The beginning of the trip seemed long; but then, before she expected it, she saw ahead a gentle slope leading down toward a children's playground and a small schoolhouse. She would have sworn that she did not remember the setting, but on first sight it became immediately familiar. The car rolled down to the foot of the hill, halted beside the schoolhouse, and switched itself off. The AVC screen went blank.
"We're arrived," Celine said. "Tell Mr. Rolfe we're here. No, better than that." She reached out for the headset clipped to the partition in front of her. "I'll do it myself. Hello, Gordy Rolfe. Are you there?"
"Of course I'm here." The gruff reply came at once. He must have been waiting for her call—probably monitoring her progress. The Argos Group possessed the world's most advanced surveillance systems. "Do you know where the elevators are?"
"I know where they used to be. In the back of the schoolhouse."
"They haven't moved. Come on down. No, I don't want the Secret Service meatheads. Just you."
He was observing them. The first of the security staff had climbed out of the vehicle ahead of Celine.
"They're supposed to accompany me wherever I go." Celine saw Chesley Reiter, her security chief, nodding vigorously.
"Supposed to." Rolfe produced a harsh sound that could be interpreted as a laugh. "That's a load of bull, and you know it. Who was with you when you went down to New Rio to see Nick Lopez? We do it my way or not at all. You want to see me? Then you come down by yourself."
Celine glanced at Chesley Reiter, shrugged, and climbed out of the car. The sky was black, even though it was only midafternoon. To the west she saw forked lightning. "Ches, take your staff and find somewhere comfortable. I'll call when I need to be picked up."
"With respect, Madam President, we'll wait for you here."
Chesley Reiter did not add, just in case. Nor did Celine argue. It was his job, his decision. Celine went inside the schoolhouse without another word. One thing about being President, no one's time was as important as yours. If necessary, Ches and the security detail would wait all night.
The inside of the schoolhouse had changed little in the twenty-seven years since Celine had last seen it. There had never been toys—the Legion of Argos did not permit such distractions—but the old wooden desks still sat in neat lines, and the turn-of-the-century teaching aids sat by the wall. Celine picked up an orange folder from one of the diminutive desks, blew away the dust, and opened it. The lined sheets inside, covered with a child's careful lettering, were yellowed and brittle.
She looked around. Not everything was unchanged. Gordy Rolfe's personal interests showed in the tiny red eyes set at each corner of the room. Celine had never seen anything so compact. The new surveillance system must be at the limit of today's technology. Gordy's inventions in fact defined those limits.
As she hesitated, his voice came from nowhere.
"Go to the elevators and take the left-hand one all the way down. I'll be waiting."
And watching.
Celine wondered. The Argos Group was famous for its up-to-date and detailed knowledge of what went on all around the world. Did Gordy Rolfe's remote observation systems extend to the White House—even, perhaps, into the Oval Office itself? After all, there were maintenance rolfes there, even though you rarely saw one. Could they be the source of Nick Lopez's information about the meeting with Maddy Wheatstone?
Old advice, but still good: Assume nothing is off the record, nothing that you ever say, do, or write.
The bottom button of the elevator panel bore an icon like a flaming torch. Celine pressed it and began a slow, uneasy descent.
He was waiting when the door finally opened. He was even smaller than she remembered, unshaven, and dressed in a black jumpsuit with a leather belt and its array of clip-on instruments. He was scruffier than usual—his hair was greasy, and his hands were smudged with oil or graphite.
"Esteemed Madam President." Gray eyes glittered behind the outsized and antiquated frames. His mirthless smile suggested that the honorific was no more than a form of sarcasm.
Celine remembered that he tolerated no form of physical contact. Just as well, since she had no desire to touch those blackened, clawlike fingers. Instead of holding out her hand she nodded and said, "Gordy Rolfe. I'm glad you were able to meet with me."
"Good. Let's see if you stay glad."
He turned and led the way up a steep spiral staircase. Celine followed. A round hatch brought her through into a broad circular chamber bounded by a thick transparent wall. Beyond the wall she saw what seemed to be a wilderness of vegetation, but she paid little attention to that or anything else because of the other contents of the room.
