ROBERT REED
WINEMASTER
THE STRANGER PULLED INTO the Quik Shop outside St. Joe. Nothing was
remarkable
about him, which was why he caught Blaine's eye. Taller than average, but not
much, he was thin in an unfit way, with black hair and a handsome, almost pretty
face, fine
bones floating beneath skin that didn't often get into the sun. Which
meant nothing, of
course. A lot of people were staying indoors lately. Blaine
watched him climb out of an
enormous Buick -- a satin black '17 Gibraltar that
had seen better days -- and after a lazy
long stretch, he passed his e-card
through the proper slot and inserted the nozzle, filling
the Buick's cavernous
tank with ten cold gallons of gasoline and corn alcohol.
By then,
Blaine had run his plates.
The Buick was registered to a Julian Winemaster from Wichita,
Kansas;
twenty-nine accompanying photographs showed pretty much the same fellow who
stood
sixty feet away.
His entire bio was artfully bland, rigorously seamless. Winemaster was an
accountant, divorced and forty-four years old, with O negative blood and five
neo-enamel
fillings imbedded in otherwise perfect teeth, plus a small pink
birthmark somewhere on his
right buttock. Useless details, Blaine reminded
himself, and with that he lifted his gaze,
watching the traveler remove the
dripping nozzle, then cradling it on the pump with the
overdone delicacy of a
man ill-at-ease with machinery.
Behind thick fingers, Blaine was
smiling.
Winemaster moved with a stiff, road-weary gait, walking into the convenience
store
and asking, "Ma'am.? Where's your rest room, please?"
The clerk ignored him.
It was the
men's room that called out, "Over here, sir."
Sitting in one of the hard plastic booths,
Blaine had a good view of everything.
A pair of militia boys in their brown uniforms were
the only others in the
store. They'd been gawking at dirty comic books, minding their own
business
until they heard Winemaster's voice. Politeness had lately become a suspicious
behavior.
Blaine watched the boys look up and elbow each other, putting their
sights on the stranger.
And he watched Winemaster's walk, the expression on his
pretty frail face, and a myriad of
subtleties, trying to decide what he should
do, and when, and what he should avoid at all
costs.
It was a bright warm summer morning, but there hadn't been twenty cars in the
last
hour, most of them sporting local plates.
The militia boys blanked their comics and put
them on the wrong shelves, then
walked out the front door, one saying. "Bye now," as he
passed the clerk.
"Sure," the old woman growled, never taking her eyes off a tiny
television
screen.
The boys might simply be doing their job, which meant they were harmless.
But
the state militias were full of bullies who'd found a career in the last couple
years.
There was no sweeter sport than terrorizing the innocent traveler,
because of course the
genuine refugee was too rare of a prospect to hope for.
Winemaster vanished into the men's
room.
The boys approached the black Buick, doing a little dance and showing each other
their
malicious smiles. Thugs, Blaine decided. Which meant that he had to do
something now.
Before Winemaster, or whoever he was, came walking out of the
toilet.
Blaine climbed out of
the tiny booth.
He didn't waste breath on the clerk.
Crossing the greasy pavement, he
watched the boys using a police-issue lock
pick. The front passenger door opened, and both
of them stepped back, trying to
keep a safe distance. With equipment that went out of date
last spring, one boy
probed the interior air, the cultured leather seats, the dashboard and
floorboard and even an empty pop can standing in its cradle. "Naw, it's okay,"
he was
saying. "Get on in there."
His partner had a knife. The curled blade was intended for
upholstery. Nothing
could be learned by ripping apart the seats, but it was a fun game
nonetheless.
"Get in there," the first boy repeated.
The second one started to say, "I'm
getting in -- ' But he happened to glance
over his shoulder, seeing Blaine coming, and he
turned fast, lifting the knife,
seriously thinking about slashing the interloper.
Blaine was
bigger than some pairs of men.
He was fat, but in a powerful, focused way. And he was
quick, grabbing the knife
hand and giving a hard squeeze, then flinging the boy against the
car's
composite body, the knife dropping and Blaine kicking it out of reach, then
giving the
boy a second shove, harder this time, telling both of them, "That's
enough, gentlemen."
"Who
the fuck are you -- ?" they sputtered, in a chorus.
Blaine produced a badge and ID
bracelet. "Read these," he suggested coldly. Then
he told them, "You're welcome to check me
out. But we do that somewhere else.
Right now, this man's door is closed and locked, and
the three of us are hiding.
Understand.?"
The boy with the surveillance equipment said,
"We're within our rights."
Blaine shut and locked the door for them, saying, "This way.
Stay with me."
"One of their nests got hit last night," said the other boy, walking. "We've
been checking people all morning!"
"Find any.?"
"Not yet --"
"With that old gear, you won't."
"We've caught them before," said the first boy, defending his equipment. His
status. "A
couple, three different carloads..."
Maybe they did, but that was months ago. Generations
ago.
"Is that yours?" asked Blaine. He pointed to a battered Python, saying, "It
better be.
We're getting inside."
The boys climbed in front. Blaine filled the back seat, sweating
from exertion
and the car's brutal heat.
"What are we doing?" one of them asked.
"We're
waiting. Is that all right with you.?"
"I guess."
But his partner couldn't just sit. He
turned and glared at Blaine, saying,
"You'd better be Federal."
"And if not?" Blaine
inquired, without interest.
No appropriate threat came to mind. So the boy simply growled
and repeated
himself. "You'd just better be. That's all I'm saying."
A moment later,
Winemaster strolled out of the store. Nothing in his stance or
pace implied worry. He was
carrying a can of pop and a red bag of corn nuts.
