An Inch of Ashes (45 page)

Read An Inch of Ashes Online

Authors: David Wingrove

BOOK: An Inch of Ashes
10.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘He’s
dying
.’ She raised her voice suddenly, anger spilling over into her words. ‘Goddammit, Ben, they’ve given him a month! Six weeks at most!’ She swallowed, then shook her head, her eyes pleading with him now. ‘Don’t you see? That’s why you can’t go after her. You’ve got to come home. You
must
! Mother needs you. She needs you badly. And me. I need you too, Ben. Me more than anyone.’

Memorandum:
dated 4th day of May,
AD
2207

 

To His Most Serene Excellency, Li Shai Tung, Grand Counsellor and T’ang of
Ch’eng Ou Chou
(City Europe)

 

Chieh Hsia,

Your humble servant begs to inform you that the matter of which we spoke has now resolved itself satisfactorily. The girl involved, Catherine Tissan (see attached report, MinDis PSec 435/55712), has apparently returned to her former lover, Sergey Novacek (see attached report, MinDis PSec 435/55711), who, after pressure from friends loyal to Your Most Serene Excellency, has dropped his civil action against the Shepherd boy (see copies of documents attached).

Ben Shepherd himself has, as you are doubtlessly aware, returned home to tend his ailing father, abandoning his studies at Oxford, thus removing himself from the threat of possible attack or abduction.

This acknowledged, in view of the continuing importance of the Shepherd family to State matters, your humble servant has felt it his duty to continue in his efforts to ascertain whether this was, as appears on the surface of events, a simple matter of rivalry in love, or whether it was part of some deeper, premeditated scheme to undermine the State. Such investigations have revealed some interesting if as yet inconclusive results regarding the nature of the father, Lubos Novacek’s business dealings. Results which, once clarified, will, if of substance to this matter, be notified to Your Most Serene Excellency.

 

Your humble servant,

Heng Yu,

Minister Of Transportation,
Ch’eng Ou Chou
(City Europe)

Heng Yu read the top copy through then, satisfied, reached out and took his brush from the ink block, signing his name with a flourish on each of the three copies. One would go to Li Shai Tung. The second he would keep for his own records. The third... well, the third would go to Prince Yuan, via his contact in the palace at Tongjiang, Nan Ho.

Heng Yu smiled. Things could not have gone better. The boy was safe, the T’ang pleased, and he was much closer to his ambition. What more could a man ask for? Of course, not everything had been mentioned in the documents. The matter of the bronze statue, for instance, had been left out of the report on Sergey Novacek.

It had been an interesting little tale. One which, in spite of all, reflected well on young Novacek. Investigations into the past history of the bronze had shown that it had once belonged to his father, Lubos, who, to bail out an old friend, had had to sell it. Sergey Novacek had heard of this and, hearing Heng Chian-ye talking of it, had set things up so that he might win it back. The matter of Shepherd, it seemed, had been a secondary matter, spawned of jealousy and tagged on as an afterthought. The statue had been the prime mover of the boy’s actions. From accounts, he had returned it to his father on his sixtieth birthday.

And the father? Heng Yu sat back, stroking his beard. Lubos Novacek was, like many of the City’s leading tradesmen, a respectable man. His trade, however, was anything but respectable, for Lubos Novacek acted as a middleman between certain First Level concerns and the Net. Put crudely, he was the pimp of certain Triad bosses, acting on their behalf in the Above, buying and selling at their behest and taking his cut.

A useful man to know. And know him he would.

As for the Great Man – that pompous halfwit, Fan Liang-wei – Heng had enjoyed summoning him to his Ministry and ordering him to desist from his efforts to get Ben thrown out of the college. He had shown Fan the instrument signed by the T’ang himself and threatened him with instant demotion – even to the Net itself – should any word come back to him that Fan was pursuing the matter in any shape or form.

Yes, it had been immensely satisfying. Fan’s face had been a perfect picture as he had attempted to swallow his massive pride and come to terms with the fact of the boy’s influence. He had been almost apoplectic with unexpressed anger.

Heng Yu gave a little chuckle, then turned to face his young cousin.

‘Something amuses you, Uncle?’

‘Yes, Chian-ye. Some business I did earlier. But come now, I need you to take these documents for me.’ He picked up two of the copies and handed them across. ‘This first copy must be handed directly to Chung Hu-yan and no one else, and this to Nan Ho at Tongjiang. Both men will be expecting you.’

‘Is that all, Uncle Yu?’

