Limit of Vision (38 page)

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Authors: Linda Nagata

Tags: #science fiction, #biotechnology, #near future, #human evolution, #artificial intelligence

BOOK: Limit of Vision
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Virgil
turned his farsights back on when he and Ky reached the edge of the mangrove stand. Instantly, a link to Ela opened. “Virgil! You and Ky have to come back. Now. There’s only a little time.” Fear whispered in the sibilant undertones of her voice. Virgil knew better than to ask questions. He followed Ky into the boat, grabbed the pole, and began pushing for home.

At high
noon the overflights stopped. Daniel Simkin spoke to them again, though this time it was a private communication as he explained in detail how they were to exit the Sea Palace one by one, walking outside into the pestilence-laden air, where they would present themselves for arrest.

“Come find us in the ocean room,” Ela countered softly, determined to seize these few extra minutes for the
L
ov
s to finish their task. “We’ll be waiting for you here. We won’t resist.”

There was a disturbance at the curtain. She peeked past, and discovered a crippled spider trying to get through, but it was contaminated. It could not be allowed in. So she kicked it through the curtain, three times, breaking its legs. Then she crouched by the barrier, peering through a slit at the outer door.

Ninh squatted beside her. “Ky and Virgil are almost here.” He sent her the screen. The image was skewed but she could see them: two small figures, Virgil poling the boat, Ky crouched in the bow, watching for snags and shoals.

“Hurry,” she whispered.

Virgil nodded, his harsh breathing loud in her ear.

A helicopter lifted from an offshore platform. It swept toward shore, toward the boat, coming in fast. Virgil glanced at it. Then he shouted a warning to Ky and jammed his pole into the mud, sending the boat skidding forward. It rammed against a hidden mud bar, but both men were ready for the impact. Ela watched them leap clear; watched them splash down in knee-deep water. They broke for the Sea Palace in a stumbling run. Loudspeakers shouted at them to freeze and drop their weapons. It was a show, Ela knew. Part of the endless quest for better ratings. The IBC knew they were unarmed.

Virgil and Ky might have read the script. They ignored the warning and ran faster.

Virgil reached the stairs a step ahead of Ky. He glanced up, and through his farsights Ela saw the helicopter loom into view above the parapet. Its shadow caught him in a column of darkness, the negative image of a searchlight. The loudspeaker again commanded him to freeze. Instead he darted under the arch as shock troops in color-shifting camouflage slid out of the helicopter’s belly, gliding like water drops down twin cables.

Ela’s viewpoint shifted. Now she peeked past the barrier of wet blankets, watching Virgil with her own eyes. He saw her. “Ela!” His eyes were wild.

“Hurry up!” she screamed at him. Then: “There’s not enough time.”

Ky filled the arch of sunlight behind him. “I’ll hold the door.”

“You can’t hold the door,” Virgil said.

“Go!” Ky roared. “Go see what she wants!” He turned back to face the troops, his hands raised, palms out. Then a flash of brilliant light erupted from his farsights, a tiny lightning bolt chasing back the shadows in the palace hall. Ky cried out in pain. His hands shot up as if to grab the farsights away from his face. He never reached them.

The shock troops outside saw the sudden movement, and fired. Ky’s shoulder blade exploded. A second round opened a crater in his lower back. Blood sprayed the walls, falling in heavy spatters across Virgil’s shirt as he turned a stunned face toward the carnage.

“Virgil!” Ela screamed. “Come now! Now.”

Outside the soldiers were shouting, conjuring explanations for the murder. It shouldn’t have happened. Ky was unarmed. Anyone could see that. Anyone at all, because Ela sent the sequence to her news site while Virgil lingered wasteful seconds over this tangle of protein that used to be Ky Xuan Nguyen.


Virgil
.”

He looked around at her.

“Now. Please.” He would have to come to her. She would not step around the curtain and risk contaminating the
Roi Nuoc
. None of them knew how long the design change would take, or if it would work at all. They needed time. She would not take a second of it away from them.

