Nosferatu
Page 7
Michael had six rooms, half the building’s top floor. Two of them were filled entirely with cyberdecks and associated tech, machines cannibalized and rewired until they looked like something from another planet.
“It’s a bit Heath Robinson, but it works,” the Englishman said as he swept in and flicked on the lights. Serrin noticed there weren’t any windows, at least not in the rooms he could see.
“What’s Heath Robinson?” he asked.
“An artist who designed ridiculous machines that looked like they might work.”
“What, you mean, like, Rube Goldberg?” Serrin asked. Michael gave him a smile. “Yes, folks, it’s that old ‘One nation divided by a common language’ time again,” he chuckled. “Anyway, you two can catch some sleep if you want. I’ve got work to do. I think Gerald will have finished the business in Germany by now.”
“Gerald? Who’s he?” Serrin demanded irritably. It was becoming tiresome the way this Englishman always seemed to be so far ahead of it all.
“Gerald’s a smart frame. I like to give them names after designing them. Anyway, I got Gerald off to his stuff last night with the remote while you were changing clothes. I must say, old boy, you look spiffing in them.” The troll sniggered.
“A smart frame working from here? Spirits, isn’t that risky? Surely there’ll be trace IC in a military system,” Serrin said doubtfully.
“That’s why Gerald was re-routed through BIC in Dallas/Fort Worth. If the Germans trace him, they’ll think it was someone in the Texas corp who’s been snooping on them. From past experience I know that Gerald can infiltrate BIC and that they won’t be able to trace him. I’ll download what he’s got. By then, Tracey should have finished analyzing flight schedule data and setting up options for MP checks,” Michael replied smoothly.
“Don’t even ask about Tracey,” Tom whispered to Serrin.
“Chummer, what is there that you can’t do?” Serrin asked caustically.
The Englishman paused to think for a moment. “I wouldn’t want to try busting into Aztechnology in Aztlan, old boy. Not unless someone gave me a million up front and I had a top-notch team of paramedics sitting around me at the deck. Apart from that, and one or two of the hush-hush Japanese sculpted systems, I’m not intimidated by anything, really.
“Geraint says I’m a controlled hypomanic. That’s when he’s being nice. And if you ask him after his latest affaire d’amour has gone down the tubes, he’ll probably say that I’m crazy,” Michael said. “But if I do something, it gets done. Now let me order out for some bagels and let’s see what we’ve got here.”
* * *
Even on a cool winter’s day, it was an unpleasant ride out to Simon’s Town. A bus that was supposed to carry only sixty people was stuffed with nearer to a hundred, and the interior was hot, sweaty, and stifling. At first Kristen thought she was seated among half a dozen jockeys headed for the ostrich races, but soon she realized that they were just wannabes, kids hoping to attract the attention of the right person at the track. They chattered and laughed and pointedly ignored her, which suited her; she stayed quiet and just waited, increasingly miserably, for the trip to end. The ride took nearly two hours, the bus crawling around the western coastline before it veered east past Da Gama Park on the way to the broken-down old naval port. Next time, she thought. I’ll make Manoj give me the extra rand for the train.
The big old houses on Main Street had long since decayed into a warren of ghettos. Azania didn’t maintain much of a navy these days and more than half the people of the town were unemployed, most of the rest having to commute into Cape Town itself to find work. The few who were lucky, or trusted, enough to get work as gemstone polishers in Topstones lived in their own arcology, far from their fellows down the hillside. There were too many empty eyes in the streets looking for people whose money might buy them a few hours of oblivion in some wretched indulgence or other.
Kristen was carrying the heavy knife she’d brought from Manoj’s place, not an item she would normally touch in Cape Town itself, where she could get two years just for its presence in her bag. Right here, right now, though, she was glad to have it. All the way to the villa, set back off Main Street by a fringe of security railings and heavy flowering bushes, she got more and more paranoid. By the time she rang the bell at the plain gray gates, she was desperate to be off the street. The gates swung slowly open just long enough to allow her admittance, then immediately snapped shut behind her.
