Begun
by Shadar, continued by Brantley
XueLee had been sleeping fitfully when her phone
rang. It was dark outside. Nobody should be calling her now. Nobody. ExceptÉ
Reluctantly, she picked it up, trying to concentrate
through the pain and the haze of the drug.
ÒItÕs Carey,Ó the voice on the other end said. ÒWeÕre
bringing you in.Ó
ÒÉthe hell?Ó
ÒI canÕt say any more. IÕll be right over.Ó
He broke the connection as XueLee tried to take it
all in. Carey Smyth was only deputy staff engineer at BIO. This had to come
from Kaleb Silverstein, the chief engineer. Or even from Tom Kendricks,
director of the whole Wormhole Physics Annex. Only Tom had told her just a week
ago that there wasnÕt any wasnÕt any hopeÉ at least, not any hope on this
Earth.
But there might still be hope beyond this Earth. That
was what Pavel had thought, but she hadnÕt believed it then and she didnÕt
believe it now. SheÕd been winding
up her affairs since her last concert, saying her goodbyes to family and
friends.
They were promising her a new life, that had to be
it. Just like Armstrong the mouse. But she wasnÕt a mouse. And the technology
of this Brave New Universe wasnÕt as simple as beaming people in Star Trek. It
couldnÕt work. CouldnÕt.
Only, What have I got to lose? At the very worst, it would be a quick and painless
deathÉ SheÕd been thinking of assisted suicide when
the pain became too great. She had already pre-planned her funeral; only the
date remained to be set. If things went wrong, the WPA could see to thatÉ
* * *
What turned out to be her last concert had been
nearly over when the pain began to return. A growing wave of searing agony
spread outward from Bao XueLeeÕs abdomen and radiated up her back. She gritted
her teeth and stiffened her resolve. Just five more minutes and I can slip
back into the blessed numbness of the painkiller.
SheÕd been declared terminal four
months ago – pancreatic cancer that had metastasized – but she
wasnÕt going to give up her love without a fight. She was second chair violin
in the Seattle Symphony Orchestra. Enduring the pain was a casualty of playing
her music. She couldnÕt feel the strings when the opiates were in her
bloodstream, so she did without. It was a good tradeoff, allowing her a few
hours of immersion in her music before the pain became too much.
SheÕd never have made it as the
soloist in SibeliusÕ Concerto for Violin and Orchestra. The part called for a
great deal of energy – an energy she no longer possessed. She had once
dreamed of becoming a soloist, as what young violinist hasnÕt; but it was a
relief now that she hadnÕt. Her pain would remain a private thing.
It was concertmaster Barbara Fay who
held center stage tonight; she was the one all eyes would be watching and all
ears hearing, it was she who would receive the accolades. As for XueLee, she
could quietly slip off the stage and ignore the applause, as much as those
applauding would ignore her. Her cancer wasnÕt a secret to her colleagues, but
it had been kept out of the media. The musicians were part of a community; they
protected their own. Nino Badalamenti, the music director, had offered to put
her on paid leave, but she had declined. She wanted to live this life as long
as she could.
Like all concerts, it was over too
soon. She stepped behind the curtain as the audience filed out, pulled up the
hem of her long dress and jabbed the needle in the fleshy side of her hip. The
Dilaudid, a powerful opiate that was prescribed only for terminal cancer
patients, began to work its magic. She sat back down in her seat and took off
her thick glasses to hold her head in her hands. All around her, her friends
and fellow musicians put their instruments away. They talked softly as she
waited for the soft wave of nothingness to dull the pain enough for her to join
their conversation. She thought of Pavel, dead more than three years now, with
an ironic relief that he wasnÕt here to see her like this.

Lifting her head as the pain
receded, she saw the cellist Jeremy Riddick smiling at her. TheyÕd been best
friends since High School, and he knew how little time she had left. He was the
one who helped her pick up the pieces after Pavel was killed.
And then the cancer had struck.
ÒI liked the way you handled that
long stretch during the andante. The XueLee of old was back in second chair
tonight.Ó
She smiled her gratitude. I
wasnÕt that good.
A sudden
realization came to her, born of his misplaced praise. I canÕt really feel
at one with the music any more. It was a bitter realization, but she had to live with it. Well,
I wonÕt have live with it very long.
ÒThis is
probably my last concert, Jeremy. If I were still that good, I could go on,
butÉÓ
Jeremy was silent for a moment.
ÒWeÕll miss you. Hell, IÕll miss
you.Ó He wrapped his arm gently around her shoulder, too obviously suppressing
the impulse to pull away. She must feel as delicate as a bird. SheÕd always
been tiny, 5Õ1Ó and barely over 90 pounds, but he guessed only 75 now.
ÒNow that youÕve made first chair,
youÕll be too busy to worry about me. Nino is going to double up the pressure
on you.Ó
ÒLet him try,Ó Jeremy grinned
fiercely. ÒI live to play. A dozen other orchestras out there would be glad to
have me.Ó
ÒA bright future,Ó she said, staring
down at the floor. ÒI used to have one of those too.Ó
Pavel had been part of that bright future. Chief
Researcher for the BIO team at the Jet Propulsion LaboratoryÕs advanced
Wormhole Physics Annex, heÕd been brought in to the WPA after theyÕd discovered
the Anomaly, that single word denoting the most significant event in all human
history. With double PhDÕs in
astrophysics and organic chemistry, heÕd come with the right combination of
talents. Especially after people began to accept that there really was a race
of sentient life forms on the other end of the wormhole.
She and Pavel had been the right combination, too. If
onlyÉ
ÒHey, is
that any way to talk?Ó Jeremy gently reproved her,
He was
trying to be kind, she knew, butÉ
ÒCanÕt think all that well now, Jeremy. The
painkillers are killing me. Neuron by neuron.Ó
ÒDonÕt give up. I saw just last week that they were
making progress on those last cancers. TheyÕll have one of those magic bullet
drugs real soon.Ó
As soon as IÕm dead and gone. But she didnÕt say that. SheÕd been following the
research. First trial was two years away. She didnÕt have two months.
Jeremy waved down a cab for her, and the ride home
was a blur, the powerful opiates washing away both the pain and the fine edge
of her consciousness. Her world turned fluffy and soft whenever she took the
Dilaudid, her feet floating, the colors around her blurred and warm, friendly
faces floating in and out of view. Far from being pleasant, she hated the way
her brain grew dull, her keen intelligence disintegrating into little more than
fleeting thoughts. But the pain went with her mental acuity, a tradeoff that
was becoming more and more welcome.
She still managed to put her violin away when she got
home, and then undressed, pausing to look at herself in the mirror. Her
hard-earned fitness had completely deserted her, a thousand hours of exercise
vanishing to leave behind a slightly emaciated look. Her breasts had shrunken
to boy-like flatness, and her ribs stuck out like a third-world orphanÕs. Her
skin was pasty and sagging. The bags under her eyes grew darker with each week
that passed, and the sparkle had long been replaced by an out-of-focus
dullness. She hadnÕt smiled for a long time, and the shape of her mouth now
fitted the frowns she usually wore.
This
business of dying really sucks. Especially at thirty-eight. IÕd complain about
it, but God wasnÕt listening that night Pavel was killed by a mugger. Why would
he listen now? SheÕd been raised a Christian in Beijing before coming to
the U.S. 15 years ago after making her mark as a prodigy in China, but now she
believed in nothing.
