard the old
man found it to deal with this. The warmth he felt toward the other
man—that depth of reawakened feeling—brought him close to
tears. He looked away a moment, controlling himself, then finished
what he had meant to say. "Thanks to you, Axel. Thanks to you." Axel
smiled. His hands lay above the sheets. Long, fine hands, undamaged
in the incident. Tolonen took one and squeezed it. "I
misjudged you, boy. I—" Haavikko
shook his head, a slight grimace of pain crossing his face. "It
doesn't matter. Really, sir. I..." He turned his head slightly,
looking across the room to the peg where his clothes hung. "But
there's something you must know. Something important." Tolonen
smiled. "Rest, my boy. There's plenty of time for other things .
. ." "No
. . ." Haavikko swallowed dryly. "Over there, in my tunic,
there's a package. I was bringing it to you when it happened. I'd
pieced it all together." Tolonen
shook his head, puzzled. "Pieced what together?" Haavikko
looked up, pleading with his eyes. "Just look. Please, sir. You
don't have to read it all right now. Later, perhaps, when you feel up
to it. But promise me you'll read it. Please, Marshal." Tolonen
let go of Haavikko's hand, got up heavily, and walked across the
room. Just as Haavikko had said, there was a small package in the
inner pocket of the tunic. He tugged at it until it came free, then
went back, taking his seat again. He
held the package out, a query in his eyes. "So what is this?" Haavikko
swallowed again and Tolonen, taking the hint, put the package down
and picked up the glass by the bedside, giving Haavikko a few sips. "Well?" "Long
ago you asked me to do something for you—to make a list of
people who might have been involved in the assassination of Minister
Lwo Kang. Do you remember?" Tolonen
laughed. "Gods! That must have been eleven years ago. And you
did that?" Haavikko
made the smallest movement of his head. "That's how it began.
But I extended it. I kept a record of anything I felt wasn't
right—anything that didn't quite make sense to me. Then,
recently, I teamed up with Kao Chen and your man Karr." "Good
men," Tolonen said, nodding his approval. "Yes."
Haavikko smiled, then grew serious again. "Anyway, what you have
there is the result of our investigations. My original list, my
notes, and a few other things. Computer files. Hologram images." Tolonen
lifted the package and turned it in his hand; then he set it down on
his knee and reached out to take Haavikko's hand again. "And you
want me to look at it?" "Yes.
. ." Tolonen
considered a moment. He had promised Jelka he would dine with her
later on, but maybe he would cancel that. He could always say he was
tired. Jelka would understand. He smiled broadly at Haavikko. "Of
course. It's the very least I can do." Haavikko
looked back at him, his eyes moist. "Thank you," he said,
his voice almost a whisper. "Thank you, sir." Tolonen
sat clasping the young man's hand. The ache in his left shoulder was
much stronger now. It was probably time for his medication, but he
felt loath to leave Haavikko. "I
must go now," he said softly. "But I promise you I'll look
at your files. Later. When it's quiet." Haavikko
smiled, his eyes closed. Slowly his mouth relaxed. In a moment he was
sleeping. Tolonen
placed the young man's hand gently back on the sheets, then got to
his feet stiffly. Twice lucky, he thought, remembering the attack at
Nanking spaceport. He made his way across, then turned, looking back,
noticing for the first time just how pale Haavikko was. He stood
there a moment longer, absently scratching at the dressing at his
shoulder, then desisted, annoyed with himself. He
looked down at the silver arm and sighed, remembering how Jelka had
fussed when she'd first seen it. But there was steel in her too. She
had borne up bravely. So, too, this young man. Oh, he would make
things up. He was determined on it. He would find a way of making
things right again. Tolonen
yawned, then, smiling sadly to himself, turned away, leaving the
young officer to sleep. TSU ma
lifted the dish and brushed his thumb across its silken, contoured
surface. It was a perfect piece; black lacquer carved with two water
fowls against a background of lotus. Fourteenth century, from the
last years of the Yuan Dynasty. He smiled to himself, then turned to
face Li Yuan. "Two
years they would labor to make one of these. Two years of a master
craftsman's life. And at the end, this. This small fragment of dark
perfection." Li
Yuan looked across at him, turning from the view of Rio de Janeiro's
bay and Sugarloaf Mountain beyond. He had not been listening, but he
saw the lacquered dish in Tsu Ma's hands and nodded. "That piece
is beautiful. Hou Ti had many fine things." Tsu Ma
held his eyes a moment. "These days some think of them as
primitive, ignorant men. Barbarians. But look at this. Is this
barbarian?" He shook his head slowly, his eyes returning to the
dish. "As if the mere passage of years could make our species
more sophisticated." Li
Yuan laughed and came closer. "Your point, Tsu Ma?" Behind
them, at the far side of the long room, the rest of the Seven were
gathered, talking among themselves. Tsu Ma
put the dish down, letting his fingers rest in its shallow bowl, then
looked up at Li Yuan again. "Just that there are those here who
think the future better than the past simply because it is the
future. Who believe that change is good simply because it is change.
They have no time for comparisons. Nor for the kind of values
expressed in the simplicity of this dish. No time for craft, control,
or discipline." He lowered his voice a fraction. "And I
find that disturbing, Li Yuan. Dangerous, even." Li
Yuan studied him a moment, then gave the barest nod of agreement.
They had covered much ground that morning, but nothing yet of true
significance. On the matters of the stewardships and the new
immortality drugs he had bowed like the reed before the wind, not
pushing his own viewpoint, merely ensuring that these matters were
not finalized. Let them play their games of evading death, he
thought; death would find them anyway, wherever they hid. As for the
other, there was time enough to force his view on that. "How
deep is this feeling?" Tsu Ma
considered a moment, then leaned toward Li Yuan. "Deep, Cousin.
Deep enough to trouble me." He looked past the younger man, out
beyond the window glass, seeing how the space between the bowl of
hills was plugged with the white of the City's walls. "They
would do away with certain restraints." He stretched his long
neck, lifting his chin, then looked directly at Li Yuan. "You'll
see. This afternoon. . ." The
early afternoon sunlight fell across Li Yuan's arm and shoulder. "It
is the illness of our time. Change and the desire for change. But I
had not thought—" Yuan smiled and broke off, seeing Chi
Hsing, the T'ang of the Australias, approach. The
two men nodded, acknowledging the newcomer. "Are
you not eating, cousins?" Chi Hsing smiled and turned, summoning
the waiters, then turned back. "Before we resume, there is a
matter I must raise with you. A change has been proposed to the
scheduled itinerary." "A
change?" Li Yuan said, raising his eyebrows slightly, but
heavily emphasising the word. Beside him Tsu Ma kept his amusement to
himself, staring back masklike at his fellow T'ang. Chi
Hsing was known for neither his intelligence nor his subtlety. In
that regard he was much more his mother's child than his father's. He
was a father now himself, of course. Two young sons, the eldest
barely two years old, had blessed his first marriage, changing him
considerably. He was less rash now than he'd been, and though he had
secretly applauded Li Yuan's purge of the Ping Tioo, he also had
misgivings about such actions. He feared for his sons, remembering
what had happened in the War with the Dispersionists. Vengeance was
fine, but now he wished only for peace. Peace.
So that he might see his sons grow to be men. Strong, fine men, as
his father had been. "Wang
Sau-leyan has made a request," he began, his eyes searching both
their faces. "And there are others here who wish to speak on the
matter." His eyes grew still, focused on Li Yuan. "Go
on, Cousin." Chi
Hsing bowed his head slightly. "He wishes to discuss the
arrests. The action you took in league with Wu Shih against the Young
Sons." It was
clear, by the way Chi Hsing stood there, that he expected Li Yuan to
refuse. Indeed, it was within Li Yuan's rights to refuse Wang's
request, as his father had done once before. But Li Yuan only smiled
politely. "I
have no objection to that. Do you, Tsu Ma?" "Not
I." Li
Yuan reached out and touched Chi Hsing's shoulder. "It is best,
after all, if these things are aired between us. In the open." Chi
Hsing nodded, still hesitant, as if he expected Li Yuan to change his
mind at any moment. Then, realizing he had achieved his end, he
smiled. "Good.
That's very good, Li Yuan. As you say, it is best. In the open."
He nodded again, this time decisively, then turned and went across to
where Wang Sau-leyan and their host, Hou Tung-po, T'ang of South
America, were standing. Wang listened a moment, then looked across at
Li Yuan, bowing his head slightly. "In
the open," said Tsu Ma beneath his breath. "You're like
your father, Yuan. Devious." Li
Yuan turned, surprised, then laughed, seeing the humor beneath the
surface of Tsu Ma's words. "Words are words, Tsu Ma. We must
bend and shape them to our needs." Tsu Ma
nodded, pleased with that. "So it is in these troubled times,
Cousin. But history shall judge us by our actions." wang
sau-leyan was leaning forward in his seat, his hands folded in his
lap, his big moon face looking from one to another as he spoke. He
seemed calm, relaxed, his voice soft and deep, persuasive in its
tones. Thus far he had said little that had not been said before, but
now he turned the conversation. "In
this room, as in the rooms of the Twenty-Nine and the mansions of the
Supernal, there are those who are questioning recent events. Some
with anger, some with sadness and misgivings. Others
fearfully, remembering things not long past. But every last one of
them is concerned, wondering where it will stop. For myself, I
believe it has already gone too far." Wu
Shih made to interrupt, but Wang raised his hand. "You will have
your say, Wu Shih, and 1 shall listen. But first hear me out. This
must be said, before it is too late for words." Tsu Ma
reached into the pocket of his jacket and took out a slender silver
case. "Then talk, Cousin. Let us hear what you have to say." There
was an unconcealed hostility in the words that surprised Li Yuan. He
watched Tsu Ma take a cheroot from the case, close it, and slip it
back into his pocket. "Thank
you, Cousin," said Wang, watching the older man light the
cheroot and draw the first breath from it. He smiled tightly, then
let his face fall blank again. "As I said, there is anger and
sadness and a great deal of fear. Unhealthy symptoms. Signs of a deep
and bitter hostility toward us." Wu
Shih grunted indignantly, but kept his silence. His cheeks burned red
and his eyes bored into the side of Wang's softly rounded face. "We
have sown a harvest of discontent," Wang went on. "1 say
we, because this affects us all. And yet I hesitate to use that
plural, because it suggests consensus on our part. Suggests a
commonly agreed-upon set of actions, discussed and debated here, in
Council, as has always been our way." He paused and looked about
him, shaking his head. "Instead I wake to find the world a
different place from when I slept. And myself every bit as surprised
as those who came begging audience, saying, 'Why is my son arrested?'
" In the
chair beside him, Hou Tung-po nodded his head vigorously. "So it
was for me. I was not notified, Li Yuan. Not consulted before you and
Wu Shih acted. A poor choice was left to me—to seem a scoundrel
or look a fool. Relations are bad between us and the Above. As bad as
at any time during the last ten years. We must act to defuse this
situation before it gets out of hand. We must make some gesture to
placate the Above." There
was a moment's silence, then Li Yuan spoke, his anger at Wang
Sau-leyan's criticism barely contained. "When
a man saves his brother's life, does he say first, 'Excuse me,
brother, I would save your life, is that all right with you?' No, he
acts, pushing his brother aside, out of the way of the falling rock.
He acts! I make no apologies for my actions. Nor for the lack of
consultation. Surprise was a necessity. I could not risk informing
anyone." He
stood, going to the center of their informal circle, looking down at
Wang Sau-leyan. "Perhaps
you relish death, Cousin Wang. For myself I would grow old in peace,
no dagger to my throat." Wang
laughed; a short, bitter laugh. "Oh yes, Li Yuan, you act like
one destined to live long. For while your enemies multiply, your
friends diminish." Li
Yuan smiled back at him tightly. "So it is in this world. But it
is better to trust one's friends and know one's enemies. Better to
act than to prevaricate." Wang
Sau-leyan glared back at Li Yuan, infuriated by his words, all
pretense of calm gone from him. "Ai yal—but must we
all suffer for your rashness, Cousin? Must vx. reap what you
sow? You sound like your dead brother—hotheaded!" For a
moment there was a tense silence, then Li Yuan gave a soft laugh.
"Hotheaded, you say?" He shook his head. "Not so,
Cousin. Not so. You ask for something to placate the Above, like a
woman begging for her son's life. Has it come to that? Are we so weak
we must beg for our existence? Are we not to crush what seeks
to destroy us? It seems you have changed your tune, Wang Sau-leyan,
for once you sought to lecture us ..." Wang
was shaking his head. "Young men, Li Yuan, that's all they are.
Young men. Misguided, overenthusiastic, that's all." Wang looked
beyond Li Yuan, a faint smile resting on his lips. "It would
defuse things if we let them go, and in time this thing would
certainly blow over." "Blow
over?" Li Yuan shook his head in disbelief. "What must they
do before you see it, Cousin? Must they hold the gun to your head?
This is no act of high spirits. This is revolution. Open rebellion.
Don't you understand? It begins with ideas and it ends with
bloodshed." He paused, then took a step closer, pointing down
at'Wang. "They would kill you, Wang Sau-leyan, T'ang of Africa,
and set themselves up in your place. Just as they killed your eldest
brothers. Or do you forget?" Li
Yuan stood there, breathing deeply, staring down at Wang Sau-leyan,
forcing him to meet his eyes. "Well?
Do you still want appeasement?" Wang nodded. "And
who else?" He looked at Hou Tung-po, then across to Chi Hsing.
Both nodded, though neither met his eyes. "And
you, Wei Feng? What do you counsel?" He turned, facing the aged
T'ang of East Asia. "You, surely, know the depths of this
problem." "You speak as if I had the casting vote, Li
Yuan." "You
have." It was Tsu Ma who answered for Li Yuan. Beside him Wu
Shih looked across, bowing his head in assent. Wei
Feng sighed and looked down. "You know what I feel," he
began, his low, toneless voice picking out each word slowly,
meticulously. "You know my dislikes, my prejudices." He
looked up at Li Yuan. "You must know, then, that what you did
pleased me greatly." He smiled sourly. "However, that is
not what is at issue here. What is at issue is our manner of
conducting ourselves, Li Yuan. Not the action itself—with which
I basically agree and for which I would support you at any other
time—but the way in which you acted. As Wang Sau-leyan
says, you acted without consulting us." He
paused, considering, then spoke again. "We are Seven, Li Yuan.
Not One, but Seven. In that lies our strength. For seven generations
now, our strength and the reason for peace in the world. For the
strength of our society. Break that cohesion and you break it all." "You
defer then, Wei Feng?" Wei
Feng nodded. "I say free the young men. Then do as Wang says.
Make the best of a bad lot and seek conciliation." For a
moment longer Li Yuan stood there, then he shrugged. "So be it,"
he said, looking across at Wang. "I will hand my prisoners over
to you, Cousin, to do with as you will." He
looked away, leaving it there, but in his head the words resounded.
Not One, but Seven. In that Ues our strength. He had never
questioned it before, but now, standing there amidst his peers, he
asked himself if it were really so. He
glanced at Wu Shih, seeing how the T'ang of North America was looking
down, his anger unexpressed, and he had his answer. The days of
unanimity were gone, and what had made the Seven such a force had
gone with them. What Wei Feng had said, that had been true once, back
in his father's time, but now? Seven
. . . the word was hollow now, the Great Wheel broken. It had died
with his father. Four against three—that was the new reality.
He looked across at Wang Sau-leyan, seeing the gleam of triumph in
his eyes and knew. It was finished. Here, today, it had ended. And
now they must find another path, another way of governing themselves.
That was the truth. But the truth could not be spoken. Not yet,
anyway, and certainly not here, in Council. He
smiled, suddenly relaxing as if a great weight had been taken from
his shoulders, and turned his head, meeting Tsu Ma's eyes, seeing the
light of understanding there. "Shall
we move on?" he said, looking about the circle of his fellow
T'ang. "Time presses and there's much to do." Yes,
he thought; but none of it matters now. From now on this is merely
play, a mask to hide our real intentions. For all the real decisions
will henceforth be made in secret. Out in
the open. He laughed, recognizing finally the full irony of
what he had said earlier, then turned, looking at Tsu Ma, and smiled,
seeing his smile returned strongly. Yes. So it would be from now on.
In the open . . . IT HAD
been summer in Rio. In Tongjiang it was winter. Li
Yuan stood on the terrace, looking out over the frozen lake. He wore
furs and gloves and thick leather boots, but his head was bare,
snowflakes settling in his fine, dark hair. Below him the slope was
deep in snow, while on the far shore the trees of the orchard formed
stark, tangled shapes against the white. He
looked up past the gentle slopes toward the distant mountains. Vast,
sharp-edged escarpments of rock speared the colorless sky. He
shivered and turned away, finding the bleakness of the view too close
to his present mood. He
looked across at the palace, the stables beyond. His men were waiting
on the verandah, talking among themselves beneath the great,
shuttered windows. They did not like it here, he knew. This openness
appalled them. They felt exposed, naked to all the primal things the
City shut out behind its walls, but for him only this was real. The
rest was but a game. He had
expected to find her here, or at least the memory of her, but there
was nothing. Only the place itself remained, robbed of its scents,
its vivid greenness, all human presence gone. As if all that had
happened here had never been. He
shivered and looked down at his feet. A leaf clung to the ankle of
his right boot. He removed his glove, stooped to pluck the wet and
blackened leaf, then straightened up, feeling the icy cold against
his flesh, the wetness in his palm. What did it all mean? He brushed
the leaf away and pulled his glove back on, turning to walk back to
the palace and the waiting transit. Nothing,
he decided. It meant nothing. He
flew southwest, over unbroken whiteness. Not snow this time but the
endless City, three thousand U without a break, until they
reached Kuang Chou, ancient Canton, at the mouth of the Pei River.
Then, for a while, there was the blue of the South China Sea, before
Hong Kong and to its southeast, the island of T'ai Yueh Shan, where
Yin Tsu had his estate. He had
put this off too long. But now it was time to see the child. To
bestow his gift upon his past-wife's son. Coded
signals passed between the ship and the estate's defense system; then
they came down, Yin Tsu greeting him in the hangar. He was kneeling,
his forehead pressed to the cold metal of the grid as Li Yuan stepped
down. Li
Yuan had changed clothes on the flight down, shedding his furs and
gloves and heavy boots in favor of thin satins of a fiery orange and
slippers of the finest kid. Approaching the old man he stopped,
lifting his foot. Yin
Tsu took the offered foot with care and kissed it once, then once
more before releasing it. "Yin
Tsu, once-father, please." He reached down and took the old
man's hand, helping him up. Only then did Yin Tsu look at him. "I
am honored by your visit, Chieh Hsia. Wnat may I do for you?" "Fei
Yen ... Is she still here with you?" The
old man nodded, his thin lips forming i'r ; faintest of
smiles. "Yes, Chieh Hsia. She is here. And the child." "Good.
Good." He hesitated a moment, feeling awkward, then spoke again.
"I'd like to see her. And . . . the child too. If she would see
me." "Please.
Come through." Yin Tsu led the way, half turned toward Li Yuan
in courtesy as he walked, bowed low, his hands held out but pressed
together in an attitude of the deepest respect. While
he waited for her, he thought of what he would say. He had not seen
her since the day he had insisted on the tests. Had she forgiven him
for that? He
gritted his teeth, thinking on it, then turned to find her standing
there. She was wearing a pale lemon-colored dress, her dark hair
hanging loose about her shoulders. The child was not with her. "I—"
he began, but the sight of her struck him dumb. She seemed more
beautiful than ever, her face stronger, her breasts much fuller than
he remembered them. As he had turned to face her, she had bowed and
now rested on one knee, her head lowered, awaiting his command. "Fei
Yen," he said, but the words came out so softly that she did not
hear them. He went across and touched her gently on the crown of her
head, wanting to kiss her there, his cheek muscle twitching with the
tension he felt this close to her. He stepped back, straightening up.
"Get up, Fei Yen. Please . . ." She
got up slowly, her dark eyes filled with awe of him. She had seen how
powerful he was; how his servants laid their necks down for him to
tread upon. Had seen and was afraid. This was not the boy she had
known. No, he was no longer a child, but a man: the cub a lion now,
dressed in flame. "You
look well," he said, aware of the inadequacy of the words. "I
wondered when you'd come. I knew you would." He
nodded, surprised by how subdued she sounded. So different from
before. "And the child?" "He's
fine." She looked away, biting her lip. "He's sleeping now.
Do you want to see him?" She glanced at him, aware of his
hesitation. "You don't have to. I know how you feel about all
this." Do
you? he thought; but he kept silent and simply nodded. "Han,"
she said. "1 called him Han. As you wished." She
was watching him; trying to see what he made of it. His cheek muscle
twitched once more and then lay still, his face a mask. "Come,"
she said after a moment, then led him down a high-ceilinged corridor
«| to the nursery. A girl
sat beside the cot, her hands in her lap. At the entrance of her
mistress she got up and bowed. Then she saw Li Yuan and abased
herself, as Yin Tsu had done. Fei Yen dismissed her hurriedly, then
turned to face Li Yuan again. "Don't
wake him, Yuan. He needs his sleep." He
nodded and went close, looking down at the baby from the side of the
cot. The
child lay on its side, one hand up to its mouth, the other resting
lightly against the bars at the side of the cot. A fine, dark down of
hair covered its scalp, while about its neck lay a monitoring strip,
the milky white band pulsing quickly, in time with the baby's
heartbeat. "But
he's so—so tiny I" Li Yuan laughed, surprised. The
baby's hands, his tiny, perfectly formed feet were like fine
sculpture. Like miniatures in tarnished ivory. "He's
not a month yet," she said, as if that explained the beauty of
the child. Li Yuan wanted to reach out and hold one of those tiny
hands; to feel its fingers stretch and close about his thumb. He
turned, looking at her, and suddenly all of the old bitterness and
love were there, impurely mixed in what he was feeling. He hated her
for this. Hated her for making him feel so much. Frustration made him
grit his teeth and push past her, the feeling overwhelming him,
making him want to cry out for the pain he felt. As it
had always been, he realized. It had always hurt him to be with her.
She took too much. Left him so little of himself. And that was wrong.
He could not be a T'ang and feel like this. No, it was better to feel
nothing than to feel so much. He stood with his back to her,
breathing deeply, trying to calm himself, to still the turmoil in his
gut and put it all back behind the ice. Where
it belonged. Where it had to belong. She
was silent, waiting for him. When he turned back, all trace of
feeling had gone from his face. He looked across at the cot and the
sleeping child, then back at her, his voice quiet, controlled. "I
want to give you something. For you and the child. It will be his
when he comes of age, but until that time it is yours to administer." She
lowered her head obediently. "I
want him to have the palace at Hei Shui." She
looked up, wide-eyed with surprise. "Li Yuan—" But he
had raised his hand to silence her. "The
documents are drawn up. I want no arguments, Fei Yen. It's little
enough compared to what he might have had." She
turned her head away, unable to disguise the moment's bitterness,
then nodded her acquiescence. "Good."
He turned, looking at the cot once more. "There will be an
allowance too. For both of you. You will not want for anything, Fei
Yen. Neither you nor he." "My
father—" she began, pride creeping back into her voice,
but she cut it off, holding her tongue. She knew he need do nothing.
The terms of the divorce were clear enough. Hers was the shame. In
her actions lay the blame for how things were. "Let
it be so, then," he said finally. "Your father shall have
the documents. And Han. . ." he said the name; said it and
breathed deeply afterward, a muscle jumping in his cheek. "Han
shall have Hei Shui." TOLONEN
LOOKED UP, his long face ashen, his gray eyes filled with a deep
hurt. For a time he stared sightlessly at the wall, then slowly shook
his head. "I
can't believe it," he said quietly, pushing the file away from
him. "I just can't believe it. Hans. . ." His mouth creased
into a grimace of pain. "What will I say?. . . What will his
father say?" Then he thought of Jelka and the betrothal and
groaned. "Gods, what a mess. What a stinking, horrible mess this
is." The
file on Hans Ebert was a slender dossier, not enough to convict a man
in law, but enough to prove its case by any other measure. To an
advocate it would have been merely a mass of circumstantial evidence,
but that evidence pointed in one direction only. Tolonen
sighed, then rubbed at his eyes. Hans had been clever. Too clever, in
fact; for the sum total of his cleverness was a sense of absence, of
shadow where there should have been substance. Discrepancies in
GenSyn funds. Payments to fellow officers. Unexplained absences in
Ebert's service record—missing hours and days that, in three
cases, linked up with dates given them by DeVore's man Reid.
Misplaced files on five of the eighteen Young Sons arrested on Li
Yuan's instructions only a day or so ago, all of which had, at some
point, passed through Ebert's hands. Then there was the statement
given by the girl in the Ebert household, Golden Heart, and, finally,
the holograms. The
holograms seemed, on the surface of it, to be the most conclusive
evidence, though in law, he knew, they held no real significance. It
had been successfully claimed long ago that photographic and
holographic evidence was unreliable, since GenSyn could make a
perfect duplicate of anyone. This and the whole question of
image-verification had relegated such "information" to a
secondary status in law. But this was not something that would ever
see a courtroom. Wider issues were at stake here. And older codes of
conduct. In one
of the holograms Hans could be seen standing on the verandah of a
skiing lodge, looking down at a figure on the snow below him. That
figure was DeVore. They were grainy shots, taken from a narrow
triangulation—perhaps as little as twenty degrees—and
consequently the far side of the three-dimensional image blurred into
perfect whiteness; but that incompleteness itself suggested that it
was genuine, taken with two hand-helds from a distance, who knew for
what purpose— maybe blackmail. The holograms had been found in
storage in DeVore's stronghold, almost as though they had been left
to be found. In itself this might have led Security to discount them
as a subtle attempt to undermine Ebert's position, but added to the
other matters they we're significant. No,
there was no real proof, but the circumstantial evidence was
considerable. Ebert
had been working with the rebels; providing them with funds; meeting
with them; passing on information, and covering their tracks where
necessary. Tolonen
closed the file, then sat back, his hands trembling. He had always
trusted Ebert. When he had asked Haavikko to investigate he had been
thinking of three other officers. For him the question of Hans
Ebert's loyalty had never arisen. Not until this evening. He
shook his head. There were tears in his eyes now; tears running down
his furrowed cheeks. He gritted his teeth, tightening the muscles in
his face, but still the tears came. There was only one thing to do.
He would have to go and see Klaus. After all, this was Family. A
matter of honor. He let
out a shuddering sigh, then shook his head, remembering. Jelka ... He
had promised Jelka that he would dine with her at home tonight. He
glanced at the timer on the wall, then pulled himself up out of the
chair, throwing the file down on the bed. He was late already, but
she would understand. He would call Helga and explain. And maybe send
Jelka a note by messenger. He
shivered, feeling old beyond his years. He had been so wrong. So very
wrong. And not just once but twice now. First with DeVore and then .
. . "Ach.
. ." he muttered, then turned, angry with himself for his
weakness, pressing the button to summon his aide. He would bathe and
dress and go to see his old friend. For a father should know his son.
Whatever kind of creature he was. IT was
JUST after three when Jelka woke. The apartment was in darkness,
silent. For a while she lay there, trying to settle back into sleep,
then abandoned the idea. She
slipped on a robe and went to her father's room, forgetting for a
moment. His bed was empty, the room tidy. Of course . . . She moved
on, pausing outside her aunt and uncle's room, hearing their soft
snoring from within. In the kitchen she found a hand-written note
resting against the coffee machine. The sheet was folded in half, her
name written on the front in her father's neat, upright hand. She sat
at the table and read it through, then smiled, thinking of him. She
always felt such fear for him when he was out on business. More so
since the latest attempt on his life. She
looked about her at the dark forms of the kitchen, feeling suddenly
tense, restless. That sense of restlessness seemed almost her natural
state these days. That and an underlying desire to break things. But
she told no one of these feelings. She knew they had to do with Hans
and the forthcoming marriage, but there was little she could do to
salve them. One
thing she could do, however, was exercise. The gym was locked,
but unknown to her father, she had memorized the combination. She
punched it in, then went through, into darkness, the doors closing
behind her automatically. They
had strengthened the walls since the attack on her and put in a
special locking system, but otherwise the gym was much as it had
been. She went across to the panel on the wall and switched on three
of the spotlights over the wall bars, then shrugged off her robe and
began to exercise, knowing that no one could hear her once the doors
were closed. There
was a wall-length mirror at the far end of the gym. As she went
through her routine, she caught glimpses of her naked figure as it
moved between the three separate beams of light, her limbs flashing
like spears of ice, her body twisting and turning intricately. And as
she danced she felt the tension drain from her, deriving a definite
pleasure from her body's precise and disciplined movements. Faster
she went and faster, like a dervish, crying out in delight as her
feet pounded the floor, flicking her over in a somersault, then into
a tight, high leap. And
afterward she stood there, breathing deeply, trying not to laugh. If
he could only see me now . . . She shook her head, then drew her hair
back from her face. She
had begun a second routine when something caught her eye. She slowed,
then stopped, facing the door, her whole body tensed. The
panel above the door was pulsing steadily. A feverish, silent pulse
that meant one thing only. There were intruders in the apartment. LEHMANN
READ the note quickly, then crumpled it in his hand and threw it
aside. Tolonen led a charmed life. Three times they had tried for him
now and three times they had failed. Tonight, for instance, Ebert had
assured him that he would be at home, but for some reason he had not
come. Lehmann cursed softly, then turned, going into the room where
they held the two captives. They
lay on the bed, facedown, their plump, naked bodies bound hand and
foot. Beside them the two Han waited. "Anything?"
he asked, seeing the huge welts on the prisoners' backs, the burns on
their arms where they had been tortured. "Nothing,"
one of the Han answered him. "Nothing at all." Lehmann
stood there a moment, wondering if he should try something more
persuasive, then shrugged and gave the order, turning away, letting
them get on with it. Outside,
in the corridor, he paused and looked about, sniffing the air.
Something nagged at him. They had searched the apartment thoroughly
and there was no sign of the girl, so maybe she had gone. But
then why the note? He
turned and looked down the corridor at the door to the gym. In there?
he wondered. It was unlikely, but then so was the possibility that
the girl had gone. Her bed had been slept in, even if the covers were
cold. He
stood at the control panel, studying it. It was a new doorlock,
specially strengthened. Without the code there was no way of opening
it. He was about to turn away when he realized that he didn't have to
get inside to find out if she was there. There was a security
viewscreen. Which meant that there were cameras inside. It
took only a moment to work out how to operate the screen, then he was
staring into darkness, the cameras looking for forms among the
shadows. He scanned the whole room once, then went back carefully,
double-checking. Nothing. There was no one in the room. He
switched off the screen, satisfied now that she had gone. It was a
shame. She would have made the perfect hostage. But as it was, the
death of Tolonen's brother and sister-in-law would hurt the old man
badly. He
went back to where his men were waiting. They had finished now and
were ready to go. He looked down at the corpses dispassionately,
feeling nothing for them. Directly or indirectly they served a system
that was rotten. This, then, was their fate. What they deserved. He
leaned forward and spat in the face of the dead man, then looked up,
meeting the eyes of the Han. "All
right. We've finished here. Let's go." They
nodded, then filed out past him, their weapons sheathed, their eyes
averted. Lehmann looked about him, then drew his knife and followed
them out into the corridor. JELKA
waited in the darkness, fearing the worst, her cheeks wet, her
stomach tight with anxiety. This was the nightmare come again. And
this time it was much worse than before, for this time she could do
nothing. Nothing but crouch there by the locked door, waiting. In the
past hour she learned how dreadful a thing inaction was—far
worse than the terror of hiding. When she had been balanced on the
perch above the camera it had been somehow easier—much
easier—than the awiul limbo of not-knowing that came afterward.
Then she could think to herself, "In a few moments this will be
over, the cameras will stop moving and I can drop to the floor
again." But the waiting was different. Horribly different. The
very quality of time changed subtly, becoming the implement by which
she tortured herself, filling the darkness with her vile imaginings. In the
end her patience broke and she went out, afraid that they would still
be there, waiting silently for her, but unable to stay in the gym a
moment longer. Outside
it was dark, silent. A strange smell hung in the air. She went slowly
down the corridor, feeling her way, crouching warily, prepared to
strike out with hand or foot, but there was nothing. Only her fear. At the
first door she stopped, sniffing the air. The smell was stronger
here, more sickly than in the corridor. She gritted her teeth and
went inside, placing her feet carefully, staring into the darkness,
trying to make out forms. There
were vague shapes on the floor close to her. She leaned toward them,
then jerked her head back, giving a small cry, unable to stop
herself. Even in the darkness she could tell. Could see the wire
looped tightly about their throats. She
backed away, horrified, gasping for breath, her whole body shaking
violently, uncontrollably. They were dead. She
turned and began to run, but her legs betrayed her. She stumbled, and
her outstretched hands met not the hard smoothness of the floor but
the awful, yielding softness of dead flesh. She shrieked and
scrambled up, then fell again, her horror mounting as she found
herself tangled among the bodies that littered the floor. She
closed her eyes and reached out, taking the wall as her guide, small
sounds of brute disgust forming at the back of her throat as she
forced herself to tread over them. She
went out into the dimly lit corridor. The outside barrier was
unmanned, the elevator empty. She stood there a moment, beside the
open doors, then went inside and pressed to go down. It was the same
at the bottom of the deck. There were no guards anywhere, as if the
whole contingent had been withdrawn. She went into the control center
for the deck and sat at the console, trying to work out how to
operate the board. Her first few attempts brought no response, then
the screen lit up and a soft MekVoc asked for her Security code. She
stammered the number her father had made her memorize, then repeated
it at the machine's request. At once a face filled the central
screen. "Nu
shi Tolonen," the duty officer said, recognizing her at once.
"What is it? You look—" "Listen!"
she said, interrupting him. "There are no guards. The apartment
has been attacked. They've—" She bit it off, unable to
say, yet it seemed he understood. "Stay
where you are. I'll inform the General at once. We'll get a special
unit over to you within the next ten minutes." He was leaning
out of screen as he spoke, tapping a scramble code into the machine
next to him. Then he turned back, facing Jelka again. "All
right. They're on their way. The General will contact you directly.
Stay by the board." He paused and drew a breath. "How long
ago did this happen?" "About
an hour." She shuddered, trying not to think of what she had
left back up the levels. "I think they've gone now. But there
are . . ." She swallowed dryly, then continued, steeling herself
to say it. "There are bodies. My aunt and uncle. Some others. I
don't know who." She took a shuddering breath, so close to tears
again that she found it difficult to control herself. "Listen
to me, Jelka. Do exactly what I say. There should be a medical
cupboard in the restroom next to you. You'll find some tranquilizers
there. Take two. Only two. Then come back to the board and stay
there. All right?" She
nodded and went off to do as she was told, but then she stopped and
turned, looking back at the screen. Why was there no one here? Where
was the guard unit? The pattern was all too familiar. Like the
attack on the Wiring Project that time. It hit
her suddenly. This wasn't like the other attack on her. This had been
set up. From inside. Someone had given the order for the unit to pull
out. Someone at the top. Which
meant that she had to get out. Right away. Before they came for her. Even
as she turned and looked, the picture on the screen changed. Hans
Ebert's face appeared, red-eyed, his cheeks unshaven. He had been
summoned from his bed. "Jelka? Is that you? Come closer. Come
over to the board." In a
trance she went across and stood there, staring down at the screen. "Stay
where you are. And don't worry. I'll be with you just as soon as I
can." She
stood there, a cold certainty transfixing her. Then, as his face
vanished from the screen, she reached across and cut the connection.
She laughed, a cold bitter laughter, then, not looking back, made her
way across to the transit and went inside, pressing the down button. IT w a
S T E n minutes after four when Tolonen got to the Ebert Mansion. One
of the goat creatures greeted him and ushered him through to the
study. It bowed low, then, in a deep, burred voice, excused itself
while it went to fetch its master. A moment later another of the
creatures entered the room; taller, gaunter than the first, its dress
immaculate. It came across to where the Marshal stood and asked him
what he would have to drink. "Nothing,
thank you," he answered, not looking at the beast. "Would
you like something to eat, Marshal?" It
stood close to him, almost at his elbow. He could hear its breathing,
smell its heavy musk beneath the artifice of its cologne. "No.
Now leave me," he said, waving it away. "Is
there anything I can do for you, Excellency?" it persisted,
seeming not to have heard what he had said nor to have seen his
gesture of dismissal. Tolonen
turned and shook his head, meeting the creature's pink eyes. He had
not noticed before how repulsive the creatures were; how vile their
combination of sophistication and brutality. "I'm sorry,"
he said tightly, controlling the irritation he was feeling. "But
please leave me alone. I want nothing, I assure you." He
watched it go, then shuddered, wondering if this would be the last
time he would come here; whether by this he ended it all between
himself and his oldest friend. He looked around, trying to distract
himself, aware that the moment was drawing close, but it was no good:
the words he had come to say ran on inside his head, like an awful,
unrelenting litany. He
hadn't long to wait. Klaus Ebert had doused his face, put on a robe,
and come down. He pushed the far doors open and strode into the room,
smiling, his arms out to welcome his friend. "You're
damned early, Knut, but you're as welcome as ever." Ebert
clasped Tolonen to him, then released him, standing back. "What
brings you here at this hour, Knut? All's well with you and yours, I
hope?" Tolonen
smiled wanly, touched more than ever by the warmth and openness of
the greeting, but the smile was fragile. Underlying it was a
bitterness that he found hard to contain. He nodded, then found his
voice. "They were well when I left them, Klaus." He
drew a breath, then shook his head once, violently, his face muscles
tightening into a grimace. "I rehearsed the words, but I can't.
. ." He straightened his back, controlling his emotions. Then,
with his right hand, he took the file from beneath his artificial arm
and handed it across. Ebert
frowned. "What's this, Knut?" He searched his friend's face
for explanations, troubled now, but could find nothing there. His
broad lips formed a kind of shrug, then he turned and went to his
desk, pulling open the top drawer and taking out a small case. He
sat, setting the file down on the broad desktop, then opened the case
and drew out a pair of old-fashioned spectacles, settling them on the
bridge of his nose. He
opened the file and began to read. Tolonen
stood on the far side of the desk, watching Ebert's face as he read.
He had written out a copy of the file in his own hand, taking direct
responsibility for the matter. After
a moment Ebert looked up at him, his eyes half-lidded. "I don't
understand this, Knut. It says . . ." He laughed briefly,
awkwardly, then shook his head, watching Tolonen carefully all the
while. "You wouldn't. . ." He
looked down, then immediately looked up again, his mouth making the
first motion of speech but saying nothing. There was a strange
movement in his face as he struggled toward realization—a
tightening of his lips, a brief flash of pain in his eyes. Tolonen
stood silently, his right fist clenched tight, the nails digging into
the soft palm, his own face taut with pain, waiting. Ebert
looked down again, but now there was a visible tremor in his hand as
it traced the words, and after a moment a tear gathered, then fell
from his nose onto the sheet below. He turned the page and read on,
the trembling spreading to his upper arms and shoulders. When he had
finished he closed the folder slowly and took off his glasses before
looking up at Tolonen. His eyes were red now, tear-rimmed, and his
face had changed. "Who
else knows of this, Knut?" Ebert's
voice was soft. His eyes held no hatred of his old friend, no blame,
only a deep, unfathomable hurt. Tolonen
swallowed. "Three of us now." "And
Li Yuan? Does he know yet?" Tolonen
shook his head. "This is family, Klaus. Your son." The
man behind the desk considered that, then nodded slowly, a small sad
smile forming on his lips. "I thank you, Knut. I..." The
trembling in his hands and arms returned. Then something broke in the
old man and his face crumpled, his mouth opening in a silent howl of
pain, the lower jaw drawn back. He pressed his palms into the desk's
surface, trying to still the shaking, to control the pain that
threatened to tear him apart. "Why?" he said at
last, looking up at the Marshal, his eyes beseeching him. "What
could he possibly have wanted that he didn't have?" Tolonen
shrugged. He had no answer to that. No understanding of it. At
that moment the door at the far end of the study opened. One of the
goat-creatures stood there, a tray of drinks in one hand. For a
second or two Klaus Ebert did nothing, then he turned in his seat and
yelled at the beast. "Get
out, you bloody thing! Get out!" It
blanched, then turned and left hurriedly. There was the sound of
breaking glass in the hallway outside. Ebert
turned back to face the Marshal, breathing deeply, his face a deep
red. "How long have I, Knut? How long before Li Yuan has to
know?" Tolonen
shivered. They both knew what had to be done. "Two days,"
he said quietly. "I can give you two days." Ebert
nodded, then sat back in his chair, clasping his hands together
tightly. "Two days," he repeated, as if to himself, then
looked up at Tolonen again. "I'm sorry, Knut. Sorry for Jelka's
sake." "And
I." Tolonen
watched him a moment longer, then turned and left, knowing that there
was nothing more to be said. His part in this was ended, his duty
discharged; but for once he felt anything but satisfaction. there
WERE FIRES on the hillside. Bodies lay unmoving on the snow. In the
skies above the mountains the dark, knifelike shapes of Security
battleships moved slowly eastward, searching out any trace of warmth
in the icy wasteland. In the
control room of the flagship sat Hans Ebert, Li Yuan's General. He
was unshaven and his eyes were red-rimmed from lack of sleep. His
uniform was undone at the collar and he had his feet up on the
console in front of him. Above him a bank of nine screens showed the
landscape down below. Over the image on the central screen ran bright
red lines of data. From time to time a map would flash up, showing
the current extent of the sweep. Hans
watched the screens vacantly, tired to the core. There were drugs he
might have taken to ameliorate his condition, but he had chosen to
ignore them, feeding his bitter disappointment. There
were five others in the low-ceilinged room with him, but all were
silent, wary of their commander's dark mood. They went about their
tasks deftly, quietly, careful not to draw his attention. Eight
strongholds had been taken. Another five had been found abandoned.
DeVore's network was in tatters, more than three thousand of his men
dead. What Karr had begun, he, in the space of six short hours, had
finished. Moreover, Jelka was gone, probably dead, and all his dreams
with her. His dreams of being king. King of the world. "The
lodge is up ahead, sir!" He
looked up sharply, then took his feet down from the desk. "Good!"
He bit the word out savagely, then relented. He turned, looking at
the young officer who had reported it to him. "Thanks . . ." The
officer saluted and turned smartly away. Ebert sat a moment longer,
then hauled himself up onto his feet and went down the narrow
corridor and out into the cockpit. Staring out through the broad,
thickly slatted screen, he could see the mountain up ahead, the lodge
high up on its western slopes. It was
a mere twelve months since he had met DeVore here, and now he was
forced to return, the architect of his own undoing, following his
T'ang's explicit orders. Silently he cursed Li Yuan. Cursed the whole
damn business, his irritation and frustration rising to fever pitch
as he stood there, watching the lodge draw closer. They
touched down less than half a li away, the twin turrets of the
battleship pointed toward the lodge. Hans suited up then went down,
onto the snow. He crossed the space slowly, a lonely figure in black,
holding the bulky gun with both hands, the stock tucked into his
shoulder. Fifty paces from the verandah he stopped, balancing the
gun's barrel across his left forearm and flicking off the safety.
Then, without a word, he emptied the cartridge into the side of the
lodge. The
explosions were deafening. In seconds the lodge was a burning ruin,
debris falling everywhere, sizzling in the snow as it fell; the
concussions echoing back and forth between the mountains, starting
small slides. He waited a moment longer, the weapon lowered, watching
the flames, then turned and walked back, the heavy gun resting
loosely on his shoulder. CHAPTER
FOURTEEN
The Shattered Land Klaus
EBERT waited in his study for his son. He had dismissed his servants
and was alone in the huge, dimly lit room, his face expressionless.
The file lay on the desk behind him, the only object on the big
leather-topped desk. It had been fifteen hours since Tolonen's visit
and he had done much in that time; but they had been long, dreadful
hours, filled with foul anticipation. Hans
had been summoned twice. The first time he had sent word that he was
on the T'ang's business and could not come, the second that he would
be there within the hour. Between the two had been the old man's
curtly worded message, "Come now, or be nothing to me." A bell
rang in the corridor outside, signal that his son had arrived. Ebert
waited, his feet apart, his hands clasped behind his back. He was the
picture of strength, of authority, his short gray hair combed back
severely from his high forehead, but his gray-green eyes were
lifeless. There
were footsteps on the tiled floor outside, then a knock on the great
oak door. Hans entered, followed by two young lieutenants. He crossed
the room and stood there, only an arm's length from his father. The
two officers stood by the door, at ease. "Well,
Father?" There was a trace of impatience, almost of insolence in
the young man's tone. Klaus
Ebert narrowed his eyes and looked past his son at the two
lieutenants. "This is family business," he said to them.
"Please leave us." There
was a moment's uncertainty in their faces. They looked to each other
but made no move to go. Ebert stared at them a moment, then looked to
his son for explanation. "They're
under my direct orders, Father. They're not to leave me. Not for a
moment." His voice was condescending now, as if he were
explaining something to an inferior. Ebert
looked at his son, seeing things he had never noticed before, the
arrogance of his bearing, the slight surliness in the shapes his
mouth formed, the lack of real depth in his clear blue eyes. It was
as if he looked at you, but not into you. He saw only
surfaces; only himself, reflected in others. He
felt something harden at the core of him. This was his son. This
creature. He hissed out a long breath, his chest feeling
tight; then he started forward, shouting at the two officers. "Get
out, damn you! Now! Before I throw you out!" There
was no hesitation this time. They jerked as if struck, then turned,
hurrying from the room. Klaus stared at the closed door a moment then
turned, looking at his son. "There
was no need for that." "There
was every need!" he barked, and saw his son flinch
slightly. "1 summon you and you excuse yourself. And then you
have the nerve to bring your popinjay friends—" "They're
officers—" Hans began, interrupting, but the old man cut
him off with a sharp gesture of his hand. "Your.
. . friends." He turned to face his son, no longer
concealing his anger. He bit the words out. "To bring them here,
Hans." He pointed at the floor. "Here, where only we
come." He took a breath, calming himself, then moved away, back
to the desk. From there he turned and looked back at his son. Hans
was looking away from him, his irritation barely masked. "Well?
What is it, Father?" The
words were sharp, abrasive. Hans glanced at his father then resumed
his rigid stance, his whole manner sullen, insolent, as if answering
to a superior officer he detested. So it
has come to this? Ebert thought, growing still, studying his son. He
looked down at the file and gritted his teeth. But he didn't need the
Marshal's carefully documented evidence. All that he needed was there
before him, for his own eyes to read. "Well?"
the young man insisted. "You've summoned me from my duties,
threatened to withhold from me what is mine by right, and insulted my
officers. I want to know why, Father. What have I done to warrant
this treatment?" Ebert
laughed bitterly. "My son," he said, weighting the second
word with all the! irony he could muster; but what he felt was hurt—a
deep, almost overwhelming feeling of hurt—and a sense of
disillusionment that threatened to unhinge his mind. He stood up and
moved away from the desk, circling his son until he stood-; with his
back to the door. "What
have you done, Hans? What have you done?" The
young man turned, facing his father, his fists clenched at his sides.
He seemed barely in control of himself. "Yes, what have I
done?" Ebert pointed across at the desk. "See that file?" "So?"
Hans made no move to look. "You could have sent it to me. I
would have read it." Ebert
shook his head. "No, Hans. I want you to read it now."
There was a small movement in the young man's face, a moment's doubt,
and then it cleared. He nodded and turned, taking his father's seat. Ebert
went to the door and locked it, slipping the key into his pocket.
Hans was reading the first page, all color drained from his face.
Why? the old man asked himself for the thousandth time that
day. But in reality he knew. Selfishness. Greed. A cold
self-interest. These things were deeply rooted in his son. He looked
at him, his vision doubled, seeing both his son and the stranger who
sat there wearing the T'ang's uniform. And, bitterly, he recognized
the source. Berta,
he thought. Yfou're Berta's child. Hans
closed the file. For a moment he was silent, staring down at the
unmarked cover of the folder, then he looked up, meeting his fathers
eyes. "So . . ."he said. There was sober calculation in his
eyes: no guilt or regret, only a simple cunning. "What now,
Father?" Ebert
kept the disgust he felt from his voice. "You make no denial?"
"Would you believe me if I did?" Hans sat back, at ease
now. The old man shook his head. Hans
glanced at the file, then looked back at his father. "Who else
knows, besides Tolonen?" "His
one-time lieutenant, Haavikko." Ebert moved slowly, crossing the
room in a half-circle that would bring him behind his son. "Then
Li Yuan has yet to be told?" He nodded. Hans
seemed reassured. "That's good. Then I could leave here this
evening." He turned in his seat, watching his father's slow
progress across the room toward him. "I could take a ship and
hide out among the Colony planets." Ebert
stopped. He was only paces from his son. "That's what you want,
is it? Exile? A safe passage?" Hans
laughed. "What else? I can't argue with this." He brushed
the file with the fingertips of his left hand. "Li Yuan would
have me killed if I stayed." Ebert
took another step. He was almost on top of his son now. "And
what if I said that that wasn't good enough? What if I said no? What
would you do?" The
young man laughed uncomfortably. "Why should you?" He
leaned back, staring up at his father, puzzled now. Ebert
reached out, placing his hand gently on his son's shoulder. "As
a child I cradled you in my arms, saw you learn to walk and utter
your first, stumbling words. As a boy you were more to me than all of
this. You were my joy. My delight. As a man I was proud of you. You
seemed the thing I'd always dreamed of." Hans
licked at his top lip, then looked down. But there was no apology.
"Shall I go?" The
old man ignored the words. The pressure of his hand increased. His
fingers gripped and held. Reaching out, he placed his other hand
against Hans's neck, his thumb beneath the chin. Savagely, he pushed
Hans's head up, forcing him to look into his face. When he spoke, the
words were sour, jagged-edged. "But now all that means nothing."
He shook his head, his face brutal, pitiless. "Nothing! Do you
hear me, Hans.7" Hans
reached up to free himself from his father's grip, but the old man
was unrelenting. His left hand slipped from the shoulder to join the
other about his son's neck. At the same time he leaned forward,
bearing down on the younger man, his big hands tightening their grip,
his shoulder muscles straining. Too
late the young man realized what was happening. He made a small,
choked sound in his throat, then began to struggle in the chair, his
legs kicking out wildly, his hands beating, then tearing, at his
father's arms and hands, trying to break the viselike grip. Suddenly
the chair went backward. For a moment Hans was free, sprawled on the
floor beneath his father's body; but then the old man had him again,
his hands about his throat, his full weight pressing down on him,
pushing the air from the young man's lungs. For
one frozen moment the old man's face filled the younger man's vision,
the mouth gasping as it strained, spittle flecking the lips. The eyes
were wide with horror, the cheeks suffused with blood. Sweat beaded
the brow. Then, like a vast, dark wave, the pain became immense. His
lungs burned in his chest and his eyes seemed about to burst. And
then release. Blackness . . . He
gasped air into his raw throat, coughing and wheezing, the pain in
his neck so fierce that it made him groan aloud; a hoarse, animal
sound. After
a moment he opened his eyes again and pulled himself up onto one
elbow. His father lay beside him, dead, blood gushing from the hole
in the back of his head. He
looked around, expecting to see his lieutenants, but they were not in
the room. The door to his father's private suite was open, however,
and there was movement inside. He called out—or tried to—then
struggled up into a sitting position, feeling giddy, nauseated. At the
far end of the room a figure stepped into the doorway; tall as a man,
but not a man. Its white silk jacket was spattered with blood, as
were its trousers. It looked at the sitting man with half-lidded
eyes; eyes that were as red as the blood on its clothes. Over one arm
was a suit of Hans's father's clothes. "Here,
put these on," said the goat-creature in its soft, animal voice.
It crossed the room and stood there over him, offering the clothes. He
took them, staring at the beast, not understanding yet, letting it
help him up and across the study to his father's room. There, in the
doorway, he turned and looked back. His
father lay facedown beside the fallen chair, the wound at the back of
his head still wet and glistening in the half light. "We
must go now," said the beast, its breath like old malt. He
turned and met its eyes. It was smiling at him, showing its fine,
straight teeth. He could sense the satisfaction it was feeling. Years
of resentment had culminated in this act. He shuddered and closed his
eyes, feeling faint. "We
have an hour, two at most," it said, its three-toed hand moving
to the side of Ebert's neck, tracing but not touching the weltlike
bruise there. For a moment its eyes seemed almost tender. He
nodded and let it lead him. There was nothing for him here now.
