Authors: Peter F. Hamilton
“Shit!” he roared. In his army days it wouldn’t have made any difference. None. See a hostile and snuff them. Nothing else had ever been allowed to interfere with that maxim. It was simple survival. Life was so fucking easy in those days. Uncomplicated.
Brendan Talbot’s fingers closed around the catch.
Greg yanked the stunshot round, strap cutting into his shoulder. Aim and fire. The pulse hit the glass, and splattered, minute static tendrils writhing across the oblong pane. “Shit shit shit.” Aim and fire. This time the pulse struck Talbot’s hand. There was a muffled grunt, and he was flailing backwards. His wrist caught the spikes of glass around the edge of the hole, skin tearing. There was a confused splash of heat.
The torch beam wavered about as Kay tried to catch him.
“Let’s go,” Greg said.
Runnels of Talbot’s blood were seeping down the window below the hole, glowing like radioactive sludge.
“What’s happening now, boy?” Philip asked anxiously.
“Trouble. Where’s the crash team?”
“They’re getting into the tilt-fan now.”
“Jesus!”
Eleanor gave him a frightened glance as they charged back into the hall.
“The crash team is just taking off,” he told her. “Philip, have they got stunshots with them?”
“Sure thing, boy.”
“Tell them to use the stunshots wherever possible, remember these people aren’t responsible for what they’re doing.”
“I’ll tell ‘em.”
“Upstairs,” he said to Eleanor. They started to pound up the staircase.
There was an almighty crash of breaking glass from the lounge when they were halfway up.
Knocking the whole window out by the sound of it, Greg thought. He handed Eleanor the stunshot when they reached the landing. At least if she did have to shoot she would never have the guilt of killing a complete innocent. He could always use the rifle to immobilize, If he had time, if the mêlée didn’t become too confusing, if he could hang on to his scruples. They ran down the landing to the master bedroom.
“Philip, plug Royan in,” Greg said.
“Right-oh, boy.”
The landing’s biolums came on just as they reached the bedroom door, three sets of wall globes shaped like lilies. Greg shot them out with the rifle. They disintegrated with loud popping sounds, showering the landing with radiant flakes that died as they bounced along the carpet.
From a tactical standpoint there was little improvement; biolum light shone up from the hall, casting long delusive shadows over the landing walls. He could hear people moving about below.
They went through into the bedroom. “Keep watching the stairs,” Greg said. “Anyone comes up, shoot ‘em.”
“Right.” Eleanor knelt down beside the door, peering through the crack.
The photon amp’s time numerals and guido co-ordinates blurred then merged into a single wavery band of yellow light. There was a moment’s pause, then the display printed: I’M HERE, GREG.
“Great. Listen, I’ve got about half a dozen people who think they’re Liam Bursken coming at me. Now there has got to be some way to flush that paradigm out of them. We know it erases itself after a set time. Access the recording you made and look for the magic photons sequence, see if there’s any way we can activate it prematurely.”
GOT YOU. ACCESSING NOW.
“They’re here, Greg,” Eleanor called softly. She fired the stunshot, ten or twelve pulses zinged along the landing, scorching long burn marks into the wallpaper, blistering the paint on the banister rail.
He was aware of the minds on the stairs. One of them ruptured in a flurry of pain, the thought currents fragmenting into comate insensibility. “You got one.”
GREG, HAVE YOU GOT A LASER WITH YOU?
“Yeah, a Heckler and Koch hunting rifle.”
TOO POWERFUL. HAS IT GOT A TARGETING IMAGER?
“Yeah.”
GOOD GOOD GOOD. PLUG THE IMAGER INTO YOUR SUIT ‘WARE.
“Right.”
“The crash team has left,” Philip said. “Be with you in eight minutes.”
It was going to be too long, that much was obvious. Greg tugged the rifle’s targeting imager monocle out of its recess, and detached it from the fibre optic cable. The interface was standard—thank Christ. He plugged the cable into a socket on the guido ‘ware module. Blue target circles hardened in front of him, angling down towards the carpet, the same line as the rifle barrel was pointing.
“Come out, Mandel,” Ronnie Kay shouted up from the ball, “or we will burn you out. Fire is always the great purifier. Your wife will die with you then. Come out.”
“Don’t you dare,” Eleanor said.
“Royan?”
I’VE DECRYPTED IT STRANGE. NOT LIKE SOFTWARE. NO SUBROUTINES. EVERYTHING STRUNG TOGETHER, SIMILAR TO PIXEL CODES, MUCH HIGHER BIT RATE THOUGH.
