Shuttered Sky ss-3

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Shuttered Sky ss-3 Page 23

by Нил Шустерман


  “Why am I here?”

  “That is for you to find out.”

  “I’m not in the mood for guessing games.”

  “You misunderstand,” said Tessic. “I mean this literally. You see, all five floors of this penthouse were built with you in mind. The entire place is lined, floors and walls, to contain your energy and sensory field. It keeps you from being overwhelmed by what lies outside, and will keep those on the outside from sensing you. This place can serve whatever function you choose. A retreat, perhaps, as it is for me.”

  Dillon got the gist. “Just another cell. Only prettier.”

  Tessic bristled at the suggestion. “There are no locks here. You can leave whenever you please. My hope is that you will see the wis­dom of staying.”

  “And Maddy?”

  “She is my guest as well. In fact, she told me that you needed a place like this to settle your mind. That you lacked a certain clarity.”

  “She said that?”

  “In so many words.”

  Dillon put his hand to the glass, then turned to look at the olive grove. An oasis in the sky. A world apart. He turned to Tessic. “I don’t think I was meant to live a life of leisure.”

  “None of us are,” Tessic said. “We are all called to action in one way or another. But sometimes we need a place to regroup, and to stage our operations. Even superman had his Fortress of Solitude, yes?”

  Dillon chuckled at the thought. “If you saw me in the graveyard, then you should know I’m not a man of steel.”

  “There are substances more useful than steel.”

  Useful, thought Dillon. Yes, for a man like Tessic everything had to have utility. There would always be something in it for him. “So what do you want from me?”

  Tessic pondered the question, but didn’t respond quite yet. “Come, I’ll give you the grand tour.” They strode back into the grove, taking a different flagstone path that led to an artificial stream. Hidden speakers pumped the sounds of birds and other wildlife into the air, adding to the illusion. By the time they reached the stream, there was no telling they were on the roof of a skyscraper.

  “Until a few years ago,” Tessic said, “I was arrogant enough to think I was the greatest man of our time. Then you appeared on the scene.”

  “Jealous, Elon?”

  Tessic shook his head. “No. Envy never brings a man true success. Certainly there are men like Bussard in the world, who are threatened by anything more powerful than themselves. But I am not Bussard. To me you are not a threat. You are . . . an opportunity.”

  The path wound them back to the garden where the two lounge chairs sat. But this time, Dillon saw the vine-covered wall behind it, and the opening that led to an elevator. “Opportunity for what?”

  Tessic paused, picking up his bowl of fruit, popping a few grapes. “I have so much money, I can’t find enough things to do with it—and the curse of wealth can be as potent as its blessing. You see, when money ceases to be an issue, a man can either become a slave to his passions, or buy his freedom from them, seeking more worthy objec­tives.”

  “Meaning?”

  Tessic patted Dillon on the cheek, and offered up a wry smile. “Simply put, Dillon, I am helping you because you’re good for my soul.”

  Dillon glanced at the oasis around him. There was something tempting about it, and somehow that made it feel dangerous.

  Sensing Dillon’s reluctance, Tessic reached over and twisted a twig from the tree beside him. “This has always been a symbol for hope and peace,” he said. “I hope you’ll accept my olive branch.”

  When Dillon didn’t take it, Tessic placed it on a boulder beside them, and turned the key that opened the elevator doors.

  * * *

  The multi-story penthouse was part office and spa, part museum, and part spiritual sanctuary. “Not exactly Hearst Castle,” Tessic com­mented. “I like to think my tastes are not so garish.”

  Perhaps not, but every last amenity seethed excess, from a reading room that featured a priceless collection of medieval Jewish artifacts, to a four-story indoor rock-climbing wall, which towered above Tes­sic’s personal gym. Maddy clung to the top of the wall, focused on her climb; “entertaining herself,” as Tessic had said. Dillon chose not to disturb her.