Her urgency must have burned past his shock. He ran to her. He did not slow down. “Wait! Stop!” Ela cried. She raised her hand in a warding gesture. “Don’t come in. You’re not clean.”

Virgil stumbled, his eyes wide as a frightened dog’s. He stopped himself with a hand against the wall. His chest heaved and sweat shone all across the rosy flush of his face. Great smears of blood stank across his shirt. He started to step away.

“No!” she shouted. “Don’t go.” She edged her shoulder past the barrier of hanging blankets, feeling the dampness licking at her skin. “Look at me.
Think
with me—”

“There’s no time. My God, Ela. They—”


Now
.” She reached toward him. She touched his cheek; the back of his neck, drawing him closer.

“It’s too late,” he whispered. “Lien and her cadre—”

“I know.”

“And Ky—”

“It’s too late,” she agreed. “Kiss me now.”

His gaze sharpened. He must have caught some encoded trace of her mood. “You know something.”

“Kiss me now.” Her lips brushed his cheek, moved barely against his ear:
Let me teach you to retreat
.

He embraced her, his arms so tight her breath came hard. “Listen to me!” she gasped.

She drew back far enough to meet his eye; far enough for her
L
ov
s to whisper their secrets. His mouth brushed hers. Then he froze, staring deep into her eyes. His raw shock filled her. “What have you done?”

She didn’t answer. She only kissed him again lightly as silhouettes of armored soldiers gathered in the brilliant afternoon light pouring down outside the doorway. He heard them, but she would not let him turn and look. “They murdered Ky,” he whispered.

“I know.”

“We need to talk.”

“There’s no time.”

“We can’t give up.”

“We haven’t.” She closed her eyes and kissed him hard, fixing the sensation of it, the scent of him in her mind. Tasting his raw shock. How had it come to this?

“Step away,” a stern voice said.

She looked up into the faceless shield of a soldier’s mask. What had moved her to make the choices she had made? What moved anyone? She never would have chosen this end; Virgil never would have consented to this outcome . . . except they
had
, with every decision made since the module fell.

chapter

40

The evacuation went
swiftly. Each
Roi Nuoc
was placed under arrest. Their farsights were confiscated. They were transported by helicopter to a converted merchant ship waiting offshore in stormy seas. After a quick march across a rolling deck, they were taken below where they were placed in separate, padded cells, seven by seven feet. There were no bars, no windows, and no furniture. A grill in the ceiling introduced air that was sterile and without scent. Ela sat on the padded floor, staring at the gray walls. Waiting.

She could not get Ky’s death out of her mind. She tried hard not to think about him but every time her eyes shifted she thought she saw blood on the walls. She could not get the smell of it out of her nostrils. Why was he dead? He had not threatened anybody. She saw it all again: the way he had turned back to the door, palms raised in peace, ready to negotiate for a few more seconds, a minute or two of additional time, and they had shot him down.

Hadn’t it gone that way? No. She was forgetting that strange flash of light from Ky’s farsights, a burst of electronic lightning that must have seared his eyes. He’d reacted instinctively, grabbing for the farsights. The nervous soldiers had jumped just as hard and
then
Ky had died.

Killed by that one frantic gesture. He might be alive now if not for that flash of light.

Where had it come from? Ela wondered. What had caused it? Mother Tiger would know, but without farsights Ela had no way to contact the
R
osa
.

Maybe it had been a booby-trap message sent by the IBC. Maybe similar accidents would happen to all of them.

She could not sit still. So she went to examine the cell door, following the seam with her fingernails, but both the lock and the hinges were hidden. She looked up at the air vent. It was out of reach, even when she jumped. She sat down again.

Where was Virgil now? Where was Oanh?

Again she looked up at the air vent. “Maybe I could get a bath?” she said aloud. Then later: “I want to see a lawyer.” They would probably send in a death squad instead.

But no one came.

Absently, she scratched her forehead, wondering what to do next. Later, when she looked at her fingertips, minute white specks glittered behind her nails. She sucked in a sharp breath. Then she scratched her head again. More specks appeared. Her hand started to shake, so she pressed it against the padded floor to hide her distress from any watching cameras.

