Through Fire (Darkship Book 4)

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Through Fire (Darkship Book 4) Page 26

by Sarah A. Hoyt


  I looked up, suddenly, as things added up behind my eyes. “You mean that everyone here was modified? And how many more people were modified? You said there were other shelters.”

  Basil looked up. He opened his mouth, then snapped it shut, then sighed. “Tens of thousands, at least. That we know and can trace, and can be traced, in my lifetime, maybe a little older, twenty thousand or so. We have…four thousand in various hidden shelters, here and in the continental territories, mostly in Europe.” He took a deep breath, and looked at what must have been my utterly shocked face. “Not all first generation. Not even close. Some are the result of mating between enhanced people whose enhancements breed true.”

  I felt like this was insane. Was everyone modified? Then at the last minute I remembered the difference between Earth and Eden. In Eden having twenty thousand intentionally enhanced people might represent all of the population. In fact, it almost did, though a lot of people didn’t tamper with their children’s fundamental makeup out of religious respect or other considerations. But bioengineering was widely available and got widely employed. Expensive modifications like the ones that created navigators and pilots and a few other highly specialized communities were rare and kept within a certain number of families, normally. But minor modifications, for looks or computational ability, often got bought on a retail basis by prospective parents worried about how their children would turn out. The thing was—

  I paused. The thing was that in Eden, where modifications were out in the open and openly bought, the modifications were not inheritable. They couldn’t be because, if they were, then the companies would shortly not have anything to sell. And it turned out the majority of people were prejudiced towards their kids being maybe only a little better than themselves.

  But on Earth, where modifications were underground, secretive, and run by an over-authoritarian elite, then of course the modifications would be inheritable, and often imposed from above, so that everyone who could be born with enhancements represented a cheap buy for the Good Men. No. That couldn’t be true. Given that sort of setup, how could the Good Men be sure they controlled everyone who was modified for their benefit, or at least that they controlled them so they didn’t turn against the Good Men?

  Then I remembered that the Good Men had a slight quirk absent from the makeup of both Eden and most of the human population on Earth. Because of who they were—the original high IQ Mules, raised to be servants of the bureaucracy but taking power over the bureaucracy itself and blossoming into the biolords—and the way they were brought up, in strict crèches, by people who were afraid of them, they had virtually no loyalty to humanity in general, and very little loyalty to enhanced people.

  It wasn’t so much that they didn’t consider themselves human or thought of humans as objects. They thought of everyone, themselves included, as objects. Humans were just things you played with. Numbers, ciphers. They didn’t even think of themselves as relevant or important. Their upbringing had stripped them of that.

  Normal people, no matter what the logical necessity of the move, wouldn’t be able to have clones of themselves made and raise them as their own children, no matter how detached the raising, and then have them killed in order to steal their bodies. Normal human beings, no matter how maimed or wounded—human beings who thought of themselves as human beings or even as significant in any way beyond a purpose—wouldn’t be able to do that to a child they’d seen grow up.

  I realized, with a sort of inner shake, that I would not be able to do it. Even if I had hated the young person I’d raised, I would not be able to kill him or her in order to keep myself alive and in power.

  But the only thing the Good Men had, the only thing that they lived by and held to, the only thing they wanted, was to preserve their own lives. There was no higher principle. Any they’d been given had failed to take hold. If they’d been given any principles beyond “obey constituted authority”—and I don’t think there had been much—they’d learned better, when they’d realized how thoroughly they’d been manipulated and designed as a sort of superior slave, despite being more capable than those around them.

  The poor creatures had been thrown into the world as a sort of maimed solipsistic paranoids. They not only didn’t consider anyone else real, they didn’t consider themselves particularly real or special either. They had only wanted to survive.

  A bit of that feeling had resulted in my creation and Kit’s, by two who were arguably the best of the Mules. And even if they had repented the impulse that might have led to our destruction ultimately, the impulse had been there.

  The Mules, having become the Good Men, could afford to have vast populations enhanced and not fear them, because the Mules, ultimately, didn’t care how many of their own creations they killed. Hundreds? Thousands? Hundreds of thousands? The ones who rebelled or who didn’t fully participate could be eliminated and the others would be kept on, with the threat of their bioimproving being revealed, of their not being safe, ever, except under the Good Men.

  “How many people are there in Liberte?” I asked.

  “Counting the territories?”

  I nodded.

  “Counting the territories in Europe and the Americas…Oh, thirty million or so,” he said. “Why?”

  “Because,” I said. “We—and by that I mean enhanced people—are still a tiny minority. How could the people who tried to subvert this shelter and possibly the others attempt to rule everyone?”

  Basil shrugged. “I don’t believe they were thinking so much. They were swayed. Told tales. You know, come to our side and we will give you power over the multitudes. You won’t have to hide—”

  Simon said something under his breath. I thought it was “And the Devil took him to a high mountain.” Simon’s references and sources of inspiration were often thoroughly baffling. He drummed his fingers on the table. “More important than calculating how they could have come to believe this is to find out how many other people believed it.” he said, suddenly, and with these words he seemed to draw onto himself the mantel of authority, stopping being what he was—in fact, an unremarkable average-height man with average colored hair and eyes and skin—and seeming to command the attention of everyone in his presence. “And the most important thing to know is many of those people are in our supposed safe places; how many of these people are people we were counting on and, most all of, Basil, what I’d really like to know is how one tells the sheep from the goats.”

