Broken Angels (6 page)

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Authors: Richard K. Morgan

BOOK: Broken Angels
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She lowered her gaze. “It was, for a while. And no, Wycinski wouldn't play that tune. He loved the Martians, he admired them, and he said so in public. That's why you only hear about him in connection with fucking hub theory. They pulled his funding, suppressed most of his findings, and gave it all to Carter and Bogdanovich to run with. And what a blowjob those two whores gave in return. The U.N. commission voted a seven percent increase in the Protectorate strategic budget the same year, all based on paranoid fantasies of a Martian Overculture somewhere out there, waiting to jump us.”

“Neat.”

“Yeah, and totally impossible to disprove. All the astrogation charts we've recovered on other worlds bear out Wycinski's finding: Each world centers itself on the map the way Mars did, and that single fact is used to scare the U.N. into keeping a high strategic budget and a tight military presence across the whole Protectorate. No one wants to hear about what Wycinski's research really means, and anybody who talks too loud about it, or tries to apply the findings in research of their own, is either defunded overnight or ridiculed, which in the end comes to the same thing.”

She flicked her cigarette into the fire and watched it flare up.

“That what happened to you?” I asked.

“Not quite.”

There was a palpable click to the last syllable, like a lock turning. Behind me, I could hear Schneider coming up the beach, his checklist for the shuttle or maybe just his patience exhausted. I shrugged.

“Talk about it later, if you want to.”

“Maybe. How about you tell me what all that macho high-g-maneuver bullshit was today?”

I glanced up at Schneider as he joined us beside the fire. “Hear that? Complaint about the in-flight entertainment.”

“Fucking passengers,” Schneider grunted, picking up the clowning cue flawlessly as he lowered himself to the sand. “Nothing ever changes.”

“You going to tell her, or shall I?”

“Was your idea. Got a Seven?”

Wardani held up the pack, then tossed them into Schneider's grasp. She turned back to me. “Well?”

“The Dangrek coast,” I said slowly, “whatever its archaeological merits may have been, is part of the Northern Rim territories, and the Northern Rim has been designated by Carrera's Wedge as one of nine primary objectives in winning the war. And judging from the amount of organic damage going on up there at the moment, the Kempists have come to the same conclusion.”

“So?”

“So, mounting an archaeological expedition while Kemp and the Wedge are up there fighting for territorial dominance isn't my idea of smart. We have to get the fighting diverted.”

“Diverted?”
The disbelief in her voice was gratifying to hear. I played to it, shrugging again.

“Diverted, or postponed. Whatever works. The point is, we need help. And the only place we're going to get help of that order is from the corporates. We're going to Landfall, and since I'm supposed to be on active service, Schneider's a Kempist deserter, you're a prisoner of war, and this is a stolen shuttle, we need to shed a little heat before we do that. Satellite coverage of our little run-in with the smart mines back there will read like they took us down. A search of the seabed will show up pieces of wreckage compatible with that. Allowing that no one looks at the evidence too closely, we'll be filed as missing, presumed vaporized, which suits me fine.”

“You think they'll let it go at that?”

“Well, it's a war. People getting killed shouldn't raise too many eyebrows.” I picked a stray length of wood out of the fire and started tracing a rough continental map in the sand. “Oh, they may wonder what I was doing down here when I'm supposed to be taking up a command on the Rim, but that's the kind of detail that gets sifted in the aftermath of a conflict. Right now, Carrera's Wedge are spread pretty thin in the north and Kemp's forces are still pushing them toward the mountains. They've got the Presidential Guard coming in on this flank”—I prodded at the sand with my makeshift pointer—“and sea-launched air strikes from Kemp's iceberg fleet over here. Carrera's got a few more important things to worry about than the exact manner of my demise.”

“And you really think the Cartel are going to put all that on hold just for you?” Tanya Wardani swung her burning gaze from my face to Schneider's. “You didn't really buy into this, did you, Jan?”

Schneider made a small gesture with one hand. “Just listen to the man, Tanya. He's jacked into the machine: He knows what he's talking about.”