She closed off her thoughts and collapsed on the bed,
curling up in the soft covers as she sought oblivion for a few hours –
she had trouble getting sleep now, and that had made her work even harder.
The fact that she was dying at all was a mystery to
her doctors. Ever since the genetic basis for cancer had been discovered in
2021, gene therapy had proven to be an effective treatment for 99.9% of cases.
Hers was among the 0.1% that didnÕt fit the model.
Her bad luck with cancer was typical for her family.
Every woman in the last four generations of her family had died from the
disease by fifty, and at only thirty-eight, she knew she wasnÕt going to beat
those odds. Her father back in Beijing couldnÕt understand why American
medicine couldnÕt solve her problem. Every conversation with him ended with his
plea for her to come home to China. But she knew that the doctors there
couldnÕt do any more for her than the ones in Seattle.
SheÕd always hoped to be the one member of her family
to beat the cancer. Between her lifestyle, composed of equal parts vigorous
exercise and a strict vegetarian diet, not to mention the various anti-cancer
drugs sheÕd taken for years, sheÕd hoped to become the exception. But nothing
could overcome her family history, it seemed.
As PavelÕs boss, Kendricks, had been especially
supportive, offering to pay for her long-term disability care and devoting his
own time to searching for a cure – any cure. He had contacts with every
medical research program and institution in the world, rather than just
following media accounts like Jeremy and the rest at the symphony. There had
been tears in his eyes the last time she had met him, when he had given her the
final bad news. She could trust him not to sugar coat the truth, and she was
grateful to him for that. There was nothing they could say to each other
afterwards, and she had never expected to hear from him or anyone at the
project after that.
* * *
When
Carey arrived, he was all by himself, driving his own car. XueLee got in, and
they headed downtown. It was 5 a.m. when they arrived at the Annex, way before
working hours.
XueLee still had the pass that Pavel had wangled for
her three years ago; she doubted it would do her any good, but Carey managed to
bull his way past security by invoking higher authority.
ÒThis comes from Kendricks,Ó he assured the night man.
ÒKendricks isnÕt here yet.Ó
ÒHe will be, and heÕll be seriously upset
if you cross him.Ó
The guard weighed his options, then waved
them through,
ÒKalebÕs setting things up,Ó Carey told
her, once they were past Security.
ÒWhat things?Ó
Carey put his finger to his lips, then
said in a low voice: ÒPavel would want it for you.Ó
PavelÉ
Her mind flashed back to their life
together.
The weather had been perfect in Seattle that day
seven years ago when XueLee had met Pavel Ivanovich Orlov.
Kerry Park was her favorite place, with stunning
views of the downtown skyline, Mt. Rainier, the sound, the islands, the Olympic
Mountains... and of course, the Space Needle.
She had been out for a stroll, taking in the
sunshine, nothing on her mind, just people watching. She liked to watch people
simply being themselves, being happy – natives and tourists alike. And
Kerry Park was the place for that.
Besides tourists, usually brought by natives, there
were parents pushing their strollers, singles and couples walking their dogs,
and children playing catch or Frisbee. And often there were native musicians
doing their thing. Sometimes they were really good; it might turn out that they
were local bands who played at clubs nobody outside Seattle would have ever
heard of. SheÕd made some discoveries here – not for the orchestra, of
course; just for her own enjoyment.
You could hear all kinds of music, from ballads
hundreds of years old to classic American jazz, country, R&B, rock and rap,
more recent inventions like buzz, ethnic imports like rai and bangra, and
countless combinations of two or more of these. It was like a musical melting
pot, or perhaps more accurately a buffet, because none of what youÕd hear at
Kerry Park sounded like a mash-up – the music and the musicians had an
integrity all their own.
XueLee had the same feeling here that she had playing
for the symphony: This is what civilization is all about.
It was just about 1 p.m. that her life changed.
On that day, at that hour, at that moment, a crowd
had gathered around a man playing rock classics – on a balalaika. He was
really good. In fact, he was great.
She worked her way forward. The player looked to be
about 30, the same age as her. He had black hair and a black beard. He was a
real looker – but not like some model for a romance novel cover. He
looked intelligent – and intense. He wore jeans and a T-shirt that read:
That was Russian, she could tell; sheÕd seen Russian
before. Anyway, it went with the balalaika. She didnÕt have any idea what it
meant, or even what the letters meant. But the man could play, and he could
sing, and it wasnÕt some Russian song but a David Bowie classic:
Ground control to Major Tom
Ground control to Major Tom
Take your protein pills and put your helmet on
(Ten) Ground control (Nine) to major Tom (Eight)
(Seven, six) Commencing countdown (Five), engines on
(Four)
(Three, two) Check ignition (One) and may GodÕs
(Blastoff) love be with you
XueLee hadnÕt been born until long after the year of
Apollo 11, and yet the song somehow took her back to what had seemed an age of
promise – before the pointless wars, before the epidemic of terrorism,
before the global ethnic cleansing billed as Òpopulation transfers,Ó before the
plagues, before a war had trumped climate changeÉ
The pig flu had killed half a billion people but,
ironically, half of those had been in Muslim countries after the virus had
jumped to humans in Southeast Asia and from there to Southeast Asian guest
workers in the Middle East – by then the former Israelis and Egyptian
Copts were in Europe, which turned out to be lucky for them – and not so
lucky for the Muslims ÒrepatriatedÓ to their old homelands. The plague had put
a final damper on terrorism after all else had failed but, understandably,
nobody had wanted to dwell on that.
As for global warming, that had been halted only by
the dust clouds from the India-Pakistan exchange, the first use of nuclear
weapons since World War II, and seen at the time as the epitaph for
civilization. Yet, somehow, the world had pulled back from the brink of a wider
holocaust. People wanted a second chance, and they had gotten it.
And then came the Anomaly. It was exciting. It was
scary. There were other people out there. Wiser heads, perhaps, who could help
humanity find its way. Or perhaps not wiser, more a hindrance than a help. Even
hostile. Nobody knew for sure; how could they? If the U.N. Contact Authority
knew, it wasnÕt telling.
The guy with the balalaika was breaking into another
Bowie classic, from decades later:
Hello Spaceboy, you're sleepy now. Hello
Your silhouette is so stationary
You're released but your custody calls
And I want to be free
Don't you want to be free
Do you like girls or boys
It's confusing these days
But Moondust will cover you
Cover you
This chaos is killing me
The chaosÉ that was what sheÕd grown up with. It was
being held in check now, half by hope and half by fear.
* * *
XueLee noticed that while the man was still singing
to the crowd, his eyes had come to focus on her. He came over afterwards to
introduce himself, saying that she looked familiar somehow.
She toid him where he might have seen her, and his
eyes lit up.
ÒA fellow musician! YouÕve just made my day.Ó
But he wasnÕt just a fellow musician, she quickly
learned. He started telling her about his work at the WPA, and she could tell
that he thought it was the most important work in the world – and even
beyond the world.
ÒWeÕre citizens of the universe!Ó he exclaimed,
pointing to his T-shirt.
So thatÕs what the Russian words are about.
From that moment, there was no turning back. First
dinner at the Wild Ginger, then to his place, where they made love for the
first time. From that first day and first night, they knew they were made for
each other.
And so
it came to pass four years later that Pavel had gotten her a special pass to
the BIO section, where history was about to be made.