  The sixty-second floor, the lowest floor of the penthouse complex, was set aside for what Tessic called his “professional hobbies.” It housed his private office; an uncharacteristically modest space, with some shelves and a simple cherrywood desk, within a larger gallery of high­tech toys. Some projects were complete, others still works-in-progress. In one corner sat an elaborate model train that ran on magnetic levitation. Nearby was a drafting table overflowing with schematics for a large-scale version, that Tessic was clearly drafting by his own hand.

  “The stuff of dreams,” Tessic told him. “Or at least my dreams.”

  There was a work bench full of computer viscera, reminding Dillon of the hands-on inventiveness that was Tessic’s calling card, even be­fore he became known for his business acumen. It was comforting to see that the man was still elbow-deep in nuts and bolts.

  “Let me show you my latest interest.” Tessic led Dillon to a Lucite-covered display case that held a matchbox city. Row after row of three-inch high-rise apartment buildings.

  “Another dream?” asked Dillon.

  “Reality,” Tessic answered. “We’re already on the third phase.”

  “I didn’t know you were a developer.” Dillon’s eyes blurred as he looked at the three-dimensional grid of towers. “There’s got to be a hundred buildings here.”

  “A hundred and twelve. The largest single housing complex ever conceived—and it’s just one of several I have planned.”

  Dillon moved around the box, to view it from another angle.

  “It interests you,” observed Tessic.

  “I’m just a little stunned. I mean, it must cost billions. No matter how rich you are, I can’t believe you can afford this.”

  “I have no one to leave my money to. So I intend to leave this world penniless.”

  “This is a good start.”

  “Besides, money’s not quite the same over there.”

  “Over where?”

  Tessic drew Dillon’s attention to a map on the wall, pinned up between artists renderings of one of the buildings. “I have purchased several large plots of land in Belarus and Poland. The labor’s cheap, and so are the raw materials. Some leverage with a few friendly Eu­ropean banks, and my out-of-pocket expense is under fifteen million.”

  “Oh, is that all,” Dillon scoffed.

  “Of course they’re not the most beautiful of structures, but form follows function. The goal is to get them up quickly. We can always beautify them later.”

  “What’s the rush?”

  “I’m nothing if not efficient,” Tessic answered, then added, “And besides, as you’re the author of world chaos, you should know how little constructive time is left.”

  Dillon shifted uncomfortably. Tessic was prodding him, gauging his reaction. “I may be responsible for what’s happening in the world,” Dillon said, “but I won’t take credit as its author. I never intended it.”

  “You have plans to repair it, then?”

  Dillon found he couldn’t look Tessic in the eye.

  “Hopes then,” Tessic prompted. “Hopes in search of a plan.”

  “Yes, you could say that.”

  “Perhaps I can help you there,” offered Tessic. “Strategy is one of my specialties.” Tessic exuded confidence like a musk, and Dillon found himself half believing Tessic really could help. He wondered whether or not it was just wishful thinking.

  Dillon studied the lattice of model buildings, which was more like a starburst than a grid, the buildings radiating outward from an octag­onal park in the center. A bold design, like the man who conceived it. “So, are these housing complexes part of some strategy?” Dillon asked. “These people obviously can’t afford this type of housing,
unless you give it away. What could you possibly get in return?”

  Tessic paused. “Always with you, I must have some angle.”

  Dillon waited, and Tessic looked away. “The great wall of China is the only man-made structure visible from space,” Tessic said. “I intend to add to the tally.”

  Dillon nodded, but knew that Elon Tessic was not so shallow a man. He served more than just his ego. “That’s a nice cover story. Now tell me the real reason.”

  Dillon refused to back down, and, cornered, Tessic sighed. “You read me too well.”

  “One of my specialties.”

  Tessic looked at his miniature city, and gently stroked its Lucite lid, as if it were a lover. “You can call it my mitzvah project,” Tessic said quietly. “A holy deed in a faithless world.” Reflexively, Dillon’s thoughts ricocheted to Deanna. It irritated him that the mere mention of faith could bring her to haunt his thoughts. But if nothing else, it helped to sober him.

  “We could go there,” Tessic offered. “I could show you the site.”

  “Why would I want to go there?”

  Tessic had no immediate answer.