“Have you found the magic photons sequence?”
WORKING ON IT
Greg went over to the window, standing beside it with his back to the wall, expanding his espersense outwards. There were three minds below. He edged the rifle out past the curtains and activated the imager. The photon amp’s picture of the bedroom faded away, replaced by a view of the garden below. Three men were standing on the lawn, waiting patiently. One of them held what looked like a shotgun, the other two were carrying clubs of some kind.
“Come out, Mandel.”
Eleanor fired another barrage of stunshot pulses down the landing.
“We’ll burn your flesh to ashes. Your last minutes will be the torment of Hell. Repent.”
THINK I’VE GOT IT
“Thank Christ for that.”
THERE ARE TWO SEPARATE SEQUENCES, BOTH BECOME ACTIVE AFTER A MEASURED INTERVAL FOLLOWING IMPRINT TIMED BY HEARTBEATS. CLEVER THAT THE FIRST SEQUENCE CONTAINS THE PARADIGM ITSELF AND THE INSTRUCTION TO KILL KITCHENER, ALONG WITH ADDITIONAL ORDERS TO DESTROY HIS RETROSPECTIVE NEUROHORMONE WORK. IT ACTIVATED ITSELF AFTER APPROXIMATELY NINE HOURS. THE SECOND SEQUENCE IS THE MAGIC PHOTONS, WHICH ACTIVATES TWO HOURS LATER.
Even now, Greg couldn’t quite shake off his fascination with the case. Nicholas must have been hit before the storm, before the rising waters of the Chater closed the ramshackle bridge.
“Can you trigger the magic photons sequence?”
YES. I’VE ISOLATED ITS ACTIVATION CODE FROM THE PARADIGM’S TIMER SECTION.
“OK, there are three people we can try it on.”
The target circles vanished as Royan took command of the rifle’s ‘ware. Greg watched the imager’s laser sending a fan of ruby light sweeping across the lawn. The grid emerged in its wake, splitting into three sections, folding around the waiting men.
HERE GOES.
The contoured lines around the central figure began to flash.
NOW.
Greg saw a single strobe-like flicker of pink douse the man’s face. His espersense showed him the man’s thought currents start to seethe furiously. A loud destitute wailing penetrated the glass.
“What’s happening?” Eleanor demanded.
“I’m not sure.” Even as he spoke he sensed the new tide of personality usurping Bursken’s resolute thought currents. His empathy was caught by the backlash of petrified bewilderment raging inside the abused brain, feedback sending a quake of dismay shuddering along his own synapses. Then the man was dropping to his knees, curling into a foetal position, mind rushing headlong into welcome oblivion.
“OK, we got him. Zap the other two, Royan.”
Their grid outlines began to flash. The targeting laser fired twice.
“Flames, Mandel,” Ronnie Kay shouted. “They will consume you. There will be no redemption.”
Wait,” Greg shouted back. “I’m coming out.”
“Greg!” Eleanor pleaded.
“Those crazies will torch the place if I don’t. We have to clear them out.”
“Let the crash team do it.”
“That bastard MacLennan is still out there. He can load Bursken’s mind into them as soon as they land. Then where will we be? They are armed and armoured, Eleanor. At least the lynch mob only have shotguns.”
“Come then, Mandel. Come to us.”
She drew a sharp breath through her teeth. “God, you be careful, Gregory—”
He knew exactly how much that cost her to say. “No messing.”
They waited in the hall at the foot of the stairs. Five of them, a tight arrowhead, with Ronnie Kay at the front. Two shotguns followed him with mechanical precision. Their mouths were curved up in the same slight, vapid smile.
His espersense flowed round them, along the hall, through the empty rooms. They were the only ones inside. Right at the back of his head was the faint thrumming of pressure, the neurohormones stressing his synapses to their limit.
He held the rifle casually at his hip as he descended.
“Take the ones with the shotguns first,” he whispered.
RIGHT
The grid appeared again, peeling into five segments like cybernetic butterfly wings. Closing fluidly around their ignorant prey.
Ronnie Kay blinked, glancing distrustfully at the rifle. “Put it down, Mandel.”
READY
“Now.”
The laser lashed out, spiking each of them in turn. Elapsed time seven-tenths of a second.
They wilted in unison, filling the air with a grotesque catlike puling. Arms and legs were infected with a life of their own, waving and flexing at random.
“Shitfire,” Greg murmured.