Resting his purchases on the roof, he
punched in his code to unlock the driver's
door, then gave the area a quick glance. It was
the glance of someone who never
intended to return here, even for gasoline -a dismissive
expression coupled with
a tangible sense of relief.
That's when Blaine knew.
When he was
suddenly and perfectly sure.
The boys saw nothing incriminating. But the one who'd held the
knife was quick
to say the obvious: A man with Blaine's credentials could get his hands on
the
best BM sniffers in the world. "Get them," he said, "and we'll find out what he
is!"
But
Blaine already felt sure.
"He's going," the other one sputtered. "Look, he's gone -- !"
The
black car was being driven by a cautious man. Winemaster braked and looked
both ways twice
before he pulled out onto the access road, accelerating
gradually toward 1-29, taking no
chances even though there was precious little
traffic to avoid as he drove north.
"Fuck,"
said the boys, in one voice.
Using a calm-stick, Blaine touched one of the thick necks;
without fuss, the boy
slumped forward.
"Hey!" snapped his partner. "What are you doing --?"
"What's best," Blaine whispered afterward. Then he lowered the Python's windows
and
destroyed its ignition system, leaving the pair asleep in the front seats.
And because the
moment required justice, he took one of their hands each,
shoving them inside the other's
pants, then he laid their heads together, in the
pose of lovers.
THE OTHER REFUGEES pampered
Julian: His cabin wasn't only larger than almost
anyone else's, it wore extra shielding to
help protect him from malicious
high-energy particles. Power and shaping rations didn't
apply to him, although
he rarely indulged himself, and a platoon of autodocs did nothing
but watch over
his health. In public, strangers applauded him. In private, he could select
almost any woman as a lover. And in bed, in the afterglow of whatever passed for
sex at
that particular moment, Julian could tell his stories, and his lovers
would listen as if
enraptured, even if they already knew each story by heart.
No one on board was more ancient
than Julian. Even before the attack, he was one
of the few residents of the Shawnee Nest
who could honestly claim to be
DNA-made, his life beginning as a single wet cell inside a
cavernous womb, a
bloody birth followed by sloppy growth that culminated in a vast and slow
and
decidedly old-fashioned human being.
Julian was nearly forty when Transmutations became
an expensive possibility.
Thrill seekers and the terminally ill were among the first to
undergo the
process, their primitive bodies and bloated minds consumed by the microchines,
the sum total of their selves compressed into tiny robotic bodies meant to
duplicate every
normal human function.
Being pioneers, they endured heavy losses. Modest errors during the
Transmutation meant instant death. Tiny errors meant a pathetic and incurable
insanity. The
fledging Nests were exposed to heavy nuclei and subtle EM effects,
all potentially
disastrous. And of course there were the early terrorist
attacks, crude and disorganized,
but extracting a horrible toll nonetheless.
The survivors were tiny and swift, and wiser,
and they were able to streamline
the Transmutation, making it more accurate and affordable,
and to a degree,
routine.
"I was forty-three when I left the other world." Julian told his
lover of the
moment. He always used those words, framing them with defiance and a hint of
bittersweet longing. "It was three days and two hours before the President
signed the
McGrugger Bill."
That's when Transmutation became illegal in the United States.
His lover
did her math, then with a genuine awe said, "That was five hundred and
twelve days ago."
A day was worth years inside a Nest.
"Tell me," she whispered. "Why did you do it? Were you
bored? Or sick?"
"Don't you know why?" he inquired.
"No," she squeaked.
Julian was famous,
but sometimes his life wasn't. And why should the youngsters
know his biography by heart?
"I don't want to force you," the woman told him. "If you'd rather not talk about
it, I'll
understand."
Julian didn't answer immediately.
Instead, he climbed from his bed and crossed
the cabin. His kitchenette had
created a drink-- hydrocarbons mixed with nanochines that
were nutritious,
appetizing, and pleasantly narcotic. Food and drink were not necessities,
but
habits, and they were enjoying a renewed popularity. Like any credible
Methuselah,
Julian was often the model on how best to do archaic oddities.
The woman lay on top of the
bed. Her current body was a hologram laid over her
mechanical core. It was a traditional
body, probably worn for his pleasure; no
wings or fins or even more bizarre adornments. As
it happened, she had selected
a build and complexion not very different from Julian's first
wife. A
coincidence? Or had she actually done research, and she already knew the answers
to her prying questions?
"Sip," he advised, handing her the drink. Their hands brushed
against one
another, shaped light touching its equivalent. What each felt was a
synthetically
generated sensation, basically human, intended to feel like warm,
water-filled skin.
The
girl obeyed, smiling as she sipped, an audible slurp amusing both of them.
"Here," she
said, handing back the glass. "Your turn.'
Julian glanced at the far wall. A universal
window gave them a live view of the
Quik Shop, the image supplied by one of the multitude
of cameras hidden on the
Buick's exterior. What held his interest was the old muscle car, a
Python with
smoked glass windows. When he first saw that car, three heads were visible. Now
two of the heads had gradually dropped out of sight, with the remaining man
still sitting
in back, big eyes opened wide, making no attempt to hide his
interest in the Buick's
driver.
No one knew who the fat man was, or what he knew, much less what his intentions
might
be. His presence had been a complete surprise, and what he had done with
those militia
members, pulling them back as he did as well as the rest of it,
had left the refugees more
startled than grateful, and more scared than any time
since leaving the Nest.
Julian had
gone to that store with the intent of suffering a clumsy, even
violent interrogation. A
militia encounter was meant to give them authenticity.
And more importantly, to give Julian
experience--precious and sobering firsthand
experience with the much-changed world around
them.
