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I cleared my throat.
"A psionic, yes?" he said happily, almost dancing as he paced around me. "One that slipped through the cracks."
I nodded, struck dumb by the onslaught.
"And he took limited control over Dawson and Hallier and forced them to act contrary to standing order 778 concerning legal representatives of a legally recognized religion-a religion that has a lot of members, and thus, a lot of influence. Mr. Cates, what you and Mr. Gatz did was very, very bad for us."
His manic grin made him seem almost happy about this. As I stared up, his expression switched off again, and he leaned down, putting his hands on the table in front of me.
"Dawson and Hallier are the worst of the SSF, Mr. Cates. They're ignorant and arrogant and too willing to hurt people. But I don't care about them. What I care about, Mr. Cates, is the reason you were found by these two a.s.sholes in the first place. What you saw the night Officer Alvarez was killed." The grin came back, exactly as it had been. "I tried to get to you first, but those a.s.sholes had nothing better to do."
Suddenly he straightened up and stared over at the corner for a full six beats of my straining heart. Then it was back to me again. The motherf.u.c.ker was crazy.
"Let me tell you what you saw," he said cheerfully, standing up. The lights dimmed suddenly, and one of the gray walls bloomed into bright light, a Vid. It hurt my eyes at first, but I welcomed the change of scenery.
"You saw a Monk recruiting a new member by killing him. The Monk shot him and would have had the corpse retrieved within moments. The victim would have reappeared the next day as a Monk-happy, content, and complete with cover story concerning his epiphany. This is how the Electric Church operates."
The screen flickered and a chart appeared, boring cubes and gridlines.
"The Electric Church is the fastest-growing organization in the world. It is growing so quickly, Mr. Cates, that it is currently estimated that it will be the world's largest religion in five years. In eight years, it will be the world's only only religion." religion."
I blinked, almost got my mouth open before he whirled back to me, his skin pale in the gloom, his gla.s.ses pitch black. "I know. know. A religion that did not exist seven years ago, subsuming the world in ten. Unbelievable! Is it because the idea of salvation through eternity is so seductive? No, Mr. Cates. The Electric Church is growing so quickly because it forcibly recruits new members. They murder their new members, they perform surgery on their new members, and they control their new members postprocess via hardwired circuitry." A religion that did not exist seven years ago, subsuming the world in ten. Unbelievable! Is it because the idea of salvation through eternity is so seductive? No, Mr. Cates. The Electric Church is growing so quickly because it forcibly recruits new members. They murder their new members, they perform surgery on their new members, and they control their new members postprocess via hardwired circuitry."
Suddenly he was right on top of me again, leaning down. "In other words, Cates, I believe that inside most of those Monks is a horrified, tortured human mind that is used like a puppet, with a gibbering ineffectual terror. I think that Dennis Squalor is possibly the worst ma.s.s murderer in the history of the human race. Worse," he leaned back again, smiling. "Worse, Mr. Cates, I think that if action isn't taken soon, the Electric Church may soon be beyond the authority of the SSF. Beyond my my authority. And that doesn't sit well with me." authority. And that doesn't sit well with me."
I cleared my throat. "Dennis-" I managed, and d.i.c.k Marin animated again, leaping up as the Vid wall clicked, and a picture, old and grainy, shot from some distance, appeared in place of the chart.
"Dennis Squalor," Marin said briskly, pacing up and down, "Founder and chief prophet of the Electric Church. He reminds me of you, Mr. Cates. Not a lot of information on him past the age of twenty-three, which is when Unification was achieved and he disappeared, returning-on various paper trails, at least-only when the Electric Church applied for formal religion status within the System. The Electric Church enjoys protected status as a religion, and it isolates Squalor pretty effectively. Of course, I know more about him. I know everything, but it's need-to-know and you . . . don't need to know."
He spun and almost threw himself at me. "Imagine, Mr. Cates-you were there, it shouldn't be a problem-imagine, you're walking home late at night. A Monk appears and the next thing you remember is waking up, trapped inside a metal and silicon body, with your higher brain functions looped through a container circuit. You try to move, but nothing happens. You try to speak, but the words that emerge from your mouth are not your own. Your brain has been kept intact merely to pa.s.s all known identification systems. Your brain has been kept intact merely to pa.s.s all known identification systems. Think on that, Mr. Cates." Think on that, Mr. Cates."