  Dillon looked around the workshop. If this was Tessic’s sandbox, Dillon didn’t want to play. “I appreciate your hospitality, Elon,” he said. “But I can’t accept it. I’ll be leaving in the morning.”

  Although he thought Tessic might deflate with the news, he showed no signs of it. “That is, of course, your choice to make.”

  Dillon nodded. “I’ll tell Maddy.” He turned to leave, but Tessic called to him.

  “You’ve always spoken of your desire to pull back your energy field—contain yourself. Do you still believe you’ll ever be able to do that?”

  “Yes, I do.” Although he was no closer now than he had been in Hesperia.

  “Has it occurred to you,” said Tessic, “that perhaps I was brought to you as your means of containment?”

  Dillon hadn’t considered that. It was a seductive thought, for it implied a grand design, and if there was anything that Dillon longed for it was grand designs. Perfect patterns. An ordered universe.

  “From the moment I was brought in to build your prison,” Tessic said, “I knew that our meeting was bashert. Fated. I built you this sanctuary, knowing fate would bring you here.”

  Dillon maintained his distance, keeping a buffer zone between himself and Tessic’s persuasive intensity. “Fate didn’t bring me here; you did,” Dillon reminded him. “In a helicopter, backed up by your own personal army.”

  “If it wasn’t meant to be, I would have failed.”

  Dillon laughed. “What? Elon Tessic? Fail?”

  Tessic hesitated, becoming quiet. “It has happened more often than you know.”

  There was deep sorrow to his words. Dillon found himself trying to decipher the source of the sorrow, and found the path convoluted and clouded. Dillon knew if he pushed himself, he could decode Tes­sic’s complex patterns and truly know the man, but Dillon didn’t have the heart to do it. He much preferred Tessic as an enigma.

  “Do you know how I became successful, Dillon?” he asked.

  Dillon shrugged. “You’re a genius. Everyone knows that.”

  “Most geniuses starve,” Tessic reminded him. “I succeeded, be­cause I took the time to listen. I learned to be still. But you—you spend your time running. Running away, running toward, but always running.”

  Tessic paused, perhaps waiting for Dillon to defend himself, but there was no defense. Tessic was right.

  “Be still,” Tessic said, his voice soothing and calm. “You are like some beacon that is never in the same place twice. What good is that to anyone? What good is that to you? Imagine yourself, for once at the center of the universe, Dillon, and the shadows you chase, your purpose here—everything you seek will be drawn to you. And in that stillness, when your fate does come to you, you will be ready to seize it.”

  * * *

  On the rock-climbing wall, Maddy was already seizing what Tessic had to offer. She had earned it. Years of busting her ass to gain ad­mittance to a military machine that stuck her with the likes of Bussard, then created a backspin of lies that turned her into America’s Most Wanted. AWOL and disgraced; a fugitive only six months after a high-honor West Point graduation—yes, she had earned the right to lux­uriate in Tessic’s penthouse.

  As she scaled his magnificent rock-climbing wall, she thought back to easier times; Bryce Canyon, two summers before, when the only challenge in her life was the stone faces of the rocks she climbed, and her stone-faced instructors come Fall. This had once been a predict­able, rational world she could sink her teeth into.

  She reached up, deftly inching her way higher, trying to block out everything but the wall. Tessic called it his climate-controlled Everest. He called the entire penthouse complex his “urban cottage.”

  “You’ll find it pleasant,” he had told her while their helicopter was still en route. He took pride in his ability to understate.

  She didn’t know what to expect of the place before she arrived. Somewhere in the back of her mind were images of a pleasure dome replete with large-breasted, iron-thighed amazons running the whole operation. But instead she found, to some disappointment, a staff no more exotic than any other. A plump Midwestern woman ran the penthouse staff, and went on about how the military had stonewalled her son Jimmy after Desert Storm, “so I can sympathize, honey.” Maddy wasn’t sure how much she knew of their situation, but she knew enough. It could have been a security problem, but the woman’s loyalty to Tessic was unwavering. “Elon paid all of Jimmy’s medical bills, when the Pentagon SOBs were still denying Desert Storm Syn­drome,” she had told Maddy, as she led her to a lavishly appointed bedroom suite.

