Read Expatria: The Box Set Online
Authors: Keith Brooke
She looked at their phenotypes, wondered if they could be read here on Expatria, whether the signals were the same. The openness indicated in Mathias's facial stresses seemed to be genuine, the rawness of Mono's movement. But Prime Edward seemed to carry himself with an authority that contradicted the Thessalonian deceit in his and his mother's eyes. She cut off the debate in her mind; it would take the natural ability of an Ephesian to evaluate the Expatrian phenos. And Katya was only a Roman.
Director Roux let his trif stare into Edward's eyes, making his doubts apparent, letting the power of his image assume the dominant role.
'Your explanation is noted,' he said, keeping his speech carefully formal. 'As a director of the holy staff, I say to you that we come to Expatria to renew contact between the peoples of our two worlds. We come as emissaries to the farthest reaches of the empire of the Universal Corporation, widening the Lord's sphere of influence. We hope to demonstrate to you a new gospel, a dynamical world view that has been revealed since the divergence of our two people's histories. We are humble before you. We are representatives of the Lord on Earth, we are the new church.'
'Wha's he sayin'?' said Sunset, tapping on Katya's arm. ''E's speakin' queer, not like you, Miz.'
Katya lowered her head and whispered in carefully modulated tones. 'The Holy Corporation of GenGen is the highest expression of the Lord God, the finest product of His creative powers. Before, He spoke through humans; now, He expresses Himself in the market-place of the soul. Director Roux explains that a branch of the Corporate Messiah is now here on Expatria, we are emissaries of the Church of the Lord.' She felt as if she had recited a Maxim, the buzz in her Glory Chip felt that good.
The wailing momma's face had gone pale. 'Like Gautama the buddha? Like Jesus Christ the buddha? You say a new buddha's been born on Earth?'
'Yes,' said Katya. 'The buddha is the All of GenGen: the Holy Corporation is the Lord's ultimate expression in flesh and bones and computer space.'
Katya looked up in response to a sharp gasp from the gathered guards and evangelicals. The Matre, Maye Cyclades, crossed herself frantically as others flinched and drew back from an apparition that was growing out from Director Roux's autonome.
'Jeez-shit,' gasped Kardinal Mondata as the figure of a man continued to grow, to expand, the figure of the prophet of the Corporate Universe, the founder, Maxwell Riesling. He hung before them, a metre from the ground, four metres in height—August Hall would take no more. He held his hands out before him in a gesture of peace, of blessing, of acknowledgement. His skin glowed and a golden mist hung about him. The corporate hymn filled the air and the image smiled.
'I am the Max,' said the avatar, its voice booming around August Hall, reverberating with power. 'I represent the MetaPlex, which in turn represents the Holy All. I am the Corporation, the spiritual substance of the universal Lord. I am the corporate soul.'
Although the substance of his words could have little meaning to the Expatrians, Katya noted that the fact of his presence was having a profound effect. They were staring, gaping, shivering, their faces had flushed, gone pale, gone lax, and their eyes were fixed, exclusively, on the Max. Katya kept her guard up, but even so she felt a little closer to the Lord in the presence of the Max. She wondered how these barbarians would respond when they had the benefit of the gospel of
The Third Testament
to inform them. They would be born again, born in the eyes of the Lord. They would be barbarians no more.
'The Holy Corporation joined with others to initiate the colonisation of Expatria. And now there is only the Corporation, now there is only GenGen. Children of light—' he spread his arms wide '—my children, the Corporation is here in its rightful land. The Corporation is within you, as you must become a part of
it
. We must become as part of one another. The Holy Corporation has come to reclaim its children: we have come to realise your spiritual assets. We are you, we are your planet,
we are the Lord!
'
~
Katya had kept firm control of herself. She had heard such words before. But when they came from an avatar of the MetaPlex...
She had watched the faces, studied the responses, remembering her instructions from Director Roux.
Know thine enemy
. Sukui-san was making notes on a scrap of paper. Prime Edward narrowed his eyes and consulted with his mother. The others appeared to be so overcome by the avatar's presence that his actual words passed them by.
Beyond the platform where they had been seated there was a set of archways. Katya passed through them and emerged onto a wide balcony. She breathed deeply, forgetting that her mask would filter out the local taste of the air.
She caught herself, remembered where she was.
