The Killing of Worlds (25 page)

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Authors: Scott Westerfeld

Tags: #Science Fiction, #War, #Fantasy, #Young Adult, #Adult, #Mystery, #Adventure

BOOK: The Killing of Worlds
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“Because it would have to expend its own mass to create a missile?”

“Yes, Hobbes. And true mass is the one thing it lacks. It may be able to create a diamond bullet, but however hard that diamond is, it will still have the density of a sugar cube. However you strip the
Lynx
, I think she’ll be able to withstand a hail of sugar cubes. Even very hard ones.”

Hobbes’s eyebrows raised. Whenever she thought the old man had succumbed to melancholy, Zai would show his usual tactical brilliance. But she wasn’t entirely convinced.

“Even if these sugar cubes are propelled by a railgun, sir? At relativistic velocities—”

“A railgun requires magnetism, Hobbes.”

Hobbes grimaced at her own error. Of course. DA believed that the object’s alchemical matter was nonferrous and nonfissionable. The thing was limited to chemical propulsion for any weapon, a paltry way to accelerate a kinetic weapon.

“I see, sir. That’s why you want the gees: so that we can decelerate fast enough to match velocity.” Hobbes saw it now. If the
Lynx
flew past the object at hundreds of klicks per second, it could simply place a net of alchemical elements in their path. Even a stationary tripwire could be deadly to a running man.

“Exactly, Executive Officer,” he answered. “And with six gees, we can escape the battlecruiser after our mission is accomplished.”

She nodded.

“But what about energy weapons, sir? We’ve only got a makeshift heat-sink. The bridge armor also shields us from radiation.”

“We’ve seen no signs of a powerful energy source, Hobbes. But of course you’re right. If that thing can make itself into a planet-sized fusion cannon, we’re dead.”

“Then what should we—”

“Dead, Hobbes, whether or not we have shielding around the bridge. Give me six gees. Captain out.”

Katherie heard the connection step down.

She sighed. Perhaps the old man was right. They were traveling toward an incomprehensible set of possibilities, facing a foe of unknown strengths and weaknesses. The
Lynx
was matched against an enemy that was neither a crewed starship nor a drone, machine nor creature; it wasn’t even proper matter. It was an empty signifier in the emptiness of space.

Once again, the survival of Laurent Zai’s ship seemed to be out of the hands of its crew.

A few more tons of metal weren’t going to make any difference.

Senator

The counselor from the Plague Axis arrived with a thunderous noise.

She had been waiting for hours. The counselor was only twenty minutes late, but Nara’s mind had turned to this meeting again and again all day, as if it were some illicit and terrible assignation. There was the aberrance of talking with someone whose face she would never see, the unease at meeting with another counselor outside the chamber, and, underlying it all, the irrational but age-old fear of contagion.

The sound of the counselor’s helicopter approached slowly, building from a subliminal shudder to a relentless force that raised a chorus of chattering complaints from Nara’s foxbone tea service. The vehicle had called ahead to check the specifications of her building’s landing pad; it was a big machine. The counselor’s environmental system required heavy transport. It contained the man’s affliction, a mobile quarantine.

At Oxham’s request, Roger Niles had discreetly determined the gender of the Plague Axis representative. In the chambers of the War Council, the plagueman rarely spoke except to vote, his voice distorted by the filtration system that protected both his delicate immune system from the capital’s pollution and his fellow counselors from the ancient parasites that made him their home.

Nara Oxham shuddered for a moment when the pitch of the helicopter’s whine dropped, signaling that its landers were secure on the pad above her. Rationally, Oxham knew that she had nothing to fear. Members of the Plague Axis carried death with themselves when they entered the realm of the living. If a biosuit were somehow opened to the fresh air, a layer of phosphorus compounds would immolate its wearer rather than risk exposing the populace.

And her fear was not only unreasoned, it was shameful, a remnant of one of humanity’s most idiotic mistakes. The Plague Axis performed a signal service to the Empire. Like most of the human diaspora, the Eighty Worlds possessed only a small gene pool relative to its trillions of inhabitants. The genetic legacy of Earth Prime had been pared down by wars and holocausts, and by foolish edicts of racial purity, which resulted in monocultures taking to the stars together, inbred groups without the stability and adaptability of genetic fusion cultures. But of all the historical errors that had reduced genetic diversity, most damaging had been the effort to engineer a humanity free of faults.

