Authors: Neal Asher
Tags: #Science Fiction, #General, #Space Opera, #Fiction
“Who
are
you?” she asked, finally.
He gazed at her with those cold eyes that seemed somehow wrong in that face—and yet somehow familiar.
“A question I, too, am curious to know the answer to,” he replied, staring at her with peculiar intensity. “And to which I hope you can supply an answer.”
She climbed in through the passenger door of the transvan. What else could she do? Or what else did she want to do? Underneath the shock, she felt something like excitement stir. Her life had been one of perpetual confinement and political supervision, the imminent threat of an adjustment cell just around the corner. She had never expected anything else. And now he was taking her out into a world she had never expected to see again.
Malden
, she thought. He had to be one of Malden’s people.
But why had he grabbed her and not the revolutionary leader himself? The man must still be back there, still in his cell…unless he too had escaped, perhaps leaving the complex via a different route? Perhaps she had been taken out separately so as to cut down on the risk of both of them being caught?
The killer beside her drew the transvan to a halt at the gates, where the post-mounted recognition system just bleeped acceptance and opened them. While driving through, he took his machine pistol out of his lap and dumped it on the third seat, between them.
“I thought you were Inspectorate…here to kill me,” she said, since it now seemed clear that was not his intention.
“I think you underrate your value to the Committee,” he said. “If you were that dispensable, they would not have allowed you the anti-ageing drugs, or supplied you with everything you need to conduct your experiments.” He paused to glance at her expressionlessly. “Including the human subjects.”
“Not my choice,” she replied, feeling a surge of guilt.
He continued, “I’ve little doubt your escape will warrant the outlay of massive resources and any number of lives, just to put you back under lock and key.”
“You think so?” Perhaps he was right, though it just didn’t feel like that. The threat of adjustment or execution had been hanging over her just too long.
“Oh, yes,” he continued, a note of bitter sarcasm in his voice. “They want you regularly turning out all those astounding inventions and innovations that fall within your area of interest. They want further brain augmentation and more ways to connect it up to computer hardware. Your work is leading to developing the first post-humans, which is what many in the upper echelons of government want to become.”
It was a nightmare scenario: old and vicious ideologues made immortal by anti-ageing treatments, and super-intelligent through the hardware and software Hannah could create. An awareness of this had always been there, at the back of her mind. She studied him further, then tentatively reached up to the scalp just behind his ear. He glanced at her, but did not deny her investigation, so she probed with sensitive fingertips before snatching her hand away.
“You’ve got hardware in your skull,” she declared. “Advanced hardware.”
That was it then: he himself must be one of her experimental subjects, who had somehow escaped and now come back to exact his vengeance.
“And an artificial intelligence living on Govnet,” he added.
“An artificial intelligence,” she repeated woodenly.
An artificial intelligence on Govnet? None of her experimental subjects could have managed that…
Then something heavy and terrifying came and sat on her chest. Someone possessing that kind of resource, who quite evidently also hated the Committee?
Far far too much of a coincidence…but he was dead.
She’d watched him die, so how could this have anything to do with him? Hannah just sat there in silence turning it all over in her head, lost in a haze of speculation which she only came out of as he pulled into a layby.
“Vehicle change,” he said, nodding towards an old hydrocar parked ahead. Then he explained, “This place is a cam deadspot.”
Now Hannah felt a weird species of bewilderment, as if she’d just stepped through a hole in reality. She could not remember any time in her life when there wasn’t an active camera watching her every move. In her early years, behavioural programs had judged her and passed on snippets of her life to political officers for assessment. In later years, such officers had kept her under constant watch. Not having them watch her now felt really strange. It meant she could
do
something now.
Say
something now.
“Fuck the Committee,” she said abruptly, then felt her face redden, her chest and her throat tightening up. She flicked her gaze towards the various ragged-looking people wandering aimlessly about the area, almost afraid that someone might have heard her. But no real immediate danger seemed to threaten here, which was why her “liar” panic attack returned.