A world that he hadn't visited for more than a millennium, Nest-time.
Since he last
looked, nothing of substance had changed at that ugly store. And
probably nothing would
change for a long while. One lesson that no refugee
needed, much less craved, was that when
dealing with that other realm, nothing
helped as much as patience.
Taking a long, slow sip
of their drink, he looked back at the woman twenty days
old; a virtual child -- and without
a shred of patience, she said, "You were
sick, weren't you? I heard someone saying that's
why you agreed to be
Transmutated...five hundred and twelve days ago..."
"No." He offered a
shy smile. "And it wasn't because I wanted to live this way,
either. To be honest, I've
always been conservative. In that world, and this
one, too."
She nodded amiably, waiting.
"It was my daughter," he explained. "She was sick. An incurable leukemia." Again
he offered
the shy smile, adding, "She was nine years old, and terrified. I
could save her life by
agreeing to her Transmutation, but I couldn't just
abandon her to life in the Nest...making
her into an orphan, basically..."
"I see," his lover whispered.
Then after a respectful
silence, she asked, "Where's your daughter now?"
"Dead."
"Of course..." Not many people were
lucky enough to live five hundred days in a
Nest; despite shields, a single heavy nucleus
could still find you, ravaging
your mind, extinguishing your very delicate soul. "How long
ago...did it
happen....?"
"This morning" he replied. "In the attack."
"Oh...I'm very
sorry..."
With the illusion of shoulders, Julian shrugged. Then with his bittersweet
voice,
he admitted, "It already seems long ago."
WINEMASTER HEADED NORTH into Iowa, then did the
unexpected, making the sudden
turn east when he reached the new Tollway.
Blaine shadowed
him. He liked to keep two minutes between the Buick and his
little Tokamak, using the FBI's
recon network to help monitor the situation. But
the network had been compromised in the
past, probably more often than anyone
knew, which meant that he had to occasionally pay the
Tollway a little extra to
boost his speed, the gap closing to less than fifteen seconds.
Then with the
optics in his windshield, he would get a good look at what might or might not
be
Julian Winemaster -- a stiffly erect gentleman who kept one hand on the wheel,
even when
the Al-managed road was controlling every vehicle's speed and
direction, and doing a better
job of driving than any human could do.
Iowa was half-beautiful, half-bleak. Some fields
looked tended, genetically
tailored crops planted in fractal patterns and the occasional
robot working
carefully, pulling weeds and killing pests as it spider-walked back and
forth.
But there were long stretches where the farms had been abandoned, wild grasses
and
the spawn of last year's crops coming up in ragged green masses. Entire
neighborhoods had
pulled up and gone elsewhere. How many farmers had accepted
the Transmutation, in other
countries or illegally? Probably only a fraction of
them, Blaine knew. Habit-bound and
suspicious by nature, they'd never agree to
the dis-mantlement of their bodies, the
transplantation of their crusty souls.
No, what happened was that farms were simply falling
out of production,
particularly where the soil was marginal. Yields were still improving in
a world
where the old-style population was tumbling. If patterns held, most of the
arable
land would soon return to prairie and forest. And eventually, the entire
human species
wouldn't fill so much as one of these abandoned farms...leaving
the old world entirely
empty...if those patterns were allowed to hold,
naturally...
Unlike Winemaster, Blaine kept
neither hand on the wheel, trusting the AIs to
look after him. He spent most of his time
watching the news networks, keeping
tabs on moods more than facts. What had happened in
Kansas was still the big
story. By noon, more than twenty groups and individuals had
claimed
responsibility for the attack. Officially, the Emergency Federal Council
deplored
any senseless violence -- a cliche. which implied that sensible
violence was an entirely
different question. When asked about the government's
response, the President's press
secretary looked at the world with a stony face,
saying, "We're investigating the
regrettable incident. But the fact remains, it
happened outside our borders. We are
observers here. The Shawnee Nest was
responsible for its own security, just as every other
Nest is responsible...'
Questions came in a flurry. The press secretary pointed to a small,
severe-looking man in the front row -- a reporter for the Christian Promise
organization.
"Are we taking any precautions against counterattacks?" the
reporter inquired. Then, not
waiting for an answer, he added, "There have been
reports of activity in the other Nests,
inside the United States and elsewhere."
A tense smile was the first reply.
Then the stony
face told everyone, "The President and the Council have taken
every appropriate precaution.
As for any activity in any Nest, I can only say:
We have everything perfectly well in
hand."
"Is anything left of the Shawnee Nest.?" asked a second reporter.
"No." The press
secretary was neither sad nor pleased. "Initial evidence is that
the entire facility has
been sterilized."
A tenacious gray-haired woman -- the perpetual symbol of the Canadian
Newsweb --
called out, "Mr. Secretary...Lennie -- !"
"Yes, Cora..."
"How many were killed.?"
"I wouldn't know how to answer that question, Cora..."
"Your government estimates an excess
of one hundred million. If the entire Nest
was sterilized, as you say, then we're talking
about more than two-thirds of the
current U.S. population."
"Legally," he replied, "we are
talking about machines."
"Some of those machines were once your citizens," she mentioned.
The reporter from Christian Promise was standing nearby. He grimaced, then
muttered bits of
relevant Scripture.
"I don't think this is the time or place to debate what life is or
isn't," said
the press secretary, juggling things badly.
Cora persisted. "Are you aware of
the Canadian position on this tragedy?
"Like us, they're saddened."
"They've offered
sanctuary to any survivors of the blast --"
"Except there are none," he replied, his face
pink as granite.
"But if there were.? Would you let them move to another Nest in the United
States, or perhaps to Canada....?"
There was a pause, brief and electric.