ÒAs you know, weÕve made some great progress in
transporting inorganic items back and forth to the Talantrans,Ó he said,
pausing to wink at her. ÒBut on Saturday night, we managed to encode marker
amino acids in the lattice, and then we synthesized.Ó He paused to grin
dramatically at her. ÒError was less than one part in twenty billion. Thanks to
SmythÕs low-noise filter.Ó
XueLee gasped. ÒJesus!Ó
ÒIt was just a bunch of amino acids.Ó
ÒPavel, those are very complex and delicate
chains. If you can encode and
decode them, then the ones in our bodies will be even easier.Ó
Pavel grinned. ÒYeah, I know. ThatÕs why I ordered a
couple of cases of champagne for tonight. Our OSSFM-OGLFM party.Ó He pronounced
it Oss-Fim, Ohm-Glim. Like the
people on the project, she knew that meant, One Small Step for a Man. One Giant
Leap for Mankind.
After decades, the culmination of a thousand peopleÕs
work was finally at hand. Wormhole research had become the darling of the
physics community after the detection in 2012 of a tiny black hole less than a
million miles from Earth. The SETI people had found it by virtue of an encoded
stream of digital information that was beaming out of what turned out to be
some kind of wormhole. It took them a mere two weeks to decode the information.
The key was simplicity itself -- merely the first thirty elements in the
Periodic Table. For the next year, nearly every scientist on Earth was reading
what they decoded.
It was a primer on intergalactic transportation.
Amazingly, they had learned that very few planets had
spaceships any more advanced than those on Earth. Just short-range shuttles for
orbital work. Nothing remotely like the warp drives or antigravity of science
fiction.
Yet it was clear from the primer that sentient beings
were actually traveling even thousands of light years in the time it took radio
waves to reach the wormhole on one side, and to find a receiver on the other.
The object to be transported was sampled, turned into a highly compressed
digital bit stream, which was then beamed through the hole and reassembled on
the other side. The primer made it clear that the object in question could be a
sentient being.
There were basically five steps to the process.
First you had to encode it. That meant performing a
desynthesis step to extract information about every atom in the object to be
transmitted. That was no small feat, but the primer told how to build a device
to accomplish exactly that. Unfortunately, it was a destructive analysis,
requiring the power of a military laser. The scanning beam tore the object
apart, dissociating every molecule down to its constituent atoms as it recorded
the information. A very disconcerting process, especially when you considered
subjecting a living being to the scan.
That resulting data was then encoded into a crystal
lattice which served as a highly efficient compression scheme. The lattice was
then scanned with a non-destructive laser which was coupled to a very high
frequency transmitter. A narrow-band antenna beamed the compressed digital bit
stream representing the lattice construction through the wormhole. The idea was
then to reconstruct an identical lattice on the other side. Then the final and
most critical step was performed. A synthesis chamber was coupled to a reader
which could reconstruct the original object, one atom at a time. Presumably, if
the encoding/decoding noise was low enough, a personÕs consciousness, which was
no more than connections between neurons, would be faithfully maintained. The
person transported would never know theyÕd left home.
Or so the primer claimed. It felt too much like Star
Trek technology for most scientists to take seriously. At least in the
beginning.
Three teams were formed funded with US Government and
Japanese money. Later on, the Chinese and the Russians and the European Union
joined in. The high-energy physics portion of the project was horrendously
expensive.
The Wormhole Physics team had the job of creating the
holes they would use. Pinhole in size, they could be generated for short periods
of time in a lab environment. The gravitational and electromagnetic effects
were significant, however, so the ideal location for such high-energy physics
was at a LaGrange point. L5 was where the initial black hole had appeared.
However, until such time as they could get a launch vehicle prepared, WP team
was using Kwajalein Atoll in the South Pacific. Same place theyÕd tested
hydrogen bombs nearly a hundred years earlier.
The second team, Encode/Decode, or EDÕs they called
themselves, constructed and read the crystal lattice. They also built the
transmitters, receivers and antenna complexes. High gigahertz stuff, a thousand
channels operating in parallel. They learned a few things from the Talantrans,
but this was technology that Earth was already pretty good at.
Pavel had led the third so-called BIO team. They
designed the synthesis and desynthesis chambers. Their science was a
combination of high power lasers, organic chemistry and medicine. Theirs was by
far the most complex task, as most of the technology was foreign to Earth.
In early 2026, the first two teams hooked up a
decoder to the wormhole generator. A half dozen attempts later, they were
shocked to see a crystal lattice cube form inside the machine.
Six months of additional research was required to
perfect the scanning system, but when it finally worked, they found themselves
staring at a repository of data the size of the Library of Congress. The people
whoÕd sent it called themselves Talantrans, and their written language was
fairly easy to learn, using the codes that the SETI people had determined.
Whether a quirk of nature or deliberate attempt, the Talantrans claimed they
were a relay point for many worlds.
Six months after that, the WP and ED teams beamed
back a cube that contained nearly every piece of data from the Library of
Congress. The Talantrans confirmed theyÕd decoded it by sending a cube back
with a hundred questions about Earth history.
Now that two-way communications was established, the
Talantrans had tried to help PavelÕs team solve the teething problems of
creating the synthesis chambers. As senior staff engineer, Kaleb had worked
under him.
Synthesis was by far the hardest part of the project,
as any noise in the system would cause critical errors during the reconstruction.
They got the basic machine working in 2028, and had been working on improving
the accuracy for the two years since. They were down to one part in a billion,
but that was still an unacceptable error rate. They needed ten times that
accuracy before a HDO could be transmitted. In the acronym-laden world of
research, HDO stood for Highly-Developed Organism. Which in turn was a
euphemism for a sentient being. A human. Or Talantran.
PavelÕs dream had been to get that extra 10x
accuracy, and XueLee knew he had driven his team to exhaustion. But that day
heÕd invited her into the lab had been his day of triumph, a day heÕd wanted to
share with her as heÕd shared her, body and soul.
ÒWith the improvements in my filter, weÕre ready to
try with a mouse,Ó heÕd told her when they met at the front entrance. ÒAnd IÕll
let you do the honors.Ó Twenty
minutes later, they were standing in the BIO lab. XueLee reached into a cage
and took out the white mouse.
ÒIÕve been keeping this little guy for just this day.
ArmstrongÕs his name. A tribute to Neil Armstrong. And now the first creature
from Earth to leave our solar system and return.Ó
XueLee had felt her heart racing, the pain in her
stomach from the cancer – not as bad then, but an inescapable fact
– fading away. Endomorphins she knew. It was so incredible. Without a
doubt, this was the most exciting moment in the history of Earth.
Pavel stood beside her, uncharacteristically quiet.
ÒThe Talantrans have been asking about you, XueLee. How youÕre doing.Ó
She put the mouse in a small transparent box. ÒWhat
do you mean?Õ
ÒIÕve had Kaleb talking about your condition.Ó
ÒYouÕve
what?Ó
ÒI thought they might help.Ó
ÒAnd so you told Kaleb, and he told the Talantrans,
and nobody bothered telling me?Ó
ÒThey think youÕre part of the Project.Ó
ÒYou had no right. WhatÕs going on with me is my business.Ó
ÒOur
business. I love you. I thought they might have something. I know TomÕs been
looking high and low here on Earth. But Earth isnÕt the only place to look. So
I took a chance. I had to.Ó
ÒHad to what?
ÒWe kind
of borrowed your med data and sent it. They wanted male and female comparative
data. I had access to my own, and yours.Ó
XueLee hung her head tiredly.
