Rainbows End (29 page)

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Authors: Vernor Vinge

Tags: #Singles, #Speculative Fiction

BOOK: Rainbows End
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Robert ghosted over the suburbs, toward the nearest of the lights. He hadn’t tried Epiphany’s “out of body” feature before. There was no feeling of air flowing past, or motion. It was just his synthetic viewpoint slewing across the landscape. He could still feel his butt on the chair in his bedroom. And yet he understood why the directions said to do this sitting down. The viewpoint swooped down into a valley with a speed that was dizzying.
He drifted into a welcoming window. Juan Orozco and Mahmoud Kwon and a couple of others were gathered in a family room, marking out possibilities for tomorrow’s exchange with Capetown. They looked up and said hi, but Robert could tell they weren’t seeing much more than his icon hovering in the room. He could be present virtually, perhaps even look as “real” as Sharif usually did. But Robert just hung in the air, listening to the talk for a few moments and —

Alarm notification!
He cut the connection and was back in his bedroom.

Downstairs, Bob had wandered out of the living room. He stood by Alice’s door and knocked gently. As far as Robert could tell there was no answer. After a moment, Bob tucked his chin in and turned away. Robert tracked him up the stairs. The sounds of footsteps came down the hall. Bob knocked on Miri’s door, the way he did most evenings. There was mumbled conversation, and Miri’s voice saying, “G’night, Daddy.” It was the first Robert had heard her call Bob that.

Bob’s footsteps came nearer; he paused at Robert’s door, but he didn’t say anything. Robert watched him through the wall as Bob turned and was swallowed up by the privacy of the master bedroom.

Robert hunched over his desk and stared into the downstairs. Alice hardly ever stayed up much beyond Bob. Of course, tonight was not your usual night. Damn. You screw your courage up to an act of family betrayal — and then fate dumps problems all over your dishonorable intent. But even if Alice camped out in the den, eventually she’d have to use the bathroom. Right?

Twenty minutes passed.

Alice’s door opened. She stepped out, turned toward the stairs.
Use the ground-floor bathroom, damn you
. She turned again and paced angrily around the living room. Paced? There was precision and power in every motion, like a dancer or a martial-arts nut. Not like dumpy frumpy Alice Gong Gu, she of the mild round face and the shapeless dress. And yet this was the real view. It was her real face, even if it was tense with pain, and drenched in sweat. Huh? Robert tried to follow her gliding dance in close-up. The woman was dripping sweat. Her dress was soaked, as if she had just finished a long, frantic run.

Like Carlos Rivera.

It couldn’t be. Alice never got stuck in a foreign language, or in a particular specialty. In any
one
particular specialty. But he remembered the web discussion of JITT. What about the few strange people who could “train” more than once, who became ever more multitalented, until the side effects finally destroyed them? Where would such wretches get “stuck” if there were dozens of imprints to fall into?

Alice’s gliding dance slowed, stopped. She stood for a moment with her head bowed, her shoulders heaving. Then she turned and walked slowly into the front bathroom.

Finally, finally.
And now I should he overcome with relief
. Instead, revelation bounced back and forth in his mind. This explained so many little mysteries. It contradicted several certainties. Maybe Alice hadn’t been gunning for him. Maybe she was no more his enemy than anyone in this house.

Sometimes things are not as they seem.

It was very quiet. The old house in Palo Alto had had little squeaks and thumps, and sometimes Bob’s PC playing stolen music. Here, tonight… yes, there were occasional sounds, the house settling into the cool of the evening. Wait. In the utility view, he saw that one of the water heaters had kicked in. He could hear running water.
Not for the first time, Robert wondered what kind of magic that little gray box was. It had not triggered the house watchdogs. Maybe it wasn’t electronic at all, but nineteenth-century gears and cogs driven by a metal spring. Then it had
disappeared
from Robert’s own naked eyesight. That was something new, not a visual trick. Maybe the box had sprouted little legs and scurried off. But whatever it was, what would it finally
do
? Maybe the Stranger didn’t need a little blood. Maybe a lot of blood would suit him more. Robert sat stock-still for a second and then bolted to his feet — and froze again.
I was so desperate
. Credibility is not important if the victim wants to believe so hard that truth
must
be what the liar claims. So the Stranger had mocked the notion that hurting Alice would be worth such hugger-mugger.
And I, desperate, smiled and was convinced
.