Nothing at all. KARR
looked UP over his glass and met the young officer's eyes. "What
is it, Captain?" "Forgive
me, sir. I wouldn't normally come to you on a matter of this kind,
but I think this will interest you." He
held out a slender dossier. Karr stared at it a moment, then took it
from him. Putting down his glass, he opened it. A moment later, he
started forward, suddenly alert. "When
did this come in?" "Twenty
minutes ago. Someone said you were down here in the Mess, sir, so I
thought..." Karr
grinned at him fiercely. "You did well, Captain. But what put
you on to this?" "The
name, sir. Mikhail Boden. It was one of the names we had as a suspect
for the murder of a Fu Jen Maitland six years ago. It seems
she was Under-Secretary Lehmann's wife at one time. She was burned to
death in her rooms. An incendiary device. Boden was there shortly
before she died. His retinal print was in the door camera that
survived the blaze. When it appeared again, I thought I'd have a look
at the visual image and see if it was the same man. As you can see,
it wasn't." "No
. . ." Karr got to his feet. The camera stills were of two quite
different men, yet the retinal print was the same. "But how come
the computer allowed the match?" "It
seems that the only detail it has to have a one-hundred-percent
mapping on is the retinal pattern. That's unchanging. The rest—facial
hair, proportion of muscle and fat in the face—changes over the
years. The computer is programmed to ignore those variations. As long
as the underlying bone structure is roughly the same the computer
will recognize it as being the same face." Karr
laughed. "And you know who this is?" The
young officer smiled back at Karr. "I read my files, sir. It's
DeVore, isn't it?" "Yes.
And he entered Salzburg hsien twenty or twenty-five minutes
ago, right?" "Yes,
sir." "Good.
And you're tracking him?" "Yes,
sir. I've put two of my best men on the job." "Excellent." Karr
looked down at the dossier again. The gods knew why DeVore had made
such an elementary mistake, but he had, so praise them for it. Taking
the handset from his pocket, he tapped in Chen's combination, then,
as Chen came on line, gave a small laugh. "It's DeVore, Chen. I
think we've got him. This time I really think we've got him!" T o l
o N E n was crouched in the middle of the room. The corpses were gone
now, his men finished here, but still the room seemed filled with
death. He looked up at the young officer, his face pulled tight with
grief, his eyes staring out at nothing. "I should have killed
him while I had the chance." He shuddered and looked down at his
big square hands. "If only I had known what mischief he was up
to." "We'll
track him, sir. Bring him back," the officer offered, watching
his Marshal, a deep concern in his clear gray eyes. The
old man shook his head and looked down again. Something had broken in
him in the last few hours. His shoulders sagged, his hands—real
and artificial— rested on his knees limply. All of the anger,
all of the old blind rage that had fired him as a man, had gone.
There was no avenging this, whatever he said. The young officer had
seen how the old man had looked, such tenderness and agony in his
face as he.bent and gently touched the wire about his brother's neck.
It was awful to see such things. More than could be borne. The
young man swallowed, his voice a sympathetic whisper. "Can I get
you anything, sir?" Tolonen
looked up at him again, seeming to see him for the first time. There
was a faint smile on his lips, but it was only the smallest flicker
of warmth in the wasteland of his features. "Is
there any news?" The
young man shook his head. There was no trace of Jelka. It was as if
she had vanished. Perhaps she was dead, or maybe Ebert had her after
all. He hoped not. But
she was nowhere in the City. An eighteen-hour Security trawl had
found no trace of her. The
officer went through to the living room, returning a moment later
with two brandies. "Here," he said, handing one to the
Marshal. "This will help." Tolonen
took the glass and stared at it a while, then drained it at a gulp.
He looked up at the young officer, his face expressionless. "Telling
Li Yuan was hard." His wide brow furrowed momentarily. "I
felt I had failed him. Betrayed him. It was bad. Worse than Han
Ch'in's death. Much worse." "It
wasn't your fault." Tolonen
met his eyes a moment, then looked away, shaking his head. "If
not mine, then whose? I knew and didn't act. And this . . ." His
mouth puckered momentarily and his fists clenched. He took a deep
breath, then looked up again. "This is the result." The
officer was about to answer the Marshal, to say something to
alleviate the old man's pain, when a three-tone signal sounded in his
head. There was news. He narrowed his eyes, listening, then smiled; a
huge grin of a smile. "What
is it?" Tolonen asked, getting to his feet. "It's
Viljanen, from Jakobstad. He says to tell you that Jelka is there.
And safe." jelka
stood at the end of the old stone jetty, waiting for him. Waves
crashed against the rocks across the bay. Above her the slate-gray
sky was filled with huge thunderheads of cloud, black and menacing. The
island was in winter's grip. Snow covered everything. She stood
there, above the deep-green swell of the sea, wrapped in furs against
the cold, only her face exposed to the bitter air. The boat was small
and distant, rising and falling as she watched, laboring against the
elements. Beyond it, its scale diminished by the distance, lay the
clifflike whiteness of the City, its topmost levels shrouded by low
cloud. Only
as the boat came nearer could she hear the noise of its engine, a
thin thread of regularity amid the swirling chaos of wind and wave.
Entering the bay the engine noise changed, dropping an octave as the
boat slowed, turning in toward the jetty. She saw him on the deck,
looking across at her, and lifted her arm to wave. They
embraced on the path above the water, the old man hugging her to him
fiercely, as if he would never again let her go. He pushed back her
hood and kissed her on the crown, the brow, the lips, his hot tears
coursing down her frozen face, cooling in her lashes and on her
cheeks. "Jelka
. . . Jelka ... I was so worried." She
closed her eyes and held on to him. Snow had begun to fall, but he
was warm and close and comforting. The familiar smell of him eased
her tortured mind. She let him turn her and lead her back to the
house. He
built a fire in the old grate, then lit it, tending it until it was
well ablaze. She sat watching him in the half-light from the window,
her hand clasping the pendant at her neck, the tiny kuei dragon
seeming to burn against her palm. Still
kneeling, he half turned toward her, his face a mobile mask of black
and orange, his gray hair glistening in the flickering light. "How
did you get here?" he asked gently. "My men were looking
for you everywhere." She
smiled but did not answer him. Desperation creates its own resources,
and she had been desperate to get here. Besides, she wasn't sure. It
was as if she had dreamed her journey here. She had known. Known that
while the storm might rage on every side, here was safety, here the
eye. And she had run for the eye. Here, where it was warm and safe. He
watched her a moment longer, his moist eyes filled with the fire's
wavering light, then stood. He was old. Old, and weary to the bone.
She went across and held him, laying her cheek against his neck, her
arm about his waist. For a moment he rested against her, thoughtless,
unmoving, then he shifted slightly, looking down into her face. "But
why here? Why did you come here?" In her
head there had been the memory of brine and leather and engine oils,
the strong scent of pine; the memory of a circle of burned and
blackened trees in the woods, of an ancient stone tower overlooking a
boiling sea. These things, like ghosts, had summoned her. She
smiled. "There was nowhere else." He
nodded, then sighed deeply. "Well. . . It's over now." "Over?" His
hand went to her face, holding her where the jaw bone came down
beneath the ear, his thumb stroking the soft flesh of her cheek. His
own face was stiff, his chin raised awkwardly. "I
was wrong, Jelka. Wrong about many things, but most of all wrong to
try to force you into something you didn't want." She
knew at once what he meant. Hans. She felt herself go cold, thinking
of him. "I
was blind. Stupid." He shook his head slowly. His face muscles
clenched and unclenched, then formed a grimace. This pained him. As
much as the deaths. She
opened her lips to speak, but her mouth was dry. She nodded. She had
tried to tell him. "He's
gone," he said, after a moment. "Hans has gone." For a
moment she said nothing. Her face was blank, her eyes puzzled.
"Gone?" Her
father nodded. "So it's over. Finished with." For a
moment longer she held herself there, tensed against the news, afraid
to believe him. Then, suddenly, she laughed, relief flooding her. She
shivered, looking away from her father. Gone. Hans was gone. Again
she laughed, but then the laughter died. She looked up suddenly,
remembering. "He
told me to stay there. He was coming for me." She
shivered again, more violently this time, her arm tightening about
her father's waist, her hands gripping him hard. She looked up
fiercely into his face. "He
would have killed me." "I
know," he said, pulling her face down against his neck, his arms
wrapped tightly about her. His voice was anxious now, filled with
sorrow and regret. "I was wrong, my love. So very wrong. Gods
forgive me, Jelka, I didn't know. I just didn't know . . ." THAT
NIGHT Jelka dreamed. The sky pressed down upon her head, solid and
impenetrable. Voices clawed at her with hands of ragged metal,
screeching their elemental anger. It was dark; a darkness laced with
purple. She was alone on the tilted, broken land, the storm raging at
every comer of the earth. Each
time the lightning struck, she felt a tremor pass through her from
head to toe, as sharp as splintered ice. And when the thunder growled
it sounded in her bones, exploding with a suddenness that made her
shudder. Through
the dark, its progress marked in searing flashes of sudden light,
came the tower, its eyes like shattered panes of glass, its wooden
spider limbs folding and stretching inexorably, bringing it closer. She
stood there, unable to move, watching it come. It seemed malefic,
evil, its dark mouth crammed with splintered bone. She could hear it
grunt and wheeze as it dragged its weight across the jagged, uneven
ground. Closer it came, climbing the hill on which she stood, picking
its way through the darkness. In the
sudden light she saw it, close now and laughing horribly, its crooked
mouth smiling greedily at her. Its breath was foul, rolling up the
hill to where she stood. The scent of rottenness itself. As the
darkness enfolded her again she cried out, knowing she was lost. Her
cry rang out, louder than the storm, and for a moment afterward there
was silence. Light leaked slowly into that silence, as if her cry had
cracked the darkness open at its seams. Things
took a shadowy form. The tower had stopped. It stood there, not far
below her. She could hear its wheezing, scraping voice as it
whispered to itself. Her sudden cry had startled it. Then, as she
stared into the half-dark, the earth between her and the tower
cracked and split. For a moment the land was still and silent, and
then something small and dark crawled from the dark mouth of the
earth. A stooped little creature with eyes that burned like coals.
Its wet, dark skin shone with an inner light and its limbs were short
but strong, as though it had dug its way to the surface. As she
watched, it climbed up onto its legs and stood facing the tower. In
one hand it held a circle of glass backed with silver. Holding it up
before it, it advanced. Light
flashed from the circle and where it touched the tower small leaves
of bright red flame blossomed. The tower shrieked and stumbled
backward, but the small, dark creature kept advancing, light flashing
from the circle in its hand, the tiny fires spreading, taking hold. Screeching,
the tower turned and began to run, its thin legs pumping awkwardly.
Thick black smoke billowed up into the air above it, gathering in a
dense layer beneath the solid sky. The noise of the tower burning,
splitting, was fierce. Great cracks and pops filled the bright-lit
silence. The
creature turned, looking at her, the glass lowered now. Its fiery
eyes seemed both kind and sad. They seemed to see right through her,
to the bone and the darkness beneath the bone. She
stared back at it as the darkness slowly returned, filling the space
between the sky and the cracked and shattered land, until all she
could see was the fallen tower, blazing in the distance, and, so
close she could feel their warmth, two jewels of fire set into the
soft and lambent flesh of the creature. As she
watched, it smiled and bowed its head to her. Then, its movements
quick and fluid, it returned to the open crack and slipped down into
the darkness of the earth. FOR
eighteen HOURS DeVore hadn't settled, but had moved on constantly, as
if he knew that his only salvation lay in flight. His disguises had
been tenuous at best and he had cashed in old friendships at a
frightening rate; but all the while Karr had kept close on his tail.
Then, suddenly, Karr had lost him. That was in Danzig. It might have
ended there, but DeVore got careless. For the second time that day he
doubled up on an identity. As
backup, Karr had programmed the Security pass computer to "tag"
all past known aliases of DeVore—eight in all—with
special priority "screamers." If DeVore used any of them,
alarm bells would ring. It was the slimmest of chances and no one
expected it to work, but for once it did. A day after Karr had lost
the trail, DeVore gave himself away. A screamer sounded on one Joseph
Ganz, who had moved up-level in one of the Amsterdam stacks. A random
Security patrol had checked on his ID and passed him through, unaware
of the tag, Karr was there in less than an hour. Chen was waiting for
him, with a full Security battalion. He had sealed off all the
surrounding stacks and put Security guards at every entrance to the
transit lifts. The fast-track bolts were shut down, and they were
ready to go in. There
was no possibility that DeVore had gone far. All the local Security
posts had been alerted at once. If DeVore was coming out, it would be
by force this time, not guile. He had worn his last disguise. Karr
smiled fiercely and rubbed his big hands together. "I have you
now, old ghost. You won't slip away this time." There
were five decks to check out. Chen planned to move through them
carefully, one at a time, from the bottom up—fifty levels in
all—but Karr knew already where he would find DeVore. At the
very top of the City. He left Chen in charge of the sweep and went on
up, alone, taking the transit to the uppermost deck. He was
an impressive sight, coming out of the transit; a seven-ch'i giant,
in full combat dress and carrying a fearsome array of weaponry. He
walked slowly, searching faces, but knowing that he wouldn't find
DeVore there, in the corridors. His quarry would be higher up, holed
up somewhere in one of the penthouse apartments. With an old friend,
perhaps. Karr
lowered his visor and pressed out a code into his wrist comset. Onto
the transparent visor came a readout. He thumbed it through as he
walked, until he came upon a name he knew. Steven Cherkassky. An old
associate of DeVore's and a retired Security officer. Karr checked
habitation details, moving toward the inter-level lifts. Cherkassky's
apartment was on the far side of the deck and at the highest level.
Just as he'd thought. DeVore would be there. Karr
took a deep breath, considering. It would not be easy. DeVore was one
of the best. He had been an excellent Security Major. In time he
would have been General. But he'd had more ambitious plans than that.
Karr had studied his file carefully and viewed training films of him
in action. Karr respected few men, but DeVore demanded respect.
Speed, size, and age were on Karr's side, but DeVore was cunning. And
strong too. A fox with the strength of a tiger. People
moved hurriedly out of Karr's way as he strode along. The lift
emptied at his bark of command and he went up. He thumbed for a map,
then thumbed again for Cherkassky's service record. The man might
have retired, but he could still be dangerous. It did not pay to make
assumptions. Cherkassky,
Steven. The file extract appeared after a two-second delay. He
took in the details at a glance, then cleared his visor and stopped. He
hadn't realized . . . This gave things a new complexion. The old man
had been specially trained. Like Karr, he was an assassin. Karr
checked his guns, all the while staring down the wide, deserted
corridor. He was less than a hundred ch'i from Cherkassky's apartment
now. If they were being careful—and there was no reason to
expect otherwise—they would know he was coming. There would
have been an "eye" close by the transit; someone to report
back at once. Which
meant they would be waiting for him. He
switched to special lenses. At once his vision changed. Using
lenses he could pick out the shape of a tiny insect at five hundred
ch'i. Squeezing the corners of his eyes he adjusted them to
medium range and checked all the surfaces ahead for signs of
antipersonnel devices. It seemed clear, but for once he decided not
to trust the visual scan. He set one of his hand lasers to low charge
and raked it along the walls and floors, then along the ceiling.
Nothing. Yet he still felt ill at ease. Some instinct held him back.
He waited, breathing shallowly, counting to twenty in his head, then
heard a sound behind him—so faint that it would have been easy
to miss it. The faintest clicking, like a claw gently tapping the
side of a porcelain bowl. He
tensed, listening, making sure, then turned fast and rolled to one
side, just as the machine loosed off a burst of rapid fire. The wall
exploded beside him as the heavy shells hit home. He cursed and fired
back, the first few rounds wild, the next deadly accurate. The
machine sputtered, then blew apart, hot fragments flying everywhere.
A piece embedded itself in his side, another cracked the front of his
visor. There
was no time to lose now. The machine was like the one they had used
to attack Tolonen, but more deadly. A remote. Which meant they had
seen him. Seen how good he was. He was using up his advantage. He
considered the situation as he ran. They knew he was coming. Knew
what he was like, how fast, how agile he was. There was one of him
and two of them. Older, yes, but more experienced than he. A Security
Major and a special-services assassin, now sixty-eight, but still fit
and active, he was certain. On those facts alone it might seem he had
little chance of succeeding. But there was one final factor,
something they didn't know; that DeVore couldn't know, because it had
never got into Karr's service record. In his teens—before he
had become a blood— he had been an athlete; perhaps the finest
athlete the Net had ever produced. And he was better now. At
twenty-nine he was fitter and faster than he'd ever been. Karr
slowed as he neared the end of the corridor. There was no tape to
break this time; even so, his time was close to nine seconds. They
wouldn't think . . . He
fired ahead of him, letting momentum take him through the door,
rolling and springing up, turning in the next movement to find
Cherkassky on the ceiling above the door, held there in an assassin's
cradle. He was turning with his feet, but it wasn't fast enough. Karr
shot away the strands, making Cherkassky tumble to the floor, all the
while his eyes darting here and there, looking for DeVore. He skipped
over the rubble and crouched above the winded assassin. "Where
is he? Tell me where he is." The
old man laughed, then coughed blood. Karr shot him through the neck.
DeVore had gone. Had traded on his final friendship. But he could not
have gone far. Cherkassky hadn't been operating the machine. So ... Quickly,
carefully, he checked the rest of the apartment. There was no sign of
the controls here, so DeVore had them elsewhere. Somewhere close by.
But where? He pushed his helmet out into the corridor, then, a moment
later, popped his head around the comer to look. Nothing. There was a
high-pitched screaming from a nearby apartment but he ignored it,
stepping out into the corridor again. There was no way out overhead.
The roof was sealed here. He had checked on that earlier. No. The
only way out was down. He
glanced at his timer. It was only three minutes and forty-eight
seconds since he had stood at the far end of the corridor. Was that
time enough for DeVore to get to the elevator? Possibly. But Karr had
a hunch that he hadn't done that. DeVore would want to make sure he
was safe, and that meant getting back at his pursuer. He walked
slowly down the corridor, keeping to the wall, the largest of his
guns, an antique Westinghouse-Howitzer, pressed tight against his
chest. He would take no chances with this bastard. He was
about to go on when he paused, noticing the silence. The screaming
had stopped suddenly, almost abruptly, in mid-scream. It had taken
him a second or two to notice it, but then it hit him. He turned,
lowering himself onto his haunches, as if about to spring. Two doors
down the corridor, it had been. He went back slowly, his finger
trembling against the hair trigger, making a small circle around the
door until he stood on its far side, his back to Cherkassky's
apartment. He had two options now: to wait or to go in. Which would
DeVore expect him to do? Was he waiting for Karr to come in, or was
he about to come out? For a moment Karr stood there, tensed,
considering; then he smiled. There was a third option: burn away the
wall and see what lay behind it. He liked that. It meant he didn't
have to go through a door. He lay
down, setting the big gun up in front of him, ejecting the standard
explosive shells and slipping a cartridge of ice-penetrating charges
into the loader. Then he squeezed the trigger, tracing a line of
shells first up the wall, then along the top of it. The partition
shuddered, like something alive, and began to peel away from where
the charges had punctured holes in it. There was no sound from the
other side of the wall; only silence and the roiling smoke. He
waited, easing his finger back and forth above the hair trigger as
the ice curled back, revealing the shattered room. Karr's eyes took
in each and every detail, noting and discarding them. A young woman
lay dead on the lounger, her pale limbs limp, her head at an odd
angle—garrotted, by the look of it. There was no sign of
DeVore, but he had been there. The woman had been alive only a minute
before. Karr
crawled into the room. A siren had begun to sound in the corridor. It
would bring Chen and help. But Karr wanted to finish this now. DeVore
was his. He had pursued him for so long now. And, orders or no, he
would make sure of things this time. He
stopped, calling out, "Surrender yourself, DeVore. Put your
hands up and come out. You'll get a fair trial." It was
a charade. Part of the game they had to play. But DeVore would pay no
heed. They both knew now that this could end only in death. But it
had to be said. Like the last words of a ritual. His
answer came a moment later. The door to the right hissed open a
fraction and a grenade was lobbed into the room. Karr saw it curl in
the air and recognized what it was. Dropping his gun, he placed his
hands tight over his ears and pushed his face down into the floor. It
was a concussion grenade. The shock of it ripped a hole in the
floor and seemed to lift everything in the room into the air. In a
closed room it would have been devastating, but much of the force of
it went out into the corridor. Karr got up, stunned but unhurt, his
ears ringing. And then the door began to iris open. Reactions
took over. Karr buckled at the knees and rolled forward, picking up
his gun on the way. DeVore was halfway out the door, the gun at his
hip already firing, when the butt of Karr's gun connected with his
head. It was an ill-aimed blow that glanced off the side of his jaw,
just below the ear, but the force of it was enough to send DeVore
sprawling, the gun flying from his hands. Karr went across, his gun
raised to aim another blow, but it was already too late. DeVore was
dead, his jaw shattered, fragments of it pushed up into his brain. Karr
stood a moment looking down at his old enemy, all of the fierce
indignation and anger he felt welling up in him again. He shuddered,
then, anger getting the better of him, brought the gun down, once,
twice, a third time, smashing the skull apart, spilling DeVore's
brains across the floor. "You
bastard . . . You stinking, fucking bastard!" Then,
taking the small cloth bag from his top pocket, he undid the string
and spilled the stones over the dead man. Three hundred and sixty-one
black stones. For
Haavikko's sister, Vesa, and Chen's friend, Pavel; for Kao Jyan and
Han Ch'in, Lwo Kang and Edmund Wyatt, and all the many others whose
deaths were attributed to him. Karr
shuddered, then threw the cloth bag down. It was done. He could go
home now and sleep. li
yuan stood in the deep shadow by the carp pool, darkness wrapped
about him like a cloak. It had been a long and tiring day, but his
mind was sharp and clear. He stared down through layers of darkness,
following the languid movements of the carp. In their slow,
deliberate motions it seemed he might read the deepest workings of
his thoughts. Much
had happened. In the chill brightness of his study, all had seemed
chaos. DeVore was dead and his warren of mountain fortresses
destroyed. But Klaus Ebert was also dead and his son, the General,
had fled. That had come as a shock to him, undermining his newfound
certainty. Here,
in the darkness, however, he could see things in a better light. He
had survived the worst his enemies could do. Fei Yen and young Han
were safe. Soon he would have a General he could trust. These things
comforted him. In the light of them, even Wang Sau-leyan's
concessions to the Young Sons seemed a minor thing. For a
while he let these things drift from him; let himself sink into the
depths of memory, his mood dark and sorrowful, his heart weighed down
by the necessities of his life. He had companionship in Tsu Ma and
three wives to satisfy his carnal needs. Soon he would have a
child—an heir, perhaps. But none of this was enough. So much
was missing from his life. Fei Yen herself. Han Ch'in, so deeply
missed that sometimes he would wake from sleep, his pillow wet with
tears. Worst were the nightmares; images of his father's corpse,
exposed, defenseless in its nakedness, painfully emaciated, the skin
stretched pale across the frame of bone. The
fate of Kings. He
turned and looked across at the single lamp beside the door. Its
light was filtered through the green of fern and palm, the smoky
darkness of the panels, as if through depths of water. He stared at
it, reminded of something else—of the light on a windswept
hillside in the Domain as a small group gathered about the unmarked
grave. Sunlight on grass and the shadows in the depths of the earth.
He had been so certain that day: certain that he didn't want to stop
the flow of time and have the past returned to him, fresh, new again.
But had Ben been right? Wasn't that the one thing men wanted most? Some
days he ached to bring it back. To have it whole and perfect. To sink
back through the years and have it all again. The best of it. Before
the cancer ate at it. Before the worm lay in the bone. He
bowed his head, smiling sadly at the thought. To succumb to that
desire was worse than the desire itself. It was a weakness not to be
tolerated. One had to go on, not back. The
quality of the light changed. His new Master of the Inner Chamber,
Chan Teng, stood beside the doorway, silent, waiting to be noticed. "What
is it, Master Chan?" "Your
guest is here, Chieh Hsia." "Good."
He lifted a hand to dismiss the man, then changed his mind. "Chan,
tell me this. If you could recapture any moment from your past—if
you could have it whole, perfect in every detail—would you want
that?" The
middle-aged man was silent a while; then he answered. "There
are, indeed, times when I wish for something past, Chieh Hsia.
Like all men. But it would be hard. Hard living in the now if
'what was* were still to hand. The imperfection of a man's memories
is a blessing." It was
a good answer. A satisfactory answer. "Thank you, Chan. There is
wisdom in your words." Chan
Teng bowed and turned to go, but at the door he turned back and
looked across at his master. "One
last thing, Chieh Hsia. Such a gift might well prove useful.
Might prove, for us, a blessing." Li
Yuan came out into the light. "How so?" Chan
lowered his eyes. "Might its very perfection not prove a cage, a
prison to the mind? Might we not snare our enemies in its sticky
web?" Li
Yuan narrowed his eyes. He thought he could see what Chan Teng was
saying, but he wanted to be sure. "Go on, Chan. What are you
suggesting?" "Only
this. That desire is a chain. If such a thing exists it might be used
not as a blessing but a curse. A poisoned gift. It would be the
ultimate addiction. Few men would be safe from its attractions. Fewer
still would recognize it for what it was. A drug. A way of escaping
from what is here and now and real." Li
Yuan took a deep breath, then nodded. "We shall speak more on
this, Chan. Meanwhile, ask my guest to come through. I shall see him
here, beside the pool." Chan
Teng bowed low and turned away. Li Yuan stared down at the naked glow
of the lamp, then moved his hand close, feeling its radiant warmth,
tracing its rounded shape. How would it feel to live a memory? Like
this? As real as this? He sighed. Perhaps, as Chan said, there was a
use for Shepherd's art: a way of making his illusions serve the real.
He drew his hand away, seeing how shadows formed between the fingers,
how the glistening lines of the palm turned dull and lifeless. To
have Han and Fei again. To see his father smiling. He
shook his head, suddenly bitter. Best nothing. Better death than such
sweet torture. There
was movement in the corridor outside. A figure appeared in the
doorway. Li Yuan looked up, meeting Shepherd's eyes. "Ben
. . ." Ben
Shepherd looked about him at the room, then looked back at the young
T'ang, a faint smile on his lips. "How are you, Li Yuan? With
all that's happened, I wasn't sure you'd remember our meeting." Li
Yuan smiled and moved forward, greeting him. "No. I'm glad you
came. Indeed, our meeting is fortuitous, for there's something I want
to ask you. Something only you can help me with." Ben
raised an eyebrow. "As mirror?" Li
Yuan nodded, struck once again by how quick, how penetrating Ben
Shepherd was. He, if anyone, could make things clear to him. Ben
went to the edge of the pool. For a moment he stared down into the
darkness of the water, following the slow movements of the fish, then
he looked back at Li Yuan. :
'••>: "Is it about Fei Yen and the child?" Li
Yuan shivered. "Why should you think that?" Ben
smiled. "Because, as I see it, there's nothing else that only I
could help you with. If it were a matter of politics, there are a
dozen able men to whom you might talk. Whereas the matter of your
ex-wife and the child. Well. . . who could you talk to of that within
your court? Who could you trust not to use what was said to gain some
small advantage?" Li
Yuan bowed his head. It was true. He had not thought of it in quite
such a calculated manner, but it was so. "Well?"
he said, meeting Ben's eyes. Ben
moved past him, crouching down to study the great tortoise shell with
its ancient markings. "There's
an advantage to being outsidfe of things," Ben said, his eyes
searching the surface of the shell, tracing the fine patterning of
cracks beneath the transparent glaze. "You see events more
clearly than do those who are taking part in them. What's more, you
learn to ask the right questions." He turned his head, looking
up at Li Yuan. "For instance: Why, if Li Yuan knows who the
father of his child is, has he not acted on that knowledge? Why has
he not sought vengeance on the man? Of course, the assumption has
always been that the child is not Li Yuan's. But why should that
necessarily be the case? It was assumed by almost everyone that Li
Yuan divorced Fei Yen to ensure the child of another man would have
no legitimate claim upon the Dragon Throne, but why should that be
so? What if that were merely a pretext? After all, it is not an easy
thing to obtain a divorce when one is a T'ang. Infidelity, while a
serious enough matter in itself, would be an insufficient reason. But
to protect the line of inheritance . . ." Li
Yuan had been watching Ben, mesmerized, unable to look away. Now Ben
released him and he drew back a pace, shuddering. "You always
saw things clearly, didn't you, Ben?" "To the bone."
"And was I right?" "To
divorce Fei Yen? Yes. But the child . . . Well, I'll be frank—that
puzzles me somewhat. I've thought about it often lately. He's your
son, isn't he, Li Yuan?" Li Yuan nodded. "Then why
disinherit him?" Li
Yuan looked down, thinking back to the evening when he had made that
awful decision, recollecting the turmoil of his feelings. He had
expected the worst—had steeled himself to face the awful fact
of her betrayal—but when he had found it was his child,
unquestionably his, he was surprised to find himself not
relieved but appalled, for in his mind he had already parted from
her. Had cast her from him, like a broken bowl. For a long time he
had sat there in an agony of indecision, unable to see things
clearly. But then the memory of Han Ch'in had come to him—of
his dead brother, there beside him in the orchard, a sprig of white
blossom in his jet-black hair—and he had known, with a fierce
certainty, what he must do. He
looked back at Ben, tears in his eyes. "I wanted to protect him.
Do you understand that? To keep him from harm. He was Han, you see.
Han Ch'in reborn." He shook his head. "I know that doesn't
make sense, but it's how I felt. How I still feel, every time I think
about the child. It's . . ." He
turned away, trying for a moment to control—to wall in—the
immensity of his suffering. Then he turned back, his face open,
exposed to the other man, all of his grief and hope and suffering
there on the surface for Ben's eyes to read. "I
couldn't save Han Ch'in. I was too young, too powerless. But my son .
. ." He swallowed, then looked aside. "If one good thing
can come from my relationship with Fei Yen, let it be this: that my
son can grow up safe from harm." Ben
looked down; then, patting the shell familiarly, he stood. "I
see." He walked back to the edge of the pool, then turned,
facing Li Yuan again. "Even so, you must have sons, Li Yuan.
Indeed, you have taken wives for that very purpose. Can you save them
all? Can you keep them all from harm?" Li
Yuan was staring back at him. "They will be sons . . ."
"And Fei's son, Han? Is he so different?" Li
Yuan looked aside, a slight bitterness in his face. "Don't tease
me, Ben. I thought you of all people would understand." Ben
nodded. "Oh, I do. But I wanted to make sure that you did. That
you weren't trying to fool yourself over your real motives. You say
the boy reminds you of Han. That may be so, and I understand your
reasons for wanting to keep him out of harm's way. But it's more than
that, isn't it? You still love Fei Yen, don't you? And the child . .
. the child is the one real thing that came of your love." Li
Yuan looked at him gratefully. Ben
sighed. "Oh, I understand clear enough, Li Yuan. You wanted to
be her, didn't you? To become her. And the child . . . that's
the closest you'll ever come to it." Li
Yuan shivered, acknowledging the truth of what Ben had said. "Then
I was right to act as I did?" Ben
turned, looking down, watching the dark shapes of the carp move
slowly in the depths. "You remember the picture I drew for you,
the day of your betrothal ceremony?" Li
Yuan swallowed. "I do. The picture of Lord Yi and the ten
suns—the ten dark birds in the fu sang tree." "Yes.
Well, I saw it then. Saw clearly what would come of it." "To
the bone." Ben
looked back at the young T'ang, seeing he understood. "Yes, You
remember. Well, the mistake was made back there. You should never
have married her. You should have left her as your dream, your
ideal." He shrugged. "The rest, I'm afraid, was inevitable.
And unfortunate, for some mistakes can never be rectified." Li
Yuan moved closer until he stood facing Ben, his hand resting loosely
on Ben's arm, his eyes boring into Ben's, pleading for something that
Ben could not give him. "But
what else could I have done?" "Nothing,"
Ben said. "There was nothing else you could have done. But still
it isn't right. You tried to shoot the moon, Li Yuan, like the great
Lord Yi of legend. And what but sorrow could come of that?" IT WAS
DAWN in the Otzalen Alps and a cold wind blew down the valley from
the north. Stefan Lehmann stood on the open mountainside, his furs
gathered tight about him, the hood pulled up over his head. He
squinted into the shadows down below, trying to make out details, but
it was hard to distinguish anything, so much had changed. Where
there had been snow-covered slopes and thick pine forest was now only
barren rock—rock charred and fused to a glossy hardness in
places. Down where the entrance had been was now a crater almost a li
across and half a li deep. He
went down, numbed by what he saw. Where the land folded and rose
slightly he stopped, resting against a crag. All about him were the
stumps of trees, charred and splintered by the explosions that had
rent the mountain. He shuddered and found he could scarcely catch his
breath. "All gone," he said, watching his words dissipate
into the chill air. AM
gone . . . A thin
veil of snow began to fall, flecks on the darkness below where he
stood. He made himself go on, clambering down the treacherous slope
until he stood at the crater's edge, looking down into the great
circle of its ashen bowl. Shadow
filled the crater like a liquid. Snowflakes drifted into that
darkness and seemed to blink out of existence, their glistening
brightness extinguished in an instant. He watched them fall,
strangely touched by their beauty. For a time his mind refused to
acknowledge what had been done. It was easier to stand there, emptied
of all thought, all enterprise, and let the cold and delicate beauty
of the day seep into the bones, like ice into the rock. But he knew
that the beauty of it was a mask, austere and terrible. Inhumanly so.
For even as he watched, the whiteness spread, thickening, concealing
the dark and glassy surface. At his
back the mountains thrust high into the thin, cold air. He looked up
into the grayness of the sky, then turned, looking across at the
nearest peaks. The early daylight threw them into sharp relief
against the sky. Huge, jagged shapes they were, like the broken,
time-bared jawbone of a giant. Beneath, the rest lay in shadow, in
vast depths of blue shading into impenetrable darkness. Clouds
drifted in between, casting whole slopes of white into sudden shade,
obscuring the crisp, paleocrystic forms. He watched, conscious of the
utter silence of that desolate place, his warm breath pluming in the
frigid air. Then, abruptly, he turned away, beginning to climb the
slope again. The
rawness of the place appalled some part of him that wanted warmth and
safety, yet the greater part of him—that part he termed his
true self—recognized itself in all of this. It was not a place
for living, yet living things survived here, honed to the simplest of
responses by the savagery of the climate, made lithe and fierce and
cunning by necessity. So it was for him. Rather this than the
deadness of the City—that sterile womb from which nothing new
came forth. He
reached the crest and paused, looking back. The past with all its
complex schemes was gone. It lay behind him now. From here on he
would do it his way; would become a kind of ghost, a messenger from
the outside, flitting between the levels, singular and deadly. A
bleak smile came to his albinic eyes, touched the comers of his
thin-lipped mouth. He felt no grief for what had happened, only a new
determination. This had not changed things so much as clarified them.
He knew now what to do; how to harness all the hatred that he felt
for them. Hatred enough to fill the whole of Chung Kuo with death. The
cloud moved slowly south. Suddenly he was in sunlight again. He
turned to his right, looking up toward the summit. There, at the top
of the world, an eagle circled the naked point of rock, its great
wings extended fully. The sight was unexpected yet significant;
another sign for him to read. He watched it for some time then moved
on, descending into the valley, heading north again toward his
scantily provisioned cave. It would be hard, but in the spring he
would emerge again, leaner and hungrier than before, but also purer,
cleaner. Like a new-forged sword, cast in the fire and tempered in
the ice. He
laughed—a cold, humorless sound—then gritted his teeth
and began to make his way down, watching his footing, careful not to
fall.
INTERLUDE I WINTER 2207 Dragons
Teeth
Without
preparedness superiority is not real superiority and there can be no
initiative either. Having grasped this point, a force which is
inferior but prepared can often defeat a superior enemy by surprise
attack. —mao
tse tung, On Protracted War, May 1938
IT
WAS DUSK on Mars. On the Plain of Elysium it was minus 76 degrees and
falling. Great swaths of shadow lay to the north, beneath the slopes
of Chaos, stretching slowly, inexorably toward the great dome of Kang
Kua City. Earth lay on the horizon, a circle of pure whiteness,
back-lit by the sun. The evening star, they called it here. Chung
Kuo. The place from which they had come, centuries before. DeVore
stood at the window of the tower, looking out across the great dome
of Kang Kua toward the northern desert and the setting sun. The
messenger had come an hour earlier, bringing news from Earth. He
smiled. And so it had ended, his group surrounded, his pieces taken
from the board. Even so, he was pleased with the way his play had
gone. It was not often that one gained so much for so small a
sacrifice. He
turned, looking back into the room. The morph sat at the table, its
tautly muscled skin glistening in the dull *ed light. It was hunched
forward, its hands placed on either side of the board, as if
considering its next play. So patient it was; filled with an inhuman
watchfulness, an inexhaustible capacity for waiting. He
went to the table and sat, facing the faceless creature. This was the
latest of his creations; the closest yet to the human. Closest and
yet furthest, for few could match it intellectually or physically. He
took a white stone from the bowl and leaned forward, placing it in
shang, the south, cutting the line of black stones that
extended from the comer. "Your
move," he said, sitting back. Each
stone he placed activated a circuit beneath the board, registering in
the creature's mind. Even so, the illusion that the morph had
actually seen him place the stone was strong. Its shoulders tensed as
it leaned closer, seeming to study the board; then it nodded and
looked up, as if meeting his eyes. Again
it was only the copy—the counterfeit—of a gesture, for
the smooth curve of its head was unmarked, like unmolded clay or a
shell waiting to be formed. So,
too, its personality. He
looked away, a faint smile on his lips. Even in those few moments it
had grown much darker. The lights of the great dome, barely evident
before, now glowed warmly, filling the cold and barren darkness. "Did
you toast my death, Li Yuan?" he asked the darkness softly. "Did
you think it finally done between us?" But it
wasn't done. It was far from being done. He
thought back, remembering the day when he had sent the "copy"
out, two weeks after the assassination squad. It had never known;
never for a moment considered itself anything but real. DeVore, it
had called itself, fancying that that was what it had always been.
And so, in a sense, it had. Was it not his genetic material, after
all, that had gone into the being's making? Were they not his
thoughts, his attitudes, that had gone to shape its mind? Well then,
perhaps, in a very real sense, it was himself. An imperfect
copy, perhaps, but good enough to fool all those it had had to face;
even, when it turned to face the mirror, itself. He
watched the morph play its stone, his own one line out while at the
same time protecting the connection between its groups. He smiled,
pleased. It was the move he himself would have made. Shadowing
... it was an important part of the game. As important, perhaps, as
any of the final skirmishes. One had to sketch out one's territory
well in advance, while plotting to break up one's opponent's future
schemes: the one need balanced finely against the other. DeVore
leaned across the table and took a stone from the bowl, holding it
for a moment between his fingers, finding its cool, polished weight
strangely satisfying; then set it down in £>mg, the east,
beginning a new play. He
stood and went to the window again, looking out across the lambent
hemisphere of the dome to the darkness beyond. He had
never returned from Mars. What had landed at Nanking ten years ago
had been a copy—a thing so real that to call it artificial
questioned definition— while he had remained here, perfecting
his plays, watching—from this cold and distant world—how
the thing he had made fared in his place. It was
impressive. Indeed, it had exceeded all expectations. Whatever doubts
he had harbored about its ability had quickly vanished. By all
reports it had inherited his cunning along with many other of his
traits. But in the end its resources had proved insufficient. It was
but a single man, fragile in all the ways a single man is fragile.
Karr's rifle butt had split its skull and ended all its schemes. And
so it was if one were single. But to amend the forgotten poet
Whitman's words, he would contain multitudes: would be like the
dragon's teeth, which, when planted from the dragon's severed head,
would sprout, producing a harvest of dragons, each fiercer, finer
than its progenitor. He
breathed deeply, then turned to look at the morph again. Soon it
would be time. They would take this unformed creature and mold it,
mind and body, creating a being superior to those it would face back
on Chung Kuo. A quicker, more cunning beast, unfettered by pity or
love or obligation. A new model, better than the last. But
this time it would have another's face. He
went across, placing his hand on the creature's shoulder. Its flesh
was warm, but the warmth was of the kind that communicated itself to
the senses only after a moment or two: at first it had seemed cold,
dead almost. Well, so it was, and yet, when they had finished with
it, it would think itself alive; would defy God himself had He said,
"I made you." But
whose face would he put to this one? Whose personality would furnish
the empty chambers of its mind? He leaned across the creature to play
another stone, furthering his line in ping, extending out toward tsu,
the north. A T'ang? A General? Or something subtler—something
much more unexpected? DeVore
smiled and straightened up, squeezing the creature's arm familiarly
before he moved away. It would be interesting to see what they made
of this one, for it was different in kind from the last. It was what
his own imperfect copy had dreamed of. An inheritor. The first
of a new species. A cleaner, purer being. A
dragon's tooth. A seed of destruction, floated across the vacuum of
space. The first stone in a new, more terrifying game. He laughed,
sensing the creature move behind him in the semidarkness, responding
to the noise. Yes, the first. . . but not the last. The
White Mountain
Chi K'ang Tzu asked Confucius
about government, saying, "What would you think if, in order to
move closer to those who possess the Way, I were to kill those who do
not follow the Way?"
Confucius answered, "In
administering your government, what need is there for you to kill?
Just desire the good in yourself and the common people will be good.
The virtue of the gentleman is like wind; the virtue of the small man
is like grass. Let the wind blow over the grass and it is sure to
bend."
—confucius,
The Analects, Book XII
"All
warfare is based on deception."
—SUN tzu, The
Art of War, Book I, Estimates
CHAPTER
FIFTEEN Between
Light and Shadow cHEN
KNELT patiently before the mirror as Wang Ti stood over him, brushing
out his hair and separating it into bunches. He watched her fasten
three of them at the scalp, her fingers tying the tiny knots with a
practiced deftness. Then, with a glancing smile at his reflection,
she began to braid the fourth into a tight, neat queue. As ever, he
was surprised by the strength of her hands, their cleverness, and
smiled to himself. A good woman, she was. The best a man could have. "What
are you thinking, Kao Chen?" she asked, her fingers moving on to
the second of the bunches, her eyes meeting his in the mirror. "Just
that a man needs a wife, Wang Ti. And that if all men had wives as
good as mine this world would be a better place." She
laughed; her soft, rough-edged peasant's laugh that, like so many
things she did, made him feel warm deep down inside. He lowered his
eyes momentarily, thinking back. He had been dead before he met her.
Or as good as. Down there, below the Net, he had merely existed,
eking out a living day by day, like a hungry ghost, tied to nothing,
its belly filled with bile. And
now? He smiled, noting the exaggerated curve of her belly in the
mirror. In a month—six weeks at most—their fourth child
would be born. A girl, the doctors said. A second girl. He shivered
and turned his head slightly, trying to look across at the present he
had bought her only the day before, but she pulled his head back
firmly. "Keep
still. A minute and I'll be done." He
smiled, noting the tone in her voice, that same tone she used for the
children when they would not do as they were told, and held still,
letting her finish. "There,"
she said, stepping back from him, satisfied. "Now put on your
tunic. It's on the bed, freshly pressed. I'll come and help you with
your leggings in a while." Chen
turned, about to object, but she had already gone to see to the
children. He could hear them in the living room, their voices
competing with the trivee, his second son, the six-year-old Wu,
arguing with the "baby" of the family, Ch'iang Hsin,
teasing her, as he so often did. Chen laughed, then went across to
the table, picking up the lacquered bowl he had bought her and
rubbing his ringer across its smooth surface, tracing the raised
figures of the household gods, remembering her expression of delight
when she had taken it from the paper. Things
were good. No, he thought; things had never been better. It was as if
the gods had blessed him. First Wang Ti. Then the children. And now
all this. He looked about him at the new apartment. Eight rooms they
had. Eight rooms! And only four stacks out from Bremen Central! He
laughed, surprised by it all, as if at any moment he might wake and
find himself back there, beneath the Net, that all-pervading stench
filling his nostrils, some pale, blind-eyed bug crawling across his
body while he slept. Back then, simply to be out of that hell had
been the sum total of his ambitions. While this—this apartment
that he rented in the upper third, in Level 224—had seemed as
far beyond his reach as the stars in the midnight sky. He
caught his breath, remembering, then shook his head. That moment on
the roof of the solarium—how long ago had that been now? Ten
years? No, twelve. And yet he remembered it as if it were yesterday.
That glimpse of the stars, of the snow-capped mountains in the
moonlight. And afterward, the nightmare of the days that followed.
Yet here he was, not dead like his companion, Kao Jyan, but alive:
the T'ang's man, rewarded for his loyalty. He set
the bowl down and went through, pulling on his tunic, then looked at
himself in the mirror. It was the first time he had worn the
azurite-blue ceremonial tunic and he felt awkward in it. "Where's
that rascal, Kao Chen?" he asked his image, noting how strange
his hair looked now that it was braided, how odd his blunt,
nondescript face seemed atop such elegant clothes. "You
look nice," Wang Ti said from the doorway. "You should wear
your dress uniform more often, Chen. It suits you." He
fingered the chest patch uncomfortably, tracing the shape of the
young tiger there—the symbol of his rank as Captain in the
T'ang's Security forces—then shook his head. "It doesn't
feel right, Wang Ti. I feel overdressed. Even my hair." He
sniffed in deeply, unconsciously mimicking the Marshal, then shook
his head again. He should not have let Wang Ti talk him into having
the implants. For all his adult life he had been happy shaving his
scalp, wearing its bareness like a badge, but for once he had
indulged her, knowing how little she asked of him. It was four months
now since the operation had given him a full head of long, glistening
black hair. Wang Ti had liked it from the first, of course, and for a
while that had been enough for him, but now his discontent was
surfacing again. "Wang
Ti. . . ?" he began, then fell silent. She
came across, touching his arm, her smile of pride for once making him
feel uncomfortable. "What is it, husband?" "Nothing
. . ." he answered. "It's nothing . . ." "Then
hold still. I'll do your leggings for you." the
woman was leaning over the open conduit, reaching in with the
fine-wire to adjust the tuning, when Leyden, the elder of the two
Security men, came up with a bulb of ch'a for her. She
straightened up and set the wire down, looking across at him as she
peeled off her elbow-length gloves. "Thanks,"
she said softly, and sipped at the steaming lip of the bulb. "How
much longer, Chi Li?" Ywe
Hao looked up, responding to the false name on her ID badge, then
smiled. It was a beautiful smile; a warm, open smile that transformed
her plain, rather narrow face. The old guard, seeing it, found
himself smiling in return, then turned away, flustered. She laughed,
knowing what he was thinking, but there was nothing mocking in her
laughter, and when he turned back, a trace of red lingering in the
paleness of his neck, he, too, was laughing. "If
you were my daughter . . ." he began. "Go
on. What would you do?" The smile remained, but fainter, a look
of unfeigned»curiosity in the young woman's eyes. Still
watching him, she tilted her head back and ran one hand through her
short dark hair. "Tell me, Wolfgang Leyden. If I were your
daughter ..." And again there was laughter—as if she
hadn't said this a dozen times before. "Why
... I'd lock you up, my girl. That's what I'd do!" "You'd
have to catch me first!" He
looked at her, the web of wrinkles about his eyes momentarily stark
in the brightness of the overhead light, then he nodded, growing
quieter. "So I would. . . . So I would. . . ." Their
nightly ritual over, they grew silent, serious. She drained the bulb,
then pulled on her gloves and got back to work, crouching there over
the conduit while he knelt nearby, watching her clever hands search
the tight cluster of filaments with the fine-wire, looking for weak
signals. There
was a kind of natural fellowship between them. They were both out of
their level, here at the top of the stack, both uniformed; his the
pale-green fatigues of Patrol Security, hers the yellow and orange of
Maintenance. From the first— almost
three weeks ago now—he had sensed something different in her;
in the way she looked at him, perhaps. Or maybe simply because she,
twenty years his junior, had looked at him; had noticed him and
smiled her beautiful smile, making him feel both young and old, happy
and sad. From that first day had come their game— the
meaningless banter that, for him at least, was too fraught with
meaning to be safe. "There!"
she said, looking up. "One more of the fiddly little buggers
done!" v Leyden nodded, but he was still remembering
how her top teeth pulled down the pale flesh of her lower lip when
she concentrated; how her eyes filled with a strange, almost
passionate intensity. As if she saw things differently. Saw more
finely, clearly than he. "How
many more?" She
sat back on her heels and drew in a deep breath, considering.
"Eighty-seven junctions, one hundred and sixteen conduits,
eleven switches, and four main panels." She smiled. "Two
weeks' work. Three at the outside." She
was part of a team of three—two women and a man—sent in
to give the deck its biannual service. The others were hard at work
elsewhere—checking the transportation grid for faults;
repairing the basic plumbing and service systems; cleaning out the
massive vents that threaded these upper decks like giant cat's
cradles. Their jobs were important, but hers was the vital one. She
was the communications expert. In her hands rested the complex
network of computer links that gave the deck its life. There were
backups, of course, and it was hard to cause real damage, but it was
still a delicate job—more like surgery than engineering. She
had said as much herself. "It's
like a huge head," she had told him. "Full of fine nerves
that carry messages. And it has to be treated like a living mind.
Gently, carefully. It can be hurt, you know." And he recalled
how she had looked at him, a real tenderness and concern in her face,
as if the thing really were alive. But
now, looking at her, he thought, Three weeks. Is that all? And
what then? What will I do when you're gone? Seeing
him watching her, she leaned across and touched his arm gently. "Thanks
for the ch'a, but hadn't you better get back? Shouldn't you be
checking on things?" He
laughed. "As if anything ever happens." But he sensed that
he had outstayed his welcome and turned to go, stopping only at the
far end of the long, dark shaft to look back at her. She
had moved on, further in toward the hub. Above her the overhead lamp,
secure on its track and attached to her waist by a slender, weblike
thread, threw a bright, golden light over her dark, neat head as she
bent down, working on the next conduit in the line. For a moment
longer he watched her, her head bobbing like a swimmer's between
light and shadow, then turned, sighing, to descend the rungs. CHEN
SAT there, watching the screen in the comer while Wang Ti dressed the
children. The set was tuned to the local MidText channel and showed a
group of a dozen or so dignitaries on a raised platform, a great mass
of people gathered in the Main in front of them. It was a live
broadcast, from Hannover, two hundred li to the southeast. At the
front of the group on-screen was the T'ang's Chancellor, Nan Ho,
there on his Master's behalf to open the first of the new Jade
Phoenix Health Centers. Behind him stood the Hsien Ling, the
Chief Magistrate of Hannover Hsien, Shou Chen-hai, a tall man
with a patrician air and a high-domed head that shone damply in the
overhead lights. The Chancellor was speaking, a great scroll held out
before him, outlining Li Yuan's "new deal" for the Lowers,
dwelling in particular upon the T'ang's plan to extend health
facilities considerably over the coming five years by building one
hundred and fifty of the new Health Centers throughout the lower
third. "About
time," said Wang Ti, not looking up from where she sat, lacing
up her young daughter's dress. "They've neglected things far too
long. You remember the problems we had when Jyan was born. Why, I
almost gave birth to him in the reception hall. And that was back
then. Things have gotten a lot worse in the years since." Chen
grunted, remembering; yet he felt uneasy at the implied criticism of
his T'ang. "Li Yuan means only well," he said. "There
are those who would not do one tenth as n»uch." Wang
Ti looked across at him, a measured look in her eyes, then looked
away. "I'm sure that's so, husband. But there are rumors. . . ." Chen
turned his head abruptly, the stiff collar of his jacket chafing his
neck. "Rumors? About the T'ang?" Wang
Ti laughed, fastening the lace, then pushed Ch'iang Hsin away from
her. "No. Of course not. And yet his hands . . ." Chen
frowned. "His hands?" Wang
Ti got up slowly, putting a hand to her lower back. "They say
that some grow fat on the T'ang's generosity, while others get but
the crumbs from his table." "I
don't follow you, Wang Ti." She
tilted her head slightly, indicating the figures on the screen, then
lowered her voice a fraction. "The big one. Our friend, the
Hsien Ling. It is said he has bought himself many things these
past six months. Bronzes and statues and silks for his concubines.
Yes, even a wife—a good wife, of First Level breeding. And more
besides..." Chen's
face had hardened. "You know this, Wang Ti? For a
certainty?" "No.
