Read Arcadia Online

Authors: Iain Pears

Arcadia (66 page)

‘Then who does?’

‘I do,’ said Emily from the corner of the room. ‘It is concealed, and if you try to take it by force it will be destroyed. From what I understand of its nature, merely rendering a small section unreadable will make the whole thing useless, is that not the case?’

‘Then I ask you to give it to me.’

‘Certainly. By all means.’

Kendred instantly rounded on her.

‘Are you mad, girl? Don’t you know who this is?’

‘I do. This is the man who controls the fate of the world, whether we like it or not.’

Oldmanter’s eyes showed his amusement. ‘Quite right.’

‘Unless I destroy that little booklet,’ she continued, ‘in which case the machine you are all so interested in will be just a useless piece of ironware. Correct? You are not clever enough to reproduce Angela Meerson’s work and this is the only copy of it.’

‘An interesting opening, young woman. Let us say, for a moment, that your statement is correct. What do you do next?’

‘I make modest demands that you will find easy to accept, in exchange for giving you what you want.’

‘Oh, dear! You are going to beg me to abandon the campaign against the Retreats and the renegades. How wearisome of you!’

‘No. I want you to increase it.’

‘I beg your pardon?’ Oldmanter visibly perked up at hearing something new for once.

‘Shut them down. Gather the inmates together, by force if necessary.’

She got no further, though. Kendred, his face white with fury, spoke once more. ‘Stop this now.’

‘I know what I’m doing.’

‘We must talk. Now.’

He all but dragged her from the room. Oldmanter did not move to stop them, but nodded to one of the guards.

‘Watch them. If either makes any dangerous moves, then shoot them both.’

Then he turned to Hanslip, who was still standing in the corner, watching in shock. ‘Oh, take him away,’ he said. ‘I can’t stand to look at him.’

*

The room was empty except for Jack and Oldmanter, who sat there and hummed to himself for a while.

Eventually, though, he spoke. ‘Are you surprised, Mr More?’

‘By you allowing them to leave the room, or by what she just said?’

‘The second. It is obviously safer if it is handed over voluntarily. As she said, it is unwise to risk damage to the text. If I have to use force, then I will. But I would prefer not to.’

‘I did not expect it.’

‘Nor I. She is an interesting young woman. But each must use such advantages as they have, and what loyalty does she owe to any of us? Can anyone offer her a better price than I can, do you think? It is sensible to sell the information to the highest bidder, although I must admit I assumed the stupid principles of these people would get in the way. They always seem to prefer suffering and self-sacrifice to common sense.’

Oldmanter moved slightly in his chair and Jack saw again how very old and frail this man really was. ‘I was impressed by your behaviour,’ Oldmanter continued. ‘You must have known I might have ordered your execution for disobeying me just now.’

‘I gave my loyalty to Dr Hanslip,’ Jack said. ‘I was bound until it was clear the tie was dissolved.’

‘And now it is. So what will you do?’

‘Look for another job, I suppose. Unless you plan to have me locked up.’

‘I do not punish loyalty. Besides, I can think of a better use for you. You will continue in your present employment, but obedient to me directly. Do you accept?’

‘Of course.’ Jack spoke without hesitation.

‘That is settled then.’

‘What will you do with Emily?’

‘Are you worried for her? Don’t be. I will give her everything she wants. I imagine her demands will be limited.’

‘Why would she trust you?’

‘Because I am a man of my word,’ he said in a slightly hurt tone. ‘It is my pleasure to be so. I do not win by cheating. Where is the achievement in that?’

‘Hanslip said this technology is too dangerous to use.’

Oldmanter laughed. ‘A remarkable change of mind, don’t you think?’

‘You think he was lying?’

‘I know he was. There were very advanced plans to use that machine lying in his desk when we took control of his institute, and we have not found a shred of evidence to suggest it is dangerous. Besides, we have analysed the problem ourselves. I put the matter to a committee of the most senior figures in physics. We will not take undue risks, I assure you. It is in good hands; rather better than it was before.’

*

Emily was expressionless as she led Kendred back into the room.