ÒAnd what do they want to know about human
physiology, The very air they breathe would kill us in seconds. Sulfur dioxide
and methane. And theyÕd spontaneously combust in our oxygen atmosphere.Ó
ÒI wasnÕt sure at first. At least not until they
asked us to send your medical data from five years ago. They wanted to compare
it with current data.Ó
ÒOh, yeah, that must have been fun. Let me guess,
they found that IÕm older and IÕm sick as hell. I could have told them that.Ó
ÒAnd?Ó
Pavel shook his head.
ÒNothing. Nothing yet. But thereÕs still time. Surely
someone somewhere out thereÉÓ
XueLee had felt violated, and now it turned out the
violation was all for nothing. Nothing. But she decided to hold her tongue. She didnÕt want to make any more
of a scene than she had already. This was a historic occasion, after all, and
she had to respect it.
She suddenly wondered, quite irrelevantly, what the
Talantrans must think of her. Did she look as ugly to them as they did to her?
Three-legged and covered in a moist skin that looked like it oozed with slime,
they had three eyes and stood only four feet tall.
Never mind, she told herself. Focus on the present.
ÒItÕs a whole different biochemistry,Ó she pointed
out. ÒCould we cure their
diseases? Not likely. LetÕs just finish this.Ó
She put the glass box on the floor of the heavily
armored chamber and walked back out to spin the locking wheel. The armored door
was made of foot thick ceramic steel, with a powerful magnetic field inside
that to keep the worst of the EM spectrum inside. A thick porthole of leaded
glass and quartz let her see inside. No electronics could survive inside the
chamber.
She had done the honors. Now it was PavelÕs show.
ÒYou ready on the data buffer?Ó
Kaleb punched some buttons. ÒA hundred terabytes
on-line and ready to stream.Ó
Pavel put on his darkened glasses, and lent XueLee a
pair. He looked through the portal. ÒYou wonÕt feel a thing, Armstrong. I
promise.Ó
He pushed a button and the inside of the chamber
turned nuclear white. The ultra-frequency stimulus laser sliced through the
glass box at a rate of a million scans a second. Each slice vaporized a portion
of ArmstrongÕs body, and a thousand scanning laser beams recorded the spectrum
of the atoms that were torn from the molecules of its body. It took less than
two seconds for Armstrong to disappear completely.
XueLee and Pavel took off her glasses and walked over
to stand behind Kaleb.
ÒData is streaming. Two terabytes, 5, 8, 10,11. Looks
like thatÕs it. We got it all.Ó
They walked over to the large encoding machine on the
other side of the lab. A dozen metal hoses were connected to it, with four of
them smoking from the vaporized crystalline material that was being pumped into
the atmosphere of the chamber. Lights started blinking as the data download
began from the buffer, and a dozen lasers began to construct the crystal
lattice. At each location where the lasers converged, a uniquely configured
crystal atom was formed.
Three hours later, the entire 11 terabytes of data
was encoded. Where there had been nothing but vapor, there was now an
incredibly complex lattice cube. It sparkled with facets like a thousand
diamonds. Pavel held the hot cube in an asbestos mitt as he transferred it to
the decoding unit. He closed the door and looked back at Kaleb.
ÒMain bufferÕs cleared,Ó he announced. ÒAll thatÕs
left of Armstrong are the bits in that cube.Ó
ÒIÕm starting the decode.Ó Pavel pushed the Start
button and a sequence of lower frequency lasers began to read the
three-dimensional lattice of the cube.
XueLee was up to speed on the basics of the process,
but except for the lattice, there hadnÕt been much to look at.
It took only an hour to scan it out and reload the
buffer. A dozen other project members had wandered in by now, including
Kendricks himself.
The atmosphere of the chamber was flooded with
complex organic compounds, along with traces of nearly everything in the
periodic table. A dense, poisonous and corrosive atmosphere, much like the
primeval soup that evolution had begun in.
Everyone looked excited as Pavel enabled the
synthesis lasers. Kaleb slaved the pattern buffer to the laser controllers.
ÒWeÕre ready to rock and roll,Ó he said, ribbing
Pavel about his playing rock on his balaiaika.
XueLee crossed her fingers as Pavel pushed the
Activate button.
The inside of the chamber was lit with a softer light
this time, a rainbow pattern of light radiating from a tiny point in the middle
of a ceramic platform. The rebuilding of Armstrong had begun, a molecule at a
time.
While it had taken only seconds to scan the little
mouse during the desynthesis mode, it was going to take at least four hours to
run through the reconstruction sequence. The portal of the synthesis chamber
clouded over almost immediately, and Pavel activated the inside wipers, but
they couldnÕt cut through the poisonous residue that clouded the glass. All
they could do is wait and hope.
The laser
controller finally stopped at 4:23:07 elapsed time as it ran out of data. The
laser power supplies whined softly as they discharged.
ÒReconstruction complete,Ó Kaleb said, echoing a line
from a favorite old Luc Besson movie called Fifth Element. He felt a bit like he was on that movie set.
ÒExtracting the sample,Ó Pavel said as he hit the
control to retrieve the sample box. ÒIf Armstrong is alive, we have to get him
out of there while he still has air to breath in his box.Ó
That was for XueLeeÕs benefit, but sheÕd already
figured it out.
A robotic arm extended to grip the box and swing it
over to the airlock. The inner door closed and the pump-down scrubbers went to
work. A green light came on and chime sounded. Pavel said a little prayer and
opened the outer door.
Inside was a pitted and partially corroded glass box.
Inside that glass box, a tiny white mouse was
desperately clawing at the glass, trying to get out!
While Kaleb was freeing Armstrong, XueLee managed to
beat everyone else with the obvious response: ÒOne small step for a mouse, one
giant leap for mousekind.Ó
The champagne flowed freely at the celebration, but
XueLee begged off early to return home. The pain was bothering her again, but
she was also upset with Pavel.
ÒI knew youÕd be stubborn about this,Ó he told her
when they managed to get a moment alone together at the party. ÒThatÕs why I
never told you.Ó
ÒIÕm not a part of the project. IÕm not an
experiment. CanÕt you see that?Ó
ÒI couldnÕt bear to lose you.Ó
ÒMaybe you just have. IÕll have to think about it.Ó
As a peace offering, Pavel let her take
Armstrong II home.
She had knelt on the floor and picked him
up, letting him run across her hands, marveling at the miracle of life. She
knew now that if they could encode Armstrong in the lattice and read him out,
reconstructing every cell of his body perfectly, then they could send him a
thousand light years across the galaxy. The cube that contained such a perfect
record of what it meant to be Armstrong the mouse was even now on its way to
Kwajalein Atoll.
The next day, they would scan the lattice
again, synthesizing ArmstrongÕs twin. More than a twin, a perfect clone, with
every reflex and experience the original Armstrong had developed during his brief
life. And so it had gone – like
clockwork.
Not so her relationship with Pavel. She was still
trying to come to terms with that a week later, when his body was found at
Kerry Park. He had been stabbed to death and his wallet and watch were missing.
The WPA had taken care of the funeral arrangements, and Kendricks had given the
eulogy
The pain of her illness was nothing compared to the
agony she felt the night she had heard the news. Why did it have to be Kerry
Park?
She was torn between anger and guilt, but the anger
had won out when she went to the police, and had a run-in with a detective who
was either heartless or clumsy or both.
