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by Morgan, Richard


  ‘I thought you were here to help.’

  ‘I am. My payback is handing you the people who cut me loose.’

  ‘Not good enough.’

  ‘I’m sorry, it’ll have to do.’

  ‘Then go peddle your grudge to someone else.’

  He turned his back and leaned on the seaward wall. Stared at the lights out across the water, tried hard not to think of Istanbul, and failed. Under certain superficial differences, the two cities shared an essence you couldn’t evade. Both freighted with the same distilled dream of shoreline, hills and suspension spans, the same hazy sunlit air and rumble by day, the same glimmer on water at evening as ferries criss-crossed the gloom, and traffic flowed in skeins of red and pale gold light, across the bridges and through the street-lamp studded veins of the city. What was in the air there, was here as well, and he felt it catching in his throat.

  He heard her boots move behind him. Footfalls on evercrete, closing the gap. He looked out at the glimmer of lights.

  ‘Kind of careless tonight, aren’t you?’ She draped her arms on the wall, mimicked his posture about a metre off to his left.

  He shrugged, didn’t look at her. ‘I figure if you want to feed me some information, it doesn’t pay you to take me out. You were going to do that, you would have done it a while ago.’

  ‘Fair analysis. Still a risk, though.’

  ‘I’m not feeling very risk-averse right now.’

  ‘Yeah, but you’re being fucking choosy about who you take your leads from. Mind telling me why?’

  He tipped a glance at her.

  ‘How about because I don’t trust you any further than I would a Jesusland preacher with a choirboy? You’re handing me what looks like half of a solution, Ren. And it doesn’t match up with what I already know. To me, that stinks of deflection. You want me to believe you’re really ready to sell out your boss? Tell me who you are.’

  Quiet. The city breathed. Reflected light trembled across the water.

  ‘I’m like you,’ she said.

  ‘You’re a variant?’

  She squinted at the blade of her outstretched hand. ‘That’s right. Harbin black-lab product. Nothing but the best.’

  ‘You some kind of bonobo then?’

  ‘No, I am not some kind of fucking bonobo.’ There were a couple of grammes of genuine anger in the way her voice lifted. ‘I had sex with Merrin and Scotty for my operational benefit, not because I couldn’t keep my hands off them.’

  ‘Well, you know what?’ He kept his voice at a drawl, not really sure why he was pushing, just some vague intuitive impulse to feed the anger and keep Ren off balance. ‘The real bonobo females, the pygmy chimps in Africa? That’s what they do a lot of the time too. Fuck to calm the males down, keep them in line. I guess you could call that operational benefit, from a social point of view.’

  She got off the wall and faced him.

  ‘I’m a fucking thirteen, Marsalis. A thirteen, just like you. Got that?’

  ‘Bullshit. They never built a female thirteen.’

  ‘Right. Tell yourself that, if it makes you feel better.’

  She stood a metre off, and he saw her force the anger back down, iron it out of her stance and put it away. Shiver of unlooked-for fellow feeling as he watched it happen. She leaned on the wall again, and her voice came out cool and conversational.

  ‘Has it ever occurred to you, Marsalis, to wonder why Project Lawman failed so spectacularly? Has it occurred to you that just maybe cramming gene-enhanced male violent tendency into a gene-enhanced male chassis is overloading the donkey a little?’

  Carl shook his head. ‘No, that hasn’t occurred to me. I was there when Lawman blew apart. What went wrong was that thirteens don’t like to do what they’re told, and as soon as the normal constraints come off, they stop doing it. You can’t make good soldiers out of thirteens. It’s that simple.’

  ‘Yeah, like I said. Overloading the donkey.’

  ‘Or just misunderstanding the concept of soldier.’ He brooded on the outline of the Marin headland against the sky, watched the neat, corpuscular flow of red dotted lights funnelling off the bridge and into a fold in the darkened hills. ‘Anyway, speaking of soldiering, if Harbin put you together, gave you the genes and the ninjutsu, I’ve got to assume that means you belong to Department Two.’

  He thought she maybe shivered a little. ‘Not any more.’

  ‘Care to explain that?’

  ‘Hey, you asked who I was. No one said anything about a full fucking résumé.’