Then with a flat
cool voice, the press secretary reported, "The McGrugger Bill
is very specific. Nests may
exist only in sealed containment facilities,
monitored at all times. And should any of the
microchines escape, they will be
treated as what they are...grave hazards to normal
life...and this government
will not let them roam at will...!"
Set inside an abandoned salt
mine near Kansas City, the Shawnee Nest had been
one of the most secure facilities of its
kind ever built. Its power came from
clean geothermal sources. Lead plates and intricate
defense systems stood
against natural hazards as well as more human threats. Thousands of
government-loyal AIs, positioned in the surrounding salt, did nothing but watch
its
borders, making certain that none of the microchines could escape. That was
why the thought
that local terrorists could launch any attack was so ludicrous.
To have that attack succeed
was simply preposterous. Whoever was responsible for
the bomb, it was done with the
abeyance of the highest authorities. No sensible
soul doubted it. That dirty little nuke
had Federal fingerprints on it, and the
attack was planned carefully, and its goals were
instantly apparent to people
large and small.
Julian had no doubts. He had enemies, vast and
malicious, and nobody was more
entitled to his paranoias.
Just short of Illinois, the Buick
made a long-scheduled stop.
Julian took possession of his clone at the last moment. The
process was supposed
to be routine -- a simple matter of slowing his thoughts a
thousandfold, then
integrating them with his body -- but there were always phantom pains
and a sick
falling sensation. Becoming a bloated watery bag wasn't the strangest part of
it. After all, the Nest was designed to mimic this kind of existence. What
gnawed at Julian
was the gargantuan sense of Time: A half an hour in this realm
was nearly a month in his
realm. No matter how brief the stop, Julian would feel
a little lost when he returned, a
step behind the others, and far more
emotionally drained than he would ever admit.
By the
time the car had stopped, Julian was in full control of the body. His
body, he reminded
himself. Climbing out into the heat and brilliant sunshine, he
felt a purposeful stiffness
in his back and the familiar ache running down his
right leg. In his past life, he was
plagued by sciatica pains. It was one of
many ailments that he hadn't missed after his
Transmutation. And it was just
another detail that someone had thought to include, forcing
him to wince and
stretch, showing the watching world that he was their flavor of mortal.
Suddenly another old pain began to call to Julian.
Hunger.
His duty was to fill the tank,
then do everything expected of a road-weary
driver. The rest area was surrounded by the
Tollway, gas pumps surrounding a
fast food/playground complex. Built to handle tens of
thousands of people daily,
the facility had suffered with the civil chaos, the militias and
the plummeting
populations. A few dozen travelers went about their business in
near-solitude,
and presumably a team of state or Federal agents were lurking nearby, using
sensors to scan for those who weren't what they seemed to be.
Without incident, Julian
managed the first part of his mission. Then he drove a
tiny distance and parked, repeating
his stiff climb out of the car, entering the
restaurant and steering straight for the
restroom.
He was alone, thankfully.
The diagnostic urinal gently warned him to drink more
fluids, then wished him a
lovely day.
Taking the advice to heart, Julian ordered a
bucket-sized ice tea along with a
cultured guinea hen sandwich.
"For here or to go?" asked
the automated clerk.
"I'm staying," he replied, believing it would look best.
"Thank you,
sir. Have a lovely day."
Julian sat in the back booth, eating slowly and mannerly, scanning
the pages of
someone's forgotten e-paper. He made a point of lingering over the trite and
trivial, concentrating on the comics with their humanized cats and cartoonish
people,
everyone playing out the same jokes that must have amused him in the
very remote past.
"How's
it going?"
The voice was slow and wet. Julian blanked the page, looking over his shoulder,
betraying nothing as his eyes settled on the familiar wide face. "Fine," he
replied, his
own voice polite but distant. "Thank you."
"Is it me? Or is it just too damned hot to live
out there...?"
"It is hot," Julian conceded.
"Particularly for the likes of me." The man
settled onto a plastic chair bolted
into the floor with clown heads. His lunch buried his
little table: Three
sandwiches, a greasy sack of fried cucumbers, and a tall chocolate
shake. "It's
murder when you're fat. Let me tell you...I've got to be careful in this
weather.
I don't move fast. I talk softly. I even have to ration my thinking. I
mean it! Too many
thoughts, and I break out in a killing sweat !"
Julian had prepared for this moment. Yet
nothing was happening quite like he or
anyone else had expected.
Saying nothing, Julian took
a shy bite out of his sandwich.
"You look like a smart guy," said his companion. "Tell me.
If the world's
getting emptier, like everyone says, why am I still getting poorer?"
"Excuse
me?"
"That's the way it feels, at least." The man was truly fat, his face smooth and
youthful,
every feature pressed outward by the remnants of countless lunches.
"You'd think that with
all the smart ones leaving for the Nests...you'd think
guys like you and me would do pretty
well for ourselves. You know.?"
Using every resource, the refugees had found three
identities for this man: He
was a salesman from St. Joseph, Missouri. Or he was a Federal
agent working for
the Department of Technology, in its Enforcement division, and his
salesman
identity was a cover. Or he was a charter member of the Christian Promise
organization,
using that group's political connections to accomplish its
murderous goals. What does he
want? Julian asked himself. He took another shy
bite, wiped his mouth with a napkin, then
offered his own question. "Why do you
say that...that it's the smart people who are
leaving....?"
"That's what studies show," said a booming, unashamed voice. "Half our people
are gone, but we've lost ninety percent of our scientists. Eighty percent of our
doctors.
And almost every last member of Mensa...which between you and me is a
good thing, I
think... !"