ÒIt was a basic kill,Ó he told her. ÒThose are the
hardest to solve. Obvious motive, but no physical evidence that could point to
the perp. No witnesses that we could find. It was late at night. He shouldnÕt
have been there.Ó
She had wanted to shout at him, to curse him. But she
had restrained herself and just glared at him, turning to leave without another
word.
And now here she was again, three years
later and very much the worse for wear. They had reached the BIO outer office,
which gave her a chance to get off her feet. Carey seemed relieved.
ÒWell, since youÕre sitting down, XueLee, I guess I
can tell you.Ó
She looked up at him expectantly as he started pacing
the room as he always did when he was excited. ÒTell me what?Ó
ÒThey want us to send you through. You know,
transport you to the other side so they can heal you, XueLee. Fix whateverÕs
wrong and send you back.Ó
ÒIÕd guessed as much.Ó
XueLee
shivered, as much from dread as excitement. Because
Carey was offering hope – and because she couldnÕt believe in that hope.
She remembered the blazing light and heat
of the desynthesis chamber. The high-frequency laser that vaporized anything
inside, dissociating each cell and molecule, ripping them apart down to the
atomic level. Annihilation. She thought of her essence traveling across the
galaxy and reappearing on another world. But she remembered the poison gases on
both ends. The chamber atmosphere and the Talantran atmosphere were about the
same. The primordial stuff of creation.
ÒWe might have waited longer, exceptÉ you
donÕt have much time.Ó
ÒOr much to lose,Ó she finished, saying
what he could not. ÒBut IÕm not a mouse. ItÕs much more complicated. And even
if you can send me through intact, how would they know enough about human physiology to fix anything?Ó She
shook her head. ÒItÕs crazy.Ó
ÒMaybe not as crazy as it seems.Ó He started pacing
even faster, waving his hands as she talked. ÒIt turns out that one of the cool
things the Talantrans use this technology for is to edit the buffer as they
call it. They overlay the data from different desynthesis scans; that means
dozens of different scans at one time, and wherever the cellular data is
different, their programs make a decision on what pattern to transfer to the
output buffer.Ó
ÒDifferent scans? We donÕt have different scans.Ó
ÒThey do. Their library holds millions of scans.Ó
XueLee stared at him for a long moment as that sunk
in. ÒBut not from humans.Ó When
Carey didnÕt respond she looked up at him. ÒRight?Ó
ÒI donÕt think thatÕs exactly correct. Based on some
of the images that came back from one cube, there are other beings out there
that sure look human.Ó
ÒThat look human? And you want to overlay my cellular structure with theirs?Ó
ÒOur communication is still primitive, but thatÕs
what Kaleb thinks they have in mind. Their science, really more of a creative
art, is to meld things together in interesting ways to create what the client
wants. Creative synthesis or something. I think thatÕs why they seek out new
races. TheyÕre trying to expand their library of biological data.Ó
XueLeeÕs eyes opened wide. To scan, transport and
reassemble oneÕs body on a distant world was amazing enough. Stupendous even.
But now the ability to change the characteristics during synthesis? Her head
began to spin. This was moving too fast even for her.
ÒThat could be pretty horrifying if it goes wrong,
Carey.Ó
ÒOr a real medical breakthrough if they get it
right,Ó he replied. ÒNear as we can tell, the Talantrans have been doing this
for thousands of years.Ó
ÒSo how exactly do I fit into this?
ÒIsnÕt it obvious? They can change things around
somewhat. Edit bad things out or add some good things in. Synthesize something
new.Ó
ÒYou
mean, they could turn Armstrong into a cat? Or vice versa.Ó
Carey looked at her as if she was deranged. ÒThat was
definitely not the first thing Kaleb and I had in mind. He had a thing for you,
back in the day, in case you hadnÕt figured that out.Ó
ÒNo, I hadnÕt. I mean, IÕm not exactlyÉÓ
ÒDonÕt go there, XueLee. We both remember how you
were back in the day. Back when Pavel was taking you out dancing all the time.
Kaleb was positively green with envy. But heÕs sorry about that; maybe he wants
to make it up to you.Ó
XueLee closed her eyes. She and Pavel had talked of
getting married. She looked back up at Carey and tried to smile.
ÒSo now you tell me,Ó XueLee smiled crookedly. ÒYour
timing really sucks.Ó
ÒYeah. Well, Kaleb has been driving this forward. I
just thought you should know why. HeÕs been
obsessed with it ever since he found out about yourÉ condition. Even beforeÉ
what happened to Pavel.Ó
ÒShould I feel touched?Ó
CareyÕs face reddened for a moment, then became
distant.
ÒIs there something more youÕre not telling me?Ó
ÒNot what
ÒNo. itÕs just thatÉ well, I care about you too. Or I wouldnÕt be involved in
this.Ó
ÒKaleb couldnÕt manage it by himself, could he?Ó
ÒNo.Ó
ÒWhat does Kendricks have to say about
this?Ó
Carey put his finger to his lips again.
ÒHe canÕt
say anything about it. Not officially. It goes against all protocols. If everything goes well, he can present it
as a fait accompli. If notÉ it
will never have happened. Kaleb says thatÕs the best deal he could get. And
thatÕs why weÕre doing it now, when nobody else is looking.Ó
ÒNobody else is involved?Ó
ÒJust the three of us. Each cube we sent back and
forth involving you had sections coded for only
KalebÕs eyes. And, of course, for the Talantran who is our counterpart in BIO.
Officially, weÕve done chipmunks and squirrels and even rabbits. We were going
to try a cat, but Tom wouldnÕt go for that – figured if something went
wrong, weÕd never hear the end of it from cat lovers.
ÒKendricks will fire you if this gets
out, even if it does work. YouÕll be lucky if you donÕt end up in jail. And
they might do worse than
that.Ó
They was whatever paranoid group would surely take offense at
what Kaleb had in mind. Animal rights groups had even protested about Armstrong
and, after that, the WP had become extremely cautious. Press releases were few
and far between, vague, and nearly
all about what the project had learned about other planets and their inhabitants,
coupled with assurances that none of them would ever be coming here.
ÒWeÕre willing to take that risk. For
you.Ó
ÒIÕm flattered. But IÕm still not
convinced you can bring it off.Ó
ÒMouse, woman, the only difference is kilos.Ó
ÒNow IÕm insulted. ThereÕs more to this than
replicating bodies.Ó
ÒArmstrong II could run the same mazes as Armstrong
I. Same with the rabbits, though we had to use different tests for them.Ó
ÒBut will it still be me? Or just somebody who thinks sheÕs me, like those duplicates on Star Trek and all the sf stories about copying people?Ó
ÒI donÕt think this new you will be complaining.Ó
Carey saw the look on her face.
ÒHey, youÕre smiling. Looks good on you. ThatÕs a
good sign. Anyway, we want to send you through this morning.Ó
ÒWithout testing the system any further?Ó
ÒItÕs the only way.Ó
ÒNo way. Given what youÕve
just told me, if they had a scan of me from a decade ago and now a current one,
then maybe. But theyÕll have only a single scan from me. They canÕt overlay
that with anythingÉÓ her voice trailed off.