Heng Yu smiled. It was a moment for magnanimity. ‘No, Chian-ye. I am pleased with the way you have served me this past week. In view of which I have decided to review the matter of your allowance. In respect of past and future duties as my personal assistant, you will receive an additional sum of twenty-five thousand
yuan
per year.’

Heng Chian-ye bowed low, surprised yet also greatly pleased. ‘You are most generous, Uncle Yu. Be assured, I will strive hard to live up to the trust you have placed in me.’

‘Good. Then get going, Chian-ye. These papers must be in the hands of their respective agents within the next six hours.’

Heng Yu watched his cousin leave, then stood, stretching and yawning. There was no doubting it, this matter – of little substance in itself – had served him marvellously. He laughed, then looked about him, wondering momentarily what his uncle, Chian-ye’s father, would have made of it.

And the matter of the Melfi Clinic?

That, too, could be used. Was something to be saved until the time was ripe. For though his uncle, Heng Chi-po, had been a greedy, venal man, he had been right in one thing. Information was power. And those who had it wielded power.

Yes. And never more so than in the days to come. For Chung Kuo was changing fast. New things were rising from the depths of the City. Things he would do well to know about.

Heng Yu, Minister to the T’ang, nodded to himself, then reached across and killed the light above his desk.

Which was why, in the morning, he had arranged to meet the merchant, Novacek. To offer him a new arrangement – a new commodity to trade in; one he would pay handsomely to possess.

Information.

IN TIMES TO COME...
 

C
hung Kuo: An Inch of Ashes
is the sixth volume of a vast dynastic saga that covers more than half a century of this vividly realized future world. In the fourteen volumes that follow, the Great Wheel of fate turns through a full historical cycle, transforming the social climate of Chung Kuo utterly.
Chung Kuo
is the portrait of these turbulent – and often apocalyptic – times and the people who lived through them.

In
Chung Kuo: The Broken Wheel
the ‘War of Two Directions’ intensifies. Revolutionary activity is rife, culminating in an attack on Bremen stack, which kills over 15,000 citizens. Behind this, and behind a new splinter cult, the Yu, is our old friend DeVore – or at least a convincing copy of him – while at his side is Stefan Lehmann, son of an old Dispersionist leader, and as cold and cruel as DeVore himself.

Whereas once there was unanimity, now things are far from well within the Seven, with the odious Wang Sau-leyan sowing discord between the T’ang. For Prince Li Yuan, personal events overtake public considerations. When Fei Yen, heavily pregnant, defies him and goes riding, he kills all her horses. Furious, she leaves him, returning to her father’s house. A week later, she tells him that the child she bears is not his.

This is not the only betrayal Li Yuan suffers. Ebert’s scheme to work with DeVore is uncovered and reported to Marshal Tolonen, Ebert’s future father-in-law. Horrified but convinced of Hans’ guilt, the old man goes to Ebert’s father, Klaus, his childhood friend, and gives him twenty-four hours to resolve the matter. Only things go wrong: Klaus is killed by one of his goat servants, while trying to choke his son to death, and Hans Ebert flees to Mars.

Kim Ward’s true history of the world – his ‘Aristotle File’ – grows more influential with every year, undermining the work of the ‘Thousand Eyes’. When his labs are attacked by assassins, everyone is killed bar Kim, who – using his darkest instincts from the Clay – savagely fights his way to freedom. He hides in the warren of ducts, traumatized, until the ancient sage and Master of
wei chi
, Tuan Ti Fo, led by a dream, rescues him.

With Li Shai Tung’s death, Li Yuan becomes one of the Seven. His first act is to test the paternity of Fei Yen’s child. He then divorces her, marrying three new wives. But his heart is empty, his mind numbed by what has happened.

But there is a new threat to the Seven, the ‘Sons of Benjamin Franklin’, a group of rich young Americans, heirs to their fathers’ Companies, who want change as fiercely as any lower-level
Ko Ming
revolutionaries.

CHARACTER LISTING

 

MAJOR CHARACTERS

Ascher, Emily

  

Trained as an economist, she joined the
Ping Tiao
revolutionary party at the turn of the century, becoming one of its policy-formulating ‘Council of Five’. A passionate fighter for social justice, she was also once the lover of the
Ping Tiao
’s unofficial leader, Bent Gesell.

DeVore, Howard

 

A one-time major in the T’ang’s Security forces, he has become the leading figure in the struggle against the Seven. A highly intelligent and coldly logical man, he is the puppetmaster behind the scenes as the great ‘War of the Two Directions’ takes a new turn.

Ebert, Hans

 

Son of Klaus Ebert and heir to the vast GenSyn Corporation, he is a captain in the Security forces, admired and trusted by his superiors. Ebert is a complex young man: a brave and intelligent officer, he also has a selfish, dissolute and rather cruel streak.

