The Last Mayor Box Set 3
Page 40
She smiled. A knife to the eye didn't scare her. "I can. You know the stated purpose of the Logchain; we study the genome, aiming to extend human lifespan. That's where it began thirty years back. You know I came onto the project later, when they already had half the samples expressed already."
James frowned. "By samples you mean the creatures in the basement? And by expressed, you mean manufactured?"
Rachel nodded. "Yes. More or less."
"What do you mean, more or less?"
She sighed. She tried to lift her hand, but the cuff caught it. "More or less, meaning we didn't 'manufacture' them." Her voice was getting smoother now, regaining some of its poise. "The troubles we had expressing the samples were legion. We didn't, and don't, have the technology to build bodies from the ground up, so we repurposed."
James While didn't have much facility with idioms and euphemisms, but this was a euphemism he could grasp. It fit the pattern, and the pattern was deception and immorality.
"People," he said. "You took people and changed them."
Heron sneered. "You make it sound terrible. It's not. We took bodies with fundamentally broken brains, a very specific spine/brain disconnect that meant the biological specimen was perfectly healthy, there was just no driver at the wheel. They've typically been in comas for five years by the time they come to us. Hollow shells for us to fill."
"And you fill them with a new type?"
"We try." Her confidence was returning. "It isn't easy, expressing the T4 types. Obviously, it's never been done before."
It hadn't been done before because it broke core rules of the SEAL's Geneva Testament, the parallel guidelines Olan Harrison had imposed on his own organization at the same time as the Geneva Convention on Human Rights. The SEAL's, if anything, were far stricter than the one used in the wider world.
"It's illegal."
Rachel gave him a look. It was the same as the look she'd given him when they went down to the corridor, and he knew what it meant. 'Don't be a child. Grow up. This is the real world.'
"Different standards," Heron said. "You won't be the one to judge me."
He let a silence fall. Let her stew. The pieces were lining up. He gestured for the woman with the knife to back away. She went back to her position by the door, the knife sheathed.
"You believe me," Heron said, a hint of hopefulness breaking through the arrogance.
"You're already talking. I don't need the knife. Tell me about samples."
She took a breath. "They started expressing them twenty-one years ago. It began with type one, then two, on down the line. There was no connection to the hydrogen line back then, nobody even knew that existed until your Joran Helkegarde came and discovered it. We were purely focused on the cellular codes."
James thought back to the corridor, and the odd vibration in the air at each corner of each cell. "But you contain them with something. No glass wall could hold back the Arrays. If that's not the hydrogen line, what was it?"
Her eyes narrowed. "You're right, but it's not the line. It's a code snippet dropped into their DNA. The samples we have would never rampage like the ones in the Arrays. They're completely docile, designed to be that way."
"You engineered them?"
"Every part. As much as we could. Their whole design is engineered, James."
That gave him pause for a moment. The official narrative from the SEAL describing the T4 was that it had been found in the Arctic, buried in a piece of ice that dated back millennia. Joran Helkegarde had cast doubt on it. Now, obviously, that wasn't true.
"They're not from the Arctic."
Rachel smirked. "A weak cover story, meant only as a paper veneer. No one was going to come asking questions, not even you, not when Olan oversaw the project directly. Of course, we designed them. One after another, strand by genetic strand, making progressive improvements on the basic human DNA. Now you're going to ask me why. Why make them at all?"
"Go on."
She seemed to be enjoying herself, now, blowing holes in his perceived 'innocence'. "Because genetic engineering is hard, James. It's not for the faint of heart. Have you any idea of the complexity of a single chromosomal strand? The depths of it are like a black hole. The Human Genome project nailed down the pair maps a decade ago, but did nothing for the interplay of genes. There are billions of interconnections in a single genome, speaking in a language we fundamentally do not understand. Trying to engineer that is like trying to speak Ancient Egyptian when you don't have an alphabet, don't even have a pen and paper. How long is a word? What's the grammar? What does meaning really mean? We didn't know, and for much of it we still don't."