It had taken millennia of misguided genetic manipulation to discover the subtle jape played by evolution: Almost no human traits were universally unfit. Genes that exacerbated a disease in one environment conferred resistance in another. Insanity was married to genius, passivity to patience. Every disadvantage carried hidden strengths. In the wildly variable conditions of the stars, humans would find that they needed greater diversity, not less. And yet it was a diminished humanity that left earth’s cradle, enfeebled supermen who met only a local and flawed standard of superiority.

The Plague Axis was an attempt to repair this damage. They were the throwbacks, possessed of legacy genes that had escaped by chance the eugenical pogroms. Descended from the poor, those without access to gene therapies and prenatal selection, they were like discarded junk that had become incalculably valuable as antiques. The people of the Axis had been the ugly, the afflicted, those prone to madness. Now, they existed as reservoirs of ancient treasure, their once-undesirable traits slowly and carefully reintroduced into the general population over the span of generations.

But still, Nara Oxham hesitated before she signaled for her door to open. She made the gesture with an unsure hand.

The Plague Axis representative paused at the entry, like a vampire waiting to be invited across her threshold.

“Counselor,” she said.

The helmet of the biosuit performed a little bow, and the man shuffled in.

Senator Oxham wondered if he would sit. The sunken dais of the council’s chamber was suited to the suit’s bulk, but the chairs in her apartment were spindly and insubstantial.

He remained standing. So did she.

“Senator,” he returned the greeting.

“To what do I owe the pleasure?”

“An explanation is in order, and a promise.”

Oxham shook her head slightly in confusion.

“Senator,” the man continued, “I must explain my vote of yesterday.”

Oxham took a deep breath. He was talking about the Emperor’s genocidal plan. She glanced out at the blackness of the Martyrs’ Park. The hundred-year rule did not forbid discussion of secrets between counselors, but she felt uncomfortable speaking of the forbidden topic outside the council chamber.

“Surely the point is moot now, Counselor. It didn’t come to that.”

“Yes, we were saved by the
Lynx
,” he said. “But we wish you to understand our motives. We are not your enemy.”

“We?”

He nodded. “I did not make the decision alone.”

Nara blinked. He had discussed the Emperor’s plan with outsiders? The man was admitting treason.

“But how?” she said. “We had only minutes to decide.” She looked at the bulky biosuit, wondering if it might house an entangled quantum grid, the only form of communication that could possibly be undetectable to the sensors of the Diamond Palace.

The plagueman spread his thickly gloved hands, a clumsy puppet’s gesture, pleading for understanding.

“I have not broken the hundred-year rule, Senator Oxham. The Emperor himself came to the Axis before the question was raised in council. Before the rule was invoked.”

Nara nodded and sighed. The sovereign and his tricks. He had gone into the vote with a stacked deck.

“What did he offer you?” she said coldly.

The plagueman turned half away, his puppet hands up in the air now.

“You must understand something, Senator. The Plague Axis of the Risen Empire faces hard times. Bleak centuries ahead.”

“What do you mean?”

“We are too few,” he said. “Although we add diversity to the Empire, we lack enough divergence in our own population. Over the generations, we risk becoming a monoculture ourselves.”

Nara frowned, trying to remember the reading she’d done on the Axis since first meeting the members of the council. This hasty study blurred with the volumes of military and megaeconomic theory she had consumed, the forced marches of sudden expertise required to prosecute a war.

“A monoculture?” she asked. “Don’t you interbreed with the plague axes of the other coreward powers?” That was the true source of the Axis’s independence from the rest of the Empire. They were not simply a reservoir, they were a trading guild.

He ponderously shook his head. “Not for eighty years Absolute. Since the end of the First Incursion, we have been under a blockade.”

“A blockade?”

“The Rix have applied pressure throughout the core. The Tungai, the Fahstuns, not even the Laxu will trade with us.”