“Yeah,
right
.” The intense, hectic eyes snapped back to me. “Don't think I'm not grateful to you for getting me out of the camp, because I am. I don't think you can imagine quite how grateful I am. But now that I'm out, I'd quite like to live. This, this
plan
, is all bullshit. You're just going to get us all killed, either in Landfall by corporate samurai or caught in the crossfire at Dangrek. They aren't going to—”

“You're right,” I said patiently, and she shut up, surprised. “To a point, you're right. The major corporates, the ones in the Cartel, they wouldn't give this scheme a second glance. They can murder us, stick you into virtual interrogation until you tell them what they want to know, and then just keep the whole thing under wraps until the war is over and they've won.”

“If they win.”

“They will,” I told her. “They always do, one way or the other. But we aren't going to the majors. We've got to be smarter than that.”

I paused and poked at the fire, waiting. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw how Schneider craned forward with tension. Without Tanya Wardani aboard, the whole thing was dead in the water and we all knew it.

The sea whispered itself up on the beach and back. Something popped and crackled in the depths of the fire.

“All right.” She moved slightly, like someone bedridden shifting to a less aching posture. “Go on. I'm listening.”

Relief gusted out of Schneider audibly. I nodded.

“This is what we do. We target one corporate operator in particular, one of the smaller, hungrier ones. Might take a while to sound out, but it shouldn't be difficult. And once we have the target, we make them an offer they can't refuse. A one-time-only, limited-period, bargain-basement satisfaction-guaranteed purchase.”

I saw the way she exchanged glances with Schneider. Maybe it was all the monetary imagery that made her look to him.

“Small and hungry as you like, Kovacs, you're still talking about a corporate player.” Her eyes locked onto mine. “Planetary wealth. And murder and virtual interrogation are hardly expensive. How do you propose to undercut that option?”

“Simple. We scare them.”

“You
scare
them.” She looked at me for a moment, and then coughed out a small, unwilling laugh. “Kovacs, they should have you on disk. You're perfect post-trauma entertainment. So, tell me. You're going to
scare
a corporate block. What with, slasher puppets?”

I felt a genuine smile twitch at my own lips. “Something like that.”

CHAPTER SIX

It took Schneider the better part of the next morning to wipe the shuttle's datacore, while Tanya Wardani walked aimless scuffing circles in the sand or sat beside the open hatch and talked to him. I left them alone and walked up to the far end of the beach where there was a black rock headland. The rock proved simple to scale, and the view from the top was worth the few scrapes I picked up on the way. I leaned my back against a convenient outcrop and looked out to the horizon, recalling fragments of a dream from the previous night.

Harlan's World is small for a habitable planet, and its seas slop about unpredictably under the influence of three moons. Sanction IV is much larger, larger even than Latimer or Earth, and it has no natural satellites, all of which makes for wide, placid oceans. Set against the memories of my early life on Harlan's World, this calm always seemed slightly suspicious, as if the sea were holding its watery breath, waiting for something cataclysmic to happen. It was a creepy sensation, and the Envoy conditioning kept it locked down most of the time by the simple expedient of not allowing the comparison to cross my mind. In dreamsleep, the conditioning is less effective, and evidently something in my head was worrying at the cracks.

In the dream, I was standing on a shingle beach somewhere on Sanction IV, looking out at the tranquil swells, when the surface began to heave and swell. I watched, rooted to the spot, as mounds of water shifted and broke and flowed past each other like sinuous black muscles. What waves there were at the water's edge were gone, sucked back out to where the sea was flexing. A certainty made in equal parts of cold dread and aching sadness rose in me to match the disturbances offshore. I knew beyond a doubt. Something monstrous was coming up.

But I woke up before it surfaced.

A muscle twitched in my leg and I sat up irritably. The dregs of the dream rinsed around the base of my mind, seeking connection with something more substantial.

Maybe it was fallout from the duel with the smart mines. I'd watched the sea heave upward as our missiles detonated beneath the surface.

Yeah, right. Very traumatic.

My mind skittered through a few other recent combat memories, looking for a match. I stopped it, rapidly. Pointless exercise. A year and a half of hands-on nastiness for Carrera's Wedge had laid up enough trauma in my head to give work to a whole platoon of psychosurgeons. I was entitled to a few nightmares. Without the Envoy conditioning, I'd probably have suffered a screaming mental collapse months ago. And combat memories weren't what I wanted to look at right now.

