Read Deus Ex - Icarus Effect Online
Authors: James Swallow
"You next" Powell ordered.
Saxon frowned and made the drop; it was less than a meter and a half of open air, but a sudden burst of wind shear hit him like a punch in the
gut. He felt his foot touch the curve of the hull and slip out from under. His balance wasn't there and he was falling.
Suddenly, slender but strong fingers were gripping his wrist tightly. It gave him the moment he needed, and Saxon's cyberarm snagged a cable
and held fast. He turned his head to see Kelso holding him steady with no little effort.
Saxon nodded his thanks and scrambled back up the curve of the hull. Powell and the last of his men dropped to the deck as the veetol curved
away, and he led them forward to a windbreak and a hatch set flush with the hull. D-Bar barged his way to the front and made sure he was first
in. The rest of them followed suit. The hatch slammed shut as he dropped into the airship's maintenance bay, cutting out the roaring cold. He
frowned; his face was raw with windburn.
"You okay?" Kelso asked.
He nodded and gestured to his cyberlegs. "It's these new pins. Still working out the gyro synch. Thanks for the assist, though. Hope you didn't
strain anything."
"It was just reflex," she snapped, suddenly terse.
"One suh-skydive without a chute is enough f-for anyone," said D-Bar, fighting back the shivers.
"Can't argue with you there," Saxon replied, with feeling.
"Okay, listen up," Powell ordered. "The zep crew know the drill. They don't ask, we don't tell. The ship'll make a speed-run over the
Greenland-Iceland-UK gap and then on down to Switzerland." He looked at them all in turn. "We need to be ready to go the moment we reach
Geneva, so I advise you all to get some rest, because the moment we touch down, we don't stop until the Tyrants are dealt with, you read me?"
The other men gave a chorus of nods, and Saxon glanced at D-Bar. The young hacker was quivering and wiping tears from his ruddy face.
"Wow," he managed, crack-throated, "that was some rush, huh?"
"Get below," said Powell, cutting off any reply.
Geneva International Airport—Grand-Saconnex—Switzerland
It was late evening, and a light drizzle was falling in desultory waves across the gray runway and the aircraft apron. Namir listened to the rattle
of the raindrops off the apex of the open hangar cowling overhead; the wide, low metal shed was dimly lit so as not to draw attention from the
civilian traffic passing only a few hundred meters from the nose cone of the Tyrant aircraft parked within. Once again, the jet's livery had been
reprogrammed and reconfigured to conceal its true nature. Currently it wore the black and gold of the private military contractor Belltower.
The PMC had a long-standing relationship with the Swiss government that proved a useful cover for the Tyrants. They would be left to their
own devices.
Namir walked the length of the aircraft, casting a glance across the darkened hangar to where Hermann and Barrett were working at the back
of an unmarked commercial van. The ruin of the German's right eye was hidden under an adhesive patch, but he showed no signs of suffering
for the injury. Namir didn't intervene; they knew their jobs, and after the recent incident on board the plane, they knew better than to do
anything that might be considered a further failure of their duties. He reached the jet's cargo hatch and halted, studying the door. The seal was
undamaged, but there were clear signs of surface damage around the hinges and opening mechanism. It had never been designed to be
operated while airborne.
He sensed someone approaching and turned. Federova walked toward him, folding down a hood from her dark hair, flicking rain from her
shoulders. Her expression was unreadable, but Namir knew her well enough to see the irritation lurking there. She didn't enjoy the surveillance
operations; she liked the hunt and the kill better than the stalking. "You're late," he said.
She looked up and saw the same scarring on the hull, and cast a questioning look at him. He smiled slightly. Yelena loved the sound of her own
silence; sometimes it seemed as if he had never known her to speak at all.
"It's nothing of concern," he noted. "I'm afraid Ben Saxon made a decision to part company with us. He chose the time and place rather poorly."
Her eyes narrowed and she made a throat-cutting gesture.
"Likely." He held out a hand, changing the subject. "So. Give it to me."
Federova produced a small digital slate from her pocket and handed it over. Namir tapped the screen and scrolled through the images in the
memory. The display was full of shots of the Metropol Grande, one of the more opulent of Geneva's great hotels. The footage highlighted
locations for monitor cameras and security posts around the front entrance and throughout the underground garage beneath the building;
others showed corridors on the executive penthouse level, accessways, and the like. The last image was at an angle, a surreptitious shot
captured in a moment of opportunity. In the frame was an older man flanked by a coterie of bodyguards and personal assistants. The profile of
William Taggart's face was unmistakable. He scanned the other people in the frame, measuring them against himself, looking for anything that
could be a threat. Some of the faces he was already familiar with from the files that Temple had supplied to the Tyrants; there was Isaias
Sandoval, the Humanity Front's right-hand man and chief of staff alongside Taggart's personal assistant Elaine Peller, and a few others. Not one
of them possessed even the most basic of augmentations. Namir wasn't foolish enough to believe that his implants made him invulnerable, but
they did make him superior. Quite how these people believed they could ever hope to protect themselves from the threats of this world—
threats like the Tyrants—was beyond him.