While frowned. "That's not true. In Stabilization we regularly mass-produce genetic building blocks, insert them into hollowed-out bacteria, then run reproduction and mutation trials. It's good for killing mosquitoes and other insect pests. We use it to protect crops. If Stabilization can do that, what's so hard about this?"
Heron gave him a look of disgust. "Mosquito impotence? James, try to imagine the difference between reproducing a single bacteria and designing a whole new breed of human from the ground up. It's ice cream next to astrophysics."
He homed in on that. "So why build a whole person at all? I can understand why expressing single cells might be useful, as a way of learning about telomeres in the attempt to reverse or slow the aging process. Why build anything bigger than that?"
She gave him that look again. "Because the things we were trying to do were complex. Every change is a chain reaction. You try and tweak just a few telomeres and eke a few more years out of an everyday cell, and you get mush. The grammar doesn't work, the vocabulary doesn't sync up, because the way telomeres work in every cell of the human body is different. Liver cells play differently from heart cells, from skin cells, from blood cells, but all of this is really beside the point, because we were never trying to just tweak telomeres. We were trying to do it all at once."
"Do all what?"
She smiled. This was the payload. "The whole thing. Aging was number one on our target list, you know that, but we were also looking at a range of other objectives. Disease proofing, drought and starvation proofing, increased strength, intelligence, plus mental abilities we haven't yet seen, like telepathy, telekinesis. We were aiming for a post-human body, human plus."
Human plus? James While spun the SEAL, in light of that. It opened dozens of doorways. This was the place where the Logchain might link in to the Multicameral Array.
"And you wanted it all at once?"
"All at once," Rachel echoed. "For any one requirement alone, we might have been able to do it, but that wasn't the request. Everything had to synchronize in one body, because you can't just bolt something like psychic ability on top. It has to weave perfectly. So we kept trying, with each effort failing in a different way." She shuddered. "You saw some of them below. They're a horror show; monsters dredged out of nightmares, but they each represent progress. They all actually have the traits we're looking for, to some degree. They're virtually ageless. They're strong, they barely need to eat, they're efficient, they all have a kind of basic psychic facility, but none of them has a real consciousness, at least not the way we think of it. They're not people, rather they're all broken in different ways."
James While spun as he listened, thinking through the ramifications. What she was saying sounded like it belonged in a science fiction movie, but then he'd seen it for himself. He'd seen it in the Arrays and in the corridor below.
"So you upgraded humanity, like the latest model of smart phone. How many in total?"
"Thirty-six. There are thirty-six samples underground, testifying to all our efforts. They all have this effect on humans," she pointed to her head. "Some of them try and eat us. Some just want to cozy up. Some of them hate each other, some ignore each other, like any normal siblings. We don't know why. Roll of the dice, is the theory so far. It's just what it is, thirty-six unpredictable cocktails."
She laughed. The painki
llers were affecting her.
"Why?"
It was the big question. It would shed light on what was coming. It might give him the edge.
Rachel gave him the 'little boy' look again. "I think you know. You can guess. It's basically the whole stated goal of the Logchain, even of the SEAL."
He stifled a frown. He didn't know. The stated goal of the SEAL was not this. Or was it?
"You're going to have to spell it out for me. We obviously have different ideas of what the SEAL is for."
She smiled, the 'little boy' look gone motherly. She was back to trying to manipulate him. "You really are a boy scout. They call you an idealist, but maybe you're just willfully blind. The SEAL's humanitarian efforts exist only to keep us afloat in a world that wouldn't permit what we're doing otherwise. Which is to keep Olan Harrison alive, James. To extend his natural lifespan. You knew that, surely?"
There it was. It had been hanging in the air, now it was plucked down. It made even James While feel ill.
"I thought it would be gene therapy on him. Repairing him. Not a whole new body. Not thirty-six failed models."