But the rumors . . ." Chen
stood, angered. "Rumors! Kuan Yin preserve us! Would you risk
all this over some piece of ill-founded tittle-tattle?" The
three children were staring up at him, astonished. As for Wang Ti,
she lowered her head, her whole manner suddenly submissive. "Forgive
me, husband, I—" The
sharp movement of his hand silenced her. He turned, agitated, and
went to the set, jabbing a finger angrily at the power button. At
once the room was silent. He turned back, facing her, his face
suffused with anger. "I
am surprised at you, Wang Ti. To slander a good man like Shou
Chen-hai. Who put this foolishness into your head? Do you know for a
fact what the Hsien Ling has or hasn't bought? Have you been
inside his mansion? Besides, he is a rich man. Why should he not have
such things? Why are you so quick to believe he has used the T'ang's
money and not his own? What evidence have you?" He
huffed impatiently. "Can't you see how foolish this is? How
dangerous? Gods, if you were to repeat to the wrong ear what you've
just said to me, we would all be in trouble! Do you want that? Do you
want us to lose all we've worked so long and hard to build? Because
it's still a crime to damage a man's reputation with false
allegations, whatever your friends may think. Demotion, that's what
I'm talking about, Wang Ti. Demotion. Back below the Net." Wang
Ti gave a tiny shudder, then nodded, When her voice came again it was
small, chastened. "Forgive me, Kao Chen. I was wrong to say what
I did. I will say no more about the Hsien L'ing." Chen
stared at her a moment longer, letting his anger drain from him, then
nodded, satisfied. "Good. Then we'll say no more. Now hurry or
we'll be late. I promised Karr we'd be there by second bell." SHOU
CHEN-HAI looked about him nervously; then satisfied that everything
in the banqueting room was prepared, he forced himself to relax. The
T'ang's Chancellor had departed an hour past, but though Nan Ho was
high, high enough to have the ear of a T'ang, Shou's next guest—a
man never seen on the media, his face unknown to the billions of City
Europe—was in many ways more important. For
Shou it had begun a year back, when he had been appointed to the
chair of the finance committee for the new Health Center. He had seen
then where it might lead . . . if he was clever enough, audacious
enough. He had heard of the merchant some time before, and—his
mind made up—had gone out of his way to win his friendship. But
it was only when Shih Novacek had finally called on him, impressed
more by his persistence than his gifts or offers of help, that he had
had a chance to win him to his scheme. And now, this afternoon, that
friendship would bear its first fruit. Shou
clapped his hands. At once the serving girls went to their places,
while in the kitchen the cooks began to prepare the feast. Novacek
had briefed him fully on how to behave. Even so, Shou's hands
trembled with a mixture of fear and excitement at the thought of
entertaining a Red Pole, a real-life 426, like on the trivee serials.
He called the Chief Steward over and wiped his hands on the towel the
man held out for him, dabbing his forehead nervously. When he had
first considered all this he had imagined a meeting with the 489
himself; had pictured himself at a large table somewhere below the
Net, facing the big boss, some special delicacy in a porcelain bowl
by his elbow as he spelled out his scheme, but Novacek had quickly
disillusioned him. The Triad bosses rarely met the people they dealt
with. No. They were careful—very careful—to use
intermediaries. Men like Novacek, or like their Red Poles, the
"Executioners" of the Triads; cultured, discreet men with
the manners of Mandarins and the instincts of sharks. As he
was fussing with one of the table decorations, the curtains at the
far end of the long room twitched back and four young,
muscular-looking Han entered, Novacek just behind. They wore yellow
headbands with a wheel—the symbol of the Big Circle
Triad—embroidered in blue silk above the forehead. Novacek
looked across and smiled reassuringly. Again, Shou had been prepared
for this— even so, the thought of being "checked out"
by the Red Pole was faintly disturbing. He watched the young men
spread out, their eyes searching for anything suspicious; looking
under tables, checking the walls for false panels where assassins
might hide, even lifting up the bowls of flowers on each table to
make sure there were no tiny devices hidden away. They worked with an
impressive thoroughness, as if this were much more than simple
precaution. If what Shih Novacek said were true, theirs was a
cutthroat world down there, and those who succeeded were not merely
the strongest but the most careful. Finished,
two of the men stood in the room while the others went into the
kitchens to continue their search. While they did so, Novacek came
across, bowing to Shou Chen-hai. "You
have done well, Hsien L'ing Shou," he said, indicating
the spread Shou had prepared for his guest. Shou
returned Novacek's bow, immensely gratified by the merchant's praise.
"It is but the humblest fare, I am afraid." Novacek
came closer, lowering his voice. "Remember what I said. Do not
smile at our friend when he comes. Nor should you show any sign of
familiarity. Yao Tzu, like most Red Poles, is a proud man—he
has great face—but understandably so. One does not become a Red
Pole through family influence or by taking exams. The HungMun, the
Secret Societies, are a different kind of school—the very
toughest of schools, you might say—and our friend the Red Pole
is its finest graduate. If any other man were qualified for the job,
then he would be Red Pole and our friend Yao Tzu would be
dead. You understand?" Shou
Chen-hai bowed his head, swallowing nervously, made aware once again
of the risks he was taking even in meeting this man. His eyes went to
the Hung Moo's face. "You will sit beside me, Shih Novacek?" Novacek
smiled reassuringly. "Do not worry, Hsien L'ing Shou. Just do as
I've said and all will be well. I'll be there at your elbow all the
time." Shou
Chen-hai gave a tiny shudder, then bowed again, grateful that the
merchant had agreed to this favor. It would cost him, he knew, but if
his scheme succeeded it would be a small price to pay. At the
entrance to the kitchen one of the runners appeared again, giving a
brief hand signal to one of his compatriots. At once the young man
turned and disappeared through the curtain. "All's
well, it seems," Novacek said, turning back. "Come, let's
go across. Our friend the Red Pole will be here any moment now." Little
was said during the meal. Yao Tzu sat, expressionless, facing Shou
Chen-hai across the main table, one of his henchmen seated on either
side of him. If what Novacek said were true, the Red Pole himself
would be unarmed, but that didn't mean that he was unprepared for
trouble. The henchmen were big, vicious-looking brutes who sat there,
eating nothing. They merely stared at Shou; stared and stared until
his initial discomfort became something else—a cold,
debilitating dread that seeped into his bones. It was something
Novacek had not prepared him for and he wondered why. But he let
nothing show. His fear and discomfort, his uncertainty and self-doubt
were kept hidden behind the thickness of his face. He
watched the Red Pole wipe at his lips delicately with the cloth, then
look across at him. Yao Tzu had tiny, almost childlike features; his
nose and ears and mouth dainty, like those of a young woman, his eyes
like two painted marbles in a pockmarked face that was almost Hung
Moo in its paleness. He stared at Shou Chen-hai with an impersonal
hostility that seemed of a piece with the rest of him. Meeting that
gaze, Shou realized that there was nothing this man would not do.
Nothing that could ever make him lose a moment's sleep at night. It
was this that made him so good at what he did—that made him a
426, an Executioner. He
almost smiled, but stopped himself, waiting, as he'd been told, for
Yao Tzu to speak first. But instead of speaking, the Red Pole half
turned in his seat and clicked his fingers, summoning one of his
runners. At once the man came across and placed a slender case on the
table by Yao Tzu's left hand. Yao
Tzu looked up, then pushed the case toward him. Shou
glanced at Novacek, then drew the case closer, looking to the Red
Pole for permission to open it. At the man's brief nod, he undid the
catches and lifted the lid. Inside, embedded in bright-red padded
silk, were three rows of tiny black-wrapped packages, Han pictograms
embossed on the wrappings in red and blue and yellow—a row of
each color. He stared at them a moment, then looked up, meeting the
Red Pole's eyes, understanding dawning on him. Again he had to fight
down the impulse to smile—to try to make some kind of personal
contact with the man facing him—but inside he felt exultant. If
these were what he thought they were then it was already agreed. He
glanced at Novacek for confirmation, then looked back at the Red
Pole, bowing his head. For
the first time in over an hour, Yao Tzu spoke. "You
understand then, Shou Chen-hai? You have there the complete range of
our latest drugs, designed to suit every need, manufactured to the
very highest quality in our laboratories." He leaned forward
slightly. "At present there is nothing like them in the whole of
Chung Kuo. We will supply you with whatever you require for the first
two months, free of charge, and you in turn will provide the capsules
without payment to your contacts in the Above. After that time,
however, we begin to charge for whatever we supply. Not much, of
course—nothing like what you will be charging your friends,
neh?—but enough to keep us both happy." Shou Chen-hai gave
the smallest nod, his throat dry, his hands trembling where they
rested on either side of the case. "And my idea?" Yao
Tzu looked down. "Your scheme has our approval, Hsien L'ing
Shou. It accords with our plans for future expansion. Indeed, we
had been looking for some while to move in this direction. It is
fortunate for us both that our interests coincide so closely, neh?" Shou
felt a shudder of relief pass through him. "And the other bosses
. . . they'll not contest you over this?" It was
his deepest worry—the one thing that had kept him sleepless
night after night—and now he had blurted it out. For a moment
he thought he had said the wrong thing, but beside him Novacek was
silent, and there was no sign in the Red Pole's face that he had been
offended by the words; even so, Shou sensed a new tension about the
table. "It
will be dealt with," Yao Tzu answered stiffly, meeting his eyes.
"When the well is deep, many can draw from it, neh? Besides, it
is better to make money than fight a war. I am certain the other
bosses will feel the same." Shou
took a long breath, letting the tension drain from him. Then it was
agreed. Again he felt a wave of pure elation wash through him. Yao
Tzu was watching him coldly. "You, of course, will be
responsible for your end of things. You will take care of recruitment
and marketing. You will also provide all tea money." Shou
bowed his head, concealing his disappointment. He had hoped they
would help him out with respect to "tea money"—bribes;
had assumed that they would pay well to buy his contacts, but it was
clear they saw things differently. His funds were large, admittedly,
since he had tapped into the Health Project finances, but they were
far from infinite and he had had extensive experience already of
dealing with officials. They were like whores, only whores were
cheap. He
kept his eyes lowered, thinking it through. Meeting the bill for
squeeze would stretch his resources to the limit, but he would cope,
even if he had to borrow steeply; for the return, when it came, would
be tremendous. He would be the Big Circle's man in the Above, buying
into legitimate concerns on their behalf, making friends, gaining
access where even men like Novacek could not go. And this other
matter—this unexpected business with the drugs—that, too,
could prove quite lucrative. He saw it now. He would recruit
gamblers—would finance their debts, then agree to pay off what
they owed in exchange for their becoming his men, dealing on his
behalf. Yes, he could see it clearly; could picture a great web of
connections with himself at the center. He
looked up, meeting the Red Pole's stare with a sudden confidence,
knowing he had not been wrong all those months back. He, Shou
Chen-hai, was destined for great things. And his sons would be great
men too. Maybe even ministers. When
they had gone he sat there, alone at the table, studying the contents
of the case. If what he had heard were true, this lot alone was worth
half a million. He touched his tongue to his teeth thoughtfully, then
lifted one of the tiny packages from its bed. It was
identical in size to all the others, its waxy, midnight-black wrapper
heat-sealed on the reverse with the blue wheel logo of the Big
Circle. The only difference was the marking on the front. In this
instance the pictograms were in red. Pan shuai ch'i, it
read—"half-life." The others had similarly strange
names: leng tuan—"cold leg"; ting
tui—"shutdown"; hsian hsiao ying—"yield
point." He set the package carefully in its place and sat back,
staring thoughtfully into the distance. He was still sitting there
when Novacek returned. "What
are these?" Novacek
hesitated, then laughed. "You know what they are." "I
know they're drugs, but why are they so different? He said there was
nothing like them in Chung Kuo. Why? I need to know if I'm going to
sell them." Novacek
studied him a moment, then nodded. "Okay, Shou Chen-hai. Let me
tell you what's happening . . . what's really happening here." "It's
all pipes now," said Vasska, his voice coming from the darkness
close by. "The shit goes down and the water comes up. Water and
shit. Growth and decay. Old processes, but mechanized now. Forced
into narrow pipes." A
warm, throaty laugh greeted Vasska's comment, the darkness hiding its
source. "Don't we just know it," said Erika, her knees
rubbing against Ywe Hao's in the cramped space. "They
fool themselves," Vasska continued, warming to his theme. "But
it isn't a real living space, it's a bloody machine. Switch it off
and they'd die, they're so cut off from things." "And
we're so different?" Ywe
Hao's comment was sharp, her irritation with Vasska mixed up with a
fear that they might be overheard. They were high up here, at the
very top of the stack, under the roof itself, but who knew what
tricks acoustics played in the ventilation system? She glanced at the
faintly glowing figure at her wrist and gritted her teeth. "Yes,
we're different, all right," said Vasska, leaning closer, so
that she could feel his breath on her cheek. "We're different
because we want to tear it down. To level it and get back to the
earth." It was
close to an insult. As if she had forgotten—she who had been in
the movement a good five years longer than this . . . this boy I
Nor was it what she had really meant. They, too, were cut off.
They, too, had lived their lives inside the machine. So what if they
only thought they were different? She
was about to respond, but Erika leaned forward, touching her arm
gently, as if to say, Don't mind him. We know his kind. But
aloud she said, "How much longer, Chi Li? I'm stifling." It was
true. The small space at the hub hadn't been designed for three, and
though it was well ventilated, it was cramped, hot, and rich with a
mixture of mildly unpleasant smells. "Anotrter
five at least," she said, covering Erika's hand with her own.
She liked the woman, for all her faults, whereas Vasska . . . Vasska
was a pain. She had met his sort before. Zealots. Bigots. They used
the Yu ideology as a substitute for thinking. The rest was
common talk. Shit and water. Narrow pipes. These were the catch
phrases of the old Ping Tiao intelligentsia. As if she
needed such reminders. She
closed her eyes a moment, thinking. The three of them had been
together as a team for only six weeks now—the first three of
those in training for this mission and in what they termed
"assimilation." Vasska, Erika—those weren't their
real names, no more than her own was Chi Li, the name on her ID
badge. Those were the names of dead men and women in the Maintenance
Service; men and women whose identities the Yu had stolen for
their use. Nor would she ever leam their real names. They were
strangers, brought in from other Yu cells for this mission. Once they
were finished here she would never see them again. It was
a necessary system, and it worked, but it had its drawbacks. From the
start Vasska had challenged her. He had never said as much, but it
was clear that he resented her leadership. Even though there was a
supposed equality between men and women in the movement, the men
still expected to be the leaders—the doers and the thinkers,
the formulators of policy and the agents of what had been decided.
Vasska was one such. He stopped short of open dissent, but not far.
He was surly, sullen, argumentative. Time and again she had been
forced to give him explicit orders. And he, in return, had questioned
her loyalty to the cause and to the underlying dogma of the Yu
ideology; questioned it until she, in her quiet moments, had begun to
ask herself, "Do 1 believe in what I'm doing? Do I believe in
Mach's vision of the new order that is to come once the City has been
leveled?" And though she did, it had grown harder than ever to
say as much—as though such lip service might make her like
Vasska. For a
while there was only the sound of their breathing and the faint,
ever-present hum of the life systems. Then, prefacing his remark with
an unpleasantly insinuating laugh, Vasska spoke again. "So how's
your boyfriend, Chi Li? How's. . . Wbl/-gang?" And he made the
older man's name sound petty and ridiculous. "Shut
up, Vasska," said Erika, defusing the sudden tension. Then,
leaning closer to Ywe Hao, she whispered, "Open the vent. Let's
look. It's almost time." In the
dark Ywe Hao smiled, grateful for Erika's intervention, then turned
and slipped the catch. Light spilled into the cramped, dark space,
revealing the huddle of their limbs. "What
can you see?" For a
moment it was too bright. Then, when her eyes had focused, she found
she was looking down into Main from a place some fifty or sixty ch'i
overhead. It was late—less than an hour from first dark—and
the day's crowds had gone from Main, leaving only a handful of
revelers and one or two workers, making their way to their
night-shift occupations. Ywe Hao looked beyond these to a small
doorway to her left at the far end of Main. It was barely visible
from where she was, yet even as her eyes went to it, a figure stepped
out, raising a hand in parting. "That's
him!" she said in an urgent whisper. "Vasska, get going. I
want that elevator secured." Dismissing him, she turned, looking
into the strong, feminine face close to her own. "Well? What do
you think?" Erika
considered, then nodded, a tight, tense smile lighting her features.
"If it's like last time, we have thirty minutes, forty at the
outside. Time enough to secure the place and get things ready." "Good.
Then let's get moving. There won't be another opportunity as good as
this." YWE
HAO looked about her, then nodded, satisfied. The rooms seemed
normal, no sign of the earlier struggle visible. Four of the servants
were locked away in the pantry, bound hand and foot and sedated. In
another room she had placed the women and children of the household;
Shou's two wives, the new concubine, and the two young boys. Those,
too, she had drugged, taking care to administer the exact dosage to
the boys. Now she turned, facing the fifth member of the household
staff, the Chief Steward, the number yi—one—emblazoned
in red on the green chest patch he wore on his pure white pau. He
stared back at her, his eyes wide with fear, his head slightly
lowered, wondering what she would do next. Earlier she had taped a
sticky-bomb to the back of his neck, promising him that at the
slightest sign or word of warning, she would set it off. "Remember,"
she said reassuringly, "it's not you we want, Steward Wong. Do
as I say and you'll live. But relax. Shou Chen-hai must suspect
nothing. He'll be back from seeing the girl soon, so run his bath and
tend to him as normal. But remember, we shall be watching your every
movement. At the least sign . . ." The
Steward bowed his head. .
"Good." She turned, double-checking the room, then patted
the pocket of her tunic. The papers were inside—the pamphlet
explaining their reasons for the execution and the official death
warrant, signed by all five members of the High Council of the Yu.
These would be left on Shou's body for Security to find.
Meanwhile, friends sympathetic to the cause would be distributing
copies of the pamphlet throughout the Lowers. More than fifty million
in all, paid for from the coffers of the long-defunct Ping Tiao.
Money that Mach had sifted away after Helmstadt and before the
debacle at Bremen that had brought about the Ping Tioo's demise. "Okay.
You know what to say? Good. Then get to work. I want things prepared
for when he returns." She
joined Erika at the desk in the tiny surveillance room. At once she
picked up the figure of the Chief Steward as he made his way down the
corridor to the main bathroom. Keeping an eye on what he did, she
glanced at the other screens, once more appalled by the luxury, by
the sheer waste of what she saw. Shou Chen-hai's family was no bigger
than many in the Mids and Lowers, and yet he had all this:
twenty-four rooms, including no less than two kitchens and three
private bathrooms. It was disgraceful. An insult to those he was
meant to serve. But that was not why she was here, for there were
many who l$ed as Shou Chen-hai lived, unaware of the misery and
suffering their greed relied upon. No, there were specific reasons
for singling out Shou Chen-hai. She
shuddered, indignation fueling her anger. Shou Chen-hai was a cheat.
And not just any cheat. His cheating was on a grand scale and would
result in untold suffering: in children not receiving treatment for
debilitating diseases; in good men bleeding to death in overcrowded
Accident Clinics; in mothers dying in childbirth because the
facilities promised by the T'ang had not been built. She laughed
coldly. That ceremony earlier had been a sham. The T'ang's Chancellor
had been shown around the new wards and operating theaters as if they
were typical of what existed in the rest of the facility. But she had
seen. With her own eyes she had seen the empty wards, the unbuilt
theatres, the empty spaces where real and solid things ought to have
been. Only a fifth of the promised facility had been built. The rest
did not exist—would never exist—because Shou
Chen-hai and his friends had taken the allocated funds and spent them
on their own personal schemes. She shook her head slowly, still
astonished by the scale of the deception. It was not unheard offer
officials to take ten, even fifteen, percent of any project. It was
even, in this crazy world of theirs, expected. But eighty
percent! Four billion yua.nl Ywe Hao gritted her teeth. It
could not be tolerated. Shou Chen-hai had to be made an example of,
else countless more would suffer while such as Shou grew bloated on
their suffering. She
turned, looking at Erika. "Who is Shou seeing?" Erika
smiled, her eyes never leaving the screen. "One of his
underling's daughters. A young thing of thirteen. The mother knows
but condones it. And who can blame her?" "No
. . ." Yet Ywe Hao felt sick at the thought. It was another
instance of Shou's rottenness; of his corrupt use of the power given
him. Power . . . that was what was at fault here. Power, given over
into the hands of petty, unscrupulous men. Men who were not fit to
run a brothel, let alone a hsien. Men no better than her Uncle
Chang. She
drew her knife, staring at it a moment, wondering what it would feel
like to thrust it into Shou Chen-hai, and whether that would be
enough to assuage the anger she felt. No. She could kill a million
Shous and it would not be enough. Yet it was a start. A sign, to be
read by High and Low alike. She
turned the knife in her hand, tested the sharpness of the edge, then
sheathed it again. "Are you ready?" Erika
laughed. "Don't worry about me. Just worry whether Vasska's done
his job and covered the elevators." "Yes
. . ." she said, then tensed, seeing the unmistakable figure of
Shou Chen-hai at the far end of the approach corridor. "Yes. But
first our man . . ." the
CEREMONY was far advanced. In the small and crowded room there was an
expectant silence as the New Confucian official turned back, facing
the couple. Karr
was dressed in his ceremonial uniform, the close-fitting azurite-blue
tunic emphasizing his massive frame. His close-cropped head was bare,
but about his neck hung the huge golden dragon pendant of the chia
ch'eng. It had been awarded to him by the T'ang himself at a
private ceremony only two months earlier, and Karr wore it now with
pride, knowing it was the highest honor a commoner could attain
outside of government, making him Honorary Assistant to the Royal
Household. Beside
Karr, soon to be his wife, stood the woman he had met at the Dragon
Cloud teahouse six months before, Marie Enge. In contrast to Karr she
wore bright scarlet silks, a simple one-piece, tied at the waist. The
effect, though simple, was stunning. She looked the perfect mate for
the big man. Karr
turned, meeting her eyes briefly, smiling, then turned back to face
the official, listening attentively as the wizen-faced old man
spelled out the marriage duties. "I
must remind you that in public it is neither seemly nor appropriate
to show your love. Your remarks must be restrained and considerate to
the feelings of those about you." The old man looked about him
severely. "Love must be kept in bounds. It must not be allowed
to interfere with the husband's work nor with his duties to the
family." He gave a little nod, then looked at the bride. "As
for you, Marie Enge, you must perform your household duties as a good
wife, without reproach or complaint. In social gatherings you should
not sit with your husband but should remain aloof. As a wife, all
ties of blood are broken. You will become part of your husband's
household." The
old man paused, becoming, for a moment, less formal. "I am told
that among the young it has become unfashionable to view things in
this light, but there is much to be said for our traditions. They
bring stability and peace, and peace breeds contentment and
happiness. In your particular case, Gregor Karr and Marie Enge, I
realize that there are no families to consider. For you the great
chain of family was broken, from no fault of your own. And yet these
traditions are still relevant to your situation, for in time you will
have children. You will be family. And so the chain will be reforged,
the ties remade. By this ceremony you reenter the great tidal flow of
life in Chung Kuo. By taking part in these most ancient of rituals,
you reaffirm their strength and purpose." Chen,
looking on from Karr's left, felt a tiny shiver ripple down his spine
at the words. So it had been for him, when he had married Wang Ti. It
had been like being reborn. No longer simply Chen, but Kao Chen,
Head of the Kao family, linked to the future by the sons he would
have. Sons who would sweep his grave and enact the rituals. In
marrying he had become an ancestor. He smiled, feeling deeply for
Karr at that moment, enjoying the way the big man looked at his
bride, and knowing that this was a marriage made in Heaven. After
the ceremony he went across and congratulated them, holding Karr to
him fiercely. "I am so pleased for you, Gregor. I always hoped—"
He stopped, choked by the sudden upsurge of feeling. Karr
laughed, then pushed him back to arm's length. "What's this, my
friend? Tears? No . . . this is a time for great joy, for today my
heart is fuller than it has ever been." He
turned, raising a hand. At the signal the doors behind him were
thrown open, revealing a long, high-ceilinged room, all crystal and
lace, the tables set for several hundred guests. "Well,
dear friends, let us go through. There is food and drink, and later
there will be dancing." He looked across at his bride, smiling
broadly, holding out his hand until she joined him. "So . . .
welcome, everyone. Tonight we celebrate!" THE
GOLDEN EYE of the security camera swiveled in its dragon-mouth
socket, following Shou Chen-hai as he approached. Moments later the
door hissed back. Beyond it, in the tiled entrance hall, the Chief
Steward was waiting, head bowed, a silken indoor robe over one arm. Shou
Chen-hai went inside and stood there, letting Wong Pao-yi remove his
outside garments and help him on with the lightweight pau. For
a moment he breathed deeply, enjoying the cool silence of the
anteroom, then turned, looking at his servant. "Where is
everyone?" Wong
Pao-yi lowered his head, repeating the words he had been told to say.
"Your first wife, Shou Wen-lo, is visiting her mother,
Excellency. She will be back in the morning. Your second wife, Shou
He, has taken the boys to buy new robes. She called not long ago to
say she would be another hour." Shou
nodded, satisfied. "And Yue Mi?" The
old servant hesitated. "She is asleep, Excellency. Would you
have me wake her and send her to your room?" Shou
laughed. "No, Steward Wong. Later, perhaps. Just now I'd like a
bath." Wong
Pao-yi bowed his head again. "It is already poured, Excellency.
If you will come through, I will see to your needs personally." "There's
no need. Just bring me a drink." Alone
in the bathroom, he kicked off his thin briefs, then set the wine cup
down and peeled the pau over his head. Naked, he stretched,
feeling good, enjoying the sight of his own well-muscled body in the
wall mirror, then picked up his wine cup again, toasting himself. The
girl had been good. Much less tense than before. Much more willing to
please him. Doubtless that was her mother's doing. Well, perhaps he
would reward the mother. Send her some small gift to encourage her
efforts. Or maybe he would have them both next time, mother and
daughter, in the same bed. The
thought made him laugh, but as he turned he slowed, sensing another
presence in the corridor outside. "Wong
Pao-yi? Is that you?" He
took a step forward, then stopped, the heavy porcelain wine cup
falling from his hand, clattering against the side of the bath. "What
the fuck ... ?" It was
a man, dressed in the orange and yellow work fatigues of Maintenance,
standing there, a handgun raised and pointed at him. "Wong
Pao-yi!" Shou called, staring back at the man, conscious of his
nakedness, his vulnerability. "Wong Pao-yi, where are you?" The
man laughed softly and shook his head. "Been having fun, Shou
Chen-hai? Been fucking little girls, have we?" Anger
made Shou take two more steps before he remembered the gun. He
stopped, frowning, seeing the odd look of enjoyment on the man's
face. "What
do you want?" he asked. "All I have is in the safe
in the study. Cards, cash, a few other bits and pieces—" The
man shook his head. "I'm no robber, Shou Chen-hai. If I were,
I'd have taken you earlier, in the corridors." Shou
nodded, forcing himself to stay calm. If this were one of the rival
Triad bosses trying to muscle in on the deal he had made with the Big
Circle, then it would not do to show any fear in front of one of
their messenger boys. He puffed out his chest, wearing his nakedness
like a badge of courage. "Who
sent you? Fat Wong? Li the Lidless? Or was it Whiskers Lu?" The
man waved the gun impatiently and thrust a piece of paper at Shou.
Shou Chen-hai turned his head slightly, not understanding, but at
second prompting took the paper. Looking down at it, his stomach
turned over. It was
a terrorist pamphlet. Itemizing his crimes. Saying why they had had
to kill him. "Look,
I..." Shou began. But there was no arguing with this. No way of
dealing with these bastards. His only chance was to jump the man. But
as if he knew this, the man took a step backward, pulling back the
safety. He was watching Shou intently, his eyes gloating now. "Been
having /un?" the man insisted, jerking the gun forward, making
Shou jump and give a tiny whimper of fright. "Been fucking
little girls?" Was
that it? Was it someone hired by his underling Fang Shuo? And was all
this business with the pamphlets merely a cover? He put out one hand,
as if to fend off the man. "I'll
pay you. Pay you lots. Much more than Fang Shou paid you. Look, I'll
take you to the safe now. I'll—" "Shut
up!" The
man's mouth was formed into a snarl, but his eyes were cold and
pitiless and Shou Chen'hai knew at once he had been mistaken. He was
a terrorist. There was no mistaking that mad gleam, that
uncompromising fanaticism. "Your
kind revolt me," he said, raising the gun and pointing it at
Shou's forehead. "You think you can buy anything. You think—"
He stopped and turned abruptly, following Shou's eyes. A
second figure had come into the corridor. She, too, wore the orange
and yellow of Maintenance. Taking one look at how things were, she
raised her gun and came forward. "You
stupid bastard! What the fuck do you think you're doing?" The
man gave a visible shudder of anger, then turned back, facing Shou
Chen-hai. Even so, his face had changed, had lost its look of hideous
amusement. Shou could see immediately how things stood between the
two—could sense the acid resentment in the man—and at
once began working on a way to use it. But it was too late. Ywe
Hao pointed her gun and fired twice, then, a moment later, a third
time, standing over the slumped, lifeless body to make sure it was
dead. There was blood on the ceramic tiles. Blood in the glasslike
water of the bath. She turned and looked at Vasska, her anger making
her voice shrill. "You
fucking idiot! I've had to send Erika to do what you should have
done. Now go! Go and link up with her. Now!" The
man huffed out his resentment, but lowered his gun and began to turn
away. He was two steps across the room when he stopped and turned
back. "Someone's
coming! I can hear footsteps!" She
looked up at him, shaking her head. He was such a fool. Such a bloody
amateur. Why had she had to get him on her team? Quickly she placed
the papers on the corpse. Then, straightening up, she went out past
Vasska and into the corridor. At the far end a man had come into
view—barefoot, it seemed, and in his indoor clothes. As he came
closer, she recognized who it was. It was the old Security guard,
Leyden. "No
. . ." she said softly. "Please no . . ." But he kept
coming. A few paces from her, he stopped. "Chi
Li... What's going on? 1 thought I heard shots. I..." His
voice tapered off. He was frowning and looking at the gun in her
hand, part of him understanding, another part refusing to understand. She
shook her head. There wasn't time to tie him up. No time even to
argue with him. Training and instinct told her to shoot him and get
out, but something held her back. Vasska, coming alongside her,
looked at the man and raised his gun. "No
. . ." she said, reaching out to restrain his hand. "Let
him go. He's not armed." Vasska
laughed. "You're a fool. Soft too," he sneered, forgetting
what she had done in the other room. "Let's kill him and get
out." Leyden
was looking frightened now. He glanced from one to the other and
began to back away. Vasska stepped forward, throwing off Ywe Hao's
arm, and aimed his gun. But he didn't have a chance to fire it. Two
more shots rang out and he fell forward, dead. Leyden
looked at Ywe Hao, his eyes wide, his mouth open. "Go!"
she said, her eyes pleading with him. "Go, before I have to kill
you too!" And she raised her gun at him—the gun that had
killed Shou Chen-hai and Vasska. He hesitated only a moment, then
turned and ran, back up the corridor. She watched him go—heard
his footsteps sound long after he was out of sight— then,
stepping over Vasska's corpse, walked slowly down the corridor, the
gun held out in front of her. THE
LIGHTS had been dimmed in the reception room, a space cleared for
dancing. A small troupe of Han musicians had set up their instruments
in one corner and were playing a sprightly tune, their faces beaming
as they watched the dancers whirl about the floor. Chen
stood to one side, watching as Karr led his new wife through the
dance. He had never seen the big man so happy; never seen that broad
mouth smile so much, those blue eyes sparkle so vividly. Marie,
facing him, seemed almost breathless with happiness. She gasped and
laughed and threw her head back, screeching with delight. And all
about them the crowd pressed close, sharing their happiness. Chen
grinned and turned his head, looking across at his own family. Jyan
and young Wu were sitting at a nearby table, sipping at their drinks
through straws, their eyes taking in everything. Beside them sat Wang
Ti, her heavily swollen belly forcing her to sit straight-backed, her
legs apart. Even so, she seemed not to notice her discomfort as she
held Ch'iang Hsin's hands, twirling her baby daughter this way and
that to the rhythms of the music. Chen
smiled, then took a deep swig of his beer. It felt good to be able to
let go. To relax and not have to worry about what the morning would
bring. The last six months had been murderously busy, getting the new
squad ready for active service, but after tonight both Karr and he
were on a week's furlough. Chen yawned, then put his hand up to
smooth his head, surprised, for the briefest moment, that his fingers
met not flesh but a soft covering of hair. He lowered his hand,
frowning. A lifetime's habits were hard to shift. He was always
forgetting. . . . Chen
drained his glass, then went across to the bar to get a refill,
glancing at the presents stacked high on the table as he passed.
Tolonen had sent a bolt of the finest silk, the T'ang a silver
platter, engraved by the Court's own Master Silversmith. But there
were hundreds of others too—evidence of the esteem in which
Karr was held. He
took his beer and made his way back, catching Karr's eye as he
circled the dance floor, lifting his glass in salute. "Are
you all right?" he asked Wang Ti, crouching at her side. "If
you're feeling tired . . . ?" She
smiled. "No, I'm fine. Just keep an eye on the boys. Make sure
they don't drink anything they shouldn't. Especially Wu. He's a
mischievous little soul." Chen
grinned. "Okay. But if you want anything, just let me know, eh?
And if you get tired . . ." "Don't
nag me, husband. Who's carrying this thing—you or me? I'll tell
you straight enough when I want to go. All right?" Chen
nodded, satisfied, then straightened up. As he did the door at the
far end swung open and a uniformed guard came into the room. Chen
narrowed his eyes, noting at once that the man was a Special Services
courier. In one hand he held a Security folder. As he came into the
room he looked about him, then swept off his cap, recognizing Karr. Chen
went across, intercepting the courier. "I
am Captain Kao," he said, standing between Karr and the man.
"What is your business here?" The
courier bowed. "Forgive me, Captain, but I have sealed orders
for Major Karr. From Marshal Tolonen. I was told to give them
directly into the Major's hands." Chen
shook his head. "But this is his wedding night. Surely . . . ?"
Then he caught up with what the man had said. From Tolonen . . . He
frowned. "What has been happening?" The
courier shrugged. "Forgive me, Captain, but I am not aware of
the contents, only that it is a matter of the most extreme urgency." Chen
stood back, letting the man pass, watching as he made his way through
the dancers to stand before Karr. Karr
frowned, then with a shrug tore open the wallet and pulled out the
pririted documents. For a moment he was silent, intent on what he was
reading; then, grim-faced, he came across. "What
is it?" Chen asked, disturbed by the sudden change in Karr's
mood. Karr
sighed, then handed Chen the photostat of the terrorist pamphlet that
had been among the documents. "I'm sorry, Chen, but for us the
party's over. We have work to do. It looks like the Ping Tiao are
active again. They've assassinated a senior official. A man named
Shou Chen-hai." "Shou
Chen-hai . . ." Chen looked up from the pamphlet, his mouth
fallen open. "The Hsien L'ing from Hannover?" Karr's
eyes widened. "That's right. You knew him?" But
Chen had turned and was looking at Wang Ti, remembering what she had
said only that morning—the argument they had had over the
rumors of the man's corruption. And now the man was dead, murdered by
assassins. He turned back. "But your wedding night. . . ?" Karr
smiled and held his arms briefly. "Marie will understand.
Besides, it will be sweeter for the waiting, neh?" And, turning
away, the big man went across to his bride. the
first corpse lay where it had fallen, faceup on the bathroom floor.
The face was unmarked, the eyes closed, as if sleeping, but the chest
was a mess. The first two high-velocity shells had torn the rib cage
apart and spattered the heart and most of the left lung over the far
wall, but whoever had killed him had wanted to make absolutely sure.
A third shot had been fired into the man's gut after he had fallen,
hemorrhaging the stomach and large intestine and destroying the left
kidney. Chen
had already seen the computer simulation produced by the Medical
Examiner on the scene, but he had wanted to see the damage for
himself; to try to picture what had happened. He knelt there a moment
longer, studying the dead man, fingering the fine silk of his
bathrobe, then he looked across at the fallen wine cup, the faintly
pink water of the low-edged marble bath. The medical report showed
that Shou Chen-hai had recently had sex. He had not had time to wash
himself before he was killed. As for the wine, he had barely sipped
at the cup before he had dropped it, presumably in surprise, for it
lay some way from the body, the thick stoneware chipped. He
stood and took a step back, taking in the whole of the scene, then
turned, looking out into the hallway where the second corpse lay,
facedown, the back of the orange and yellow Maintenance work suit
stained red in a figure eight where the wounds had overlapped. Chen
shook his head, trying to piece it together, but as yet it made no
sense. The second corpse was supposedly a terrorist. His ID was faked
and, as expected, they had found a fish pendant around his neck, a
copy of the pamphlet in his pocket. But was that what they had been
meant to find? Was this, in fact, a Triad killing and the rest of it
a front, meant to send them off on the wrong track? It would
certainly make sense of the explicit mention in the pamphlet of
Shou's dealings with the Big Circle. If a rival Triad boss wanted to
discredit Iron Mu, or more likely, to frighten off those who might
think of dealing with him, what better way than to resurrect old
fears of fanatical terrorists who struck like ghosts between the
levels? Because
the Ping Tiao were ghosts. They had been destroyed—their
cells smashed, their leaders killed—less than six months ago.
It was not possible that they could have rebuilt themselves in such a
short time. Chen
took the copy of the pamphlet from his tunic pocket and unfolded it.
There was no mention of the Ping Tiao anywhere on the
pamphlet, but the Han pictogram for the word "fish"—Yu—the
symbol of the old Ping Tiao was prominent in several places; and the
printing and style of the pamphlet were unmistakable. Even if the
Ping Tiao itself had not survived, one important aspect of it—one
man, perhaps, the brain and eye behind the original organization—had
come through. Unless this were an intricate fake: a mask designed to
confuse them and throw them off the scent. But why do that? He
walked through, skirting the corpse. First Level was meant to be
immune from attack—a haven from such violence. But that myth
had just been blown. Whoever it was, Ko Ming or Triad, had
just sent a ripple of fear throughout the whole of City Europe. Karr
was coming out of a room to his right. Seeing Chen, he beckoned him
inside. They
had set up an operations room here by the main entrance. The room had
been a store-cupboard, but they had cleared it and moved in their own
equipment. Karr's desk was at one end of the tiny room, piled high
with tapes and papers. In a chair in front of it sat a middle-aged
man wearing the uniform of Deck Security. "This is Wolfgang
Leyden," Karr said, taking his seat on the far side of the desk.
"It seems he knew the team who were responsible for this. More
than that, he was witness to one of the killings." Chen
stared.at the man in disbelief. "I don't understand." Karr
looked to the man. "Leyden, tell Captain Kao what you just told
me." Slowly, and with a faint tremor in his voice, Leyden
repeated his story. "Well?" Karr said. "Have you ever
heard the like?" Chen
shook his head. "No. But it makes sense. I had begun to think
this was some kind of Triad operation. One of the big bosses muscling
in on another's deals, but now . . ." Now he
understood. The Ping Tioo really were back. Or something like them.
"What else have we got?" Karr
looked up. "Surprisingly little. The woman did a thorough job on
the deck communications system. For the three weeks they were here
there's no visual record of them." Chen
laughed. "That isn't possible." "That's
what I thought. You've got Security guards checking the screens all
the time. They'd notice if anything were being blanked out, neh? But
that's not what she did. The cameras were working, but nothing was
being stored by the deck computer. The term for it is a white-out. It
would only get noticed if someone wanted to refer back to something
on the tapes, and with so little happening at this level, it's rare
that Security has to check on anything. I looked at their log. It's
almost nine weeks since they last called anything from memory.
There's no crime this high up. At least, nothing that would show as
being crime. So, as long as Security keeps the wrong people out of
these levels . . ." Chen
frowned. "You said 'she' just then when you were talking about
the tampering with the computer system. How do we know that?" Leyden
spoke up. "She was good. I've seen them before, many times, but
none of them were as good as her. I sat and watched her while she was
at work. It was like she was part of the system." He paused,
looking away, a sudden wistfulness in his face. "She was a nice
girl. I can't believe . . ." He looked down at his trembling
hands. "Why? I don't understand____" Chen
leaned toward him. "You're certain it happened as you said. The
other— Vasska,
you say his name was—he had already drawn his gun when she shot
him?" Leyden
nodded. "He was going to kill me, but she wouldn't let him. His
gun was pointed at me. At my head." A faint shudder went through
him, then he looked up, his eyes searching Chen's face. "You'll
kill her, won't you? You'll track her down and kill her." Chen
looked down, disturbed by the accusation in Leyden's voice. "I've
read their pamphlet," Leyden went on, "and it's true. I've
seen them come here for meetings. Businessmen. And others. Others who
had no legitimate business to be here. And I've seen the things he's
bought these last eight months. Things beyond his means. So maybe
they were right. Maybe—" Karr
raised a hand, interrupting him. "Take care what you say,
friend. Captain Kao here and I... we understand how you feel. The
girl saved your life and you're grateful to her. But there are others
who will be much less understanding. They will take your gratitude
for sympathy with the girl's ideals. I would advise you to keep your
opinion of the Hsien Ling to yourself, Shih Leyden. As
for your account. . ." Karr
hesitated, noting the guard who had appeared at the door. "Yes?" The
guard snapped to attention, bowing his head. "Forgive me, Major,
but an official from the T'ing Wei has arrived." "Shit,"
Karr said under his breath. "So soon?" The
T'ing Wei was the Superintendent of Trials, and his department
was responsible for keeping the wheels of justice turning in City
Europe; yet it was in the department's other role—as the
official mouthpiece of the State—that it was most active. Karr
turned to Leyden. "Forgive me, but I must attend to this.
However, as I was about to say, your account will be entered in the
official record, and if the matter comes to trial, will be offered in
mitigation of the woman's crime. That said, I'm afraid I can't vouch
that she'll ever come to trial. State policy toward terrorism is, and
must be, of the severest kind. To have exposed Shou Chen-hai would
have been one thing, to have murdered him is another." Leyden
shuddered, then stood, bowing his head first to Karr and then to
Chen. As he left, Chen looked across at Karr. "The
T'ing Wei were bloody quick getting here. What do you think
they want?" Karr snorted in disgust. "To meddle in things,
as ever. To bugger things up and muddy the clearest of streams. What
else are they good for?" Chen
laughed. "Then we'll be giving them our full cooperation?"
Karr nodded. "And dropping our pants for good measure, neh?"
The two men roared with laughter. They were still laughing when the
official from the T'ing Wei entered, trailing four youthful,
effeminate-looking assistants. All five were Han, and all had that
unmistakable air of self-contained arrogance that was the hallmark of
the T'ing Wei—a kind of brutal elegance that was
reflected in their clothes and manners. The
official looked about him distastefully, then began to speak, not
deigning to look at Karr. "I
understand that a pamphlet has been circulated linking the Hsien
L'ing with certain nefarious organizations." Karr
picked up a copy of the pamphlet and made to offer it, but the
official ignored him. "Our
task here is to make sure that the truth is known. That this
scurrilous tissue of lies is revealed for what it is and the
reputation of the late Shou Chen-hai returned to its former glorious
condition." Karr
stared at the official a moment, then laughed. "Then I'm afraid
you have your work cut out, Shih . . . ?" "My
name is Yen T'ung," the official answered coldly, turning to
take a folder from one of his assistants, "and I am Third
Secretary to the Minister, Peng Lu-hsing." "Well,
Third Secretary Yen, I have to inform you that it seems the
accusations are true. Our friend, the Hsien L'ing, has been having
meetings with people that a man of his . . . reputation . . . ought
not to have been seeing. As for the funds relating to the Phoenix
Health Center—" Yen
T'ung stepped forward, placing the folder carefully, almost
delicately, on the edge of Karr's desk. "Forgive
me, Major Karr, but inside you will find the official report on the
murder of Shou Chen-hai. It answers all of the points raised as well
as several others. Moreover, it paints a full and healthy picture of
the dead man." Yen T'ung stepped back, brushing his left hand
against his silks, as if to cleanse it. "Copies of the report
will be distributed to the media at twelfth bell tomorrow. Shortly
afterward I shall be making a statement regarding the capture of
those responsible for this heinous crime." "A
statement?" For once Karr looked nonplussed. "Are you
saying that we have until twelfth bell tomorrow to find the
culprits?" Yen
T'ung snapped his fingers. At once another of his assistants opened
the case he was carrying and handed a scroll to the Third Secretary.
With a flourish, Yen T'ung unrolled the scroll and read. "We
have been informed by our Security sources that the four-man Triad
assassination squad responsible for the murder of the Hsien L'ing of
Hannover, Shou Chen-hai, was, in the early hours of this morning,
surrounded by forces loyal to the T'ang, and after a brief struggle,
subdued and captured." "I
see," Karr said, after a moment. "Then we're to let things
drop?" "Not
at all, Major Karr. Your investigations will continue as before. But
from henceforth any discoveries made will be screened by my office. I
have the authority to that effect right here." He took a
document from another of his assistants and handed it across. Karr
studied the authority a moment, noting that it was signed by the
T'ang's Chancellor, Nan Ho, and countersigned by Tolonen, then looked
up again. "Then we're to paint black white, is that it?" Yen
T'ung was silent, a fixed smile on his lips. "And
the guard Leyden's account?" Yen
T'ung raised an eyebrow in query. "We
have a witness who saw exactly what happened. His account—" "Will
be screened by this office. Now, if you will excuse me, Major Karr,
there is much to be done." Karr
watched the Third Secretary and his retinue depart, then sat back
heavily, looking up at Chen. "Can
you believe that? The arrogance of the little shit. And they've got
it all worked out beforehand. Every last little detail." Chen
shook his head. "It won't work. Not this time." "Why
not? The T'ing Wei are pretty good at their job, and even if
you and I don't like what they do or the way they go about it, it is
necessary. Terrorist propaganda has to be countered. It softens
public opinion and that makes our job easier." "Maybe,
but this time I've got a feeling that they're up against people who
are better at this than they are." Karr
narrowed his eyes. "What do you mean?" Chen
hesitated, then said what had been on his mind all along. "Wang
Ti. She knew about Shou Chen-hai. When we were getting ready this
morning, she commented upon him—on his corruption. It was most
unlike her. Usually she has nothing to do with such tittle-tattle,
but it seems that the rumors were unusually strong. I suspect someone
seeded them long before the assassination. And then there are the
pamphlets." Karr
nodded. Yes, it would be hard to counter the effect of the pamphlets.
In the past they had been circulated on a small scale, but reports
were coming in that millions of the things had been distributed
throughout the Lowers. All of which spoke of a much larger scale of
activity than before. And the assassination itself was far more
subtle, far better planned than previous Ping Tiao attacks.
Far more audacious. Whoever was behind all this had learned a great
deal from past mistakes. Chen had gone to the door. He pulled it
shut, then turned, looking back at Karr. "So what now? Where do
we begin?" Karr
lifted the pamphlet. "We begin with this. I want to know how
much of it is true and I want to know how our friends the terrorists
got hold of the information." "And the two women?" Karr
smiled. "We've got good descriptions on both of them from
several sources—Leyden, the wives and servants, the three
guards who tried to intercept them at the elevator. We'll get one of
our experts to run a face match and see what comes out of the
computer files. Then we'll dig a little deeper. See what turns up." "And
then?" It
seemed an innocuous question, but Kan- knew what Chen meant. If they
got to the girl, what would they do? Would they kill her? Would they
hand her over, to be tortured and disposed of at the whim of the
T'ing Wei official, Yen T'ung? Or was there something else
they might do? Something that was not strictly by the book? Karr
sat back, sighing heavily. "I don't know, Chen. Let's find her
first, neh? Then we'll decide." IT WAS
A DARK and empty place, echoing silent, its ceiling lost in the
blackness overhead. They were gathered at one end, a single lamp
placed at the center of the circle of chairs. There were nine of
them, including Ywe Hao, and they spoke softly, leaning toward the
lamp, their faces moving from darkness into light, features forming
from the anonymity of shadow. Just now the one called Edel was
speaking. "Is
there any doubt?" he said, looking across at Ywe Hao as he
spoke. "There are many who have heard the guard's story. How she
killed my brother—shot him in the back—and spared the
guard." "So
you say," said Mach, his long, thin face stretching toward the
light. "But have you witnesses to bring forward? Written
statements?" Edel
laughed scathingly, moving back into shadow. "As if they'd come
here! As if they'd risk their names on paper to satisfy a Yu court!" "No
Yu, even?" Mach insisted. "Or is it only your
say-so? Chi Li here denies your charge. Without proof it is her word
against yours. Your dead brother has no voice here." "Send
someone. Get proof." A
woman leaned forward, one of the Council of Five. Her face, etched in
the light like a woodcut, showed strong, determined features. Her
voice, when she spoke, was hard, uncompromising. "You know we
cannot do that. You know also that you broke our strictest orders by
going yourself." "He was my brother*." "We
are all brothers." "Not all, it seems. Some are murderers." There
was a moment's silence, then Mach leaned forward. "You asked for
this hearing, Edel. As was your right. But you have made accusations
without supporting evidence. You have brought the reputation of a
good and proven comrade into question. She has answered your charges
fully and still you persist. Such, one might argue, is your duty as a
brother. But do not add insolence to the list of things against you." Edel
stood. His voice boomed, echoing in the dark and empty space. "So
it's wrong to want justice, is it? Wrong to want to unmask
this murdering bitch?" His
finger pointed unerringly across the circle at Ywe Hao, who kept her
head lowered, the lamplight shining in the crown of her dark, neat
hair. This tableau held for a moment, then without another word, Edel
sat back again, putting his trembling hands on his knees. From the
fierce look of hatred in his eyes there was no doubting he believed
what he said. "Chi
Li?" asked the woman, looking at her. "You stand by your
account?" Ywe
Hao looked up, the lamp's light catching in her dark, liquid eyes.
"Vasska was a fool. Erika and I barely got out alive. There was
a patrol at the elevator he should have secured. We had to shoot our
way out. Erika was badly wounded. These are facts. If I could, I
would have killed him for that. For risking others' lives. But I
didn't. Shou Chen-hai killed him. Killed him before I could get to
him." So ran
the official Security report, given to the media. Edel had done
nothing, provided nothing, to seriously counter this. His evidence
was rumor, hearsay, the kind of romantic legend that often attached
itself to this kind of event. The Five made their decision and gave
it. "I
find no case proven," said Mach, standing. "You must
apologize, Edel, or leave the Yu. That is our law." Edel
also stood, but there was no apology. Instead he leaned forward and
spat across the lamp at Ywe Hao. It fell short, but at once Veda, the
female Council member, stepped forward and pushed Edel back. She
spoke quickly, harshly now. "That's it. You have proved that
there's no place for you here. Go! And remember. Say nothing. Do
nothing to harm the Yu. The merest word and we shall hear of it. And
then . . ." She raised one finger to her throat and drew it
across. "So be silent, and go." Sullenly,
glaring back at Ywe Hao, Edel left the circle and walked slowly
across the factory floor, stopping only in the brightness of the
doorway at the far end to look back, as if to say it wasn't over yet. When
he'd gone, Mach signaled to one of the men at his side to follow
Edel. "Best do it now, Klaus. Veda's warning will have no effect
on him. He is past reasoning." The
man nodded, then ran across the dark floor, following Edel, his knife
already drawn. Mach turned, facing Ywe Hao. "I'm
sorry, Chi Li. This has been a sad day for us all." But
Ywe Hao was watching the man disappear in pursuit of Edel and asking
herself if her lie had been worth the life of another man; if this
baiter, his life for hers, could in any way be justified. And as if
in answer, she saw Leyden again, standing there, terrified, facing
Edel's brother, the man she had only known as Vasska, and knew she
had been right to spare the guard and kill her comrade. As right as
she had been in killing Shou Chen-hai. The
woman Veda came and stood by her, taking her hand, her words soft,
comforting. "It's all right, Chi Li. It wasn't your fault." But
the thing was, she had enjoyed killing Vasska. Had wanted to kill
him. And ^nd^dMat:±ngc.ose, turn,, her
to face him, "I have another task for you Ve's a place the
younger sons use. A place called the Dragonfly Club . . ."
