âDon't be ridiculous,' Gaffney said as he unclipped his whiphound and thumbed it on. âI've come to interview you, not kill you. How would that go down? I'm not a butcher.'
He ran out the filament and allowed it to find traction against the floor, then relinquished his hold on the handle. For an instant the whiphound stayed where it was, just turning its shaft to shine the red laser of its eye on Dreyfus's face. Then it began to advance, its filament making a slow hissing sound as it scraped its coils against the floor. The handle was tipped down slightly, like the head of a cobra.
Dreyfus knew that there was nowhere to run, nowhere to hide. But he could not help shrinking back against the wall, dragging his legs up onto the bunk as if the corner might provide some sanctuary from the questing machine.
Gaffney stood back, his arms folded across his chest. âGuess you know the drill, Tom. No point pretending this is going to be pleasant. But tell me what I need to know and it'll all be over with very quickly. Why did you kill Clepsydra, and how did you get the body to your room?'
âYou killed her, not me. She was still alive when I left her.'
The whiphound slinked onto the bunk, the elevation of its handle never altering. The red glare of its laser made Dreyfus squint and hold a hand up to his face. It came nearer, until he could hear a shrill electronic buzzing. He edged deeper into the corner, drawing his knees high against his chest. The whiphound continued its advance, bringing the blunt end of the handle to within a hand's-width of Dreyfus's face. The brightness of the laser and the electronic humming combined with hypnotic effect. Around the trembling shield of his hand he saw the filament's tip rise up and quest the air. It began to curl, ready to wrap itself around Dreyfus. Part of him wanted to reach out and grab it, to try to stop it finding a way behind his back. A more sensible part of him knew how futile that would be, and what the attempt would do to his fingers.
âThey'll find out what you did,' he said. âThey're better than you, Gaffney. You won't be able to hide from Panoply for ever.'
Then he felt the filament whip around him. It wrapped itself around him twice, constricting him with its blunt edge. His arms were pinned to his sides, his knees jammed hard against his ribcage. The handle remained pointed at his face, its laser eye washing the world into scarlet.
âThe whiphound's going to insert the tip of its tail into your mouth,' Gaffney said, âbut we can go with any orifice you like. Your call, Tom.'
Dreyfus closed his mouth, biting down so hard that he tasted salty wetness gush from his tongue. The filament tapped against the portcullis of his teeth, as if asking permission to enter. Dreyfus produced a senseless groan of defiance. The whiphound tapped again. He felt the filament tighten its coils.
âOpen wide,' Gaffney said, cheerily encouraging. âEasy does it.'
The whiphound tapped twice more against his teeth, then withdrew the tip of the filament. Dreyfus wondered if it was going to try to force its way in through a different orifice now that he had barred it from slithering in through his mouth.
He felt the coils loosen. Breathing was no longer difficult. The handle held its gaze on him for a second, and then rotated slowly around until it was directing the horizontal glare of its scanning laser eye onto Gaffney's face rather than Dreyfus's. The coil released Dreyfus completely. He took a grateful breath and slumped against the wall, feeling a stripe of cold sweat ooze down the valley of his spine. The whiphound moved stealthily off the bunk, never releasing its visual lock on Gaffney.
âStand down,' Gaffney said, keeping the panic from his voice for the moment. 'Stand down. Revert to defence posture one.'
The whiphound showed no sign of having heard or recognised his order and kept on slithering. The filament pushed the handle higher, so that it was level with the standing man's face. Gaffney took a hesitant step backwards, then another, until his back bumped into the wall.
âStand down,' he repeated, louder this time. âThis is Senior Prefect Gaffney ordering you to stand down and switch to standby mode. You have developed a fault. Repeat, you have developed a fault.'
âIt doesn't appear to be listening,' Dreyfus said.
Gaffney raised a shaky hand. âStand down!'
âI wouldn't touch it if I were you. It'll have your fingers off.'
The whiphound pressed Gaffney hard against the wall, the filament spooled out to its maximum extension. The handle made an emphatic nodding motion.
âI think it wants you to kneel,' Dreyfus said.