I made myself lie back again and relax into the day. The morning sun was already beginning to build toward semitropical midday heat, and the rock was warm to the touch. Between my half-closed eyelids, light moved the way it had in the lochside convalescent virtuality. I let myself drift.

Time passed unused.

My phone hummed quietly to itself. I reached down without opening my eyes and squeezed it active. Noted the increased weight of heat on my body, the light drenching of sweat on my legs.

“Ready to roll,” said Schneider's voice. “You still up on that rock?”

I sat up unwillingly. “Yeah. You make the call yet?”

“All cleared. That mothballed scrambler uplink you stole? Beautiful. Crystal clear. They're waiting on us.”

“Be right down.”

Inside my head, the same residue. The dream had not gone.

Something coming up.

I stowed the thought with the phone and started downward.

•         •         •

Archaeology is a messy science.

You'd think, with all the high-tech advances of the past few centuries, that we'd have the practice of robbing graves down to a fine art by now. After all, we can pick up the telltale traces of Martian civilization across interplanetary distances these days. Satellite surveys and remote sensing let us map their buried cities through meters of solid rock or hundreds of meters of sea, and we've even built machines that can make educated guesses about the more inscrutable remnants of what they left behind. With nearly half a millennium of practice, we really ought to be getting good at this stuff.

But the fact is, no matter how subtle your detection science is, once you've found something you've still got to dig it up. And with the vast capital investment the corporates have made in the race to understand the Martians, the digging is usually done with about as much subtlety as a crew night out in Madame Mi's Wharfwhore Warehouse. There are finds to be made and dividends to be paid, and the fact that there are—apparently—no Martians around to object to the environmental damage doesn't help. The corporates swing in, rip the locks off the vacated worlds, and stand back while the Archaeologue Guild swarm all over the fixtures. And when the primary sites have been exhausted, no one usually bothers to tidy up.

You get places like Dig 27.

Hardly the most imaginative name for a town, but there was a certain amount of accuracy in the choice. Dig 27 had sprung up around the excavation of the same name, served for fifty years as dormitory, cafeteria, and leisure complex for the archaeologue workforce, and was now in steep decline as the seams of xenoculture ore panned out to the dregs. The original dighead was a gaunt centipedal skeleton, straddling the skyline on stilled retrieval belts and awkwardly bent support struts as we flew in from the east. The town started beneath the drooping tail of the structure and spread from it in sporadic and uncertain clumps like an unenthusiastic concrete fungus. Buildings rarely heaved themselves above five stories, and many of those that had were rather obviously derelict, as if the effort of upward growth had exhausted them beyond the ability to sustain internal life.

Schneider banked around the skull end of the stalled dighead, flattened out, and floated down toward a piece of wasteground between three listing pylons that presumably delineated Dig 27's landing field. Dust boiled up from the badly kept ferrocrete as we hovered, and I saw jagged cracks blown naked by our landing brakes. Over the comset, a senile navigation beacon husked a request for identification. Schneider ignored it, knocked over the primaries, and climbed from his seat with a yawn.

“End of the line, folks. Everybody out.”

We followed him back to the main cabin and watched while he strapped on one of the unsubtle sawn-off particle throwers we'd liberated with the shuttle. He looked up, caught me watching, and winked.

“I thought these were your friends.” Tanya Wardani was watching as well, alarmed, if the expression on her face was anything to go by.

Schneider shrugged. “They were,” he said. “But you can't be too careful.”

“Oh great.” She turned to me. “Have you got anything a bit less bulky than that cannon that I could maybe borrow. Something I can lift.”

I lifted the edges of my jacket aside to show the two Wedge-customized Kalashnikov interface guns where they rested in the chest harness.

“I'd lend you one of these, but they're personally coded.”

“Take a blaster, Tanya,” said Schneider without looking up from his own preparations. “More chance you'll hit something with it anyway. Slug throwers are for fashion victims.”

The archaeologue raised her eyebrows. I smiled a little. “He's probably right. Here, you don't have to wear it around your waist. The straps web out like this. Sling it over your shoulder.”

I moved to help her fit the weapon and as she turned toward me something indefinable happened in the small space between our bodies. I settled the holstered weapon at the downward slope of her left breast, and her eyes slanted upward to mine. They were, I saw, the color of jade under swift-flowing water.