CHAPTER
SIXTEEN Dragonflies THE
PAVILION of Elegant Sound rested on a great spur of pale rock, the
delicately carved tips of its six sweeping gables spread out like the
arms of white-robed giants raised in supplication to Heaven. To
either side, twin bridges spanned the ravine, the ancient wood of the
handrails worn smooth like polished jade by a million pilgrims'
hands. A
dark, lush greenery covered the flank of Mount Emei surrounding the
ancient building, filtering the early morning sunlight; while below,
long, twisted limbs of rock reached down to a shadowed gorge, their
dark, eroded forms slick with the spray of the two tiny falls that
met in a frenzy of mist and whiteness at their foot. Farther out, a
great heart-shaped rock, as black as night itself, sat peacefully
amid the chill, crystal-clear flow. Standing
at the low wooden balustrade, Li Yuan looked down into the waters.
For more than a thousand years travelers had stopped here on their
long journey up the sacred mountain, to rest and contemplate the
perfection of this place. Here two rivers met, the black dragon
merging with the white, forming a swirl of dark and light—a
perfect, natural tai ch'i. He
turned and looked across at his host. Tsu Ma stood by the table on
the far side of the pavilion, pouring wine. They were alone here, the
nearest servants five hundred ch'i distant, guarding the
approaches. From the gorge below came the melodious sound of the
falls, from the trees surrounding them the sweet, fluting calls of
wild birds. Li Yuan breathed in deeply, inhaling the heady scent of
pine and cypress, cinnamon and paulownia, that filled the air. It was
beautiful: a place of perfect harmony and repose. He smiled. It was
like Tsu Ma to choose such a place for their meeting. Tsu Ma
came across, handing Li Yuan one of the cups. For a moment he stood
there, looking out past Li Yuan at the beauty of the gorge, then
turned to face him, placing a hand lightly on his shoulder. "Life
is good, neh, Yuan?" Li
Yuan's smile broadened. "Here one might dream of an older,
simpler age." Tsu Ma
grunted. "Things have never been simple for those who have to
rule. Some problems are eternal, neh? Why, it is said that even the
great Hung Wu, founder of the Ming Dynasty, slept poorly at night.
Population pressures, famines, civil unrest, the corruption of
ministers, court intrigues, the ambitions of rivals— these were
as much his problems as they are ours. Nor was he much more
successful at solving them." Li
Yuan frowned. "Then you think we should do nothing?" "On
the contrary. As T'ang, it is our purpose in this life to attempt the
impossible—to try to impose some kind of order on the chaos of
this world. There would be no justification for our existence were it
not so. And where would we be then?" Li
Yuan laughed, then took a sip of the pale yellow wine, growing
serious again. "And in Council tomorrow? How are we to play
that?" Tsu Ma
smiled. Tomorrow's was an important meeting; perhaps the most
important since Li Shai Tung's death nine months earlier. "With
regard to GenSyn, I think you are right, Yuan. Wang Sau-leyan's
proposal must be opposed. His idea of a governing committee of
seven—one member appointed by each T'ang—while fair in
principle, would prove unworkable in practice. Wang's appointment
would be but a front for his own guiding hand. He would seize upon
the slightest excuse— the most petty of internal divisions on
policy—to use his veto. It would have the effect of closing
GenSyn down; and as few of GenSyn's facilities are based in City
Africa, our cousin would escape relatively unscathed, while you would
be harmed greatly. Which is why I shall support your counterproposal
of a single independent stewardship." "And
my candidate?" Tsu Ma
smiled. "I can see no reason why Wang should object to Wei
Feng's man Sheng, taking charge. No. It's the perfect choice. Wang
would not dare suggest that Minister Sheng is unsuited for the post."
He laughed, delighted. "Why, i would be tantamount to a slur on
Sheng's master, the T'ang of East Asia! And even our moon-faced
cousin would not dare risk that." Li
Yuan joined in Tsu Ma's laughter, but deep down he was not so sure.
Wang Sau-leyan made much of his power to offend. His sense of
Hsiao—of filial submission—was weak. If the man had
dared to have his father killed, his brother driven to suicide,
what else might he not do? And yet the question of GenSyn was the
least of the items that were to be discussed. As Tsu Ma knew, Li Yuan
was prepared to concede ground in this instance if Wang in his turn
would give way on more important matters. "Do
you think the balance of Council will be against us on the other
measures?" Tsu Ma
stared into his cup, then shrugged. "It is hard to say. I have
tried to sound Wu Shih and Wei Feng on the question of the proposed
changes, but they have been strangely reticent. On any other
matter—even the reopening of the House— I think we could
guarantee their support, but on this I am afraid they see things
differently." Li
Yuan huffed, exasperated. Without those concessions provided by the
changes to the Edict and the reopening of the House, there was no
chance of striking a deal with the Above over population controls.
The three items worked as a package or not at all. The Edict changes
were the sweetener in the package, creating new prosperity and new
opportunity for the merchant classes; whereas the reopening of the
House would not only satisfy the growing call for proper
representation of the Above in government but also provide the
vehicle for the passage of new laws. Laws controlling the number of
children a man might have. Laws that the Seven might find it
difficult to implement without Above support. Tsu Ma
looked at Yuan ruefully, knowing what he was thinking. "And the
perversity of it is that Wang Sau-leyan will oppose us not because he
disagrees— after all, he has made it quite clear that he would
like to see changes to the Edict, the House reopened—but
because it is his will to oppose us." Li
Yuan nodded. "Maybe so. But there is something else, Cousin Ma.
Something I have not mentioned before now." Tsu Ma
smiled, intrigued, conscious of a darker tone in Yuan's voice. "Which
is?" Li
Yuan laughed quietly, but his expression was somber, almost
regretful. "First fill my cup, then I will tell you a tale about
a nobleman and a T'ang and a scheme they have hatched to make all
plans of mine mere idle talk." IT WAS
ALL much dirtier than she remembered it. Dirtier and more crowded.
Ywe Hao stood there, her back to the barrier, and breathed out
slowly. Two boys, no taller than her knee, stood beside her, looking
up at her. Their faces were black with dirt, their heads covered in
sores and stubble. Their small hands were held up to her, palms open,
begging. They said nothing, but their eyes were eloquent. Even so,
she shooed them from her, knowing that to feed two would bring a
hundred more. Main
had become a kind of encampment. The shops she remembered from her
childhood had been turned into sleeping quarters, their empty fronts
covered with sheets. There were crude stalls in Main now, though what
they sold seemed barely worth selling. There was rubbish everywhere,
and the plain, clean walls she had glimpsed in memory were covered
with graffiti and posters for a hundred different political
groupings. And sometimes the symbol of a fish, done in blood-red
spray paint. Everything
stank here. Urchins with shaved heads ran about between the milling
adults. As she watched, an old woman pushed an empty soup-cart back
toward the elevators. Loose wiring hung from its empty undercarriage
and a worn sign on its scratched and battered side showed it had been
donated by one of the big Above companies. There
was no sign anywhere of Security, but there were other groupings
here. Men wearing armbands and looking better fed than the others,
stood at the intersections and about Main itself, wielding
ugly-looking clubs. Against the walls families huddled or lay, mother
and father on the outside, children between. These last were mainly
Han. They called them "little t'ang" down here, the irony
quite savage, for these t'ang had nothing—only the handouts
from Above. And an unfair share of that. It had
been only eight years since she had come from here. How could it have
changed so much in that brief time? Ywe
Hao pushed across Main, jostled by surly, ill-featured men who looked
at her with undisguised calculation. She glared back threateningly.
On the far side one of them came across and took her arm. She shook
herself free, reached out with a quicksilver movement that surprised
him, and held him beneath the chin, pushing his head back firmly.
"Don't. . ." she warned as she pushed him away. He backed
off respectfully, understanding what she was. Others saw it too, and
a whisper went out, but she was gone by then, down a side corridor
that, unlike the rest, seemed little changed. At the far end was her
mother's place. The
room was squalid. Three families were huddled into it. She knew none
of them. Angry, worried, she came out into the corridor and stood
there, her heart pounding. She hadn't thought. . . . From
across the corridor an old man called to her. "Is that you, Ywe
Hao? Is that really you?" She
laughed and went across, stepping over a child crawling in the
corridor. On either side people were watching her, standing in
doorways or out in the corridor itself. There was no privacy anywhere
down here. It was
her Uncle Chang. Her mother's brother. She went to him and held him
tightly to her, so glad to see him that for the moment she forgot
they had parted badly. "Come
in, girl! Come in out of the way!" He looked past her almost
haughtily at the watching faces, sniffing loudly before ushering her
inside and sliding back the panel. It was
quieter inside. While her uncle crouched at the kang, preparing
ch'a, she looked about her. Most of the floor was taken up by three
bedrolls, made neatly, tidily. To her left, beside the door panel,
was a small table containing holos and 2-D's of the family. In a
saucer in front of them was the stub of a burnt candle. The room
smelled of cheap incense. "Where's
Mother?" she asked, seeing her presence everywhere. Her
uncle looked around at her and smiled. "At market. With Su
Chen." "Su
Chen?" He
looked away, embarrassed. "My wife," he said. "Didn't
you hear?" She
almost laughed. Hear? How would she hear? For years she hadn't known
a thing. Had lived in fear of anyone finding out anything about them.
But she had never stopped thinking of them. Wondering how they were. "And
how is she?" "Older,"
he answered distractedly, then grunted his satisfaction at getting
the kang to work. Ywe Hao could see he did little here. There
was a Vid unit in the corner, but it was dead. She looked at it, then
back at him, wondering how he filled his days. She
had been right to get out. It was like death here. Like slow
suffocation. The thought brought back the memory of the last time she
had been here. The argument. She turned her face away, gritting her
teeth. How could they live like this? The
tiny silver fish hung on a chain about her neck, resting between her
breasts, its metal cool against her flesh. It was like a talisman
against this place; the promise of something better. And though it
was foolish to wear it, she could not have faced this place without
it. Her
uncle finished pottering about and sat back on the edge of the
nearest bedroll. "So how are you?" His eyes looked her up
and down. Weak, watery eyes, watching her from an old man's face. He
had been younger, stronger, when she'd last seen him, but the
expression in the eyes was no different. They wanted things. He was
a weak man, and his weakness made him spiteful. She had lived out her
childhood avoiding his spitefulness; avoiding the wanting in his
eyes. From his pettiness she had forged her inner strength. "I'm
fine," she said. And what else? That she was an expert killer
now? One of the most wanted people in the City? "No
man? No children, then?" Again
she wanted to laugh at him. He had never understood. But something of
her contempt must have shown in her face, for he looked away, hurt. "No.
No man. No children," she said, after a moment. "Only
myself." She
moved away from the door and crouched beside the table, studying the
small collection of portraits. There was one of her, younger, almost
unrecognizably younger, there beside her dead brother. "I
thought Mother didn't need this." Her
uncle breathed out deeply. "She gets comfort from it. You'd not
deny her that, surely?" There
was a holo of her father; one she had never seen before. No doubt her
mother had bought the image from the public records. There was a file
date at the foot of it that told her the holo had been made almost
eight years before she had been born. He would have been—what?—twenty
then. She shivered and straightened up, then turned, looking down at
her uncle. "Do you need money?" She
saw at once that she had been too direct. He avoided her eyes, but
there was a curious tenseness in him that told her he had been
thinking of little else since she'd shown up. But to admit it... that
was something different. He was still her uncle. In his head she was
still a little girl, dependent on him. He shrugged, not meeting her
eyes. "Maybe ... It would be nice to get a few things." She
was about to say something more when the panel behind her slid back
and her mother stepped into the room, a middle-aged Han female close
behind her. "Chang,
I—" The
old woman paused, then turned to face Ywe Hao, confused. At first it
didn't register; then with what seemed a complete transformation, her
face lit up. She dropped the package she was carrying and opened her
arms wide. "Hao! My little Hao!" Ywe
Hao laughed and hugged her mother tightly, having to stoop to do so.
She had forgotten how small her mother was. "Mama . . ."
she said, looking into her eyes and laughing again. "How have
you been?" "How
have I been?" The old lady shook her head. Her eyes were
brimming with tears and she was trembling with emotion. "Oh,
dear gods, Hao, it's so good to see you. All these years. . ."
There was a little sob, then with another laugh and a sniff, she
pointed to the beds. "Sit down. I'll cook you something. You
must be hungry." Ywe
Hao laughed, but did as she was told, squatting beside her uncle on
the bedroll. From the doorway Su Chen, unintroduced, looked on,
bewildered. But no one thought to explain things to her. After a
while she pulled the door closed and sat on the far side of her
husband. Meanwhile, the old lady pottered at the kang, turning
every now and then to glance at her daughter, wiping her eyes before
turning back, laughing softly to herself. Later,
after eating, they sat and talked. Of things that had happened long
ago, in her childhood; of happier, simpler times, when it had seemed
enough simply to be alive. And if their talk steered a course about
the darker things—those great unmentionables that lay like
jagged rocks in the flow of time—that was understandable, for
why destroy the moment's happiness? Why darken the waters with the
stain of ancient agonies? For a
time, it seemed almost as though the long years of parting had not
happened; that this day and the last were stitched together like
points on a folded cloth. But when, finally, she left them, promising
to return, she knew at last that there was no returning. She had gone
beyond this, to a place where even a mother's love could not keep
her. Looking
back at Main she saw the changes everywhere. Time had injured this
place, and there seemed no way to heal it. Best then to tear it down.
Level by level. Maybe then they would have a chance. Once they had
rid themselves of Cities. Shivering,
more alone now than she had been for many years, she turned from it
and stepped into the transit, going up, away from her past. the
DARK, heart-shaped ROCK was embedded deep in the earth beneath the
pool, like the last tooth in an ancient's jaw. Its surface was scored
and pitted, darker in places than in others, its long flank, where it
faced the Pavilion, smoother than those that faced away; like a dark,
polished glass, misted by the spray from the tiny falls. At its foot
the cold, clear waters of the pool swirled lazily over an uneven
surface of rock, converting the white-water turbulence of the two
rivers' convergence into a single, placid flow. From
the rock one could see the two figures in the Pavilion; might note
their gestures and hear the murmur of their words beneath the hiss
and rush of the falling water. Tsu Ma was talking now, his hand
moving to his mouth every so often, a thin thread of dark smoke
rising in the air. He seemed intensely agitated, angered even, and
his voice rose momentarily, carrying over the sound of the falls. "It
is all very well knowing, Yuan, but how will you get proof? If
this is true, it is most serious. Wang Sau-leyan must be called to
account for this. His conduct is outrageous! Unacceptable!" Li
Yuan turned to face his fellow T'ang. "No, Cousin Ma. Think what
damage it would do to confront Wang openly with this matter. At best
he might be forced to abdicate, and that would leave us with the
problem of a successor—a problem that would make the GenSyn
inheritance question a mere trifle, and the gods know that is proving
hard enough! At worst he might defy us. If he did, and Hou Tung-po
and Chi Hsing backed him, we could find ourselves at war among
ourselves." "That
cannot be." "No.
But for once the threat to expose Wang might prove more potent than
the actuality. If so, we might still use this to our benefit." Tsu Ma
sniffed. "You mean, as a bargaining counter?" Li
Yuan laughed; a hard, clear laughter. "Nothing so subtle. I mean
we blackmail the bastard. Force him to give us what we want." "And
if he won't?" "He
will. Like us all, he enjoys being a T'ang. Besides, he knows he is
too weak, his friends in Council unprepared for such a war. Oh, he
will fight if we push him to it, but only if he must. Meanwhile he
plays his games and bides his time, hoping to profit from our
failures, to build his strength while eroding ours. But this once he
has overstretched himself. This once we have him." Tsu Ma
nodded. "Good! But how do you plan to use this knowledge?" Li
Yuan looked outward, his face hardening to a frown of concentration.
"First we must let things take their course. Hsiang Shao-erh
meets with our cousin Wang on his estate in Tao Yuan an hour from
now. My friend in Wang's household will be there at that meeting. By
tonight I will know what transpired. And tomorrow, after Council, we
can confront Wang Sau-leyan with what we know. That is, if we need
to. If we haven't already achieved what we want by other, more direct
means." "And
your. . . friend? Will he be safe? Don't you think Wang might suspect
there is a spy in his household?" Li
Yuan laughed. "That is the clever part. I have arranged to have
Hsiang Shao-erh arrested on his return home. It will seem as if he
had . . . volunteered the information. As, indeed, he will." Tsu Ma
nodded thoughtfully. "Good. Then let us get back. All this
talking has given me an appetite." Li
Yuan smiled, then looked about him, conscious once more of the beauty
of the shadowed gorge, the harmony of tree and rock and water. And
yet that beauty was somehow insufficient. It wasn't enough to set his
soul at peace. Too much was happening inside. No. He could not break
the habit of his being; could not free himself from the turmoil of
his thoughts and let himself lapse into the beauty of the day. He
grasped the smooth wood of the rail, looking out at the great
heart-shaped rock that rested, so solid and substantial, at the
center of the flow, and felt a tiny tremor pass through him. This
place, the morning light, gave him a sense of great peace, of oneness
with things, and yet, at the same time, he was filled with a seething
mass of fears and expectations and hopes. And these, coursing like
twin streams in his blood, made him feel odd, distanced from himself.
To be so at rest and yet to feel such impatience, was that not
strange? And yet, was that not the condition of all things? Was that
not what the great Tao taught? Maybe, but it was rare to feel it so
intensely in the blood. Like a
dragonfly hovering above the surface of a stream. Tsu Ma
was watching him from the bridge. "Yuan? Are you coming?" Li
Yuan turned, momentarily abstracted from the scene, then with the
vaguest nod, he moved from the rail, following his friend. And
maybe peace never came. Maybe, like life, it was all illusion, as the
ancient Buddhists claimed. Or maybe it was himself. Maybe it was his
own life that was out of balance. On the bridge he turned, looking
back, seeing how the great swirl of white drifted out into the black,
how its violent energy was stilled and channeled by the rock. Then
he turned back, walking on through the shadow of the trees, the dark
image of the rock embedded at the center of his thoughts. IT was
midday and the sky over Northern Hunan was the cloudless blue of
early spring. In the garden of the palace at Tao Yuan, Wang Sau-leyan
sat on a tall throne, indolently picking from the bowls of delicacies
on the table at his side while he listened to the man who stood, head
bowed, before him. The
throne was mounted on an ancient sedan, the long arms carved like
rearing dragons, the thick base shaped like a map of the ancient
Middle Kingdom, back before the world had changed. Wang had had them
set him down at the very heart of the garden, the elegant whiteness
of the three-tiered Pagoda of Profound Significance to his right, the
stream, with its eight gently arching bridges, partly concealed
beyond a stand of ancient junipers to his left. To one
side Sun Li Hua, newly promoted to Master of the Royal Household,
stood in the shadow of the junipers, his arms folded into his
powder-blue sleeves, his head lowered, waiting to do his Master's
bidding. The
man who stood before Wang was a tall, elegant-looking Han in his
mid-fifties. He was wearing expensive dark-green silks embroidered
with flowers and butterflies; unfashionable, traditional clothes
that revealed he was of the Twenty-Nine, the Minor Families. His name
was Hsiang Shao-erh and he was Head of the Hsiang Family of City
Europe, Li Yuan's bondsman—his blood vassal. But today he was
here, speaking to his Master's enemy. Offering him friendship. And
more . . . For an
hour Hsiang had prevaricated; had talked of many things, but never of
the one thing he had come to raise. Now, tiring of his polite
evasions, Wang Sau-leyan looked up, wiping his fingers on a square of
bright red silk as he spoke. "Yes,
Cousin, but why are you here? What do you want from me?" For
the second time that day Hsiang was taken aback. Earlier he had been
terribly put out when Wang had invited him outdoors to talk. His
mouth had flapped uselessly, trying to find the words that would not
offend the T'ang; that might make clear this was a matter best
discussed behind closed doors or not at all. But Wang had insisted
and Hsiang had had to bow his head and follow, concealing his
discomfort. Now,
however, Hsiang was feeling much more than simple discomfort. He
glanced up, then looked away, troubled by Wang Sau-leyan's
directness. For him this was a major step. Once taken, it could not
be reversed. Even to be here today was a kind of betrayal. But this
next. . . With a
tiny shudder, Hsiang came to the point. "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia, but I am here because I can do you a great
service." He lifted his head slightly, meeting Wang's eyes
tentatively. "There is one we both . . . dislike immensely. One
who has offended us gravely. He ..." Wang
raised an eyebrow, then reached across and took another slice of the
sickly scented durian, chewing it noisily. «„,„ "Go
on, Hsiang Shao-erh . . ." Hsiang
looked down. "You know what happened, Chieh Hsia?" Wang
nodded, a faint smile on his lips. He did indeed. And, strangely
enough, it was one of the few things he actually admired Li Yuan for.
Faced with similar circumstances—with an outbreak of a deadly
strain of syphilis—he would have acted exactly as Li Yuan had
done, even to the point of offending his own Family Heads. But that
was not the issue. Hsiang Shao-erh was here because—quite
rightly—he assumed Wang hated Li Yuan as much as he did. But
though Hsiang's loss efface before his peers had been a great thing,
it was as nothing beside this act of betrayal. Hsiang
looked up, steeling himself, his voice hardening as he recalled his
humiliation; his anger momentarily overcoming the fear he felt. "Then
you understand why I am here, Chieh Hsia." Wang's
smile broadened. He shook his head. "You will have to be less
opaque, Cousin. You talk of one who has offended us both. Can you be
more specific?" Hsiang
was staring at him now. But Wang merely turned aside, picking a
lychee from one of the bowls and chewing leisurely at the soft, moist
fruit before looking back at Hsiang. "Well?" Hsiang
shook his head slightly, as if waking, then stammered his answer. "Li
Yuan. I mean Li Yuan." "Ah
. . ." Wang nodded. "But I still don't follow you, Cousin.
You said there was some great service you could do me." Hsiang's
head fell. He had clearly not expected it to be so hard. For a time
he seemed to struggle against some inner demon, then he straightened,
pushing out his chest exaggeratedly, his eyes meeting Wang's. "We
are tied, you and I. Tied by our hatred of this man. There must be
some way of using that hatred, surely?" Wang's
eyes narrowed slightly. "It is true. I dislike my cousin. Hatred
may be too strong a word, but. . ." He leaned forward, spitting
out the seeds. "Well, let me put it bluntly, Hsiang Shao-erh. Li
Yuan is a T'ang. Your T'ang, to be more accurate. My equal and your
Master. So what are you suggesting?" It
could not have been put more explicitly, and Wang could see how
Hsiang's eyes widened fearfully before he looked down again. Wang
reached out and took another fruit, waiting, enjoying the moment.
Would Hsiang dare take the next step, or would he draw back? "I
. . ." Hsiang shuddered, his unease showing in the way his body
swayed, his hands pulled at the silk over his thighs. Then, after
another titanic inner struggle, he looked up again. "There
is a substance I have heard of. An illegal substance that was
developed, I am told, in the laboratories of SimFic." "A
substance?" la
Hsiang moved his head uncomfortably. "Yes, Chieh Hsia.
Something that destroys the female's ability to produce eggs." "Ah
. . ." Wang sat back, staring up into the blueness. "And
this substance? You have it, I take it?" Hsiang
shook his head. "No, Chieh Hsia. As I understand, it was
taken in a raid on one of Shih Berdichev's establishments.
Your late father's Security forces undertook that raid, I believe,
yet the substance—" "Was
destroyed, I should think," Wang said brusquely. "But tell
me, Cousin. Had it existed—had there been some of this
substance remaining, held, perhaps illegally, in defiance of the
Edict—what would you have done with it?" Again
it was too direct. Again Hsiang shied back like a frightened horse.
Yet the desire for revenge—that burning need in him to reverse
the humiliation he had suffered at Li Yuan's hands—drove him
on, overcoming his fear. He spoke quickly, nervously, forcing the
words out before his courage failed. "I
plan to hold a party, Chieh Hsia. In celebration of Li Yuan's
official twentieth birthday. He will accept, naturally, and his wives
will accompany him, as they do to all such functions. It is there
that I will administer this substance to his wives." Wang
Sau-leyan had been sitting forward, listening attentively. Now he sat
back, laughing. "You mean, they will sit there calmly while you
spoon it down their throats?" Hsiang
shook his head irritably. "No, Chieh Hsia. I... The
substance will be in their drinks." "Oh,
of course!" Wang let out another burst of laughter. "And
the she t'ou, the official taster—what will he have been
doing all this while?" Hsiang
looked down, biting back his obvious anger at Wang Sau-leyan's
mockery. "I am told this substance is tasteless, Chieh Hsia.
That even a she t'ou would be unable to detect any trace
of its presence." Wang
sniffed deeply, calming himself, then sat forward, suddenly more
conciliatory. He looked across at Sun Li Hua, then back at Hsiang
Shao-erh, smiling. "Let
me make this absolutely clear, Hsiang Shao-erh. What you are
suggesting is that I provide you with a special substance—an
illegal substance—that you will then administer secretly to Li
Yuan's three wives. A substance that will prevent them from
ovulating." Hsiang
swallowed deeply, then nodded. "That is it, Chieh Hsia." "And
if our young friend marries again?" Hsiang
laughed uneasily. "Chieh Hsia7." "If
Li Yuan casts off these three and marries again?" Hsiang's
mouth worked uselessly. Wang
shook his head. "No matter. In the short term your scheme will
deny Li Yuan sons. Will kill them even before they are born, neh?" Hsiang
shuddered. "As he killed mine, Chieh Hsia." It was
not strictly true. Hsiang's sons had killed themselves. Or, at least,
had fallen ill from the yang mei ping—the willow-plum
sickness—that had spread among the Minor Families after the
entertainment at Hsiang's estate. If Li Yuan had helped Hsiang's sons
end their worthless lives a few days earlier than otherwise, that was
more to his credit than to theirs. They had been fated anyway. Their
deaths had saved others' lives. But Wang was unconcerned with such
sophistry. All that concerned him was how he might use this to his
benefit. Hsiang's sense of humiliation, more than the death of his
sons, drove him now. It made him useful, almost the perfect means of
getting back at Li Yuan. Almost. Wang
Sau-leyan leaned forward, thrusting out his right hand, the
matte-black surface of the Yu>e Lung, the ring of power, sitting
like a saddle on the index finger. Hsiang
stared at it a moment, not understanding, then, meeting Wang's eyes,
he quickly knelt, drawing the ring to his lips and kissing it once,
twice, a third time before he released it, his head remaining bowed
before the T'ang of Africa. KARR
HAD WASHED and put on a fresh uniform for the meeting. He turned from
the sink and looked across. Marie was in the other room, standing
before the full-length mirror. In the lamp's light her skin was a
pale ivory, the long line of her 1 backbone prominent as she leaned
forward.
7 For a
moment he was perfectly still, watching her, a tiny thrill of delight
rippling through him. She was so strong, so perfectly formed. He felt
his flesh stir and gave a soft laugh, going across. He
closed his eyes, embracing her from behind, the warm softness of her
skin, that sense of silk over steel, intoxicating. She turned,
folding into his arms, her face coming up to meet his in a kiss. "You
must go," she said, smiling. "Must
I?" "Yes,
you must. Besides, haven't you had enough?" He
shook his head, his smile broadening. "No. But you're right. I
must go. There's much to be done." Her
smile changed to a look of concern. "You should have slept. . ." He
laughed. "And you'd have let me?" She
shook her head. "No.
And nor could I with you beside me." "The
time will come ..." He
laughed. "Maybe. I can't imagine it, but. . . She
lifted her hand. "Here." He
took the two pills from her and swallowed them down. They would keep
him awake, alert, for another twelve to fifteen hours—long
enough to get things done. Then he could sleep. If she'd let him. "Is
it important?" Marie asked, a note of curiosity creeping into
her voice. "It
is the T'ang's business," he answered cryptically, stone-faced,
then laughed. "You must learn patience, my love. There are
things I have to do ... well, they're not always pleasant." She
put a finger to his lips. "I understand. Now go. I'll be here,
waiting, when you get back." He
stood back from her, at arm's length, his hands kneading her
shoulders gently, then bent forward, kissing her breasts. "Until
then . . ." She
shivered, then came close again, going up on tiptoe to kiss the
bridge of his nose. "Take care, my love, whatever it is." "Okay,
Major Karr. You can take off the blindfold." Karr
removed the green silk headband and looked about him, surprised.
"Where are we? First Level?" The
servant lowered his head respectfully, but there was a smile on his
face. He was too wary, too experienced in his Master's service, to be
caught by such a blatant attempt to elicit information, but he was
also aware that, blindfolded as he was, Karr knew he had been taken
down the levels, not up. "If
you would follow me . . ." Karr
smiled and followed, taken aback by the elegance of the rooms through
which they passed. He had not thought such luxury existed here just
above the Net, but it was not really that surprising. He had read the
report on the United Bamboo; had seen the financial estimates for the
last five years. With an annual turnover of one hundred and fifteen
billion yuan, Fat Wong, the big boss of United Bamboo, could
afford luxuries like these. Even so, it was unexpected to find them
in such a setting. Like finding an oasis on Mars. It was
nothing like the palace of a T'ang, of course; even so, there was
something impressive about this place, if only that it was set amid
such squalor. Karr
looked down, noting that the floor mosaic mirrored that of the
ceiling overhead. Nine long, thick canes of bamboo were gripped by a
single, giant hand, the ivory yellow of the canes and the hand
contrasted against the brilliant emerald green of a paddy field. Karr
smiled, thinking of how often he had seen that symbol, on the
headbands of dead runners trapped in Security ambushes, or on the
packaging of illicitly smuggled goods that had made their way up from
the Net. And now he was to meet the head behind that grasping
hand—the 489 himself. The servant had stopped. Now he turned,
facing Karr again, and bowed deeply. "Forgive me, Major Karr,
but I must leave you here. If you would go through, my Master will be
with you in a while." Karr
went through, past a comfortably furnished anteroom and out into a
long, spacious gallery with a moon door at each end. Here, on the
facing walls, were displayed the banners of the thirty or more minor
Triads that the United Bamboo had conquered or assimilated over the
centuries. Karr made his way down the row, stopping at the last of
the banners. He
reached up, touching the ancient silk gently, delicately, conscious
that it was much older than the others hanging there. The peacock
blue of the banner had faded, but the golden triangle at its center
still held something of its former glory. In the blue beside each
face of the triangle was embroidered a Han word, the original red of
the pictograms transformed by time into a dull mauvish-brown, like
ancient bloodstains. He gave a little shudder, then offered the words
softly to the air. "Tian.
Nan Jen. Tu." Heaven.
Man. Earth. He turned, meaning to study the banners on the other
wall, then stopped, noticing the figure that stood inside the moon
door at the far end of the gallery. "You
walk quietly, Wong Yi-sun. Like a bird." Fat
Wong smiled, then came forward, his cloth-clad feet making no sound
on the tiles. "I
am delighted to meet you, Major Karr. Your reputation precedes you." Karr
bowed, then looked up again, noting how the smile remained even as
Wong's eyes looked him up and down, assessing him. Contrary
to public expectations, Fat Wong was not fat at all. Quite the
contrary—he was a compact, wiry-looking man, who in his peach
silks and bound white feet looked more like a successful First Level
businessman than the reputedly savage leader of one of the seven
biggest Triads in City Europe. Karr had read the file and seen holos
of Wong; even so, he found himself unprepared for the soft-spokenness
of the man, for the air of sophistication that seemed to emanate from
him. "1
am honored that you would see me, Wong Yi-sun. A thousand blessings
upon your sons." "And
yours, Major. I understand you are recently married. A fine, strong
woman, I am told." Wong's smile broadened. "I am happy for
you. Give her my best regards. A man needs a strong wife in these
unhappy times, neh?" Karr
bowed his head. "Thank you, Wong Yi-sun. I will pass on your
kind words." Fat Wong smiled and let his eyes move from Karr's
figure for the first time since he had entered the room. Released
from his gaze, Karr had a better opportunity of studying the man.
Seen side-on, one began to notice those qualities that had made Wong
Yi-sun a 489. There was a certain sharpness to his features, a
restrained tautness, that equated with reports on him. When he was
younger, it was said, he had gone into a rival's bedroom and cut off
the man's head with a hatchet, even as he was making love to his
wife, then had taken the woman for his own. Later, he had taken the
name Fat Wong, because, he claimed, the world was a place where worm
ate worm, and only the biggest, fattest worm came out on top. From
then on he had worked day and night to be that worm—to be the
fattest of them all. And now he was. Or almost. "I
noticed you were admiring the ancient silk, Major. Do you know the
history of the banner?" Karr
smiled. "I have heard something of your history, Wong Yi-sun,
but of that banner I am quite ignorant. It looks very old." Wong
moved past Karr, standing beneath the banner, then turned, smiling up
at the big man. "It
is indeed. More than four hundred years old, in fact. You say you
know our history, Major Karr, but did you realize just how old we
are? Before the City was, we were. When the City no longer is, we
shall remain." Wong's
smile broadened, and Karr, watching him, remembered what Novacek had
told him—that the higher officials of the Triads never
smiled in the company of strangers—and felt wrong-footed
once more. Wong
Yi-sun moved down the row of banners, then turned, facing Karr again. "People
call us criminals. They say we seek to destroy the social fabric of
Chung Kuo, but they lie. Our roots are deep. We were founded in the
late seventeenth century by the five monks of the Fu Chou
monastery—honorable, loyal men, whose only desire was to
overthrow the Ch'ing, the Manchu, and replace them with the rightful
rulers of Chung Kuo, the Ming. Such was our purpose for a hundred
years. Before the Manchu drove us underground, persecuting our
members and cutting dff our resources. After that we were left with
no choice. We had to improvise." Karr
smiled inwardly. Improvise. It was a wonderfully subtle
euphemism for the crudest of businesses: the business of murder and
prostitution, gambling, drugs, and protection. "So
you see, Major Karr. We have always been loyal to the traditions of
Chung Kuo. Which is why we are always pleased to do business with the
Seven. We are not their enemies, you understand. All we wish for is
to maintain order in those lawless regions that have escaped the long
grasp of the T'ang." "And
the banner?" Fat
Wong smiled, then lowered his head slightly. "The banner comes
from Fu Chou monastery. It is the great ancestor of all such banners.
And whoever leads the Great Council holds the banner." Wong's
smile tightened. "And
you. . ." But it didn't need to be said. Karr understood. But
why had Wong told him? Not, surely, to impress him. Unless . . . Wong
turned slightly, his stance suggesting that Karr should join him.
Kan-hesitated, then went across, his mind racing. Fat Wong wanted
something. Something big. But to ask for help directly was
impossible for Wong: for to admit to any weakness—to admit that
there was something, anything, beyond his grasp—would involve
him in an enormous loss of face. And face was everything down here.
As Above. Karr
shivered, filled with a sudden certainty. Yes. Something was
happening down here. In that veiled allusion to the Triad Council and
the banner, Fat Wong had revealed more than he'd intended. Karr
looked at him in profile and knew he was right. Fat Wong was under
pressure. But from whom? From inside his own Triad, or from
without—from another of the 4895? Whichever, he had seized this
opportunity to broach the matter—to approach it subtly, without
having to ask directly. But
what precisely was going on? Wong
looked back at the banners, then with the briefest smile, moved on.
"Come, Major," he said. "We have much to say and it is
far more comfortable within." He
followed Wong through, up a broad flight of steps and out into a
huge, subtly lit room. Steps
led down into a sunken garden, at the center of which was a tiny,
circular pool. Within the pool seven golden fish seemed to float, as
if suspended in glass. But the garden and the pool were not the most
striking things about the room, for the eye was drawn beyond them to
where one whole wall—a wall fifty ch'i in length, ten in
height—seemed to look out onto the West Lake at Hang Chou,
providing a panoramic view of its pale, lacelike bridges and pagodas,
its willow-strewn islands and ancient temples. Here it was
perpetually spring, the scent of jasmine and apple blossom heavy in
the cool, moist air. From
somewhere distant, music sounded, carried on the breeze that blew
gently through the room. For a moment the illusion was so perfect
that Karr held himself still, enthralled by it. Then, realizing Wong
was watching him, he went down the steps and stood at the edge of the
pool. "You
know why 1 have come here, Wong Yi-sun?" "I
understand you want some information. About the Ko Ming who
assassinated the Hsien Ling." "We
thought you might know something about this group—for instance,
whether or not they were related to the Ping Tiao." "Because
they share the same symbol?" Wong sniffed, his face suddenly
ugly. "1 don't know what your investigations have thrown up,
Major Karr, but let me tell you this, the Hsien L'ing was meddling in
things he ought never to have been involved in." Karr
kept his face a mask, but behind it he felt an intense curiosity.
What was Shou Chen-hai involved in that could possibly anger Fat
Wong? For there was no doubting that Wong Yi-sun was furious. "And
the Ko Ming?" Fat
Wong gulped savagely at his drink, then took a deep breath, calming
himself. "Your assassins are called the Yu. Beyond that I
cannot say. Only that their name echoes throughout the Lowers." Karr
nodded thoughtfully. "That is unusual, neh?" Wong
met Karr's eyes steadily. "You are quite right, Major Karr. They
are something different. We have not seen their like for many years.
I—" Wong
paused, looking beyond Karr, toward the arched doorway. "Come,"
he said brusquely, one hand waving the servant in. The
servant handed Wong something, then leaned close, whispering. Then he
backed away, his head lowered, his eyes averted. For a
moment Wong stared at the three tiny packages, his hand trembling
with anger, then he thrust his hand out, offering them to Karr. "These
are yours, I understand." Karr
nodded, but made no attempt to take the three tiny, waxen packages
from the 489. "We found them in the Hsien L'ing's
apartment. I thought they might interest you." Wong
narrowed his eyes. "You know what was in them?" Again
Karr nodded. They had had them analyzed and knew they were something
special. But what did Fat Wong know about them? Karr watched the
movement in his face and began to understand. Wong hadn't been sure.
He had only suspected until he had seen the packages. But now he
knew. Wong
turned away and stood there, as if staring out across the lake. A
wisp of his jet black hair moved gently in the breeze. "They
have overstretched themselves this time. They have sought to destroy
the balance . . ." Then,
as if he realized he had said too much, he turned back, giving a tiny
shrug. But though Fat Wong smiled, his eyes gave him away. This was
what had been worrying him. This was the big something he could not
deal with on his own. He had been the biggest, fattest worm until
now. The keeper of the ancient banner. But now the Big Circle was
making its bid to oust him; a bid financed by the revenue from new
drugs, new markets. But
what did Fat Wong want? Did he want help to crush the Big Circle? Or
did he want something else—some other arrangement that would
keep the Big Circle in their place while keeping him supreme? And,
beyond that, what would his own master, Li Yuan, want from such a
deal? That was, if he wanted anything but to keep the Triads in their
place. Li
Yuan's father, Li Shai Tung, had tried to make such a deal. To forge
some kind of order in the Lowers by granting concessions to men like
Fat Wong. But would it work? Would it not merely give them too much
power? And, in the end, would they not have to crush them anyway? Or
see themselves displaced. Fat
Wong closed his hand over the three tiny packets, then threw them
down into the water. Reaching inside his silks, he withdrew a slender
envelope. "Give
this to your T'ang," he said, handing it across. "And
what am I to say?" "That
I am his friend. His very good friend." ON THE
TABLE by the bed was a holo plinth. Mach knelt, then placed his hand
on the pad. Nothing. He turned slightly, looking up at Ywe Hao,
curious. She leaned across him, holding her fingertips against the
pad. At once two tiny figures formed in the air above the plinth. "My
brother," she explained. "He died in an industrial
accident. At least, that's what the official inquiry concluded. But
that's not the story his friends told at the time. He was a union
organizer. Eighteen he was. Four years older than me. My big brother.
They say the pan chang threw him from a balcony. Eight levels
he fell, into machinery. There wasn't much left of him when,they
pulled him out. Just bits." Mach
took a breath, then nodded. For a moment longer Ywe Hao stared at the
two tiny images, then drew her hand back, the pain in her eyes sharp,
undiminished by the years. "I
wanted to see," he said, looking about him again. "I wanted
to be sure." "Sure?" "About
you." "Ah
..." He
smiled. "Besides which, I've got to brief you." She
frowned, then stood, moving back slightly. "About what?" "The
attack on the Dragonfly Club. We're bringing it forward." He
stood, then went over to his pack and took out a hefty-looking
folder, holding it out for her to take. She
looked down at the folder, then back at Mach. "What's this?" "It's
a full dossier on all those involved." He grimaced. "It's
not pleasant reading, but then it's not meant to be. You have to
understand why we need to do this. Why we have to kill these men." "And
the raid? When do we go in?" "Tonight." "Tonight?
But I thought you said it would take at least a week to set this up." "That's
what I thought. But our man is on duty tonight. And there's a meeting
on." She
shuddered, understanding. "Even so, we've not had time to
rehearse things. We'd be going in blind." Mach
shook his head, then sat on the edge of the bed, indicating that she
should sit next to him. "Let me explain. When I spoke to you the
other day—when I gave you this assignment—I had already
allocated a team leader. But after what happened I wanted to give you
a chance. An opportunity to prove yourself." She
made to speak, but he silenced her. "Hear
me out. I know what happened the other day. I know you killed Vasska.
But it doesn't matter. You were right. The other matter—his
brother—that's unfortunate, but we'll deal with it. What was
important was that you did the right thing. If you'd let him kill the
guard . . . well, it would have done us great harm, neh?" She
hesitated, then nodded, but he could see she was unhappy with his
oversimplification of events. Which was good. It showed that she
hadn't acted callously. He took the folder from her lap and opened it
up, turning one of the still photographs toward her. "This
is why we're going in tonight. To put an end to this kind of thing.
But it has to be done carefully. That's why I've drafted you in to
lead the team. Not to organize the raid—your team knows exactly
what they have to do; they've rehearsed it a hundred times. No, your
role is to keep it all damped down. To make sure the right people are
punished. I don't want anyone getting overexcited. We have to get
this right. If we get it wrong, we're fucked, understand me?" She
nodded, but her eyes stayed on the photo of the mutilated child.
After a moment she looked up at him, the disgust in her eyes touched
with a profound sadness. "What makes them do this, Jan? How in
the gods' names could anyone do this to a little boy?" He
shook his head. "I don't know. It's how they are." He put
his hand gently to her cheek. "AH I know is that all that anger
you feel, all that disgust and indignation . . . well, it's a healthy
thing. I want to harness that. To give it every opportunity to
express itself." He let
hisliand fall away, then laughed softly. "You know, you remind
me of an old friend. She was like you. Strong. Certain about what she
did." Ywe
Hao shivered, then looked down again. "What about my cover?" Mach
smiled, impressed by her professionalism, then turned, pointing
across at the pack beside the door. "It's all in there. All you
need to do is read the file. Someone will come for you at eleven. You
go in at second bell." He sat
back. "There's a lot there, but read it all. Especially the
statements by the parents. As I said, you need to know why you're
there. It'll make it easier to do what you have to do." She
nodded. "Good.
Now I must go. My shift begins in an hour and I've got to get back
and change. Good luck, Ywe Hao. May Kuan Yin smile on you tonight." IN
THETORCH-LiTSiLENCEofthe Hall of Eternal Peace and Tranquillity, Li
Yuan knelt on the cold stone tiles, facing the hologram of his
father. Thin threads of smoke from the offering sticks drifted slowly
upward, their rosewood scent merging with the chill dampness of the
ancient room. Beyond the ghostly radiant figure of the dead T'ang,
the red lacquer of the carved screen seemed to shimmer, as if it
shared something of the old man's insubstantiality, the Yuie Lung
at its center flickering, as if, at any moment, it might vanish,
leaving a smoking circle of nothingness. Li
Shai Tung stood there as in life, the frailty of his latter days
shrugged off, the certainty he had once professed shaping each
ghostly gesture as he spoke. "Your
dreams have meaning, Yuan. As a boy I was told by my father to ignore
my dreams, to focus only on what was real. But dreams have their own
reality. They are like the most loyal of ministers. They tell us not
what we would have them say, but that which is true. We can deny
them, can banish them to the farthest reaches of our selves, but we
cannot kill them, not without killing ourselves." Li
Yuan looked up, meeting his dead father's eyes. "And is that
what we have done? Is that why things are so wrong?" Li
Shai Tung sniffed loudly, then leaned heavily on his cane, as if
considering his son's words, but tonight Yuan was more than ever
conscious of what lay behind the illusion. In the slender case
beneath the image, logic circuits had instantly located and selected
from a score of possible responses, preprogrammed guidelines
determining their choice. It seemed spontaneous, yet the words were
given—were as predetermined as the fall of a rock or the decay
of atoms. And the delay? That, too, was deliberate; a machine-created
mimicry of something that had once been real. Even
so, the sense of his father was strong. And though the eyes were
blank, unseeing—were not eyes at all, but mere smoke and
light—they seemed to see right through him; through to the tiny
core of unrest that had robbed him of sleep and brought him here at
this unearthly hour. "Father?" The
old man lifted his head slightly, as if, momentarily, he had been
lost in his thoughts. Then, unexpectedly, he gave a soft laugh. "Dreams.
Maybe that's all we have, Yuan. Dreams. The City itself, was that not
a dream? The dream of our ancestors made tangible. And our long-held
belief in peace, in order and stability, was that not also a dream?
Was any of it ever real?" Li
Yuan frowned, disturbed by his father's words. For a moment his mind
went • back to the evening of his father's death, recalling how
sickly thin his body had \ been, how weak and vulnerable death
had found him. He shuddered, realizing that | the seed of his
father's illness had been sown long before the virus finished him.
No. i He understood now. His father had been dead long before his
heart had ceased I beating. Had died, perhaps, the day his brother,
Han Ch'in, had perished. Or was| it before? Had something died in his
father that night when he, Yuan, had forced his way prematurely from
his mother's womb? Had all his father's life since then been but a
waking dream, no more substantial than this shadow play? The
question hovered close to speech, then sank back into the darkness.
He returned to the matter of his dream. The dream that had awakened
him, fearful and sweating in the coolness of his room. "But
what does it mean, Father? How am I to read my dream?" The dead
T'ang stared at his son, then gave a tiny shudder. "You say you
dreamed of dragonflies?" Li
Yuan nodded. "Of great, emerald-green dragonflies, swarming on
the riverbank. Thousands upon thousands of them. Beautiful creatures,
their wings like glass, their bodies like burnished jade. The sun
shone down on them and yet the wind blew cold. And as I watched, they
began to fall, first one, and then another, until the river was
choked with their struggling forms. And even as I watched they
stiffened and the brilliant greenness was leached from their bodies,
until they were a hideous gray, their flesh flaking from them like
ash. And still the wind blew, carrying the ash away, covering the
fields, clogging every pool and stream, until all was gray and
ashen." • "And then?" "And
then I woke, afraid, my heart pounding." "Ah
. . ." The T'ang put one hand to his beard, his long fingers
pulling distractedly at the tightly braided strands, then shook his
head. "That is a strange and powerful dream, erh tzu. You
ask me what it means, yet I fear you know already." He looked
up, meeting his son's eyes. "Old glassy, he is the very symbol
of summer, neh? And the color green symbolizes spring. Furthermore,
it is said that when the color green figures in a dream, the dream
will end happily. Yet in your dream the green turns to ash. Summer
dies. The cold wind blows. How are you to read this but as an ill
omen?" Li
Yuan looked down sharply, a cold fear washing through him. He had
hoped against hope that there was some other way to read his dream,
but his father's words merely confirmed his own worst fears. The
dragonfly, though the emblem of summer, was also a symbol of weakness
and instability, of all the worst excesses of a soft and easy life.
Moreover, it was said that they swarmed in vast numbers just before a
storm. Yet
was the dream anything more than a reflection of his innermost fears?
He thought of his father's words—of dreams as loyal ministers,
uttering truths that could not otherwise be faced. Was that the case
here? Had this dream been sent to make him face the truth? "Then
what am I to do?" The
dead T'ang looked at him and laughed. "Do, Yuan? Why, you must
wear stout clothes and leam to whistle in the wind. You must look to
your wives and children. And then . . ." "And
then, Father?" The
old man looked away, as if he'd done. "Spring will come, erh
tzu. Even in your darkest hour, remember that. Spring always
comes." Li
Yuan hesitated, waiting for something more, but his father's eyes
were closed now, his mouth silent. Yuan leaned forward and took the
burning spills from the porcelain jar. At once the image shrank,
taking its place beside the other tiny, glowing images of his
ancestors. He
stood, looking about him at the torch-lit stillness of the Hall—at
the gray stone of the huge, funerary couch to his right, at the
carved pillars and tablets and lacquered screens—then turned
away, angry with himself. There was so much to be done—the note
from Minister Heng, the packet from Fat Wong, the last few
preparations for Council—yet here he was, moping like a child
before his dead father's image. And to what end? He
clenched his fist, then slowly let it open. No. His anger could not
be sustained. Nor would the dream be denied that easily. If he closed
his eyes he could see them—a thousand bright, flickering shapes
in the morning sunlight, their wings like curtains of the finest
lace. Layer upon layer of flickering, sunlit lace— "Chieh
Hsia . . ." Li
Yuan turned, almost staggering, then collected himself, facing his
Chancellor. "Yes,
Chancellor Nan. What is it?" Nan Ho
bowed low. "News has come, Chieh Hsia. The news you were waiting
for." He was
suddenly alert. "From Tao Yuan? We have word?" "More
than that, Chieh Hsia. A tape has come. A tape of the meeting
between Wang and Hsiang." "A
tape . . ." Li Yuan laughed, filled with a sudden elation that
was every bit as powerful as his previous mood of despair. "Then
we have him, neh? We have him where we want him." THE
doorman had done his job. The outer door slid back at her touch.
Inside it was pitch black, the Security cameras dead. Ywe Hao turned,
then nodded, letting the rest of the team move past her silently. The
doorman was in the cubicle to the left, facedown on the floor, his
hands on his head. One of the team was crouched there already,
binding him hand and foot. She
went quickly to the end of the hallway, conscious of the others
forming up to either side of the door. She waited until the last of
them joined her, then stepped forward, knocking loudly on the inner
door. There
was a small eye-hatch near the top of the reinforced door. She faced
it, clicking on the helmet lamp and holding up her ID card. The call
had gone out half an hour ago, when the outer power had "failed,"
so they were expecting her. The
hatch cover slid back, part of a face staring out from the square of
brightness within. "Move
the card closer." She did as she was told. "Shit
. . ." The face moved away, spoke to someone inside. "It's
a fuckiri woman." "Is
there a problem?" The
face turned back to her. "Well, it's like this. This is a mens'
club. Women ain't supposed to come in." She
took a breath, then nodded. "I understand. But look. I've only
got to cut the power from the box inside. I can do the repairs out
here in the hallway." The
guard turned, consulting someone inside, then turned back. "Okay,
but be quick, neh? And keep your eyes to yourself or there'll be a
report going in to your superior." Slowly
the door slid back, spilling light into the hallway. The guard moved
back, letting Ywe Hao pass, his hand coming up, meaning to point
across at the box, but he never completed the gesture. Her punch
felled him like a sack. She
turned, looking about her, getting her bearings. It was a big,
hexagonal room, corridors going off on every side. In its center was
a circular sunken pool of bright red tile, five steps leading down
into its depths. The
young men in the pool seemed unaware of her entrance. There were
eight of them, naked as newborns. One of them was straddling another
over the edge of the pool, his buttocks moving urgently, but no one
seemed to care. Behind him the others played and laughed with an
abandon that was clearly drug induced. She
took it all in at a glance, but what she was really looking for was
the second guard—the one her fallen friend had been speaking
to. Unable to locate him, she felt the hairs on her neck rise; then
she saw movement, a brief flash of green between the hinges of the
screen to her right. She
fired twice through the screen, the noise muted by the thick
carpeting underfoot, the heavy tapestries that adorned the walls, but
it was loud enough to wake the young men from their reverie. The
others stood behind her now, masked figures clothed from head to toe
in black. At her signal they fanned out, making for the branching
corridors. She
crossed the room slowly, the gun held loosely in her hand, until she
stood on the tiled lip of the pool. They had backed away from her,
the drug elation dying in their eyes as they began to realize what
was happening. The copulating couple had drawn apart and were staring
wide-eyed at her, signs of their recent passion still evident. Others
had raised their hands in the universal gesture of surrender. "Out!"
she barked, lifting the gun sharply. They
jerked at the sound of her voice, then began to scramble back,
abashed now at their nakedness, fear beginning to penetrate the drug
haze of their eyes. She
watched them climb the far steps, awkward, afraid to look away. One
stumbled and fell back into the water. He came up, gasping,
wide-eyed. "Out!"
she yelled again, making him jump, one hand searching for the steps
behind him as he backed away. She
knew them all. Faces and names and histories. She looked from face to
face, forcing them to meet her gaze. They were so young. Barely out
of childhood, it seemed. Even so, she felt no sympathy for them, only
disgust. There
were noises from the rest of the club now; thumps and angry shouts
and a brief snatch of shrieking that broke off abruptly. A moment
later one of the team reappeared at the entrance to one of the
corridors. "Chi
Li! Come quickly. . . ." "What
is it?" she said as calmly as she could, tilting her head
slightly, indicating her prisoners. He
looked beyond her, understanding, then came across, lowering his
voice. "It's Hsao Yen. He's gone crazy. You'd better stop him."
