Expatria: The Box Set (49 page)

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Authors: Keith Brooke

BOOK: Expatria: The Box Set
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He could hear hammering noises coming from the stable, metal on metal. He stopped by a tall door, moved it ajar and peered inside. Working in the light of the roof windows was a thin young man with black hair, a wide mouth, a wisp of a moustache. It could almost have been Sukui forty years earlier. The similarity was only in looks, though; in manner and attitude Lui Tsang had retained the coarseness of his Orlyons street upbringing. He still had a distance to travel.

Sukui cleared his throat and entered the stable, keeping his head bowed.

Lui Tsang looked up, startled, then leapt down from the vehicle upon which he had been working. It was a large digger, its meth engine exposed, its metal scoop held high in salute.

'Sukui-san!' said Tsang. 'You're back!'

Sukui kept his head bowed. 'Please,' he said. 'Just Sukui. I am no longer a man of importance. I am—' he laughed grimly '—a free spirit.' He hated feeling this sorry for himself. For a moment he tried to focus on the rational aspects of his situation but it was no good any more, he was a Charity... he was a huminal.

'Sukui-san, you're safe.' Lui Tsang was beside him, slapping him on the arm, grinning all over his face. 'This place has sure missed you being around. The Prime—'

'—has dispensed with my services.'

Tsang's mouth fell open. 'The Prime is as dumb as my dead mother. He's got rid of you? All this time he says "Where's a Sukui when you need one" and now this?'

'Lui,' said Sukui. 'You must not be so quick to judge your betters. Audibly, at least. You still have a lot to learn.' The youth looked worn out, as did so many people these days. 'Lui, what has been happening?'

'The Prime is... Well, he's the Prime. You know what I mean. He's terrified that some kind of superhuman assassin is going to break through all his defences and kill him in the dead of night. He's paranoid.' Tsang shrugged and leaned back against the jalopy. 'I've been going trifax in orbit a lot,' he continued. 'GenGen have really taken over up there. It used to be a kind of constructive anarchy—just like a green field to a building gang. GenGen have moved in, taken over.

'I've been getting to know the orbital computer system, ArcNetwork 37CoHandy.'

'I know of the ArcNet.'

'I've been going into direct trifacsimile link with ArcNet,' said Tsang. 'My neural impulses are translated into light maps and the 'Net interprets them, I can get right inside the system, work my way around.'

'You have encountered the MetaPlex?' said Sukui. It was the next rational step.

'Sure. You can get around there a bit, you can hide up as an autonome. ArcNet has a primitive psylogue of me now. It's been using it to lever its way into the MetaPlex, only it isn't subtle. The Meta's on guard now, I can't get in.'

'And?'

Tsang looked at him strangely, continued. Talking seemed to be helping him shape his thoughts, a process with which Sukui was achingly familiar. 'I think I can get my way in there again, in amongst the psylogues—the Meta' is so schizoid that once I'm in there I can do almost whatever I want and the psylogues will blame each other. I can use ArcNet to get in, but the 'Net can use
me
just as much. Listen, Sukui-san, I don't know if what I'm doing is right. The consequences are too much to even think about. I don't know where to go from here.' Tsang tossed a screwdriver into an open bag and looked around the stable disconsolately.

'Lui,' said Sukui. 'You are far more capable than you claim. You are the closest I have come to discovering genius. You have a grand future in the Primal service, if that is your choice. A person must make their own decisions. If you are scared, then desist; it may be for the best.

'But I do not think you will, Lui. I do not think you could ever turn away from discovery.'

He bowed, he turned, he walked away into the streets of Alabama City, wondering what he should do with his unexpected liberty, knowing he had only one choice.

~

The old attendant at Hitachi Tower had recognised him. After the earlier part of the day, Sukui had doubted even that much. The attendant had welcomed him back with a hug so powerful it had reminded Sukui of Lucilla, then she had led him ceremoniously up the three familiar flights of stairs and left him outside the door to his old apartment.

He had spent the night in there and it had seemed so familiar, but simultaneously it had felt false, as if he was trying to slip into some past life. It had not felt like the apartment, or the objects it contained, had actually belonged to Sukui. He had made himself sleep on his old hair mattress and all the familiar lumps and hollows made themselves felt to him as if he had never slept there before. He had half-expected the dream to return but it had not and for that he was grateful.

The next morning his course had been determined. He had left Hitachi Tower with no regrets. He had walked at a steady pace along Grand Rue Street, through the pre-dawn crowds of traders and hustlers. He had stopped in an eaterette on Ruby Way for some ginseng tea and then he had made his way to the docks. It had been difficult to find a boat that would take him any distance but he had made his enquiries and eventually he had secured himself a passage.