ÒWith anything human? Yeah, we thought of that. But
that didnÕt seem to bother the Talantrans. They claim to have scans from more
than ten thousand sentient races. Apparently theyÕve solved a lot of problems
with different genetic and cellular structures andÉÓ
XueLee swallowed wrong and started coughing,
interrupting him. ÒTen thousand races? Jesus. I had no idea.Ó
ÒYeah. Blew my mind too.Ó
ÒAnd whoÕs helping them decide what to combine to
makeÉ hell, I donÕt know, the new me?Ó
ÒKaleb. I donÕt know the details, but heÕs been
trading ideas back and forth for a long time. IÕll let him show you what he has
in mind.Ó
ÒAnd why havenÕt you brought any of this up before?Ó
ÒWe didnÕt want to give you any false hopes. Not
until we were sure it would work.Ó
ÒI canÕt really believe this gives me a chance,Ó she
said. ÒBut the alternative is no chance at all.Ó
* * *
Kaleb SilvertonÕs office was a disaster area. Stacks
of dusty journals and papers were piled to the ceiling, comic books
intermingled with advanced papers on AstroPhysics, books on metaphysics mingled
with physics texts. Some so old they were turning yellow. Mythology and hard
science.
Despite his strange interests, he was a certifiable
genius, having earned his first PhD at the age of 22, and his fourth by age 35.
His entire life, it seemed, was reflected in the mountain of paper in his
office, and the terabytes of data in his computer.
Kaleb looked a lot like his office, Late forties,
graying beard that had rarely been trimmed, hair that went this way and that.
His body was soft and slightly overweight despite his religious use of the
treadmill in the corner, and his clothes were always rumpled. But he was clean.
He was infamous for commandeering the lab shower room twice a day. His
trademark was wearing sunglasses inside the dark basement. On the rare occasion
when he took them off, his brown eyes sparkled with intelligence.
He sat in front of a large screen now, punching up
some programs XueLee had never seen before. ÒIÕve recalibrated the BIO for your
height and weight, XueLee, and brought in a larger supply of raw ingredients.
Nasty stuff, but as you know, the Talantrans prefer to work from basic
organics, more or less akin to what youÕd find on the bottom of your average
swamp. I guess they can find that kind of stuff on even the most primitive
worlds. I want to make sure IÕve got about ten times your bodyweight in
material. Not sure how efficient the synthesis process is.Ó
ÒWhat about the containment box? For the
reconstruction. I canÕt breathe that stuff. On either end.Ó
ÒNo way I could order a human sized container without
raising eyebrows. Not yet anyway. Maybe in a year or so. WeÕll use an ordinary
shipping container, tell Kwajalein itÕs for non-living hazardous
material.
XueLee felt the pain growing in her stomach. ÒToo
long. WeÕre wasting our time. Even if the Talantrans can Ôedit meÕ or whatever
they do, the gases will kill me during synthesis. First breath and IÕll be down
for good.Ó
Kaleb turned to look at her, taking his sunglasses
off. ÒI donÕt think so, XueLee. You see, I asked the Talantrans to tweak a few
things.Ó
ÒWhat, to
let me breathe chlorine?Ó Xuelee laughed. She started coughing just from the
thought of that. Damn, her lungs were starting to fill up. Forget those two
weeks. Maybe only days.
ÒSurviving
chlorine is only an expedient. We wonÕt be turning you into some sort of alien.
Hope you arenÕt too mad at me.Ó
ÒNo, IÕm not mad.Ó
ÒWhich is why weÕre here. WeÕll never get another
chance if word were to get out about what weÕre trying.Ó
XueLee covered her mouth as she coughed again. The
back of her hand was suddenly covered in speckles of blood. So fast? Her
remaining days had just shrunk hours. She suddenly felt afraid. ÒIÉ I
donÕt have anything to lose.Ó She coughed again, and felt a deep tearing
sensation inside her lungs. ÒI thinkÉ somethingÕs lettingÉ go,Ó she gasped.
ÒInside.Ó
ÒPrep the chamber, Carey,Ó Kaleb shouted urgently as
he reached out to wrap his arm around her waist to steady her. He leaned close
to whisper in her ear. ÒHang on, baby. Just a little longer. Takes only five
minutes to spin everything up.Ó
XueLee was struggling to breathe a few minutes later.
She was standing naked in the desynthesis chamber; her clothing on the floor of
KalebÕs office where heÕd helped her undress. It took every ounce of her
strength and concentration just to keep standing. A requirement to allow the
lasers to make a proper scan. She was very self-conscious about the way she
looked. So skinny, so pale, skin
hanging off her. She looked through the porthole at the warm smile on KalebÕs
face and realized that he didnÕt care. A tiny smile curled her lips.
What a strange thought to have during my last
minute of life. No profound statements, no comments on the future of man. Only
the Dilaudid, dulling my mind, and the cancer, tearing my guts out, robbing me
of life itself. And my final thought was feeling embarrassed to be standing
naked in front of the one man on Earth who might be in love with me?
Not that
it matters. IÕll be dead in seconds.
A final brief surge of excitement sent tingles down
her back. Or will I? My genetic code, the details of my cellular structure,
both are going to be transmitted
a billion light years away. To a
race of inhumanÉ
She did not finish that thought. Instead, she was
blinded by the brilliance of the stimulus laser as it started scanning. ThenÉ
nothing.
It was just like awakening from a nightÕs sleep. She knew who she was. It was one of the miracles of life we take for granted, the return each morning not only to consciousness but consciousness of self, of self recognition, of a knowledge that one has lifetime of memories even if they are not being called to mind at that moment.
Beyond her identity, she was immediately aware of three things: she was in some sort of chamber, was lying in a fetal position, that there was a stench of ammonia and sulfur dioxide, and that she was being showered with warm water.I made it! she thought. And then, They did it!
She could sense that she was free of her cancer;
there was no pain – rather, a sense of well-being. And yet something, her
sense of her body, wasÉ off. It must be because she was cured, she thought, and
yet she couldnÕt remember having felt exactly like thisÉ before.
Blinking her eyes open, she found she could see
clearly without her glasses. The powerful jet of water blasting into her face
didnÕt even hurt her eyes. She read the label in the upper corner of the
shower.
Sanitary Industries, Waukegan, Illinois
Mark 7 Decontamination Shower Assembly
Her heart leaped as she realized she was back in the
lab in Seattle. Yet she clearly remembered standing in the desynthesis chamber.
That brilliant light. A wave of excitement coursed through her veins as she
lowered her hand and pressed on her lower abdomen, right on the spot where the
pain had always been the worst. Her abs felt as tight as a drum. She pressed
harder, probing into the worst of the pain.
Nothing.
She followed her hand with her eyes, and suddenly
realized that it wasnÕt her hand.
Those werenÕt her abs. The
breasts above them werenÕt her
breasts, and the legs below them werenÕt hers. And between her legs –
that too wasnÕt hers. She was perfectly hairless. She brought her hand back up,
and reached for her hair. It wasnÕt her hairÉ reddish-blonde instead of black.
They found me another body, those Talantrans, she thought. Carey had told her that would be the
case, but somehow it hadnÕt quite registered. Beggars canÕt be choosers, she realized. But there would be a period of
adjustment.
It will take a while to get back to work. IÕll
have to retrain my body.
Then it dawned on her.
How am I going to explain this to Nino and Jeremy
and all the rest? To my family?
And then:
How are Kaleb and Carey going to explain it?
She was distracted by a burst of wonderful tingles
through her pelvis and all the way up her back as she stretched and one of the
shower jets hit her between the legs. She arched herself backward, luxuriating
as a sensual feeling of warmth and comfort cascaded over her. It was the way
she used to feel after a really good orgasm. Back before she got sick and
couldnÕt even have orgasms.