Then she walked up to the front door which was opened by a lean, gaunt-faced white man holding a heavy pistol leveled at her chest.
“Drop the bag and put your hands on your head,” he ordered. She complied at once. Keeping the gun, and his eyes, trained on her, the man sank down onto one knee to open the bag. He pulled out her knife, spat at her, and kept it in one hand as he told her to retrieve the bag. She did so very slowly.
“Thought you'd cut me up for the goods, huh?” he snarled at her.
“Look, chummer. I’m just the errand girl,” she said wearily. “I walked down Main Street to get here. What kind of idiot would do that without a blade?”
He nodded reluctantly and edged back into the hallway. “You better come in. I ain’t going to just pull everything out in plain view of anyone keeping their eyes open,” he said. Sighing, she followed him in, being careful to move slowly and deliberately.
The man put the knife down on the table and, keeping his eyes on her. walked over to a desk and picked up an old, crudely made radio. Carrying it over to her, he stuffed it into her bag.
“It’s in there,” he said. “Tell Manoj he can keep the radio. It still works.” For a moment he almost allowed himself a smile and then thought better of it. “Tell him the other half of the money had better be here by tomorrow morning or he’s going to get a visit from some men. Now, buzz.”
Kristen wasn’t yet ready to abandon the chance to make some extra money. “I’ve got something Manoj said you might want to buy.” The man laughed derisively, but that didn’t put her off. “In the bag. A computer.”
He extracted the radio again and put it to one side, then removed the small box. The fact that he didn’t stare at it like it was something that had just crawled into a hole and died was promising.
“Let me scope it.” he said. “But you’d better come with me. I ain’t trusting you to sit in here.”
Still watching her like a veldt hawk, he led her into the back room, where he told her to sit opposite him at a work table. He laid the gun down within reach and flicked the tiny power button on the computer.
"Manoj couldn’t get it to work. He said maybe you could use the parts,” Kristen told him. He unscrewed the casing and checked the insides.
“Nothing really wrong with it. I could use some of this, maybe,” he said coolly. “Give you a hundred rand for it.” That was chicken fodder, really. But even though she didn’t know what the little machine was worth, Kristen wasn’t in much of a bargaining position. She’d learned that a small gain now was better than the possibility of a big gain later, so she decided to take the money.
“Sure. If you help me with one thing.”
“Huh?” he grunted. She pushed the unfurled printout at him. “One of the names on this list. Serrin Shamandar. Any way of getting more information?”
He looked at the digits on the paper. “There’s a telecom number,” he said. “Why ain’t you tried it, stupid?”
“I can’t read, stupid,” she snapped, stung.
“Look, I’m not making any calls to someone I never even heard of,” he said. “Some people have permanent traces that switch on as soon as you call ’em. If you want to talk to this bugger, get someone to make the call for you when you get back home. Use a public phone.”
If I can find one that hasn’t been fragged, she thought. The only ones still working were in parts of town where Kristen’s dark skin would be out of place and make her look as suspicious as hell.
“Look, it’s only a phone call,” sh
e said miserably. “He’s not going to come looking for you all the way from Seattle just because somebody calls him from Cape Town, is he? Twenty bucks I can pay you.”
“Where did you get dollars? No, I won’t ask,” he said drily. “All right. You get half a minute, that’s all.”
He entered the code on his telecom, cutting the visual channel. The whine that came back left him grinning.
“That’s no phone number, gal. It’s a fax. Words only. You want me to type in a message? Cost you ten bucks a half-minute.”
Kristen didn’t want him to know what she was going to say. She didn’t even know what she wanted to say. She tried to think of someone she’d trust enough to do it back in Cape Town. She got up to leave, but he leveled the gun at her.
“Twenty bucks, you said.”
She threw him half of that. “You made the connection, but I didn’t get to talk. Half rate,” she said, staring defiantly at him. He sniffed and looked away from her.