Another bite, and wipe. Then with a genuine firmness, Julian told him, "I don't
think we should be talking. We don't know each other."
A huge cackling laugh ended with an
abrupt statement:
"That's why we should talk. We're strangers, so where's the harm?"
Suddenly
the guinea hen sandwich appeared huge and inedible. Julian set it down
and took a gulp of
tea.
His companion watched him, apparently captivated.
Julian swallowed, then asked, "What
do you do for a living?"
"What I'm good at." He unwrapped a hamburger, then took an
enormous bite,
leaving a crescent-shaped sandwich and a fine glistening stain around his
smile.
"Put it this way, Mr. Winemaster. I'm like anyone. I do what I hope is best."
"How do
you -- ?"
"Your name? The same way I know your address, and your social registration
number,
and your bank balance, too." He took a moment to consume half of the
remaining crescent,
then while chewing, he choked out the words, "Blaine. My
name is. If you'd like to use it."
Each of the man's possible identities used Blaine, either as a first or last
name.
Julian
wrapped the rest of his sandwich in its insulated paper, watching his
hands begin to
tremble. He had a pianist's hands in his first life but
absolutely no talent for music.
When he went through the Transmutation, he'd
asked for a better ear and more coordination
-- both of which were given to him
with minimal fuss. Yet he'd never learned how to play,
not even after five
hundred days. It suddenly seemed like a tragic waste of talent, and
with a
secret voice, he promised himself to take lessons, starting immediately.
"So, Mr.
Winemaster...where are you heading...?"
Julian managed another sip of tea, grimacing at the
bitter taste.
"Someplace east, judging by what I can see..."
"Yes," he allowed. Then he
added, "Which is none of your business."
Blaine gave a hearty laugh, shoving the last of
the burger deep into his gaping
mouth. Then he spoke, showing off the masticated meat and
tomatoes, telling his
new friend, "Maybe you'll need help somewhere up ahead. Just maybe.
And if that
happens, I want you to think of me."
"You'll help me, will you?"
The food-stuffed
grin was practically radiant. "Think of me," he repeated
happily. "That's all I'm saying."
FOR A LONG WHILE, the refugees spoke and dreamed of nothing but the mysterious
Blaine.
Which side did he represent? Should they trust him? Or move against him?
And if they tried
to stop the man, which way was best? Sabotage his car? Drug
his next meal? Or would they
have to do something genuinely horrible?
But there were no answers, much less a consensus.
Blaine continued shadowing
them, at a respectful distance; nothing substantial was learned
about him; and
despite the enormous stakes, the refugees found themselves gradually
drifting
back into the moment-by-moment business of ordinary life.
Couples and amalgamations
of couples were beginning to make babies.
There was a logic: Refugees were dying every few
minutes, usually from radiation
exposure. The losses weren't critical, but when they
reached their new home --
the deep cold rock of the Canadian Shield -- they would need
numbers, a real
demographic momentum. And logic always dances with emotion. Babies served
as a
tonic to the adults. They didn't demand too many resources, and they forced
their
parents to focus on more managable problems, like building tiny bodies and
caring for needy
souls.
Even Julian was swayed by fashion.
With one of his oldest women friends, he found
himself hovering over a
crystalline womb, watching nanochines sculpt their son out of
single atoms and
tiny electric breaths.
It was only Julian's second child.
As long as his
daughter had been alive, he hadn't seen the point in having
another. The truth was that it
had always disgusted him to know that the
children in the Nest were manufactured -- there
was no other word for it -- and
he didn't relish being reminded that he was nothing, more
or less, than a fancy
machine among millions of similar machines.
Julian often dreamed of
his dead daughter. Usually she was on board their
strange ark, and he would find a note
from her, and a cabin number, and he would
wake up smiling, feeling certain that he would
find her today. Then he would
suddenly remember the bomb, and he would start to cry,
suffering through the
wrenching, damning loss all over again.
Which was ironic, in a
fashion.
During the last nineteen months, father and daughter had gradually and
inexorably
drifted apart. She was very much a child when they came to the Nest,
as flexible as her
father wasn't, and how many times had Julian lain awake in
bed, wondering why he had ever
bothered being Transmutated. His daughter didn't
need him, plainly. He could have remained
behind. Which always led to the same
questions: When he was a normal human being, was he
genuinely happy? Or was his
daughter's illness simply an excuse...a spicy bit of good
fortune that offered
an escape route...?
When the Nest was destroyed, Julian survived only
through more good fortune. He
was as far from the epicenter as possible, shielded by the
Nest's interior walls
and emergency barricades. Yet even then, most of the people near him
were
killed, an invisible neutron rain scrambling their minds. That same rain had
knocked
him unconscious just before the firestorm arrived, and if an autodoc
hadn't found his limp
body, then dragged him into a shelter, he would have been
cremated. And of course if the
Nest hadn't devised its elaborate escape plan,
stockpiling the Buick and cloning equipment
outside the Nest, Julian would have
had no choice but to remain in the rubble, fighting to
survive the next moment,
and the next.
But those coincidences happened, making his present
life feel like the
culmination of some glorious Fate.
The secret truth was that Julian
relished his new importance, and he enjoyed the
pressures that came with each bathroom
break and every stop for gas. If he died
now, between missions, others could take his
place, leading Winemaster's cloned
body through the needed motions...but they wouldn't do
as well, Julian could
tell himself...a secret part of him wishing that this bizarre,
slow-motion chase
would never come to an end...
The Buick stayed on the Tollway through
northern Illinois, slipping beneath
Chicago before skipping across a sliver of Indiana.