‘Have you persuaded your associate?’ Oldmanter asked.

‘You may have the document.’

‘The trouble with that,’ Oldmanter said, ‘is that once you have done so, you will have no way of ensuring that I keep my side of any bargain. Mr More here pointed that out, which was quite offensive of him, but it has a measure of truth to it.’

‘I know. But you will.’

‘Why do you think that?’

‘Because my price will accomplish your greatest desires, provide you with an interesting experiment and gain you worldwide applause,’ she said.

‘You are very attentive to my needs. Go ahead.’

‘I want a universe.’

Oldmanter paused, genuinely caught on the hop for the first time in decades. ‘How splendid!’ he said. ‘That is what you meant by a modest demand, eh?’

‘As fast as is reasonable,’ Emily went on, ‘you will make your machines operational. You will then transmit those members of Retreats who wish to depart. You will announce the discovery and, as a way of demonstrating its power, announce also that you are financing a programme to rid the world of all subversive,
non-productive influences like us. The acclaim will be considerable. Then you can get on with whatever you have in mind.’

Oldmanter was impressed. Jack, standing to one side, could see that he was following her train of thought as fast as she was laying it out; the two of them were in step. It was an extraordinary thing to witness.

‘Now that, young lady, is a proposal worth listening to. I am inclined to agree just because of the scale of your nerve.’

‘Think of the new data you will gather, the organisational expertise. Think of the gratitude as well. You will recoup the cost in no time, and most will be research expenses you would incur anyway.’

‘What a shame,’ Oldmanter said appreciatively, ‘that you are a renegade. If only my employees had half your imagination. I don’t suppose I could tempt you …’

‘No.’

‘Ah well.’

‘Ah well, indeed,’ Emily said. ‘That’s the deal. Accept and you can have the data. Refuse and you can’t.’

Oldmanter was not a man to hesitate. His success had been built on seeing an opportunity and grabbing it wholeheartedly.

‘Obviously I accept. As you say, it is greatly to my advantage.’

‘Good.’

He nodded. ‘We will go to Mull, set up and calibrate. As long as there has been no substantial damage and my people haven’t gone overboard and razed the place, it will take a couple of weeks. Then we will have to test it with a few volunteers to make sure it is functioning properly. We will construct a bigger machine, building in what we have learned. Then perhaps five thousand a day, working up to ten thousand as more machines come on stream. This will continue until all volunteers have gone.’

‘Then you will leave us alone.’

‘Oh, certainly. We will switch to a different universe for our purposes. You may have a life of rustic bliss festering in primitivism until the day every single one of you dies.’

‘One more thing. I would like that poor man to have the chance of coming too. Hanslip.’

‘Why?’

‘Just a pointless act of kindness.’

‘If you want him, you can have him. We can say he died in captivity. Suicide or something. It may be as good as suicide anyway. You know that, don’t you?’

‘I am quite aware of the risks.’

Emily walked over and gave him the Devil’s Handwriting, hesitating for only a fraction of a second before putting it into his hand. ‘We have established, by the way, that it is of very recent vintage. It looks old and was evidently meant to convince people it is old. It defeats most tests, but it is quite definitely a fake. Don’t believe anyone who tells you differently; we are experts in this field.’ She gave Kendred a severe look as she turned away again.

Oldmanter flicked through its pages with deep interest for several minutes, then let out a sigh of satisfaction. ‘We will leave for Mull in an hour.’

*

For Oldmanter, having the girl voluntarily give him the manuscript was yet another extraordinary piece of good fortune. A more sentimental man would have wondered if fate wanted him to have this technology.

He could most definitely afford to appear generous, not least because no generosity was involved. He would dispose of the renegades and they would make the task easier by rushing to volunteer. They would herd themselves into the transportation device, beg to be dispatched. If anything demonstrated their unfitness to live, that was it.

Of course, it wasn’t that simple. There were the needs of research as well. This was brought up the following day, when he settled down to map out the schedule with his closest advisers.

‘Every single one?’ they asked. ‘There must be millions of them.’

