The Affinities (13 page)

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Authors: Robert Charles Wilson

BOOK: The Affinities
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I gave my drawing to Amanda as we were driving away. She looked at it and smiled abstractedly and put it in her lap.

*   *   *

An ambulance arrived at the scene along with a couple of Traffic Services vehicles. We told our story, Rachel Ragland told hers. The EMS guys insisted on taking Damian in for observation, over his protests. As they slid him into the ambulance on a wholly unnecessary stretcher, Amanda offered to ride along to the hospital in Kelowna.

“No, stay with the car,” Damian said. “Stay with Adam.” Klein's data was safe in her purse.

So we shared an umbrella as we waited for the tow truck. Amanda had already put in a call to someone from a tranche in Kelowna who would meet us at the garage. She was leaning into my arm when she spotted my drawing: it had blown out of the car onto the verge of the road. She kneeled over it and tried to peel the sodden paper from the tarmac, uselessly. It tore in her hand. She looked at me guiltily. “It's ruined! I'm so sorry.”

“It's all right,” I said. “It wasn't very good.”

 

CHAPTER 7

The week-long Pan-Affinity conference drew to a close, but Damian asked me and Amanda to stay in the city and help him organize the analysis of Klein's data. We divided the work into two parts: Amanda's job was to round up Taus who were qualified to make sense of the mathematics, while my job was to assemble a team who could look at ways to turn the Affinity test protocols into a hardware/software application that could be detached from InterAlia's corporate control.

For the last few days of the conference we worked out of our rooms at the Hilton. Damian had come back from the hospital with a diagnosis of a minor concussion and a Technicolor bruise on his forehead, but he insisted on keeping his remaining commitments: a couple of roundtable discussions plus a series of private meetings with representatives of the American sodality. One of his roundtables concerned the problem of forming and stabilizing tranches in countries where the Affinities were prohibited by law (including China and most nominally Islamic nations), but where clandestine testing was already being performed—a question that mirrored the larger one nobody wanted to ask: What would happen if InterAlia went belly-up?

On Sunday night the week-long event officially ended and the delegates dispersed, as did the demonstrators who had been making a nuisance of themselves outside the convention center. The picketers represented a variety of groups including evangelicals and right-wingers, but the faction most heavily represented was NOTA (None of the Above), a kind of social club for people who had been rejected by the Affinities or disapproved of them on principle. In the United States, NOTA had already launched a series of class-action suits against InterAlia for what it was calling “category discrimination.”

After the convention the Hilton began to seem both eerily empty and absurdly expensive. We relocated to a cheaper hotel while we set up an office in a three-story commercial building owned by a local Tau—rent-free, because parts of the building were under renovation, which meant we learned to live with the sound of hammering and the squeal of power saws.

We had been there less than a week when I got a call from Rachel Ragland. Something had happened, she was worried, and she wanted to talk to me about it.

*   *   *

Leaving a Tau-specific environment in which you've been immersed for days is like coming up from a deep-water dive: best done in stages, if you want to avoid the bends. But I didn't have that luxury when I went to meet Rachel.

I had told Amanda about the call, and she had summoned Damian, who rolled his eyes. “She wants money, of course. She'll probably threaten to go to the police.”

“I asked her about that. Pretty bluntly. She says she already told the police I was driving and that she hadn't been hurt, and that was the end of it. Or would have been. Except yesterday two guys showed up at her door.”

“What do you mean—cops?”

“They said they were insurance investigators. They wanted to hear about the accident. She says she stuck to her story.”

“But?”

“But the ID they showed her looked dodgy, and she thinks there was something off about them.”

“Something
off
?”

“I think she meant they seemed threatening. They scared her. And since she lied to them on my behalf, she feels like I owe her an explanation.”

“Which is the one thing you can't give her.”

“I agreed to meet her for lunch.”

Amanda said, “You couldn't just tell her to fuck off? Because Damian's right, it's probably some kind of shakedown. She'll ask for money, bet on it.”