"Good work," he told her. The rest of the slate's memory was filled with copies of itinerary files and route maps, but the majority of that data
had already been in the hands of the unit for some time. "Take this to Gunther. Make sure there are no last-minute variables, then help him
secure the payload."
She walked off, casting a sideways look as she crossed paths with Hardesty coming the other way. The operative ran a hand over his bald pate.
"Ice queen's back, huh?" He watched her traverse the hangar. "So, I guess that means we still have a green light?"
"We still have a green light," Namir repeated. "Gunther can function, despite his injury. This sanction is too critical to the group for
postponement. It must go ahead." Hardesty nodded, but he didn't leave. After a moment, Namir spoke again. "Was there something else you
wanted to say, Scott?"
The other man folded his thin arms over his chest. "I was right about Saxon."
"Yes, you were." Namir met his gaze and waited for the rest of it.
Hardesty didn't disappoint. "He was weak. He never had the steel for this work. You made the wrong call—"
"Enough," Namir silenced him. "What do you want from me? An apology?"
"You misread him, and it almost cost us the operation!" Hardesty was emboldened by Namir's admission of error, and he was pushing it.
"Do you know why I wanted him to join us?" said Namir. The ice in his tone chilled the air between them. "It's because he had a code of
conduct, Scott. Unlike you. Because this unit needs balance."
Hardesty was on the verge of launching into an argument, but he caught himself before he said something he might have regretted. As much as
he was a braggart, Hardesty wasn't foolish enough to cross swords with Jaron Namir. Instead, he allowed himself a belligerent smile. "Balance,
huh?" He glanced up at the scarred hull of the jet. "Look what that got you," he said, walking away.
Aerial Transit Corridor—Maury Sea Channel—North Atlantic
It was cold inside the airship's cavernous cargo bay. Faint layers of frost gathered on the sides of the container pods filling the length of the
compartment. Breath emerged from Saxon's mouth in streams of white vapor as he walked the length of the companionway; the Caidin
replacements for his lower legs were starting to bed in at last, and he'd used the downtime to get himself back into fighting condition. He didn't
want a repeat of what happened when they boarded.
Powell and his men kept close to the aft service bay, where noisy electric motors fed the airships rotors and kept the area a little warmer than
the rest of the cargo spaces. Without comment, he crossed into the group and helped himself to a couple of cheap YouLike self-heating coffee
cans and power bars.
He found Kelso on her own, huddled inside a solar foil blanket. She was miles away, her gaze fixed on a brass coin as she turned it over and over
in her fingers. She looked up as he approached and palmed the coin, as if she'd been caught doing something wrong. He held out a can and she
took it, striking the base on the deck to get the thermal tab working.
Saxon dropped into a lotus settle and did the same, tossing her one of the bars. She unwrapped it with her teeth, waiting for him to speak; he
tried to frame the question the right way, then finally gave up.
He nodded at her hand, where she had the coin. "How long have you been clean?" When she didn't answer straight away, he went on. "S'okay. I
know what the chip is for..." He drifted off, frowning at himself.
Kelso studied him. "You were in the program?"
He shook his head. "Not me. My old man." He made a drinking motion with the can. "He didn't do that well with it."
"Stims. For a while." Her eyes narrowed; she was taking this as a challenge. "It doesn't make me weak," she told him.
"Of course not" he replied. "If anything, they give you the chip, it means you're stronger, yeah?"
"Yeah." She didn't sound convinced by her reply.
He swigged at the coffee and made a face. It tasted like someone had stubbed a cigarette out in it; but it was hot, and that was what counted.
Saxon leaned forward. "You don't think you can trust me." He jerked a thumb over his shoulder. "Like Powell and the rest. You think I'm
marked."
"After everything that's happened to me over the past few months, I'd question my own family." She grimaced as she took a pull from the can,
then shot him a look. "Why'd you lie to Powell?"
"About what?"
"When I said I wanted to come. You told him I'd seen the faces of the Tyrants. That's stretching the truth."
"You saw Federova and lived to talk about it. Trust me, love, there's not a lot of folks can say that."
Her eyes narrowed. "Her and one other." Kelso's lips thinned. "I need you to tell me something. Washington, D.C., the hit on Skyler. Were you
one of them?"
The question came out of nowhere and he took a second to follow it through. "When?" Kelso told him the date and he shook his head, his gut
tightening as an old, hateful memory made itself known. "No. I was halfway around the world that day, trying not to die. Namir recruited me
afterward. He was a man down, he said." He eyed her. "Were you responsible for that?" He thought about Wexler, the man he had replaced,
and the lines of invisible influence that had brought him to this place at this moment.
She ignored the question. "Why did you lie?" she repeated.
He gestured at his eyes. "You got the same look I see in the mirror. You're like me. You're looking for someone to pay a butcher's bill."
"They killed a man who saved my life," she said, her gaze becoming distant. "Did it right in front of me. And I couldn't do a damn thing. Then
the Illuminati's proxies covered it up and buried him under the lies." Kelso shook her head. "I couldn't let that stand."
"Illuminati" Saxon turned the word over, sounding it out, connecting it with what he knew. "Namir called them 'the group,' like he was afraid to