A Murder of Clones: A Retrieval Artist Universe Novel

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A Murder of Clones: A Retrieval Artist Universe Novel Page 19

by Rusch, Kristine Kathryn


  And he would have to step it off because his links were down. The constant hum he let the links function under had gone away. He felt alone inside his head.

  He paced, even though he should probably sit like a relaxed and comfortable attorney. Someone had put a table in the center of the room, but the table clearly wasn’t part of the permanent décor. Neither were the chairs. They were all attached to the floor, but he could see the releases, even if he couldn’t operate them himself.

  The door clanged open and two android guards entered. They looked sturdier than the guards he had seen in other prisons, with extra layers over their internal workings. Their eyes were receded in their heads, and they had slits for mouths. Otherwise, they had very strong, almost rope-like arms and equally strong-looking legs. Their torsos were completely flat.

  Zhu nodded at them. They did not acknowledge him in return.

  Now that they were here, he couldn’t sit at all. He really was nervous.

  “I’m here to see a client,” he said. “You may not stay in the room once he arrives.”

  “We will not record anything,” said one of the guards in a flat monotone.

  Zhu smiled. He’d played this game before. Young attorneys often lost cases because they didn’t realize that any presence in the room other than the attorney and client would destroy attorney-client privilege under Alliance law.

  “I don’t care what you will and won’t do,” Zhu said. “I am an attorney. Under the law, I have the right to see my client in private.”

  “Your client is dangerous,” the same guard said in the same flat voice. “We are here to protect you from harm.”

  “I will not waive protection, like you want me to. You can observe through the proper channels. I retain the right to see my client in private.”

  He was deliberately stating that he had the right to see his client in private. He had a hunch he would lose if he argued that his client had the right to privacy. He had no idea where clones stood in the laws governing attorney-client privilege, so he wasn’t going to invoke his client’s rights at all.

  Zhu was only going to invoke his rights as an attorney. And on that, Alliance law was very clear. He had the right to see anyone or any sentient thing as a client, alone, if he wanted to. The prison (or jail) had to protect him from harm, by monitoring the proximity of the client and the attorney. Any touch and the guards could enter the room.

  “We are here for your safety,” the android guard repeated.

  “Get out,” Zhu said.

  Their eyes flared. He couldn’t tell if that was an acceptance from them or if someone else had made the flare occur. It didn’t matter, because they left the room, one following the other.

  And leaving him feeling even more nervous than he had a moment earlier.

  He made himself sit at the table, then flatted his hands on its metallic surface. He was feeling paranoid enough that he thought he should search the table and chairs for recording and listening devices.

  But he didn’t have access to his links, so he couldn’t really locate any devices. His hands were protected, so he couldn’t feel much through his skin.

  He would have to rely on his insistence to the androids that he needed time alone with his client. If the prison was recording this meeting, then it would have that request repeatedly on the footage. Not to mention the fact that the androids left after speaking to him. If somehow the prison deleted his conversation, then he would still be able to argue common sense, based on actions alone.

  The door clanged open again. He looked up, glad he wasn’t pacing anymore. If he had been, he would have startled visibly. As it were, his heart rate increased.

  A broad-shouldered man slipped in, hands locked together and outstretched. He followed his arms like he was being pulled, and it took Zhu a moment to realize that he was. Whatever they had bound his wrists with was tugging him toward the table.

  The man bent over, and his hands hit the table’s edge. He would either have to stand while bent over like that, or he would have to sit down.

  He sat.

  He had piercing blue eyes. Zhu had never seen eyes like that, so clear, with such a deep blue color. They were riveting. His face was the face of the assassins, at least as they were presented in the Anniversary Day footage, except that his skin was mottled blue and yellow and purple.