I didn't want to. Instead, I thought about getting out of the Blank Room, getting back to a world where there was color and nuance. I cleared my throat, and when that did not start the madman jumping around again, I ventured to try my luck at a sentence.
"What is it, exactly, exactly, you want from me, Mr. Marin? I appear to be a little bit below your level." you want from me, Mr. Marin? I appear to be a little bit below your level."
Marin nodded. "What do I want with you? Mr. Cates, I want to hire you."
I blinked. The motherf.u.c.ker was insane. insane. The whole world was being run by this insane little s.h.i.t. "You want me to Gun for you?" The whole world was being run by this insane little s.h.i.t. "You want me to Gun for you?"
"Of course not, Mr. Cates. You would be voluntarily choosing to do a few things, which will in turn have some unexpected benefits for you, which might, after an exhaustive and death-defying investigation, be traced back to the SSF. Not to me, me, mind you, but to the System Security Force in general. You'll do this because it'll be lucrative, and because I can have you killed just by letting your case proceed. You're a cop-killer, Mr. Cates. I am all that stands between you and execution. Take this on, and not only will your involvement in the deaths of officers Janet Hense, Jack Hallier, and Miguel Alvarez remain secret, you'll get paid, too." mind you, but to the System Security Force in general. You'll do this because it'll be lucrative, and because I can have you killed just by letting your case proceed. You're a cop-killer, Mr. Cates. I am all that stands between you and execution. Take this on, and not only will your involvement in the deaths of officers Janet Hense, Jack Hallier, and Miguel Alvarez remain secret, you'll get paid, too."
He stopped, and just grinned at me. f.u.c.k the Blank Room, this c.o.c.ksucker's grin grin was freaking me out. I knew I'd break in no time if he just sat there and grinned at me, his head c.o.c.ked to one side like a f.u.c.king ventriloquist's dummy. I felt an almost-irresistible urge to grin back, and I knew if I did I'd never be able to stop. was freaking me out. I knew I'd break in no time if he just sat there and grinned at me, his head c.o.c.ked to one side like a f.u.c.king ventriloquist's dummy. I felt an almost-irresistible urge to grin back, and I knew if I did I'd never be able to stop.
"You'll clear me on three dead cops?"
Marin shivered, shivered, a subtle vibration that rippled through his whole body in a second. "Collateral damage, Mr. Cates. I could not possibly care less about three dead cops, if you pull this off." a subtle vibration that rippled through his whole body in a second. "Collateral damage, Mr. Cates. I could not possibly care less about three dead cops, if you pull this off."
I licked my lips, and he spun away again. "Actually, I've already hired others to do this job. There are a lot lot of Gunners out there, Mr. Cates, and I've hired quite a few in the last few months. Most with much better skill-sets than you, I think. They are all dead now-a.s.sumed to be, in some cases, as no body has yet turned up. I've been forced to shift down to the second tier, and there you are-you have a rep for being very good, physically, and smarter than most. I've reviewed your arrest file." of Gunners out there, Mr. Cates, and I've hired quite a few in the last few months. Most with much better skill-sets than you, I think. They are all dead now-a.s.sumed to be, in some cases, as no body has yet turned up. I've been forced to shift down to the second tier, and there you are-you have a rep for being very good, physically, and smarter than most. I've reviewed your arrest file."
Behind him the screen lit up with a quick flicker of my various busts, fifteen years of my life told in progressive mug shots.
"You're smart, Mr. Cates, but something's holding you back, yes? You fulfill your contracts and play by rules-you're trusted out there. Which is rare, these days. Criminals fear each other, they respect force, but very rarely do we find a criminal who is trusted. trusted." He whirled to grin at me again. "You're unique, Mr. Cates: a thinking killer. I hope maybe your approach will be more effective."
"So you're hiring me because I'm a mediocre Gunner," I croaked. This sounded interesting. My day was improving. "How rich?"
Marin nodded, once, curtly, and produced a slip of paper from one pocket, which I was amazed to think he'd had waiting for this moment, ready. I took it from his cold fingers and stared down at the unusually large sum written upon it. I thought at first it must be one of those imaginary numbers I'd heard about in school.
"Deposited into a secure account under any name you wish, within two hours of proof of completion. Do we have a deal?"
I kept staring at the number. "I have one requirement."
