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The Phoenix Exultant

Page 28

by John C. Wright


  “Hence the target was completely without suspicion or inhibition, and was unable to override its pre-established high-speed reflexes. Finding itself in a brain under fire, it activated noumenal recording circuits, and broadcast itself to a safe station. Harrier Sophotech’s predictions in this regard seem to be have been confirmed. Signal was intercepted by cislunar sail and suppressed. Unfortunately, the enemy thought-encryption system, which is based on an infinite-infinitesimal number process we cannot decode, prevented the signal from being trapped or recorded property. Scaramouche is dead beyond recovery.”

  Phaethon turned to Harrier. “What is going on? What prediction did you make?”

  Harrier smiled, and said, “The other odd thing that Mr. Jason Sven Ten Shopworthy did, aside from leaning on his left elbow at the teahouse, was that he sleepwalked on his way home last Tuesday. While his body was on autopilot, records indicate that his mind entered into the Orient Free Market Group Thought-shop Mall in the Deep-Dreaming Commercial Channel. He visited quite a number of shops and business, and ran many free samples, and, all in all, seemed quite impressed with the luxury and wealth of our commercial consumer markets.”

  Phaethon said, “I don’t understand. How could our wealth impress him? He was from the Silent Oecumene, which, by all accounts, was much richer in energy than our Golden Oecumene by an almost infinite amount. What was our wealth to him?”

  “But their technology was arrested at the Fifth-Era level of development. They have only those technical advances from the Sixth Era, the Era of the Sophotechs, that we broadcast to them. There is no evidence, however, that they had in place any of the social or marketplace structures necessary to take advantage of those developments. Furthermore, it is not clear what percentage of the population survived the events depicted in the famous Last Broadcast, nor what their level of civilization was thereafter. War can do terrible things.”

  “Are you suggesting that their technology level is less than ours? Less? I had been assuming al this time it was greater …”

  “Mr. Rhadamanth,” said Harrier, “if you came for the first time from a more primitive circumstance and entered into the Golden Oecumene, what is the first, the very first, technological advantage of which you would avail yourself … ?”

  Phaethon looked at Daphne. Perhaps he was thinking about her past.

  He said, “We did corrupt him. Scaramouche bought a Noumenal Immortality account, didn’t he?”

  Harrier said, “And suppose you were an alien spy. You could not send your brain-information into any Golden Oecumene Sophotech or any of our mind banks, could you? So where would you send it? To which Sophotech would you direct the broadcast?”

  Phaethon looked back and forth. “There is really something horrible about you all, Warmind, Harrier, Atkins. You just shot an innocent man without warning.”

  Harrier said, “If a police officer must shoot through a hostage to strike a criminal hiding in his mind, who is to blame? The officer, or the criminal who deliberately put that hostage in danger?”

  Atkins patted Phaeton on the shoulder. “I think you need to reload some intelligence enhancers or something, sir. Maybe you’re tired. Warmind! Tell our newest recruit about Mr. Shopworthy.”

  “Mr. Shopworthy is unaware of what occurred. He is presently recuperating in the Orpheus Alaska branch of the Noumenal Immortality life bank.”

  Atkins turned and stared at the eastern horizon. There was no hint of light there yet, but a predawn smell was in the night and, on the shore and not far away, first one bird note, then another, rang out, and soon the air was filled with song.

  “Dawn’s coming,” said Atkins.

  “It’s refreshing!” said Daphne. “I always have loved the dawn! A time of hope, isn’t it … ? And we really are going to defeat these creatures, aren’t we? These monsters?”

  “Actually,” said Atkins, “I was thinking we should get under cover. I don’t think a purely passive spy satellite or remote sent out from the enemy starship could see us in the dark, not if it did not dare emit any sort of signal to bounce off of us. But once the sun is up, the enemy may have enough magnification and resolution to get a picture of us even from somewhere beyond Mars, if his collector is big enough and his resolution is fine enough.”

  Daphne glumly looked up at the night sky.