Her
L
ov
s were flaking away. Panic stirred in her belly. She had planned for this to happen; she had helped to engineer it, but how could she be sure it was only the outer shells of her
L
ov
s that were dying? What if the asterids themselves had been poisoned by some viral weapon of the IBC?

She closed her eyes, breathing deeply, slowly, concentrating on an image of blood spattered across white walls. She would surely feel the loss of the asterids. But she felt the same. Even this fear was utterly familiar.

Summer
Goforth arrived in Saigon in late afternoon, on an IBC charter flight in the company of Daniel Simkin. They were ferried out to the ship on a helicopter that bucked and shuddered in the rising wind. Beneath them, whitecaps screamed off heaving waves. Lightning crackled on the horizon. The helicopter set down hard on the rolling ship, breaking a strut.

The storm seemed to lessen when they were inside, and could no longer see the furious weather. That was illusion of course. The worst would come tonight.

Summer toured the holding cells with Simkin and his aides. She viewed the security arrangements. There was a surgical facility, but rough seas made it impossible to consider the delicate procedure that must be required to remove the symbiotic
L
ov
s.

At last they were shown into a small conference room, where coffee was served with a light supper. Simkin left to take a private call. His aides had business of their own and soon Summer was alone. It was not unexpected.

She looked around the little room: six chairs and a table and maps on the wall. No doubt they hoped she would stay here and be content. Daniel had not wanted to bring her along at all, but he’d given in when she threatened to resign. Evidently there was a chance he might still need her.

She slipped her farsights on.

She had been given access to the camera feeds from each holding cell. She scrolled through them now, glimpsing youths huddled in corners, or twitching in restless sleep. Virgil’s cell was empty. Someone had said he’d been taken to another room for questioning. Ela Suvanatat was present.

Summer watched her for several minutes, perplexed by her spasmodic movement. Every few seconds her right hand would rise to scratch compulsively at the
L
ov
s on her forehead: just one scrape of her fingernail; rarely two. Then she would yank her hand down, like a child who has just had her wrist slapped. She would slip her hand under her thigh as if to hold it there, but it never stayed for long.

Summer tapped her fingers, magnifying the image just as Ela raised her hand again to scratch. Her nail picked at a minute, gray
L
ov
. It popped free. A tiny spot of blood welled up where the
L
ov
had been.

Summer’s heart rate jumped. Sweat prickled her skin. What she had just seen should not be. Symbiotic
L
ov
s were fragile, yes, but they could not be removed by gentle scraping. She zoomed in closer.

Ela’s
L
ov
s had all lost their healthy blue-green color, fading to a pearly gray. Summer had seen this before. When she’d examined the
L
ov
s on Panwar’s corpse, they had looked like this. The conclusion was inescapable: Ela’s
L
ov
s were dying, flaking away beneath the compulsive scratching of her fingernails.

But how was that possible? None of the viruses released by the IBC should have affected the symbiotic
L
ov
s. Daniel had been adamant about that, and Summer had done everything she could to ensure it. Ela’s
L
ov
s could not be dying.

Yet they were . . . and Ela knew it. See how she stared at the wall with dull, unfocused eyes, fear painted in a sheen across her smooth face? Panic lurked just beneath the surface.

“Dr. Goforth?”

The soft query startled Summer from her speculations. With a shaking hand she slipped her farsights off, turning to see a crew member in cream coveralls leaning past the door to peer into the conference room. “A package for you, Dr. Goforth, to be delivered upon arrival.” He opened the door wider, presenting her with a small carry-case, twelve by six by four inches high, perforated with air holes all around its upper half. Something scurried and scratched within it as he set it on the table. She signed his pad and he withdrew, while she read the specimen tag fixed to the handle. Nothing had been written on the line describing the contents of the box; only time and place of collection had been recorded. On the back of the tag though, scrawled in indelible pen, was an additional note:
L
ov
s on fish surviving too
.

Summer peered through the air holes, but it was dark inside the box. All she could see was the blue-green glow of a patch of healthy
L
ov
s.

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