  He was bruised, badly bruised, and no nanoprobes had repaired his injuries. His nose looked wider than Zhu expected. The man’s lips were thicker than they should have been as well, probably still swollen from whatever beating he had taken. A line of dried blood ran underneath his lower lip, and it took Zhu a second to understand that the dried blood was actually a scar. Something—the man’s teeth?—had gone through the lower lip and damaged it.

  Zhu had seen unrepaired humans before, but the extent of the damage, and the way it showed up on skin, always surprised him. He had no idea how humans had survived before medicine evolved to make such injuries disappear.

  Yet this man—this clone—had those injuries, and he seemed mobile.

  “You’re the lawyer?” the man asked.

  “My name is Torkild Zhu.” Zhu spoke slowly. Even though the man’s eyes radiated intelligence, Zhu had no idea how much he would understand. Some clones got no education at all. “I’m with one of the best defense firms in the Alliance: Schnable, Shishani, & Salehi.”

  The man’s eyebrows went up. “What did I do to deserve S-three?”

  Zhu knew better than to tell this man much. Zhu had learned long ago that saying anything about himself or his firm to the client, beyond the standard business information, was the wrong thing to do.

  “You requested an attorney,” Zhu said.

  “And I’m your pro bono?” The man leaned his head back, then stopped when it clearly hurt him. “Because of Anniversary Day?”

  Zhu didn’t like the way the man tried to take control of the interview. In fact, he felt a strong antipathy toward the man, but couldn’t tell if that was simply because of the Anniversary Day footage.

  “I don’t even know your name,” Zhu said.

  “I don’t have a legal name,” the man said. “I was called Third of the Second back in the day, and here I’m known as Trey. But according to prison records, all I have is an inmate number. You see, I lack a Day of Creation Document, and all of that lovely stuff legal clones have.”

  So that was what the guard had meant by illegal. Zhu frowned for just a moment as he thought through the law he had read.

  “Are you a clone of PierLuigi Frémont?” Zhu asked.

  Trey tugged on his restraints as if he were trying to find a more comfortable position. “Are you my lawyer?”

  “What does that mean?” Zhu asked.

  “PierLuigi Frémont was a mass murderer. Convicted, unrepentant. And now there are these Anniversary Day creatures that everyone says are related to him in some way.” Trey stopped right there. He said nothing more, but he tilted his head slightly, as if inviting Zhu to answer his own question.

  Zhu’s breath caught. This man, this clone, knew the law. And under Alliance law, any known clone of PierLuigi Frémont could—should—be put to death.

  “What do you want a lawyer for?” Zhu asked.

  “Two things,” Trey said. “I need a lawyer to help me challenge my illegal status.”

  “Do you have a clone mark?” Zhu asked.

  “No,” Trey said.

  “And you lack a Day of Creation Document,” Zhu said, “so how could a lawyer challenge your status?”

  “Are you my lawyer?” Trey asked again. He seemed to prefer that question when he felt it wasn’t in his own interest to answer Zhu’s question.

  “Not yet,” Zhu said, although if he were honest with himself, he was leaning that way just for the challenge alone. “You mentioned two reasons, the first being to challenge your illegality. The second?”

  “I have information the Earth Alliance wants. I’m willing to trade that information for my freedom.�
� His gaze hadn’t left Zhu’s face.

  “Looks like they already tried to beat it out of you,” Zhu said.

  Trey’s swollen lips twisted slightly. “That happened in the yard right after we saw some Anniversary Day footage. You know, the one with the clones.”

  Zhu did know it.

  “The beating went on too long. No one stepped in, even though I called for a lawyer. I suspect that outburst saved my life.”

  It probably had.

  “I don’t understand why clone prisoners would be upset that a group of clones tried to destroy the Moon,” Zhu said.

  “I’m not sure that’s why they were upset,” Trey said.

  “You think it’s coincidence?” Zhu asked.

  “I don’t know that either,” Trey said.

  They studied each other. Trey seemed quite calm for a man who had received a violent beating and who might lose his life because of whom he was related to.