It was a promising way to wake up. But then she
thought of Pavel. If only he could have lived. She wanted him so badly it
ached, and there was nobody else she felt that way about. Memories of their
good times together and the pleasures theyÕd shared poured into her
consciousness. Pavel had had an unerring sense, not only of when she was in the
mood, but just what she was in the mood forÉ it was as if he could read her mind – the
dirty parts of her mindÉ
XueLee quickly tried to suppress all that, and it
took a few moments for her to focus again on the present – and the
future. She got to her feet and, as she did so, her reddish hair, cascaded
around her – it was so long.
She noticed that there was a bottle of shampoo on the decon chamber, so she
grabbed it and began working it into her hair. It took her mind off the future
for a few moments. After rinsng off, she hit the shutoff valve and stepped out
onto the metal grid outside the chamber. It had hurt her feet the first time
she walked on it. She wiggled her toes, feeling every sharp ridge of the grid. No
discomfort.
The changing
room was so full of steam that she had to feel around for a towel. She instead
found the button for the room dryer. She pressed it, and the lights dimmed as a
hurricane of hot air blasted at her from all directions. The only light now was
a huge heat lamp overhead.
Squinting into the hurricane as it made short work of
the steam, she searched for clothing, a towel, anything. The hurricane stopped
to leave her standing in a stark and empty room. She felt very naked as she
reaching down to crack the door open. A peek outside showed that the corridor
to the lab was empty. She stepped out, brushing her long hair with her fingers
to cover her breasts.
Where were Carey and Kaleb?
It was awkward to walk. Her legs felt a mile long,
and her body felt nearly weightless, forcing her to hold onto the walls. Her
arms were long enough to reach across the corridor. She studied her right hand.
Long fingers, tendons clearly visible. So tan. Not my hand. She made a fist. So it was. She thought of how it would take to bowing, how
long it would take to get back into practice, if... Pushing a disorienting
shiver of fear away, she refocused on the end of the corridor. Time enough
to worry about that later.
She reached
the door to the lab; pausing to listen, she heard two men talking. Kaleb and
Carey. They seemed to be in the middle of an argument. Carey was blaming Kaleb
for doing something bad to her.
ÒSheÕs not
just your plaything,Ó Carey said.
ÒSheÕll love
it,Ó Kaleb answered. ÒJust you wait and see.Ó
ÒI can
hardly wait for you to tell her about the Great Big Plan,Ó Carey said, a touch
of anger and perhaps even pain in his voice.
Taking a deep breath, XueLee boldly stepped in. Carey
was looking just to her left, but his eyes snapped to hers, growing large. He
stopped talking in mid-sentence, then slipped and nearly fell off the lab
bench, a shocked look on his face. Kaleb saw his expression, and began to
slowly turn around, a knowing smile on his face.
ÒWelcome back to the land of the living,Ó he said.
ÒYou hadnÕt noticed before?Ó she asked, seeing that
the monitors showed the empty decon chamber.
She was startled be the sound of her own voice. It
was low and smoky, full of sibilant overtones. But still with the tiniest trace
of her Beijing accent.
Kaleb looked embarrassed.
ÒWe hadnÕt expected your recovery to be so rapid,Ó he
said. ÒAnd Carey and I had gotten caught up in a discussion of yourÉ future.Ó
ÒThatÕs his way of putting it, since he seems to have
your future all mapped out. I didnÕt learn until—Ó
ÒShut up!Ó Kaleb shouted. ÒThis is none of your
concern.Ó
ÒItÕs sure as hell XueLeeÕs concern!Ó
ÒThere isnÕt any more XueLee. ThatÕs been settled.Ó
ÒBy you and some bunch of spooks? You think Kendricks
will stand for this?Ó
ÒWhatÕs going on here?Ó Xue Lee interrupted. ÒWhat
the hell are you two talking about?
ÒHeÕs gone behind KendricksÕ back. Gone behind
everybodyÕs backs. Made a deal with the Talantrans to—Ó
ÒYouÕre skating on thin ice!Ó
ÒWhat are you going to do – kill me? Have the
spooks kill me? HowÕs she going to take that?Ó
ÒSheÕs going to take what sheÕs got. What IÕve given
her. What only I could have given
her! How could she resist?Ó
Carey looked at her desperately.
ÒHeÕs had them turn you into some sort of superwoman,
out of those comic books he reads. HeÕs—Ó
ÒItÕs true. But itÕs all for you. YouÕll have a life other women could only dream of,
fighting our enemies and—Ó
ÒIÕm Bao XueLee!Ó she shouted. ÒIÕm a violinist.
ThatÕs my life, and IÕm going to take it back.
ÒBao XueLee is dead,Ó Kaleb said solemnly. ÒThatÕs
what weÕll give out to your friends and family. The experiment didnÕt work. It
never could have. We went around Kendricks out of pity for you. HeÕll accept
that.Ó
ÒThe hell you say!Ó
ÒHow do you suppose youÕre going to prove otherwise?
Just look in the mirror over there.Ó
With some reluctance, XueLee made herself cross the
lab to the mirror.
A completely unfamiliar woman looked back at her. Not
Chinese, that was for sure. Likely a mix of Slavic and Mediterranean. Besides
the long reddish blonde hair, she had blue eyes that glowed like precious gems.
Her mouth was wide and sensuous, her teeth like china. It was a singularly
beautiful face. It just wasnÕt her
face. She stepped back to get a better look at her body. She found flawless
skin, burnished gold and taut, her body slender and lean, abs as tight as a
drum. And her chest. Breasts round and full, high and firm. Yet her body was
very slender and wickedly fit. And tall.
Kaleb walked up behind her. She realized with a shock
that she was taller than he was. He was what, 5Õ8? He paused to stand next to
her, staring into the mirror, a look of purest lust on his face. Standing
without a stitch of clothing on, she felt violated the way he was staring at
her. She could tell what he had in for her besides being some sort of secret
agent.

ÒMy father is going to murder you,Ó she said levelly.
ÒHeÕs very Chinese at heart, and heÕd always hoped IÕd marry some nice Chinese
man. HeÕs not going to like this at all.Ó
ÒYou donÕt have to accept any of it,Ó Carey broke in.
ÒYou still have your memories – things only you could know. Besides that,
people already know the Talantrans can do practically anything.Ó
ÒYou donÕt seem to like the way youÕre living. We can
remedy that.Ó
ÒYou kill Carey, and youÕll have to kill me.Ó
ÒThat would be rather difficult,Ó Kaleb said. ÒAnd
counterproductive. But it would be easy enough to take care of others. Friends
and family. Nino. The loving father of whom you just spoke.Ó
ÒYou bastard!Ó
ÒYouÕll thank me, in the fullness of time. Your name
is ÒXsara Sylvan, and you have a duty to your countryÉÓ
ÒWho came up with that stupid name?Ó
ÒI did. I think it will fit. I have to admit this
wasnÕt quite what I had expected. The Talantrans said theyÕd try to keep your
racial identity, but whatever humans they borrowed the overlay from were pretty
European in appearance.Ó
He paused for a moment.
ÒBut itÕs just as well. Best to start with a clean
slate.Ó
XueLee said nothing, trying to hide her seething
emotions even as she was trying to take it all in. She forced herself to stay
analytical. Just because she looked different didnÕt mean she had to act
differently. Carey said sheÕd been turned into some sort of superwoman, and her
analytical mind made a connection.