He glanced at her as he took a fuel can out from behind the seat.
“Quite.” He leaned across to open her door. “Out, now.”
She stepped out of the van, still feeling in a haze and reluctant to move away from the vehicle’s protective presence—out into the unwatched open. He rounded the front of the vehicle to stand before her, an electrical device of some kind clutched in one hand. “Step away from the van.”
Catching a whiff of diesel from the cab, she obeyed, fully expecting him to now torch the vehicle, but it turned out that the device he held wasn’t an igniter but some kind of scanner that he ran up and down her body, pausing for a moment each time it beeped.
“Five trackers on you,” he said, bringing the scanner back to the last detected point, where it beeped at her collar. He clicked another button, whilst holding the device in place, and she spotted a bar display rising on its little screen. When that reached the top, a green light blinked on. He pressed another button and a point of warmth expanded at her neck.
“Focused microwave burst,” she surmised, that sense of tight panic inside her fading with the warmth.
“Burns them out,” he supplied.
He found another two in her clothing: two dermal stick-ons which, after he dealt with them, left her skin reddened. He then paused the scanner device over her thigh.
“I’m afraid this is going to hurt,” he said flatly.
“What…what do you mean?”
“You’ve got a tracker embedded in the bone of your thigh.”
She saw the bar display rising and didn’t know how to protest. He triggered the device and at first the expected pain failed to register. But then it started to grow, a bone-deep ache that just kept climbing in intensity. She found herself gritting her teeth, her eyes watering, then her leg just gave way under her. He caught her around the waist, holding the device in place for a moment longer, till he finally retracted it.
“Okay,” he said. “Come on.”
He helped her hobble over to the hydrocar, and she was more than glad to climb inside. Sudden light caught her eye and she looked round to see fire blooming inside the transvan cab. She then looked round at the scattering of indigents up above on the concrete bank, watching the show.
“What about
them
?” she asked.
“They’ll disappear quick enough once the Inspectorate appear.”
He passed her a blister pack of painkillers and an analgesic patch, then concentrated on pulling the hydrocar out into a gap between passing autotrucks. Feeling no embarrassment, she pulled down her trousers and pressed the patch into place. She was so used to being watched. From behind came a whoomph and, glancing back again, she saw flames belch out of the gap where the transvan’s screen had been. Seeing this destruction too, the indigents began moving off.
“You expected deeply implanted trackers?” she said.
“I expected more than just one.”
Another vehicle change ensued in an underpass, presumably another deadspot, and again it was a place inhabited by ragged, aimless people. But then where wasn’t, these days? Everywhere Hannah looked, she could see hopeless souls trudging about with the demeanour of seniles in late-stage dementia, even though many of them weren’t noticeably old. Her head felt light as she sat staring out of the windscreen at these sad beings, but, even so, something seemed to begin unwinding inside her—years and years of it. Her leg aching after having to walk from car to car, she swallowed some of the painkillers, then realized her abductor genuinely had expected more than just one deeply implanted tracker, for the pills were strong. She didn’t remember sleeping, but after an odd hiatus she found they were driving along a carbocrete rural road, then parking on a patch of old concrete, amidst fields. Here, at last, no people in sight—which seemed very strange.
He hid the vehicle under a filthy canvas sheet whose colour matched the concrete, then guided her round by a trampled path, to a hatch that he pulled up. He then led her down below, and lights came on as they entered some sort of underground bunker. Next he tore off his mask—the layer of silicone rubber she had somehow known was there—to reveal features that she recognized at once.
She gazed at him for a long moment, not quite sure how to handle this. Then she nodded slowly. “I thought Smith had killed you, Alan. I thought he’d finally got what he wanted.”