Just a few yards from her squatted a small bipedal dinosaur. It was, she felt sure, a carnivore; a genetically down-bred form from one of the largest meat-eaters, T. rex, or maybe Gorgosaurus. The creature was muzzled and tethered by a short chain to a heavy ring bolt in the floor of the room. The blue-black eyes turned in the oversized scaly head and fixed their dead gaze on Celine. The mouth opened as far as it could against the green muzzle, to show the tips of white needle teeth. The animal growled, deep in its throat, and the smell of rotting meat that gusted out made Celine hold her breath. The animal stood up and moved toward the newcomers until it reached the limit of its chain.
"Place is a bit of a mess." Rolfe walked, unconcerned, to within two feet of the chained carnosaur. "Come sit down."
Celine edged after him, and saw that the place was indeed a mess. Rolfe's desk and a nearby table were covered with a clutter of electronics and test units. On the floor beside the table, upside-down and eviscerated, lay a trio of eight-legged machines.
"Those look like rolfes." Celine dumped a tangle of wires and a miniaturized scanning probe microscope onto the floor and sat down. The carnosaur was a deliberate attempt to make her ill at ease, but she refused to acknowledge its presence. She wanted Gordy Rolfe to know he had failed.
If he had failed. It was hard to sit calmly with your back to the minisaur, especially when you could hear its harsh breathing and the grating of stressed chain links.
"They are rolfes—of a sort." Gordy perched on the arm of a chair, so Celine would have to look up at him. "I originally designed them to function in there." He jerked his thumb toward the wall and the jungle beyond. "Now I'm doing a bit more fiddling, adding a few special functions. The new ones have the same general organization, but they'll be smarter and more versatile. The sort of things your space dummies say they're going to need, but won't get."
Deliberate provocation, designed to start an argument. Celine delayed her response, swiveling in her chair to add to her original first impression of the chamber. The floor was dust-free and clear of small objects. Cleaning machines would remove those, also the dust and dirt and spilled liquids. These machines—rolfes of the most primitive kind—were clearly in use here. Two moved across the room as she watched, little low-end servers no more than a foot long and a couple of inches off the floor. They would ignore large objects, or at most clean, lift, and replace them exactly.
Part of the room had been partitioned off, and she could see the end of a bed through an opening in the waist-high barrier. There were no doors, beyond one that led through to the encircling area of dense vegetation. A heap of spare machine parts lay in disarray against the wall on the side opposite to the chained carnosaur. She recognized axles, gears, motors, gauges, and metal rods and pipes of many sizes. A bench nearby was a jumble of wrenches, saws, pliers, hammers, and pincers. Stacked against the wall next to that stood a stack of cages, each one the size of a large chest. Changes in light and dark behind narrow slits in the front of the cages showed something moving within, but Celine could not determine what it might be. Next to the chests, incongruously, stood an old-fashioned bicycle.
"Do you ride that?"
"Sure." Rolfe had his eyes fixed on Celine, as intent and unblinking in his gaze as the tethered carnosaur. The communications unit on his desk was buzz
ing with an external call, but he took no notice. "Got to stay healthy, you know. Mens sana in corpore sano. A healthy mind in a healthy body."
Did he ride the bike down here, somewhere out there beyond the tangle of jungle? No. The whole thing was an obscure joke. Gordy Rolfe rode nothing. His face had the gray pallor of a man who shunned all forms of exercise. Furthermore, the bicycle sat in front of a dozen other anachronisms. Celine pointed to a radio that was not of this century, and from its appearance hardly of the last. "I suppose you use that, too."
"No. Too valuable. It's a real rarity. The woman who sold it to me guaranteed that Noah used it for ship-to-shore."
"Why did you really agree to meet with me? You seem to have made up your mind that you won't make more rolfes available on Sky City."
"I did so because I owe you a favor."
"I can't think what."