Robert was out of his room, and flying down the stairs. He dashed through the living room and pounded on the bathroom door. “Alice! Al — ”

The door opened. Alice was looking at him, a bit wide-eyed. He grabbed her arm and dragged her into the hallway. Alice was not a large woman; she came easily in his grasp. But then she turned, taking him off balance. Somehow his feet got tangled in hers and he slammed into the doorjamb.

“What! Is it?” she said, sounding irritated.

“I — ” Robert looked over his shoulder, into the brightly lit bathroom, then back at Alice. She was dressed in a robe now, and her short hair looked as though she had washed it.
And everybody is still in one piece. No pools of blood… except maybe where my head hit the doorjamb
.

“Are you okay, Robert?” Concern seemed to rise above her irritation.

 

Robert felt the back of his head. “Yeah, yes. I’m pretty robust these days.” He thought about how he’d come down the stairs. Even when he was seventeen years old, he had never skipped four steps at a time. “But — ” Alice began. Clearly she was more concerned about his mental state than anything else.

It’s okay, Daughter-in-Law. I thought I was stopping your murder, and now I find it’s a false alarm
. Somehow he didn’t think that would be a satisfactory explanation. So why was he down here in the middle of the night, pounding on the door? He looked into the bathroom again. “I, um, I just needed to use the John.”

Her sympathy frosted over. “Don’t let me keep you, Robert.” She turned and headed for the stairs.

“Are you okay, Alice?” Bob’s voice, from the top of the stairs. Robert didn’t have the courage to look, but he could imagine Miri’s little face staring down, too. As he stepped into the bathroom and shut the door, he heard his daughter-in-law’s tired voice. “Not to worry. It was just Robert.”

Robert sat on the can for a few minutes and let the shakes die away. Maybe there was still a bomb here, but if it exploded, none but the guilty would be blown apart.

And neither did he have the little box that was the point of the comedy. When he showed up at the library, he would be empty-handed.
So
? After a moment, Robert stood, and looked into the real glass mirror. He favored his reflection with a twisted smile. Maybe he should just bring them a fake; would Tommie even notice? As for the Mysterious Stranger, perhaps his spell had been broken… along with all hope.

His eyes strayed to the countertop. There, sitting away from the clutter, was a small gray box. It hadn’t been there when Alice left. He reached down. His fingers touched warm plastic. Not an illusion. A greater mystery than all the flash and glitter that he was just becoming accustomed to. He slipped the box into his pocket and quietly returned to his room.

Alfred Volunteers

Günberk Braun and Keiko Mitsuri: They were top officers in their respective services. Vaz had tracked these two since their college days. He knew more about them than they would ever guess. That was one of the benefits of being very old and very well connected. In a sense, he had guided them into their intel careers, though neither they nor their organizations suspected the fact. They weren’t traitors to the EU or Japan, but Alfred understood them so well that he could subtly guide them.

So he had thought, and so he still hoped. And yet his two young friends’ remorseless efforts to help had become the greatest threat to his plans. As today:

“Yes, yes. There are risks,” Vaz was saying. “We knew that from the beginning. But letting a serious YGBM project escape detection would be much more dangerous. We
must
find out what’s going on in the San Diego labs. Plan Rabbit can do that.”

Keiko Mitsuri shook her head. “Alfred, I have contacts in U.S. intelligence that go back years. These aren’t my agents, but they would not tolerate a rogue weapons project. On that, I would trust them with my life. I say we should contact them — very unofficially — and see what they can learn about the San Diego labs.”

Alfred leaned forward. “Would you trust them with your country’s life? Because that’s what we are talking about here. In the worst case, there is not only a YGBM research effort going on in San Diego, but it is supported at the highest levels of the U.S. government. In that case, your friends’ best efforts would simply alert their superiors to our suspicions. The evidence would disappear. When it comes to investigating a threat this serious
we simply must do it ourselves
.”

In one form or another, this was an argument that dated from their Barcelona meeting. Today’s installment could be decisive.

Keiko sat back and gave a frustrated shrug. She was presenting in more or less her real appearance and location, a thirty-year-old woman sitting at her desk somewhere in Tokyo. She had transformed one side of Vaz’s office with her minimalist furniture and a picture-window view of Tokyo’s skyline.