Thinner-featured, of course. Hair dyed a different colour from its usual acid white. Something almost unhuman wearing a human face and finding it didn’t quite fit. That was him; that had always been Alan Saul. Of course she was glad to see him alive, but it meant that a whole bunch of complicated emotions, once securely cached in her mind, were no longer quite so secure.
“Smith,” he echoed, momentary rage transforming his expression, shortly displaced by puzzlement. He shook his head. “I know my own name, but that’s about all I know.”
“You don’t remember Salem Smith?”
“No.”
She should not feel disappointed with his amnesia. Considering what Smith had done to him, it was miraculous he possessed a mind at all—or that he was even alive.
“Alan Saul,” she confirmed tightly. “But don’t even bother looking on Govnet or the Subnets for anything regarding yourself. You erased everything, and your work was so highly classified they put nothing back. Even I’m only allowed access to parts of it—after it’s been vetted by a committee of fourteen science-policy advisers.”
“My work?”
She told him.
5
PROHIBITION WORKS!
The greater the power and extent of the state, the more room there is for corruption. The more inept state services and industries become, the more pies it takes its huge cut from and the more regulation it imposes, the greater the call for black markets. This last fact is one governments consistently failed to learn, even after the stark lesson of American Prohibition. Deadspots are where you’ll find them. Inspectorate officers grow rich in cash by selling the locations of such deadspots to the underworld, which in turn makes its cut from those it opens up such spots to. The breakers come there—those who burn out the tracers in stolen vehicles and disassemble them for their components, those who take apart computer hardware to sell to others maintaining the Subnet, and those who chop up human bodies for usable organs—usually to be sold to low-echelon officials not yet enjoying twenty-second-century medical care. Retailers come to sell other blackmarket goods: food disapproved of by All Health, like high-fat dairy products, sugary drinks and sweets; cigarettes, drugs, illegal ABV booze, coffee and tea without the cumulative emetics to discourage abuse. And then there are the black surgeries dealing in illegal implants, ID implant excision and exchange, gunshot wounds, and all those injuries and illnesses not catered for under All Health—but only for those who can afford them.
In a totalitarian state, some people are just too dangerous to be allowed to live. Saul now considered his second-hand knowledge of the person he had been. He was a brilliant, brilliant man, indeed a genius, but with a huge drawback in that he was also only a marginally functional human being. It could be called autism, or maybe Asperger’s syndrome, but Saul liked to think that so focused on his work had he been, he simply had not found the time, space or energy to deal with the trivialities of normal human relationships. Able to speak and read even before he could coordinate his limbs, his previous self had been sent immediately into special schools, but even they could not quite handle him and he ended up being home-tutored by educational experts. By the age of ten, he also outpaced these experts, and thereafter had taken charge of his own education. Had Saul been a child of zero-asset-status parents, all this might have caused great problems, and sufficient funding and resources might have been hard to find, but his parents were high-level Committee executives and able to lavish attention on him.
For Saul, every test, both mental or physical, was of overriding interest and in nothing he tried did he fail to excel. He practised martial arts, taking his second black belt in shotokan karate whilst studying for eight doctorates in the physical sciences and three in the arts. Very soon he began to produce: making vast improvements to the software of agricultural robots, then designing a new kind of materially inert microbot that could hunt through the human body for cancer cells without causing rejection problems. Next he applied the same inert materials to someone else’s invention of a chip interface to the human mind, so it too would not activate the immune system. That was Hannah’s invention.
Saul thus became a “societal asset” even as the Committee was just inventing the term. When Committee political officers realized how valuable he could be, he was seconded to a gated science community secure in the Dinaric Alps of Albania and there, for the first time, and like all the other scientists thus seconded, he came under intense political scrutiny. This was where he had first met Hannah.
“That was forty years ago, Alan,” Hannah told him.
“How old am I?” he asked.
“Somewhere in your sixties,” she replied. “Just like us all, you received anti-ageing treatments.”
“I see.” He nodded. “So how, then, did I end up in a crate heading for the Calais Incinerator?”