He drew the gun from his belt. "Go on. I'll guard these." She
could hear Hsao Yen long before she saw him, standing over the young
man in the doorway, a stream of obscenities falling from his lips as
he leaned forward, striking the prisoner's head and shoulders time
and again with his rifle butt. "Hsao
Yen!" she yelled. "Ai yal What are you doing!" He
turned, confronting her, his face livid with anger, then jerked his
arm out, pointing beyond the fallen man. She
moved past him, looking into the room, then drew back, shuddering,
meeting Hsao Yen's eyes almost fearfully. "He did that?" Hsao
Yen nodded. He made to strike the fallen man again, but Ywe Hao
stopped his hand, speaking to him gently. "I understand, Hsao
Yen. But let's do this-' properly, neh? After all, that's what we
came here for. To put an end to this." Hsao
Yen looked down at the bloodied figure beneath him and shivered, "All
right. As you say." She
nodded, then looked past him, torn by what she saw. "And the
boy? He's dead, I take it." Hsao
Yen shuddered, his anger transformed suddenly to pain. "How
could he do that, Chi Li? How could he do that to a child?" She
shook her head, unable to understand. "I don't know, Hsao Yen. I
simply don't know." They
were lined up beside the pool when she returned, three dozen of them,
servants included. The masked figures of the Yu stood off to one
side, their automatic pistols raised. She had two of their number
hold up their beaten fellow, then went down the line, separating out
the servants. "Tu
Li-shan, Rooke . . . take them through to the kitchens. I want them
gagged and bound. But don't harm them. Understand?" Ywe
Hao turned back, facing the remaining men. There were twenty-three of
them. Less than she had hoped to find here. Looking down the line she
noted the absence of several of the faces from the files. A shame,
she thought, looking at them coldly. She would have liked to catch
them all; every last one of the nasty little bastards. But this would
do. "Strip
off!" she barked angrily, conscious that more than half of them
were naked already, then turned away, taking the thickly wadded
envelope from within her tunic. These were the warrants. She unfolded
them and flicked through, taking out those that weren't needed and
slipping them back into the envelope, then turned back, facing them
again. They
were watching her, fearful now, several of them crying openly, their
limbs trembling badly. She went slowly down the line, handing each of
them a single sheet of paper; watching as they looked down, then
looked back up at her again, mouths open, a new kind of fear in their
eyes. They
were death warrants, individually drafted, a photograph of the
condemned attached to each sheet. She handed out the last, then stood
back, waiting, wondering if any of them would have the balls at the
last to say something, to try to argue their way out of this, perhaps
even to fight. But one glance down the line told her enough. Hsao Yen
was right. They were insects. Less than insects. For a
moment she tried to turn things around; to see it from their
viewpoint; maybe even to elicit some small trace of sympathy from
deep within herself. But there was nothing. She had seen too much;
read too much: her anger had hardened to something dark,
impenetrable. They were evil, gutless little shits. And what they had
done here—the suffering they had caused—was too vast, too
hideous, to forgive. Ywe
Hao pulled the mask aside, letting them view her face for the first
time, letting them see the disgust she felt, then walked back to the
end of the line and stood facing the first of them. Taking the paper
from his shaking hands, she began, looking directly into his face,
not even glancing at the paper, reciting from memory the sentence of
the Yu Inner Council, before placing the gun against his temple and
pulling the trigger. fifth
BELL was sounding as Wang Sau-leyan stood at the head of the steps,
looking down into the dimly lit cellar. It was a huge, dark space,
poorly ventilated and foul smelling. From its depths came a steady
groaning, not from one but from several sources; a distinctly human
sound, half-articulate with pained confession. The semblance of words
drifted up to him, mixing with the foul taste in his mouth, making
him shudder with distaste and spread his fan before his face. Seeing
him there, Hung Mien-lo tore himself away from the bench and hurried
across. "Chieh
Hsia," he said, bowing low. "We are honored by your
presence." The
T'ang descended the uneven steps slowly, with an almost finicky care.
At the bottom he glared at his Chancellor, as if words could not
express the vulgarity of this. It was
old-fashioned and barbaric, yet in that lay its effectiveness.
Torture was torture. Sophistication had nothing to do with it. Terror
was of the essence. And this place, with its dank, foul-smelling
miasma, was perfect for the purposes of torture. It stank of
hopelessness. The
bench was an ordinary workman's bench from an earlier age. Its hard
wooden frame was scrubbed clean, and four dark iron spikes—each
as long as a man's arm—jutted from the yellow wood, one at each
corner, the polished metal thick at the base, tapering to a
needle-sharp point. The prisoner's hands and feet were secured
against these spikes with coils of fine, strong chain that bit into
the flesh and made it bleed. Across his naked chest a series of
heated wires had been bound, pulling tight and searing the flesh even
as they cooled, making the prisoner gasp and struggle for each
breath; each painful movement chafing the cutting wires against the
blood-raw flesh. One
eye had been put out. Burned in its blackened socket. The shaved head
was crisscrossed with razor-fine scars. Both ears had been severed.
All four limbs were badly scarred and bruised, broken bone pushing
through the skin in several places. There were no nails on hands or
feet and the tendons of each finger had been cut neatly,
individually, with a surgeons skill. Lastly, the man's genitals had
been removed and the amputation sealed with a wad of hot tar. Wang
Sau-leyan looked, then turned away, moving his fan rapidly before his
face, but Hung Mien-lo had seen, mixed in with the horror and the
revulsion, a look of genuine satisfaction. The
prisoner looked up, his one good eye moving between the two men. Its
movements seemed automatic, lacking in curiosity, intent only on
knowing where the pain would come from next. All recognition was gone
from it. It saw only blood and heat and broken bone. Wang Sau-leyan,
looking down at it, knew it from childhood. It was the eye of his
father's Master of the Royal Household, Sun Li Hua. "You
have his confession?" "Yes,
Chieh Hsia," Hung answered, one hand resting lightly on
the edge of the bench. "He babbled like a frightened child when
I first brought him down. He couldn't take much pain. Just the
thought of it and the words spilled from him like a songbird." And
yet he's still alive, Wang thought. How can he still be
alive when all this has been done to him? The
thought brought him to a new realization, and his anger at the man's
betrayal was softened by a new respect for him. Even so, he deserved
no pity. Sun Li Hua had sold him to another. To Li Yuan, his enemy. Just
as he sold my father to me. Wang
leaned over and spat on the scarred and wounded body. And the eye,
following the movement, was passive, indifferent to the gesture, as
though to say, "Is that all? Is there to be no pain this time?" They
moved on, looking at the other benches. Some were less damaged than
Sun Li Hua, others were barely alive—hacked apart piece by
piece, like hunks of animal product on a butcher's table. They were
all old and trusted servants; all long-serving and "loyal"
men of his father's household. And Li Yuan had bought them all. No
wonder the bastard had been able to anticipate him in Council these
last few times. Wang
Sau-leyan turned, facing his Chancellor. "Well,
Chieh Hsia?" Hung Mien-lo asked. "Are you pleased?" There
was an unpleasant smile on the Chancellor's features, as if to say
there were nothing he liked better than inflicting pain on others.
And Wang Sau-leyan, seeing it, nodded and turned quickly away,
mounting the steps in twos, hurriedly, lest his face betray his true
feelings. It was
a side of Hung Mien-lo he would never have suspected. Or was there
another reason? It was said that Hung and Sun had never got on. So
maybe it was that. Whatever, there would come a time of reckoning.
And then Hung Mien-lo would really learn to smile. As a corpse
smiles. Li
yuan STOOD at the window, letting himself be dressed. Outside, the
garden lay half in shadow, half in light, the dew-misted top leaves
of the nearby rhododendron bushes glittering in the dawn's first
light. He held himself still as the maid drew the sashes tight about
his waist, then turned, facing his Master of the Inner Chamber. "And
have you no idea what they want, Master Chan?" Chan
Teng bowed low. "None at all, Chieh Hsia. Only that the
Marshal said it was of the utmost urgency. That I was to wake you if
you were not awake already." Li
Yuan turned away, hiding the smile that came to his lips at the
thought of Tolonen's bluntness. Even so, he felt a ripple of
trepidation run down his spine. What could Chancellor Nan and the
Marshal want at this hour? They
were waiting in his study. As he entered they bowed, Tolonen stiffly,
Nan Ho more elaborately. Impatient to hear what had happened, he
crossed the room and stood before them. "Well,
Knut? What is it?" Tolonen
held out a file. Li Yuan took it and flicked it open. After a moment
he looked up, giving a small, strange laugh. "How odd. Only last
night, I dreamed of dragonflies. And now this . . ." He studied
Tolonen a moment, his eyes narrowed. "But why show me this? It's
nasty, certainly, but it is hardly the kind of thing to wake a T'ang
over, surely?" Tolonen
bowed his head, acceding the point. "In ordinary circumstances
that would be so, Chieh Hsia. But this is a matter of the
utmost importance. The beginning of something we would do well to
take very seriously indeed." Li
Yuan turned, looking at his Chancellor. "So what makes this
different?" Nan Ho
lowered his head again. "This, Chieh Hsia." Li
Yuan set the file down on a nearby chair, then took the pamphlet from
his Chancellor. It was a single large sheet that had been folded into
four, the ice paper no more than a few mols thick, the print poor,
uneven. He realized at once that it had been hand set; that whoever
had produced this had wanted to avoid even the slightest chance of
being traced through the computer network. He
shrugged. "It's interesting, but I still don't understand." Nan Ho
smiled tautly. "Forgive me, Chieh Hsia, but it is not so much
the pamphlet, as the numbers in which it has been distributed. It's
hard to estimate exactly how many copies went out, but latest
Security estimates place it at between a quarter of a billion and a
billion." Li
Yuan laughed. "Impossible! How would they print that number? How
distribute them? Come to that, how on earth would they finance it?" And
yet he saw how grave the old man looked. "This
is something new, Chieh Hsia. Something dangerous. Which is why we
must deal with it at once. That is why I came. To seek your
permission to make the elimination of this new group our number-one
priority." Li
Yuan stared at his Marshal a moment, then turned away. A billion
pamphlets. If that were true it was certainly something to be
concerned about. But was Tolonen right to be so worried, or was he
overreacting? He went to his desk and sat, considering things. "What
is Major Karr doing right now?" Tolonen
smiled. "Karr is on their trail already, Chieh Hsia. I
put him in charge of investigating the murder of the Hsien L'ing
Shou Chen-hai." "And?" Tolonen
shook his head. "And nothing, I'm afraid. Our investigations
have so far drawn a blank." "Nothing even from our Triad
friends?" "I
am afraid not, Chieh Hsia." Li
Yuan looked down. "I see." Then Karr had told Tolonen
nothing about his meeting with Fat Wong. About the message he had
passed on from the Triad leader. That was interesting. It spoke
lucidly of where Karr's ultimate loyalty lay. "All
right. But I want Karr in charge, Knut, and I want a daily report on
my desk concerning any and every development. You will make sure he
gets whatever resources he needs." "Of
course, Chieh Hsia." He
watched Tolonen go, then turned his attention to his Chancellor. "Was
there something else?" The
Chancellor hesitated, as if weighing something, then came forward,
taking a small package from within his robes and offering it to his
T'ang, his head lowered, his eyes averted. "I was not certain
whether to give this to you, Chieh Hsia." Li
Yuan took the package, smiling, then felt his breath catch in his
throat. There was the faintest scent from the silk. The scent of Mei
hua. Of plum blossom. "Thank
you, Nan Ho. I. . ." But
the Chancellor had already gone. Even as Li Yuan looked up, the door
was closing on the far side of the room. He sat
back, staring at the tiny package on his desk. It was from her. From
Fei Yen. Though there were no markings on the wrapping, he knew no
other would have used that scent. No one else would have used his
Chancellor as a messenger. He
shuddered, surprised by the intensity of what he felt. Then, leaning
forward, his hand trembling, he began to unfasten the wrappings,
curious and yet afraid of what was inside. There
was a note, and beneath the note a tiny tape. He unfolded it and read
the brief message, then lifted the tape gingerly, his eyes drawn to
the gold-leaf picto-grams embossed into the black of the casing. Han
Ch'in, they read. His son. He
swallowed, then closed his eyes. What did she want? Why was she doing
this to him? For a moment he closed his hand tightly on the tiny
cassette, as if to break it, then loosened his grip, letting the
tension drain from him. No. He would have to see it. Suddenly he
realized just how much he had wanted to go to the estate at Hei Shui
and simply stand there, unobserved, watching his child at play. Even
so, the question still remained. What did she want? He went to the
long window. Already the sun was higher, the shadows on the eastern
lawn much shorter. He breathed deeply, watching the sunlight flicker
on the surface of the pond, then shook his head. Maybe she didn't
know. Maybe she didn't understand what power she had over him, even
now. Maybe it was a simple act of kindness. . . . He
laughed quietly. No. Whatever it was, it wasn't that. Or not simply
that. He turned, looking across at the tape, the note, then turned
back again, staring outward. Whatever, it would have to wait. Right
now he must prepare himself, clearing his mind of everything but the
struggle ahead. Tonight, after Council, he could relax; might let
himself succumb to his weakness. But not before. Not until he had
dealt with Wang Sau-leyan. He
sighed and turned from the window, making his way back to his rooms
and the waiting maids. Out on
the pond, in the early morning light, a dragonfly hovered over the
water, its wings flickering like molten sunlight, its body a bright
iridescent green. CHAPTER
SEVENTEEN In
a Darkened Eye IT
WAS just AFTER seven in the morning, but in the Black Heart business
was brisk. At the huge center table a crowd of men pressed close,
taking bets on the two tiny contestants crouched in the tight beam of
the spotlight. They
were mantises, brought up from the Clay, their long, translucent
bodies raised threateningly, switchblade forelegs extended before
their tiny, vicious-looking heads as they circled slowly. To Chen,
watching from the edge of the crowd, it was an ugly, chilling sight.
He had seen men—Triad gangsters—behave in this manner,
their every movement suggestive of a deadly stillness. Men whose eyes
were dead, who cared only for the perfection of the kill. Here, in
these cold, unsympathetic creatures, was their model; the paradigm of
their behavior. He shuddered. To model oneself on such a thing—what
made a man reduce himself so much? As he
watched, the larger of the creatures struck out, its forelegs moving
in a blur as it tried to catch and pin its opponent. There was a roar
of excitement from the watching men, but the attack faltered, the
smaller mantis struggling free. It scuttled back, twitching, making
small, answering feints with its forelegs. Chen
looked about him, sickened by the glow of excitement in every face,
then came away, returning to the table in the corner. "So
what's happened?" Karr
looked up from the map, smiling wearily. "It's gone cold. And
this time even our Triad friends can't help us." Chen
leaned across, putting his finger down where the map was marked with
a red line—a line that ended abruptly at the entrance to the
stack in which the Black Heart was located. "We've tracked them
this far, right? And then there's nothing. It's a—what
did you call it?—a white-out, right?" Karr
nodded. "The cameras were working, but the storage system had
been tampered with. There was nothing on record but white light." "Right.
And there's no trace of either of them coming out of this stack,
correct? The records have been checked for facial recognition?"
Again Karr nodded. "Then
what else remains? No one broke the seals and went down to the Net,
and no one got out by flyer. Which means they must be here." Karr
laughed. "But they're not. We've searched the place from top to
bottom, and found nothing. We've taken the place apart." Chen
smiled enigmatically. "Which leaves what?" Karr shrugged.
"Maybe they were ghosts." Chen
nodded. "Or maybe the images on the tape were. What if someone
tampered with the computer storage system farther down the line?"
He traced the red line back with his finger, stopping at the point
where it took a sixty-degree turn. "What if our friends turned
off earlier? Or went straight on? Have we checked the records from
the surrounding stacks?" Karr
shook his head. "I've done it. A sixty-stack search. And there's
nothing. They just disappeared." At the
gaming table things had changed dramatically. Beneath the spotlight's
glare the smaller mantis seemed to be winning. It had pinned the
larger creature's forelegs to the ground, trapping it, but it could
not take advantage of its position without releasing its opponent.
For a long time it remained as it was, moving only to prevent its foe
from rising. Then, with a suddenness that surprised the hushed
watchers, it moved back, meaning to strike at once and cripple its
enemy. But the larger beast had waited for that moment. The instant
it felt the relentless pressure of the other's forelegs lapse, it
snapped back, springing up from the floor, its back legs powering it
into the smaller insect, toppling it over. The snap of its forelegs
was followed instantly by the crunch of its opponent's brittle flesh
as it bit deep into its undefended thorax. It was over. The smaller
mantis was dead. For a
moment they looked across, distracted by the uproar about the central
table, then Karr turned back, his blue eyes filled with doubt. "Come
. . . let's get back. There's nothing here." They
were getting up as a messenger came to their table; one of the Triad
men they had met earlier. Bowing, he handed Karr a sheet of computer
printout—a copy of a Security report timed at 4:24 A.M. Karr
studied it a moment, then laughed. "Just when I thought it had
died on us. Look, Chen! Look what the gods have sent us!" Chen
took the printout. It was a copy of the first call-out on a new
terrorist attack. On a place called the Dragonfly Club. The details
were sketchy, but one fact stood out—a computer
face-recognition match. He looked at Karr, then shook his head,
astonished. "Why,
it's the woman . . . Chi Li, or whatever her real name is!"
"Yes," Karr laughed, his gloom dispelled for the first time
in two days. "So let's get there, neh? Before the trail
goes cold." YWE
HAO WOKE, her heart pounding, and threw back the sheet. Disoriented,
she sat up, staring about her. What in the gods' names . . . ? Then
she saw it—the winking red light of the warning circuit. Its
high-pitched alarm must have woken her. She spun about, looking to
see what time it was. 7:13. She had been asleep less than an hour. Dressing
took fifteen seconds, locating and checking her gun another ten. Then
she was at the door, breathing deeply, preparing herself, as the door
slid slowly back. The
corridor was empty. She walked quickly, her gun held out before her,
knowing that they would have to use this corridor if they were coming
for her. At the
first intersection she slowed, hearing footsteps, but they were from
the left. The warning had come from her friends—the two boys at
the elevator—which meant her assailants would be coming from
that direction; from the corridor directly ahead. She slipped the gun
into the pocket of her one-piece and let the old man pass, bowing,
then went to the right, breaking into a run, heading for the
interlevel steps. Even
as she reached their foot, she heard urgent whispering in the
corridor behind her—at the intersection. She flattened herself
against the wall, holding her breath. Then the voices were
gone—three, maybe more of them—heading toward her
apartment.
-^ Vasska's
brother Edel. She was certain of it. She had no idea how he had
traced her, but he had. She
was eight, nine steps up the flight when she remembered the case. "Shit!"
she hissed, stopping, annoyed with herself. But there hadn't been
time. If she'd stopped to dig it out from the back of the cupboard
she would have lost valuable seconds. Would have run into them in the
corridor. Even
so, she couldn't leave it there. It held full details of the raid;
important information that Mach had entrusted her with. People
were coming down the steps now; a group of Han students heading for
their morning classes. They moved past her, their singsong chatter
filling the stairwell briefly. Then she was alone again. For a moment
longer she hesitated, then went on up, heading for the maintenance
room at the top of the deck. karr
looked about him at the ruins. It was the same pattern as before—
broken Security cameras, deserted guard-posts, secured elevators, the
terrorists' trail
cleverly covered by white-outs. All spoke of a highly organized
operation, planned well in advance and carried out with a
professionalism that even the T'ang's own elite would have found hard
to match. Not
only that, but the Yu chose their targets well. Even here,
amid this chaos, they had taken care to identify their victims.
Twenty-four men had died here, all but one of them—a
guard—regular members of the club, each of them "tagged"
by the Yu, brief histories of their worthless lives tied about
their necks. The second guard had simply been beaten and tied up,
while the servants had again been left unharmed. Such discrimination
was impressive and rumors about it—passed from mouth to ear, in
defiance of the explicit warnings of the T'ing Wei—had
thus far served to discredit every effort of that Ministry to portray
the terrorists as uncaring, sadistic killers, their victims as
undeserving innocents. Karr shook his head, then went across to Chen. "Anything
new?" he asked, looking past Chen at the last of the corpses.
"Nothing," Chen answered, his weary smile a reminder that
they had been on duty more than thirty hours. "The only
remarkable thing is the similarity of the wounds. My guess is that
there was some kind of ritual involved." Karr
grimaced. "You're right. These men weren't just killed, they
were executed. And, if our Kb Ming friends are right, for good
reason." Chen
looked away, a shudder of disgust passing through him. He, too, had
seen the holos the assassins had left—studies of their victims
with young boys taken from the Lowers. Scenes of degradation and
torture. Scenes that the T'ing Wei were certain to keep from
popular consumption. Which
was to say nothing of the mutilated corpse of the child they had
found in the room at the-far end of the club. Karr
leaned across, touching Chen's arm. "It'll be some while before
we can move on what we know. We're waiting on lab reports, word from
our Triad contacts. There's little we can do just now, so why don't
you get yourself home? Spend some time with that wife of yours, or
take young Jyan to the Palace of Dreams. They tell me there's a new
Historical." Chen
laughed. "And Marie? I thought this was supposed to be your
honeymoon?" Karr
grinned. "Marie understands. It's why she married me." Chen
shook his head. "And I thought I was mad." He laughed.
"Okay. But let me know as soon as something happens." Karr
nodded. "All right. Now go." He
watched Chen leave, then stood, feeling the emotional weight of what
had happened here bearing down on him. It was rare that he was
affected by such scenes, rarer still that he felt any sympathy for
the perpetrators, but for once he did. The Yu had done society
a great service here tonight. Had rid Chung Kuo of the kind of scum
he had met so often below the Net. He
breathed out heavily, recalling Chen's disgust, knowing, at the very
core of him, that this was what all healthy, decent men ought to
feel. And yet the T'ing Wei would try to twist it, until these
good-for-nothing perverts, this shit masquerading as men, were
portrayed as shining examples of good citizenship. Yes,
he had seen the holes. Had felt his guts wrenched by the distress in
the young boys' eyes, by that helpless, unanswered plea. He
shuddered. The Oven Man had them now. And no evidence remained, but
for that small, pathetic corpse and these mementos—these
perverse records of a foul desire.
And was he to watch it
being whitewashed? Made pure and sparkling by a parcel of lies? He
spat, angered by the injustice of it. Was this why he had become
Tolonen's man? For this? He
looked about him. There was a tray of carapaced insects in a
glass-topped case like those one found beneath the Net, but these
were bright, sparkling, gaudily colored. Beside them was an ancient
radio set, shaped like a woman's private parts. He shook his head
then reached up, pulling a heavy, leather-bound volume down from a
shelf. He
stared at the cover, trying to make out the design—that of a
yellow eel curled about a fish—then caught his breath,
understanding. The book was a trade catalog, the trade in question
being that of young male prostitutes. He
thumbed through the pages. On each was displayed the naked figure of
a young man—Han or Hung Moo—each of them handsome,
athletic, well endowed. Fine young men, upright in their bearing,
they had the look of ancient heroes, yet for all their beauty they
were somehow tainted. One saw it in the slight curl of a lip or the
expression in the eyes. The beauty here was all outward. Curious,
Karr touched his fingers to the page and was surprised to find the
flesh of the model warm, the background cold. As he drew his fingers
back there was the slightest tingling of static. He
closed the book and put it back on the shelf, wiping his fingers
against his shirt as if they'd been sullied, then moved back into the
center of the room. He had seen enough. Enough to know he had been
right about these young men. It was not the eccentricity but the soft
luxury, the corruption of it, that nauseated him—that made him
shudder with a deep inner revulsion. They had no idea, these people.
No idea at all. Everywhere
he looked he found the signature of decadence; of sons given
everything by their fathers—everything but time and attention.
No wonder they turned out as they did, lacking any sense of value. No
wonder they pissed their time away, drinking and gambling and whoring
and worse—for inside them there was nothing. Nothing real,
anyway. Some of them were even clever enough to realize as much,
yet all their efforts to fill that nothingness were pointless. The
nothingness was vast, unbounded. To fill it was like trying to carry
water in a sieve. Karr
sighed, angered by the sheer waste of it all. He had seen enough to
know that it was not even their fault; they had had no choice but to
be as they were— spoiled and corrupt, vacuous and sardonic.
They had been given no other model to emulate, no stamp to mark them
out differently, and now it was too late. He
found the sheer sumptuousness of the room abhorrent. His own taste
was for the simple, the austere. Here, confronted by its opposite, he
found himself baring his teeth, as if at an enemy. Then, realizing
what he was doing, he laughed uncomfortably and turned, forcing
himself to be still. It
would be no easy task tracking down the Yu, for they were
unlike any of the other Kb Ming groups currently operating in City
Europe. They were fueled not by simple hatred—that obsessive
urge to destroy that had fired the Ping Tiao and their
like—but by a powerful indignation and a strong sense of
injustice. The first Ko Ming emperor, Mao Tse-tung, had once
said something about true revolutionaries being the fish that swam in
the great sea of the people. Well, these Yu— these
"fish"—were certainly that. They had learned from
past excesses. Learned that the people cared who died and who was
spared. Discrimination—moral discrimination—was
their most potent tool, and they took great pains to be in the right.
At least, from where he stood, it looked like that, and the failure
of the T'ing Wei to mold public opinion seemed to confirm his
gut instinct. And
now this. Karr looked about him. Last night's raid—this
devastatingly direct strike against the corrupt heart of the
Above—would do much to bolster the good opinion of the masses.
He smiled, imagining the face of the T'ing Wei's Third
Secretary, Yen T'ung, when he had seen the Yu's pamphlet. He would
have known that word had gone out already: a billion pamphlets this
time, if reports were true. Karr laughed, then fell silent, for his
laughter, like the tenor of his thoughts, was indicative of a deep
inner division. His
duty was clear. As Tolonen's man he owed unswerving loyalty. If the
Marshal asked him to track down the Yu, he would track them
down. Every last one of them. But for the first time ever he found
himself torn, for his instinct was for the Yu, not against
them. If one of those boys had been his son . . . He shivered. Yes,
and he shared their indignation too, their passionate belief in
justice. But he
was Tolonen's man; bound by the strongest of oaths. Sworn to defend
the Seven against Ko Ming activity, of whatever kind. He
spoke softly to the empty room. "Which is why I must find you,
Chi Li. You and all your Yu friends. Even if, secretly, I admire what
you have done here. For I am the T'ang's man, and you are the T'ang's
enemy. A Ko Ming." And
when he found her? Karr looked down, troubled. When he found her he
would kill her. Swiftly, mercifully, and with honor. the
first OF them was facing Ywe Hao as she came through the
door, his head half-turned, laughing at something. He fell back,
clutching his ruined stomach, the sound of the gun's detonation
echoing in the corridor outside. The
second was coming out of the kitchen. She shot him twice in the
chest, even as he fumbled for his weapon. Edel was behind him. He
came at Ywe Hao with a small butcher's knife, his face twisted with
hatred. She blew his hand off, then shot him through the temple. He
fell at her feet, his legs kicking impotently. She
looked about her. There had been five of them according to her
lookouts. So where were the others? There
was shouting outside. Any time now Security would investigate. She
went through to the kitchen, then came out again, spotting the case
on the bed. Nothing appeared to be missing. She
went across and took the case from the bed. It was only as she lifted
it that she realized she had been wrong. They had taken
something. She flipped the case open. It was empty. "Shit.
. . ." So
she'd killed them for nothing. She shuddered, trying to think, trying
to work out what to do. Where would they have taken the dossiers?
What would they have wanted them for? There
were footsteps, coming down the corridor. She
threw the case down and crossed the room, standing beside the open
door, clicking the spent clip from the handle of her gun. Outside the
footsteps stopped. "Edel?
Is that you?" She
nodded to herself, then slipped a new clip into the handle. The
longer she waited, the more jittery they'd get. At the same time,
they might just be waiting for her to put her head around the door. She
smiled. It was the kind of dilemma she understood. She
counted. At eight she turned and went low, the gun kicking noisily in
her hand as she moved out into the corridor. OVERHEAD,
tiny armies, tens of thousands strong, fought against a hazed
background of mountains, the roar of battle faint against the hubbub
of noise in the crowded Main. The giant hologram was suspended in the
air above the entrance to the Golden Emperor's Palace of Eternal
Dreams. Crowds
were pushing out from the Holo-Palace while others—young and
old alike—lined up to get in, their necks craned back to watch
the battle overhead. As Kao Chen pushed through, ushering his son
before him, he smiled, seeing how his head strained up and back,
trying to glimpse the air show. "Well,
Jyan? What did you think?" The
ten-year-old looked up at his father and beamed a smile. "It was
wonderful! That
moment when Liu Pang raised his banner and the whole army roared his
name. That was great!" Chen
laughed, holding his son to him briefly. "Yes, wasn't it? And to
think he was but Ch'en She, a poor man, before he became Son of
Heaven! Liu Pang, founder of the great Han Dynasty!" Jyan
nodded eagerly. "They should teach it like that at school. It's
far more interesting than all that poetry." Chen
smiled, easing his way through the crowds. "Maybe, but not all
poetry is bad. You'll understand that when you're older." Jyan
made a face, making Chen laugh. He, too, had always preferred history
to poetry, but then he'd never had Jyan's chances, Jyan's education.
No, things would be different for Jyan. Very different. He
slowed, then leaned close again. "Do you want to eat out, Jyan,
or shall we get back?" Jyan
hesitated, then smiled. "Let's get back, neh? Mother will be
waiting, and I want to tell her all about it. That battle between Liu
Pang and the Hegemon King was brilliant. It was like it was really
real. All those horsemen and everything!" Chen nodded. "Yes
... it was, wasn't it? I wonder how they did that?" "Oh,
it's easy," Jyan said, pulling him on by the hand. "We
learned all about it in school ages ago. It's all done with computer
images and simulated movement." "Simulated
movement, eh?" Chen laughed, letting himself be pulled through
the crowds and into one of the quieter corridors. "Still, it
seemed real enough. I was wincing myself once or twice during some of
those closeup fight scenes." Jyan laughed, then fell silent,
slowing to a halt. "What is it?" Chen said, looking up
ahead. "Those
two . . ." Jyan whispered. "Come. Let's go back. We'll take
the south corridor and cut through." Chen
glanced at Jyan, then looked back down the corridor. The two young
men—Han, in their mid-teens—were leaning against the
wall, pretending to be talking. Chen
bent down, lowering his voice. "Who are they?" Jyan
met his eyes. "They're senior boys at my school—part of a
tong, a gang. They
call themselves the Green Banner Guardians." "So what do
they want?" "I
don't know. All I know is that they're trouble." "You've
not done anything, then, Jyan? Nothing I should know of?" Jyan
looked back at him clear eyed. "Nothing, Father. I swear to
you." "Good. Then we've nothing to fear, have we?" He
straightened up. "Do you want me to hold your hand?" Jyan
shook his head. Chen
smiled, understanding. "Okay. Then let's go." They
were almost level with the two when they turned and stepped out,
blocking their way. "Where
do you think you're going, shit-brains?" the taller of them
said, smirking at Jyan. "What
do you want?" Chen asked, keeping the anger out of his voice. "Shut
your mouth, loo jen," said the second of them, moving
closer. "We've business with the boy. He owes us money." Chen
made himself relax. So that was it. They were out of funds and
thought they could shake down one of the junior boys. He smiled and
touched the tiny eye on his tunic's lapel, activating it. "I
don't think my son has any business with you, friend. So be on your
way." The
first youth laughed; a false, high laugh that was clearly a signal.
At the sound of it, four more youths stepped out from doorways behind
him. "As
I said, the boy owes us money. Twenty yuan." Chen
put his left arm out, moving Jyan back, behind him. "You have
proof of this?" "Not
on me," the first youth said, his face ugly now, his body
movements suddenly more menacing. "But he does. And I want it.
So unless you want to call me a liar . . ." Chen
smiled, moving his body slightly, so that the camera would capture
all| their faces. "Oh, I'm sure there's no need for that,
friend. But I'm afraid my son doesn't have a single fen on
him, let alone twenty yuan." The
youth's eyes flickered to the side, then looked back at Chen, a smile
coming to his lips. He was enjoying his game. "Well, what about
you, loo jen7. They say a father is responsible for
his son's debts. I reckon you're good for twenty yuan." Chen
smiled and shook his head, taking a step back. "I've spent my
money, friend. Now let us pass. Our home is up ahead." There
was a peal of mocking laughter from behind the two youths. The taller
of them stepped forward, resting his hand lightly on Chen's shoulder. "I'm
sorry. . . friend. . . but that's not possible. You see, I
don't believe you. I saw the note you paid with at the picture house.
You can't have spent all of that, can you?" Chen
looked at the hand on his shoulder. It was a thin, ugly hand. It
would be easy—and immensely satisfying—to take it from
his shoulder and crush it. But he could not do that. He was an
officer of the T'ang. And besides, Jyan had to leam the right way of
doing things. Chen
took a breath, then bowed his head, taking the slender, crumpled note
from his pocket and handing it to the youth. "Good.
. ." The youth squeezed Chen's shoulder reassuringly, then
stepped back, grinning. He turned, holding the note up triumphantly
for his friends to se They whooped and jeered, making face and hand
gestures at Chen. Then, with a final mocking bow to him, the youth
turned and strolled arrogantly away, his friends parting before him
then forming up behind, one of them turning to send a final gesture
of contempt back at Chen. Chen
watched them go, then turned, looking down at his son. Jyan was
standing there sullenly, his head turned away, held stiffly. "I
had to—" Chen began, but Jyan shook his head violently. "You
let them piss on us!" Chen
felt himself go still. He had never heard Jyan swear in front of him
before. Nor had he ever heard that tone of anger—of hurt and
fierce disapproval. "There
were six of them. Someone would have got hurt." Jyan
looked up, glaring at him. "You, you mean!" It
wasn't what he'd meant, but he didn't argue. He took a breath,
spelling it out clearly, trying to make his son understand. "I
am an officer of the T'ang's Security forces, Jyan, and I am off
duty. I am not empowered to brawl in the corridors." "They
pissed on us," Jyan said again, glaring at his father, close to
tears now. "And you let them get away with it. You just handed
the money over to them, like some low-level oaf!" Chen
lifted his hand abruptly, then let it fall. "You don't
understand, Jyan. I've got it all on camera. I—" Jyan
gave a huff of derision and turned, beginning to walk away. "Jyan!.
Listen to me!" The
boy shook his head, not looking back. "You let them piss on us!" Chen
stood there a moment longer, watching him, shaking his head, then
began to follow. Back
at the apartment, he went through to the end bedroom. Wang Ti was
sitting on the bed, packing his kit. "Where
is he?" he said quietly. She
looked up at him, then pointed to the closed door of Jyan's room.
There, she mouthed. But leave him be. He
looked at her, then looked down, sighing heavily. Seeing that, she
stopped and came across, holding him to her. "What is it?"
she asked quietly. He
closed the door, then told her what had happened, explaining what he
planned to do. If he acted now, they could trace the note to the
youths. That and the evidence of the camera eye would be enough to
have the boys demoted to a lower deck. It was the proper way of doing
things. The effective way, for it rid the level of that kind of scum.
But for once he felt a strong sense of dissatisfaction. "You
were right, Chen," she said softly, her face close to his. "And
what you did was right. There must be laws. We cannot live as they
did in the old days. It would be like the Net up here if it were
otherwise." "I
know," he said, "but I let him down. I could see it in his
face. He thinks I am a coward. He thinks I didn't have the guts to
face them out." Wang
Ti shook her head, a momentary pain in her eyes. "And you, Chen?
Do you consider yourself a coward? No. And nor do I. You are kwai,
husband. Whatever clothes you wear, beneath it you will always be
kwai. But sometimes it is right to step back, to avoid
trouble. You have said so yourself. Sometimes one must bend like a
reed." "A*
ya . . ." He turned his head aside, but she drew it back
gently. "Let
him be, Chen. He'll come around. Just now his head is filled with
heroics. That film you took him to see. His imagination was racing
with it. But life is not like that. Sometimes one must concede to get
one's way." He
stared back at her, knowing she was right, but some part of him
couldn't help thinking that he should have acted. Should have crushed
the boy's hand and broken a few of their hot heads. To teach them a
lesson. And
impress his son . . . He
looked down. "It hurts, Wang Ti. To have him look at me like
that. To have him say those things . . ." She
touched his cheek tenderly, her caress, like her voice, a balm. "I
know, my love. But that, too, is a kind of bravery, no? To face that
hurt and conquer it. For the good. Knowing you did right." She
smiled. "He'll come around, Chen. I know he will. He's a good
boy and he loves you. So just leave him be a while, neh?" He
nodded. "Well... I'd best get Deck Security onto it. I've got to
report back in a few hours, so there's not much time." She
smiled and turned away, returning to her packing. "And Chen?" "Yes?"
he said, turning at the door, looking back at her. "Don't
do anything silly. Remember what I said. You know what you are. Let
that be enough, neh?" He
hesitated, then nodded. But even as he turned away he knew it wasn't. Damn
them! he thought, wondering what it was that twisted men's souls
so much that they could not exist without tormenting others. IN the
LONG, BROAD HALLWAY that led to the Hall of the Serene Ultimate it
was cool and silent and dimly lit. From the dark, animal mouths of
cressets set high in the blood-red walls, naked oil-fed flames gave
off a thin watery glow that flickered on the tiled mosaic of the
floor and gave a dozen wavering shadows to the slender pillars that
lined each side. The long shapes of dragons coiled upward about these
pillars in alternating reds and greens, stretching toward the heavens
of the ceiling, where in the flicker of dark and light a battle
between gods and demons raged in bas relief. Between
the pillars stood the guards, unmoving, at attention, in seven rows
of eight, the variations of their ceremonial uniforms noticeable even
at first glance. Light glimmered dimly on their burnished armor,
revealing the living moistness of their eyes. They faced the outer
doors prepared, their lives a wall, defending their lords and
masters. At
their back was a second double door, locked now. Beyond it, the Seven
sat in conference. There it was warmer, brighter. Each T'ang sat easy
in a padded chair, relaxed, his ceremonial silks the only outward
sign of ritual. Wang Sau-leyan, host of this Council, was talking
now, discussing the package of proposals Li Yuan had set before them. Li
Yuan sat facing Wang, a hard knot of tension in his chest. Earlier,
he had been taken aback by the unexpected warmth of the young T'ang
of Africa's greeting. He had come expecting coldness, even overt
hostility, but Wang's embrace, his easy laughter, had thrown him. And
so now. For while his words seemed fair—seemed to endorse, even
to embrace Li Yuan's scheme for the days ahead—Li Yuan could
not shed the habit of suspicion. Wang Sau-leyan was such a consummate
actor—such a natural politician—that to take
anything he did or said at face value was to leave oneself open,
unguarded, vulnerable to the next twist or turn of his mood. Li
Yuan eased back into the cushions, forcing himself to relax, trying
to see through the veil of Wang's words. Beside him, he could sense
Tsu Ma shift in his chair. He had glanced at him earlier and seen his
own unease mirrored in his cousin's face. "And
so . . .*^Wang said, looking across at Li Yuan again, his smile
clear, untroubled. "My feeling is that we must support Li Yuan's
ideas. To do otherwise would be unwise, maybe even disastrous."
He looked about him, raising his plump hands in a gesture of
acceptance. "I realize that I have argued otherwise in the past,
but in the last six months I have wrestled with these problems and
have come to see that we must face them now, before it is too
late. That we must deal with them, resolutely, with the will to
overcome all difficulties." Li
Yuan looked down, aware of how closely Wang's words echoed his
father's. But was that deliberate on Wang's part or mere unconscious
echo? He drew a long breath, deeply uncertain. He had come prepared
to fight Wang, to lay siege to his fortress and batter down the door,
but Wang had put up no fight. His fortress was unmanned, the great
door open. He
looked up, noting how Wang was watching him, and nodded. "Good,"
Wang said, turning his head, looking first to Wu Shih, then to Wei
Feng, understanding that those two alone remained to be convinced.
"In that case, I propose that we draft a much fuller document to
be agreed and ratified by us at the next meeting of this Council." Li
Yuan looked to Tsu Ma, surprised. Was that it? Was there to be no
sting in the tail? Tsu Ma
leaned forward, a soft laugh forming a prologue to his words. "I
am glad that we see eye to eye on this matter, Cousin, but let me
make this clear. Are you proposing that we adopt Li Yuan's package of
measures, or are you suggesting some . . . alteration of their
substance?" Wang
Sau-leyan's smile was disarming. "In essence I see nothing wrong
with Li Yuan's proposals, yet in matters of this kind we must make
sure that the fine details—the drafting of the laws
themselves—are to our satisfaction, neh? To allow too little
would be as bad as to allow too much. The changes to the Edict must
be regulated finely, as must the laws on population growth. The
balance must be right, would you not agree, Wei Feng?" Wei
Feng, addressed unexpectedly, considered the matter a moment. He was
looking old these days, markedly tired, and for the last meeting he
had let his eldest son, Wei Chan Yin, sit in for him. But this time,
in view of the importance of the meeting, he had decided to attend in
person. He sat forward slightly, clearly in pain, and nodded. "That
is so, Wang Sau-leyan. And I am gratified to hear you talk of
balance. I have heard many things today that I thought not to hear in
my lifetime, yet I cannot say you are wrong. Things have changed
these last ten years. And if it takes this package of measures to set
things right, then we must pursue this course, as my cousin Wang
says, resolutely and with the will to overcome all difficulties. Yet
we would do well to take our own counsel on the extent and nature of
these changes before we make them. We must understand the likely
outcome of our actions." Wang
bowed his head respectfully. "1 agree, honored Cousin. There is
great wisdom in your words. And that is why I propose that a joint
committee be set up to investigate the likely consequences of such
measures. Moreover, might I suggest that my cousin Wei Feng's man,
Minister Sheng, be appointed head of that committee, reporting back
directly to this Council with his findings." Li
Yuan stared at Tsu Ma, astonished. Minister Sheng! It was Sheng whom
he and Tsu Ma had planned to propose as the new steward for GenSyn,
Sheng who was the linchpin of their scheme to keep the company from
financial ruin; yet somehow Wang Sau-leyan had found out, and now he
had preempted them, robbing them of their candidate, knowing they had
prepared no other. Wei Feng was nodding, immensely pleased by the
suggestion. A moment later a vote had carried the decision
unanimously, bringing them to the next piece of business, the
question of GenSyn and how it was to be administered. "But
first let us eat," Wang said, lifting his bulky figure from the
chair. "I don't know about you, cousins, but I could eat an ox,
raw if necessary." There
was laughter, but it was not shared by Li Yuan or Tsu Ma—they
were still reeling from the shock of Wang's final twist. Li Yuan
looked across, meeting Wang's eyes. Before they had been clear, but
now there was a hardness, a small gleam of satisfaction in them. Li
Yuan bit back his anger, then leaned forward and picked up the
silk-bound folder, gripping it tightly as he made his way across and
out onto the balcony. Only minutes ago he had decided not to use what
he knew—not to play his final card— but now he was
determined. No. He
was not finished yet. Let Wang Sau-leyan savor his tiny victory, for
this day would see him humbled, his power in Council broken for all
time. And
nothing—nothing—would stop him now. AT
THAT moment, twenty thousand Ji away, at Nanking spaceport a tall
Han, wearing the outworld fashions of the Mars Colony, was stepping
down from the interplanetary craft Wuhan. He had been through
one exhaustive security check on board the ship, but another lay
ahead. Ever since the attempt on Marshal Tolonen's life, security had
been tight here. He
joined the queue, staring out across the massive landing pit
dispassionately. The tests inside the ship had interested him. They
were looking for abnormalities; for differences in the rib structure
and the upper chest; signs of unusual brain scan patterns. He had had
to produce a sample of his urine and his fecal matter. Likewise, he
had had to spit into a small ceramic dish. And afterward the guard
had looked up at him and smiled. "It's all right," he'd
said, laughing as if he'd cracked the joke a thousand times, "you're
human." As
if that meant anything. "Tuan Wen-ch'ang . . ." He
stepped forward, presenting his papers. The guard ignored them,
taking his hand and placing it onto a lit-up pad on the desk in front
of him. After a moment the guard released his hand, then brought
around a swivel arm, indicating that he should put his eye to the
cup. He did so, holding there a moment longer than was necessary for
the machine to take a retinal scan. "Okay,"
the guard said, then leaned across, taking Tuan's papers. Holding
them under the high-density light he looked for signs of tampering or
falsification. Satisfied, he slipped the pass into the slim black box
at his side. A moment later it popped out again. At Security Central
in Bremen the computer had entered Tuan Wen-ch'ang's personal details
into the mainframe. "All
right. You're authorized for unobstructed passage in the four Cities
in which you have business, full access granted between Level 150 and
First Level." Tuan
gave the slightest bow then walked on, pocketing his papers. Deep
inside he felt a mild amusement. It had been much easier than he had
expected. But he understood why. This whole society had been
conditioned not to anticipate; to think of how things were and had
always been, not of their potential. Their security procedures, for
instance. They were testing for something that was already redundant;
that was as outmoded as the tests they used to find it. On Mars
things were different. There the pace was faster. Things had moved
on. He
climbed aboard the courtesy train and sat there, waiting, his
patience inexhaustible, his path through the great labyrinth of the
City mapped out clearly in his head, as if already traveled. It was
four hours by bolt to Luo Yang, then another hour and a half north to
Yang Ch'ian on the edge of the City, only a hundred It from Wang
Sau-leyan's palace at Tao Yuan. But the central computer records
would show something else; would show him traveling south down the
coast to catch the intercontinental shuttle from Fuchow to Darwin.
And if the central computer said it were so, who would argue with it?
Who would bother to check whether it reflected anything real—anything
happening in the solid, physical world? Tuan
Wen-ch'ang's face remained placid, almost inscrutable in its masklike
quality, yet deep down he was smiling. Yes, they had had all kinds of
things bred out of them down here. Things that the species needed if
it were to evolve beyond its present state. And that was why he was
here. To remind them of what could be done. To shake them up a
little. And to
push things one stage further. BEYOND
THE one-way GLASS the two youths sat, their backs to the wall, their
hands bound. The preliminary interrogation was over, the accusations
made and denied. Now it was time to take things further. Chen
followed the sergeant through, watching how the two boys glanced at
him, seeing the uniform, then looked again, their eyes widening as
they recognized who he was. "Ai
ya . . ." the younger of them murmured beneath his
breath, but the tall, thin youth—the ringleader—was
silent. "Well,
my friends," the sergeant said, a warm, ironic tone to his
voice, "you've met your accuser before, but I don't think you
knew his name. So let me present Captain Kao of the T'ang's special
elite force." The
thin youth's eyes came up, meeting Chen's briefly. Good,
thought Chen. So now you understand. "All
right," he said brusquely. "You have had your chance to
confess. Now you will be taken before a specially convened panel of
judges who will decide the matter." He paused. "Your
families will be present." He saw
the sudden bitterness in the thin youth's face. "You bastard,"
the boy said quietly. "You fucking bastard." Again,
he let it pass. He was the T'ang's man, after all. It was his duty to
do things properly. They
took them down, under armed escort, to the meeting hall at the far
end of the deck. There, in closed session, the three judges were
waiting, sitting behind their high lecterns. To one side of the hall,
on chairs set apart from the rest, sat the youths' four young
accomplices. Behind them were the families—men, women, and
children—numbering several hundred in all. AH
this, Chen thought, looking about him, surprised by the size of the
gathering. AH this because I willed it. Because I wanted things to
be done properly. And
yet it didn't feel right. He should have broken the little bastard's
hand. Should have given him a simple lesson in power. Whereas this .
. . It
began. Chen sat there, to the side, while the judges went through the
evidence, questioning the boys and noting down their replies. It was
a cold, almost clinical process. Yet when Chen stood to give his
statement, he could feel the silent pressure of all those eyes,
accusing him, angry at him for disturbing the balance of their lives.
He felt his face grow numb, his heart begin to hammer, but he saw it
through. He was kwai, after all. Besides, it was not he who
had threatened another; who had extorted money and then lied about
it. He
stared at the two youths, the desire to lash out—to smash their
ugly little faces—almost too much for him. The darkness
afterward came as a relief, and he sat there barely conscious of the
film being shown on the screen behind the judges—the film he
had taken only hours before. And when it was finished and the lights
came up again, he found it hard to turn his head and face that wall
of faces. He
listened carefully as the senior judge summed up the case; then,
steeling himself, he stood for the verdict. There was a moment's
silence, then an angry murmur of disapproval as the two ringleaders
were sent down—demoted fifty levels—their families fined
heavily, their accomplices fined and ordered to do one hundred days
community service. Chen
looked across, conscious of the pointing fingers, the accusing eyes,
and even when the senior judge admonished the families, increasing
the fines and calling upon the Heads to bring their clans to order,
he felt no better. Maybe they were right. Maybe it was too harsh. But
that wasn't really the point. It was the kind of punishment, not the
degree, that felt wrong. As the
families left, Chen stood there by the door, letting them jostle him
as they filed past, staring back at his accusers, defying them to
understand. You
saw what your sons did. You have seen what they've become. So why
hate me? Why blame me for your children's failings? And
yet they did. Ts'ui Wei, the father of the ringleader, came across,
leaning menacingly over Chen. "Well,
Captain Kao, are you happy now? Are you satisfied with what
you have done here today?" Chen
stared back at him silently. Ts'ui
Wei's lips curled slightly, the expression the mirror image of his
son's disdainful sneer. "I am sure you feel proud of yourself,
Captain. You have upheld the law. But you have to live here, neh? You
have children, neh?" Chen
felt himself go cold with anger. "Are you threatening me, Shih
Ts'ui?" Ts'ui
Wei leaned back, smiling; a hideously cynical smile. "You
misunderstand me, Captain. I am a law-abiding man. But one must live,
neh?" Chen
turned away, biting back his anger, leaving before he did something
he would regret. As Wang Ti said, he ought to be content that he had
done his part; satisfied that he had helped cleanse his level. Yet as
he made his way back it was anger not satisfaction that he felt. That
and a profound sense of wrongness. And as he walked, his hand went to
his queue, feeling the thick braid of hair then tugging at it, as if
to pull it from his head. IT WAS
AFTER three when they called Karr from his bed. There had been a
shoot-out at one of the stacks east-southeast of Augsburg Hsien.
Five men were dead, all visitors to the stack. That alone would
not have been significant enough to wake him, but some hours later, a
sack had been found near one of the interdeck elevators: a sack
containing items from the Dragonfly Club, plus a handwritten file ;
giving full details of how the raid had been planned. Now,
less than thirty minutes later, he stood in the bedroom of the
two-room apartment, trying to work out what had happened. As he
stood there the deck's duty officer knocked and entered. Coming to
attention, he bowed his head and handed Karr two printouts. "Ywe
Hao . . ." Karr mouthed softly, studying the flat,
black-and-white image of the apartment's occupant; noting at once how
like the artist's impression of the girl—the Yu terrorist Chi
Li—she was. This was her. There was no doubting it. But who
were the others? The
security scans on the five victims had revealed little. They were
from various parts of the City—though mostly from the
north-central hsien. All were engineers or technicians in the
maintenance industries: occupations that allowed them free access at
this level. Apart from that their past conduct had been exemplary.