  Atkins said, “As for our plan, I think Phaethon has to continue with the masquerade we started here. If he publicly approaches the Hortators and proves his innocence, that will warn the enemy. So, without any visible help from anyone, he has to make contact with the Neptunians, get them to hire him, and get back to his ship. Once Phaethon is aboard the ship, the enemy will have to come for him. Each time they have acted so far, they’ve tried to get the armor.”

  Phaethon said, “Without the armor to control the ship-mind hierarchies, near-light speed flight is dangerous or impossible. But why do they want my ship?”

  “I’m not sure. But I intend to find out. We can then follow the two signal vectors we have to see where they intersect. If the enemy starship is just hanging there in space, only another starship is going to be fast enough to approach her, if she turns and runs. Warmind … ?”

  A smaller menu appeared next to the image of the blood-red figure in armor, showing latitudes and right ascensions. “These are the two directions the two signals traveled.”

  “Calculate the intercept.”

  Phaethon’s almanac was as quick and precise as money could buy, and the circuitry it used was not fundamentally different from that in which Sophotechs were embedded, not fundamentally slower. Therefore, it was Phaethon who answered first: “About sixty degrees trailing Jupiter, at about five A.Us distance, since Jupiter is presently at apogee. That puts it right in the middle of the Jovian Trailing Trojan Point City-Swarm. So, unless they put an alien starship in the middle of a highly populated and well-traveled area, we’ve only caught a relay or a lieutenant.”

  “That’s not good. It means we have to trace the line of command up to the next level, or take steps to ensure that the highers-up come out of hiding,” said Atkins. “The enemy is going to be suspicious when they do not hear back from their lieutenants. So we need some sort of lure or bait that we know for sure the enemy will not be able to resist.”

  Phaethon did not like the way Atkins was looking at him.

  Phaethon said, “You have simply got to be kidding me.”

  “As soon as we can get you inducted, and download some Basic Training routines into you, we’ll be ready to go.”

  “It will never happen,” said Phaethon, drawing himself erect. “I may cooperate freely with you, as one free man with another, but I shall not place myself under the orders of any other man.”

  Harrier said, “Perhaps Marshal Atkins is too polite actually to remind you that he is blackmailing you. If you do not sign up, you get put on trial for treason. If you do sign up, you have access to the Military Noumenal Immortality Circuit, which is not controlled by Orpheus or the Hortators.”

  Atkins looked askance at Harrier. “Actually, I was going to appeal to his sense of duty and patriotism, and point out what a bad idea a split command was.”

  Phaethon folded his arms over his chest, and sighed. All he was aware of was fatigue. He was tired in his body, tired in his mind, tired in his soul. He was tired of being manipulated, forced, or coerced. He thought there was some error, some obvious oversight in Atkins’s blackmail scheme, but Phaethon’s tired brain could not bring it to the surface.

  Phaethon turned a thoughtful glance upon Daphne, who was staring out at the horizon, smiling as if half in a dream.

  His voice woke her. “Daphne!”

  She stirred, and turned luminous eyes on him. “Mm? Yes? What do you need, lover?”

  “I am really tired, and my brain is acting stupid, and I haven’t got a microscopic fragment of an idea of what to do.”

  She looked mildly amused. “Was there something you wanted me to do about all that, lover?”

/>   He spread his hands as if to show their emptiness. “You’re here to rescue me. I’ve run out of ideas. So rescue me.”

  There was a note of irony in his voice, as if he were challenging her, testing her. Daphne smiled very broadly, as if she were very pleased.

  To Phaethon she said, “Listen to your little wife now, darling, and take notes, because I may give you a quiz on this later. Ready? Atkins is trying to drive his mule (that’s you, darling) with a carrot and a lash. The lash is the charge of treason. The carrot is the noumenal immortality circuit. But his carrot is no good.”