Marin was silent, but I could feel that f.u.c.king grin on the top of my head like heat from a sun. "A requirement, Mr. Cates?"
"Gatz," I said, looking up and squinting into his smile. "I need Kev Gatz. He gets out with me, and he gets a cleared file, too."
d.i.c.k Marin laughed, a single bark of noise. "I see, see, Mr. Cates! A reasonable request. We have a deal?" Mr. Cates! A reasonable request. We have a deal?"
I didn't answer right away, and then frowned. "Wait a sec-who am I supposed to kill?"
Marin might have blinked behind his gla.s.ses, I couldn't tell. "Why, Mr. Cates . . . I want you to a.s.sa.s.sinate Dennis Squalor. Of course."
I blinked. "Jesus f.u.c.ked, why why?"
Marin didn't answer right away. He stared just over my head for a moment, once again listening to something only he could hear. Finally the King Worm shivered and returned his attention to me.
"Why? Mr. Cates, haven't you been listening? The Electric Church is using its status as a religion as a cover. cover. Dennis Squalor is not converting fanatics, he is aggressively acquiring slaves. If I do nothing, within the decade we're all working for him-and digitally prevented from doing anything about it, or even complaining. Time is short. I have no evidence, which restricts my options, and he's got the political ac.u.men to make trouble for me if I act without evidence-highly unusual for me, and highly inconvenient. I have got to go through back channels. Buried channels. Dennis Squalor is not converting fanatics, he is aggressively acquiring slaves. If I do nothing, within the decade we're all working for him-and digitally prevented from doing anything about it, or even complaining. Time is short. I have no evidence, which restricts my options, and he's got the political ac.u.men to make trouble for me if I act without evidence-highly unusual for me, and highly inconvenient. I have got to go through back channels. Buried channels. Nonexistent Nonexistent channels. I am seeking a loophole. If Dennis Squalor goes down, the resulting confusion will give me the leverage to order a full investigation, temporarily suspend the EC's exempted status-don't worry over channels. I am seeking a loophole. If Dennis Squalor goes down, the resulting confusion will give me the leverage to order a full investigation, temporarily suspend the EC's exempted status-don't worry over how. how. You just do your part. Kill the high priest. You just do your part. Kill the high priest.
"Let's be clear." He was suddenly calmed and relaxed, orienting on me as if really noting my presence for the first time, his manner suddenly fluid and focused. "There is nothing official about this. You will be denied. I can offer you no help. On the other hand, you are free to act. I am not concerned with collateral damage. If SSF officers take notice of you, I will do whatever I can to help you. But a man like you knows how to avoid the cops when necessary, doesn't he? And if you succeed, Mr. Cates, all will be forgiven, no matter how messy."
I shrugged, trying to smile back at him. "I'm here, though, right? Is that how you keep things secret, by sending a G.o.dd.a.m.ned hover to scoop me up in the middle of the street?"
In the face of that shining sun beaming from Marin, my own grin felt weak and brittle, and quickly faded away.
"Colonel Moje is . . . overly enthusiastic, sometimes, I admit. But no one knows, or would believe, that SSFDIA Marin is behind this, Mr. Cates. SSF officers often disparage the use of uniformed officers-what do you call them? Crushers?-to acquire a.s.sets, and misuse hovers and Stormers like that just to make an impression. To overawe the population, you see. A show of force is very effective for that. As far as anyone outside this room is concerned, Mr. Cates, you were picked up for questioning concerning the Dawson and Hallier incident, and released." the population, you see. A show of force is very effective for that. As far as anyone outside this room is concerned, Mr. Cates, you were picked up for questioning concerning the Dawson and Hallier incident, and released."
I thought about pointing out the sheer implausibility of this story, since the Pigs hardly ever released anyone, but didn't want to tempt this madman into going for a more realistic approach. Like beating me within an inch of my life, just for effect.
Marin leaped up and the door snicked snicked open again. "We have a deal, then, Mr. Cates?" open again. "We have a deal, then, Mr. Cates?"
He was walking briskly to the door. "I'll need start-up costs!" I shouted.
And he was out the door, which snicked shut again. I waited a moment to see what would happen, but nothing did. I glanced down. My coffee had gone cold.
VIII.
They May Not Believe They'll Survive 01110.
"So, what's the deal?"