According to the record, they were fine, upstanding citizens, but the
record was clearly wrong. So
what was this? A rival faction, muscling in on the action? Or had
there been a split in the ranks of the Yu—some internal
struggle for power, culminating in this? After all he'd seen of such
Ko Ming groups it would not have surprised him, but for once the
explanation didn't seem to fit. "What
do the cameras show?" "They're
being processed and collated, sir. We should have them in the next
ten to fifteen minutes." "And
the woman—this Ywe Hao—she's on them, neh?" The
Captain nodded. "I sent a squad up to where she was last seen by
the cameras, but there was no sign of her, sir. She vanished."
"Vanished?" Karr shook his head. "How do you mean?" The
man glanced away uneasily. "Our cameras saw her enter the
maintenance room at the top of the deck. After that there's no sign
of her. Neither of the cameras on the main conduit picked her up."
"So she must be there, neh?" "No,
sir. I had my men check that straight away. The room's empty and
there's no sign of her in the conduit itself." Karr
sighed. It was clear he would have to look for himself. "You
said earlier that she may have been warned, that there was a lookout
of some kind. . . ." "Two young boys, sir." "I
see. And you've traced them, neh?" "They're in custody,
sir. Would you like to see them?" Karr
looked about him at the mess. "Your men have finished here, I
take it?" The Captain nodded. "Good.
Then clear this up first. Remove the corpses and put some cloths
down. I don't want our young friends upset, understand me?"
"Sir!" "Oh,
and Captain . . . have one of your men run a file on the movements of
our friend Ywe Hao over the last three months. With particular
attention to those occasions when she doesn't show up on camera." The
Captain frowned but nodded. "As you wish, Major." "Good.
And bring me some ch'a. A large chung if you have one. We may
be here some while." CHEN
STOOD there in the doorway, looking about him at the carnage. "Kuan
Yin! What happened here?" Karr
smiled tiredly. "It looks like some kind of interfactional
rivalry. As to whether it's two separate groups or a struggle within
the Yu, maybe that's something we'll discover if and when we find the
woman. As for the woman herself, I'm certain she was involved in both
the Hannover assassination and the attack on the Dragonfly Club. I've
asked for files on her movements over the last three months. If I'm
right about her, then there ought to be blanks on the tape
corresponding with the white-outs surrounding the terrorist
incidents. We've no next-of-kin details, which is unusual, but you
can do a little digging on that, neh? Oh, yes, and the Duty Captain
is going to bring two young boys here. They were the woman's
lookouts, it seems. I want you to question them and find out what
they know about her. But be easy on them. I don't think they
understood for a moment what they were in on." "And
you, Gregor? What will you be doing?" Karr
straightened up, then laughed. "First I'm going to finish this
excellent ch'a, then I'm going to find out how a full-grown woman can
disappear into thin air." "Cousins,
we come to the question of the GenSyn inheritance." Wang
looked about him, his eyes resting briefly on Li Yuan and Tsu Ma
before they settled on the aging T'ang of East Asia, Wei Feng. "As
I see it, this matter has been allowed to drag on far too long. As a
result the Company has been harmed, its share price reduced
dramatically on the Index. Our immediate concern, therefore, must be
to provide GenSyn with a stable administrative framework, thus
removing the uncertainties that are presently plaguing the Company.
After that—" Li
Yuan cleared his throat. "Forgive me for interrupting, Cousin,
but before we debate this matter at any length, I would like to call
for a further postponement." Wang
laughed, a small sound of disbelief. "Forgive me, Cousin, but
did I hear you correctly? A further postponement?" Li
Yuan nodded. "If it would please my cousins. It is clear that we
need more time to find a satisfactory solution. Another month or
two." Wang
sat forward, his face suddenly hard. "Forgive me, Cousin, but I
do not understand. Since Klaus Ebert's death, this matter has been
brought before this Council twice. On both occasions there was a
unanimous agreement to postpone. For good reason, for no solution to
the problem was forthcoming. But now we have the answer. Hou
Tung-po's proposal is the solution we were looking for." Tsu
Ma's laugh was heavily sardonic. "You call that a solution,
Cousin? It sounds to me like a bureaucratic nightmare—a recipe
not for stability but for certain financial disaster." Hou
Tung-po sat forward, his face red with anger, but Wang's raised hand
silenced him. "Had
this matter not been raised before, Tsu Ma, and were there not
already a satisfactory solution before us—one you will have a
full opportunity to debate—I would understand your desire to
look for other answers, but the time for delay is past. As I was
saying, we must act now or see the Company damaged, perhaps
irreparably." Wang
paused, looking to Wei Feng, appealing to the old man directly. As
things stood, Hou Tung-po and Chi Ling would support Wang, while Tsu
Ma and Wu Shih would line up behind Li Yuan. If it came to a fight,
Wei Feng held the casting vote. Wang
smiled, softening his stance. "Besides,
what objections could my cousins possibly have to the idea of a
ruling committee? Would that not give us each a fair say in the
running of the Company? Would that not demonstrate—more clearly
than anything—that the Seven have full confidence in the
continuing prosperity of GenSyn?" Li
Yuan looked away. Although in terms of holdings it was second to the
giant MedFac Company on the Hang Seng Index, GenSyn was, without
doubt, the single most important commercial concern on Chung Kuo, and
as Tsu Ma had rightly said, any weakening of the Company would affect
him far more than it did Wang Sau'Ieyan. But
that could not be said. Not openly. For to say as much would give
Wang the chance to get back at Li Yuan for his family's special
relationship with GenSyn—a relationship that, though it had
existed for a century or more, was, in truth, against the spirit of
the Seven. Li
Yuan sat back, meeting Tsu Ma's eyes. They would have to give way.
Minister Sheng had been their winning card, and Wang had already
taken him from their hand. "Cousin
Wang," he said coldly. "I concede. Let us adopt Cousin
Hou's proposal. As you say, what possible objection could we have to
such a scheme?" He
drew a breath, finding comfort in the presence of the silk-bound
folder in his lap—in the thought of the humiliation he would
shortly inflict on Wang. Then— from nowhere, it seemed—a
new thought came to him. He leaned forward again, the sheer
outrageousness of the idea making him want to laugh aloud. "Indeed,"
he said softly, "let me make my own proposal. If the Council
permits, I would like to suggest that Marshal Tolonen be replaced in
his high post and appointed as Head of the ruling committee of
GenSyn." He looked at Wang directly. "As my cousin argued
so eloquently, we need to boost the market's confidence, and what
clearer sign could we give than to make a man of such experience and
integrity the head of our committee?" He saw
the movement in Wang's face and knew he had him. Wang could object,
of course, but on what grounds? On the unsuitability of the
candidate? No. For to argue that would be to argue that their
original ratification of Tolonen as Marshal had been wrong, and that
he could not—would not—do. Li
Yuan looked about him, seeing the nods of agreement from all
sides—even from Wang's own allies—and knew he had
succeeded in limiting the damage. With Tolonen in charge there was a
much greater chance of things getting done. It would mean a loss of
influence in the Council of Generals, but that was as nothing beside
the potential loss of GenSyn's revenues. He met
Wang's eyes, triumphant, but Wang had not finished. "I
am delighted that my cousin recognizes the urgency of this matter.
However, I am concerned whether my cousin really means what he says.
It would not, after all, be the
first time that he has promised this Council something, only to go
back on his word." Li
Yuan started forward, outraged by Wang's words. All around him there
was a buzz of astonishment and indignation. But it was Wei Feng who
spoke first, his deeply lined face grown stern and rocklike as he sat
stiffly upright in his chair. His gruff voice boomed, all sign of
frailty gone from it. "You
had best explain yourself, Wang Sau-leyan, or withdraw your words." "No
?" Wang stood in a flurry of silks, looking about him defiantly.
"Nor would you have, Cousin, had there not been good reason. I
am talking of Li Yuaris promise to this Council that he would release
the young sons—a promise that my cousins Wu Shih and Tsu Ma
were also party to." He shifted his bulk, looking about the
circle of his fellow T'ang. "It is six months since they gave
that promise and what has happened? Are the sons back with their
fathers? Is the matter resolved, the grievance of those high citizens
settled? No. The fathers remain unappeased, rightfully angry that
after we gave our word their sons remain imprisoned." Li
Yuan stood, facing Wang. "There is good reason why the sons have
not been released, and you know it." "Know
it?" Wang laughed contemptuously. "All I know is that you
gave your word. Immediately, you said." "And
so it would have been had the paperwork gone smoothly." "Paperwork
. . . ?" Wang's mocking laughter goaded Wu Shih to rise and
stand beside Li Yuan, his fists clenched, his face livid. "You
know as well as any of us why there have been delays, Wang Sau-leyan!
Considering the gravity of the circumstances, the terms of release
were laughable. All we asked of the fathers was that they should sign
a bond of good behavior. It was > the very minimum we could have
asked for, and yet they refused, quibbling over the i wording of the
papers." "With
every right, if what I've heard is true . . ." Wu
Shih bristled, his words like acid now. "And what have you
heard, Cousin?| Wang
Sau-leyan half turned away, then turned back, moving a step closer,
face thrust almost into Wu Shih's. "That your officials have
been obstructive, it has been your officials and not the fathers who
have quibbled over the precise" wording of these . . . bonds.
That they have dragged their heels and delayed until even the
best man's patience would be frayed. That they have found every
excuse— however absurd—not to come to terms. In short,
that they have been ordered to delay matters." "Ordered?"
Wu Shih shuddered with rage, then lifted his hand as if to strike
Wang, but Li Yuan put out his arm, coming between them. "Cousins,"
he said urgently, "let us remember where we are." He turned
his head, staring fiercely at Wang. "We will achieve nothing by
hurling insults at each other." "You
gave your word," Wang said, defiantly, meeting his eyes coldly.
"All three of you. Immediately, you said. Without conditions."
He took a breath, then turned away, taking his seat. Wu
Shih glared at Wang a moment longer, then stepped back, his disgust
at his cousin no longer concealed. Li Yuan stood there, looking about
him, feeling the tensions that flowed like electric currents in the
air about him and knew—for the first time knew beyond all
doubt—that this was a breach that could never be healed. He
took his seat again, leaning down to lift the folder from where it
had fallen. "Wang
Sau-leyan," he began, looking across at his moon-faced cousin,
calm now that he had taken the first step. "There is a small
matter I would like to raise before we continue. A matter of...
etiquette." Wang Sau-leyan smiled. "As you wish, Cousin." Li
Yuan opened the folder, looking down at the wafer-thin piece of black
plastic. It was the template of a hologrammic image: the image of
Wang Sau-leyan in the garden at Tao Yuan, meeting with Li Yuan's
bondsman, Hsiang Shao-erh. There were other things in the folder—a
taped copy of their conversation and the testimony of Wang's Master
of the Royal Household, Sun Li Hua, but it was the holo that was the
most damning piece of evidence. He
made to offer it to Wang, but Wang shook his head. "I know what
it is, Li Yuan. You have no need to show me." Li
Yuan gave a small laugh of astonishment. What was this? Was Wang
admitting his treachery? With
what seemed like resignation, Wang pulled himself up out of the chair
and went to the double doors, unlocking them and throwing them open.
At his summons a servant approached, head bowed, bearing a large
white lacquered box. Wang took it and turned, facing his fellow
T'ang. "I
wondered when you would come to this," he said, approaching to
within an arm's length of where Li Yuan was sitting. "Here. I
was saving this for you. As for the traitor Sun, he has found peace.
After telling me everything, of course." Li Yuan took the box,
his heart pounding. He
opened it and stared, horrified. From within the bright red wrappings
of the box Hsiang Shao-erh stared back at him, his eyes like
pale-gray bloated moons in an unnaturally white face, the lids peeled
back. And then, slowly, very slowly, as in a dream, the lips began to
move. "Forgive
... me ... Chieh . . . Hsia. ... I ... confess ... my ...
treachery . . . and . . . ask. . . you . . . not... to ... punish...
my ... kin ... for... my . . . abject. . . unworthiness. . . ."
There was a tiny shudder from the severed head, and then it went on,
the flat, almost gravelly whisper like the voice of stone itself.
"Forgive . . . them . . . Chieh . . . Hsia. ... I ... beg
. . . you. . . . Forgive . . .them____" Li
Yuan looked up, seeing his horror reflected in every face but one.
Then, with a shudder of revulsion he dropped the box, watching it
fall, the frozen head roll unevenly across the thick pile of the
carpet until it lay still, resting on its cheek beside Wang
Sau-leyan's foot. Bending down, the T'ang of Africa lifted it and
held it up, offering it to Li Yuan, the smile on his face like the
rictus of a corpse. "This
is yours, I believe, Cousin." Then he began to laugh, his
laughter rolling from him in great waves. "Yours . . ." "What's
your name?" "Kung
Lao." "And
yours?" "Kung
Yi-lung." "You're
brothers, then?" The
nine-year-old Yi-lung shook his head. "Cousins . . ." he
said quietly, still not sure of this man who, despite his air of
kindness, wore the T'ang's uniform. Chen
sat back slightly, smiling. "Okay. You were friends of Ywe
Hao's, weren't you? Good friends. You helped her when those men came,
didn't you? You let her know they were on their way." He saw
how the younger of the two, Lao, looked to his cousin before he
nodded. "Good.
You probably saved her life." He saw
how they looked down at that; how, again, they glanced at each other,
still not sure what this was all about. "She
must have been a very good friend for you to do that for her,
Yi-lung. Why was that? How did you come to be friends?" Yi-lung
kept his head lowered, almost stubbornly. "She was kind to us,"
he mumbled, the words offered reluctantly. "Kind?"
Chen gave a soft laugh, recalling what Karr had said about the guard
Leyden and how she had probably spared his life. "Yes, I can
imagine that. But how did you meet her?" No
answer. He tried another tack. "That's
a nice machine she's got. A MedRes Network-6. I'd like one like that,
wouldn't you? A top-of-the-range machine. It was strange, though. She
was using it to record news items. Things about transportation
systems." "That
was our project," the younger boy, Lao, said without thinking,
then fell quiet again. "Your
project? For school, you mean?" Both
boys nodded. Yi-lung spoke for them. "She was helping us with
it. She always did. She took the time. Not like the rest of them. Any
time we had a problem we could go to her." Chen
took a deep breath. "And that's why you liked her?" Both
boys were looking at him now, a strange earnestness in their young
faces. "She
was funny," Lao said reflectively. "It wasn't all work with
her. She made it fun. Turned it all into a game. We learned a lot
from her, but she wasn't like the teachers." "That's
right," Yi-lung offered, warming to things. "They made
everything seem dull and gray, but she brought it all alive for us.
She made it all make sense." "Sense?"
Chen felt a slight tightening in his stomach. "How do you mean,
Yi-lung? What kind of things did she used to say to you?" Yi-lung
looked down, as if he sensed there were some deeper purpose behind
Chen's question. "Nothing," he said evasively. "Nothing?"
Chen laughed, letting go, knowing he would get nothing if he pushed.
"Look, I'm just interested, that's all. Ywe Hao's gone missing
and we'd like to find her. To help her. If we can find out what kind
of woman she was . . ." "Are
you tracking her down?" Chen
studied the two a moment, then leaned forward, deciding to take them
into his confidence. "Ywe Hao's in trouble. Those men who came
tried to kill her, but she got away. So yes, Kung Lao, we have to
find her. Have to track her down, if that's how you want to put it.
But the more we know—the more good things we know about her—the
better it will be for her. That's why you have to tell me all you can
about her. To help her." Lao
looked at his cousin, then nodded. "Okay. We'll tell you. But
you must promise, Captain Kao. Promise that once you find her you'll
help her all you can." He
looked back at the two boys, momentarily seeing something of his own
sons in them, then nodded. "I promise. All right? Now tell me.
When did you first meet Ywe Hao, and how did you come to be friends?" THE
maintenance ROOM was empty, the hatch on the back wall locked, the
warning light beside it glowing red in the half-light. Karr crouched
down, squeezing through the low doorway, then stood there, perfectly
still, listening, sniffing the air. There was the faintest scent of
sweat. And something else . . . something he didn't recognize. He
went across, putting his ear against the hatch. Nothing. Or almost
nothing. There was a faint hum—a low, pulsing vibration—
the same sound one heard throughout the City, wherever one went. He
paused a moment, studying the hatchway, realizing it would be a tight
squeeze; that he would be vulnerable momentarily if she were waiting
just the other side. But the odds were that she was far away by now. He
ducked into the opening backward, head first, forcing his shoulders
through the narrow space diagonally, then grabbed the safety bar
overhead and heaved himself up, twisting sideways. He dropped and
spun around quickly, his weapon out, but even as he turned, he had to
check himself, staggering, realizing suddenly that the platform was
only five ch'i in width and that beyond . . . Beyond
was a drop of half a li. He
drew back, breathing slowly. The conduit was fifty ch'i across,
a great diamond-shaped space, one of the six great hollowed columns
that stood at the comers of the stack, holding it all up. Pipes went
up into the darkness overhead, massive pipes twenty, thirty times the
girth of a man, each pipe like a great tree, thick branches
stretching off on every side, crisscrossing the open space. Service
lights speckled the walls of the great conduit above and below, but
their effect was not so much to illuminate the scene as to emphasize
its essential darkness. It was
a cold, somber place, a place of shadows and silence. Or so it seemed
in those first few moments. But then he heard it—the sound that
underlay all others throughout the City, the sound of great engines
pushing the water up the levels from the great reservoirs below and
of other engines filtering what came down. There was a palpable hum,
a vibration in the air itself. And a trace of that same indefinable
scent he had caught a hint of in the room earlier, but stronger here.
Much stronger. Poking
his head out over the edge he looked down, then moved back, craning
his neck, trying to see up into the shadows. Which
way? Had she gone up or down? He
looked about him, locating the cameras, then frowned, puzzled. There
was no way the cameras wouldn't have seen her come out of the room
and onto the platform. No chance at all. Which meant that either she
hadn't gone into the v maintenance room in the first place or those
cameras had been tampered with. And she had gone into the
room.
: For a
moment Karr stared at the camera just across from him, then struck by
the absurdity of it, he laughed. It was all too bloody easy. Since
the City had first been 1 built Security had been dependent on their
eyes—their cameras—to be theirji watchdogs and do most of
their surveillance work for them, not questioning for a moment how
satisfactory such a system was, merely using it, as they'd been
taught. But others had. The Yu, for instance. They had seen at
once how weak, how vulnerable such a network was—how easily
manipulated. They had seen just how easy it was to blind an eye or
feed it false information. All they needed was access. And who had
access? Technicians. Maintenance technicians. Like the five dead men.
And the girl. And others. Hundreds of others. Every last one of them
tampering with the network, creating gaps in the vision of the world. False
eyes they'd made. False eyes. Like in wei chi, where a group
of stones was only safe if it had two eyes, and where the object was
to blind an eye and take a group, or to lull one's opponent into a
false sense of security by letting them think they had an eye,
whereas in fact. . . Pulling
his visor down, he leaned out, searching the walls for heat traces. Nothing.
As he'd expected, the trail was cold. He raised the visor, sighing
heavily. What he really needed was sleep. Twelve hours if possible,
four if he was lucky. The drugs he was taking to keep awake had a
limited effect after a while. Thought processes deteriorated,
reflexes slowed. If he didn't find her soon . . . He
leaned back, steadying himself with one hand, then stopped, looking
down. His fingers were resting in something soft and sticky. He
raised them to his mouth, tasting them. It was blood, recently
congealed. Hers?
It had to be. No one else had come here in the last few hours. So
maybe she'd been wounded in the firefight. He shook his head,
puzzled. If that were so, why hadn't they found a trail of blood in
the corridors outside? Unless they hadn't looked. He
went to the edge of the platform, feeling underneath, his fingers
searching until, at the top of the service ladder, three rungs down,
they met a second patch of stickiness. Down.
She had gone down. Karr
smiled; then, drawing his gun, he turned and clambered over the edge,
swinging out, his booted feet reaching for the ladder. toward
THE bottom of the shaft it became more difficult. The smaller service
pipes that branched from the huge arterials proliferated, making it
necessary for Karr to clamber out, away from the wall, searching for
a way down. The
trail of blood had ended higher up, on a platform thirty levels down
from where he had first discovered it. He had spent twenty minutes
searching for further traces, but there had been nothing. It was only
when he had trusted to instinct and gone down that he had found
something—the wrapping of a field-dressing pad, wedged tightly
into a niche in the conduit wall. It was
possible that she had gone out through one of the maintenance hatches
and into the deck beyond. Possible but unlikely. Not with all the
nearby stacks on special security alert. Neither would she have
doubled back. She had lost a lot of blood. In her weakened state the
climb would have been too much. Besides which, his instinct told him
where he would find her. Karr moved on, working his way down, alert
for the smallest movement, the least deviation in the slow, rhythmic
pulse that filled the air. That sound seemed to grow in intensity as
he went down, a deep vibration that was as much within his bones as
in the air. He paused, looking up through the tangled mesh of
pipework, imagining the great two-Zi-high conduit as a giant flute—a
huge k'un-ti—reverberating on the very edge of
audibility: producing one single, unending note in a song written for
titans. He
went down, taking greater care now, conscious that the bottom of the
shaft could not be far away. Even so, he was surprised when, easing
his way between a nest of overlapping pipes, his feet met nothing.
For a moment he held himself there, muscles straining, as his feet
searched blindly for purchase, then drew himself up again. He
crouched, staring down through the tangle of pipework. Below him
there was nothing. Nothing but darkness. In all
probability she was down there, in the darkness, waiting for him. But
how far down? Twenty ch'i? Thirty? He pulled his visor down and
switched to ultraviolet. At once his vision was filled with a strong
red glow. Of course ... he had felt it earlier—that warmth
coming up from below. That was where the great pumps were—just
beneath. Karr raised the visor and shook his head. It was no use. She
could move about as much as she wanted against that bright backdrop
of warmth, knowing that she could not be seen. Nor could he use a
lamp. That would only give his own position away, long before he'd
have the chance to find her. What then? A flash bomb? A disabling
gas? The
last made sense, but still he hesitated. Then, making up his mind, he
turned, making his way across to the wall. There
would be a way down. A ladder. He would find it and descend, into the
darkness. He
went down, tensed, listening for the slightest movement from below,
his booted feet finding the rungs with a delicacy surprising in so
big a man. His body was half turned toward the central darkness, his
weapon drawn, ready for use. Even so, it was a great risk he was
taking and he knew it. She didn't have night-sight—he was
fairly sure of that—but if she were down there, there
was the distinct possibility that she would see him first, if only as
a shadow against the shadows. He
stopped, crouching on the ladder, one hand going down. His foot had
met something. Something hard but yielding. It was
a mesh. A strong security mesh, stretched across the shaft. He
reached' out, searching the surface. Yes, there!—the raised
edge of a gate, set into the mesh. He traced it around. There was a
slight indentation on the edge farthest from the ladder, where a
spanner-key would fit, but it was locked. Worse, it was bolted from
beneath. If he were to go any further he would have to break it open. He
straightened up, gripping the rung tightly, preparing himself, then
brought his foot down hard. With a sharp crack it gave, taking him
with it, his hand torn from the rung, his body twisting about. He
fell. Instinctively, he curled into a ball, preparing for impact, but
it came sooner than he'd expected, jarring him. He
rolled to one side, then sat up, sucking in a ragged breath, his left
shoulder aching. If she
was there . . . He
closed his eyes, willing the pain to subside, then got up onto his
knees. For the briefest moment he felt giddy, disoriented, then his
head cleared. His gun . . . he had lost his gun. In the
silent darkness he waited, tensed, straining to hear the click of a
safety or the rattle of a grenade, but there was nothing, only the
deep, rhythmic pulse of the pumps, immediately beneath. And something
else—something so faint he thought at first he was imagining
it. Karr
got to his feet unsteadily, then, feeling his way blindly, he went
toward the sound. The
wall was closer than he'd thought. For a moment his hands searched
fruitlessly, then found what they'd been looking for. A passageway—a
small, low-ceilinged tunnel barely broad enough for him to squeeze
into. He stood there a moment, listening. Yes, it came from here. He
could hear it clearly now. Turning
sideways, he ducked inside, moving slowly down the cramped
passageway, his head scraping the ceiling. Halfway down he stopped,
listening again. The sound was closer now, its regular pattern
unmistakable. Reaching out, his fingers connected with a grille. He
recognized it at once. It was a storage cupboard inset into the wall,
like those they had in the dormitories. Slipping
his fingers through the grille, he lifted it, easing it slowly back
and up into the slot at the top. He paused, listening again, his hand
resting against the bottom edge of the niche, then began to move his
fingers inward, searching. . . Almost
at once they met something warm. He drew them back a fraction,
conscious of the slight change in the pattern of the woman's
breathing. He waited for it to become regular, then reached out
again, exploring the shape. It was a hand, the fingers pointing to
the left. He reached beyond it, searching, then smiled, his fingers
closing about a harder, colder object. Her gun. For a
moment he rested, his eyes closed, listening to the simple rhythm of
the woman's breathing, the deep reverberation of the pumps. In the
darkness they seemed to form a kind of counterpoint and for a moment
he felt himself at ease, the two sounds connecting somewhere deep
within him, yin and yang, balancing each other. The
moment passed. Karr opened his eyes into the darkness and shivered.
It was a shame. He would have liked it to end otherwise, but it was
not to be. He checked the gun, then pulled his visor down, clicking
on the lamp. At once the cramped niche filled with light and shadow. Karr
caught his breath, studying the woman. She lay on her side, her face
toward the entrance, one hand folded across her breasts. In the
pearled glow of the lamp she was quite beautiful, her Asiatic
features softened in sleep, her strength—the perfect bone
structure of her face and shoulders—somehow emphasized. Like
Marie, he thought, surprised by the notion. As he watched she
stirred, moving her head slightly, her eyes flickering beneath the
lids in dream. Again
he shivered, remembering all he had learned about her in the past few
days—recalling what the guard Leyden had said about her, and
what the two boys had told Chen. At the same time he could see the
murdered youth at the Dragonfly Club and the soft, hideous excess of
that place, and for a moment he was confused. Was she realty his
enemy? Was this strong, beautiful creature really so different from
himself? He
looked away, reminding himself of the oath of loyalty he had made to
his T'ang. Then, steeling himself, he raised the gun, placing it a
mere finger's length from her sleeping face and clicking off the
safety. The
sound woke her. She smiled and stretched, turning toward him. For a
moment her dark eyes stared out dreamily, then with a blink of
realization, she grew still. He
hesitated, wanting to explain, wanting, just this once, for her to
understand. UT
') "Don't.
. ." she said quietly. "Please . . ." The
words did something to him. He drew the gun back, staring at her,
then, changing its setting, he leaned forward again, placing it to
her temple. Afterward
he stood there, out in the darkness of the main shaft, the mesh
overhead glittering in the upturned light from his visor, and tried
to come to terms with what he'd done. He had been resolved to kill
her; to end it cleanly, honorably. But faced with her, hearing her
voice, he had found himself unmanned— incapable of doing what
he'd planned. He
turned, looking back at the shadowed entrance to the passageway. All
this| while he had been out of contact—operating under a
communications blackout— so in theory he might still kill her
or let her go and no one would be the wiser. But he knew now that he
would do what duty required of him—and deliver her, stunned,
her wrists and ankles bound, into captivity. Whether
it felt right or not. Because that was his job—the thing
Tolonen had chosen him to do all those years ago. Karr
sighed; then raising his right hand, he held down the two tiny
blisters on the wrist, reactivating the built-in comset. "Kao
Chen," he said softly, "can you read me?" There
was a moment's silence, then the reply came, sounding directly in his
head. "Gregor . . . thank the gods. Where are you?" He
smiled, comforted by the sound of Chen's voice. "Listen. I've
got her. She's bound and unconscious, but I don't think I can get her
out of here on my own. I'll need assistance." "Okay.
I'll get onto that straight away. But where are you? There's been no
trace of you for almost two hours. We were worried." Karr
laughed quietly. "Wait. There's a plaque here somewhere."
He lowered his visor, looking about, then went across. "All
right. You'll need two men and some lifting equipment—pulleys
and the like." "Yes," Chen said, growing impatient.
"I'll do all that. But tell me where you are You must have some
idea." "It's
Level Thirty-one,» Karr said, turning back, playing the beam
onto the surface of the plaque, making sure. "Level Thirty-one,
Dachau Hsien." CHAPTER
EIGHTEEN The Dead Brother LI
YUAN STOOD on the high terrace at Hei Shui, looking out across the
lake. He had come unannounced, directly from a meeting with his
ministers. Behind him stood eight of his retainers, their black silks
______merging with the shadows. A
light breeze feathered the surface of the lake, making the tall reeds
at the shoreline sway, the cormorants bob gently on the water. The
sky was a perfect blue, the distant mountains hard, clear shapes of
black. Sunlight rested like a honeyed gauze over everything, glinting
off the long sweep of steps, the white stone arches of j the bridge.
On the far bank, beyond the lush green of the water meadow, Fei Yens
f maids moved among the trees of the orchard, preparing their
mistress for the audience to come. From
where he stood he could see the child's cot—a large, sedanlike
thing of ~4 pastel-colored cushions and veils. Seeing it had
made his heart beat faster, the darkness at the pit of his stomach
harden like a stone. He
turned, impatient. "Come," he said brusquely, then turned
back, skipping down the broad steps, his men following like shadows
on the white stone. They
met on the narrow bridge, a body's length separating them. Fei Yen
stood there, her head lowered. Behind her came her maids, the cot
balanced between four of them. As Li
Yuan took a step closer, Fei Yen knelt, touching her head to the
stone. Behind her her maids did the same. "ChiehHsia.
. ." She
was dressed in a simple chi poo of pale lemon, embroidered
with butterflies. Her head was bare, her fine, dark hair secured in a
tightly braided bun at the crown. As she looked up again, he noticed
a faint color at her neck. "Your
gift—" he began, then stopped, hearing a sound from within
the cot. She
turned her head, following his gaze, then looked back at him. "He's
waking." He looked at her without recognition, then looked back
at the cot. Stepping past her, he moved between the kneeling maids
and, crouching, drew back the veil at the side of the cot. Inside,
amid a downy nest of cushions, young Han was waking. He lay
on his side, one tiny, delicate hand reaching out to grip the edge of
the cot. His
eyes—two tiny, rounded centers of perfect liquid blackness—were
open, staring up at him. Li
Yuan caught his breath, astonished by the likeness. "Han Ch'in .
. ." he said softly. Fei
Yen came and knelt beside him, smiling down at the child, evoking a
happy gurgle of recognition. "Do you wish to hold him, Chieh
Hsial" He
hesitated, staring down at the child, engulfed by a pain of longing
so strong it threatened to unhinge him, then nodded, unable to form
the words. She
leaned past, brushing against him, the faint waft of her perfume, the
warmth of the momentary contact, bringing him back to himself, making
him realize that it was she there beside him. He shivered, appalled
by the strength of what he was feeling, knowing suddenly that it had
been wrong for him to come. A weakness. But now he had no choice. As
she lifted the child and turned toward him, he felt the pain return,
sharper than before. "Your
son," she said, so faintly that only he caught the words. The
child nestled in his arms contentedly, so small and frail and
vulnerable that his face creased with pain at the thought that anyone
might ever harm him. Nine months old, he was—a mere thirty-nine
weeks—yet already he was the image of Yuan's brother, Han
Ch'in, dead these last ten years. Li
Yuan stood, then turned, cradling the child, cooing softly to him as
he moved between the kneeling maids. Reaching the balustrade, he
stood there, looking down at the bank, his eyes half-lidded, trying
to see. But there was nothing. No younger self stood there, his heart
in his throat, watching as a youthful Han Ch'in strode purposefully
through the short grass, like a proud young animal, making toward the
bridge and his betrothed. Li
Yuan frowned, then turned, staring across the water meadow, but again
there was nothing. No tent, no tethered horse or archery target. It
was gone, all of it, as if it had never been. And yet there was the
child, so like his long-dead brother that it was as if he had not
died but simply been away, on a long journey. "Where
have you been, Han Ch'in?" he asked softly, almost
inaudibly, feeling the warm breeze on his cheek; watching it stir and
lift the fine dark hair that covered the child's perfect, ivory brow.
"Where have you been all these years?" Yet
even as he uttered the words he knew he was deluding himself. This
was not Tongjiang, and his brother, Han Ch'in, was dead. He had
helped bury him himself. And this was someone else. A stranger to the
great world; a whole new cycle of creation. His son, fated to be a
stranger. He
shivered again, pained by the necessity of what he must do, then
turned, looking back at Fei Yen. She
was watching him, her hands at her neck, her eyes misted, moved by
the sight of him holding the child, all calculation gone from her.
That surprised him— that she was as unprepared for this as he.
Whatever she had intended by her gift— whether to wound him or
provoke a sense of guilt—she had never expected this. Beyond
her stood his men, like eight dark statues in the late morning
sunlight, watching, waiting in silence for their Lord. He
went back to her, handing her the child. "He is a good child,
neh?" She
met his eyes, suddenly curious, wondering what he meant by coming,
then lowered her head. "Like his father," she said quietly. He
looked away, conscious for the first time of her beauty. "You
will send me a tape each year, on the child's birthday. I wish. . ."
He hesitated, his mouth suddenly dry. He looked back at her. "If
he is ill, I want to know." She
gave a small bow. "As you wish, Chieh Hsia." "And,
Fei Yen . . ." She
looked up, her eyes momentarily unguarded. "Chieh Hsia?" He
hesitated, studying her face, the depth of what he had once felt for
her there again, just below the surface, then shook his head. "Just
that you must do nothing beyond that. What was between us is past.
You must not try to rekindle it. Do you understand me clearly?" For a
moment she held his eyes, as if to deny him; then with a familiar
little motion of her head, she looked away, her voice harder than
before. "As
you wish, Chieh Hsia. As you wish." A
SCREEN had been set up between the pillars at the far end of the
Hall, like a great white banner gripped between the teeth of the
dragons. Wang Sau-leyan's Audience Chair had been set before the
screen, some twenty ch'i back, the gold silk cushions plumped up
ready for him. He went to it and climbed up, taking his place, then
looked across at his Chancellor. "Well?" Hung
Mien-lo shuddered, then turning toward the back of the Hall, lifted a
trembling hand. At
once the lights in the Hall faded. A moment later the screen was lit
with a pure white light. Only as the camera panned back slightly did
Wang Sau-leyan realize that he was looking at something—at the
pale stone face of something. Then as the border of green and gray
and blue came into stronger focus, he realized what it was. A tomb.
The door to a tomb. And
not just any tomb. It was his family's tomb at Tao Yuan, in the
walled garden behind the Eastern Palace. He shivered, one hand
clutching at his stomach, a tense feeling of dread growing in him by
the moment. "What. . . ?" The
query was uncompleted. Even as he watched, the faintest web of cracks
formed on the pure white surface of the stone. For the briefest
moment these darkened, broadening, tiny chips of whiteness falling
away as the stone began to , crumble. Then with a suddenness that
made him jerk back, the door split asunder, ' revealing the inner
darkness. He
stared at the screen, horrified, his throat constricted, his heart
hammering in his chest. For a moment there was nothing—nothing
but the darkness—and then the darkness moved, a shadow forming
on the ragged edge of stone. It was a hand. Wang
Sau-leyan was shaking now, his whole body trembling, but he could not
look away. Slowly, as in his worst nightmare, the figure pulled
itself up out of the darkness of the tomb, like a drowned man
dragging himself up from the depths of the ocean bed. For a moment it
stood there, faintly outlined by the morning sunlight, a simple shape
of darkness against the utter blackness beyond; then it staggered
forward, into the full brightness of the sun. Wang
groaned. "Kuan Yin ..." It was
his brother, Wang Ta-hung. His brother, laid in a bed of stone these
last twenty months. But he had grown in the tomb, becoming the man he
had never been in life. The figure stretched in the sunlight, earth
falling from its shroud, then looked about it, blinking into the new
day. "It
cannot be," Wang Sau-leyan said softly, breathlessly. "I
had him killed, his copy destroyed." "And
yet his vault was empty, Chieh Hsia." The
corpse stood there, swaying slightly, its face up to the sun. Then,
with what seemed like a drunken lurch, it started forward again,
trailing earth. "And
the earth?" "Is
real earth, Chieh Hsia. I had it analyzed." Wang
stared at the screen, horrified, watching the slow, ungainly
procession of his brother's corpse. There was no doubting it. It was
his brother, but grown large and muscular, more like his elder
brothers than the weakling he had been in life. As it staggered
across the grass toward the locked gate and the watching camera, the
sound of it—a hoarse, snuffling noise—grew louder step by
step. The
gate fell away, the seasoned wood shattering as if rotten, torn
brutally from its massive iron hinges. Immediately the image shifted
to another camera, watching the figure come on, up the broad pathway
beside the Eastern Palace and then down the steps, into the central
gardens. "Did
no one try to stop it?" Wang asked, his mouth dry. Hung's
voice was small. "No one knew, Chieh Hsia. The first time
an alarm sounded was when it broke through the main gate. The guards
there were frightened out of their wits. They ran from it. And who
can blame them?" For
once Wang Sau-leyan did not argue with his Chancellor.
Watching the I figure stumble on he felt the urge to hide—somewhere
deep and dark and safe—or j to run and keep running, even to
the ends of the earth. The hair stood up on his neck, and his hands
shook like those of an old man. He had never felt so afraid. Never,
even as a child. And
yet it could not be his brother. Even as he feared it, a part of him
rejected it. He put
his hands out, gripping the arms of the chair, willing himself to be
calm, but it was hard. The image on the screen was powerful, more
powerful than his reasoning mind could bear. His brother was dead—he
had seen that with his eyes; J touched the cold and lifeless
flesh—and yet here he was once more, reborn—a new man,
his eyes agleam with life, his body glowing with a strange, unearthly
power. He
shuddered, then tore his eyes from the screen, looking down into the
pale, terrified face of his Chancellor. "So
where is it now, Hung? Where in the gods' names is it now?" Hung
Mien-lo looked up at him, wide-eyed, and gave the tiniest shrug. "In
the hills, Chieh Hsia. Somewhere in the hills." YWE
HAO WAS STANDING with her back to Karr, naked, her hands secured
behind her back, her ankles bound. To her right, against the bare
wall, was an empty examination couch. Beyond the woman, at the far
end of the cell, two members of the medical staff were preparing
their instruments at a long table. Karr
cleared his throat, embarrassed, even a touch angry, at the way they
were treating her. It had never worried him before—normally the
creatures he had to deal with deserved such treatment—but this
time it was different. He glanced at the woman uneasily, disturbed by
her nakedness, and as he moved past her, met her eyes briefly,
conscious once more of the strength there, the defiance—even,
perhaps, a slight air of moral superiority. He
stood by the table, looking down at the instruments laid out on the
white cloth. "What are these for, Surgeon Wu?" He
knew what they were for. He had seen them used a hundred, maybe a
thousand, times. But that was not what he meant. Wu
looked up at him, surprised. "Forgive me, Major. I don't
understand . . " Karr
turned, facing him. "Did anyone instruct you to bring these?" The
old man gave a short laugh. "No, Major Karr. No one instructed
me. But it isp standard practice at an interrogation. I assumed—" "You
will assume nothing," Karr said, angry that his explicit
instructions had not been acted on. "You'll pack them up and
leave. But first you'll give the prisoner a full medical
examination." "It
is most irregular, Major—" the old man began, affronted by
the request, but Karr barked at him angrily. "This
is my investigation, Surgeon Wu, and you'll do as I say! Now
get to it. I want a report ready for my signature in twenty minutes." Karr
stood by the door, his back turned on the girl, while the old man and
his assistant did their work. Only when they'd finished did he turn
back. The
girl lay on the couch, naked, the very straightness of her posture,
like the look in her eyes, a gesture of defiance. Karr stared at her
a moment, then looked away, a feeling of unease eating at him. If the
truth were told, he admired her. Admired the way she had lain there,
suffering all the indignities they had put her through, and yet had
retained her sense of self-pride. In that she reminded him of Marie. He
looked away, disturbed at where his thoughts had led him. Marie was
no terrorist, after all. Yet the thought was valid. He had only to
glance at the girl—at the way she held herself—and he
could see the similarities. It was not a physical resemblance—though
both were fine, strong women—but some inward quality that
showed itself in every movement, every gesture. He
went across and opened one of the cupboards on the far side of the
room, then returned, laying a sheet over her, covering her nakedness.
She stared up at him a moment, surprised, then looked away. "You
will be moved to another cell," he said, looking about him at
the appalling bareness of the room. "Somewhere more comfortable
than this." He looked back at her, seeing how her body was
tensed beneath the sheet. She didn't trust him. But then, why should
she? He was her enemy. He might be showing her some small degree of
kindness now, but ultimately it was his role to destroy her, and she
knew that. Maybe this was just as cruel. Maybe he should just have
let this butcher Wu get on with things. But some instinct in him
cried out against that. She was not like the others he had had to act
against—nothing like DeVore or Berdichev. There he had known
exactly where he stood, but here . . . He
turned away, angry with himself. Angry that he found himself so much
in sympathy with her; that she reminded him so much of his Marie. Was
it merely that—that deep resemblance? If so, it was reason
enough to ask to be taken off the case. But he wasn't sure that it
was. Rather, it was some likeness to himself; the same thing
he had seen in Marie, perhaps, that had made him want her for his
mate. Yet if that were so, what did it say about him? Had things
changed so much—had he changed so much—that he could now
see eye to eye with his Master's enemies? He
looked back at her—at the clear, female shape of her beneath
the sheet— and felt a slight tremor pass through him. Was he
deluding himself, making it harder for himself, by seeing in her some
reflection of his own deep-rooted unease? Was it that? For if it
were, if the problem lay with him ... "Major
Karr?" He
turned. Surgeon Wu stood beside the table, his assistant behind him,
holding the instrument case. On the table beside the old man was the
medical report. Karr
picked it up, studying it carefully, then took the pen from his
pocket and signed at the bottom, giving the undercopy to the surgeon. "Okay.
You can go now, Wu. I'll finish off here." Wu's
lips and eyes formed a brief, knowing smile. "As you wish, Major
Karr." Then, bowing his head, he departed, his assistant—silent,
colorless, like a pale shadow of the old man—following two
paces behind. Karr
turned back to the woman. "Is there anything you need?" She
looked at him a moment. "My freedom. A new identity, perhaps."
She fell silent, a look of sour resignation on her face. "No,
Major Karr. There's nothing I need." He
hesitated, then nodded. "You'll be moved in the next hour or so,
as soon as another cell is prepared. Later on, I'll be back to
question you. It has to be done, so it's best if you make it easy for
yourself. We know a great deal anyway, but it would be best for you—" "Best
for me?" She stared back at him, a look of disbelief in her
eyes. "Do what you must, Major Karr, but never tell me what's
best for me. Because you just don't know. You haven't an idea." He
felt a shiver pass through him. She was right. This much was fated.
Was like a script from which they both must read. But best. . . ? He
turned away. This was their fate, but at least he could make it easy
for her once they had finished—make it painless and clean. That
much he could do, little as it was. IN TAG
YUAN, in the walled burial ground of the Wang clan, it was raining.
Beneath a sky of dense gray-black cloud, Wang Sau-leyan stood before
the open tomb, his cloak pulled tight about him, staring wide-eyed
into the darkness below. Hung
Mien-lo, watching from nearby, felt the hairs rise on the back of his
neck. So it was true. The tomb had been breached from within, the
stone casket that had held Wang Ta-hung shattered like a plaster god.
And the contents? He
shuddered. There were footprints in the earth, traces of fiber, but
nothing conclusive. Nothing to link the missing corpse with the
damage to the tomb. Unless one believed the film. On the
flight over from Alexandria they had talked it through, the T'ang's
insistence bordering on madness. The dead did not rise, he argued, so
it was something else. Someone had set this up, to frighten him and
try to undermine him. But how? And who? Li
Yuan was the obvious candidate—he had most to gain from such a
move— but equally, he had the least opportunity. Hung's spies
had kept a close watch on the young T'ang of Europe and no sign of
anything relating to this matter had emerged—not even the
smallest hint. Tsu
Ma, then? Again, he had motive enough, and it was true that Hung's
spies in the Tsu household were less effective than in any other of
the palaces, but somehow it seemed at odds with Tsu Ma's nature. This
was not the kind of thing he would do. With Tsu Ma even his
deviousness had a quality of directness to it. So who
did that leave? Mach? The thought was preposterous. As for the other
T'ang, they had no real motive—even Wu Shih. Sun Li Hua had had
motive enough, but he was dead, his family slaughtered to the third
generation. All of
which made the reality of this—the shattered slabs, the empty
casket— that much more disturbing. Besides which, the thing was
out there somewhere, a strong, powerful creature, capable of
splitting stone and lifting a slab four times the weight of a man. Something
inhuman. He
watched the T'ang go inside, and he turned away, looking about him at
the layout of the rain-swept garden. Unless it was the real Wang
Ta-hung, it would have had to get inside the tomb before it could
break out so spectacularly; how would it have done that? Hung
Mien-lo paced to and fro slowly, trying to work things out. It was
possible that the being had been there a long time—placed there
at the time of Wang Ta-hung's burial ceremony, or before. But that
was unlikely. Unless it was a machine it would have had to eat, and
he had yet to see a machine as lifelike as the one that had burst
from the tomb. So
how? How would something have got into the tomb without their seeing
it? The
security cameras here worked on a simple principle. For most of the
time the cameras were inactive, but at the least noise or sign of
movement they would focus on the source of the disturbance, following
it until it left their field of vision. In the dark it was programmed
to respond to the heat traces of intruders. The
advantage of such a system was that it was easy to check each
camera's output. There was no need to reel through hours of static
film; one had only to look at what was there. Hung
could see how that made sense . . . normally. Yet what if, just this
once, something cold and silent had crept in through the darkness? He
went across, looking down into the tomb. At the foot of the steps, in
the candle-lit interior, Wang was standing beside the broken casket,
staring down into its emptiness. Sensing Hung there, above him, Wang
Sau-leyan turned, looking up. "He's
dead. I felt him. He was cold." Hung
Mien-lo nodded, but the T'ang's words had sent a shiver down his
spine. Something cold... He backed away, bowing low, as Wang came up
the steps, wiping the dust from his hands. "You'll
find out who did this, Master Hung. And you'll find that thing . . .
whatever it is. But until you do, you can consider yourself demoted,
without title. Understand me?" Hung
met the T'ang's eyes, then let his head drop, giving a silent nod of
acquiescence. "Good.
Then set to it. This business makes my flesh creep." And
mine, thought Hung Mien-lo, concealing the bitter anger he was
feeling. And mine. Jk. THE
CELL WAS CLEAN, the sheets on the bed freshly laundered. In one comer
stood a bowl and a water jar, in another a pot. On the narrow desk
were paper, brushes, and an ink block. Those and the holo plinth from
Ywe Hao's apartment. Ywe
Hao sat at the desk, brush in hand, her eyes closed, looking back,
trying to remember how it was, but it was hard to do. Painful. Even
so, the need was strong in her. To make sense of it all. To try and
explain it to the big man. She
let the brush fall, then sat back, knuckling her eyes. It was more
than three hours since the morning's interview with the Major, yet
she had managed no more than three brief pages. She sighed and lifted
the first sheet from the desk, reading it back, surprised by the
starkness of her description, by the way the words bristled with
pain, as if she'd changed them somehow. She
shivered, then put it down, wondering what real difference any of
this made. At the end of it they would find her guilty and have her
executed, whatever she said J or did. The evidence was too strong
against her. And even if it wasn't. . . Yes,
but the big man—the Major—had been scrupulously fair so
far. She looke away, disturbed by the direction of her thoughts. Even
so, she could not deny it. There was something different about him.
Something she had not expected to find in one of the T'ang's
servants. It was as if he had understood—maybe even sympathized
with—much of what she'd said. When she had spoken of the
Dragonfly Club, particularly, she had noted how he had leaned toward
her, nodding, as if he shared her contempt. And yet he was a Major in
Security, a senior officer, loyal to his T'ang. So maybe it was just
an act, a trick to catch her off her guard. Yet if it was, then why
hadn't he used it? Or was his a longer game? Was he aiming to catch
bigger fish through her? If so,
he would need the patience of the immortals, for she knew as little
as Karr when it came to that. Mach alone knew who the cell leaders
were, and Mach was much too clever to be taken by the likes of Karr. Again
the thought troubled her. Made her pause thoughtfully and look down
at her hands. Karr
had given her clothes, ensured that her food was okay, that she was
treated well by her guards. All of which had been unexpected. She had
been schooled to expect only the worst. But this one puzzled her. He
had the look of a brute—of some great, hulking automaton—yet
when he talked his hands moved with a grace that was surprising. And
his eyes . . . She
shook her head, confused. Whatever, she was dead. The moment he had
taken her she had known that. So why
did she feel the need to justify herself so strongly? Why couldn't
she let the acts speak for themselves? She
leaned across and pulled the plinth toward her. Maybe this was why.
Because he had asked. Because of the look in those deep-blue eyes of
his when she had told him about her brother. And because he had
returned this to her. So maybe. . . Maybe
what? she asked, some coldly cynical part of her suddenly
asserting itself. After all, what good was his understanding unless
it changed him? What good would all her explanations be if all they
did was make him better at what he did? And what he did was to track
down people like herself. Track them down and kill them, preventing
change. What
was the expression they had? Ah yes, 1 am my Master's hands. So
it was among them. And so it would remain. And nothing she could say
would ever change that. She
pushed the plinth and the papers aside and stood up, angry, annoyed
with herself that she had not been quicker, stronger than she'd
proved. She had had so much to offer the Yu, but now she had
destroyed all that. I
should have known, she told herself. I should have anticipated Edel
getting back at me. I should have moved from there. But there wasn't
time. Mach didn't give me time. And I was so tired. She
threw herself down onto the bed, letting it all wash through her for
the dozenth time. Nor was she any nearer to an answer. Not that
answers would help her now. And yet the urge remained. The urge to
explain herself. To justify herself to him. But
why? Why should that be? There
were footsteps outside and the sound of the electronic locks of the
door sliding back. A moment later the door eased back and Karr came
into the room, stooping to pass beneath the lintel. "Ywe
Hao," he said, in that faintly accented way he had of speaking.
"Get up now. It's time for us to talk again." She
turned, looking at him, then nodded. "I've been thinking,"
she said. "Remembering the past. . ." SINCE
THE FIRE that had destroyed it, Deck Fourteen of Central Bremen stack
had been rebuilt, though not to the old pattern. Out of respect for
those who had died here, it had been converted into a memorial park,
landscaped to resemble the ancient water gardens—the Chuo Cheng
Yuan—at Siichow. Guards walked the narrow paths, accompanied by
their wives and children, or alone, enjoying the peaceful harmony of
the lake, the rocks, the delicate bridges and stilted pavilions. From
time to time one or more would stop beside the great t'ing, named
"Beautiful Snow, Beautiful Clouds" after its original, and
stare up at the great stone—the Stone of Enduring Sorrow—that
had been placed there by the young T'ang only months before, reading
the red-painted names cut into its broad, pale gray flank. The names
of all eleven thousand and eighteen men, women, and children who had
been killed here by the Ping Tiao. Farther
down, on the far side of the lotus lake, a stone boat jutted from the
bank. This was the teahouse "Traveling by Sea." At one of
the stone benches near the prow Karr sat, alone, a chung of the
house's finest ch'a before him. Nearby two of his guards made
sure he was not disturbed. From
where Karr sat, he could see the Stone, its shape partially obscured
by the willows on the far bank, its top edge blunted like a filed
tooth. He stared at it awhile, trying to fit it into the context of
recent events. He
sipped at his ch'a, his unease returning, stronger than ever. However
he tried to argue it, it didn't feel right. Ywe Hao would never have
done this. Would never, for a moment, have countenanced killing so
many innocent people. No. He had read what she had written about her
brother and been touched by it. Had heard what the guard Leyden had
said about her. Had watched the tape of Chen's interview with the two
boys—her young lookouts—and seen the fierce love for her
in their eyes. Finally, he had seen with his own eyes what had
happened at the Dragonfly Club, and in his heart of hearts he could
find no wrong in what she had done. She
was a killer, yes, but then so was he, and who was to say what
justified the act of killing, what made it right or wrong? He killed
to order, she for consciences sake, and who could say which of those
was right, which wrong? And
now this—this latest twist. He looked down at the scroll on the
table beside the chung and shook his head. He should have killed her
while he had still had the chance. No one would have known. No one
but himself. He set
his bowl down angrily, splashing the ch'a. Where the hell was
Chen? What in the gods' names was keeping him? But
when he turned, it was to find Chen there, moving past the guards to
greet him. "So
what's been happening?" "This
. . ." Karr said, pushing the scroll across. Chen
unfurled it and began to read. "They've
taken it out of our hands," Karr said, his voice low and angry.