“I didn't tell her to fuck off.” For some reason I thought of Rachel's daughter Suze, owl-eyed and rain-drenched in the backseat of her car. “But if she asks for money, I will.”

So I drove to the restaurant Rachel had suggested, a chain steakhouse in a Burnaby strip mall, and a bored waiter steered me to her table. Which was good, because I might not have recognized her. Her hair, which had looked black in the rain, was actually a deep coppery red. It framed her round face, brown eyes, small nose, and a pursed mouth that showed her upper front teeth when she smiled. “Adam Fisk,” she said.

“Just Adam.”

“And I'm Rachel.”

“I remember. Where's Suze?”

“In school, but thank you for asking. I hope I didn't drag you away from anything important?”

I had been more or less confined to a room with six other Taus—IT types and electronics engineers—for days now. But I couldn't complain. “Just work,” I said.

“Mm. Well, I work three days a week at the food bank on Hastings Street. But today's not one of those days.”

So we stared at our menus and discussed the comparative virtues of the salad plate and the club sandwich and wondered what else we ought to say. After we ordered I said, “You had some people come visit you?”

“Yeah. Like I said, two guys with IDs I didn't trust. Kind of pretending to be nice—at least at first—but you could tell they were only pretending.”

“What did they look like?”

She shrugged. “Hard to describe. White guys in suits. Short hair. Maybe Russian or Eastern European–looking, if that means anything. Something about the cheekbones. But no accent, so I don't know. One was a little chunky, the other was taller and looked like he worked out.”

“And they asked about your accident?”

“They seemed to know the details already, which is why I thought they were legitimate. I told them about the transmission. Actually the car's still in the garage. Until I can bail it out. Expensive repairs.” I wondered if this was the point at which she would ask for money. “I got suspicious when they kept asking about what they called ‘the other vehicle.'
Your
car.”

“What about it?”

“Well, they asked who was driving. Wanted a description.”

“And you told them—?”

“I said I there were three people in the car, two guys and a woman, and the younger guy was driving. Same as I told the cops. But these guys kept asking the same questions over and over. Was I hurt? No. Was I sure? Yes. Was I frightened? No. And so on. Like they thought I was being uncooperative. Which admittedly I kind of was. They weren't very good at hiding their pissed-offness.” The waiter put down glasses of ice water and Rachel took a long gulp. “So I asked them to leave.”

“Which they did?”

“More or less peacefully. They didn't make any threats. But I still felt threatened. So I called you.” Her expression hardened. “Since I stuck to the story about you driving, I feel like you owe me something.”

“Owe you what exactly?” I refrained from saying,
How much?

“Well, for starters, an explanation! Who
were
those guys? What did they want? Am I in some kind of danger? I mean, I've got Suze to worry about. For that matter, who are
you
?”

“To be honest, I don't know how much of that I can answer. I have no idea who those guys were.”

“Okay. I guess I believe that. But you don't seem real
surprised
by any of this.”

And suddenly I wasn't sure what to say. I was coming out of a long Tau immersion. Had she been a Tau, I would have just explained. But she wasn't. I could neither trust her nor be sure she would understand anything I told her. Still, it was true she had done me a favor, and not just me; she had helped protect Damian, and by implication our entire Affinity. I said, “I'm a Tau—”

She rolled her eyes. “And I'm a Pisces. So what?”

“All the people in the car were Taus.”

“You're saying this is some kind of Affinity thing? I knew the convention was in town, but—”

“My friend is involved in a legal wrangle with a major corporation. Their lawyers probably have investigators in the field looking for something they can use as leverage. Now, I'm not saying that's who came to your house. I honestly
don't know
who came to your house.”

“But it's a possibility?”

“It's a possibility. Did they ask anything that struck you as particularly odd?”

“They asked if I knew where you were coming from, the day of the accident.”

We had been coming from Meir Klein's country house. InterAlia knew where Klein lived. Maybe someone had connected the dots.