“Have it your way. Take your knife and get back in one piece. Manoj will be really slotted off if you don’t make it.” He unrolled a couple of fifties from his pocket and exchanged them for the fives on the table.
By the time the gates had closed behind her and she’d run the gauntlet of eyes along the highway again, Kristen wasn’t looking forward to the bus trip home. She was carrying a five-to-ten sentence in her bag and was ten dollars poorer for nothing. Even with a hundred rand, by the time she’d bought a drink to survive the ride home she’d have spent almost as much as she was supposed to get paid for this trip. Kristen sighed. Well, that was the thing about luck. Sometimes a run of it ended just too soon.
* * *
“Lunch time, you chaps,” came an infuriatingly cheerful voice. “You’ve had three hours’ kip. Sleep any longer and you won’t sleep tonight. Come on, you missed the food by time it got here.”
Serrin opened his eyes and yawned. Rolling off the bed, he went burrowing into his case for his toothbrush. He was just heading for the bathroom while the troll snored thunderously on when Michael stopped him in his tracks.
“Well, it’s not the Damascus League who’s after you,” the Englishman told him. “German info is that they wanted to scrag Small because he’s cuddling up too close to the Jewish vote. They’ve got a list of targets, but you’re not on it. You will also be pleased to know that Renraku, Aztechnology, HKB in London—who, I gather, have a special interest in you—and a handful of other power-players might be keeping tabs on you, but with little in the way of homicidal intent.”
“You mean you’ve cracked the surveillance files of Renraku? Aztechnology? Are you for real?” Serrin gasped.
“Of course not. I have a few contacts, that’s all. Asking them to confirm that you’re not on anything above zero-priority level isn't calling in such a high-level favor. By the way, Frieda in Frankfurt remembers a completely anonymous man in a chauffeur’s uniform. Average height, average build, shades, peaked cap. long coat. No identifying characteristics whatsoever. She said he had a sexy voice, though.”
“Great,” Serrin grumbled. “Next time some drekhead tries to shoot me I’ll remember to notice that.”
“So we’ve established some negatives. Now Tracey’s doing her stuff on missing mages. Separated by race and tagged for corporate politics, obviously. She’s doing the easy stuff now, but I think I’ll jump into the pool and do the difficult ones myself while you’re having lunch. I wouldn’t want to leave her to the mercies of British IC, for instance. Digging into the heavier corporates for unreported losses might be tricky, too.”
“Don’t you ever sleep?” Serrin wondered.
“I don’t need more than three hours a night. Not since I started meditating twice a day. Ten minutes of that is as good as two hours sleep, believe me. I’ve got an overactive dopaminergic circuit, Geraint tells me. He once made me pee into some flask for one of his bloody experiments to test for some metabolites or other when we were at Cambridge. He did chromatography and assays on it and told me that, depending on how I handled it, I’d be either one of the best deckers in the business or a schizophrenic.”
Serrin looked at Michael long and hard. “You’re a freak,” he said finally.
“Yup,” Michael smiled happily. “Most people say that to me inside an hour of meeting me. You’re very polite for a sep. Got any English blood in you?”
The elf shook his head and made for the shower. By the time he’d emerged from it, shaved and bathed and happier with life, he heard Michael and Tom in earnest conversation.
“No, you’re wrong,” Michael was saying animately. “We need a hell of a lot less emotion in people. The better educated, more intelligent, more analytical people are, the better they can see the bulldrek all around them and start thinking about it.”
“You don’t need to think to know that some things are wrong,” the troll said simply. “It’s something you’ve got to feel. If you don’t feel, you ain’t got any sense of right and wrong.”
“Sure, but—” Michael broke off as Serrin wandered back into view.
The Englishman looked faintly sheepish. “Sorry, old boy. I’ll get back to the grindstone. I’ve been having a fascinating discussion with Tom.” He got up from the table and headed for the second work room, Fingering the datajack on his temple. “Excuse me. As we Brits are prone to say, I may be gone some time.” He closed the door behind him.