  He found he was smiling in the gloom. ‘Just sketch it out for me. Bare bones, enough to convince. One thing I don’t intend to be is a cat’s paw for the Chinese security services.’

  ‘You’re starting to piss me off, Marsalis. I told you I don’t do that shit any more.’

  ‘Yeah, but I’m a naturally untrusting motherfucker. You want me to murder your boss for you? Indulge my curiosity.’

  He heard her breath hiss out between her teeth.

  ‘Late ninety-six, I worked undercover to crack a Triad sex-slave operation in Hong Kong. When we finally hit them, it got bloody. Department Two aren’t overly concerned about innocent bystanders.’

  ‘Yeah, I heard that about them.’

  ‘Yeah, well I took the opportunity of all that blood and screaming to step out quietly. Disappeared in the crossfire, crossed the line. Used the contacts I’d made to hook a passage to Kuala Lumpur, and then points south.’ An odd weariness crept into her voice. ‘I was an enforcer in Jakarta for a while, played in the turf wars they had going against the yakuza, built myself an Indonesia-wide rep. Headed south again. Sydney and then Auckland. Corporate clients. Eventually the Rim States, because that’s where the real money is. And here we are. That sort out your curiosity for you?’

  He nodded, surprised once again by the twinge of kinship he felt. ‘Yeah, that’ll do for the CV. But I do have one more question, general point of information you could clear up for me.’

  Weary sigh. ‘And that is?’

  ‘Why bother with me? You’re lethal as shit, well-connected too. Staying one step ahead of RimSec and making it look easy. Why not go in and take this faithless fuck out for yourself? Not like you don’t know where he is, right?’

  She was silent for a while.

  ‘It’s a simple question, Ren.’

  ‘I think I’ve told you enough. In the end, you’re a UNGLA bounty hunter. You take me down, it puts food on your table.’

  ‘I already know what you are,’ he said roughly. ‘You see me reaching for a Haag gun?’

  Voice not quite even on those last two words. Her head tilted, as if she maybe caught the tremor. She examined the blade of her hand again.

  ‘You’ve made a career of betraying your own kind. No reason why you’d stop now, is there?’

  ‘Ren, let me tell you something. I’m not even sure I still have my licence.’ Memories of di Palma flitted through his head, the prissy bureaucratic superiority of the Agency. ‘And even if I do, first thing I plan on doing when I get back is turn it in.’

  ‘Change of heart, huh?’ It wasn’t quite a sneer.

  ‘Something like that. Now answer the question. Why me?’

  More quiet. He noticed the chill in the air for the first time. His eyes kept sliding back to the Marin hills, the disappearing stream of traffic headed north. As if there was something there waiting for him. Ren seemed to be making calculations in her head.

  ‘Two reasons,’ she said, finally. ‘First, he’s likely to be expecting me. You, he’s got no reason to watch for.’

  ‘If I were standing where you are, that kind of risk wouldn’t be enough for me to hand things over to a proxy.’

  ‘I know. But you’re a male thirteen. I’m a little smarter than that. For me it’s enough to know that it’ll get done. I don’t have to be there and smell the blood.’

  ‘Maybe I’m smarter than you think. Maybe I just won’t do it.’

  He saw her smile.
‘Well, we’ll see.’

  ‘You said two reasons.’

  ‘That’s right.’ Now she was the one looking out across the water. Her voice tinged with something that might have been embarrassment, might have been pride. ‘It seems I’m pregnant.’

  The silence seemed to rush them, like dark fog coming in off the bay. The noises of the city, already faint, receded to the edge of perception. Carl placed his hands flat on the stonework of the wall, peered down at them in the gloom.

  ‘Congratulations.’

  ‘Yeah, thanks.’

  ‘Is it Merrin’s? Or machete boy’s?’

  ‘I don’t know, and I don’t much care. And nor will your Agency friends. It’s enough that the mother’s a certified thirteen, without worrying about the father as well. They’ll send everything they’ve got after me. I need to be leaving, Marsalis. Bowing out and heading somewhere safe.’

  ‘Right.’ He folded his arms against the chill, turned to face her. ‘On the other hand, you do have one major advantage over the Agency.’

  ‘Which is.’

  ‘They don’t even know you exist.’

  And somewhere in his head, Sevgi Ertekin’s voice.