*   *   *

We talked through lunch. Rachel asked a few questions about the Affinities, I asked a few questions about Rachel. She was fairly voluble now that she had relaxed, and I liked the way she stroked the air with her right hand as she talked, index finger and middle finger pressed together as if she were holding an invisible cigarette. The waiter cleared our dessert dishes. We ordered coffee. Another twenty minutes and we were still talking. And enjoying it.

So I went home with her. Though I knew it was probably a bad idea.

Affinity members tend to be endogamous: they're more likely to form sexual relationships within their Affinity than outside of it. When it comes to long-term commitments, that's true of
all
the Affinities. But some Affinities—Delts and Kafs, most notoriously—have a penchant for short-term liaisons outside the group. Taus fall somewhere in the middle of that range. Trevor Holst, for instance, hadn't lived with anyone but another Tau since he joined our tranche, but he treated the annual convention as an all-you-can-eat sexual buffet, pun not entirely unintended. Wherever some Kaf was organizing a hotel-room orgy, there you would find Trev.

I told myself I wasn't like that. Since I joined my tranche my single long-term partner had been Amanda, and all my dalliances had been Taus. If for no other reason than that it made life easier. No mixed signals, fewer hurt feelings.

But Rachel had attracted my attention, suddenly and deeply and in a way I didn't entirely understand. And by the time we left the restaurant, both of us knew it. She had come by bus, and I asked her if she wanted a ride home. She said she did.

I wasn't sure what was beginning, only that I was willing to let it begin.

*   *   *

“So you have somebody?” she asked. “Back in Tau-land?”

She had invited me into her basement apartment in New Westminster. Rachel was a single mother on a shoestring income and had furnished the place accordingly. Cotton throw rugs over scuffed linoleum, a thrift-shop sofa, three overflowing laundry baskets occupying the space between a video panel and a bookcase stocked with secondhand paperback bestsellers. The tablet computer on the coffee table was a couple of years out of date and there was a burn mark on the plastic frame.

She caught me looking. “Okay, it's a mess.”

“No, it's fine.” I liked the personal touches she had added—the paisley silk scarf draped over a lampshade, a magazine photo of the Great Barrier Reef tacked to the wall. There was a small kitchen, a bedroom for Suze, Rachel's bedroom.

“So answer the question. Are you seeing anybody?”

“Yes. Or—it's complicated. Sort of yes.”

“Uh-huh.”

“You want me to explain that?”

“Actually, no. But thank you for offering. My last steady guy was Suze's dad. He took a job as a rigger on an Alberta oil pipeline about the time I got pregnant. He was kind of absentminded, though. Forgot to leave a forwarding address. How long have you been a Tau?”

“Seven years.”

“Doesn't it get boring, hanging around with people who're just like you?”

“That's not how it works. Have you been tested?”

She laughed. “Fuck no!”

“Why not?”

“I doubt there's a group that would have me.”

“Why do you say that?”

She shrugged off the question and scooted closer. “So what are you here for, Adam Fisk?”

“I guess I want to get to know you.”

“Oh? I thought maybe you wanted to fuck me.”

My mouth went dry. “Well … that, too.”

“Then maybe you should
do
it.”

She leaned in to kiss me. It wasn't a tentative kiss. I liked the way she tasted. I moved to put my arms around her, but she pushed me away. She unbuckled my belt, unzipped me, knelt down.

I was seconds away from an orgasm when she stood up, took my hand, led me to her bedroom, pushed me onto the bed. She tugged off her blouse and stepped out of her jeans. Nothing under them but a pair of cotton dollar-store briefs, which I yanked down. She straddled me, and we locked into an urgent rhythm, Rachel moving to some music I couldn't hear, eyes wide open—her eyes were my entire field of vision, her hair a curtain that sealed us from the world. When it was impossible to do anything else, we came hastily and greedily and simultaneously.

After we caught our breath she said, “How long has it been?”

“What do you mean?”

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