Rachel waved a hand. "We had more success than others. Tell me, James, what is the purpose of the Apotheo Net? The Free Radical trials?"
He opened his mouth, then shut it. The Apotheo Net's stated goal was developing and perfecting a brain-computer interface. The Free Radical trials were designed to understand quantum computation. But if you put those together with the 'new body' approach?
Now While saw the connections. It really was a science fiction story. "Apotheo Net was to upload his consciousness into a computer? Then download it into a new body. And Free Radical, I don't know, to upgrade his thinking? Maybe to overcome issues in storing a living mind?"
Rachel smiled. "If you think about it, and I have, then the whole of the SEAL really exists just to finance the building of a superhuman new body for Olan Harrison to keep living in, and a means to put him in it. You've been a huge help in that, though clearly you didn't realize it. Under your stewardship efficiency across the group increased massively. More money for research."
While spun the world some more. It was dizzying. It made sense, but still there were parts that didn't add up. "I poured money into the hydrogen line, at Olan's request. Why? What did he need the hydrogen line for?"
Rachel leaned back in her chair, rattling her cuff on the table. "I'm not lying about that, James. I really don't know. Maybe to overcome the headache we get from being near the samples? Maybe to step up his telepathy. I also don't know how the T4 got out to the world, or how it triggered, or any of that, as I said at the start. I'm as blind as you."
While gritted his teeth. It was infuriating, really. Here was a pattern he'd completely overlooked. She was right, he had been blind. Under any other circumstances, he would tender his resignation for failing to do his job.
He didn't have that luxury now.
He just had one more question.
"Why the T4? If it wasn't discovered like that, why store your types on it?"
She shrugged, enjoying how much she'd stumped him. "That was just the storage medium we chose to use, something borrowed off the Free Radical trials. They'd been experimenting with genetic encoding of deep data on hollowed-out, massive capacity T4 viruses. They were empty, really only as dangerous as a USB key, though efficient for serving as a placeholder when designing the samples. If you want my guess on what triggered the Event, I'd say someone rewired them, added the hydrogen line link, made them virulent, and distributed them. But I still have no idea why."
It was a lot to work with. He had to start working on it right away.
He stood up. The headache pulsed and brought keener focus.
"You've been very helpful. You'll be hearing from me soon. Until then you're under arrest, though I want you working with Joran Helkegarde. My people will explain."
She said something, but he was already moving on and out.
On the walk through the Logchain, with Heron's people gawping, he gave orders for a fresh round of strike teams around the world. He set unprecedented movements of manpower and equipment into motion, initiating a rapid coup of the SEAL. Then he got into his jet and gave coordinates, and within fifteen minutes of leaving Rachel Heron behind he took to the air.
Olan Harrison was out there, and he would answer for his lies.
12. SLAPS
Lara woke from a dream of fiery rain, panting and afraid in the dark of the Lincoln Bedroom. She shifted to sit on the edge of the bed and hug her arms round her chest, waiting for the chill in her heart to subside.
Amo.
It felt as if he'd just called her name from the middle of the room; except of course he wasn't here, and he'd never called to her like that before. Even on the stage with Drake, even in the depths of his guilt after the Maine massacre, she hadn't felt that level of dark, bitter despair. It felt like a lash across her mind, far worse than Witzgenstein's slap.
Her Amo had changed.
She didn't know where he was or what had happened, but the depths of that misery scared her. She tried to trace him back on the line, but couldn't; his comforting presence that had throbbed in her mind for so long was now far out of range, as it had been for months.
But he was hurting, that much was plain. He was lost, and afraid, and alone, just like her. He had been betrayed, and that despair was his touch reaching out for a kindred soul.
She couldn't help him. It hurt to realize that, but also it made her strong, because he was out there still, and she loved him still, and that meant something. Their bond, their children, those were things bigger than Witzgenstein, things she had to fight hard for. This morning she had knelt to a new President, she'd been humiliated in front of everyone she knew, but these were only steps on a larger journey. Amo's touch reminded her who she was, and always had been.