I didn't look at Gatz. I sucked on a cigarette and considered my options. They were very few, and it didn't take long, so I kept going over them again and again, to keep myself busy.
Marin had transferred a few thousand yen into my account, not much but a start. I had a few thousand scattered here and there, as well, and after a few debts were collected I figured we had about ten grand to get started with. You could have a pretty sw.a.n.ky night in Manhattan with ten grand. Almost everything else cost about twice that. Still, it was a start, and I figured whatever we couldn't afford Gatz might be able to finesse.
"Avery, come on," he said, struggling to keep up with me, turning his head this way and that as we walked down Broadway, ruined buildings on either side of us. "We got pinched, we got released. No one even talked talked to me. So what's going on?" to me. So what's going on?"
I exhaled smoke into the densely polluted night air. "We've got a job, chum. We're working for the Worms."
He stumbled and I gained a step on him. "Are you f.u.c.king kidding me?"
I shook my head, my eyes scanning the crowd that pushed past us. No one took any notice, but you never knew. "No kidding. But the catch is, we're on our own. No one's going to acknowledge us. And the s.h.i.t we'll be doing is going to be kind of high profile, some of it, and might attract trouble."
"So what the f.u.c.k is it?"
All of a sudden, we were partners. Gatz had proven to be a reliable buddy so far, I had to admit, but I wasn't used to having a partner.
"Let's get a drink."
At Pickerings, where all ventures great and small in our neighborhood began, I explained everything to the twitchy little f.u.c.ker, who sat with his gla.s.ses on, slumped back in the booth, his gin and ice untouched, a layer of sugar floating on top-without the sugar, the f.u.c.king stuff would blind you, no s.h.i.t. In the gloom and smoke of Pickering's he looked like a reverse shadow, pale and blurry.
When I was done, he leaned forward and took a long drink from his lukewarm cup, coughed a webby, chunky cough that didn't inspire confidence, and leaned back again. "f.u.c.king h.e.l.l," he murmured. "What now?"
I waved at Melody and held up two fingers for a second round. The thing with the unlicensed liquor was, once you started drinking you might as well get trashed, because it was going to hurt like h.e.l.l when it wore off no matter how much you drank. In the light of day, Pickering's looked almost clean, its scavenged tables gouged with a million carved messages, its bare concrete floor still reeking of the morning's bleach. The whole place looked like it might collapse in the next stiff wind. Pickering's was the very edge of halfway-civilized New York; two blocks south and you were in no-man's land.
"We're going to need a team. This is f.u.c.king huge."
"A team," he murmured.
I held up my hand and began ticking off fingers. "I'm the Gunner-okay, fine. You're the secret f.u.c.king weapon, Kev, off the charts. You can handle all sorts of unexpected situations, just like you handled those two System Cops for me. But that leaves a lot of jobs for us. We'll need a technical guy. We'll need a transportation guy. I can do security, too, unless there's someone brilliant just kicking around New York. "
Melody brought our drinks and set them sloppily on the table and had already half-turned away when I snaked out a hand and grabbed her arm. "Mel," I said just below the din of the crowd. "I need to talk to Pick."
She blinked down at my hand; a spongy, pale girl getting slowly fat, missing one front tooth. "Yeah?"
I nodded. "Yeah."
She nodded, and disappeared. Gatz and I sipped our drinks uncomfortably for a few moments, and then she reappeared, swimming up from the crowd with a dirty towel in one hand, the other extended, its finger curled at us.
"Come on, then. He ain't gonna live forever."
Gatz and I got up, shrugging our longcoats back into place. I checked my weapon-Pickering's wasn't a good place to be unarmed-Gatz looked like he was negotiating with gravity to stay off the floor, and we followed her through the crowd, around the back of the bar, and through a nondescript steel door she held open, smirking at us.
"Be careful," she said, smirking, as I pa.s.sed her. "He's in a mood today."
The back office of Pickering's was small and crowded, dimly lit and choked with dust. Old Pickering had once been a biology professor of some sort, back in the day. In the gray years just before Unification he'd lost his position and had begun a career in crime-and been pretty good at it, at least the nonviolent sort. Good enough to open his bar and retire, kind of, becoming a central gathering point for everyone in Manhattan. Old Pick knew everything that happened in Manhattan, and everyone.