Now, he sat at the prow of the yacht, a stiff breeze forcing him to narrow his eyes as he looked ahead. The boat was barely larger than the one that had brought him to within a kilometre of Alabama City. He licked his salty lips and focused on the horizon and the approaching bulk of the island of Clermont.

The wind was in their favour and the journey had taken two hours less than Sukui had expected. The sun was low in the sky, an amber orb about to sink into the ocean. He wondered what tonight would bring. Night or MidNight? He hoped it would be the latter: a night that was not a night, a night when almost the entire populace of Orlyons would be out on the streets of the Gentian Quarter. He felt the animal in his psyche rising, as it always did when he came to Orlyons; he recognised it, he embraced it. Control of the body.

They found a place to dock amongst a plethora of fishing boats, tiny, large, single or twin-hulled. Sukui paid his captain and walked rapidly into the town's heart, eager to sample its atmosphere.

All around there were the signs of conflict. Before the Treaty of Accord the island of Clermont had been the site of intense fighting.

The Andricci had kept their distance, proclaiming the island's independent status, but Hanrahan forces had moved straight in and claimed most of the territory as their own. They had been fought by guerrillas, a disciplined accretion of street-people known as the Musical Underground.

Now, as Sukui passed through these familiar streets, there was rubble where he had known rooming houses and bars and shops; a number of burnt-out buildings marked his route, multiplying as he approached the Gentian Quarter, the heart of the underground.

In small groupings, on street corners and gathered in the occasional pockets of greenery, Sukui spotted Terrans. They preached or sang to whoever would listen, but mostly the people just walked on by. They didn't look so out of place on the streets of Orlyons: buskers and preachers had always been commonplace here.

Apart from the Terrans, the people around him were the familiar people of Orlyons. Their worn clothing indicated that hard times had hit the town, but their faces, their movements, showed their true character. The excitability, the edginess, the exuberance. This had to be a MidNight, he realised. It was in the air, it hung all around him. But there was more than that, something he had never noticed before.

Sukui knew this people-dense fishing port like no other place. He had studied the crowds, analysed their flows, their currents, weighed this peculiar phenomenon of Orlyons carefully in his mind. Now he could discern new currents, flowing all around him, a sense of static poised to discharge. It was like a fire next to an explosives store, there was a violence waiting to happen.

He tasted the air on his tongue, breathed deeply. The night in Orlyons was like some exotic animal, he realised. It was alive, waiting to stir, to pounce.

He came through the Playa de l'Or, its market stalls jostling for attention in his peripheral vision. Traders were selling clothing and hot, spicy foods, there were prostitutes and sandwich board advertisers, trying to draw the crowd-animal's attention to the bars and clubs tucked away in hidden corners of the Gentian Quarter.

He emerged on the Rue de la Patterdois and there was a voice rising above the background buzz. A woman singing with hardened tones, backed by guitar and saxophone.

He looked for her and found her—Mono with her Monotones—playing outside a boarded-up building that had once been a food-store. He smiled. It all seemed so familiar.

'Hey, Sukui-san!'

Another familiar voice. He had to remind himself that he had not taken a step back in time.

'Sukui-san, you old rogue.' Alya Kik shuffled over to him and hugged him hard. 'You couldn't stay away, could you then, hah? Couldn't stay away from Mama Kik.' She held him at arms' length, shook her head. 'You look rough, Sukui-san. You need to sleep, MidNight or no.'

She kept a tight grip on his arm and started to lead him down a crowded alleyway, away from the Patterdois.

'Alya,' he gasped. 'I knew Mono would be in Orlyons, but I thought you were with the Pageant in Newest Delhi? Who else is here?'

'We're all here now. Krishnas, Hippies, everybody. Pageant's moved out of ND,' said Alya. 'They killed Larinda and Pom-Pom, you hear? It was GenGen. They making people fight amongst themselves. They don't like us 'cos we won't lie down and let 'em take us. So we come home to Orlyons an' we're gonna hold out.'

'Are you sure it was GenGen?' asked Sukui. 'Could it not have been the Convent or perhaps the Black-Handers?'

'Pah! It's GenGen, I tell you. You know what else they did, Sukui-san? You know what they did to old Alya Kik?'

Sukui shrugged, waited. Alya was leading him towards the Woodrow Gates, one of the entrances into Greene Gardens. The Gardens formed a series of rough areas, unsuitable for building; they had been left as parkland, for the birds and the prostitutes and the lovers with nowhere else to go.