The avatar had swept her caution away but now it came flooding back. She tensed, kept a check on her bodily indicators. She looked all around, looked up at the ornamental stonework above her.
She was alone on the balcony.
She walked over to the waist-high wall, looked out onto a square, recognised the metal gates off to the right. They had come in this way, across this square, nearly forty minutes earlier. Now there were people there, the pastel robes of Chet Alpha's pageanteers mixed in with the local people. Stalls had been set up, business was being done, one-to-one, private transactions. Expatria did not yet know the wonders of the corporation.
She heard the scuff of a foot and turned quickly to see Mathias Hanrahan in one of the archways. She let her left hand hang loosely by her side, centimetres from her snipe.
He walked straight towards her, stopped a metre short. His eyes were dancing with energy, with fire. His hands were on his hips, his skin flushed. His self-discipline was clearly a limited quantity. There was something in his actions that suddenly reminded her of Vladi and she caught herself momentarily adrift.
She nodded at him, forcing self-control back to the fore. She had no brother, only the Holy Corporation. She watched Mathias Hanrahan closely, waited for him to do something.
'Your trifax might impress Edward and the Sisters,' he said. 'But not me. I don't know what you're here for—and excuse me if I've got you wrong—but nobody owns an Expatrian, nobody owns Expatria.' He stopped, checked himself.
'You are direct, Mathias Hanrahan. Your dissent is noted. The avatar uses fine language, words to impress. Have Expatrians forgotten the art of rhetoric? Saint Maxwell said nothing about ownership: that's not an issue—please, excuse me, but I am not a negotiator, I can only share with you my own understanding.' She shrugged, and noted a slight relaxation in Mathias's posture. 'The Holy Corporation has enveloped the other funders of Expatria's colonisation and now, under various Stockholm protocols, the Corporation owns all rights to Expatria.' She raised her hands to ward off interruption. 'But we are not here to take anything from you. We do not want your homes, or the clothes from your bodies! We are here to share our knowledge; we've brought
The Third Testament
of the holy bible, revealed after our courses of history diverged. Humanity has embarked on its final millennium—there are more important things than ownership in question.'
She didn't like the way he stared at her, it made her feel like a virus under scan, a flower being pressed.
'Tell me,' he said. His tone had changed now, a lot of the anger had been suddenly dissipated. 'What are you like behind those screens?' He pointed at her breather, her blank, grey eye-mask.
Suddenly she felt vulnerable again—she could barely keep her pulse down to a normal rate. Before she knew what she was doing, her hands were up at her face, pulling the tendrils of the mask and the breather free from her templar interfaces.
She gave a final tug and the mask and breather came free. She pulled them clear, let them hang from her hands, folded in front of her chest. She felt the sun on her face, smelt the alien air for the first time. She didn't know what she was doing, why she had done it, where her control had gone. It was like nothing she had ever done before, the break with her life's discipline.
It certainly wasn't Roman.
She held the muscles of her face tight, controlling the tensions of each one, careful not to reveal. She opened up her pupils despite the sunlight, let tiny beads of sweat prick her skin, giving herself a healthy glow. All, the tricks from charm school, all an active's control. She looked at him as his eyes roamed about her face, studying her intently.
'And tell me,' he finally said, 'what are you like behind
that
screen?'
Her skin flushed, sweat broke too fast, she gasped, she stopped herself, she fought to bring back her control, the discipline of an active, a Roman active. But by the time she had recovered, Mathias had turned away, headed back towards August Hall, chuckling triumphantly. She fought down her anger easily, knowing that it would do her no good.
'Hey!'
Mathias had called out and suddenly an explosion broke over everything and Katya could hear cries coming from the hall.
Dragging her mask and breather back over her face, she threw herself towards the nearest archway, freeing her snipe and letting its tendrils feel their way quickly into her left carpal interface.
Inside there was confusion.
A quick survey showed evangelicals rushing up onto the raised floor, heading for the rapidly circling autonome, its trif absent, a charred black hole in the back of its seat. As she looked, its circling slowed and then it sank to the floor, retreating into maintenance mode.
A man stepped out from behind a pillar and ran for the archway. Straight at Katya.
He was looking back, didn't see her until suddenly he seemed to sense her presence. He had two lines of diagonal scarring running down the back of his neck and rows of silver rings pushed through his swollen ears. He was carrying one of the primitive rifles Katya had seen amongst the Conventist Guards.
