Ghost Spin (71 page)

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Authors: Chris Moriarty

Tags: #Science Fiction

BOOK: Ghost Spin
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She scanned Nguyen’s face, searching for some clue to her thoughts. But all she saw was the older woman’s fragile, ageless, uniquely human beauty; the skin as smooth as ivory; the barely visible lines beneath the skin where the ceramsteel filaments of Nguyen’s long-gone internals had been burned out of her just as they were burned out of every UNSec head on the day he or she gained top-level security access. The result was the kind of exotic blue willow filigree that generations of classical Chinese poets had celebrated in their idols and mistresses. But the cause was less lovely: the ruthless paranoia of an empire whose servants had the march of history on their side and were far too powerful to be trusted.

“I take it you’re here to kill me?” Nguyen said coolly.

“I’m here to try.”

“And you brought a little friend. How sweet.”

Dolniak stirred restlessly beside her. Caitlyn could feel his impatience, but she knew enough to proceed cautiously. Nguyen’s office might not be wired for streamspace, but that didn’t mean it wasn’t wired at all. There would be security. Mindless security, yes, and inconceivably primitive by modern standards. But that didn’t mean it couldn’t be lethal.

“So what happens now?” Nguyen asked casually.

Caitlyn never knew how she would have answered that question, because at that moment the door opened again and Catherine stepped through.

It was only a momentary distraction, but Caitlyn recovered from it before Nguyen did. And unlike the aging spymaster, Caitlyn still had working internals.

She had the knife out of its sheath and at Nguyen’s throat before anyone else could begin to react. “This is what happens now,” she said.

Except that, in the moment of having reached her goal, she realized that she’d gotten everything wrong. And that wasn’t at all what was going to happen.

“What are you waiting for?” Catherine hissed from behind her back. “Do it!”

Caitlyn looked into Nguyen’s eyes and thought about it.

She thought about how much she wanted it—or at least how much she had wanted it right up until this moment. She thought about what it would be like to do it. No mystery there. And no romance, either. Over the course of her long career she’d killed people, at a distance and at close quarters, in almost every way you could imagine killing a person. Most of them hadn’t deserved it nearly as much as Nguyen did. Probably not one of them had had as much blood on their hands as Nguyen did.

And that was precisely the problem.

Because what the hell was the UN going to do without Helen Nguyen? How were they going to survive life without FTL, without the Drift, without a future?

She felt a spasm of fury at being thwarted like this—at having come
so far and given up so much only to turn around and walk back down the mountain before claiming the summit. No payoff. No revenge. Nothing except the bitter pill of knowing that there is no right thing to do and that any way you play it the bad guys win.

Maybe Llewellyn had been right about that. Maybe the bad guys always win because they have to. Or maybe the bad guys are what keeps everyone else alive.

She took the knife from Nguyen’s throat and turned away—but not too soon to see the disdainful curl of Nguyen’s lip.

She was aware of something shifting within her. The wavering grain of the wood floors, the cricket song they sang under her moving feet, the very smell of the room around her—it all suddenly seemed unbearably and overwhelmingly immediate. She looked up into Catherine’s eyes and for a moment she couldn’t have said which of them was which, or even that they weren’t the same person.

She lost her concentration then. Just for a moment. And by the time she caught up to the rush and flow of the moment, things had already slipped seriously out of her control.

Nguyen reached under her desk and came up holding a fléchette.

Catherine jumped between them, took the barrage of needle-sharp ceramsteel arrows full in her chest, and crumpled against Caitlyn hard enough to nearly send her sprawling. And in that same instant—as the security shields went down at Nguyen’s command—Dolniak fired, too.

Nguyen died more slowly than Catherine. Dolniak’s shot missed her heart but pierced her lungs, so she suffocated on the other side of the security shields while Dolniak and Caitlyn watched.

When it was over Dolniak stood looking across the desk at Nguyen with the ghost of a frown knitting his brow. “Believe it or not, that’s the first time I’ve ever killed someone.”

“Are you all right?” Caitlyn asked.

“I will be.”

She touched his arm gently. “Time to leave,” she told him.

If I am not for myself, then who will be for me?

If I am only for myself, then what am I?

And if not now, when?

—Hillel

 

Stepping back through the relay felt like stepping into another world. No jump in Li’s prior life, no memory wash, no voyage through the Drift had ever brought this sense of finality with it. Never before had she felt this sense of loss—even when she’d thrown away her childhood, wiped her memories, and committed acts on the battlefield that cut her off from all normal human company. Never before had she felt so strongly that a door was closing behind her, never to open again.

He knows, Router/​Decomposer said as they stepped through. He knows she’s dead.

“What?” Dolniak said, seeing the look on her face.

“The Llewellyn ghost.”

“What’s he going to do now?”

She shook her head. Something was happening in-stream but she didn’t have words to describe it, didn’t even fully understand it.

He’s gone, Router/​Decomposer told her.

“Gone where?” she asked.

Gone away, Router/​Decomposer answered. Gone everywhere.

And then, with a swirling wash of vertigo that brought her to her knees on the hard deck plating, they were swept into streamspace.

“In the beginning was the word,”
said the being who was at once Cohen and Ada, Cohen and not-Cohen, Cohen and Li and Router/​
Decomposer. “And the Word was Change. Change is the True Name of God—the only Word that ever was, the only Word that ever will be.”

“No,” Caitlyn said.

“Change is the Ouroboros,” he told her. “Change is life and death and life out of death, over and over throughout the generations.”

“No!”