"They've pushed us aside, and I want to know why." Chen
looked up, puzzled by his friend's reaction. "All it says here
is that we are to hand her over to the T'ing Wei. That is
strange, I agree, but not totally unheard of." Karr
shook his head. "No. Look farther down. The second to last
paragraph. Read it. See what it says." Chen
looked back at the scroll, reading the relevant paragraph quickly,
then looked up again, frowning. "That cannot be right, surely?
SimFic? They are to hand her ovejr to SimFic? What is Tolonen
thinking of?" "It's
not the Marshal. Look. There at the bottom of the scroll. That's the
Chancellor's seal. Which means Li Yuan jnust have authorized this." Chen
sat back, astonished. "But why? It makes no sense." Karr
shook his head. "No. It makes sense all right's just that we
don't know how it fits together yet." "And
you want to know?" "Yes." "But
isn't that outside our jurisdiction? I mean ..." Karr
leaned toward him. "I've done a bit of digging and it seems that
the T'ing Wei are to hand her over to SimFic's African
operation." Chen
frowned. "Africa?" "Yes.
It's strange, neh? But listen to this. It seems she's destined for a
special unit in East Africa. A place named Kibwezi. The gods alone
know what they do there or why they want her, but it's certainly
important—important enough to warrant the T'ang's direct
intervention. And that's why I called for you, Chen. You see, I've
got another job for you—another task for our friend Tong Chou." Tong
Chou was Chen's alias. The name he had used in the Plantations when
he had gone in after DeVore. Chen
took a long breath. Wang Ti was close to term: the child was due
sometime in the next few weeks and he had hoped to be there at the
birth. But this was his duty. What he was paid to do. He met Karr's
eyes, nodding. "All right. When do I start?" "Tomorrow.
The documentation is being prepared. You're to be transferred to
Kibwezi from the European arm of SimFic. All the relevant background
informa-tion will be with you by tonight." "And
the woman? Ywe Hao? Am I to accompany her?" Karr
shook his head. "No. That would seem too circumstantial, neh?
Besides which, the transfer won't be made for another few days yet.
It'll give you time to find out what's going on over there." "And
how will I report back?" "You
won't. Not until you have to come out." Chen
considered. It sounded dangerous, but no more dangerous than before.
He nodded. "And when I have to come out—what do I do?" "You'll
send a message. A letter to Wang Ti. And then we'll come in and get
you out." "I
see." Chen sat back, looking past the big man thoughtfully. "And
the woman, Ywe Hao ... am I to intercede?" Karr
dropped his eyes. "No. Not in any circumstances. You are to
observe, nothing more. Our involvement must not be suspected. If the
T'ang were to hear. . ." "I
understand." "Good.
Then get on home, Kao Chen. You'll want to be with Wang Ti and the
children, neh?" Karr smiled. "And don't go worrying. Wang
Ti will be fine. I'll keep an eye on her while you're gone." Chen
stood, smiling. "I am grateful. That will ease my mind greatly." "Good.
Oh, and before you go ... what did you find out down there? Who had
Ywe Hao been meeting?" Chen
reached into his tunic pocket and took out the two framed pictures he
had taken from the uncle's apartment; the portraits of Ywe Hao's
mother with her husband and Ywe Hao with her brother. He looked at
them a moment, then handed them across. Karr
stared at the pictures, surprised. "But they're dead. She told
me they were dead." Chen
sighed. "The father's dead. The brother too. But the mother is
alive, and an uncle. That's who she went to see. Her family." Karr
stared at them a moment longer, then nodded. "All right. Get
going, then. I'll speak to you later." When
Chen had gone, Karr got up and went to the prow of the stone boat,
staring out across the water at the Stone. He could not save her. No.
That had been taken out of his hands. But there was something he
could do for her: one small but significant gesture, not to set
things right but to make things better—maybe to give her
comfort at the last. He
looked down at the portraits one last time, then let them fall into
the water, smiling, knowing what to do. LI
yuan looked about him at the empty stalls, sniffing the warm
darkness. On whim, he had summoned the Steward of the Eastern Palace
and had him bring the keys, then had gone inside, alone, conscious
that he had not been here since the day he had killed the horses. Though
the stalls had been cleaned and disinfected and the tiled floors
cleared of straw, the scent of horses was strong; was in each brick
and tile and wooden strut of the ancient building. And if he closed
his eyes. . . If
he closed his eyes . . . \He
shivered and looked about him again, seeing how the moonlight
silvered the huge square of the entrance; how it lay like a
glistening layer of dew on the end posts of the stalls. "I
must have horses. . . ." he said softly, speaking to himself. "I
must ride again and go hawking. I have kept too much to my office. I
had forgotten. . . ." Forgotten
what? he asked himself. How
to live, came the answer. You sent her away, yet still she
holds you back. You must break the chain, Li Yuan. You must learn to
forget her. You have wives, Li Yuan— good wives. And
soon you will have children. He
nodded, then went across quickly, standing in the doorway, holding on
to the great wooden upright, looking up at the moon. The
moon was high and almost full. As he watched, a ragged wisp of cloud
drifted like a net across its surface. He laughed, surprised by the
sudden joy he felt and looked to the northeast, toward Wang
Sau-leyan's palace at Tao Yuan, fifteen hundred li in the
distance. "Who
hates you more than I, Cousin Wang? Who hates you enough to send your
brother's ghost to haunt you?" And
was it that that brought this sudden feeling of well-being? No, for
the mood seemed unconnected to an event—was a sea change, like
the sunlight on the waters after the violence of the storm. He
went out onto the graveled parade ground and turned full circle, his
arms out, his eyes closed, remembering. It had been the morning of
his twelfth birthday and his father had summoned all the servants. If
he closed his eyes he could see it; could see his father standing
there, tall and imperious, the grooms lined up before the doors, the
Chief Groom, Hung Feng-chan, steadying the horse and offering him the
halter. He
stopped, catching his breath. Had that happened? Had that been he,
that morning, refusing to mount the horse his father had given him,
claiming his brother's horse instead? He nodded slowly. Yes, that had
been he. He
walked on, stopping where the path fell away beneath the high wall of
the East Gardens, looking out toward the hills and the ruined temple,
remembering. For so
long now he had held it all back, afraid of it. But there was nothing
to be afraid of. Only ghosts. And he could live with those. A
figure appeared on the balcony of the East Gardens, above him and to
his left. He turned, looking up. It was his First Wife, Mien Shan. He
went across and climbed the steps, meeting her at the top. "Forgive
me, my Lord," she began, bowing her head low, the picture of
obedience. "You were gone so long. I thought. . ." He
smiled and reached out, taking her hands. "I had not forgotten,
Mien Shan. It was just that it was such a perfect night I thought I
would walk beneath the moon. Come, join me." For a
time they walked in silence, following the fragrant pathways, holding
hands beneath the moon. Then, suddenly, he turned, facing her,
drawing her close. She was so small, so daintily made, the scent of
her so sweet that it stirred his blood. He kissed her, crushing her
body against his own, then lifted her, laughing at her tiny cry of
surprise. "Come,
my wife," he said, smiling down into her face, seeing how two
tiny moons floated in the darkness of her eyes. "I have been
away from your bed too long. Tonight we will make up for that, neh?
And tomorrow. . . Tomorrow we shall buy horses for the stables." THE
MORPH stood at the entrance to the cave, looking out across the
moonlit plain below. The flicker of torches, scattered here and there
across the darkened fields, betrayed the positions of the search
parties. All day it had watched them as they crisscrossed the great
plain, scouring every last copse and stream on the estate. They would
be tired now and hungry. If it amplified its hearing it could make
out their voices, small and distant on the wind—the throaty
encouragement of a sergeant or the muttered complaints of a guard. It
turned, focusing on the foothills just below where it stood. Down
there among the rocks, less than a li away, a six-man party
was searching the lower slopes, scanning the network of caves with
heat-tracing devices. But they would find* nothing. Nothing but the
odd fox or rabbit, that was. For the morph was cold, almost as cold
as the rocks surrounding it, its body heat shielded beneath thick •
layers of insulating flesh. In the
center of the plain, some thirty li distant, was the palace of
Tao Yuan. Extending its vision, it looked, searching, sharpening its
focus until it found what it was looking for—the figure of the
Chancellor, there in the south garden, crouched over a map table in
the flickering half-light of a brazier, surrounded by his men. "Keep
looking, Hung Mien-lo," it said quietly, coldly amused by all
this activity. "For your Master will not sleep until I'm found." No,
and that would suit its purpose well. For it was here not to hurt
Wang Sau-leyan but to engage his imagination, like a seed planted in
the soft earth of the young T'ang's mind. It nodded to itself,
remembering DeVote's final words to it on Mars. You
are the first stone, Tuan Wen-ch'ang. The first in a whole new game.
And while it may be months, years even, before I play again in
that part of the board, you are nonetheless crucial to my scheme, for
you are the stone within, placed deep inside my Quotient's
territory—a singk white stone, embedded in the darkness of
his skutt, shining like a tiny moon.
It was
true. He was a stone, a dragon's tooth, a seed. And in time the seed
would germinate and grow, sprouting dark tendrils in the young
T'ang's head. And then, when it was time ... The
morph turned, its tautly muscled skin glistening in the silvered
light, the smooth dome of its near-featureless head tilted back, its
pale eyes searching for handholds, as it began to climb.
CHAPTER
NINETEEN White
Mountain The
rocket came DOWN at Nairobi, on a strip dominated by the surrounding
mountains. It was late afternoon, but the air was dry and unbearably
hot after the coolness of the ship. Chen stood only a moment on the
strip; then, his pack clasped under one arm, he made hurriedly for
the shelter of the buildings a hundred ch'i off. He made it, gasping
from the effort, his shirt soaked with sweat. "Welcome
to Africa!" one of the guards said, then laughed, taking Chen's
ID. They took a skimmer southeast, over the old deserted town,
heading for Kib-wezi. Chen stared out through one of the skimmer's
side windows, drinking in the I strangeness of the view. Below him
was a rugged wilderness of green and brown, stretching to the horizon
in every direction. Huge bodies of rock thrust up from the plain,
their sides creased and ancient looking, like the flanks of giant,
slumbering beasts. He shivered and took a deep breath. It was all so
raw. He had been expecting something like the Plantations. Something
neat and ordered. Never for a moment had he imagined it would be so
primitive. Kibwezi
Station was a collection of low buildings surrounded by a high wire
fence, guard towers standing like machine-sentinels at each corner.
The skimmer came in low over the central complex and dropped onto a
small hexagonal landing pad. Beside the pad was an
incongruous-looking building; a long, old-fashioned construction made
of wood, with a high, steeply sloping roof. Two men stood on the
verandah, watching the skimmer land. As it settled, one of them came
down the open, slatted steps and out onto the pad; a slightly built
Hung Moo in his late twenties. He was wearing a broad-rimmed
hat and green fatigues on which were marked the double-helix logo of
SimFic. As Chen stepped down, the man moved between the guards and
took his pack, reaching out to shake his hand. "Welcome
to Kibwezi, Tong Chou. I'm Michael Drake. I'll be showing you the
ropes. But come inside. This damned heat. . ." Chen
nodded, looking around him at the low, featureless buildings. Then he
saw it. "Kuan Yin!" he said, moving out of the skimmer's
shadow and into the heat. "What's that?" Drake
came and stood beside him. "Kilimanjaro, they call it. The White
Mountain." Chen
stared out across the distance. Beyond the fence the land fell away.
In the late afternoon it seemed filled with blue, like a sea. Thick
mist obscured much of it, but from the mist rose up a giant shape of
blue and white, flat-topped and massive. It rose up and up above that
mist, higher than anything Chen had ever seen. Higher, it seemed,
than the City itself. Chen wiped at his brow with the back of his
hand and swore. "It's
strange, but you never quite get used to it." Chen
turned, surprised by the wistfulness in the man's voice. But before
he could comment, Drake smiled and touched his arm familiarly.
"Anyway, come. It's far too hot to be standing out here.
Especially without something on your head." Inside,
Chen squinted into shadow, then made out the second man seated behind
a desk at the far end of the room. "Come
in, Tong Chou. Your appointment came as something of a surprise—
we're usually given much more notice—but you're welcome all the
same. So ... take a seat. What's your poison?" "My.
. . ?" Then he understood. "Just a beer, if you have one.
Thanks." He crossed the room and sat in the chair nearest the
desk, feeling suddenly disoriented, adrift from normality. There
was a window behind the desk, but like all the windows in the room it
had a blind, and the blind was pulled down. The room was cool, almost
chilly after the outside, the low hum of the air-conditioning the
only background noise. The man leaned forward, motioning to Drake to
bring the drink, then switched on the old-fashioned desk lamp. "Let
me introduce myself. My name is Laslo Debrenceni and I'm Acting
Administrator of Kibwezi Station." »
The man half rose from his chair and extended his hand. Chen took it,
bowing his head.
~~\^ Debrenceni
was a tall, broad-shouldered Hung Mao in his late forties, a
few strands of thin blond hair combed ineffectually across his
sun-bronzed pate. He had a wide, pleasant mouth and soft green eyes
above a straight nose. Drake
returned with the drinks, handing Chen a tall glass beaded with
chilled drops of water. Chen raised his glass in a toast, then took a
long sip, feeling refreshed. "Good,"
said Debrenceni, as if he had said something. "The first thing
to do is get you acclimatized. This place takes some getting used to.
It's . . . different. Very different. You're used to the City. To
corridors and levels and the regular patterning of each day. But
here— Well, things are different here." He smiled
enigmatically. "Very different." THE
WHITE MOUNTAIN filled the sky. As the skimmer came closer it seemed
to rise from the very bowels of the earth and tower over them. Chen
pressed forward, staring up through the cockpit's glass, looking for
the summit, but the rock went up and up, climbing out of sight. "How
big is it?" he asked, whispering, awed by the great mass of
rock. Drake
looked up from the controls and laughed. "About twelve It at the
summit, but the plateau is less ... no more than ten. There are
actually two craters—Kibo and Mawenzi. The whole thing is some
five li across at the top, filled with glaciers and ice
sheets." "Glaciers?"
Chen had never heard the term before. "A
river of ice—real ice, I mean, not plastic. It rests on top
like the icing on some monstrous cake." He looked down at the
controls again. "You can see it from up to four hundred li
away. If you'd known it was here you could have seen it from
Nairobi." Chen
looked out, watching the mountain grow. They were above its lower
slopes now, the vast fists of rock below them like speckles on the
flank of the sleeping mountain. "How
old is it?" "Old,"
said Drake, softer than before, as if the sheer scale of the mountain
was affecting him too. "It was formed long before mankind came
along. Our distant ancestors probably looked at it from the plains
and wondered what it was." Chen
narrowed his eyes. "We'll
need breathing apparatus when we're up there," Drake continued.
"Thej air's thin and it's best to take no chances when you're
used to air-conditioning and corridors." Again
there was that faint but good-natured mockery in Drakes voice that
seemed to say, "You'll find out, boy, it's different out here."
MASKED,
Chen stood in the crater of Kibo, looking across the dark throat of
ti inner crater toward the crater wall, and beyond it, the high
cliffs and terraces of tt northern glacier. No, he thought, looking
out at it, not a river but a city. A vast, tiered city of ice,
gleaming in the midday sun. He had
seen wonders enough already: perfect, delicate flowers of ice in the
deeply shadowed caves beneath the shattered rocks at the crater's rim
and the yellowed, steaming mouths of fumeroles, rank-smelling
crystals of yellow sulphur clustered obscenely about each vent. In
one place he had come upon fresh snow, formed by the action of wind
and cold into strange fields of knee-high and razor-sharp fronds.
Neige penitant, Drake had called it. Snow in prayer. He
had stood on the inner crater's edge, staring down into its ashen
mouth, four hundred ch'i deep, and tried to imagine the forces
that had formed this vast, unnatural edifice. And failed. He had seen
wonders, all right, but this, this overtowering wall of ice,
impressed him most. "Five
more minutes and we'd best get back," Drake said, coming over
and standing next to him. "There's more to show you, but it'll
have to wait. There are some things back at Kibwezi you need to see
first. This"—he raised an arm and turned full circle,
indicating the vastness of the mountain—"it's an exercise
in perspective, if you like. It makes the rest easier. Much easier." Chen
stared at him, not understanding. But there was a look in the other's
masked face that suggested discomfort, maybe even pain. "If
you ever need to, come here. Sit a while and think. Then go back to
things." Drake turned, staring off into the hazed distance. "It
helps. I know. I've done it myself a few times now." Chen
was silent a while, watching him. Then, as if he had suddenly tired
of the place, he reached out and touched Drake's arm. "Okay.
Let's get back." the
GUARDS entered first. A moment later two servants entered the cell,
carrying a tall-backed sedan chair and its occupant. Four
others—young Han dressed in the blue of officialdom—followed,
the strong, acridly sweet scent of their perfume filling the cell. The
sedan was set down on the far side of the room, a dozen paces from
where Ywe Hao sat, her wrists and ankles bound. She
leaned forward slightly, tensed. From his dress—from the cut of
his robes and the elaborate design on his chest patch—she could
tell this was a high official. And from his manner—the brutal
elegance of his deportment—she could guess which Ministry he
represented. The T'ing Wei, the Superintendency of Trials. "I
am Yen T'ung," the official said, not looking-ather, "Third
Secretary to the Minister, and I am here to give judgment on your
case." She
caught her breath, surprised by the suddenness of his announcement,
then gave the smallest nod, her head suddenly clear of all illusions.
They had decided her fate already, in her absence. That was what Mach
had warned her to expect. It was just that the business with Karr—his
kindness and the show of respect he had made to her—had muddied
the clear waters of her understanding. But now she knew. It was War.
Them and us. And no possibility of compromise. She had known that
since her brother's death. Since that day at the hearing when the
overseer had been cleared of all blame, after all that had been said.
After the sworn statements of six good men—eyewitnesses to the
event. She
lifted her head, studying the official, noting how he held a silk
before his nose, how his lips formed the faintest moue of distaste. The
Third Secretary snapped his fingers. At once one of the four young
men produced a scroll. Yen T'ung took it and unfurled it with a
flourish. Then, looking at her for the first time, he began to read. "I,
Ywe Hao, hereby confess that on the seventh day of June in the year
two thousand two hundred and eight I did, with full knowledge of my
actions, murder the honorable Shou Chen-hai, Hsien L'ing to his most
high eminence, Li Yuan, Grand Counsellor and T'ang of City Europe.
Further, I confess that on the ninth day of the same month I was
responsible for the raid on the Dragonfly Club and the subsequent
murder of the following innocent citizens. . . ." She
closed her eyes, listening to the list of names, seeing their faces
vividly once more, the fear or resignation in their eyes as they
stood before her, naked and trembling. And for the first time since
that evening, she felt the smallest twinge of pity for them—of
sympathy for their suffering in those final moments. The
list finished, Yen T'ung paused. She looked up and found his eyes
were on her; eyes that were cruel and strangely hard in that soft
face. "Furthermore,"
he continued, speaking the words without looking at the scroll. "I,
Ywe Hao, daughter of Ywe Kai-chang and Ywe Sha . . ." She
felt her stomach fall away. Her parents . . . Kuan Yin! How had they
found that out? ".
. . confess also to the charge of belonging to an illegal
organization and to plotting the downfall of his most high eminence—" She
stood, shouting back at him. "This is a lie! I have confessed
nothing!" The guards dragged her down onto the stool again.
Across from her Yen 1 T'ung
stared at her as one might stare at an insect, with an expression of
profound 3 disgust. "What
you have to say has no significance here. You are here only to listen
to your confession and to sign it when I have finished." She
laughed. "You are a liar, Yen T'ung, in the pay of liars, and
nothing in Heaven or Earth could induce me to sign your piece of
paper." There
was a flash of anger in his eyes. He raised a hand irritably. At the
signal one of his young men crossed the room and slapped her across
the face, once, then again, stinging blows that brought tears to her
eyes. With a bow to his master, the man retreated behind the sedan. Yen
T'ung sat back slightly, taking a deep breath. "Good. Now you
will be quiet, woman. If you utter another word I will have you
gagged." White
Mountain
415 She
glared back at him, forcing her anger to be pure, to be the perfect
expression of her defiance. But he had yet to finish. "Besides,"
he said softly, "there is no real need for you to sign." He
turned the document, letting her see. There at the foot of it was her
signature—or, at least, a perfect copy of it. "So
now you understand. You must confess and we must read your confession
back to you, and then you must sign it. That is the law. And now all
that is done, and you, Ywe Hao, no longer exist. Likewise your
family. All data has been erased from the official record." She
stared back at him, gripped by a sudden numbness. Her mother. . .
they had killed her mother. She could see it in his face. In a
kind of daze she watched them lift the chair and carry the official
from the room. "You
bastard!" she cried out, her voice filled with pain. "She
knew nothing . . . nothing at all." The
door slammed. Nothing. . . "Come,"
one of the guards said softly, almost gently. "It's time." OUTSIDE
WAS hea T—F iFTYCH'iOFHEAT. Through a gate in the wire fencing,
a flight of a dozen shallow steps led down into the bunkers. There
the icy coolness was a shock after the thirty-eight degrees outside.
Stepping inside was like momentarily losing vision. Chen stopped
there, just inside the doorway, his heart pounding from exertion,
waiting for his vision to normalize, then moved on slowly, conscious
of the echo of his footsteps on the hard concrete floor. He looked
about him at the bareness of the walls, the plain unpainted-metal
doors, and frowned. Bracket lights on the long, low-ceilinged walls
gleamed dimly, barely illuminating the intense shadow. His first
impression was that the place was empty, but that, like the loss of
vision, was only momentary. A floor below—through a dark,
circular hole cut into the floor—were the cells. Down there
were kept a thousand prisoners, fifty to a cell, each shackled to the
floor at wrist and ankle, the shortness of the chains making them
crouch on all fours like animals. It was
Chen's first time below. Drake stood beside him, silent, letting him
judge things for himself. The cells were simple divisions of the
open-plan floor—no walls, only lines of bars, each partitioned
space reached by a door of bars set into the line. All was visible at
a glance, all the misery and degradation of these thin and naked
people. And that, perhaps, was the worst of it—the openness,
the appalling openness. Two lines of cells, one to the left and one
to the right. And between, not recognized until he came to them, were
the hydrants. To hose down the cells and swill the excrement and
blood, the piss and vomit, down the huge, grated drains that were
central to the floor of each cell. Chen
looked on, mute, appalled, then turned to face Drake. But Drake had
changed. Or, rather, Drake's face had changed; had grown harder, more
brutish, as if in coming here he had cast off the social mask he wore
above, to reveal his true face; an older, darker, more barbaric face. Chen
moved on, willing himself to walk, not to stop or turn back. He
turned his head, looking from side to side as he went down the line
of cells, seeing how the prisoners backed away—as far as their
chains allowed. Not knowing him, yet fearing him. Knowing him for a
guard, not one of their own. At the
end he turned and went to the nearest cell, standing at the bars and
staring into the gloom, grimacing with the pain and horror he was
feeling. He had thought at first there were only men, but there were
women too, their limbs painfully emaciated, their stomachs swollen,
signs of torture and beatings marking every one of them. Most were
shaven-headed. Some slouched or simply lay there, clearly hurt, but
from none came even the slightest whimper of sound. It was as if the
very power to complain, to cry out in anguish against what was being
done to them, had been taken from them. He had
never seen . , . never imagined . . . Shuddering,
he turned away, but they were everywhere he looked, their pale,
uncomplaining eyes watching him. His eyes looked for Drake and found
him there, at the far end. "Is
. . . ?" he began, then laughed strangely and grew quiet. But
the question remained close to his tongue and he found he had to ask
it, whether these thousand witnesses heard him or not. "Is this
what we do?" Drake
came closer. "Yes," he said softly. "This is what we
do. What we're contracted to do." Chen
shivered violently, looking about him, freshly appalled by the
passive suffering of the prisoners; by the incomprehensible
acceptance in every wasted face. "I don't understand," he
said, after a moment. "Why? What are we trying to do here?" His
voice betrayed the true depth of his bewilderment. He was suddenly a
child again, innocent, stripped bare before the sheer horror of it. "I'm
sorry," Drake said, coming closer. His face was less brutish
now, almost,! compassionate; but his compassion did not extend beyond
Chen; he spared noth-1 ing for the others. "There's no other
way. You have to see it. Have to come down| here and see it for
yourself, unprepared." He raised his shoulders. "This—what
you're feeling now. We've all felt that. Deep down we still do. But
you have to have that first shock. It's . . . necessary." "Necessary?"
Chen laughed, but the sound seemed inappropriate. It died in his
throat. He felt sick, unclean. "Yes.
Necessary. And afterward—once it's sunk in—we can begin
to explain it all to you. And then you'll see. You'll begin to
understand." But
Chen didn't see. In fact, he couldn't see how he would ever
understand. He looked at Drake afresh, as if he had never seen him
before that moment, and began to edge around him, toward the steps
and the clean, abrasive heat outside, and when Drake reached out to
touch his arm, he backed away, as if the hand that reached for him
were something alien and unclean. "This
is vile. It's ..." But
there wasn't a word for it. He turned and ran, back up the steps and
out—out through icy coolness to the blistering heat. it was
late NIGHT. A single lamp burned in the long, wood-walled room. Chen
sat in a low chair across from Debrenceni, silent, brooding, the
drink in his hand untouched. He seemed not to be listening to the
older man, but every word had his complete attention. "They're
dead. Officially, that is. In the records they've already been
executed. But here we find a use for them. Test out a few theories.
That sort of thing. We've been doing it for years, actually. At first
it was all quite unofficial. Back in the days when Berdichev ran
things there was a much greater need to be discreet about these
things. But now . . ." Debrenceni
shrugged, then reached out to take the wine jug and refill his cup.
There was a dreadful irony in his voice—a sense of profound
mistrust in the words even as he offered them. He sipped at his cup,
then sat back, his pale-green eyes resting on Chen's face. "We
could say no, of course. Break contract and find ourselves dumped one
morning in the Net, brain-wiped and helpless. That's one option. The
moral option, you might call it. But it's not much of a choice,
wouldn't you say?" He laughed; a sharp, humorless laugh. "Anyway...
we do it because we must. Because our 'side' demands that someone do
it, and we've been given the short straw. Those we deal with here are
murderers, of course—though I've found that helps little when
you're thinking about it. After all, what are we? I guess the point
is that they started it. They began the killing. As for us, well, I
guess we're merely finishing what they began." He
sighed. "Look, you'll find a dozen rationalizations while you're
here. A hundred different ways of evading things and lying to
yourself. But trust to your first instinct, your first response.
Never—whatever you do—question that. Your first response
was the correct one. The natural one. It's what we've grown used to
here that's unnatural. It may seem natural after a while, but
it isn't. Remember that in the weeks to come. Hold on to it." "I
see." "Some
forget," Debrenceni said, leaning forward, his voice lowered.
"Some even en/cry it." Chen
breathed in deeply. "Like Drake, you mean?" "No.
There you're wrong. Michael feels it greatly, more than any of us,
perhaps. I've often wondered how he's managed to stand it. The
mountain helps, of course. It helps us all. Somewhere to go.
Somewhere to sit and think things through, above the world and
all its pettiness." Chen
gave the barest nod. "Who are they? The prisoners, I mean. Where
do they come from?" Debrenceni
smiled. "I thought you understood. They're terrorists. Hotheads
and troublemakers. This is where they send them now. All of the
State's enemies." KIBWEZI
STATION was larger than Chen had first imagined. It stretched back
beneath the surface boundary of the perimeter fence and deep into the
earth, layer beneath layer. Dark cells lay next to stark-lit,
cluttered rooms, while bare, low-ceilinged spaces led through to
crowded guardrooms, banked high with monitor screens and the red and
green flicker of trace lights. All was linked somehow, interlaced by
a labyrinth of narrow corridors and winding stairwells. At first it
had seemed very different from the City, a place that made that
greater world of levels seem spacious—open-ended—by
comparison, and yet, in its condensation and contrasts, it was very
much a distillation of the City. At the lowest level were the
laboratories and operating theaters—the "dark heart of
things," as Drake called it, with that sharp, abrasive laugh
that was already grating on Chen's nerves. The sound of a dark,
uneasy humor. It was
Chen's first shift in the theaters. Gowned and masked he stood
beneath the glare of the operating lights and waited, not quite
knowing what to expect, watching the tall figure of Debrenceni
washing his hands at the sink. After a while two others came in and
nodded to him, crossing the room to wash up before they began. Then,
when all were masked and ready, Debrenceni turned and nodded to the
ceiling camera. A moment later two of the guards wheeled in a
trolley. The
prisoner was strapped tightly to the trolley, his body covered with a
simple green cloth, only his shaved head showing. From where Chen
stood he could see nothing of the man's features, only the
transparency of the flesh, the tight knit of the skull's plates in
the harsh overhead light. Then, with a small jerk of realization that
transcended the horrifying unreality he had been experiencing since
coming into the room, he saw that the man was still conscious. The
head turned slightly, as if to try to see what was behind it. There
was a momentary glint of brightness, of a moist, penetratingly blue
eye, straining to see, then the neck muscles relaxed and the head lay
still, kept in place by the bands that formed a kind of brace about
it. Chen
watched as one of the others leaned across and tightened the bands,
bringing one loose-hanging strap across the mouth and tying it, then
fastening a second across the brow, so that the head was held
rigidly. Satisfied, the man worked his way around the body,
tightening each of the bonds, making sure there would be no movement
once things began. Dry-mouthed,
Chen looked to Debrenceni and saw that he, too, was busy,
methodically laying out his scalpels on a white cloth. Finished, the
Administrator looked up and, smiling with his eyes, indicated that he
was ready. For a
moment the sheer unreality of what was happening threatened to
overwhelm Chen. His whole body felt cold and his blood seemed to
pulse strongly in his head and hands. Then, with a small, embarrassed
laugh, he saw what he had not noticed before. It was not a man. The
prisoner on the trolley was a woman. Debrenceni worked swiftly,
confidently, inserting the needle at four different points in the
skull and pushing in a small amount of local anesthetic. Then, with a
deftness Chen had not imagined him capable of, Debrenceni began to
cut into the skull, using a hot-wire drill to sink down through the
bone. The pale, long hands moved delicately, almost tenderly over the
woman's naked skull, seeking and finding the exact points where he
would open the flesh and drill down toward the softer brain beneath.
Chen stood at the head of the trolley, watching everything, -<
seeing how one of the assistants mopped and stanched the bleeding
while the other passed the instruments. It was all so skillful and so
gentle. And then it was done, the twelve slender filaments in place,
ready for attachment. Debrenceni
studied the skull a moment, his fingers checking his own work. Then
he nodded and, taking a spray from the cloth, coated the skull with a
thin, almost plastic layer that glistened wetly under the harsh
light. It had the sweet, unexpected scent of some exotic fruit. Chen
came around and looked into the woman's face. She had been quiet
throughout and had made little movement, even when the tiny,
hand-held drill let out its high, nerve-tormenting whine. He had
expected screams, the outward signs of struggle, but there had been
nothing; only her stillness, and that unnerving silence. Her
eyes were open. As he leaned over her, her eyes met his and the
pupils dilated, focusing on him. He jerked his head back, shocked
after all to find her conscious and undrugged, and looked across at
Debrenceni, not understanding. They had drilled into her skull . .
. He
watched, suddenly frightened. None of this added up. Her reactions
were wrong. As they fitted the spiderish helmet, connecting its
filaments to those now sprouting from the pale, scarred field of her
skull, his mind feverishly sought its own connections. He glanced
down at her hands and saw, for the first time, how they were
twitching, as if in response to some internal stimulus. For a moment
it seemed to mean something—to suggest something—but then
it slipped away, leaving only a sense of wrongness, of things not
connecting properly. When
the helmet was in place, Debrenceni had them lower the height of the
trolley and sit the woman up, adjusting the frame and cushions to
accommodate her new position. In doing this the green cover slipped
down, exposing the paleness of her shoulders and arms, her small,
firm breasts, the smoothness of her stomach. She had a young body.
Her face, in contrast, seemed old and abstract, the legs of the metal
spider forming a cage about it. Chen
stared at her, as if seeing her anew. Before he had been viewing her
only in the abstract. Now he saw how frail and vulnerable she was;
how individual and particular her flesh. But there was something
more—something that made him turn from the sight of her,
embarrassed. He had been aroused. Just looking at her he had felt a
strong, immediate response. He felt ashamed, but the fact was there
and turned from her, he faced it. Her helpless exposure had made him
want her. Not casually or coldly, but with a sudden fierceness that
had caught him off guard. Beneath
his pity for her was desire. Even now it made him want to turn and
look at her—to feast his eyes on her helpless nakedness. He
shuddered, loathing himself. It was hideous; more so for being so
unexpected, so incontestable. When
he turned back his eyes avoided the woman. But Debrenceni had seen.
He was watching Chen pensively, the mask pulled down from his face.
His eyes met Chen's squarely, unflinchingly. "They
say a job like this dehumanizes the people who do it, Tong Chou. But
you'll leam otherwise here. I can see it in you now, as I've seen it
in others who've come here. Piece by piece it comes back to us. What
we realty are. Not the ideal but the reality. The full, human reality
of what we are. Animals that think, that's all. Animals that think." Chen
looked away, hurt—inexplicably hurt. As if even Debrenceni's
understanding were suddenly too much to bear. And, for the second
time since his arrival, he found himself stumbling out into the
corridor, away from something that, even as he fled it, he knew he
could not escape. up
ABOVE, the day had turned to night. It was warm and damp and a full
moon bathed the open space between the complex and the huts with a
rich, silvery light. In the distance the dark shadow of Kilimanjaro
dominated the skyline, an intense black against the velvet blue. Debrenceni
stood there, taking deep breaths of the warm, invigorating air. The
moonlight seemed to shroud him in silver and for the briefest moment
he seemed insubstantial, like a projection cast against a pure black
backdrop. Chen started to put out his hand, then drew it back,
feeling foolish. Debrenceni's
voice floated across to him. "You should have stayed. You would
have found it interesting. It's not an operation I've done that often
and this one went very well. You see, I was wiring her." Chen
frowned. Many of the senior officers in Security were wired—adapted
for linking up to a comset—or, like Tolonen, had special slots
surgically implanted behind their ears so that tapes could be
direct'inputted. But this had been different. Debrenceni
saw the doubt in Chen's face and laughed. "Oh, it's nothing so
crude as the usual stuff. No, this is the next evolutionary step. A
pretty obvious one, but one that—for equally obvious
reasons—we've not taken before now. This kind of wiring needs
no input connections. It uses a pulsed signal. That means the
connection can be made at a distance. All you need is the correct
access code." "But
that sounds . . ." Chen stopped. He had been about to say that
it sounded like an excellent idea, but some of its ramifications had
struck him. The existence of a direct-input connection gave the
subject a choice. They could plug in or not. Without that there was
no choice. He—or she—became merely another machine, the
control of which was effectively placed in the hands of someone else. He
shivered. So that was what they were doing here. That was why
they were working on sentenced prisoners and not on volunteers. He
looked back at Debrenceni, aghast. "Good,"
Debrenceni said, yet he seemed genuinely pained by Chen's
realization. Chen
looked down, suddenly tired of the charade, wishing he could tell
Debrenceni who he really was and why he was there; angry that he
should be made a party to this vileness. For a moment his anger
extended even to Karr for sending him in here, knowing nothing; for
making him have to feel his way out of this labyrinth of half-guessed
truths. Then, with a tiny shudder, he shut it out. Debrenceni
turned, facing Chen fully. Moonlight silvered his skull, reduced his
face to a mask of dark and light. "An idea has two faces. One
acceptable, the other not. Here we experiment not only on perfecting
the wiring technique but on making the idea of it acceptable." "And
once you've perfected things?" Chen asked, a tightness forming
at the pit of his stomach. Debrenceni
stared back at him a moment, then turned away, his moonlit outline
stark against the distant mountain's shape. But he was silent. And
Chen, watching him, felt suddenly alone and fearful and very, very
small. CHEN
WATCHED them being led in between the guards; three men and two
women, loosely shackled to each other with lengths of fine chain,
their clothes unwashed, their heads unshaven. She
was there, of course, hanging back between the first two males, her
head turned from him, her eyes downcast. Drake
took the clipboard from the guard and flicked through the flimsy
sheets, barely glancing at them. Then with a satisfied nod, he came
across, handing the board to Chen. "The
names are false. As for the rest, there's probably nothing we can
use. Security
still thinks it's possible to extract factual material from
situations of duress, but we know better. Hurt a man and he'll
confess to anything. Why, he'd perjure his mother if it would take
away the pain. But it doesn't really matter. We're not really
interested in who they were or what they did. That's all in the
past." Chen
grunted, then looked up from the clipboard, seeing how the prisoners
were watching him, as if by handing him the board, Drake had
established him as the man in charge. He handed the clipboard back
and took a step closer to the prisoners. At once the guards moved
forward, raising their guns, as if to intercede, but their presence
did little to reassure him. It wasn't that he was afraid—he had
been in far more dangerous situations, many a time—yet he had
never had to face such violent hatred, such open hostility. He could
feel it emanating from the five. Could see it burning in their eyes.
And yet they had never met him before this moment. "Which
one first?" Drake asked, coming alongside. Chen
hesitated. "The girl," he said finally, "the one who
calls herself Chi Li." His
voice was strong, resonant. The very sound of it gave him a sudden
confidence. He saw at once how his outward calm, the very tone of his
voice, impressed them. There was fear and respect behind their hatred
now. He turned away, as if he had finished with them. He
heard the guards unshackle the girl and pull her away. There were
murmurs of protest and the sounds of a brief struggle, but when Chen
turned back she was standing away from the others, at the far end of
the cell. "Good,"
he said. "I'll see the others later." The
others were led out, a single guard remaining inside the cell, his
back to the door. He
studied the girl. Without her chains she seemed less defiant. More
vulnerable. As if sensing his thoughts she straightened up, facing
him squarely. "Try
anything and I'll break both your legs," he said, seeing how her
eyes moved to assess how things stood. "No one can help you now
but yourself. Cooperate and things will be fine. Fight us and we'll
destroy you." The
words were glib—the words Drake had taught him to say in this
situation— but they sounded strangely sinister now that things
were real. Rehearsing them, he had thought them stagey, melodramatic,
like something out of an old Han opera; but now, alone with the
prisoner, they had a potency that chilled him as he said them. He saw
the effect they had on her. Saw the hesitation as she tensed, then
relaxed. He wanted to smile, but didn't. Karr was right. She was an
attractive woman, even with that damage to her face. Her very
toughness had a beauty to it. "What
do you want to do?" Drake asked. Chen
took a step closer. "We'll just talk for now." The
girl was watching him uncertainly. She had been beaten badly. There
were bruises on her arms and face, unhealed cuts on the left side of
her neck. Chen felt a sudden anger. All of this had been done since
she'd been released to SimFic. Moreover, there was a tightness about
her mouth that suggested she had been raped. He shivered, then spoke
the words that had come into his head. "Have they told you that
you're dead?" Behind
him Drake drew in a breath. The line was impromptu. Was not scripted
for this first interview. The
girl looked down, smiling, but when she looked up again Chen was
still watching her, his face unchanged. "Did
you think this was just another Security cell?" he asked,
harsher now, angry, his anger directed suddenly at her—at the
childlike vulnerability beneath her outward strength; at the simple
fact that she was there, forcing him to do this to her. The
girl shrugged, saying nothing, but Chen could see the sweat beading
her brow. He took a step closer; close enough for her to hit out at
him, if she dared. "We
do things here. Strange things. We take you apart and put you back
together again. But different." She
was staring at him now, curiosity getting the better of her. His
voice was calm, matter-of-fact, as if what he was saying to her was
quite ordinary; but the words were horrible in their implication and
the very normality of his voice seemed cruel. "Stop
it," she said softly. "Just do what you're going to do." Her
eyes pleaded with him, like the hurt eyes of a child; the same
expression Ch'iang Hsin sometimes had when he teased her. That
similarity—between this stranger and his youngest child—made
him pull back; made him realize that his honesty was hurting her. Yet
he was here to hurt. That was his job here. Whether he played the
role or not, the hurt itself was real. He
turned from her, a small shiver passing down his spine. Drake
was watching him strangely, his eyes half-lidded. What are you up
to? he seemed to be saying. Chen
met his eyes. "She'll do." Drake
frowned. "But you've not seen the others..." Chen
smiled. "She'tt do." He was still smiling when she
kicked him in the kidneys. she
WAS beaten and stripped and thrown into a cell. For five days she
languished there, in total darkness. Morning and night a guard would
come and check on her, passing her meal through the hatch and taking
the old tray away. Otherwise she was left alone. There was no bed, no
sink, no pot to crap into, only a metal grille set into one corner of
the floor. She used it, reluctantly at first, then with a growing
indifference. What did it matter, after all? There were worse things
in life than having to crap into a hole. For
the first few days she didn't mind. After a lifetime spent in close
proximity to people it was something of a relief to be left alone,
almost a luxury. But from the third day on it was hard. On the
sixth day they took her from the cell, out into a brightness that
made her screw her eyes tight, tiny spears of pain lancing her head.
Outside, they hosed her down and disinfected her, then threw her into
another cell, shackling her to the floor at wrist and ankle. She
lay there for a time, letting her eyes grow accustomed to the light.
After the fetid darkness of the tiny cell she had the sense of space
about her, yet when finally she looked up, it was to find herself eye
to eye with a naked man. He was crouched on all fours before her, his
eyes lit with a feral glint, his penis jutting stiffly from between
his legs. She drew back sharply, the sudden movement checked by her
chains. And then she saw them. She
looked about her, appalled. There were forty, maybe fifty naked
people in the cell with her, men and women both. All were shackled to
the floor at wrist and ankle. Some met her eyes, but it was without
curiosity, almost without recognition. Others simply lay there,
listless. As she watched, one of them raised herself on her haunches
and let loose a bright stream of urine, then lay still again, like an
animal at rest. She
shuddered. So this was it. This was her fate, her final humiliation,
to become like these poor souls. She turned back, looking at her
neighbor. He was leaning toward her, grunting, his face brutal with
need, straining against his chains, trying to get at her. One hand
was clutched about his penis, jerking it back and forth urgently. "Stop
it," she said softly. "Please . . ." But it was as if
he was beyond the reach of words. She watched him, horrified; watched
his face grow pained, his movements growing more frantic, and then
with a great moan of pain, he came, his semen spurting across the
space between them. She
dropped her eyes, her face burning, her heart pounding in her chest.
For a moment—for the briefest moment—she had felt herself
respond; had felt something in her begin to surface, as if to answer
that fierce, animal need in his face. She
lay there, letting her pulse slow, her thoughts grow still, then
lifted her head, almost afraid to look at him again. He lay quietly
now, no more than two ch'i from her, his shoulders rising and
falling gently with each breath. She watched him, feeling an immense
pity, wondering who he was and what crime he had been sent here for. For a
time he lay still, soft snores revealing he was sleeping, then with a
tiny whimper, he turned slightly, moving onto his side. As he did she
saw the brand on his upper arm; saw it and caught her breath, her
soul shriveling up inside her. It was a fish. A stylized fish. chen
STOOD in the doorway to the Mess, looking into the deeply shadowed
room. There was the low buzz of conversation, the smell of mild
euphorics. Sitting at the bar, alone, a tall glass at his elbow, was
Debrenceni. Seeing Chen, he lifted his hand and waved him across. "How
are the kidneys?" Chen
laughed. "Sore, but no serious damage. She connected badly." "I
know. I saw it." Debrenceni was serious a moment longer, then he
smiled. "You did well, despite that. It looked as if you'd been
doing the job for years." Chen
dropped his head. He had been in the sick bay for the last six days,
the first two in acute pain. "What
do you want to drink?" Chen
looked up. "I'd best not." "No.
Maybe not." Debrenceni raised his glass, saluting Chen. "You
were right about the girl, though." "I
know." He hesitated, then. "Have you wired her yet?" "No.
Not yet." Debrenceni sat back a little on his stool, studying
him. "You know, you were lucky she didn't kill you. If the
Security forces hadn't worked her over before we'd got her, she
probably would have." Chen
nodded, conscious of the irony. "What happened to her?" "Nothing.
I thought we'd wait until you got back on duty." It was
not what Chen had expected. "You want me to carry on? Even after
what happened?" "No.
Because of what happened." Debrenceni laid his hand
lightly on Chen's shoulder. "We see things through here, Tong
Chou. To the bitter, ineluctable end." "Ineluctable?" "Ineluctable,"
repeated Debrenceni solemnly. "That from which one cannot escape
by struggling." "Ah
. . ." In his mind Chen could see the girl and picture the slow
working out of her fate. Ineluctable. Like the gravity of a
black hole, or the long, slow process of entropy. Things his son,
Jyan, had told him of. He gave a tiny, bitter laugh. Debrenceni
smiled tightly, removing his hand from Chen's shoulder. "You
understand, then?" Chen
looked back at him. "Do I have a choice?" "No.
No one here has a choice." "Then
I understand." "Good.
Then we'll start in the morning. At six sharp. I want you to bring
her from the cells. I'll be in the theater. Understand?" IT WAS
LATE when Chen returned to his room. He felt frayed and irritable.
More than that, he felt ashamed and—for the first time since
he'd come to Kibwezi—guilty of some awfulness that would
outweigh a lifetime's atonement. He sat heavily on his bed and let
his head fall into his hands. Today had been the day. Before now he
had been able to distance himself from what had been happening. Even
that last time, facing her in the cell, it had not really touched
him. It had been something abstract; something happening to someone
else—Tong Chou, perhaps—who inhabited his skin. But now
he knew. It was himself. No one else had led her there and strapped
her down, awaiting surgery. It was no stranger who had looked down at
her while they cut her open and put things in her head. "That
was me," he said, shuddering. "That was me in
there." He sat
up, drawing his feet under him, then shook his head in disbelief. And
yet he had to believe. It had been too real—too personal—for
disbelief. He
swallowed deeply. Drake had warned him. Drake had said it would be
like this. One day fine, the next the whole world totally different;
like some dark, evil trick played on your eyesight, making you see
nothing but death. Well, Drake was right. Now he, too, could see it.
Death. Everywhere death. And he a servant of it. There
was a knocking at the door. "Go
away!" The
knocking came again. Then a voice. "Tong Chou? Are you all
right?" He
turned and lay down, facing the wall. "Go away ..." Y w E
H A o had never run so far, or been so afraid. As she ran she seemed
to balance two fears in the pit of her stomach: her fear of what lay
behind outweighing her fear of the dark into which she ran. Instinct
took her toward the City. Even in the dark she could see its massive
shape against the skyline, blotting out the light-scattered velvet
backdrop. It was
colder than she had ever thought it could be. And darker. As she ran
she whimpered, not daring to look back. When the first light of
morning colored the sky at her back she found herself climbing a
gradual slope. Her pace had slowed, but still she feared to stop and
rest. At any moment they would discover her absence. Then they'd be
out, after her. As the
light intensified, she slowed, then stopped and turned, looking back.
For a while she stood there, her mouth open. Then, as the coldness,
the stark openness of the place struck her, she shuddered violently.
It was so open. So appallingly open. Another kind of fear, far
greater than anything she had known before, made her take a backward
step. The
whole of the distant horizon was on fire. Even as she watched, the
sun's edge pushed up into the sky; so vast, so threatening, it took
her breath away. She turned, away from it, horrified, then saw, in
the first light, what lay ahead. At
first the ground rose slowly, scattered with rock. Then it seemed to
climb more steeply until, with a suddenness that was every bit as
frightening as anything she had so far seen, it ended in a thick,
choking veil of whiteness. Her eyes went upward . . . No, not a veil,
a wall. A solid wall of white that seemed soft, almost
insubstantial. Again she shuddered, not understanding, a deep-rooted,
primitive fear of such things making her crouch into herself. And
still her eyes went up until, beyond the wall's upper lip, she saw
the massive summit of the shape she had run toward throughout the
night. The City . . . Again
she sensed a wrongness to what she saw. The shape of it seemed. . .
seemed what? Her arms were making strange little jerking movements
and her legs felt weak. Gritting her teeth, she tried to get her mind
to work, to triumph over the dark, mindless fear that was washing
over her, wave after wave. For a moment she seemed to come to herself
again. What
was wrong? What in the gods' names was it? And
then she understood. The shape of it was wrong. The rough, tapered,
irregular look of it. Whereas . . . Again her mouth fell open. But if
it wasn't the City . . . then what in hell's name was it? For a
moment longer she stood there, swaying slightly, caught between two
impulses, then, hesitant, glancing back at the growing circle of
fire, she began to run again. And as she ran—the dark image of
the sun's half circle stamped across her vision—the wall of
mist came down to meet her. IT was
just after DAWN when the two cruisers lifted from the pad and banked
away over the compound, heading northwest, toward the mountain. Chen
was in the second of them, Drake at the controls beside him. On
Chen's wrist, scarcely bigger than a standard Security field comset,
was the tracer unit. He glanced at it, then stared steadily out
through the windscreen, watching the grassy plain flicker by fifty
ch'i below. "We're
going to kill her, aren't we?" Drake
glanced at him. "She was dead before she came here. Remember
that." Chen
shook his head. "That's just words. No, what I mean is that we
are going to kill her. Us. Personally." "In
a manner of speaking." Chen
looked down at his hands. "No. Not in a manner of speaking. This
is real. We're going out to kill her. I've been trying not to think
about it, but I can't help it. It
seems . . ." He shook his head. "It's just that some days I
can't believe it's me, doing this. I'm a good man. At least, I
thought I was." Drake
was silent, hunched over the controls as if concentrating, but Chen
could see he was thinking; chewing over what he'd said. "So?"
Chen prompted. "So
we set down, do our job, get back. That's it." Again
Chen stared at Drake for a long time, not sure even what he was
looking for. Whatever it was, it wasn't there. He looked down at the
tiny screen. Below the central glass were two buttons. They looked
innocuous enough, but he wasn't sure. Only Drake knew what they were
for. He
looked away, holding his tongue. Maybe it was best to see it as Drake
saw it. I As just another job to be done. But his disquiet remained,
and as the mountain grew larger through the front screen, his sense
of unreality grew with it. It was
all so impersonal. As if what they were tracking was a thing, another
kind of machine—one that ran. But Chen had seen her close; had
looked into her eyes and stared down into her face while Debrenceni
had been operating. He had seen just how vulnerable she was. How
human... HE HAD
put ON the suit's heater and pulled the helmet visor down—even
so, his feet felt like ice and his cheeks were frozen. A cold breeze
blew across the mountain now, shredding the mist in places, but
generally it was thick, like a flaw in seeing itself. There
was a faint buzz on his headset, then a voice came through. "It's
clearing up here. We can see right up the mountain now, to the
summit." Chen
stared up the slope, as if to penetrate the dense mist, then glanced
back at Drake. "What now?" Drake
nodded distractedly, then spoke into his lip-mike, "Move to
within a hundred ch'i. It looks like she's stopped.
Gustaffson, you go to the north of where she is. Palmer, come around
to the east. Tong Chou and I will take the other points. That way
we've got a perfect grid." Drake
turned, looking up the mountain. "Okay. Let's give this thing a
proper test." Chen
spoke to Drake's back. "The trace ought to be built into a visor
display. This thing's vulnerable when you're climbing. Clumsy too." "You're
right," Drake answered, beginning to climb. "It's a bloody
nuisance. It should be made part of the standard Security headgear,
with direct computer input from a distance." "You
mean wire the guards too?" Drake
paused, mist wreathing his figure. "Why not? That way you could
have the coordinator at a distance, out of danger. It would make the
team less vulnerable. The runner couldn't get at the head—the
brains behind it. It makes sense, don't you think?" Halfway
up, Drake turned, pointing across. "Over there. Keep going until
you're due south of her. Then wait. I'll tell you what to do." Chen
went across, moving slowly over the difficult terrain, then stopped,
his screen indicating that he was directly south of the trace,
approximately a hundred ch'i down. He signaled back, then
waited, listening as the others confirmed they were in place. The
mist had cleared up where he was and he had eye contact with both
Gustaffson and Palmer. There was no sign of the runner. Drake's
voice sounded in his headset. "You should be clear any minute.
