Casper smiled as he watched. Even the feds thought they'd done it, and that he was a burnt corpse on the bottom of the Atlantic.
The wreckage ought to be so far down that no one could recover it and find out that there weren't any corpses, or at least none that had Casper's DNA.
If they ever did find it, of course, they'd guess the truth-that he was safe in a cabin in the Poconos, and Mirim would be joining him as soon as she could get away.
There were still other loose ends to be dealt with, as well. He had to make sure that Ed was out of the way, that the genetically-engineered virus he'd injected with that slap on the back had done its job and erased his memory-otherwise, the possibility that Ed might reveal the fraud would always be there. Ed and his terrorist past didn't fit with the new People For Change, in any case.
He hoped the virus wasn't fatal; the black market gene tailor hadn't made any promises. The thing had originally been developed with the idea of erasing outdated or proprietary imprints, but had never been used-it ate out huge chunks of the user's memory, along with the imprinted skills, and the developers hadn't been able to find a way to target it more precisely.
Casper was trying to resist the Spartacus File's ruthlessness. He hadn't simply killed Ed, though that would have been the easiest way to cover his tracks and remove an embarrassment from PFC-but Ed was going to lose so much of his past life and personality that death might almost have been preferable. If the virus performed as advertised, the old-line revolutionary would never be able to tell anyone that Beech was still alive, or that the crate that had supposedly held Beech and his life support system had actually held the bomb that destroyed Freight 2105.
That would take care of most of the loose ends, but there were other things he still had to do. Casper knew he'd have to find some way, working by proxy, to convince Cecelia to let Mirim act as her speechwriter, so that he could supply Mirim with the words to keep PFC on the right track.
But all in all, everything was going just fine. The revolution would continue, without violence, and this time no one was going to crucify Spartacus.
He'd beaten them to it.
Epilogue
It was snowing in Washington, but nobody seemed to care; the crowd listening to the new president's inaugural address applauded enthusiastically at every opportunity.
Maybe, Casper thought cynically, as he watched the spectacle on his screen, they were doing it to keep warm.
For himself, his enthusiasm had worn away over the past seventeen years-along with his control over the PFC. He listened to Cecelia delivering her speech, and could not find a single sentence of his in it.
The populist ideals were gone; instead, she was mouthing platitudes about compromise and reconciliation. The Democratic-Republicans on the dais behind her were applauding as loudly as the PFCers.
The PFC might have taken control of the government, but it was plain that the government, in turn, had taken control of the PFC.
Had taken it away from Casper.
The PFC was just more of the same old authority.
For sixteen years, Casper had appeased the demon in his head by exercising regularly with elaborate martial-arts routines, by keeping in practice with every weapon available, by planning campaigns for any PFC candidate who didn't look like a sure winner, by writing speeches for Cecelia and a dozen others, but now, as he watched President Grand, the Spartacus File was active again, and unsatisfied.
He watched Cecelia's every gesture, listened to her every word, thought over everything Mirim had relayed of late.
The PFC was the government now. They had the presidency, they had two hundred thirty-eight seats in the House and forty-three in the Senate.
And the Spartacus File compelled him to rebel against the government- any government.
That son of a bitch Schiano had never bothered to put in any end to the program; he and Covert had always assumed that their Spartacus would wind up dead, one way or another.
Covert was under Cecelia's command now. They'd tell her anything she wanted to know about the Spartacus File.
Casper knew that she had figured out, long ago, that he was still alive. She'd never said so, never told anyone else, he was sure, but she'd read those speeches, seen those campaign plans, and Mirim's name at the top or bottom wouldn't have fooled her.
And she hadn't forgiven him for lying to her, or she'd have sent him a message. She wouldn't have cut his every word out of her inaugural. She'd have mentioned her party's martyr during the campaign.
She had probably stewed constantly over the image of Casper and Mirim holed up somewhere, cozy and safe, while she fought her way up step by step through the political nightmare of the past sixteen years.
And when she talked to Schiano and the others, she'd know what would have to be done.
And Casper already knew what he had to do.
He wondered, as he packed, whether the Spartacus File had planned this all along, whether it required a constant cycle of revolutions, or whether this was a bug in the program.
In the end, it didn't matter whether it was a bug or a feature, so long as it was there.
When the SWAT team arrived two days later they found the cabin dark and empty. A note was pinned to the door with a knife.
“The battle continues,” it said.
It was signed “Spartacus.”
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The Spartacus File Page 18