Impact

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Impact Page 39

by Rob Boffard


  In another online operation, the Gurus and their new recruits led a second select group—military, clandestine services, political—on a merry geocache chase, in quest of something that might point to a huge breach of national security. There was a breach, of course.

  It was the Gurus.

  Working in this fashion, it became apparent to a few of our best and brightest that they were not dealing with an eccentric rich hermit with an odd sense humor. And there were genuine rewards, rich Easter eggs waiting to be cracked. Linking the most interesting puzzles led logically to some brilliant mathematical and scientific insights. One of these, quantum interlacing, showed the potential of increasing bandwidth in any Shannon-compliant network by a millionfold.

  Only then did the Gurus reveal themselves—through another specially trained group of intermediaries. They came in peace. Of course. They planned on being even more helpful, in due time—piecing out their revelations in step sequence, not to upset proprietary apple carts all at once.

  World leaders were gradually made aware of the game change, with astonishing tact and political savvy. Citizen awareness followed a few months later, after carefully coached preparation. It seemed the Gurus knew as much about our psychology and sociology as they did about the rules of the universe. They wanted to take things gradual.

  And so over a period of six months, the Gurus came forward, moving out in ones and twos from their Yemeni Hadramaut beachhead to world capitals, economic centers, universities, think tanks—transforming themselves into both hostages and indispensable advisors.

  The Gurus explained that they are here in tiny numbers because interstellar travel is fantastically difficult and expensive, even at their level of technology. So much had been guessed by our scientists. We still don’t know how many Gurus came to Earth originally, but there are now, at best estimate—according to what our own governments will tell us—about thirty of them. They don’t seem to mind being separated from each other or their own kind, but they keep their human contacts to a few dozen. Some call these select emissaries the Wait Staff.

  It took the Gurus a while to drop the other shoe. You can see why, looking back. It was a very big shoe, completely slathered in dog shit.

  Just as we were getting used to the new world order—just as we were proving ourselves worthy—the Gurus confessed they were not the only ones out there in the dark light-years. They explained that they had been hounded by mortal enemies from sun to sun, planet to planet, and were in fact now stretched thin—left weak, nearly defenseless.

  Gurus were not just being magnanimous with their gifts of tech. They needed our help, and we needed to step up and help them, because these enemies were already inside the far, icy margins of our solar system, were, in fact, trying to establish their own beachhead, but not on Earth.

  On Mars.

  Some pundits started to call this enemy the Antagonists—Antags. The name stuck. We were told very little about them, except that they were totally bad.

  And so our first bill came due. Skyrines were volunteered to help pay. As always.

  THE SUN SETS watery yellow in a pall of Seattle gray. Night falls and ships’ lights swim and dance in my tears. I’m still exuding slimy crap. Spacemen can’t use drugs the first few days because our livers are overworked cleaning out residue. It comes out of our skin and sits on our breath like cheap gin and old sweat. Civilian ladies don’t like the stink until we remind them about the money, then some put up with it.

  It’s quiet in the apartment. Empty. Spacemen are rarely alone coming or going or in the shit. If we’re not in timeout, there’s always that small voice in the ear, either a fellow Skyrine or your angel. But I don’t really mind being alone. Not for a few hours. Not until Joe comes back and tells me how it all turned out. What the real secret was—about Muskies and the Drifter, the silicon plague, the tower of smart diamonds.

  About Teal.

  And the Voors, nasty, greedy SOBs who lost almost everything and maybe deserved to lose more. But they didn’t deserve us.

  I curl up in the Eames chair and pull up the blanket. I’m so tired, but I’ve got a lot on my mind. Pretty soon, I relive being in the shit.

  It’s vivid.

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  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Welcome

  Dedication

  Prologue

  1. Riley

  2. Okwembu

  3. Riley

  4. Okwembu

  5. Riley

  6. Prakesh

  7. Riley

  8. Prakesh

  9. Okwembu

  10. Riley

  11. Riley

  12. Riley

  13. Prakesh

  14. Anna

  15. Riley

  16. Prakesh

  17. Riley

  18. Okwembu

  19. Prakesh

  20. Okwembu

  21. Anna

  22. Riley

  23. Prakesh

  24. Riley

  25. Anna

  26. Riley

  27. Okwembu

  28. Riley

  29. Riley

  30. Riley

  31. Okwembu

  32. Anna

  33. Prakesh

  34. Riley

  35. Okwembu

  36. Riley

  37. Riley

  38. Prakesh

  39. Okwembu

  40. Riley

  41. Prakesh

  42. Riley

  43. Anna

  44. Riley

  45. Riley

  46. Riley

  47. Riley

  48. Anna

  49. Riley

  50. Anna

  51. Riley

  52. Riley

  53. Okwembu

  54. Riley

  55. Prakesh

  56. Riley

  57. Riley

  58. Okwembu

  59. Anna

  60. Prakesh

  61. Riley

  62. Prakesh

  63. Riley

  64. Prakesh

  65. Riley

  66. Okwembu

  67. Anna

  68. Riley

  69. Prakesh

  70. Riley

  71. Riley

  72. Prakesh

  73. Riley

  74. Riley

  75. Prakesh

  76. Okwembu

  77. Riley

  78. Okwembu

  79. Riley

  80. Anna

  81. Okwembu

  82. Anna

  83. Riley

  84. Okwembu

  85. Riley

  86. Okwembu

  87. Riley

  88. Anna

  89. Okwembu

  90. Riley

  91. Riley

  92. Riley

  93. Riley

  94. Anna

  95. Riley

  96. Okwembu

  97. Riley

  98. Prakesh

  99. Riley

  Acknowledgements

  Meet the Author

  By Rob Boffard

  A Preview of The Corporation Wars: Dissidence

  A Preview of War Dogs

  Newsletters

  Copyright

  Copyright

  The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

  Copyright © 2016 by Rob Boffard

  Excerpt from The Corporation Wars: Dissidence copyright © 2016 by Ken MacLeod

  Excerpt from War Dogs copyright © 2014 by Greg Bear

  Cover design by Nico Taylor–LBBG

  Cover copyright © 2016 by Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  Hachette Book Group supports
the right to free expression and the value of copyright. The purpose of copyright is to encourage writers and artists to produce the creative works that enrich our culture.

  The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book without permission is a theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like permission to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), please contact [email protected]. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

  Redhook Books/Orbit

  Hachette Book Group

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  First ebook edition: August 2016

  Redhook is an imprint of Orbit, a division of Hachette Book Group.

  The Redhook name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

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  ISBN 978-0-316-26533-1

  E3-20160722-JV-PC

 

 

 


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