Günberk Braun was less prepossessing. His image simply occupied one of Alfred’s office chairs. No doubt Günberk figured that the EU swung enough weight that he could afford a mild disposition. Günberk might be the real problem today, but so far he was just listening.

Okay. Alfred spread his hands. “I truly think the course we set in Barcelona is the most prudent one. Can you deny the progress we have made?” He waved at the biographical reports scattered around the table. “We have hands and minds on the scene — all deniable, and ignorant of what is manipulating them. In fact, they totally misunderstand the significance of this operation. Do you doubt this? Do you think that the Americans have any whiff of our investigation?”

Both youngsters shook their heads. Keiko even gave him a rueful smile. “No. Your SHE-based compartmentalization is truly a revolution in military affairs.”

 

“Indeed, and our releasing those methods — even to sister services within the Alliance — shows how seriously we at the EIA view the current necessities. So, please. If we delay more than one hundred hours, we might as well start over. What is your problem with giving the final go-ahead?”

Günberk glanced at his Japanese counterpart. She made an impatient gesture for him to go ahead. “I assume your question is rhetorical, Alfred. The problem with Plan Rabbit is Rabbit. Everything depends on him, and still we know almost nothing about him.”

“And neither will the Americans. Deniability is the whole point. Rabbit is everything we could want.”

“He is more, Alfred.” Günberk’s gaze was steady. For all his youth, Braun had the stolid aspect of a turn-of-the-century German. He moved from point to point slowly, inexorably. “In setting up this operation, Rabbit has performed miracles on our behalf. His ability demonstrates that he himself is a threat.”

Vaz glanced at the results of Günberk’s latest investigation. “But you have discovered critical weaknesses in Rabbit. However much he’s tried to disguise it, you’ve traced all his certificate authority to a single apex.” Having a single CA apex was not unusual; that Günberk had managed to discover Rabbit’s apex was a triumph. For Alfred — given his own, ah, sensitive relationship with Rabbit — it was miraculously good news.

Günberk nodded. “Credit Suisse. So what?” “So if Rabbit turns out to be a nightmare, you could pull the plug on Credit Suisse and put him out of business.”

“Pull the plug on Credit Suisse CA? Do you have any idea what that would do to the European economy? I’m proud of my people, that they ferreted this secret out — but it’s not something we can effectively use.”

“We should have dropped Rabbit after that first meeting in Barcelona,” said Keiko. “He is too clever.” Vaz raised a hand, “Perhaps, but how could we know?”

Ja
? Forgive me, Alfred, but we wonder if you know more about Mr. Rabbit than we.”

Damn
! “Not at all. Honestly.” Alfred leaned back in his chair and took in the nervous postures of his colleagues. “You’ve been talking behind my back, haven’t you?” He gave them a gentle smile. “Do you think Rabbit is really American intelligence? Chinese?” They had spent a lot of time investigating those possibilities. But now Keiko shook her head. “Then what is your theory, my friends?”

“Well,” said Günberk, sounding a little embarrassed. “Maybe Mr. Rabbit is not even human. Maybe it’s an Artificial Intelligence.”

 

Vaz laughed. He glanced at Keiko Mitsuri. “And you?”

“I think AI is a possibility we should consider. Rabbit’s talents are so broad, his work is so effective — and his personality is so juvenile. That last was one of the features the U.S. DARPA thought would be characteristic.” She saw the incredulity on Vaz’s face. “Not every threat is a cult or conspiracy.”

“Of course. But AI monsters? That’s a bogeyman out of the twentieth century. Who in the intelligence communities takes that seriously? Ah! That’s Pascal Heriot’s hobbyhorse, isn’t it?” Alfred’s tone became low and serious. “Have you been talking to Pascal about this project?”

“Of course not. But AI is a threat that’s been totally overlooked in recent years.”
“Correct, because nothing ever came of it. Before the Sino-American war, we know DARPA spent billions on the Little Helper Project. It was almost as much a fiasco as their Space Access Denial initiative.”

“Space Denial
worked
.”

Vaz laughed. “It worked against everybody, Keiko, the Americans most of all. But you’re right, SAD is not a proper comparison. My point is that some of the smartest people in the world tried to create AI and failed.”

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