  Basil somehow changed, as Simon changed, going from being the confident leader of this base, to being a subordinate, and one who was none too sure of his ground. I couldn’t imagine why, except there was something about Simon’s easy assumption of authority that carried its own conviction with it.

  “That’s all very easy to say,” he said. “But the truth is if they were careful enough to have nothing in writing, or to have hidden the writings they did have, we’ll never find out.”

  Simon looked thunderous. “Which leaves us in the unenviable position of trying to move while we don’t know which of our forces we can trust.”

  “Move?” Basil said. “You mean…counterattack? We don’t have nearly enough people for that. We thought…”

  “You thought Brisbois was just creating a place for me to hide? Several places?”

  Basil shrugged. “I thought—undercover work? Slow?”

  “To be fair,” Brisbois said. “That is what we thought too. That if the Sans Culottes should escape your control it would take us years to regain the city proper, let alone the territories.”

  Simon touched the bridge of his nose with his index finger. I got the feeling he was trying to collect his thoughts, as his inner voice rebelled against that idea of slow and careful infiltration. I wondered if that was how the man he had been cloned from had done it. Surely that would fit his personality type, engineered and educated into him by those who had created him: to be a spy, a chameleon, to manipulate from the outside, slowly moving inside, without ever reveali
ng himself. But Simon didn’t have the same education. Simon was not the original of his genes.

  “We thought,” Brisbois said, “that you could use the shelters to hide in, use the people in them as your infiltrators, slowly work to create a freer government, one which wouldn’t kill people at least. We thought—”

  “Alexis, for the love of Liberte, stop saying we as though that meant something. Unless you’ve acquired multiple personality disorder call it what it is: you thought and you decided. The fact that you were right about the likelihood the Sans Culottes would be corrupted and taken over by your ex-wife does not make me feel better about your initiative. And I’m not sure you shouldn’t have thought about another plan.”

  Alexis opened his hands. I thought that living under an autocratic master who had the power of life and death over you, for any reason or none at all, the man should have developed…fear. That he hadn’t, that he was answering Simon’s rebuke as a rebuke not a threat said a lot about him. And a lot about Simon, I thought, whose character was the sole guarantor of Alexis life in these circumstances. “I said ‘we,’” he said ponderously. “And I meant ‘we.’” He looked up, a look of stern determination on his plain face. “Look, Simon, this is what your father—what the old Good Man did when he felt the crash coming, when he suspected that there might not be a berth in the Je Reviens for him. This is how he planned to survive, and how he ultimately survived.”

  I thought, So I was right, at the same time that Simon looked up startled. “And he managed it, damn him,” Simon said. “To become a prisoner of his role and far too interested in power to ever let go. But, Alexis, I don’t intend to artificially extend my life.”

  “It’s not prolongation,” Alexis said, “You’re enhanced for exceptionally long life. All the Mules were. But the Good Men don’t need longevity, see, so much as pretending they’re like everyone else. If I understood Fa—Doctor Dufort properly, your kind, and maybe ours, though I never asked, could easily expect to live two or three hundred years. To pretend your son inherited would only be needed if you were hiding your essential nature as…ah…created, not born.”

  Simon opened his mouth and I thought he was going to dispute the not-born thing. After all, he’d been born, even if by a surrogate. But suddenly there was a look as though the weight of the world had fallen on his shoulders. “Damn you, Alexis. I don’t want to imitate my soi-disant father. If I thought that’s what awaited me, I’d blow my brains clean out, before you could force me into that position. I want to—”

  “Pan for gold in the territories,” Brisbois said, and there was a hint of teasing to his voice, much like an older sibling amused at the younger sibling’s childish dreams. I thought they’d quite forgotten Basil, and Mailys, and even Jonathan LaForce, who was following all of this in grim silence, his mouth tightly compressed, his dark eyebrows low over his eyes.

  He made an explosive sound at Brisbois’s rejoinder, but didn’t say anything, and his noise—likely involuntary—got no more than a puzzled frown from Basil.

  “No,” Simon said. “Not that. I mean, not my ambitions, but what I want for Liberte, what must be done. I want to stop the killings. I want to make sure there is a semi-sane regime in place. I’m not an idealist, and I’m not religious, like the Usaians, which is why I never joined, despite Abigail Remy’s proselytizing. I’m a realist and I’ve read enough history to understand that there is no perfect regime, not here, not ever. There are accommodations people make to survive for the next century, the next decade, or the next week.

  “I know my history well. I know a well-run dictatorship can be better than a badly run democracy. We have examples aplenty of it. Multiplying the judgement of morons doesn’t suddenly make them geniuses, and most people are at best average, and even geniuses can be morons when it comes to governing others.