CHAPTER 21
The assembled seniors, internals and supernumerary analysts looked away from the Solid Orrery as the heavy doors of the tactical room swung open. For a second their expressions were as one, conveying a shared sense of indignation that their secret session had been interrupted, and without even the courtesy of a knock. Then they saw that the man stepping through the door was Senior Prefect Sheridan Gaffney and their collective mood changed from one of annoyance to mild puzzlement. Gaffney was perfectly entitled to enter the tactical room, his presence at least as welcome as that of anyone else there. But even Gaffney would normally have had the good manners to announce his arrival before barging in. The head of Internal Security was nothing if not a stickler for observation of the niceties.
âIs there a problem, Senior?' Baudry asked, speaking for the assembled party.
But it was not Gaffney who answered the query. Gaffney himself appeared strangely dumbstruck, incapable of formulating a response. Ten centimetres of black cylinder jutted from his mouth, as if he had been trying to swallow a thick candle. His eyes bulged as if he was seeking to squeeze all meaning through them.
The honour of replying fell instead to Dreyfus, who was following only a couple of paces behind the other man. There was an understandable measure of consternation at this development. Everyone in the room was aware that Dreyfus was under detention, unavoidably implicated in the murder of the Conjoiner woman. A smaller number of those present knew that Gaffney had been tasked to interview Dreyfus, and an even smaller number knew which methods that interview was likely to employ. The thought must have occurred to at least some of the party that Dreyfus had overpowered Gaffney and must now be holding him at knife- or gunpoint. Further inspection, however, revealed the presence of no recognisable weapon about the person of the field prefect. He was not even wearing shoes.
âActually,' Dreyfus said, âthere is a bit of a problem.'
âWhy are you not in your cell?' Baudry asked, her attention flicking from Dreyfus to Gaffney and back again. âWhat's happened? What's wrong with Sheridan? What's that thing in his mouth?'
Gaffney's posture was almost rigidly upright, as if he was hanging from an invisible coat rack. When he had walked into the room, he had moved with tiny shuffling footsteps, like a man with his laces tied together. He kept his arms glued to his sides. The thing lodged in his mouth forced him to keep his head at an unusual angle - it was as if he had developed a crick in his neck while looking up at the ceiling. There was a bulge in the skin of his throat, distending the collar of his tunic, that was more than Adam's apple. He appeared unwilling to make the slightest unnecessary bodily movement.
âThe thing in his mouth is a whiphound,' Dreyfus said. âHe came to interrogate me with a Model C. We were getting on famously when it just turned on him.'
âThat's not possible. A whiphound isn't meant to do that.' Baudry looked at Dreyfus with an appalled expression. âYou didn't do this, did you, Tom? You didn't push that thing into him?'
âIf I'd have touched it, I wouldn't have any fingers left. No, it did it all by itself. Actually, Gaffney helped a bit with the final insertion.'
âI don't understand. Why on Earth would he help?'
âHe didn't have a lot of choice. It all happened very slowly, very precisely. Have you ever seen a snake swallowing an egg? It pushed the filament into his mouth, then reached down into his stomach. You know how the interrogation mode works on those things: it locates major organs then threatens to slice them in two from inside.'
âWhat do you mean: interrogation mode? There's no such thing.'
âThere is now. It's one of the new features Gaffney had built into the Model Cs. Of course, it has some innocuous-sounding name: enhanced compliance facilitation, or something similar.'
âHe could have called for help.'
Dreyfus shook his head. âNot a hope. It would have sliced him into six or seven pieces before he could say his name into his bracelet.'
âBut why did he help it finish what it was doing to him?'
âIt was hurting him, letting him know that if he didn't help by pushing the handle into his mouth, it was going to do something really unpleasant.'
Baudry stared at Gaffney with renewed comprehension. The handle of a model A or B whiphound would have been too thick to enter the human throat. But a Model C was thinner, sleeker, altogether nastier. A whiphound handle jammed partway down Gaffney's gullet would certainly explain his stiff-necked posture, his unwillingness to compromise what must have already been a very congested windpipe.
âWe have to get it out of him,' she said.
âI don't think it wants you to do that,' Dreyfus said.