DID WE GET THEM?
“Oh yeah. We got ‘em.”
Eleanor was running along the landing, stunshot held ready, looking as if she was about to start a war.
“The crash team will be there in five minutes,” Philip said. Eleanor barged into his side, hugging him tightly. She let out a gulping sob. “I’m sorry.” She wiped her eyes.
His arm went round her, holding her roughly. He kissed the top of her forehead, damp hair rasping across his lips.
They went down the last few stairs, slowly, every step a great effort.
The front door had been forced open, the lock jimmied off. A draught of clammy air swirled in.
Greg used the rifle barrel to push the lounge door open. Shards of glass were heaped on the floor below the broken window. The curtains flapped feebly.
“It’s clear,” Greg said. “I’ll go out here, through the window. MacLennan can see the front door.” Eleanor’s fingers clutched at him through the combat leathers. “I’ve got to finish this.” And this time there would be no hesitation, no reluctance. MacLennan had come hunting him, broaching the sanctity of his own home. Well, now it would be settled on those terms. One on one, zero rules.
“I know,” Eleanor said.
He crouched down, and scuttled over to the window. “Royan, kill the imager’s camera feed. I don’t want to be on the receiving end of that paradigm – “ He stopped, intuition acting like a dose of wine, stealing warmly into his brain.
The gloomy image faded out, leaving him alone with the time display and guido co-ordinates. He shoved the rifle through the shattered window.
“Give me the laser return.”
The picture which built up was similar to the virtual simulation he had used to fly into Walton, photonic topology, except it was all red. The rickety fence was ten metres in front of him, saplings standing in long rows behind it, grass resolved as a fuzzy mauve mat.
“OK, Royan, there’s one last piece of reprogramming I need.”
He poked the rifle round the corner of the house. The laser painted in the EMC Ranger, the barn, and the wall around the farmyard. Mark Sutton was lying where he’d fallen. Frankie Owen was crawling towards the driveway. It was like watching a time-lapse puppet in motion, the picture refreshing itself every second as the laser swept back and forth.
A grid tailored itself into a perfect fit around Frankie Owen.
“I’m here,” Greg called out clearly.
Frankie. twisted round. When he was looking straight at Greg, the laser fired the magic photon’s activation code at him. There was a muffled gurgling, then he lay still. Greg sensed Bursken’s thoughts routed by Frankie’s usual dull anger and general life-resentment just before consciousness dwindled.
Not much of an improvement, really.
He pointed the rifle at the tangerine grove, where he thought MacLennan had fired the paradigm laser from.
“Focus shift, one hundred and fifty metres.”
The grove filled his vision field. It lacked the sharp-edged clarity of anything close by, degraded by rain, almost like static interference. These saplings had been planted over a year ago, two and a half metres high, starting to spread out at the top. They were covered with leaves and blossom, which showed up like a layer of coarse ice crystals around the core of twigs and branches.
There was a vehicle parked in the middle of the grove, almost hidden by the saplings. A jeep of some kind.
Perfect for the terrain in the Chater valley, he thought.
LASER ACQUISITION, the photon amp display printed.
“Royan?”
THAT’S YOUR ECM DETECTOR WARNING. MACLENNAN IS FIRING THE PARADIGM IMPRINTER AT YOU. ONE MOMENT.
The image fluttered then reappeared. A bright red dot was flashing ten metres to the left of the jeep.
THAT’S THE EMISSION POINT
“Right. Give me targeting mode.”
The blue circles sprang up. Greg shifted the rifle until they were centred on the jeep. He pulled the trigger. Five shots into the bonnet, three into the front tyre, another five into the bodywork.
MacLennan stopped firing the paradigm laser.
Greg pumped another ten shots into the rear of the jeep. He heard the unmistakable dull thud of an explosion. The back of the jeep rippled, opening up like a flower, jagged metal petals lunging jerkily for the blank sky.
“Cancel targeting mode.” He started to jog towards the jeep. No way could he run: as it was, he had to try and remember what was immediately ahead at each footfall. The wall between him and the grove seemed to lurch towards him in two-metre increments.
A nimbus had engulfed the jeep, altering in size each time the picture updated, never the same shape twice. Flames, he guessed.
He reached the wall and clambered over, moss squelching below his gloves, ignoring the erratic images as the rifle shifted about, working by touch.
LASER ACQUISITION.
He landed on the spongy grass in the grove, and automatically rolled to one side. Paratroop training. Furious flames from the jeep were making a loud crackling.