We'll start when you are." Chen
waited, while the mist slowly thinned out around him. Then, quite
suddenly, he could see the mountain above him, the twin peaks of Kibo
and Mawenzi white against the vivid blue of the sky. He shivered,
looking across, picking out the others against the slope. "I
see you," Drake said, before Chen could say anything. "Good.
Now come up the slope a little way. We'll close to fifty now. Palmer,
Gustaffson, you do the same." Chen
walked forward slowly, conscious of the others as they closed on him. Above
him was a steep shelf of bare earth. As he came closer he lost sight,
first of Drake, then of the other two. "I'll
have to come up," he said into his lip-mike. "I can't see a
thing from down here." He
scrambled up and stood there, on the level ground above the shelf,
where the thick grass began. He was only twenty ch'i from the trace
signal now. The others stood back at fifty, watching him. "Where
is she?" he said, softer than before. "Exactly
where the trace shows she is," said Drake into his head. "In
that depression just ahead of you." He had
seen it already, but it looked too shallow to hide a woman. "Palmer?"
It was Drake again. "I want you to test the left-hand signal on
your handset. Turn it slowly to the left." Chen
waited, watching the shallow pit in front of him. It seemed as if
nothing had happened. "Good,"
said Drake. "Now you, Gustaffson. I want you to press both your
controls at the same time. Hold them down firmly for about twenty
seconds. Okay?" This
time there was a noise from the depression. A low moaning that
increased as the seconds passed. Then it cut off abruptly. Chen
shuddered. "What was that?" "Just
testing," Drake answered. "Each of our signals is two-way.
They transmit, but they also have a second function. Palmer's cuts
off all motor activity in the cortex. Gustaffson's works on what we
call the pain gate, stimulating nerves at the stem of the brain." "And
yours?" asked Chen. He could hear the breathing of the others on
the line as they listened in. "Mine's
the subtlest. I can talk to our runner. Directly. Into her head." The
line went silent. From the depression in front of Chen came a sudden
whimper of pure fear. Then Drake was speaking again. "Okay. You
can move the signal back to its starting position. Our runner is
ready to come out." There
was a tense moment of waiting; then from the front of the shallow pit
a head bobbed up. Wearily, in obvious pain, the woman pulled herself
up out of the deep hole at the front lip of the shallow depression.
As her head came up and around she looked directly at Chen. For a
moment she stood there, swaying, then she collapsed and sat back,
pain and tiredness etched in her ravaged face. She looked ragged and
exhausted. Her legs and arms were covered in contusions and weeping
cuts. Drake
must have spoken to her again, for she jerked visibly and looked
around, finding him. Then she looked about her, seeing the others.
Her head dropped and for a moment she just sat there, breathing
heavily, her arms loose at her sides. "Okay,"
Drake said. "Let's wrap things up." Chen
turned and looked across at Drake. In the now brilliant sunlight, he
seemed a cold and alien figure. His suit, like all of them, was
nonreflective. Only the visor sparkled menacingly. Just now he was
moving closer in. Twenty ctii from the woman he stopped. Chen
watched as Drake made Palmer test his signal again. As it switched
off, the woman fell awkwardly to one side. Then, moments later, she
pushed herself up again, looking around, wondering what had happened
to her. Then it was Gustaffson's turn. He saw how the woman's face
changed, her teeth clamped together, her whole body arching as she
kicked out in dreadful pain. When
she sat up again, her face twitched visibly. Something had broken in
her. Her eyes, when they looked at him now, seemed lost. He
looked across at Drake, appalled, but Drake was talking to her again.
Chen could see his lips moving, then looked back and saw the woman
try to cover her ears, a look of pure terror on her face. Slowly,
painfully, she got up and, looking straight at Chen, clambered over
the lip and began to make her way toward him, almost hopping now,
each touch of her • damaged leg against the ground causing her
face to buckle in pain. But still she came. He
made to step back, but Drake's voice was suddenly in his headset, on
the discreet channel. "Your turn," it said. "Just hold
down the left-hand button and touch the right." She
was less than two body-lengths from him now, reaching out. Chen
looked down at the tiny screen, then held and touched. The air was
filled with a soft, wet sound of exploding matter, as if someone had
fired a gun off in the middle of a giant fruit. And there, where the
signal had been, was suddenly nothing. He looked up. The body was
already falling, the shoulders and upper chest ruined by the
explosion that had taken off the head. He turned away, sickened, but
the stench of burned flesh was in his nostrils and gobbets of her
ruptured, bloodied flesh were spattered all over his suit and visor.
He stumbled and almost went down the steep, bare bank, but stopped
there on the edge, swaying, keeping his balance, telling himself
quietly that he would not be sick, over and over again. After
a while he turned, and looking past the body, met Drake's eyes. "You
bastard . . . why did she come at me? What did you say to her?" Drake
pulled off his helmet and threw it down. "I told her you'd help
her," he said, then laughed strangely. "And you did. You
bloody well did."
CHAPTER
TWENTY Flames in a Glass wANG
TI ? ' ' Chen
stood just inside the door, surprised to find the apartment in
darkness. He put his hand out, searching the wall, then slowly
brought up the lights. Things looked normal, everything in its place.
He let out a breath. For the briefest moment. . . He
went out into the kitchen and filled the kettle, then plugged it in.
As he turned, reaching up to get the ch'a pot, he heard a noise. A
cough. He
went out, into the brightness of the living room. "Wang Ti?"
he called softly, looking across at the darkened doorway of their
bedroom. "Is that you?" The
cough came again, a strong, racking cough that ended with a tiny
moan. He
went across and looked into the room. It was Wang Ti beneath the
covers, he could see that at once, but Wang Ti as he had never seen
her before; her hair unkempt, her brow beaded with sweat. Wang Ti,
who had never suffered a day's illness in her life. "WangTi?" She
moaned, turning her head slightly on the pillow. "Nmmm . . ." He
looked about him, conscious that something was missing, but not
knowing what. "Wang Ti?" Her
eyes opened slowly. Seeing him, she moaned and turned away, pulling
the sheet up over her head. "Wang
Ti?" he said gently, moving closer. "Where are the
children?" Her
voice was small, muffled by the sheets. "I sent them below. To
Uncle Mai." "Ahh
. . ." He crouched down. "And you, my love?" She
hesitated, then answered in that same small, frightened voice. "I
am fine, husband." Something
in the way she said it—in the way her determination to be a
dutiful^ •i
uncomplaining wife faltered before the immensity of her
suffering—made him go ••; cold inside. Something
awful had happened. ; He
pulled back the sheet, studying her face in the half-light. It was
almost unrecognizable. Her mouth—a strong mouth, made for
laughter—was twisted into a thin-lipped grimace of pain. Her
eyes—normally so warm and reassuring— were screwed
tightly shut as if to wall in all the misery she felt, the lids heavy
and discolored. Pained by the sight, he put his fingers to her cheek,
wanting to comfort her, then drew them back, surprised. She had been
crying. There
was a moment's blankness, then he felt his stomach fall away. "The
child. . ." Wang
Ti nodded, then buried her face in the pillow, beginning to sob, her
body convulsing under the sheets. He sat
on the bed beside her, holding her to him, trying to comfort her, but
his mind was in shock. "No . . ." he said, after a while.
"You have always been so strong. And the child was well. Surgeon
Fan said so." She
lay there quietly—so quiet that it frightened him. Then it was
true. She had lost the child. "When
was this?" he asked, horrified. "A week ago." "A
week! Ai yal" He sat back, staring sightlessly into the
shadows, thinking of her anguish, her suffering, and him not there.
"But why wasn't I told? Why didn't Karr send word? I should have
been here." She
put out a hand, touching his chest. "He wanted to. He begged me
to, but I would not let him. Your job . . ." He
looked back at her. She was watching him now, her puffed and
blood-red eyes filled with pity. The sight of her—of her
concern for him—made his chest tighten with love. "Oh,
Wang Ti, my little pigeon. . . what in the gods' names happened?" She
shuddered and looked away again. "No one came," she said
quietly. "I waited, but no one came . . ." He
shook his head. "But the Surgeon ... we paid him specially to
come." "There were complications," she said, afraid to
meet his eyes. "I waited. Three hours I waited, but he never
came. Jyan tried—" "Never
came?" Chen said, outraged. "He was notified and never
came?" She gave a tight little nod. "I got Jyan to run up
to the Medical Center, but no one was free." She met his eyes
briefly, then looked away again, forcing the words out in a tiny
frightened voice. "Or so they said. But Jyan says they were
sitting there, in a room beyond the reception area, laughing—drinking
ch'a and laughing—while my baby was dying." Chen
felt himself go cold again; but this time it was the coldness of
anger. Of an intense, almost blinding anger. "And no one came?" She
shook her head, her face cracking again. He held her tightly, letting
her cry in his arms, his own face wet with tears. "My poor
love," he said. "My poor, poor love." But deep inside
his anger had hardened into something else—into a cold, clear
rage. He could picture them, sitting there, laughing and drinking
ch'a while his baby daughter was dying. Could see their
well-fed, laughing faces and wanted to smash them, to feel their
cheekbones shatter beneath his fist. And
young Jyan . . . How had it been for him, knowing that his mother was
in trouble, his baby sister dying, and he impotent to act? How had
that felt? Chen groaned. They had had such hopes. Such plans. How
could it all have gone so wrong? He
looked about him at the familiar room, the thought of the dead child
an agony, burning in his chest. "No . . ." he said softly,
shaking his head. "Nooooo!" He
stood, his fists bunched at his sides. "I will see Surgeon Fan." Wang
Ti looked up frightened. "No, Chen. Please. You will solve
nothing that way." He
shook his head. "The bastard should have come. It is only two
decks down. Three hours . . . Where could he have been for three
hours?" "Chen
. . ." She put out a hand, trying to restrain him, but he moved
back, away from her. "No,
Wang Ti. Not this time. This time I do it my way." "You
don't understand . . ." she began. "Karr knows everything.
He has all the evidence. He was going to meet you . . ." She
fell silent, seeing that he was no longer listening. His face was
set, like the face of a statue. "He
killed my daughter," he said softly. "He let her die. And
you, Wang Ti. . . you might have died too." She
trembled. It was true. She had almost died, forcing the baby from
her—no, would have died, had Jyan not thought to contact
Karr and bring the big man to her aid. She
let her head fall back. So maybe Chen was right. Maybe, this once, it
was right to act—to hit back at those who had harmed them, and
damn the consequences. Better that, perhaps, than let it fester deep
inside. Better that than have him shamed a second time before his
son. She
closed her eyes, pained by the memory of all that had happened to
her. It had been awful here without him. Awful beyond belief. She
felt his breath on her cheek, his lips pressed gently to her brow,
and shivered. "I
must go," he said quietly, letting his hand rest softly on her
flank. "You understand?" She
nodded, holding back the tears, wanting to be brave for him this
once. But it was hard, and when he was gone she broke down again,
sobbing loudly, uncontrollably, the memory of his touch glowing
warmly in the darkness. THE
ROOM WAS COLD and brightly lit, white tiles on the walls and floor
emphasizing the starkness of the place. In the center of the room was
a dissecting table. Beside the table stood the three surgeons who had
carried out the postmortem, their heads bowed, waiting. The
corpse on the table was badly burned, the limbs disfigured, the head
and upper torso crushed; even so, the body could still be identified
as GenSyn. In three separate places the flesh had been peeled back to
the bone, revealing the distinctive GenSyn marking—the bright
red G forming a not-quite-closed circle with a tiny blue S within. They
had cornered it finally in the caves to the north of the estate.
There, Hung Mien-lo and a small group of elite guards had fought it
for an hour before a well-aimed grenade had done the trick, silencing
the creature's answering fire and bringing the roof of the cave down
on top of it. Or so Hung's story went. Wang
Sau-leyan stood there, looking down at the corpse, his eyes taking in
everything. Hope warred with cynicism in his face, but when he looked
back at his Chancellor, it was with an expression of deep suspicion.
"Are you sure this is it, Hung? The face . . ." The
face was almost formless. Was the merest suggestion of a face. "1
am told this is how they make some models, Chieh Hsia. A certain
number are kept for urgent orders, the facial features added at the
last moment. I have checked with GenSyn records and discovered that
this particular model was made eight years back. It was stolen from
their West Asian organization—from their plant at
Karaganda—nearly five years ago." Wang
looked back at it, then shook his head. "Even so . . ." "Forgive
me, Chieh Hsia, but we found some other things in the cave."
Hung Mien-lo turned and took a small case from his secretary, then
turned back, handing it, opened, to the T'ang. "This was among
them." Wang
Sau-leyan stared down at the face and nodded. It was torn and dirtied
and pitted with tiny holes, but it was recognizable all the same. It
was his brother's face. Or at least, a perfect likeness. He set it
down on the chest of the corpse. "So
this is how it did it, eh? With a false face and a cold body." "Not
cold, Chieh Hsia. Or not entirely. You see, this model was designed
for work in subzero temperatures or in the heat of the mines. It has
a particularly hard and durable skin that insulates the inner
workings of the creature from extremes of heat and cold. That was why
it did not register on our cameras. At night they are programmed to
respond only to heat patterns, and as this thing did not give off any
trace, the cameras were never activated." Wang
nodded, his mouth gone dry. Even so, he wasn't quite convinced.
"And the traces of skin and blood that it left on the stone?" Hung
lowered his head slightly. "It is our belief, Chieh Hsia,
that they were put there by the creature. Deliberately, to make
us think it really was your brother." Wang
looked down, then gave a small, sour laugh. "I would dearly like
to think so, Chancellor Hung, but that simply isn't possible. I have
checked with GenSyn. They tell me it is impossible to duplicate
individual DNA from scratch." "From
scratch, yes, Chieh Hsia. But why should that be the case? All
that is needed to duplicate DNA is a single strand of the original.
This can even, I am assured, be done from a corpse." "And
that is what you are suggesting? That someone broke into the tomb
before this creature broke out from it again? That they took a piece
of my brother's body and used it to duplicate his DNA?" "That
is one possibility, Chieh Hsia, but there is another. What if
someone close to your brother took a sample of his skin or blood
before his death? Took it and kept it?" Wang
shook his head. "That's absurd. I know my brother was a weakling
and a fool, but even he would not sit still and let a servant take a
sample of his blood." "Again,
that is not what I meant, Chieh Hsia. What if your brother had a
small accident and one of his servants tended to him? And what if
that servant kept the materials they used to tend your brother's
wound—a piece of bloodied gauze, perhaps, or a bowl with
bloodied water?" Wang
narrowed his eyes. "And you think that's what happened?" Hung
nodded. "That is exactly what happened, Chieh Hsia. We have a
signed confession." "A
confession? And how was this confession obtained? By your usual
means?" Hung
turned, taking the scroll from his secretary, then handed it across. "Wu
Ming!" Wang laughed with disbelief. "And is that all the
proof you have— Wu Ming's confession?" Hung
Mien-lo shook his head. "I am afraid not, Chieh Hsia. I went
back through the household records for details of any small accident
to your brother. It seems there were several such incidents over the
past five years, but in all but one instance the materials used to
tend his wounds were properly incinerated." "And
that single instance where it was not—that involved Wu Ming, I
take it?" "Yes,
Chieh Hsia. Wu Ming and one other. The traitor Sun Li Hua." Wang
made a noise of surprise. "This is certain?" "Absolutely,
Chieh Hsia. We have a tape of the incident, showing Wu and Sun
tending to your brother, but no subsequent record of the dressings
being destroyed." "Ah
. . ." Wang turned, looking down at the corpse again, his
fingers reaching out to touch and trace the contours of his brother's
face. "Then it was my cousin's hand behind all this," he
said softly. "This was Li Yuan's doing." "So
it seems, Chieh Hsia." "So
it seems . . ." Yet something still nagged at him. He turned
back, facing his Chancellor. "How long ago did this happen?" "Two
years ago, Chieh Hsia." "Two
years, or almost two years? Be precise, Hung Mien-lo." "Twenty-two
months, to be exact, Chieh Hsia." "A
month before his death?" "That
is so, Chieh Hsia." Wang
took a deep breath, satisfied. Any earlier and it would have made no
sense, for his father would still have been alive and Li Yuan would
have had no motive for his actions. As it was . . . He
smiled. "You have done well, Chancellor Hung. You have more than
repaid my trust in you. But there are still two things that remain to
be answered. First, how did the creature get into the tomb without
the cameras seeing it? Second, where is the body of my dead brother?" Hung
Mien-lo bowed low. "Both questions have troubled me greatly,
Chieh Hsia, but I think I have the answer." Straightening
up, he drew something from his pocket and held it out, offering it to
his T'ang. It was a small, glassy circle, like the lens cap to a
camera. Wang
turned it in his hand, then looked back at his Chancellor. "What
is this?" "It
is an imager, Chieh Hsia. Placed over a camera lens, it fixes
the image in the camera's eye and maintains it for a predetermined
period. After that time, the imager self-destructs—at a
molecular level—dispersing in the form of a gas. While it is
there, over the lens, you can walk about quite freely before the
camera without fear of it registering your presence, and afterward it
leaves no trace." "I
see. And you think a similar kind of thing—or several of
them—was used to mask the cameras about the tomb?" Hung
smiled. "It would explain how the tomb door was opened without
the cameras seeing anything." "And
my brother's body?" "Of
that there is no sign, Chieh Hsia. However, we did find a
trace of ashes in a hollow near a stream to the north of the palace.
Halfway between here and the foothills." "So
the creature burned the body?" Hung
gave a slight shrug. "I am not so sure. If he did, then why did
we see no sign of it? It takes a great deal of heat to consume a
human body and from the moment the alarms were sounded, every guard
in the palace was on alert for anything suspicious. If the creature
had burned the body, we would have seen it. So no, Chieh Hsia.
I would guess that the ashes were from something else—some
small religious ceremony, perhaps. As for the body, I think it is
still out there, hidden somewhere." Wang
considered a moment, then laughed. "Which is where we shall let
it rest, neh? Amongst the rocks and streams, like an exiled
minister." Again he laughed, a fuller, richer laughter now, fed
by relief and an ancient, unforgiving malice. He turned, looking down
at the corpse and the box holding his brother's face. "As for
these things, have them burned, Chancellor Hung. Outside, before the
palace gates, where all can see." IT WAS
quiet in the lobby of the Medical Center. As Chen entered, the nurse
behind the desk looked up, smiling, but Chen walked straight by,
pushing through the gate in the low barrier, heading for where he
knew they kept their records. Someone
called out to him as he passed, but Chen ignored it. There was no
time for formalities. He wanted to know right now who had killed his
child, and why. Two
men looked up from behind their screens as he entered the records
room, surprised to see him there. One began to object, then fell
silent as he saw the gun. "I
want details of a child mortality," Chen said, without preamble.
"The name is Kao. K-A-O. A week ago it was. A female child.
Newborn. I want the registered time of death, the precise time the
call-out inquiry was made at this office, and a duty roster for that
evening, complete with duty records for all on the roster." The
clerks glanced at each other, not sure what to do, but Chen's fierce
bark made them jump. He pointed his gun at the most senior of the
two. "Do it. Now! Hard print. And don't even think of fucking me
around. If I don't get what I want, I'll put a bullet through your
chest." Swallowing
nervously, the man bowed his head and began to tap details into his
comset. As the
printout began to chatter from the machine, there was a noise
outside. Chen turned. Three of the orderlies—big, heavily built
men—had come to see what was happening. From the way they stood
there, blocking the way, it was clear they had no intention of
letting him leave. "Get
back to work," he said quietly. "This is none of your
business." He
looked back. The younger of the clerks had his fingers on the keys of
his machine. Chen shook his head. "I wouldn't, if I were you . .
." The
man desisted. A moment later the other machine fell silent. Chen
reached out, taking the printout from the tray. A glance at it
confirmed what he had suspected. Jyan had been right. At the time of
his daughter's death, no less than four of the medical staff had been
free. So why hadn't they answered the emergency call? Or rather, who
had instructed them to ignore it? He
would visit Surgeon Fan, the senior consultant of the Center—the
man who should have come at Wang Ti's summons. He would find him and
wring a name from him. Then he would find out who it was and kill
them. Whoever they were. Chen
turned, facing the orderlies again. "Did you not hear me, ch'un
tju? Go back to work. This does not concern you." He
could see how edgy they were at the sight of his gun. Edgy but
determined. They thought they could jump him. Well, they could try.
But they were mistaken if they thought sheer determination would
triumph over him. He
tucked the gun into its holster, then reached down, taking the long,
sharp-edged knife from his boot. "You
want to stop me, is that it? Well, let's see you try, eh? Let's see
you try." MINUTES
LATER he was hammering at the door of Fan Tseng-li's apartment,
conscious that a Security alert would have been put out already. He
could hear movement inside and the babble of voices. Fearful, panicky
voices. He called to them, letting his voice fill out with
reassurance. "Security!
Open up! I am Lieutenant Tong and I have been assigned to protect
you!" He saw
the door camera swivel around and held his pass card up, his thumb
obscuring the name. A moment later the door hissed open and he was
ushered inside, the three servants smiling at him gratefully. The
smiles froze as he drew his gun. "Where
is he? Where is the weasel-faced little shit?" "I
don't know who you mean," the oldest of them, an ancient with
the number two on his chest began, but Chen cuffed him into silence. "You
know very well who I mean. Fan. I want to know where he is, and I
want to know now, not in two minutes' time. I'll shoot you first, loo
tzu, then you, you little fucker." The
elder—Number Two—looked down, holding his tongue, but
beside him the youngest of the three began to babble, fear freeing
his tongue wonderfully. Chen listened carefully, noting what he said. "And
he's there now?" The
young man nodded. "Right."
He looked past them at the house comset; a large, ornate machine
embellished with dragons. "Has anyone spoken to him yet?" The
young man shook his head, ignoring the ancient's glare. "Good."
Chen stepped past them and fired two shots into the machine. "That's
to stop you being tempted. But let me warn you. If I find that he has
been tipped off, I will come back for you. So be good, neh? Be
extra-specially good." the
HOUSE STEWARD smiled, lowering his head. "If you would wait
here, Captain Kao, I shall tell my master . . ." A
straight-arm to the stomach made the man double up, gasping. Chen
stepped over him, heading toward the sound of voices, the clink of
tumblers. A
servant came toward him, trying to prevent him from entering the
dining room. Chen stiff-fingered him in the throat. He
threw the doors open, looking about him, ignoring the startled faces,
then he roared ferociously as he spotted Surgeon Fan, there on the
far side of the food-heaped table. Fan
Tseng-li stood, staggering back from his chair, his face white, his
eyes wide with fear. Others were shouting now, outraged, looking from
Chen to Fan, trying to make sense of things. For a moment there was
hubbub, then a cold, fearful silence fell. Chen
had drawn his knife. "Ai
ya\" Fan cried hoarsely, looking about him anxiously.
"Who is this madman?" "You
know fucking well who I am," Chen snarled, coming around the
table. "And I know who you are, Fan Tseng-li. You are the evil
bastard who let my unborn daughter die." Fan's
face froze in a rictus of fear, then he began to babble. "You
have it wrong. I was detained. A client of mine was ill." Fan
fell silent. Chen was standing only an arm's length from him now,
glaring at him, the look of hatred, of sheer disgust, enough to
wither the man. "I
know what kind of insect you are, Fan. What I need to know is
who paid you to let my daughter die, my wife suffer." He reached
out savagely, gripping Fan's hair, then pulled him down onto his
knees, the big knife held to his throat. "Who was it, Fan
Tseng-li? Tell me." There
was a murmur of protest from around the table, but Chen ignored them.
He was looking down into Fan's face, a murderous hatred shaping his
lips into a snarl. "You
had better tell me," he said quietly, tightening his grip on
Fan's hair, "and you had best do it now, Fan Tseng-li. Unless
you want a second mouth below your chin." Fan
grimaced, then met Chen's eyes. "It was Ts'ui Wei. Ts'ui Wei
made me do it." "Ts'ui
Wei?" Chen frowned, trying to place the name. "Did he—?" He
stopped, making the connection. Ts'ui Wei. Of course! That was
the name of the youth's father. The tall, thin man who had threatened
him that time, after he'd had the youth demoted. Chen shuddered. So
that was it. That was why his child had died. He
sheathed the knife, then turned, looking about him at the faces
gathered around the table. "You heard," he said defiantly.
"And now you know what kind of creature your friend Fan Tseng-li
is." Chen
looked back down at Fan, then with a savage grunt, brought his face
down onto his knee. He let
Fan roll to the side, then walked back around the table, seeing how
they cowered from him. At the doorway the servants parted before him,
making no attempt to hinder him. They had seen what had happened and
understood. Some even bowed their heads as Chen passed, showing him
respect. Back in the dining room, however, voices were being raised;
angry, indignant voices, calling for something to be done. HE
STOOD there, in the darkness on the far side of the restaurant,
looking across. There were seven of them in all, five of them seated
at one of the tables near the pay desk, their figures back-lit, their
faces dark. The other two sat at nearby tables; big men, their
watchfulness as much as their size telling Chen what they were. The
five were huddled close, talking. "You
should go," one of them was saying. "There must be
relatives you could stay with for a time, Ts'ui Wei. Until this blows
over." Ts'ui
Wei leaned toward him aggressively. "I'm not running from that
bastard. He had my son sent down. I'll be fucked if he'll threaten
me." "You
do as you feel, Ts'ui Wei, but I've heard that Security has been
digging through deck records, putting together a file." Ts'ui
leaned back arrogantly. "So? He can't prove anything. All
Surgeon Fan has to do is keep his mouth shut." The
fat man bristled. "Fan Tseng-li is the model of discretion. He,
at least, is taking my advice and going away until this is all sorted
out." Ts'ui
Wei snorted. "That's typical of that self-serving shit! I should
never have listened to your sniveling nonsense. We could have hit
him. Hit him hard. And not just a fucking unborn child. We could have
hurt him bad. The little girl. . ." Chen
looked down, his anger refined to a burning point. They were not
expecting him. That gave him the element of surprise. But there were
still the bodyguards. He would have to deal with them first. Standing
there, listening to them scheme and plot, he had felt his anger turn
to a deep revulsion. For them, but also for himself—for what
had he been doing while all this was happening.7 He let
out a long, slow breath. No. It could never be the same. For wherever
he looked he could see the woman stumbling toward him like a broken
doll, could hear the sound of the detonation . . . And
the child? He closed his eyes, the pain returning, like an iron band
tightening about his chest. It was as if he had killed the child. As
if he had pressed a tiny button and . . . Chen
stepped from the darkness. One of the hired men looked up at him as
he came closer, then looked away, taking him for what he seemed—a
night worker stopped for a bowl of ch'a before retiring. It
was what Chen had hoped for. Three
paces from the man, he acted, swinging his fist around in a broad arc
that brought it crashing into the man's face, breaking his nose. As
he fell back, Chen turned and spun, high-kicking, catching the second
man in the chest, even as he was getting up from his chair. At once
he followed through, two quick punches felling the man. Chen
turned, facing the men at the table. They had moved back, scattering
their chairs. Now they stared at him, wide-eyed with fear. "Tell
me," Chen said quietly, taking a step closer. "My little
girl. . . What would you have done, Ts'ui Wei? Tell me what you had
planned." Ashen-faced,
Ts'ui Wei tried to back away, but the end wall was directly behind
him. He turned his head anxiously, looking for somewhere to run, but
his way was blocked on both sides. Chen
lifted the weighted table and threw it aside, then reached down,
taking the big hunting knife from his boot. "I have no stomach
for a fight, eh, Ts'ui Wei?" Chen laughed coldly, all of the
hatred and self-disgust he had been feeling suddenly focused in his
forearm, making the big knife quiver in the light. Ts'ui
Wei stared at him a moment longer, his mouth working soundlessly,
then he fell to his knees, pressing his head to the floor in front of
Chen, his body shaking with fear. "Have mercy," he pleaded.
"For the gods' sakes, have mercy!" Chen
took a shuddering breath, remembering how Wang Ti had looked,
remembering how it had felt, knowing he had not been there for
her—and Jyan, poor Jyan . . . how had it felt for him, knowing
he could do nothing? And this . . . this piece of shit. . . wanted
mercy? He
raised the knife, his whole body tensed, prepared to strike . . . "Father!
No! Pkase . . ." He
turned, letting the knife fall from his hand. It was Jyan. It was his
son, Jyan The boy ran across and threw his arms about him, embracing
him, holding hit so tightly that Chen felt something break in him. He
began to sob, the wore spilling from him. "Oh, Jyan . . . Jyan .
. . I'm so sorry ... I didn't know . didn't know. Was it awful, boy?
Was it really awful?" Jyan
clutched his father fiercely, looking up at him, his face wet with
tears. "It's all right, Father . . . It's all right now. You're
back. You're here now." He
kissed his son's brow, then lifted him up, hugging him tightly. Yes.
But it would never be the same. He
turned, looking back into the shadows. Karr was standing there, a
troop of his guards behind him. "Are you all right, Kao Chen?" Chen
nodded. "I . . ." He laughed strangely. "I would have
killed him." "Yes,"
Karr said quietly. "And I would have let you. But Jyan . . .
Well, Jyan knew best, neh? After all, you have a life ahead of you,
Kao Chen. A good life." Chen
shivered, tightening his grip on his son, then nodded. Karr let his
hand rest on Chen's shoulder briefly, then moved past him, taking
command of the situation. "All right!" he barked, towering
over the frightened men. "Let's get this sorted out, right now!
You!—all of you!—against the back wall, hands on your
heads! You're under arrest, as principles and accessories to the
murder of a child, and for conspiring to pervert the course of
justice." karr
sat on the ledge of the stone boat, staring across at the floodlit
shape of the Memorial Stone. It was after nine and the lotus lake was
dark. Elsewhere, beneath the lamps that lined the narrow pathways,
lovers walked, talking softly, keeping a proper distance between
them. Behind Karr, seated among the shadows of the teahouse, Chen
sat, his head fallen forward, his story told. For a
moment longer Karr sat there, motionless, and then he sighed and
shook his head, as if waking from a dark and threatening dream. "And
that is the truth?" Chen
was silent. Karr
closed his eyes, deeply pained. Of course it was the truth. A tale
like that— it was not something one made up about oneself. No.
But it was not only Chen he felt sorry for. He had liked the woman
greatly. Had respected her. If he had known for one moment. . . He
turned and stood, looking back at his friend. "This is wrong,
Kao Chen. Very wrong." Chen
looked up and nodded. "Then
what are we to do?" "Do?"
Chen laughed coldly. "What can we do?" Karr
was quiet a moment, fingering the dragon pendant about his neck, then
he drew it out, staring at it. He was Chia ch'eng, Honorary
Assistant to the Royal Household. By right he could claim audience
with his T'ang. He
sat, facing Chen across the table. "I will see Li Yuan. I will
tell him everything you told me just now." "You
think he does not know?" Karr
nodded. "I am convinced of it. He is a good man. Someone is
keeping these things from him. Well, then, we must be his eyes and
ears, neh? We must let him know what is being done in his name." Chen
turned his head. "And Tolonen? He will have the report of my
debriefing by the morning. What if he says you are to do nothing?" Karr
looked down. That was true. He was Tolonen's man, and by rights he
should talk to the old man first. But some things were greater than
such loyalties. "Then
I must do it now." THE
wall had changed. Had become a view of Tai Shan, the sacred mountain
misted in the early morning light, the great temple at the summit a
tiny patch of red against the blue of the sky, perched atop that mass
of gray and green. Within the room a faint breeze blew, spreading the
scent of pine and acacia. Fat
Wong turned from the wall, looking back at his guests, then raised
his cup. "Brothers. . ." There
were five men seated around the low table, each the equal of Wong
Yi-sun, each the Big Boss of one of the great Triads that ran the
lowest levels of City Europe. It had cost him much to get them here
tonight, but here they were. All of them. Or, at least, all that
mattered. They
stared back at him, cold-eyed, returning his smile with their mouths
alone, like alligators. "I
am glad you could all come. I realize what sacrifices you have made
to come here at such short notice, but when you have heard what I
have to say, I know you will agree that I was right to convene this
meeting of the Council." "Where
is Iron Mu?" Wong
turned, facing the old man seated at the table's end. "Forgive
me, General Feng, but I will come to that." The
Big Boss of the i4K stared back at him humorlessly. "The Council
has seven members, Wong Yi-sun, but I see only six about this table.
I thought it was agreed. . ." "Hear
Wong out, Feng Shang-pao," the short, shaven-headed man seated
two down from Feng said, leaning forward to take a cashew from a
bowl. "I am sure all your questions will be answered." Feng
sat back, glaring at his interrupter. "We must have laws among
us, Li Chin. Ways of conducting ourselves." Li
Chin—Li the Lidless as he was known, for obvious reasons—turned
his bony head and looked at Feng, his overlarge eyes fixing the older
man. "I do not dispute it, Feng Shang-pao. But the Wo Shih Wo
would like to know what Fat Wong has to say, and unless you let him
say it. . ." Feng
looked down, his huge chest rising and falling, then he nodded. "Good,"
Wong said. "Then let me explain. This afternoon, I received a
letter." Whiskers
Lu, Boss of the Kuei Chuan, leaned forward, the melted mask of his
face turned toward Wong, his one good eye glittering. "A letter,
Wong Yi-sun?" "Yes."
Wong took the letter from within his silks and threw it down in front
of Lu. "But before you open it, let me say a few words." Wong
drew himself up, his eyes moving from face to face. "We of the
Hung Mun are proud of our heritage. Rightly so. Since the time of our
founding by the five monks of the Fu Chou monastery, we have always
settled our disputes amicably. And that is good, neh? After all, it
is better to make money than make war." He smiled, then let the
smile fade. "This once, however, the threat was too great. Iron
Mu sought more than simple profit. He sought to build a power base—a
base from which to overthrow this Council. To replace it." He
nodded, his face stern. "Let us not hide behind words any
longer. Iron Mu sought to destroy us." Dead
Man Yun of the Red Gang cleared his throat. "I hear your words,
Wong Yi-sun, but I find them strange. You speak of things we all
know, yet you speak of them in the past. Why is this?" Wong
smiled, then turned, going across to the tiny pool. For a moment he
stood there, watching the seven golden fish swim lazily in the
crystal waters; then with a quicksilver motion, he scooped one up and
turned, holding it up for the others to see. For a moment it flapped
in the air, then Wong threw it down onto the dry flagstones. There
was a murmur of understanding around the table. "So
Iron Mu is dead. But how?" Three-Finger Ho asked, eyeing Wong
warily. Wong
came closer, a trace of self-satisfaction at the corners of his
mouth. "I will tell you how. All thirty-seven decks of the Big
Circle heartland were hit simultaneously, thirty minutes ago. A force
of one hundred and twenty thousand Hei went in, with a backup
of fifteen hundred regular guards." Hei.
. . That single word sent a ripple of fear through the seated
men. They had seen the Hei in action on their screens, the big
GenSyn half-men clearing decks of rioters with a ruthlessness even
their most fanatical runners could not match. For a moment they were
silent, looking among themselves, wondering what this meant, then Li
the Lidless leaned across Whiskers Lu and took the letter. He
unfolded it, studying it a moment, then looked up at Wong. "But
what does this mean . . . ?" Yet
even as he said it, he understood. This letter from Li Yuan—this
brief note of agreement—changed everything. Never before had
one of their number received such a favor from Above. Never before
had the Hung Mun worked hand-in-glove with the Seven. He shivered,
seeing it clearly now. Today Fat Wong had gained great face. Had
reestablished his position as Great Father of the brotherhoods. Li
turned his head, looking about him, seeing the look of understanding
in every face, then turned back, facing Wong again, lowering his head
in a gesture of respect. THE
tapestries were burning. Flames licked the ancient thread, consuming
mountain and forest, turning the huntsmen to ashes in the flicker of
an eye. The air was dark with smoke, rent with the cries of dying
men. Hei ran through the choking darkness, their long swords
flashing, their deep-set eyes searching out anything that ran or
walked or crawled. The
door to Iron Mu's mansion had been breached ten minutes ago, but
still a small group of Mu's elite held out. Hei swarmed at the
final barricade, throwing themselves at the barrier without thought
of self-preservation. Facing them, Yao Tzu, Red Pole to the Big
Circle, urged his men to one last effort. He was bleeding from wounds
to the head and chest, but still he fought on, slashing at whatever
appeared above the barricade. For a moment longer the great pile
held, then with a shudder, it began to slide. There was a bellowing,
and then the Hei broke through. Yao Tzu backed away, his knife
gone, three of his men falling in the first charge. As the first of
the Hei came at him, he leaped forward, screeching shrilly,
meeting the brute with a flying kick that shattered the great chest
bone of the half-man. Encouraged, his men attacked in a blur of
flying feet and fists, but it was not enough. The first wave of
Hei went down, but then there was the deafening roar of gunfire
as the Hei commander opened up with a big automatic from the
top of the collapsed barricade. There
was a moment's silence, smoke swirled, and then they moved on, into
the inner sanctum. His
WIVES were dead, his three sons missing. From outside he could hear
the screams of his men as they died. It would be only moments before
they broke into his rooms. Even so, he could not rush this thing. Iron
Mu had washed and prepared himself. Now he sat, his legs folded under
him, his robe open, the ritual knife before him on the mat. Behind
him his servant waited, the specially sharpened sword raised, ready
for the final stroke. He
leaned forward, taking the knife, then turned it, holding the
needle-sharp point toward his naked stomach. His head was strangely
clear, his thoughts lucid. It was the merchant Novacek who had done
this. It had to be. No one else had known enough. Even so, it did not
matter. He would die well. That was all that was important now. As he
tensed, the door shuddered, then fell open, the great locks smashed.
Two Hei stood there, panting, looking in at him. They started
to enter, but a voice called them back. A moment later a man stepped
through, a small, neat-looking Han wearing the powder-blue uniform
and chest patch of a Colonel. A filter-mask covered his lower face. Iron
Mu met the Colonel's eyes, holding them defiantly. In this, his last
moment, he felt no fear, no regret, only a clarity of purpose that
was close to the sublime. Nothing,
not even the watching Hei, could distract him now. A
breath, a second, longer breath, and then . . . The
Colonel's eyes dilated, his jaw tensed, and then he turned away,
letting his Hei finish in the room. He shivered, impressed despite
himself, feeling a new respect for the man. Iron Mu had died well.
Very well. Even so, it could not be known how Iron Mu had died. No.
The story would be put out that he had cried and begged for mercy,
hiding behind his wives. Because that was what the T'ing Wei
wanted. And what the T'ing Wei wanted, they got. Yes,
but while he lived, Iron Mu's death would live in his memory. And one
day, when the T'ing Wei were no more, perhaps he would tell
his story. Of how one of the great lords of the underworld had died,
with dignity, meeting the darkness without fear. FAT
WONG STOOD by the door, bringing things to a close, thanking his
fellow Bosses for coming. And as they left, he made each stoop and
kiss the ancient banner, reaffirming the ancient tradition that bound
them, and acknowledging that he, Wong Yi-sun, 489 of the United
Bamboo, was still the biggest, fattest worm of all. It
should have been enough. Yet when they were gone it was not elation
he felt but a sudden sense of hollowness. This victory was not his.
Not really his. It was like something bought. He
went across and stood there over the tiny pool, staring down into the
water, trying to see things clearly. For a moment he was still, as if
meditating, then, taking the letter from his pocket, he tore it
slowly in half and then in half again, letting it fall. No. He would
be beholden to no man, not even a Son of Heaven. He saw it now. Saw
it with opened eyes. Why had Li Yuan agreed to act, if not out of
fear? And if that were so ... He
took a long, deep breath; then drawing back his sleeve reached in,
plucking the fish from the water until five of the bloated golden
creatures lay there on the ledge, flapping helplessly in the hostile
air. His
way was clear. He must unite the underworld. Must destroy his
brothers one by one, until only he remained. And then, when that was
done, he would lift his head again and stare into the light. He
looked down, watching the dying gasps of the fish, then turned away,
smiling. No. His way was clear. He would not rest now until it was
his. Until he had it all. LI
YUAN STOOD on the terrace, beneath the bright full circle of the
moon, looking out across the palace grounds, conscious of how quiet,
how empty the palace seemed at this late hour. No gardeners knelt in
the dark, earth beneath the trellises of the lower garden, no maids
walked the dark and narrow path that led to the palace laundry. He
turned, looking toward the stable. There a single lamp threw its pale
amber light across the empty exercise circle. He
shivered and looked up at the moon, staring at that great white stone
a while, thinking of what Karr had said. Standing
there in the wavering lamplight, listening to the big man's account,
he had been deeply moved. He had not known—had genuinely not
known—what was being done at Kibwezi and, touched by the
rawness of the man's appeal, he had given his promise to close
Kibwezi and review the treatment of convicted terrorists. He had
returned to the reception, distracted by Karr's words, disturbed by
the questions they raised. And as he went among his cousins, smiling,
offering bland politeness, it had seemed, suddenly, a great pretense,
a nothingness, like walking in a hall of holograms. The more he
smiled and talked, the more he felt the weight of Karr's words
bearing down on him. But
now, at last, he could face the matter squarely, beneath the unseeing
eye of the moon. Until
this moment he had denied that there was a moral problem with the
Wiring Project. Had argued that it was merely a question of attitude.
But there was a problem, for—as Tolonen had argued from the
first—freedom was no illusion, and even the freedom to rebel
ought—no needed—to be preserved somehow, if only
for the sake of balance. Were
it simply a matter of philosophy—of words—it might
have been all right. But it was not. The population problem was real.
It could not be simply wished away. He
looked down, staring at his hands—at the great iron ring on the
first finger of his right hand. For men such as Kao Chen, a common
phrase like "We are our masters' hands" had a far greater
literal truth than he had ever imagined. And a far greater
significance. For what was a man? Was he a choosing being, forging
his own destiny, or was he simply a piece on the board, there to be
played by another, greater than himself? And
maybe that was what had troubled him, more than the fate of the
woman. That deeper question of choice. He
turned, looking back into his room, seeing Minister Heng's report
there on the desk where he had left it. It was
a full report on the "police action" against the Big Circle
Triad; a report that differed quite radically from the Ting Wei's
official account. He sighed, the deep unease he had felt at
reading the report returning. The Het riot squads had gone mad down
there. More than two hundred thousand had been killed, includ-ing
many women and children. Yes,
and that was another argument in favor of wiring. If only to prevent
such massacres, "necessary" as this one might have been. He
turned back, standing there a moment, his eyes closed, feeling the
cool night breeze on his face. Then, stirring himself, he went out
onto the terrace once more. The
moon was high. He looked up at it, surprised, his perception of it
suddenly reversed, such that it seemed to bum like a vast shining
hole in the blackness of the sky. A big circle of death. He shivered
violently and looked down, noting how its light silvered the gardens
like a fall of dust. Before
today he had striven always to do the right thing, to be a good
man—the benevolent ruler that Confucius bade him be—but
now he saw it clearly. In this there was no right course of action,
no pure solution, only degrees of wrongness. And so
he would make the hard choice. He would keep his word to Karr, of
course. Kibwezi Station would be closed. As for the other thing, he
had no choice. No real choice, anyway. The Wiring Project had to
continue, and so it would, elsewhere, hidden from prying eyes. Until
the job was done, the system perfected. He
sighed, turning his back on the darkness, returning inside. Yes.
Because the time was fast coming when it would be needed. broken
glass littered the terrace outside the guardhouse, glistening like
frosted leaves in the moonlight. Nearby, the first of the bodies lay
like a discarded doll, its face a pulp, the ragged tunic of its
uniform soaked with blood. Through the empty window a second body
could be seen, slumped forward in a chair, its head twisted at an
unusual angle, the unblemished face staring vacantly at a broken
screen. Behind
it, on the far side of the room, a door led through. There, on a bed
in the rest room, the last of the bodies lay, naked and broken, its
eyes bulging from its face, its tongue poking obscenely from between
its teeth. At the
end of the unlit corridor, in the still silence of the signal room,
the morph stood at the transmitter, its neutered body naked in the
half-light. To one side, a hand lay on the desk like a stranded crab,
the fingers upturned. The
morph tensed, the severed wrist of its left hand pressed against the
input socket, the delicate wires seeking their counterparts, making
their connections to the board, then it relaxed, a soft amber light
glowing on the eye-level panel in front of it. There was a moment's
stillness and then a faint tremor ran through the creature. At the
count of twelve it stopped, as abruptly as it had begun. The message
had been sent. It
waited, the minutes passing slowly, its stillness unnatural, like the
stillness of a machine, and then the answer came. It
shuddered, then broke connection, drawing its wrist back sharply from
the panel, a strange sigh, like the soughing of the wind through
trees, escaping its narrow lips. Reaching
across, it took the hand from where it lay and lined it up carefully
against the wrist, letting the twelve strong plastic latches—six
in the hand, six in the wrist—click into place. The hand
twitched, the fingers trembling, then was still again. It
turned, looking out through the dark square of the window. Fifty ch'i
away, at the edge of the concrete apron, was a wire fence. Beyond
the fence was the forest. For a time it stood there, staring out into
the darkness, then it turned, making its way through. For
the past few nights it had dreamed. Dreams of a black wind blowing
from beyond; of a dark and silent pressure at the back of it. A dream
that was like the rush of knowledge down its spine; that set its
nerve ends tingling in a sudden ecstasy. And with the dream had come
a vision—a bright, hard vision of a world beneath the surface
of this world. Of a world ruled by the game. A game of dark and
light. Of suns and moons. Of space and time itself. A game that tore
the dark veil from reality, revealing the whiteness of the bone. On the
terrace it stopped again, considering. From Tao Yuan to Tashkent was
six thousand li. If it traveled in the dark it could make
eighty, maybe a hundred li a night for the first ten days or
so. Later on, crossing the great desert, it could increase that,
traveling in the heat of the day, when no patrols flew. With any luck
it would be there in fifty days. It
smiled, recalling DeVore's instructions. In Tashkent it would be met
and given new papers. From there it would fly west, first to Odessa,
then on to Nantes. From Nantes it would take a ship—one of the
big ships that serviced the great floating cities of the Midatlantic.
There it would stay a while, biding its time, working for the big
ImmVac company of North America, putting down roots inside that
organization, until the call came. For a
moment longer it stood there, like a silvered god, tall, powerful,
elegant in the moonlight, then it jumped down, crossing the circle of
light quickly, making for the fence and the darkness beyond. DEVORE
LOOKED UP from the communications panel and stared out into the
darkness of the Martian night. It was just after two, local time, and
the lights of the distant city were low. Beyond them was a wall of
darkness. He
stood, yawning, ready for sleep now that the message had come, then
turned, looking across at the sleeping man. Hans
Ebert lay on the camp bed, fully clothed, his kit bag on the floor
beside him. He had turned up four days earlier, scared, desperate for
help, and had ended here, "rescued" by DeVore from the
Governor's cells. DeVore
went across and stood there over the sleeping man, looking down at
him. Ebert looked ill, haggard from exhaustion. He had lost a lot of
weight and— from the smell of him—had had to rough it in
ways he had never experienced before. His body had suffered, but his
face was still familiar enough to be recognized anywhere in the
system. Well,
maybe that was a problem, and maybe it wasn't. A familiar face might
prove advantageous in the days to come. Especially when behind that
face was a young prince, burning with ambition and eager for revenge.
And that was why— despite the obvious dangers—he had
taken Ebert in. Knowing that what was discarded now might prove
extremely useful later on. He
bent down, drawing the blanket up over Ebert's chest, then turned
away, looking outward, conscious once more of the guards patrolling
the frosted perimeter, the great, blue-white circle of Chung Kuo high
above them in the Martian sky. CHEN
crouched there on the mountainside, looking down the valley to where
the dark, steep slopes ended in a flat-topped arrowhead of whiteness.
It was like a vast wall, a dam two li in height, plugging the
end of the valley, its surface a faintly opalescent pearl, lit from
within. Ch'eng it was. City and wall. The
moon was high. Was a perfect circle of whiteness in the velvet dark.
Chen stared at it a moment, mesmerized, held by its brilliant,
unseeing eye, then looked down, his fingers searching amongst the
ashes. He
turned, looking across at Karr, then lifted the shard of broken
glass, turning it in his hand, remembering. "What
is this place?" Karr asked, coming closer, his face cloaked in
shadow. Chen
stared at him a while, then looked away. "This
is where it began. Here on the mountainside with Kao Jyan. We lit a
fire, just there, where you're standing now. And Jyan . . . Jyan
brought a bottle and two glasses. I remember watching him." A
faint breeze stirred dust and ash about his feet, carrying the scent
of the Wilds. He
stood, then turned, looking north. There, not far from where they
stood, the City began, filling the great northern plain of Europe.
Earlier, flying over it, they had seen the rebuilt Imperial Solarium,
which he had helped bomb a dozen years before. Chen took a long
breath, then turned back, looking at the big man. "Did
you bring the razor, as I asked?" Karr
stared at him fixedly a moment, then took the fine blade from his
tunic. "What did you want it for?" Chen
met his eyes. "Nothing stupid, I promise you." Karr
hesitated a moment longer, then handed him the razor. Chen stared at
it a moment, turning it in the moonlight, then tested it with the
edge of his thumb. Satisfied, he crouched again, and, taking his
queue in the other hand, cut the strong dark hair close to the roots. "Kao
Chen He looked up at the big man, then, saying nothing, continued
with the task. Finished, he stood again, offering Karr the blade, his
free hand tracing the shape of his skull, feeling the fine stubble
there. Karr took the razor, studying his friend. In the moonlight,
Chen's face had the blunt, anonymous look of a thousand generations
of Han peasants. The kind of face one saw everywhere below. A simple,
nondescript face. Until one met the eyes . . . "Why
are we here, my friend? What are we looking for?" Chen
turned, looking about him, taking in everything: the mountains, the
sky, the great City, stretched out like a vast glacier under the
brilliant moon. It was the same. Twelve years had done little to
change this scene. And yet it was quite different. Was, in the way he
saw it, utterly transformed. Back then he had known nothing but the
Net. Had looked at this scene with eyes that saw only the surfaces of
things. But now he could see right through. Through to the bone
itself. He
nodded slowly, understanding now why he had had to come here. Why he
had asked Karr to divert the craft south and fly into the foothills
of the Alps. Sometimes one had to go back—right back—to
understand. He
shivered, surprised by the strength of the returning memory. It was
strange how clearly he could see it, even now, after almost thirty
years. Yes, he could picture quite vividly the old Master who had
trained him to be kwai; a tall, willowy old Han with a long,
expressionless face and a wispy beard and who always wore red. Old
Shang, they had called him. Five of them, there had been, from Chi
Su, the eldest, a broad-shouldered sixteen-year-old, down to himself,
a thin-limbed, ugly little boy of six. An orphan, taken in by Shang. For
the next twelve years Old Shang's apartment had been his home. He had
shared the kang with two others, his sleeping roll put away at
sixth bell and taken out again at midnight. And in between, a long
day of work; harder work than he had ever known, before or since. He
sighed. It was strange how he had hidden it from himself all these
years, as if it had never been. And yet it had formed him, as surely
as the tree is formed from the seed. Shang's words, Shang's gestures
had become his own. So it was in this world. So it had to be. For
without that a man was shapeless, formless, fit only to wallow in the
fetid darkness of the Clay. He
turned, meeting Karr's eyes. "He had clever hands. I watched him
from where you're standing now. Saw how he looked into his glass,
like this, watching the flames flicker and curl like tiny snakes in
the darkness of his wine. At the time I didn't understand what it was
he saw there. But now I do." Karr
looked down. It was Kao Jyan he was talking about. Kao Jyan, his
fellow assassin that night twelve years ago. "A
message came," he offered. "From Tolonen." Chen
was still looking back at him, but it was as' if he were suddenly
somewhere else, as if, for that brief moment, his eyes saw things
that Karr was blind to. "He
confirms that Li Yuan has ordered the closure of Kibwezi." "Ah
. . ." Chen lowered his eyes. Karr
was silent a moment, watching his friend, trying to understand, to
empathize with what he was feeling, but for once it was hard. He
crouched, one hand sifting the dust distractedly. "Your friend,
Kao Jyan . . . what did he see?" Chen
gave a small laugh, as if surprised that the big man didn't know,
then looked away again, smoothing his hand over the naked shape of
his skull. "Change,"
he said softly, a tiny tremor passing through him. "And flames.
Flames dancing in a glass."
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