Julian was integrated with
his larger self several times, going through the motions of the
stiff, tired,
and hungry traveler. Blaine always arrived several minutes later, never
approaching
his quarry, always finding gas at different pumps, standing outside
the rest rooms, waiting
to show Julian a big smile but never uttering so much as
a word in passing.
A little after
midnight, the Buick's driver took his hand off the wheel, lay
back and fell asleep.
Trusting the Tollway's driving was out of character, but
with Blaine trailing them and the
border approaching, no one was eager to waste
time in a motel bed.
At two in the morning,
Julian was also asleep, dipping in and out of dreams.
Suddenly a hand took him by the
shoulder, shaking him, and several voices,
urgent and close, said, "We need you, Julian.
Now."
In his dreams, a thousand admiring faces were saying, "We need you."
Julian awoke.
His
cabin was full of people. His mate had been ushered away, but his unborn
child, nearly
complete now, floated in his bubble of blackened crystal,
oblivious to the nervous air and
the tight, crisp voices.
"What's wrong?" Julian asked.
"Everything," they assured.
His
universal window showed a live feed from a security camera on the North
Dakota-Manitoba
border. Department of Technology investigators, backed up by a
platoon of heavily armed
Marines, were dismantling a Toyota Sunrise. Even at
those syrupy speeds, the lasers moved
quickly, leaving the vehicle in tiny
pieces that were photographed, analyzed, then fed into
a state-of-the-art
decontamination unit.
"What is this?" Julian sputtered.
But he already
knew the answer.
"There was a second group of refugees," said the President, kneeling
beside his
bed. She was wearing an oversized face -- a common fashion, of late -- and with
a very calm, very grim voice, she admitted, "We weren't the only survivors."
They had kept
it a secret, at least from Julian. Which was perfectly reasonable,
he reminded himself.
What if he had been captured? Under torture, he could have
doomed that second lifeboat, and
everyone inside it...
"Is my daughter there?" he blurted, uncertain what to hope for.
The
President shook her head. "No, Julian."
Yet if two arks existed, couldn't there be a third?
And wouldn't the President
keep its existence secret from him, too?
"We've been monitoring
events," she continued. "It's tragic, what's happening to
our friends...but we'll be able
to adjust our methods...for when we cross the
border..."
He looked at the other oversized
faces. "But why do you need me? We won't reach
Detroit for hours."
The President looked over
her shoulder. "Play the recording."
Suddenly Julian was looking back in time. He saw the
Sunrise pull up to the
border post, waiting in line to be searched. A pickup truck with
Wyoming plates
pulled up behind it, and out stepped a preposterously tall man brandishing a
badge and a handgun. With an eerie sense of purpose, he strode up to the little
car, took
aim and fired his full clip through the driver's window. The body
behind the wheel jerked
and kicked as it was ripped apart. Then the murderer
reached in and pulled the corpse out
through the shattered glass, shouting at
the Tech investigators:
"I've got them! Here! For
Christ's sake, help me!"
The image dissolved, the window returning to the real-time,
real-speed scene.
To himself, Julian whispered, "No, it can't be..."
The President took his
hands in hers, their warmth a comfortable fiction. "We
would have shown you this as it was
happening, but we weren't sure what it
meant."
"But you're sure now?"
"That man followed our
people. All the way from Nebraska." She shook her head,
admitting, "We don't know
everything, no. For security reasons, we rarely spoke
with those other survivors --"
"What
are we going to do?" Julian growled.
"The only reasonable thing left for us." She smiled in
a sad fashion, then
warned him, "We're pulling off the Tollway now. You still have a little
while to
get ready..."
He closed his eyes, saying nothing.
"Not as long as you'd like, I'm
sure...but with this sort of thing, maybe it's
best to hurry..."
THERE WERE NO GAS PUMPS or
restaurants in the rest area. A small divided parking
lot was surrounded by trees and fake
log cabin lavatories that in turn were
sandwiched between broad lanes of moonlit pavement.
The parking lot was empty.
The only traffic was a single truck in the westbound freighter
lane, half a
dozen trailers towed along in its wake. Julian watched the truck pass, then
walked into the darkest shadows, and kneeled.
The security cameras were being fed false
images -- images that were hopefully
more convincing than the ludicrous log cabins. Yet
even when he knew that he was
safe, Julian felt exposed. Vulnerable. The feeling worsened
by the moment,
becoming a black dread, and by the time the Tokamak pulled to stop, his
newborn
heart was racing, and his quick damp breath tasted foul.
Blaine parked two slots
away from the sleeping Buick. He didn't bother looking
through the windows. Instead, guided
by intuition or hidden sensor, he strolled
toward the men's room, hesitated, then took a
few half-steps toward Julian,
passing into a patch of moonlight.
Using both hands, Julian
lifted his weapon, letting it aim itself at the smooth
broad forehead.
"Well," said Blaine,
"I see you're thinking about me."
"What do you want?" Julian whispered. Then with a certain
clumsiness, he added,
"With me."
The man remained silent for a moment, a smile building.
"Who
am I?" he asked suddenly. "Ideas? Do you have any?"
Julian gulped a breath, then said, "You
work for the government." His voice was
testy, pained. "And I don't know why you're
following me!"
Blaine didn't offer answers. Instead he warned his audience, "The border is
a
lot harder to pierce than you think."
"Is it?"
"Humans aren't fools," Blaine reminded him.
"After all, they designed the
technologies used by the Nests, and they've had just as long
as you to improve
on old tricks."
"People in the world are getting dumber," said Julian.
"You told me that."
"And those same people are very scared, very focused," his opponent
countered.
"Their borders are a priority to them. You are their top priority. And even if
your thought processes are accelerated a thousandfold, they've got AIs who can
blister you
in any race of intellect. At least for the time being, they can."