  Baba, he’s a good man. He’s clean.

  Carmen Ren regarded him narrowly. ‘That’s right. Right now, they don’t know I exist.’

  Carl looked away across the bay again. Something was aching in his throat. Sevgi, Névant, all the others. His whole life seemed to pulse with grief.

  ‘They aren’t going to hear it from me,’ he said.

  CHAPTER FORTY-NINE

  It felt strange, walking into the Human Cost Foundation’s offices for real. Memories of the v-format clashed with the actual architecture of the reception space and the corridors leading off it. There was no Sharleen sitting there, no one in the waiting area at all, and the walls were a paler, colder blue than he recalled. The artwork he remembered wasn’t there, and the prints and Earth First shout-out posters that had replaced it seemed grubby and tired. Jeff, when he came out to greet them, looked similarly worn.

  ‘In the flesh,’ he said, hugging Norton briefly at the shoulders. ‘Nice surprise.’

  Norton hugged back. ‘Yeah, strictly business, I’m afraid. Come to pick your professional brains again. This is Carl Marsalis. Marsalis, my brother Jeff.’

  Jeff shook the thirteen’s hand without a blink. ‘Of course. Should have recognised you from the feed photos. Do you want to come through?’

  They took a different corridor to the one Norton remembered from the virtual offices, and of course it didn’t blur out the way it had in the format. They passed doors with cheaply lettered plastic signs that hinted at the foundation’s daily round: trauma counselling, coastguard liaison, harassment response, funding . . . Through one open office door, Norton glimpsed a stout Asian woman looking sleepily into the middle distance and drinking from a styrofoam coffee cup. She half-raised a hand as they passed, but said nothing. Otherwise, the place seemed to be deserted.

  ‘Quiet this morning,’ Marsalis said.

  Jeff glanced back across his shoulder. ‘Yeah, well it’s early yet. We’ve just ridden out a major funding crisis, so I sent everyone home with instructions to celebrate and come in late. In here.’

  He let them into the office marked with the simple word directorate, closed the door carefully behind them. Changes from the virtual here too, the décor was a higher powered blend of reds and greys, the sofa was the same but it had been turned so its back was to the window and there was space to walk around behind it, a low coffee table in front. Ornaments had moved around, been replaced. The photo of Megan was gone from the desk, there was a smaller one of the kids instead. Jeff gestured at the sofa.

  ‘Grab a seat, both of you. How are COLIN treating you, Mr Marsalis?’

  The thirteen shrugged. ‘Well, they got me out of jail in Jesusland.’

  ‘Yeah, I guess that could count as a pretty good opening offer.’ Jeff came round to the sofa and seated himself facing both of them. He put on a weary smile. ‘So what can I do for you guys?’

  Norton shifted uncomfortably. ‘How much do you know about the Harbin black labs, Jeff?’

  Raised brows. His brother blew out a long breath.

  ‘Well, not a whole lot. They keep that end sewn up pretty tight. Long way north, a long way from the sea. Very high security too. From what we can piece together, it’s where the high end product comes out.’

  ‘You ever meet a variant from the Harbin labs?’ Marsalis asked. ‘Human Cost ever handle any?’

  ‘Christ, no.’ Jeff sat back and rested his head on one hand. He seemed to be giving it some thought. ‘Well, certainly not since we’ve been set up in our current form anyway. I mean, before we got state funding, back before my time, they might have, I could check the files. But I doubt it. Most of the escapees we get are failed variants from the experimental camps. They don’t quite let them go, but they don’t much care what happens to them either, so it’s easier for them to slip out, grab a fishing boat or something, maybe stow away. Anyone coming out of Harbin though, they’d be very highly valued, and probably very loyal as well. I doubt they’d be interested in running, even if security was lax enough to let them.’

  ‘I met one last night,’ said Marsalis.

  Jeff blinked. ‘A Harbin variant? Where?’

  ‘Here. In the city.’

  ‘Here? Jesus.’ Jeff looked at Norton. ‘You see this as well?’

  Norton shook his head.

  ‘Well.’ Jeff spread his hands. ‘I mean, this is fucking serious, Tom. If someone out of Harbin is here, chances are they work for Department Two.’

  ‘No.’ Marsalis got up and went to the window. ‘I had quite a long talk with her. She bailed out of Department Two a while back.’