ÒI must have been breathing any number of poison
gases in the chamber, Kaleb. I should have been dead after the second breath.
Yet my lungs feel normal. Why is that, Kaleb?Ó
ÒPart of theÉ improvements. It seems that there are,
or at least were, some particularly healthy – and hardy – races out there. The Talanatrans had the
data in their genetic library. An ancient race that looked like humans but...
Whatever they were, a lot of their structure and DNA was edited into your
pattern. But it was my idea. You owe me for that. I created you, in a sense.Ó
ÒAll by yourself?Ó
ÒWell, I had some help from Xiqwat.Ó
ÒXiqwat?Ó Carey asked..
ÒMy Talantran friend.Ó
ÒThis is sounding more and more like a bad joke.Ó
XueLee frowned as she glared at Kaleb.
ÒNo, no, not like that at all,Ó he protested. ÒXiqwat
had read the stuff I sent though. My non-technical reading, if you will. He
wanted to surprise me.Ó
ÒYou said hardy as well as healthy,Ó Carey broke in.
ÒKnowing yourÉ tastesÉ exactly how hardy were these so-called ancients?Ó
ÒI thought youÕd never ask,Ó said Kaleb, his face
lighting up.
He crossed the lab to his desk, unlocked the top
drawer, and brought out a pistol, aiming it at Carey.
XueLee was stunned; she could hardly believe her
eyes. ÒAre you crazy?Ó
Carey hit the floor, trying desperately to roll out
of any possible line of fire. Kaleb looked at him contemptuously.
ÒItÕs not for you,Ó he said. ÒEven if you deserve
it,Ó
He swung his aim to XueLee and fired. She felt a
sharp pain in her abdomen. She looked down, expecting to see a terrible wound,
her lifeÕs blood pouring out. But there was only a red welt and – on the
floor – a spent bullet.
ÒYou can see what an advantage this will be in your
new line of work,Ó Kaleb said nonchalantly, as if he were making a routine
report at a staff meeting. He returned the gun to the drawer and locked it,
Carey was getting to his feet, and looking at her in
wonder. But not just in wonder. Men!
ÒAs you can see, looks were the least of what Xiqwat
was trying to provide,Ó Kaleb said.
ÒThe rest must be for the spooks,Ó Carey filled in,
clearly relieved that he was still alive to say anything at all. ÒThe looks
just go with his fantasy.Ó
ÒCan you imagine how many women dream of being as
beautiful as you are?Ó Kaleb said now, oblivious to Carey, oblivious to all
else. ÒAs powerful as you are? You have everything any woman could possibly
want. Including me.Ó
His eyes glued to her. She felt a warmth between her
legs. She hated this man, and yet she wantedÉ it wasnÕt that she wanted him;
she wanted it. Sex. It must be
part of the scheme heÕd cooked up with Xiqwat, Or maybe it just came with the
species the Talantran had selected. Was there no end to it? It was as if her
very body had been designed to betray her.
She couldnÕt let herself give in. She had to distract
him.
ÒWe might be able to discuss things more calmly if I
got some clothes.Ó
ÒIÕve got some stashed in my file cabinet. IÉ I didnÕt
know your size... I mean, what to expect when you came back.Ó
ÒThe hell you didnÕt.Ó
And indeed, the clothes fit. Very provocatively; they
came from a place called Play it Again Fashions, which specialized in party
outfits. But at least it was better than being naked.
Only Kaleb wasnÕt in the mood for discussing
anything, calmly or otherwise. He sat down at his computer, looking up only
long enough to explain that he was entering the data for her ID. ÒBlue eyes,
reddish-blonde hair, heightÉÓ he looked at her again, Ò5Õ10 I would guess.
Weight 129Ó
CareyÕs eyebrow lifted.
ÒStrain gauge in the floor of the chamber,Ó Kaleb
explained.
ÒRight. Lets seeÉ race is Caucasian, sex definitely
femaleÉ I guess that does it.Ó
Then he turned to take a head shot of her with his
mobile, and messaged that to the computer. He must have had it all planned out,
because he had to enter only a few commands before the 3D printer started
spitting out what he wanted. A national identity card, the kind that served as
a passport, driverÕs license and voter ID, plus a credit card and a debit card
– all with the same thumbnail shot of herself.
ÒÓYou are now officially XÕSara Sylvan,Ó he said.
ÒYour life belongs to me. But IÕm willing to give you some time to come to
terms with it – and come to terms you will. I have to get the good word
out to my friends. See you later, and then weÕll see. DonÕt try to leave to
complex. You wonÕt be allowed out.Ó
ÒOn the contrary, you played right into my hands with
what came after. I can hold the video over CareyÕs head – not that he has
a head for serious matters, even if he can give good head. You wonÕt trouble me any more, will
you, Carey?Ó
Carey said nothing, but XueLee sensed that he was
seething inside.
ÒI could still kill you,Ó she said. ÒOr I could talk
to Kendricks. I could make you a very famous man. And donÕt even think about
killing him. YouÕd fuck it up for
sure. Those friends of yours wouldnÕt thank you for it. Maybe you think you
could get them to come after my family and friends – they include Carey
now – and maybe they would. But if that happens, IÕll hunt you down.
Depend on it.Ó
ÒWhere do you think youÕre going to go?Ó
ÒBack home. I still know my entry code.Ó
ÒYouÕll wonÕt get out of here without your new ID,Ó
Kaleb pointed our. ÒAnd youÕll be
back, you can depend on that.Ó
ÒIÕm sorry,Ó said Carey, looking crestfallen.
* * *
It turned out that Kaleb had also gotten her some
street clothes, nothing like a fantasy superheroine outfit. No doubt the spooks
had insisted on it, but XueLee wasnÕt about to inquire. Bowing to the
inevitable – for now – she accepted the clothes, and the IDs.
It was pitch dark, well past normal working ours,
when she left the complex, attracting stares from Security but not running into
any trouble. Kaleb must have seen to that. HeÕd told her that it had been a day
and a half since she had been scanned and the lattice sent to Kwajalein. Time
enoughÉ
ÒYou owe
me,Ó he had pleaded when she was about to leave the lab.
ÒI owe it to myself to be myself,Ó sheÕd retorted. ÒIÕm the only me youÕre
going to get!Ó
ÒWait!Ó heÕd shouted as she headed out the door.
ÒThereÕs somethingÉÓ
But sheÕd rushed out the door, and never heard the
rest.
* * *
Nobody paid any attention when she entered her
apartment block. It was past midnight. She keyed in to her familiar apartment.
Nothing there had changed. She thought of calling her father; it was daytime in
Shanghai. But what could she say? He wouldnÕt even recognize her voice?
Moreover, she suspected that any calls she made would be monitored –
Kaleb would have seen to that.
Her mobile rang. Who the hell? The caller ID said it
was Carey.
ÒItÕs Carey,Ó he said. ÒI didnÕt want to call you, I
told him I didnÕt want to call you. But when he—Ó
ÒDid he threaten you? After I warned him—Ó
ÒNothing like that. Worse in a way. If what he says
is true. I justÉ youÕd never have answered if he made the call, and he knows
that.Ó
ÒOut with it,Ó XueLee said, anger and impatience in
her voice.
ÒHe says it wasnÕt just some mugger that killed
Pavel. An assassinationÉ and Kendricks knew about it. ThatÕs what he says.Ó
TO BE CONTINUED