'One of the bastards tried to kill me.' Alya shook her head. 'I saw him coming and I slugged him with a barrel of wine. I was
this
close—' she held a finger and thumb a few millimetres apart—this close to getting cut up.' She shook her head again. 'Here,' she said, brightening. They had come to a clearing in the Gardens, a circular pool that was overhung by a twenty metre crag, a large grassy area that had been overrun with the familiar graffitised tents of the Pageant of the Holy Charities. 'Here,' she repeated, raising her voice so that Sukui could hear her above the sounds of partying. 'You got to stay and have a sleep and some food and maybe some sex or something. You're a Charity, Sukui-san, you're one of us.' She slapped him on the back and bustled away, leaving him standing to one side of the encampment.

He looked around, smelt the marijuana on the air, the scent of alcohol and wood-smoke. She was right—it was time he had some rest—but he did not want to settle. The atmosphere of tension was still there, all around, waiting to happen.

The camp was a single, turbulent mass of humanity. Charities and others, dancing, singing, making generally merry. There was a short-lived fight at the far side of the gathering, broken up by the intervention of a burly Charity intent on finding some fun.

Sukui heard a sound from somewhere above him. He looked up and spotted a figure at the top of the crag. 'Mis'
Sukui?
' It was Chet Alpha. There was not a person on all Expatria who could slur their speech as fluently as Chet Alpha.

'Please,' said Sukui. 'Do not attempt to come down. I will join you.'

He followed a footpath that threaded its way between the boulders, working its way up around one side of the main crag. 'Excuse me,' he said, passing through a small mixed group of evangelicals and Charities. He smiled. Perhaps the charms of the Charities could spread some kind of understanding.

He paused near the top to control his breathing, then stepped out. 'Chet Alpha,' he said. 'It is good to see that you are still alive.'

'Phah!' snorted Alpha. 'Not you, too.' He took another drink from his bottle.

'Pardon?' said Sukui. What had he said?

'They're tryin' to kill us. Killin' all the top people. De-... de-... destabling us, makin' so they can take over, so we don't have any leaders is what they're doin'.'

'Yes?' Sukui glanced behind him, wondering if they could be overheard.

'So tell me—' Chet Alpha spread his arms wide, dropped his bottle with a crash down the side of the crag '—so tell me why they don't want to kill
me?
I'm the leader of the Pageant: aren't I important, Sukui-san? Don't I make no difference?'

Sukui bowed his head to disguise his smile. He found Chet Alpha's egotism touching.

Then he looked up sharply, stared at Alpha. 'I believe,' said Sukui, 'that your time has arrived.'

And then he stepped forward and pushed the startled Chet Alpha over the edge of the crag.

CHAPTER 26

'You have to get out quickly,' Samizdat had told her. 'The core's going to break away in twenty-five hours. It's going to move two hundred and fifty kays away so the MetaPlex can be completely isolated. I can get down into the three tee, but that's no good for you.

Now, Stopp was at the heart of a group of menials, waiting for the transporter's doors to open onto Station Yellow. She was wearing a menial body-suit and she had allowed Samizdat to shave her head, but she would never pass for the real thing—her head was the wrong shape, her limbs too atrophied, her musculature all wrong. Her only chance lay in being hidden amongst the group.

Abbi had attached himself to her, since she had dragged him back into the
Third Testament
. Now he hung next to her, humming the company hymn, unaware that his own tension could be so infectious.

Before they had left the
Third Testament
, Abbi and another menial called Bart had reported that the news of ThePatrische's death had been received with dismay, but no one had doubted that it was an accident. What else could it have been?

An evangelical pushed through, tiredly calling, 'Make way, make way.' Then, 'OK,' he said, as the doors rolled up. 'Construction menials through here. Now.'

Through her protective ring of menials, Stopp looked out at Station Yellow. The in-growths of tubes and buildings had not changed. GenGen had not dared alter this, the most populous of the arks.

The evangelical led the group of menials down a wide thoroughfare, and left them at the entrance to a small disused building.

'Over there,' Stopp whispered, pointing towards one wall. The group of menials drifted chaotically over to clump against the wall and Stopp slipped easily through a hatchway and into a small service pipe. 'Thanks,' she whispered, as she shut the hatch. Then she pulled herself rapidly away, not yet believing that she could be free.

~

Stopp had always hated people to be too predictable. That had been one of the common principles that had brought the FanClub together: a reaction against the conservative old guard, the ones who did not believe in change.

Decker was predictable.