  ‘So.’ Jeff frowned. ‘Who’s she working for now?’

  ‘She’s working for you, Jeff,’ said the black man.

  The moment hung in the room, creaked and turned like a corpse at the end of a rope. Norton was watching his brother’s eyes, and all he needed to see was there. Then Jeff jerked his eyes away, twisted about, stared up at Marsalis. The thirteen hadn’t turned from the window. Jeff looked at the broad back, the jacket lettered with S(t)igma, the lack of motion. He swung back to his brother.

  ‘Tom?’

  Norton reached into his pocket and produced the phone. He looked into Jeff’s face and thumb-touched the playback.

  ‘Guava Diamond?’

  ‘Still holding.’

  ‘We are unable to assist, Guava Diamond. Repeat, we are unable to assist. Suggest-’

  ‘You what? You bonobo-sucking piece of shit, you’d better tell me I misheard that.’

  ‘There are control complications at this end. We cannot act. I’m sorry, Guava Diamond. You’re on your own.’

  ‘You will be fucking sorry if we make it out of this in one piece.’

  ‘I repeat, Guava Diamond, we cannot act. Suggest you implement Lizard immediately, and get off Bulgakov’s Cat while you can. You may still have time.’

  Pause.

  ‘You’re a fucking dead man, Claw Control.’

  Static hiss.

  They all listened to the white-noise emptiness of it for a couple of moments, as if they’d just heard the last transmission of a plane going down into the ocean. Norton thumbed the phone to off.

  ‘That’s you, Jeff,’ he said quietly. ‘Tell me it’s not.’

  ‘Tom, you know you can fake a voice like that as easily as-’

  He jammed to a halt as the black man’s hands sank weightily onto his shoulders from behind. Marsalis leaned over him.

  ‘Don’t,’ he said.

  Jeff stared across the sofa space at Norton. ‘Tom? Tom, I’m your fucking brother, for Christ’s sake.’

  Norton nodded. ‘Yeah. You’d better tell us everything you know.’

  ‘Tom, you can’t seriously-’

  ‘Sevgi is dead!’ Suddenly he was yelling, trembling, throat
swollen with the force of it, memories of the hospital swirling. ‘She is fucking dead Jeff. Because you hid this from me, she is dead!’

  Marsalis’s hands stayed where they were. Norton gritted his teeth, tried to master the shaking that would not stop. He clamped his mouth tight, breathing hard.

  ‘Bonobo-sucking piece of shit,’ he got out. ‘She called you right, didn’t she Jeff? She knew you well.’

  ‘Tom, you don’t understand.’

  ‘Not yet, we don’t,’ said Marsalis. He lifted one hand, slapped it down again on Jeff’s shoulder, encouraging. ‘But you are going to tell us.’

  ‘I.’ Jeff shook his head. ‘You don’t understand, I can’t.’

  Marsalis lifted his head and looked directly at Norton. Norton felt something kick in his stomach, something that made him feel sick but was somehow a release as well. He nodded.

  The black man hooked one hand into Jeff Norton’s throat, dragged him back against the sofa. His fingers dug in. His other arm wrapped around Jeff’s chest, pinning one arm, holding him in place. Jeff made a shocked, choking sound, flailed about on the sofa, tugged at the thirteen’s grip with his free hand. Marsalis grabbed the flapping arm at the wrist and held it out of the way. Jeff heaved, flopped, could not get loose.

  ‘You’re the one who doesn’t understand,’ said Marsalis coldly. It was the same voice that Norton had heard him use, in Quechua, on Gutierrez. ‘Someone is going to bleed for Sevgi Ertekin. Someone’s going to die. Right now, we’ve got you. You don’t give us someone else, then you’re it. You try keeping what you know from me, RimSec are going to find you floating in the bay with every bone in your body broken and both your eyes put out.’

  Norton watched, made himself watch. Jeff’s gaze clawed frantically at him, out of a face turning blue. But Sevgi’s fading was crowded into his head like someone shouting themselves hoarse, and it kept him pinned in his seat, watching.

  ‘You killed her, Jeff,’ he said, and his voice had a quiet, reasonable tone to it that felt like the rising edge of madness. ‘Someone’s got to pay.’

 

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