  She leaned forward, eyes glittering with delight, and said, “If you had just listened to me before, you would have known that Aurelian Sophotech told me in the Taj Mahal that that noetic reader you are carrying can also be configured not just to read, but to record. It has nearly infinite storage capacity, remember? Noetic reading and noumenal storage are just two aspects of the same technology, remember? You would need a Sophotech actually to operate it during the storage-recording process, just like any other noumenal immortality circuit, and Aurelian says he can provide that service to you. All you have to do is log on to the mentality, call up the Aurelian Mansion as your sense-filter provider, and he can make you a back copy of yourself right now.”

  Phaethon said, “But Orpheus holds the patent on this technology! Aurelian cannot just steal it!”

  “Orpheus did not design this machinery. It’s not his design. It does the same thing, but so what? The guy with the patent on the steam engine for trains could not stop the guys who made the internal combustion engine for the motorcar.”

  “But Aurelian will be ostracized if he helps me!”

  Daphne smiled even more broadly. “You know, I said the same thing to him at the Taj Mahal. You know what he said to me?”

  “What?”

  “He just smiled, and said, ‘Let them try.’ And you know what? He had that look you get on your face, that same look, when you say things like that.”

  He squinted at her sidelong, querulous. “What look do you mean?”

  “You’ll get it on your face in a moment. Because I’ve taken the carrot out of Atkins’s hand, but you have to disarm him of his lash. Remember what you were told? You are supposed to remain true to your character at all times. And your character is a very, very pigheaded one. Do what you always do.”

  Phaethon looked blank.

  Daphne rolled her eyes with impatience. “Oh, come on! Just tell the military to go jump on a pogo stick, just the same way you’ve told the Hortators, your father, Ao Aoen, Eleemosynary, the other Peers, Ironjoy, the Silent One monsters, and everyone else who has tried to impede you.”

  Then, with another smile, she added, “He cannot push you around, lover. Atkins may have more testosterone than you, but you’ve got more brains.”

  Phaethon nodded, looking thoughtful. “Or, at least, I have one skill he cannot do without. Nor can he arrest me in secret, because even he cannot break the laws; nor can he afford to have my arrest be made known.”

  With great dignity, Phaethon turned toward Atkins. “Marshal Atkins! In reference to your implication that the military powers, the Parliament, and the Courts of Oecumene law will punish me for treason and execute me should I not submit to your blackmail, I have but this to say: Let them try.”

  At that same moment, the quick equatorial dawn sent a ray of light from the east to touch upon Phaethon, glinting from his unbreakable armor, showing the unbreakable spirit in his expression.

  Daphne nodded happily. “Yup. That look. Just like that.” Daphne raised her hand quickly and recorded the image into her ring.

  13

  MERCURY EQUILATERAL STATION

  1.

  Phaethon hovered in midair above the deck of the thought-shop. Ironjoy stood on the burnt decks, still damaged from the explosions, looking back and forth. No expression showed on his immobile features. The deck was deserted.

  Phaethon was able to maintain his position aloft because the levitation array, which had been lowered from orbit to a position over India was near enough for the flying-harness he had constructed inside his armor to grapple and use.

  Ironjoy said, “I do not consider our contract to have been carried out in a satisfactory fashion. Specifically, you promised to return my shop intact (I note that it has been pulverized by heavy energy discharges) and my people unharmed (I note that they are absent.) I suspect that you have come into some money, or have made some other arrangement to depart. I conclude that, should I choose to sue you in a court of law for the breach of this contract, and insist on the specific performance of the terms on which we agreed, your plans to depart would be hindered considerably. I have recently learned to have great respect for the power of Oecumene law to compel obedience.”

  Phaethon had to be careful of his money. Old-Woman-of-the-Sea, as it turned out, owned a cargo canister, one of hundreds she used to own, back when she had been making regular launches to Venus. Notor-Kotok had bought the use of an orbital railgun from a deviant willing to defy the Hortators. Phaethon could adjust his body to withstand the immense launch pressure that would otherwise make the cargo canister utterly unfit for shipping a human body; he could adjust his brain to sleep throughout the long fall toward the sun.

  Since the planned orbit was sunward, “all downhill” as old spacers liked to say, the fuel cost (almost all of which would be spent at the initial boost) would be inexpensive.