  “I joined the Sans Culottes because they had started up already and they had a romantic vision of the government of old France. That’s fine. The Usaians have a mystical vision of the government of the old North America, even though from sources of the time, the regime worked most often in the breach. It made sense—just like the Usaians believe in the substance of their form of government and ignore the faults in it—the new Sans Culottes preferred to believe that the problems with the revolution, the massacres, the fights, were incidental and not endemic to the system.

  “I had a slightly different idea. I wanted to believe, but I couldn’t quite. When you try to make everyone equal in results, it’s going to end in blood. It always has. But the thing is, I thought it might work. I thought it had a chance. The regime of my late, unlamented progenitor had leveled a lot of the differences between people, when it came right down to the essentials. Yes, some people were richer than others, but all lived about the same lifestyle, except for my esteemed Père. Only it didn’t stay that way. The Usaians—damn them—and their propaganda coup revealed that the Good Men are the same as the Mules, the same as the biolords back to the twenty-first century. Not the same in questionable ethics and power grabbing, but the same in everything but name. And that let all the demons of Hell loose upon my kind. And the demons of my kind, too, those who think we should rule humanity. Alexis, I don’t know what you meant, but the last thing I want to do is to repeat the whole miserable cycle.”

  “Well, there,” Alexis said, and opened his hands on the table. His hands looked incongruous on the polished table, too large, too calloused, too blunt-fingered. “I didn’t intend for you to become like…like the previous ruler. I didn’t intend for you to be a ruler at all. Your peculiar talents of subversion can be used in the task of creating a better government, as well as a more or less autocratic one. That’s all I meant for you to do.”

  Jonathan LaForce’s eyebrows seemed to lower still more, till all that was visible of his eyes was a vague glint beneath them. But he didn’t say anything and I thought neither Alexis nor Simon were aware of him. Nor of the rest of us.

  I cleared my throat and both turned to look at me.

  “The thing is,” I said. “You don’t have time for that. Whatever you thought Simon was going to do, Brisbois, and whatever Simon would like or would not like to do is all for naught. Jonathan says, and I believe him, that forces are massing to come and crush Liberte. Or more specifically, to crush the revolution and to install a Good Man in Simon’s place, since he’s presumed dead.

  “The forces of the Good Men could not have hoped to invade and defeat Liberte when it was functioning, as you told me the night of the ball.” Was that only a few days ago? It seemed like a lifetime. “They were occupied with their war on the Usaians, too busy to commit to a war with us also. But now it’s not a war. This seacity is a smoldering ruin, and Madame’s forces aren’t able to control day-to-day crime. In another two days, the invaders will probably be greeted as liberators. In a week, they surely will, and, correct me if I’m wrong, the usual method of taking over a seacity is to have the Good Man invading kill everyone capable of resisting, right? And then everything goes on as usual.”

  “So?” Simon said. “What do you suggest we should do about it?” It struck me that he was unusually serious, then I realized it wasn’t seriousness, so much, as the fact that maybe for the first time he was talking to me as he talked to Alexis. There wasn’t even the slightest appreciative glint in his eyes.

  I found the rest of the room looking at me. It wasn’t a new experience. In the past, at home, I’d often felt responsible for coming up with an action plan, and people tended to respond by expecting me to say or do something. The difference was that now I really didn’t have any idea what to do.

  The first thoughts that came to mind was that this was not my world and not my problem. But I’d involved myself in its destinies, put myself in peril and put them in peril too, to try to save Simon. Which meant in a way it was my responsibility. Because I’d taken it.

  More than that, I intended to stay on this world. It had been a necessary decision to avoid my own troubles back ho
me. But the decision had troubles of its own. It had given me a chance to escape attempts to marry me off to someone whose only qualification was being genetically engineered for a job complementary to the one I’d been created and taught to do. On the other hand, I couldn’t say I’d much appreciate living under the regime of the Good Men. In fact, I wouldn’t appreciate it at all.

  And if the Good Men swallowed Liberte, a very likely circumstance at this point in time, they were just as likely to tamp down the Usaians and the remaining foci of rebellion. Each seacity, each parcel of territories returned to the ancien regime would mean that much more chance of the old ways winning. At any rate, there is an inertia in the affairs of humans, that tends to pull people towards what’s familiar, well known, and therefore seen as safe.

  I started talking, more for the sake of outlining things as I saw them than to say anything of substance. But everyone expected me to say something productive, or at least Simon was looking at me expectantly, so I said, “If the Good Men take over Liberte, and they could do it walking at this point, it will be that much easier to stop all the other rebellions. And then their regime will return.”

  I saw Brisbois’s face compose itself into something like shock. I didn’t know if he was reacting to my saying it aloud or to my saying it at all; whether he thought it was shocking I would dare to voice it, or if he’d never thought of it before. I responded with something that answered both instances. “Well,” I said. “They have managed to hold power for three hundred years. Longer, if you count the time before the Turmoils. They were designed for it, you might say. Why do you think they won’t return to it? Surely there have been rebellions before. I didn’t study your history, but I’ve overheard…”

  Simon made a noise. “Isolated,” he said. “Small. Not—” His voice seemed to strangle upon itself, as though the import of what he was saying had just hit him. “I take your meaning. If they isolate us, they will tamp down this one too.”

 

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