Read The Machinery of Light Online
Authors: David J. Williams
A
nd when we get there?” asks Sarmax.
“We do whatever she says,” says Velasquez.
“What aren’t you telling me?”
“What makes you think I’m not telling you something?”
Long experience. He’s considering all the angles as the maelstrom of the labyrinth whirls around them; he’s realizing that
she’s playing at something, and he’s not sure he can stand to know—not sure that Haskell doesn’t know already—
“Control yourself,” hisses Velasquez, “or she will.”
“Our minds—”
“Your
mind is under my protection. And mine is the only one that this superbitch can’t penetrate.”
“This
superbitch
is the only thing that can stop Matthew Sinclair—”
“She’s playing right into his hands,” snarls Velasquez.
N
or is she under any illusions on
that
score. There’s no contingency she can adopt that might not be something that Sinclair’s counting upon. Every stratagem she deploys might merely be the inverse of one of his. Every action she takes might be one more step in his master plan. His progeny have operated with all too many plans—all too many scenarios … and maybe they’re all just part of the design of the one who set it all in motion. But now she’s on the point of returning to the Room with the most elite armed escort ever seen. The fact that she doesn’t know whom among that escort she can trust is something she intends to turn to her advantage. She’s going to stay one step ahead of Sinclair yet. She powers through the other side of the membrane—glances back as they come on through behind her, almost laughs at the looks on their faces.
PART V
AUTUMN RAIN
W
hat’s your problem?” asks the Operative.
It figures. Alone of all of them, he’s already processed the Room’s vast contents—takes them in with a single glance and the expression of a man who resolved long ago never to be surprised. He’s thus the only one to notice the expression on her face.
“Sinclair’s no longer here,” she says. “Neither is Control.”
“Be more precise.”
“I can’t detect them.”
“That’s more like it,” says the Operative.
She nods—starts giving orders. The group starts to deploy onto parallel elevator-trains. Riley, Maschler, and the Operative in one; Sarmax, Velasquez, and her triad in another; Linehan, Lynx, and herself in the third. They drop down toward the inner Room, trying to make sense of what they’re seeing—
W
e’re in the kingdom of heaven,” says Linehan.
“Shut up” says Lynx.
But it’s true all the same. Even if Lynx is too blind to see, Linehan’s not … and all he can do is thank God for sending him this—for giving him this life, for taking him to this place where all paths converge. He sights his guns on those terrariums sprawling past—vast shimmering walls that contain more greenery then he’s ever seen.
S
o the stories were true,” says Velasquez.
“Every last one,” says Sarmax.
T
his is just gone,” says Maschler.
“It’d be even better if someone explained it,” says Riley.
“Just keep your eyes peeled,” says the Operative.
T
he Room’s stretching out all around her in the panoply of false color and she can’t see any movement anywhere. But the Operative’s right: Sinclair’s still here. Where else could he be? Especially with the Room continuing to power up. Behind her, she can sense the membrane’s energy reaching the critical threshold. The voice of the Operative drifts in past her.
“No way anything’s getting through that now,” it says.
“When I want your opinion I’ll ask for it,” she snaps—cuts him off. She gets what he’s driving at, though. Sinclair
could
have stopped her from leaving the Room. Or maybe not … maybe he
hadn’t throttled up the Room’s engines enough by that point. Truth of the matter is that she no longer knows. It’s like she’s driving full tilt into black. She’s on the cusp of future now, can no longer see anything in front of her. She hasn’t felt this way since before she knew she was Manilishi. She figures it’s only fitting—that she’s come full circle. She starts to get glimpses of the inner Room gleaming in the distance.
W
hat in fuck’s name is
that
?” asks Riley.
“The end of the road,” says the Operative.
“We got movement,” says Maschler.
N
o one fire,” she says.