"I've owed it to you for a long time. If you hadn't come here, Pearl Lazenby might not have been captured. I might never have got my start in electronics, never been able to found the Argos Group."
"But you knew that so far as I was concerned, my visit here would be a waste of time. You'd already decided that you wouldn't provide the rolfes."
"I never said that."
"Would you meet with Wilmer Oldfield and Astarte Vjansander, and hear what they have to say?"
"Waste of time. I know what they told Nick Lopez. Crazy. Somebody out at Alpha Centauri decided humans were a nuisance, so they deliberately destroyed a whole stellar system and made an impossible supernova just to zap us. That about it?"
"There's more to it than that." But it was disturbingly close to Star and Wilmer's view.
Rolfe was grinning down at her from his perch on the chair arm. "I'm sure there's more. I don't need to hear it, because the whole idea is pure bullshit. You may believe it, but on this one you're the person who's not rational. And I'll tell you why you're not. Fucking scrambles the brain, and you used to fuck old Wilmer."
Celine wanted to say, How on earth do you know that? Her second thought, That was nearly thirty years ago! was not much better.
She said, "What about Nick Lopez? He heard Wilmer, and he believed him. Are you telling me Lopez fucked Wilmer Oldfield, too?"
"I wouldn't put it past him. But I think he's more interested in fucking Oldfield's little black chippie Vjansander, even though she's female. Wouldn't you agree?"
Celine stood up. "I'm leaving. I have work to do. This is a stupid waste of time."
"Maybe not. Sit down. Forget who's screwing who, and what I believe and don't believe. I might be willing to provide what you say you need—if the terms are right."
"What terms? Money?"
"No—though I do run a business." Rolfe strained forward, eyes gleaming. In intensity there was little to choose between the eager man and the carnosaur heaving at its chain. "I do want something, and it's not money. Get it for me, and you'll have rolfes for Sky City. All the rolfes you want."
"Why didn't you ask Lopez? He controls more of the world's resources than I do."
"Not this particular resource. I want land—this land, here where we sit and all around us. From ground level to the center of the Earth. I'm willing to pay, but the United States has to deed it to me for my lifetime plus fifty years."
"What do you want it for?"
"That's my business. But I have to be totally outside U.S. laws and U.S. justice. I must be able to do what I like, on it and in it—and with whatever lies within it."
Celine glanced at the chained carnosaur. Genetic combination work of that kind was not easy. Within the United States it was also tightly controlled and monitored. If Gordy Rolfe had performed the gene mix himself, without licenses or oversight, he was already in violation of a score of statutes. Celine could remember no recent applications for similar experiments.
But why not go offshore, to any of a dozen Golden Ring labs that would happily do the work and deliver the results?
Because a crippled, wizened man enjoyed playing God? That she could believe. But she suspected a stronger motive. This underground stronghold was where Gordy Rolfe had been raised. It was his home, his fortress, his sanctuary. He wanted a guarantee that he could never be made to leave, for any reason.
"How much land are we talking about?"
"A circle of four miles, centered on the schoolhouse. There are no occupied houses, and I have checked ownership. Every landowner has already agreed to sell. The Argos Group is ready to make final purchase."
"I assume you realize that you can't be outside U.S. jurisdiction unless you are counted as a foreign territory. That's difficult to arrange legally."
"Difficult, but it happens all the time."
"Between countries, not individuals."
"I don't want you telling me how hard it is. I'm telling you how it has to be. You get me the land, you get more and better rolfes. Otherwise, forget it."
An independent country, completely surrounded by a single other country. There were precedents. Lesotho. Vatican City. More recently, Basque and Kurdistan. The area that Rolfe was demanding was tiny, but the political problems would be immense. Even the Indian nations on U.S. territory were subject to most U.S. laws. Celine began a mental count of the different Cabinet-level departments involved: State, Commerce, Interior, Agriculture, Defense, Transportation. After six she gave up. Congress would have to agree, and that might be the biggest hurdle. If it could be done at all, it would probably take years.