His home was Station Yellow. Since splitting from his brothers and sisters at the age of fourteen he had based himself in a small complex called Curaçao. He didn't like the other stations, he didn't even like the other parts of Yellow all that much.

Just then Stopp could have fallen in love with him for being so damned predictable. She had followed the pipes through the heart of Yellow, avoiding the main routes, turning back whenever she heard sounds of people. Thoughts of Zither had stopped her from contacting just anybody. She needed somebody she could trust, somebody who was reliable.

Now she pulled herself into one of the rooms Decker had appropriated for himself.

'Wha—?'

He hung in one of the doorways, a towel tucked loosely around his waist, his hair sticking out all over in thick wet strands. '
Stopp
,' he said, staring at her clothes and her shaven head, moving into the room. 'Director Roux said you were dead, that there'd been an accident when they tried to screw with Ark Red. Jeez, Stopp, where've you been?' Then he turned back to the doorway. 'Hey, Turk!' he called. 'Come and see who's here.'

Stopp looked up at the doorway and a GenGen active—Roman, by his clothing—came into sight. Stopp stared at Decker, at the active. She backed away, towards the hatch.

'It's OK,' said Decker, waving a hand towards the Roman. 'Turkut is a friend.'

'So was Zither,' said Stopp. 'He handed me over to GenGen. I don't know what they were going to do with me if I hadn't got out. I don't know if Zither knew, either, I don't even know if he cared.' She had a hand on the hatch, now. She didn't know where she could go from here. There wasn't anybody left she could trust.

'Please,' said Turkut. 'GenGen is not a single people. There are many of us, we embrace many ideas. It would be wrong to cast us all in the same light.'

'Turk was the one who saved Red,' said Decker. 'He made them stop the spinning.'

'Their minds were elsewhere,' said Turkut. 'Even the directors. I think they will try again when things have stabilised—my orders had surprise behind them the first time. I went against the MetaPlex, I don't know the consequences.'

'How did you escape?' asked Decker.

Stopp glanced at Turkut, who said instantly, 'Don't say. You don't need to choose whether or not to trust me. I'm going, Decker. I'll leave you together.' He smiled and then left the room.

'I'm going, too,' said Stopp, when the Roman was beyond hearing.

'Turk can be trusted,' said Decker. 'If they were all like him we wouldn't have any trouble at all.'

'Sure. But like he said: I don't need to trust him yet. I'm going to get some food, some sleep. Some real clothes. I'm going to lie low for a time. I need to do some thinking.' She bowed her head, slipped through the hatchway and into the tube, and left before Turkut could return with his GenGen friends.

She took a suit over to Babeloah and slept for a few hours.

She woke in a blister on the Expatrian side of the station. The planet hung above her, vast, remote. A third of its surface was black, the rest was a misty grey, broken occasionally by the blue-green of the sea or the greys and browns of the main land mass, sagging to the south of the equator.

She preferred the stars, but she had decided to stay away from her usual haunts. She wasn't going to be stupid again.

ArcNet was ready for her almost before she had given her identifier. 'Is Lui Tsang available?' she said. 'Can the link be protected?' A view rolled up before her, Lui Tsang sitting in the small research hut on Dixie Hill, screens and trifacsimile projectors all around him, power packs and books filling every available space.

Her image appeared, sitting on top of one of the screens. 'Hi,' she said. 'How's things?'

Lui looked up. 'Prime's mad,' he muttered. He seemed to be intoxicated in some fashion. 'He's kicked Sukui out an' made me his adviser. Shit, I gave him some advice: I told him to get Sukui back. He thought I was being funny, said he liked me. What do I do, Stopp? What do l do?'

'What have you
been
doing?' said Stopp.

'Sun-Ray Sidhu's become a Nano-Hippy. Sunny!' Lui laughed sharply, stopped, stared at the trifax. 'He says we've got to call him Sun-Rider of the Old Corral—it's the name they've given him. We sniffed some ju-ju, is all. He said we'd embrace the universe and then he fell asleep.

'I don't know anything about embracing universes, but it's given me an idea, Stopp: I know how we can fuck GenGen for good. Sukui set me to thinking things through—what we have to do, that kind of thinking. Are you with me Stopp? I'm going to need your help. I'm going to need someone who can get into the central unit of the
Third Testament
. The MetaPlex is on edge right now, the only way to link is to go in there with a projector so the 'Net can pump me in direct. Could you do that, Stopp? Is it possible?'

Stopp looked at the fire burning in Lui Tsang's eyes, felt it catching somewhere inside of herself. But it meant going back to the core. 'Sure,' she said. 'Easy as nothing. When do I go?'

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