Steadily she regained control of her breathing. Her pulse settled.
Now they were coming.
She took deep breaths as they came up the stairs. She'd been waiting all day since the Truman Balcony, listening to the changes on the line, feeling the way Witzgenstein's touch reached out and bridled them all. It was hot and cold at once, all unconscious desire and anger, like Drake on the stage or the demon with its hand around her chest.
It wasn't controlled, though there was a will behind it, twisting its shape to focus in tune with Witzgenstein's emotions. Watching it from up close in that kiss had taught her a lot about what had happened to Crow, and why her people had surrendered so easily on the road East, and why she had knelt down herself.
Witzgenstein was using the line. She held them all in the palm of her hand, in her bridle, whether she was aware of it or not.
BANG
The door crashed open and in they came.
Lara stood to meet them in the semi-dark, lit by moonlight coming in through the tall windows. They were lit by their fizzing yellow lanterns, piling in like a mob, short only of pitchforks and torches.
Witzgenstein wasn't there, but she was; the red reins laid over them all.
At the head was Frances, followed by Alan, George, Nancy and Cynthia. They filed in hot, their feet stamping, anger writ on some of their faces, resignation on others, joy on one, reflecting Witzgenstein perfectly. Here was her mind spread wide, each one an exaggerated facet of their master.
Lara felt her in the air. Though she was far away, her attention was here, on this, salivating at the prospect of what was to come. These people were her lackeys only. Lara was the real deal. She'd stood on the stage. She'd been there with Amo at the beginning. She wasn't like the rest.
"How dare you," said Frances, and drew a metal police baton from its sheath at her hip. With one practiced movement she flicked it to the side, racking out the full length. It glinted in the yellow light. "How dare you call her yours?"
"Child, you must've known it'd come to this," said Cynthia sadly, circling round. "Foolishness. Pride."
The fear still came. The pain
would be real, and Lara let her legs buckle, dropping her to her knees. She hung her head again, and held the cold despair from Amo close, huddling round the pain it gave off. This was for him as well.
"I'm pregnant," was all she said, humble and demure. "Don't hurt my child."
Frances strode over. "Bitch, you should have thought of that."
The others advanced more cautiously, but still they came. They had weapons too. Frances reached out and snatched a fistful of Lara's hair, forcing her head roughly back.
"I love my President," Lara said, defiant still, putting on a show of loyalty still. "I cannot apologize for that."
"Yours?" Frances spat, shaking Lara's head by the hair, drawing tears from her eyes. "What do you know about her, you arrogant whore? You who banished us all, just for daring to believe? You who lay with the Antichrist? What would you know about my President?"
Here it came. Lara didn't resist. She didn't beg for her child again. Everything was a gamble, and every step cut a path deeper into Witzgenstein's emotions, and maybe into the line.
"So they walked Jesus to his cross," she said softly, and spread her arms wide. "That he might atone for all the people's sins." She looked into Frances' eyes. "So shall you do unto me."
Frances eyes blazed with joyous rage. "Jesus?! You filthy harlot, how dare you say his name!"
So the first blow fell.
It took her in the left temple, swung from high and above Frances' shoulder, teed up perfectly by her hand in her hair. It came on like a rocket; hard metal crunching against her skull and driving her sideways, filling her head with a sudden and piercing cold.
She rocked but the hand in her hair held her upright. The world blurred and her left eye went immediately white, all vision gone.
Then Frances was there again, shaking her baton, shaking Lara's head like a rag doll.
"Say his name again," she spat. "Say it, whore!"
The others stood by. Cynthia shook her head. So sad, Lara thought dizzily, so sad, for things to come to this. But this was what she deserved, after all. Lara who'd held herself up so high. Lara who had consorted with the devil and led them all astray. A baptism of blood.