‘It will be spread over a period of years. I agreed to send them; I did not agree to a timetable. We get rid of them, at any rate, and subsequent developments can be kept pure of social infections. In due course proper colonists will arrive and they will need labour. Has there been any work on which period is best suited for colonisation?’

‘As you know, sir, the greater the distance, the greater the amount of power needed.’

‘Meaning?’

‘Ideally we would send people to an epoch when there are no human settlements, but that would require huge amounts of power and they would arrive with nothing. If we could commandeer existing infrastructure and send them less far, then we could keep costs down dramatically.’

‘I thought that was ruled out because of the difficulties of dealing with the indigenous population. I remember talking to Grange about it.’

‘Yes, sir, but that was when the plan was to invade and conquer, then use the indigenous population as slave labour. Hanslip sketched out an alternative which makes this notion more viable. He was toying with the idea that the cheapest approach would be to encourage the native population to kill themselves by exploding a bomb at a period of heightened tension during the nuclear age. Each side would blame the other, and the subsequent war would do most of the work for us; if need be we could unleash biological weapons on any survivors. When the world is clean and empty, we can begin transporting the settlers. It would mean moving people only a couple of hundred years, and despite the damage there would be substantial infrastructure still available. It is a highly imaginative solution, and very cost-effective. The added virtue of the plan is that we could begin almost immediately.’

‘What period?’

‘The memorandum pinpointed the most vulnerable moments, running from 1962 to 2024. We will use one of them.’

‘No moral objections from anyone? I don’t want to be hauled in front of some ethics committee.’

‘There can be no moral obligation to people who are both long dead and, as far as we are concerned, do not exist. We have tested that hypothesis thoroughly.’

‘No safety issues? For us, I mean.’

‘No. Again, the panel of physicists has reviewed the matter and finds no problems. They dismissed Angela Meerson’s theories as absurd.’

‘Then I suggest you start the preparations. The sooner we see if this thing works, the better.’

‘There is one other thing. We only got the vote from the physicists by promising one of them that we would conduct experiments into future transportation. He is preparing a paper based on some of the captured material and wants to ensure that we can send people forwards, as well as back. We’ll need to do something to keep him happy, and we will have to explore this in due course anyway to maintain proper communication between worlds.’

‘I do hate these people,’ Oldmanter said. ‘Still, give him what he wants. And I think it would be best to terminate Dr Hanslip. It occurs to me that if we send him with the renegades, he may have sufficient knowledge to re-create the machine eventually. If I am going to spend a fortune to get rid of them, I don’t want them turning up again in a few generations.’

60

Pamarchon walked hand in hand with Rosalind on his way to the meeting hall, neither saying much for some time, and both merely content that the other was there.

‘Better than I could have hoped for,’ she said. ‘One might even say it is a miracle.’

He took his hand away from hers and looked at her with a worried expression.

‘What’s the matter?’

‘It is a miracle. So how can I ask you to be my wife now?’

‘Whatever do you mean?’

‘I have seen who you are. How could I presume to ask for your hand now?’

‘Oh, stuff and nonsense, Pamarchon, son of whoever. Stuff and nonsense. Don’t you dare talk to me like that,’ Rosalind replied in alarm. ‘Listen, I will tell you once, and once only. There is nothing magical about me. There is nothing even particularly special or beautiful about me either, unless you choose to see me like that.’ She paused. ‘You can, you know,’ she hinted. ‘If you want to.’

‘But back there …?’

‘It’s a long story, and a strange one. I know it seems very unlikely and everything. That’s just because you don’t know the whole story, you see? Everybody only knows a bit of it. So they think there must be something incredibly meaningful about it. Why, Henary thought the world was going to end.’

‘Esilio, though …’

‘Ah, yes. He’s a bit difficult to explain. But I’ll tell you one thing. He had no more idea of who killed your uncle than anyone else. All he did was sit there and get everyone else to do the
work for him. He didn’t figure out how or why Jaqui killed your uncle; Henary did. He hadn’t the faintest idea what was going on. Not a clue. He was very good at hiding it, but then he is a professor.’

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