Shoot him, an inner voice
urged.
Yet Julian did nothing, waiting silently, hoping to be saved from this onerous
chore.
"You can't cross into Canada without me," Blaine told him.
"I know what happened..." Julian
felt the gun's barrel adjusting itself as his
hands grew tired and dropped slightly. "Up in
North Dakota...we know all about
it..."
It was Blaine's turn to keep silent.
Again, Julian
asked, "Who are you? Just tell me that much."
"You haven't guessed it, have you?" The round
face seemed genuinely
disappointed. "Not even in your wildest dreams..."
"And why help us?"
Julian muttered, saying too much.
"Because in the long run, helping you helps me."
"How?"
Silence.
"We don't have any wealth," Julian roared. "Our homes were destroyed. By you,
for
all I know --"
The man laughed loudly, smirking as he began to turn away. "You've got some
time
left. Think about the possibilities, and we'll talk again."
Julian tugged on the
trigger. Just once.
Eighteen shells pierced the back of Blaine's head, then worked down the
wide
back, devastating every organ even as the lifeless body crumpled. Even a huge
man falls
fast, Julian observed. Then he rose, walking on weak legs, and with
his own aim, he emptied
the rest of his clip into the gore.
It was easy, pumping in those final shots.
What's more,
shooting the dead carried an odd, unexpected satisfaction -- which
was probably the same
satisfaction that the terrorists had felt when their tiny
bomb destroyed a hundred million
soulless machines.
With every refugee watching, Julian cut open the womb with laser shears.
Julian Jr. was born a few seconds after two-thirty A.M., and the audience,
desperate for a
good celebration, nearly buried the baby with gifts and sweet
words. Yet nobody could spoil
him like his father could. For the next few hours,
Julian pestered his first son with love
and praise, working with a manic energy
to fill every need, every whim. And his quest to be
a perfect father only grew
worse. The sun was beginning to show itself; Canada was waiting
over the
horizon; but Julian was oblivious, hunched over the toddler with sparkling toys
in both hands, his never-pretty voice trying to sing a child's song, nothing
half as
important in this world as making his son giggle and smile...!
They weren't getting past
the border. Their enemies were too clever, and too
paranoid. Julian could smell the
inevitable, but because he didn't know what
else to do, he went through the motions of
smiling for the President and the
public, saying the usual brave words whenever it was
demanded of him.
Sometimes Julian took his boy for long fides around the lifeboat. During
one
journey, a woman knelt and happily teased the baby, then looked up at the famous
man,
mentioning in an off-handed way, "We'll get to our new home just in time
for him to grow
into it."
Those words gnawed at Julian, although he was helpless to explain why.
By then the
sun had risen, its brilliant light sweeping across a sleepy border
town. Instead of
crossing at Detroit, the refugees had abandoned the Tollway,
taking an old highway north to
Port Huron. It would be easier here, was the
logic. The prayer. Gazing out the universal
window, Julian looked at the boarded
up homes and abandoned businesses, cars parked and
forgotten, weeds growing in
every yard, every crack. The border cities had lost most of
their people in the
last year-plus, he recalled. It was too easy and too accepted, this
business of
crossing into a land where it was still legal to be remade. In another year,
most of the United States would look this way, unless the government took more
drastic
measures such as closing its borders, or worse, invading its
wrong-minded neighbors...!
Julian
felt a deep chill, shuddering.
That's when he suddenly understood. Everything. And in the
next few seconds,
after much thought, he knew precisely what he had to do.
Assuming there
was still time...
A dozen cars were lined up in front of the customs station. The Buick had
slipped in behind a couple on a motorcycle. Only one examination station was
open, and
every traveler was required to first declare his intentions, then
permanently give up his
citizenship. It would be a long wait. The driver turned
the engine off, watching the
Marines and Tech officials at work, everything
about them relentlessly professional. Three
more cars pulled up behind him,
including a Tokamak, and he happened to glance at the
rearview screen when
Blaine climbed out, walking with a genuine bounce, approaching on the
right and
rapping on the passenger window with one fat knuckle, then stooping down and
smiling
through the glass, proving that he had made a remarkable recovery since
being murdered.
Julian
unlocked the door for him.
With a heavy grunt, Blaine pulled himself in and shut the door,
then gave his
companion a quick wink.
Julian wasn't surprised. If anything, he was relieved,
telling his companion, "I
think I know what you are."
"Good," said Blaine. "And what do your
friends think?"
"I don't know. I never told them." Julian took the steering wheel in both
hands.
"I was afraid that if I did, they wouldn't believe me. They'd think I was crazy,
and
dangerous. And they wouldn't let me come here."
The line was moving, jerking forward one
car-length. Julian started the Buick
and crept forward, then turned it off again.
With a
genuine fondness, Blaine touched him on a shoulder, commenting, "Your
friends might pull
you back into their world now. Have you thought of that?"
"Sure," said Julian. "But for the
next few seconds, they'll be too confused to
make any big decisions."
Lake Huron lay on
Blaine's left, vast and deeply blue, and he studied the picket
boats that dotted the water,
bristling with lasers that did nothing but flip
back and forth, back and forth,
incinerating any flying object that appeared
even remotely suspicious.
"So tell me," he
asked his companion, "why do you think I'm here?"
Julian turned his body, the cultured
leather squeaking beneath him. Gesturing at
Port Huron, he said, "Ii these trends continue,
everything's going to look that
way soon. Empty. Abandoned. Humans will have almost
vanished from this world,
which means that perhaps someone else could move in without too
much trouble.
They'll find houses, and good roads to drive on, and a communication system
already in place. Readymade lives, and practically free for the taking."