He looked around and his mouth dropped open and his eyes widened.
No time for the snipe, Katya brought her right hand up sharply, jabbed the man in the throat, her fingers locked straight.
Blood spat up her arm as the man fell away.
She squatted, looked around.
What now?
she wondered. What now, indeed?
CHAPTER 13
She guided herself down onto the surface of Station Yellow and waited for the air-lock to let her in. Stopp knew all the warnings about travelling by suit but she didn't care. Carriers and shuttles were hassle, they weren't necessary. Fans went from station to station all the time with only a thermo suit and a jet pack. No deal, no fuss.
Behind her, she could see the great ring of the
Third Testament
. Fifteen kilometres distant but she felt like she could reach out and run a hand around its perfect curves. Ferries and freighters crawled across the black void, tiny specks, stars that moved. Orbit had never been so busy.
The hatch slid across and she swung inside, peeling off her mask before there was even enough air to breathe.
The inner door opened and she drifted in.
The tunnel opened out into a space that was clear for fifty metres or more. On the far side she saw Decker, drifting with Dippso and Mordecai and Grady Cesar, his legs tied up behind his shoulders. She drifted across to join them. 'Hi,' she said. 'Anything new?'
Mordecai stopped himself from speaking. Probably some crack about playing screen—but he was outnumbered here, Decker and Dippso wouldn't take his bullying and Grady was too old for any of that. She saw that Mordecai's nose was puffed up even more than usual and his eyes were watering. Lots of the orbitals had suffered allergies and illnesses since the arrival of the
Third Testament
. Stopp thought of her own recurring throat infection. She could understand why the actives had protected themselves with breathing masks for their first days in orbit.
'Hi, Stopp,' said Decker. He was OK for his age. He had been born a year too early to be a real Fan—even if he had wanted—but sometimes he seemed even older than that. 'They landed yesterday, near to Newest Delhi—guess they must have listened to something I've said. I told them they wouldn't stand a chance with Salvo Andric. I told them he's too wired up but I didn't think they'd really pay any attention. Who knows? Maybe they ignored me and landed at Newest Delhi for their own reasons.'
'Yeah, I knew they'd landed, but—'
'Anyhow. No news from the Holy Cee but we've been talking to the Pageant. All the fighting seemed to stop as soon as GenGen hit dirt—I guess they kind of clubbed together against the devil they didn't, that kind of thing. They're talking in Newest Delhi, now, but we don't have coverage of any of it. We have a couple of links with people in the crowds, at the Deadacre and in the city, but they're not getting much. Nobody has any control on the streets. The Black-Handers caused a lot of the trouble but they seem to have holed up. Now there's Krishnas and Charities and all sorts; there's looting in places. No one seems to know what's going on. See what I mean?' He smiled, shrugged, stopped himself against a branch of a yellow-gage tree.
Stopp liked to listen to Decker. He always forgot who he was talking to and ended up like he was talking to anybody—he didn't talk down like Mordecai or some of the others.
'Where have you been?' said Dippso, hitching her shawl up across her shoulders. Her throat was rough and her voice sounded faint; Stopp knew how she felt. 'It's like you've been hiding.'
Stopp shrugged and let her hands dance a little. 'Guess I've been a bit nervous,' she said. 'But I've been with a guy called EpheHermann, doing scriptures and stuff. Have you seen the mission house on Red? It's like
nothing
else ... really.'
Dippso smiled and said, 'You should get out more. I've seen visuals of the Red mission house, but really it's like that all over. Look around Yellow: you've never seen so much bare plastic. They've been getting us in order like never ever.'
Stopp smiled and glanced at Grady Cesar. He looked like he wanted to speak but his stuttering always made him hold back; she nodded to show she was listening.
'We're seeing a guy called Turkut Bar'hat,' he said. 'Roman, active. He's pretty high up. Says he wants to get to know the natives.' Grady spat out into the open space. 'Pah. He wants to know native, I'll
tell
him. I'll say, "You can stop building all over an' start
asking
," is what I'll say. I'll t-t-tell him, that he c-c-c—'
'Sorry,' said Stopp, cutting him off. 'But I have things to do.' She didn't know what but she knew she didn't want to listen to Grady Cesar laying into the Holy Cee like that.