Nara swallowed. Even segments of humanity that were in violent conflict still kept up the exchange of genes through their nominally neutral plague axes. The biological legacy of Earth Prime was so thinly spread, the distances of the diaspora so great, it was playing a dangerous game to reduce diversity any further, like poisoning wells in a desert war.

“Why would they do that?”

“The Rix have a voice everywhere, Nara Oxham. As you know, we are the last coreward power to resist their compound minds. We have been under blockade these last eighty years.”

“Why has this been kept secret?”

“The Emperor wished it to be thought that the First Incursion ended in a true peace.”

The biosuit’s helmet barely moved, but Nara could tell he was shaking his head. She sighed. The Emperor had proclaimed a false victory eighty years ago. The Rix had not been beaten, they had merely moved the conflict into other theaters.

“We are growing weaker,” the Plague counselor said. “Less able to stabilize the Empire’s billions.”

Oxham knew enough to understand the threat. Almost the entire population of the Eighty Worlds had descended from a small portion of one continent on Earth Prime. The weaknesses of monoculture were a constant threat: New contagions and panics propagated quickly, and charismatic figures like the Emperor consolidated power with the hyperbolic curve of pandemics. The consequences of a genetic blockade might one day be even more damaging than this second war with the Rix.

“But why help the Emperor commit mass murder?” she asked. “How could depopulating Legis XV fulfil your aims?”

“Before the War Council took up the issue of destroying the Legis infostructure, the Apparatus came to us with an analysis. How might a war with the Rix increase the diversity of the Empire? In deep history, wars often had such an effect. Mass movements of people brought distant gene pools together, invaders and colonists crossbred with local populations.”

“But the Rix don’t want to occupy us, Counselor,” she said. “There’ll be no miscegenation with them, no rape camps or comfort conscripts. Just death, and the sterile occupation of compound minds. A nonbiological violation.”

“Correct. The only population movement will be among the Eighty Worlds themselves. Such disruptions are always useful, but they would merely stir the existing pool.”

“What was it then?” she asked.

He made a sound that might have been a sigh, which came from the filter in a hiss of white noise, like boiling water poured slowly onto cold metal.

“What the Empire needs is new genes, Senator. New arrangements of
DNA
. With the Rix blockade, we cannot import them. Only mutation will generate more diversity.”

“Hopeful monsters?” she asked. “It’s been tried. The laboratory can’t create at the same magnitude of evolution. There are never enough subjects, and we don’t even know what we’re looking for.”

The plagueman sighed again. “Not in the laboratory, Senator. But in vivo, in the wild, on a planetary scale.”

She blinked, wondering if he could be serious. “Legis?”

He nodded, a slow and clumsy gesture.

She shook her head. The man was insane. “But the nuclear weapons over Legis were to be low-yield, clean
EMP
devices.”

“No, Senator. They would have been dirty bombs. An unexplained error.”

Nara swayed for a moment, closing her eyes. She needed to sit down. Reaching behind her, she felt the cold and reassuring solidity of the apartment’s glassene wall.

“A hundred million wasn’t enough for him?”

“There are trillions to think of, Nara Oxham.”

“You’re mad,” she said. “You and he are both insane.” Nara walked away from the suited man, barely able to hold what might have happened in her mind. “God above. We would have been complicit in a billion deaths. The Emperor could have held it over the political parties for centuries. Whether we personally voted for it or not, we legitimized the decision by sitting on his council.”

“And you could hold it over the sovereign, knowing that the dirty bombings were intentional. The ultimate stabilizing force: mutually assured destruction.”

“And all this for a few mutations?”

“More than a few, Senator. The population of a whole planet is a vast palette to draw from. The dirty work has to be done; let the Rix be blamed for it, we thought.”

Senator Oxham dropped into a large chair, letting the plagueman stand alone. She covered her eyes and felt a twinge from the city. The incessant human throng that always threatened to consume her seemed terribly fragile now. With the right weapon, all those voices could be silenced in an instant. That ancient specter of mass destruction—more than the diaspora, or the Time Thief, or even the gray powers of the symbiant—was the appalling price of technology.

Death had hardly been beaten. The Old Enemy had simply changed its scale of interest.

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