"I don't know. The best I can promise you is that I'll try. But it won't happen overnight." There was the understatement of the century. "Nothing in government happens fast."
"One reason I'd never work there."
"We need the rolfes at once."
"Then you're lucky I'm not the government. I'm willing to deliver. And I'm willing to wait for your part."
Celine stared at him in amazement. "Are you implying that you'll make the rolfes available?"
"Sounds like it, don't you think?" Rolfe lifted himself laboriously from the arm of the chair and wandered away behind the desk. "You do your bit," he said over his shoulder, "and I'll arrange a first shipment for three days from now. One other thing, though. These rolfes will have new circuits in them, still unprotected by patents. You tell your people to keep their hands off. No opening up. No examination of the entrails."
"I see no difficulty with that."
"Then we're all settled."
"You don't want something in writing from me?"
"Saying what?" He was lifting a cage from the stack, picking it up as though it was almost too heavy for him. Why didn't he tell the rolfes to lift it?
He went on, "Suppose you did give me a piece of paper. What could you say? 'I, Celine Tanaka, promise to do my best to get for Gordy Rolfe the land that he wants.' That's not worth shit in a court of law. You know it. But it's all you can offer."
"I will do my best."
"And I'm accepting that you will. So everything's fine."
Celine doubted that. Everything had been too easy. What had she missed? Rolfe went on, as though the discussion of rolfes and land rights was over and done with, "While you're here I want to show you something. See what I've got?"
The communications center was buzzing again to indicate an incoming call. He continued to ignore it. He turned a knob on the top of the cage and the slits on its front widened. Celine saw white whiskers and a pink questing nose.
"It's—a rat." She felt ridiculous. "Isn't it?"
"Sort of. Actually, it's a hundred and twenty rats." He lifted the cage with a great effort and carried it toward the leashed carnosaur. He paused out of reach, lowered the cage, and carefully pushed it forward. The scaly head dipped to peer in through the slits and the creature snuffled noisily.
Gordy Rolfe nodded approvingly. "The rats haven't been fed for a long time. Neither has the minirex. Rats are one of his favorite foods. If he could get at them, they'd be doomed. Small mammal against big dinosaur. A one-pounder against a ninety-pound
meat-eater. You'd think the mammal would have no chance. Agreed?"
Celine said nothing. If Gordy Rolfe was losing his sanity, he might have any unspeakable thing in mind.
"No opinion?" Rolfe asked. "Well, let's find out."
"Whatever it is, I don't want to see it," Celine said loudly.
Rolfe took no notice. He touched a series of buttons on a device clipped to the belt of his jumpsuit. The green restraining muzzle on the carnosaur clicked open and fell to the ground. The animal leaned back on its thick haunches and opened its mouth wide. The tongue appeared—a gleaming leathery strip of black with a delicate forked end. Inch-long white teeth stood out against the mottled red-and-black background of the roof of the mouth.
Celine resisted the urge to back away. The carnosaur was still safely held by the thick chain. But it was strong. When it lowered its head and butted at the front of the cage, the solid frame dented.
"He really wants those rats," Rolfe said happily. "He can smell them, and he knows they're his dinner. You'd be a candidate for dinner, too, if he could get at you."
His fingers were again at the controller on his belt. There was a whirring of an electric motor and the front of the cage lifted. A single gray rat darted out and paused, a front paw raised. Before it could move, the minisaur swooped. It rose with the rat impaled on its long teeth, squeaking and wriggling in agony. Blood ran down the blunt jaw. The minisaur's head snapped back sharply. The rat was tossed in the air, caught, and swallowed in a single gulp.
"You might expect the rest of the rats to huddle in the cage," Rolfe said cheerily. He moved a little closer to Celine. "Or maybe you think they ought to come out and try to run away. That seems like the smart thing to do. The minirex is so much bigger and stronger than they are, it outmasses all of them put together. Worse than that, their teeth can't penetrate the armored scales. And the minirex can only reach to the limit of its chain. What would you do, Madam President, if you were the rats? Would you run away?"
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