  Inexpensive by space-shipping standards, that is. Phaethon’s income from his flying-suit patent was not enormous, and his pay from the Neptunians (which mostly consisted of buying the rest of his debt back from Vafnir, to give the Neptunians clear title) would not arrive till he arrived at Mercury Equilateral. There were not many corners he could cut.

  The negotiations did not take long, and were not entirely favorable to Phaethon.

  Ironjoy judged Phaethon’s reluctance to a nicety, or perhaps the Demeter tapestry had somehow recorded the conversations Phaethon held, less than an hour past, with Notor-Kotok and the Neptunians, and knew exactly how much currency Phaethon had to spare. Or perhaps it was merely that Ironjoy had much more practice than Phaethon did at bargaining without any Sophotechnic advice.

  In the end, Ironjoy no doubt had more than enough to restore his shop to operating levels. Phaethon felt more than a qualm of distaste for himself, erecting this villain once again to be lord and master of whatever addicted and desperate unfortunates might fall into his hands.

  But there was little Phaethon could do at this point.

  Phaethon said, “The files and brain-spaces that have not been destroyed are still in order, and I have cleaned and reconnected them, restored your search engines, and modified the hierarchies in your housecoat to free up several hundred operation-cycles of memory space.” And he transmitted back the codes and authorizations, turning control of the thought-shop once more to Ironjoy.

  “If we have no further business, sir …” said Phaethon, preparing to leave. He had agreed with the remnant of the Bellipotent Composition to rendezvous. Bellipotent’s airship could carry him back to Lake Victoria, where he could ascend the infinite tower (if he could find passage—perhaps in a masquerade disguise?) and try to reach the section of the ring-city where the Mother-of-the-Sea’s cargo capsule was stored.

  “But we do. One last brief thing,” said Ironjoy. “I would thank you not to leave your messages cluttering my thought-shop holding space.”

  Phaethon was distracted. “Messages … ?” Then he recalled that he had dumped his secretarial program, and not thought, himself, of looking for any messages since his last session with the Neptunians. “An oversight, sir. Can you forward it to my armor’s internal channel?”

  “For a small fee.”

  “That seems a trifle unkind, sir, considering that …”

  Ironjoy jerked all four hands at the sky, an odd but alarming gesture. “Unkind! You have ruined my thoughts and hopes and life! A pathetic life, by your manor-born
standards, a cruel and thin life, but it was mine and the only one I had. The Afloats have been taken to some junkyard behind a Red pleasure-garden, with me not there to protect them from over-indulgence, or to nurse the sick and aged. There is no work for them there; there is nothing for me here. Even should another flock of Afloats be dropped here, I have lost my zest for my work, my talent for forcing obedience and fear. Your vile Curia and their mind-tricks have seen to that. I have seen my life through other’s eyes and recoiled in disgust …”

  Now he lowered his hands, muttering: “I would some power could grant this gift to me—never again to see myself as others see me.”

  But Ironjoy, with a shrug of disgust, and without collecting any fee, now, for some reason, made the transmission-gesture, and passed the message file to Phaethon.

  Phaethon was thinking: Why should I feel pity for this most wretched of men? No injustice had been done to him. All Ironjoy’s ills were of his own making.

  And yet. “You could trifle with your mind, using activators and redactors from your own thought-shop, and put yourself back into the state of mind you were in before the Curia forced you to experience your victims’ lives.”

  “Is this some sort of test or quiz? You know I shall not do that.”

  “Why not?”

  Ironjoy started to turn away, but then stopped, turned, and answered the question. “If I were now as I was then, I would gladly change my self to remain as I was then; but I am now as I am now. The me that I am now has no desire to be any other me. Isn’t that the fundamental nature of the self?”

  “If you judge by emotion only, perhaps. Logic suggests that certain types of personalities are more self-consistent than others; and morality decrees that certain traits and thoughts and habits are superior to others, no matter what our preferences and appetites might say.”

  “What has your philosophy to do with me? You are not content to destroy my life, now you must critique it? Don’t you have other business elsewhere?”

 

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