“He’s weird," sighed the elf.
“Are all these British like that?” the troll asked.
Serrin laughed. “Not entirely. Not all the time. But he’s good at his work. He’s doing what we need.”
The troll grunted and made some comment about lunch.
“We could raid the freezer, or we could head for somewhere in town. I'm a bit paranoid about going out. We’d be safer here.”
“I need the fresh air,” Tom complained. “Anyway, I've seen his fridge. He only eats food without anything in it. It’s all skimmed this and no-calorie that. A troll could die of starvation up here.”
“Well, I guess nobody would recognize me in those ridiculous clothes,” Serrin sighed. “I’ll keep checking astrally too. I’ve already been doing that.”
“I noticed,” the troll said.
“I think I remember seeing someplace where you can get all the pizza and pasta you want for ten bucks, even if you’re a troll. As long as you’re with someone who isn’t. That way, twenty covers you and the other guy,” the elf said.
“If you’ve got your Predator, I’ve got my Room-sweeper,” the troll sniffed. “I got an empty belly too. Now, where is this place?”
9
The alert from Tracey surprised him. Most of the frame-decking had been pretty simple, but this time Michael was getting a message that the Zulu Nation system he’d tried to get into was an expert system. That spelled danger. The only reason he’d checked it was because a flight from New Hlobane had arrived in JFK fifteen minutes before Serrin had fled for Frankfurt. Which intrigued him. The schedule for European and Japanese flights was exactly what he’d expected to find, but a direct flight from the Zulu capital into New York’s JFK was not. That startling fact stood out like a grain of grit in vaseline. Now the frame was telling him these Zulus had some serious design work in their police systems.
Serrin and Tom were still out, so he rigged himself up with a cardiomonitor and respiratory analyzer and jacked in. Appearing in the virtual reality of the Matrix as a professor, complete with gown and mortar board, he gripped the violin case that carried his machine-gun attack utility and headed out the long route of datalines across the Atlantic.
The frame had already ferreted out the SAN number for the Zulu system, so he knew where to go. What he didn’t know was whether there was any system alert; Tracey would have disengaged before finding out. He switched to evasion mode, minimizing his chances of being detected until he could determine whether any alarm programs had been triggered.
The system access node appeared to him as a circle of
grassland hemmed in by broad-leaved, thick-barked trees swaying slightly in some unknown breeze. The sleeping lioness wasn’t a surprise, though he didn’t like her proximity to the rope bridge across the stream in the distance. Even more worrisome was the vulture sitting peacefully in one of the trees. He had no way of even guessing what kind of construct it might be.
Inching forward he felt the familiar tug at his senses. This was a sculpted system, of course, custom-designed and much more difficult to maneuver than a system using standard icon imagery. He assumed that it wouldn’t be too difficult to force this system to accept his persona, the icon by which he existed in this illusory electron world, but that vulture seemed ominous. Not because of what it was doing, but precisely because it wasn’t doing anything. Scanner program, he guessed, but he wanted to be sure.
What it turned out to be was a lot worse than that.
He let fly the little bird of prey, the hawk that was his analyze program, to circle above the vulture while he stayed where he was, keeping an eye on the lioness. The analyzing hawk came back with some conflicting signals. Trying to make sense of it, he concentrated on seeing through the hawk’s eyes.
The wings of the vulture showed a bizarre patterning, each feather with a pattern halfway between a simple spiral and a feathered fractal. Its eyes scanned everything at an impossible speed, not so much flitting around as zooming.
He had to admit it was wiz: an infinite-regress element. It was, of course, a detection program, and was entirely self-referencing. In a sculpted system, the damn thing knew exactly what was allowed in here and what wasn’t. If he tried to overcome the reality of this system, it was going to squawk. If he tried to defeat it, it had an infinitely self-checking algorithm that would actually respond to its defeat. And if he tried to defeat the algorithm .. . Michael got dizzy just thinking about the possibilities.