  “What kind of information do you have?” Zhu asked, then added, “And no, I am not your lawyer yet. I don’t want to be attached to you in any way unless I know what I’m getting into.”

  “Because I look like the Anniversary Day suspects?” Trey asked.

  “Because I have a massive caseload already,” Zhu lied, “and I need to know if you’re worth my time.”

  Trey’s measuring gaze broke for just a millisecond, long enough for Zhu to note it. He realized then that no other lawyer had answered the summons. Zhu decided to gamble on that fact.

  “I came to you,” he said. “No other attorney has, even though your request has been out there for weeks. I suspect I’m the only possible lawyer you have, and given my history and the fact that I’m with S-three, I’m also the best lawyer you could hope to get. So think carefully about whether or not you’ll answer my questions.”

  Trey’s eyes narrowed, and he sighed. “Here’s all I will tell you before you confirm that you’re my lawyer. I was raised with more than a hundred other clones. We all came from the same source, known as the Second. I do not know what that means. We were raised in a dome on Epriccom, which was, then at least, on the Frontier. We were raised, from what I can tell, to kill. Whether we were designer criminal clones, weapons, or just someone’s perverse idea of a joke, I have no idea. I do know how we were trained, and how the system worked. You may also check my background. I have been in this prison for fifteen years with no outside contact. Congratulations, Torkild Zhu. You are my first-ever visitor.”

  In other words, there was no way that Trey had known about the Anniversary Day attacks.

  “So your information is very old and the Alliance probably has it all.” Zhu started to stand. He didn’t need this.

  “If the Alliance knew what it had,” Trey said, “do you think it would have let the attacks happen? Do you seriously believe it would have let clones of PierLuigi Frémont live?”

  It was a very good point, and one that Zhu was unprepared to answer. He had half-expected to leave this place empty-handed. Now, he had to consider what he wanted.

  “If you are what I think you are,” Zhu said, “you’re never getting out of here.”

  “Admitting defeat before even stepping onto the battlefield? Really, Torkild Zhu. Is that how they train defense lawyers these days? I thought you all wanted to get a hearing before one of the Multicultural Tribunals.”

  That would have worked a few months ago, but Trey misplayed his hand. Zhu didn’t want that right now, nor did he want to save a possible mass murderer.

  He did want to know what had happened on Anniversary Day, and this man had no idea.

  “Think about this,” Trey said. “I am the Third of the Second. That means there’s a Third of the First out there. In fact, that means there’s a First, period, and maybe several others. No one has that information—or at least, has thought through what information they have. There were at least one hundred clones my age in that dome.”

  “Where are they now?” Zhu asked.

  “Dead,” Trey said. “All of them except six of us. Or maybe less. I don’t know. Six survived the day the marshals arrived. After that, I wasn’t allowed to know. I got shuttled into the system, and ended up here.”

  There was a lot more to that story; Zhu could sense it. There was a lot more to Trey.

  “I’ll consider it,” Zhu said.

  “I’d like to sign on as your client now,” Trey said.

  And Zhu felt the pull of that. In that moment, he realized this man had inherited another side of PierLuigi Frémont. Trey had charisma.

  Which made him dangerous.

  “I said I’ll consider it,” Zhu said.

  “What can I do to convince you?” Trey asked.

  Zhu studied him, heart pounding. Zhu wasn’t sure he was a match to this man, no matter how the law saw him.

  “Nothing,” Zhu said. “You can’t do anything at all.”

  THIRTY

  IT TOOK LONGER than Gomez expected to get the rest of the crew off the EAFS Stanley. She had to contact the FSS for approval for the extended time off, even though her crew was the hardest working crew in the system. Except for the few days she had just given them, several crew members had not had time off in more than a year—except the regulated downtime that any spacefaring large ship had.