"What sort of
someone?"
"That's what suddenly occurred to me." Julian took a deep breath, then said,
"Humans
are making themselves smaller, and faster. But what if something other
than humans is doing
the same thing? What if there's something in the universe
that's huge, and very slow by
human standards, but intelligent nonetheless.
Maybe it lives in cold places between the
stars. Maybe somewhere else. The point
is, this other species is undergoing a similar kind
of transformation. It's
making itself a thousand times smaller, and a thousand times
quicker, which puts
it roughly equal to this." The frail face was smiling, and he lifted
his hands
from the wheel. "Flesh and blood, and bone... these are the high-technology
materials
that build your version of microchines!"
Blaine winked again, saying, "You're probably
right. If you'd explained it that
way, your little friends would have labeled you insane."
"But am I right?"
There was no reason to answer him directly. "What about me, Mr.
Winemaster? How
do you look at me?"
"You want to help us." Julian suddenly winced, then
shuddered. But he didn't
mention it, saying, "I assume that you have different abilities
than we
do...that you can get us past their sensors --"
"Is something wrong, Mr.
Winemaster?"
"My friends...they're trying to take control of this body..."
"Can you deal
with them?"
"For another minute. I changed all the control codes." Again, he winced. "You
don't want the government aware of you, right." And you're trying to help steer
us and them
away from war...during this period of transition --"
"The way we see it," Blaine confessed,
"the chance of a worldwide cataclysm is
just about one in three, and worsening."
Julian
nodded, his face contorting in agony. "If I accept your help...?"
"Then I'll need yours."
He set a broad hand on Julian's neck. "You've done a
remarkable job hiding yourselves. You
and your friends are in this car, but my
tools can't tell me where. Not without more time,
at least. And that's time we
don't have..."
Julian stiffened, his clothes instantly soaked
with perspiration.
Quietly, quickly, he said, "But if you're really a government
agent...here to
fool me into telling you...everything....?"
"I'm not," Blaine promised.
A
second examination station had just opened; people were maneuvering for
position, leaving a
gap in front of them.
Julian started his car, pulling forward. "If I do tell you...where we
are...they'll think that I've betrayed them...!"
The Buick's anticollision system engaged,
bringing them to an abrupt stop.
"Listen," said Blaine. "You've got only a few seconds to
decide --"
"I know..."
"Where, Mr. Winemaster? Where?"
"Julian," he said, wincing again.
"Julian."
A glint of pride showed in the eyes. "We're not...in the car..." Then the eyes
grew
enormous, and Julian tried shouting the answer...his mind suddenly losing
its grip on that
tiny, lovely mouth...
Blaine swung with his right fist, shattering a cheekbone with his
first, blow,
killing the body before the last blow.
By the time the Marines had surrounded
the car, its interior was painted with
gore, and in horror, the soldiers watched as the
madman -- he couldn't be
anything but insane -- calmly rolled down his window and smiled
with a
blood-rimmed mouth, telling his audience, "I had to kill him. He's Satan."
A hardened
lieutenant looked in at the victim, torn open like a sack, and she
shivered, moaning aloud
for the poor man.
With perfect calm, Blaine declared, "I had to eat his heart. That's how
you kill
Satan. Don't you know?"
For disobeying orders, the President declared Julian a
traitor, and she oversaw
his trial and conviction. The entire process took less than a
minute. His
quarters were remodeled to serve as his prison cell. In the next ten minutes,
three separate attempts were made on his life. Not everyone agreed with the
court's
sentence, it seemed. Which was understandable. Contact with the outside
world had been lost
the instant Winemaster died. The refugees and their lifeboat
were lost in every kind of
darkness. At any moment, the Tech specialists would
throw them into a decontamination unit,
and they would evaporate without
warning. And all because they'd entrusted themselves to an
old DNA-born human
who never really wanted to be Transmutated in the first place, according
to at
least one of his former lovers...
Ostensibly for security reasons, Julian wasn't
permitted visitors.
Not even his young son could be brought to him, nor was he allowed to
see so
much as a picture of the boy.
Julian spent his waking moments pacing back and forth
in the dim light, trying
to exhaust himself, then falling into a hard sleep, too tired to
dream at all,
if he was lucky...
Before the first hour was finished, he had lost all track
of time.
After nine full days of relentless isolation, the universe had shriveled until
nothing
existed but his cell, and him, his memories indistinguishable from
fantasies.
On the tenth
day, the cell door opened.
A young man stepped in, and with a stranger's voice, he said,
"Father."
"Who are you?" asked Julian.
His son didn't answer, giving him the urgent news
instead. "Mr. Blaine finally
made contact with us, explaining what he is and what's
happened so far, and what
will happen...!"
Confusion wrestled with a fledging sense of
relief.
"He's from between the stars, just like you guessed, Father. And he's been found
insane for your murder. Though of course you're not dead. But the government
believes there
was a Julian Winemaster, and it's holding Blaine in a Detroit
hospital, and he's holding
us. His metabolism is augmenting our energy
production, and when nobody's watching, he'll
connect us with the outside
world."
Julian couldn't imagine such a wild story: It had to be
true!
"When the world is safe, in a year or two, he'll act cured or he'll escape --
whatever
is necessary -- and he'll carry us wherever we want to go."
The old man sat on his bed,
suddenly exhausted.
"Where would you like to go, Father?
"Out that door," Julian managed.
Then a wondrous thought took him by surprise,
and he grinned, saying, "No, I want to be
like Blaine was. I want to live
between the stars, to be huge and cold, and slow...
"Not
today, maybe...
"But soon...definitely soon...!"