âIt doesn't want anything. It's malfunctioning, obviously.'
âI wouldn't be so sure of that,' Dreyfus said, looking around the party, at the documents and compads on the table. âBut perhaps Gaffney has an opinion on the matter. He can't speak right now, obviously, but he can still use his hands. Can't you?'
Gaffney shuffled around. His eyes were two bulging eggs, ready to pop out of their sockets. His cheeks were the colour of beetroot. He didn't so much nod as make a microscopic twitching suggestion of one.
âI think he needs something to write with,' Dreyfus said. âCan anyone spare a compad and a stylus?'
âTake mine,' Baudry said, skidding the item across the table. One of the analysts took the compad, unclipped the stylus and passed them both to Gaffney. His arms unlocked from the sides of his body, articulating with painful slowness as if the bones themselves had fused. His hands were shaking. He took the compad in his left hand and fumbled for the stylus with his right. It fell to the floor. The analyst knelt down and gently placed it in his palm.
âI don't seeâ' Baudry began.
âTell them what happened to Clepsydra,' Dreyfus said.
Gaffney scratched the stylus across the writing surface of the compad. His movements were pained and childlike, as if he had seldom held a stylus before, let alone written with one. But laboriously he formed recognisable letters, scratching them out in agonised strokes.
He shuffled forward to the edge of the table and dropped the compad.
Baudry picked it up. She studied the scrawl upon it. âI killed her“,' she mouthed. âThat's what it says: I killed her.” She looked up at Gaffney. âIs this true, Sheridan? Did you really kill the prisoner?'
Again that twitch of a nod, a movement so subtle that the assembled seniors would never have seen it had they not been watching for it.
She handed him back the compad. âWhy?'
He scratched out another answer.
âKnew too much“,' Baudry read. âKnew too much about what, Sheridan? What secret did she have to die to protect?'
Gaffney scribbled again. His trembling was growing worse, and it took longer to spell out one word than it had taken him to spell out three the last time.
âAurora“,' Baudry read. âThat name again. Is it true, Sheridan? Is she really one of the Eighty?'
But when she handed him the compad, all he wrote on it this time was: âHelp me.'
âI think it might be best to save further questioning for later,' Dreyfus said.
âWhy is it doing this to him?' Baudry asked. âI've heard about the difficulties with the Model Cs, but nothing like this has ever happened.'
âHe must have switched on the whiphound in Clepsydra's presence,' Dreyfus said. âVery silly thing to do around a Conjoiner, but I guess he couldn't resist tormenting her. She couldn't stop him killing her - he used a gun for that - but she was still able to tamper with the whiphound.'
âShe wouldn't have had time.'
âI doubt it took her more than a second. For a Conjoiner, it would have been about as difficult as blinking.'
âBut the programming is hard-coded.'
âNothing's hard-coded to a Conjoiner. There's always a way in, always a back door. She'd have found it if she knew she was about to die and this was her only way of getting a message through. Right, Sheridan?'
Gaffney twitched another affirmative. Some kind of whitish foam or drool was beginning to erupt around the black plug filling his mouth. The quickening tempo of his breathing was now audible to everyone in the room.
âWe still have to get it out of him,' Baudry said. âSheridan: I want you to stay very, very calm. No matter what you've done, no matter what's happened, we're going to help you.' She lifted her arm and spoke into her bracelet with a voice on the trembling edge of panic. âDoctor Demikhov? Oh good, you're awake. Yes, very well, thank you. I know this is unorthodox and that you're mandated to focus only on the Aumonier case but ... something's come up. Something that requires your expertise very, very urgently.'
Dr Demikhov conjured a quickmatter partition, closing off one end of the tactical room to allow him and the other medical technicians to work on Gaffney in privacy. The last clear view Dreyfus had of the senior prefect was of him being gently lowered onto a couch tipped at forty-five degrees to the floor, handled as if he was a bomb that might detonate at any instant. Through the partition's smoky opacity, the team became vaguely outlined pale ghosts, huddled around an indistinct black form. Then the indistinct black form started thrashing, blurred limbs flailing the air.