  Part of that was because the Stanley traveled constantly inside the Frontier. In order to take time away from work, the Stanley and ships like her had to be in Alliance space, and sometimes the Stanley didn’t approach Alliance space for years. Gomez herself hadn’t had more than a week’s vacation in more than ten years.

  Gomez tried not to get testy as she waited for some bureaucrat in the FSS to approve her crew’s leave. She had to fill out more forms than she wanted, and she had to attest that the Stanley would receive a full overhaul before going back to standard duty.

  She actually didn’t mind attesting to that, since the Stanley would probably need an overhaul after she and her small team were through. If nothing else, she wanted to scrub some evidence of her private mission off the ship’s records.

  The ship would record several things whether she liked it or not, but she knew that after the trip, she could get rid of the record. She could easily shut down other parts of the ship’s tracking capabilities before the team left on its new mission.

  She shut down some external links, including all of the devices that actually pinged the Alliance with the Stanley’s location. She didn’t tell any of the team she had done this. The by-the-book members of the crew—Nuuyoma and Verstraete—would probably argue with her about the wisdom of doing that. Apaza had already questioned the wisdom of taking the Stanley—and in some ways, he was right. It would have been easier to rent a ship or to buy one, since she had a long-stored-up salary that she never spent.

  However, Gomez needed the Stanley for this trip. The Stanley was a fully-equipped law enforcement vehicle that had everything from a small restraining area to a full level with cells. And, most importantly, it had a science lab so extensive that Simiaar could work her magic, even in the far reaches of the known universe.

  Gomez needed Simiaar, and she knew she needed Simiaar’s equipment.

  Which meant she had to keep the Stanley.

  They moved out of Alliance space almost immediately, and found a stationary point behind an uninhabited moon. From there, the team split up into their various areas of research.

  Gomez had brought back hours of interviews with TwoZero, as well as all of his prison records, including his biological data. She had taken fluids and skin cells from him, with his permission, so that Simiaar could confirm if the prison’s biological materials and data actually belonged to TwoZero.

  Gomez still felt extremely paranoid, and she was beginning to think that a good thing.

  She put Verstraete to work building a map and a timeline. She wanted to know where TwoZero had been, where the other surviving clones went, and why Thirds had gone to a medium security prison while the others had gone to maximum security. She
also had Verstraete compile a list of the various known places that provided Designer Criminal Clones.

  She gave Nuuyoma the files provided fifteen years ago by the Eaufasse. A history of the colony as seen through the surveillance that the Eaufasse set up. She wanted him to watch for anything that made the founders of that colony identifiable and she also wanted to know if there were other clone murders.

  And she asked him to take a look at what was going on in that colony while she had been on Epriccom. At the time, two of her deputies were supposed to keep an eye on that enclave—and they had. But she had them looking for different things, because she had an active investigation.

  Now, she wanted to know if anything had been hidden near there, if anyone else had escaped, or if the Eaufasse had approached the enclave as well.

  Scanning that footage, even with the help of the excellent programs the Stanley had for such things, would take quite a bit of time.

  Still, Nuuyoma had the patience and the eye for detail that she needed. Plus, he hadn’t been involved in the earlier mission, so he wouldn’t have the same prejudices Gomez or Simiaar had.

  She had initially thought of putting Apaza on the footage. He could go through a lot of information quickly. But, she decided, he would be more useful doing other things.

  She brought him her notes, and walked him through the things that TwoZero had told her about his childhood. She assigned Apaza to search for similar clone clusters and domed communities outside the Alliance—even if those clusters were not related to PierLuigi Frémont or were non-human clones.

  Gomez figured they would be drowning in information, and she was all right with that. She figured the more information they had, the better they would be.

  She was the one who investigated all of the information provided by the Eaufasse. She would not be able to hide the fact she looked at these records, and she wanted it all by the book.

  The Eaufasse had joined the Alliance and were subject to Alliance laws. If she were to investigate current events happening with the Eaufasse, she would need their permission to see records not available to the public.

 

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