The place was filled with paper and boxes. I remembered how to read, but didn't get much practice these days, and didn't bother deciphering the lettering on everything. Pick had his reasons. In the far corner, bathed in the bluish light of an ancient cathode-ray monitor, which was connected in turn to an ancient, tiny computer, pre-Unification, was a huge wooden desk, piled high with more paper and dominated by a huge round ashtray, in which sat a day's worth of cigarette b.u.t.ts, a huge pile of ash, and cheap, unfiltered remnants. Pick himself was a fat, immobile man with long, dirty gray hair and a round, punched-looking face. He managed to give the impression that he hadn't stood up in years, that the office had grown around him organically. He didn't turn around as we entered. He didn't look like he could could turn around, this fat blob of a man hunched in front of a f.u.c.king keyboard-a turn around, this fat blob of a man hunched in front of a f.u.c.king keyboard-a keyboard! keyboard!-and staring at the ancient screen.
"That's primitive," I said lightly, like always-we had a running joke. I snaked my way through the piles of c.r.a.p. Behind me, I heard the hum of the bar, distant; the room was reinforced and bugproofed.
He grunted. "f.u.c.k you, Cates. It's pre-Uni, so it's clean of trackers and serials and spyware, yes? Can't do much, but what it can can do the f.u.c.king System Pigs can't see. So f.u.c.k you." do the f.u.c.king System Pigs can't see. So f.u.c.k you."
I leaned against a tall pile of boxes next to his desk and tried to look casual. "You're looking fat, Pick."
He scowled and leaned back from his work. "All right, I see I'll get no peace until you have my undivided attention. What can I do you for, Mr. Cates? And, uh," he peered thickly at Gatz, his jowly face screwed into a permenant frown of concentration, "Mr. Gatz? The infamous Mr. Gatz, the man with the googly eyes. Your name's come up."
Gatz sank against a tall pile of paper. He looked ready to quietly expire. "Oh yeah?"
Pick nodded, turning back to me. "So?"
"I'm putting together a team."
"Yeah? Pay, or share?"
"Share. I've got some startup costs, but not much."
"Score?"
"Huge, potentially. Also hugely dangerous."
"Hmmph," Pick grunted. "Typical. Listen, Cates, you ever get tired of running in the hamster wheel out there and decide to do some real work, let me know. Okay. Let's hear about it."
I shook my head. Pick was of the opinion that we would all be better served by trying to destroy the System, and I'd heard his speech many times. "Uh-uh. That would ruin the surprise."
He grinned, his teeth the strong white ones of the older people, pre-Uni people. My own were yellowed and ached a lot. Gatz had about ten teeth left in his mouth, mostly in the front. We didn't get to eat often enough to worry about our teeth. In the middle of his cauliflower face and steel-gray hair, they were shocking and looked fake. Everything real looked fake, these days. Fake looked real. "I'll find out, soon enough," he declared easily. "Okay, what you looking for?"
I gave him the general outline of our requirements, keeping it vague and terse. Pick was right: He'd know everything soon enough. The man was a lightning rod for information around these parts; it was part of his livelihood, because everyone knew he knew everything.
The fat man whistled. "That's quite a team. Getting good people to work on commission's gonna be hard."
I nodded. "I've got a good rep. Remind people of that."
Pick held up his stubby hands, his panting breath loud. "Hey, Avery, I'm not saying you don't have a good rep. One of the better reps I know of. People will believe you'll pay them-but they may not believe they'll survive."
I shrugged. "Not my problem. Who's in town?"
Pick was a living, breathing directory. When people drifted into town, or got out of jail, or came out of retirement, Pick knew moments later, somehow.
He smiled at me. "Standard fee, of course?"
I fished out my newly fattened credit dongle, slightly dulled and battered over the years, but still functioning. "Of course."
He took it and slid it through the equally aged and battered reader built into the desk. He began punching b.u.t.tons on the reader. He handed the disc back to me and then collapsed back in his chair. "Let's see . . . no one sitting out in the bar is right for this, but there's always people available in the city. You want the full list, or you want me to edit it based on who I think you can actually get?"
I was pressed for time, with the King Worm breathing down my neck. "Edit it, Pick. I'm in a rush."
He nodded. "For a Techie, then, I'd suggest Ty Kieth out of Belfast. He's on the run and living under an a.s.sumed ID over on Charlton. Heard of him?"