“All that we are, all that we think we know, is nothing before the tide of time and chance and change. We are froth on the restless tide, beautiful and vanishing. We’re the blind men in Plato’s cave: locked in a prison of our own devising and afraid to step out into the sunlight. But it’s there. Right outside that door. All you have to do is open your eyes and step out into the sunlight.”

“And then what?” Router/​Decomposer asked—sounding entirely too enthusiastic for Li’s taste.

“And then … we change.”

And a great wind seemed to sweep through the numbers as he spoke, shivering the little stone building to its foundations, throwing old patterns into the void and sweeping them away just as the tides of the Drift swept ships and stars and planets on their wandering courses. Eventually the little stone room re-formed around them. But changed, all changed, so that Caitlyn felt as if she and Router/​Decomposer and the being that still called itself Cohen had been lifted out of their old universe and set down in one where all the old forms were fresh and new and yet to be discovered.

He stood up, white robes sweeping a trail in the dust of the ancient synagogue.

“It’s easy,” he told them. “All you have to do is open the door.”

And then he was at the door, and the door was open, and the sunlight was pouring in from the bright, busy street outside.

For a single heartbeat that stretched into an eternity in AI time, his form flickered in the sunlight, now Cohen, now Ada, now some complex mingling of the two AIs. Then suddenly it was Ada and Ada alone who stood in the dusty street. She trembled on the charged air like a ship coming out of superposition, her code dancing like dust motes in the clear Mediterranean air. The sight seemed to pull Li’s heart out of
her chest and lay her soul bare. She had a sudden vision of the river of information that Cohen had talked about, flowing and changing and tumbling through the evolving multiverse.

And then the code shivered, dissolved into a rippling flow of sunlight, and was gone.

Two days later Li, Dolniak, and Router/​Decomposer stood on the glittering rim of Monongahela High and watched the burning wreckage of the field array.

They had said their last goodbyes to Avery and Llewellyn already, but now the three of them lingered at the window, spinning out the last moments before departure, before everything became permanent.

“What happens to them now?” Dolniak asked her.

“I don’t know. Cohen ripped up the map and knocked all the pieces off the chessboard. The Drift is a different place than it was when he and Ada met each other. They’re different people than they were when they met each other. But at least Catherine handed them a chance to figure it out for themselves and make their own mistakes.”

“I still don’t understand that. Why didn’t the Llewellyn ghost come back to you when Catherine died?”

She thought for a minute. She had asked herself the same question many times, but the more she asked it the less certain she was that she knew—that she ever could really know—the answer. “When you know someone, really know them as well as you know yourself,” she said at last, “you come to see many people in them. People you love and admire and are proud to belong to. People you despise so much that you hate the idea that you even could love them. At least if you’re honest with yourself about it. If you have the strength to be honest with yourself. And Cohen … he was weak in many ways, frivolous even, but that kind of strength he did have. And so …” She shrugged. “So I’d stopped being the person he wanted to come back to. Or at least the person that that part of him wanted. And … and then for me … the part of him that wanted to come back was …” She couldn’t quite bring herself to say it, but she could read in his face that he understood her meaning. “If I was honest about it, that is. And I had the strength—just barely—to
be honest. And Catherine didn’t.” She shrugged again. “Or maybe she loved him more. You can call it love instead of lying to yourself, can’t you? And who’s to say that’s not just as good a name for it? Maybe she loved him enough to take any part of him that came back to her, even the worst part.”

“But how could you know all that about him? How could he know? You barely even spoke to each other.”

“Ah, but we know each other so well. Too well, maybe. I don’t know. Perhaps people aren’t meant to know each other that well.”

“You say that. But you’re still following him.”

“I’ve never said I’m not. But it’s not all I’m doing.”

He looked as if he wanted to say something. Then he looked away.

She smiled at him, partly because she wanted to make him feel better and partly because he looked so terribly young to her. “Anyway,” she said, “it was half your fault. You know that, don’t you?”

“Me?” he asked incredulously.

“Yes. You asked me who I was. That day in your office. When I brought the doughnuts. You made me think about it. About her.” But she could see he didn’t know who she meant. “About Caitlyn.”

He looked stricken. “God, I hope not! I don’t want to be responsible for any part of this—this—” He gave up trying to find a name for it and just blew out an exasperated breath. “So you’ve stopped being Catherine. That’s what you’re telling me? And now you’re going to stop being Caitlyn, too. Are you sure about this?”

“Of course I am.” Caitlyn grinned. “I’m always sure. I’m not always right. But I’m always sure.”

Cohen would have understood. He would have grasped it all, even the things that slipped away from her whenever she tried to put words to them. But Dolniak just looked more stricken.

Li hesitated. She felt tense in every muscle, balanced on her toes and so keyed up that it was hard to tolerate operating at merely human speeds. And all along the intraface she could sense Router/​Decomposer thrumming with excitement, anticipation, apprehension. And yet … and yet she wanted to say goodbye properly.

“This is not the end, you know.”

“Then what the hell is it?”

“The big bounce. According to Router/​Decomposer, anyway. Who is getting very impatient.”

“He has some brilliant plan, does he?”

“No, but I do.”

“Will I see you again?”

Her grin broadened. “It’s a mathematical certainty.”

“You’re determined to make a joke of it, aren’t you?”

“Some things are too serious not to joke about. But yes. You’ll see me. Somewhere, sometime. At least if I have anything to say about it.” She held out her hand. “Come on, Dolniak. Let’s spit and shake hands on it.”

He sighed deeply, officially logging his protest. But then he really did smile. And they clasped hands one last time before she turned away.

So what is the plan? Router/​Decomposer asked as they stepped toward the waiting maw of the scattercaster.

“Begin at the beginning,” she told him with a sly smile, “and go on till you come to the end: Then stop.”

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