Fei Yen

 

Daughter of Yin Tsu, one of the heads of the ‘Twenty Nine’, the minor aristocratic families of Chung Kuo. The classically beautiful ‘Flying Swallow’, her marriage to the murdered Prince Li Han Ch’in nullified, marries Han’s brother, the young Prince Li Yuan. Fragile in appearance, she is surprisingly strong-willed and fiery.

Haavikko, Axel

 

Smeared by the false accusations of his fellow officers, Lieutenant Haavikko has spent the best part of a decade in debauchery and self-negation. At core, however, he is a good, honest man, and circumstances will raise him from the pit into which he has fallen.

Kao Chen

 

Once an assassin from the Net, the lowest levels of the great City, Chen has raised himself from his humble beginnings to become an officer in the T’ang’s Security forces. As friend and helper to Karr, he is one of the foot-soldiers in the War against DeVore.

Karr, Gregor

 

A major in the Security forces, he was recruited by Marshal Tolonen from the Net. In his youth he was an athlete and, later, a ‘blood’ – a to-the-death combat fighter. A giant of a man, he is to become the ‘hawk’ Li Shai Tung flies against his adversary, DeVore.

Lehmann, Stefan

 

Albino son of the former Dispersionist leader, Pietr Lehmann, he has become a lieutenant to DeVore. A cold, unnaturally dispassionate man, he seems to be the very archetype of nihilism, his only aim to bring down the Seven and their great City.

Li Shai Tung

 

T’ang of City Europe and one of the Seven, the ruling Council of Chung Kuo, Li Shai Tung is now in his seventies. For many years he was the fulcrum of the Council and unofficial spokesman for the Seven, but the murder of his heir, Han Ch’in, has weakened him, undermining his once strong determination to prevent Change at all costs.

Li Yuan

 

Second son of Li Shai Tung, he becomes heir to City Europe after the murder of his elder brother. Thought old before his time, his cold, thoughtful manner conceals a passionate nature, expressed in his wooing of his dead brother’s wife, Fei Yen.

Shepherd, Ben

 

Son of Hal Shepherd, the T’ang’s chief advisor, and great-great-grandson of City Earth’s Architect. Shepherd is born and brought up in the Domain, an idyllic valley in the south-west of England where, deciding not to follow in his father’s footsteps and become advisor to Li Yuan, he pursues instead his calling as an artist, developing a whole new art form, the Shell, which will eventually have a cataclysmic effect on Chung Kuo’s society.

Tolonen, Jelka

 

Daughter of Marshal Tolonen, Jelka has been brought up in a very masculine environment, lacking a mother’s influence. However, her genuine interest in martial arts and in weaponry and strategy mask a very different side to her nature; a side brought out by violent circumstances.

Tolonen, Knut

 

Marshal of the Council of Generals and one-time General to Li Shai Tung, Tolonen is a big, granite-jawed man and the staunchest supporter of the values and ideals of the Seven. Possessed of a fiery, fearless nature, he will stop at nothing to protect his masters, yet after long years of war even his belief in the necessity of stasis has been shaken.

Tsu Ma

 

T’ang of West Asia and one of the Seven, the ruling Council of Chung Kuo, Tsu Ma has thrown off his former dissolute ways as a result of his father’s death and become one of Li Shai Tung’s greatest supporters in Council. A strong, handsome man, he has still, however, a weakness in his nature: one that is almost his undoing.

Wang Sau-leyan

 

T’ang of Africa; fourth and youngest son of Wang Hsien. The murder of his two eldest brothers has placed him closer to the centre of political events. Thought of as a wastrel, he is, in fact, a shrewd and highly capable political being who is set – through circumstances of his own devising – to become the harbinger of Change inside the Council of the Seven.

Ward, Kim

 

Born in the Clay, that dark wasteland beneath the great City’s foundations, Kim has a quick and unusual bent of mind. His vision of a giant web, formulated in the darkness, has driven him up into the light of the Above. However, after a traumatic fight and a long period of personality reconstruction, he has returned to things not quite the person he was. Or so it seems, for Kim has lost none of the sharpness that has made him the most promising young scientist in the whole of Chung Kuo.

Other books

Adrift 2: Sundown by K.R. Griffiths
In My Sister's Shoes by Sinead Moriarty
Identity Crisis by Melissa Schorr
Gente Tóxica by Bernardo Stamateas
Scent of a Wolf's Mate by Tory Richards
The Refugee Sentinel by Hayes, Harrison
Intentions of the Earl by Rose Gordon