  She was introduced to the gardener, a small Asian man with a nominally effective artificial eye that Tessitech Labs had designed. “It bionic,” the man told her, “Like-a Lin-a-sey Wag-a-ner.” It appeared that for everyone here, Tessic had descended upon their particular misery, assuaging it with some well-conceived act of kindness. It was the most effective security measure she had ever seen.

  While Dillon still slept off a massive sedative, and before she at­tempted to climb the wall, Tessic had visited her in her room.

  “I wasn’t certain of your sleeping arrangements,” he told her, “so I prepared you and Dillon separate rooms.”

  “That will be fine,” she said. If he were fishing for the state of her and Dillon’s relationship, he would not find out from her. She briefly wondered if he might try to seduce her—after all, he did have a rep­utation as a playboy, but reputations and reality rarely went hand in hand. There was nothing in the penthouse to suggest he was a wom­anizer. “So, are we your guests, your prisoners, or your experimental subjects?”

  Tessic laughed and wagged a finger at her. “Still you only trust me as far as you can throw me.”

  “Actually, I can throw you farther.”

  “Well, perhaps I will give you that opportunity in the gym later on.”

  She hated that he was always so disarming, deflecting her barbs with the facile skill of one of his weapons systems. “Good,” she said, trying hard to hide a smirk. “I think I’d enjoy putting you in traction.”

  Tessic opened the blinds, bringing in the afternoon light, and a spectacular view of Houston. “I must confess, I’ve taken a liking to you, Lieutenant Haas.”

  “You can drop the Lieutenant,” she told him. “I think we can assume my military career is over.”

  “Then may I call you Maddy?”

  “Miss Haas will do fine.”

  “Very well, then,” he said. “A minor victory in our little cold war.” Then he paused for a second, contemplating her—not looking her up and down, but simply considering her as a whole. “Perhaps, Miss Haas, if things ever settle down, you might consider working for me.”

  “That depends. Is hell freezing over any time soon?”

  “We’ll have to ask Dillon,” he said. She laughed in sp
ite of herself. “You know,” said Tessic, “you might have a problem in trusting me, but after what I’ve seen you do for Dillon, I trust you implicitly.”

  She sighed. “So . . . what about Dillon?” In spite of their cushy sanctuary, nothing had really changed. Dillon was still at the center of events raging out of control. They weren’t free from the hurricane, they were merely in its eye.

  “Yes, what about Dillon?” echoed Tessic, waiting to take her lead, rather than pushing forward with his own ideas. She had no answer for him. She was still grappling with the events of the past few days. A graveyard resurrection—a spirit that devours souls. Before knowing Dillon, she had never been truly convinced of the existence of souls, much less the possibility of them being ripped away. This past week was enough to process; she was light-years away from considering tomorrow.

  “No one knows him better than you,” Tessic reminded her. “You know what he needs, perhaps better than he does himself.”

  Yes, she did know him, and while Tessic’s motives were still in question, she and Tessic shared the common goal of Dillon’s well-being. That was reason enough for detente, even alliance. And so, in the end, it was Maddy who suggested that Dillon be allowed to wake in the garden; a tranquil environment where Tessic might be perceived as more of a friend, and less of a threat.

  She found herself avoiding Dillon for the rest of the day. After the rock-climbing wall, she took a massage at Tessic’s suggestion, then retired early to her room for a long bath in an oversized tub. After spending so much time tending to Dillon’s needs, she had forgotten she had needs of her own. She had never been one to pamper herself— that was her sister’s style—but perhaps it was time.

  Her sister! It had been so long since Maddy had even thought of Erica. No doubt the FBI had found her in Brooklyn and was harassing her no end about her psychotically homicidal sibling. She wondered what Erica made of all this, and whether or not she believed the lies being spread about Maddy. She didn’t even want to consider what her parents might be going through. Perhaps Tessic could arrange to get messages to all of them. She would have to ask.

 

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