She pushed off along a tunnel, looking for a console bay. Maybe she could find someone to share it all with. She didn't know, she just had this terrible urge to
do
.
~
A view of a room, light slanting in from one small window, slid up onto the screen. A thin mattress was pushed against one wall, a blanket spread out over it, its top neatly folded down. Books stood in orderly piles next to heavy-duty power-cells, strings of beads hung from hooks, candles were stuck on spiked holders, charts curled away from the walls.
Stopp's trifax phased up out of thin air and ArcNet made the image look around.
'Hi, Stopp,' said Lui Tsang, moving into view. She'd never seen him out of his padded southern jacket and leggings before. In his shorts he looked incredibly thin, his skin stretched tight over an ill-fitting framework of ribs and joints. His neck angled forward, making his head bob about like that of a terrapin or a puppet. He had a wide mouth with a tongue that was constantly flicking across his lips, betraying an insecurity Stopp had never noticed before. He squatted on the mattress and pulled a shirt over his head, then spat on his hands and smoothed the few strands of moustache down on either side of his mouth.
'They've landed,' she said. 'Near to Newest Delhi.' She told him what she could and as he listened his eyes narrowed.
When she had finished he paused and then said, 'If Matt and Sukui-san are there, it might be OK. Matt's a stone-head but he means good. Sukui's what he is...
'What are they like? How do they talk? What do they want?'
'They claim some kind of rights over Expatria, as far as I can tell. But they're not going to do anything about it. They just want to convert us all to their gospel.'
Lui laughed uneasily.
'I think they mean it,' Stopp continued. '
The Third Testament
is more important to them than anything else. I've read some of it and it says all about how God's market-place of the soul is where all our good points are weighed up in a kind of a cost-benefit model. In a thousand years' time we'll all be—'
'Amen,' said Lui, slicing his hands through the air. 'Leave it to the professionals, Stopp. You're getting confused.' He smiled to show he didn't really mean anything by it, then said, 'Salvo is getting twitchier and twitchier. You heard him about the rockets, didn't you? You were with me in the Capitol. He's put Mags Sender on it and she's sharp, even if she hasn't got herself any conscience. They're building up defences all around the docks. She says she can blow any boat off the water if it comes within a kilometre and I can see she's just waiting to try. Salvo's planning to put up barricades on all the roads, too, in case they come over land. He says he's not going to shoot them before they get a chance to speak but I don't believe him. If they come here they'll have to come by trifax first, at least until the Prime runs out of bullets.'
Lui just sat there shaking his head. Stopp pointed at her console's roller and moved her trifax to sit down next to him. Before Sukui had left, Lui had only been a technician. Now Salvo seemed to be trying to squeeze him into the old scientist's imprint.
'Do you want to come up here in trifax and see what they're like?' asked Stopp. 'You have the equipment at Dixie Hill, haven't you? You've been here before with Decker and Sun-Ray Sidhu. Come on. It's all been one-way, 'til now. If you could see them here you might be able to prepare Salvo Andric.' She shrugged, waved her hands. 'It might help.'
She smiled as Lui's face lit up. 'Sure,' he said. 'Let's do it!' He stood and hurried off view. 'We don't need to go to Dixie, either. I moved some of the equipment out of there when Siggy Axelmeyer was trying to start a revolution, figured I'd save what I could. I've got it all right here. My room's on Camembert, it's just two blocks from the Capitol so there's street lights with power I can steal from the Prime's generators.'
Within minutes Lui was standing in a false space where Stopp's screen should have been. Straight away, ArcNet moved him out into the open, cast him up to the right size, animated his movements so that he floated freely instead of standing under the strain of gravity.
Stopp freed herself from the restrainer and took the projector ArcNet indicated for her in a recess above the consoles. The projector was a small disc, about ten centimetres in diameter. She licked its back, pressed it onto her chest, and moved out, Lui Tsang's ghost following her in perfectly measured movements.
She keyed the first hatch they came to and passed into an air-duct; Lui might be too conspicuous out in the open.
Shortly, they came to a fork, chose the larger pipe and continued on their way. They stopped at the next hatch and Stopp decided it was worth taking a look outside. Often these routes through the old arks would follow no logic—tunnels that came to a dead end, airlocks between air-space and air-space; Stopp had given up trying to understand them long ago. She keyed in a maintenance number and peered through the opening gap. There was a wide passageway, doors opening off it on all five sides. 'Looks like accommodation,' she said into her mike. 'Do you want a look?'
'Shit, I'll see anything,' said Lui. 'Your drainage pipes were making me sick.'
They pushed out into the corridor and closed the hatch. Voices approached, but their accents were orbital so she didn't cut the projection.
She opened a door and showed Lui a sleep-net, little else. 'Well, where are all the Terrans?' he wanted to know.
'You want Terrans, we'll get you some Terrans,' said Stopp. She pushed back out into the corridor, past a woman with no arms and a man with no hair.
Mutants stick together
, she thought, but all she said was, 'Thumbelina and David. They were born during a solar peak, forty-three years ago.'
After a few minutes they heard the lazy drawl of a Terran. 'We're getting Kay's information,' it said, a man with an accent Stopp hadn't heard before. 'We must reserve the option, I say. Send them down so they're ready if they're needed. I know Kay, I was with her in Aix: her perceptions are near-top. Remember Prague.'
Stopp came to a junction and paused. She didn't like the tone of the man's voice. A gage tree was tangled up at the end of her wall and she crept through it until she could just peer around the corner.
The corridor opened out, after a few metres, making a small bay. There were evangelicals there, Romans, Stopp thought. A few Thessalonians, too, although she still hadn't perfected her identification of the holy orders. They were looking nervously at each other, pretending that they weren't listening in on this disagreement.
Director Roux was occupying the centre of the bay, his half-body strapped into one of his autonomic floaters, cables passing under his skin, an in-built mask across his mouth and nose.
The other man was broad and strong-looking. As he spoke he thrust his hands through the air and he kept his balance by the use of a foot, judiciously hooked around a grab-bar. His head was coated in a thin ginger stubble and his skin was unnaturally darkened. Stopp wondered if he had a skin disease, but then Terrans didn't appear to have any kinds of diseases themselves, they only carried them here for the orbitals to suffer, or so it seemed.
She had never seen this man before, but he must fit well in the hierarchy if he could stand up to a director like that.
'I have consulted with the MetaPlex,' said Roux. 'The special units will land tomorrow as you suggest. But they will not be activated.'
The other man gave a satisfied smile.
A kick in the back sent Stopp tumbling out through the splintering branches of the yellow-gage tree.
She cried out—she couldn't help herself—and then they had seen her.
She hit a wall and stopped, still metres from Director Roux and this other man and the evangelicals beyond.
She looked back, past Lui's trifax, and saw another evangelical staring at her. His eyes looked like they were peering through clear plastic. His hair was cut short and as he glanced across at his director, Stopp followed his look and saw the startled expression on the faces of Roux and the others. The dark-skinned man wasn't looking at Stopp, he was staring at the trifacsimile of Lui Tsang, studying his body, clearly the product of gravity.
'Well get her then!' barked Roux, raising a finger towards Stopp.
Lui's trifax twitched and then sprang back along the passage. The nearest evangelical—the one who had found Stopp—lunged at him and lost his orientation, striking the wall and yelling with rage. Others stirred and pushed off towards Stopp. ArcNet had used a simple trick with Lui's image but it had won Stopp some precious time.
She sprang away from the wall as the first evangelical brushed by, mistiming his grab. Bulleting under his arched back, Stopp sped along the corridor, bounced around a curve and into an open tunnel end.
With less space in the tunnel, Stopp was in her element. She made ground, heard the sounds of confusion and frustration falling away behind her.
She came to an air-lock, guessed how much time she could spare, and dived inside. As the air cycled out, she let the air escape from her lungs to avoid the bends. She saw stars through the panel, pushed the door open. They would be at the inner door by now. If she let air back in then they would have her.
She swung out of the exit and looked around. Twenty metres across open space there was another extension of the Station, a lock. She would be OK. The cold here in the ark's shadow was unbelievable as her gloved feet gripped the ark's outer surface. She pushed off and hoped her aim was good.
She hit the wall about a metre from the lock, almost bouncing back into space.
She had lost all sense of feeling.
Her head was pounding. She thought she might lose consciousness and drift off into the void. Suddenly it seemed like the easiest thing to do.