“That comfortable?”

“Not especially.”

I went to move the holster, and she raised a hand to stop me. Against the dusty ebony of my arm, her fingers looked like naked bones, skeletal and frail.

“Leave it, it'll do.”

“Okay. Look, you just pull down and the holster lets it go. Push back up and it grips again. Like that.”

“Got it.”

The exchange had not been lost on Schneider. He cleared his throat loudly and went to crack the hatch. As it hinged outward, he held on to a handgrip at the leading edge and swung down with practiced flier nonchalance. The effect was spoiled slightly as he landed and began coughing in the still-settling dust our landing brake had raised. I suppressed a grin.

Wardani went after him, letting herself down awkwardly with the heels of her palms on the floor of the open hatchway. Mindful of the dust clouds outside, I stayed in the hatchway, eyes narrowed against the airborne grit in an attempt to see if we had a reception committee.

And we did.

They emerged from the dust like figures on a frieze gradually sandblasted clean by someone like Tanya Wardani. I counted seven in all, bulky silhouettes swathed in desert gear and spiky with weapons. The central figure looked deformed, taller than the others by half a meter but swollen and misshapen from the chest up. They advanced in silence.

I folded my arms across my chest so my fingertips touched the butts of the Kalashnikovs.

“Djoko?” Schneider coughed again. “That you, Djoko?”

More silence. The dust had settled enough for me to make out the dull glint of metal on gun barrels and the enhanced-vision masks they all wore. There was room for body armor beneath the loose desert gear.

“Djoko, quit fucking around.”

A high-pitched, impossible laugh from the towering, misshapen figure in the center. I blinked.

“Jan, Jan, my good friend.” It was the voice of a child. “Do I make you so nervous?”

“What do you think, fuckwit?” Schneider stepped forward and as I watched the huge figure spasmed and seemed to break apart. Startled, I cranked up the neurachem vision and made out a small boy of about eight scrambling down from the arms of the man who held him to his chest. As the boy reached the ground and ran to meet Schneider, I saw the man who had carried him straighten up into a peculiar immobility. Something quickened along the tendons in my arms. I screwed up my eyes some more and scanned the now unremarkable figure head to foot. This one was not wearing the EV mask and his face was . . .

I felt my mouth tighten as I realized what I was looking at.

Schneider and the boy were trading complicated handshakes and spouting gibberish at each other. Midway through this ritual, the boy broke off and took Tanya Wardani's hand with a formal bow and some ornate flattery that I didn't catch. He seemed insistent on clowning his way through the meeting, this Djoko. He was spouting harmlessness like a tinsel fountain on Harlan's Day. And with the worst of the dust down where it belonged, the rest of the reception committee had lost the vague menace their silhouettes had given them. The clearing air revealed them as an assortment of nervous-looking and mostly young irregulars. I saw one wispy-bearded Caucasian on the left chewing his lip below the blank calm of the EV mask. Another was shifting from foot to foot. All of them had their weapons slung or stowed, and as I jumped down from the hatch they all flinched backward.

I raised my hands soothingly shoulder height, palms outward.

“Sorry.”

“Don't apologize to this idiot.” Schneider was now trying to cuff the boy around the back of the head, with limited success. “Djoko, come here and say hello to a real live Envoy. This is Takeshi Kovacs. He was at Innenin.”

“Indeed?” The boy came and offered his hand. Dark-skinned and fine-boned, it was already a handsome sleeve—in later life it would be androgynously beautiful. It was dressed immaculately in a tailored mauve sarong and matching quilted jacket. “Djoko Roespinoedji, at your service. I apologize for the drama, but one cannot be too careful in these uncertain times. Your call came in on satellite frequencies that no one outside Carrera's Wedge has access to, and Jan, while I love him like a brother, is not known for his connections in high places. It could have been a trap.”

“Mothballed scrambler uplink,” Schneider said importantly. “We stole it from the Wedge. This time, Djoko, when I say I'm jacked in, I mean it.”

“Who might be trying to trap you?” I asked.

“Ah.” The boy sighed with a world-weariness several decades out of place in his voice. “There is no telling. Government agencies, the Cartel, corporate leverage analysts, Kempist spies. None of them has any reason to love Djoko Roespinoedji. Remaining neutral in a war does not save you from making enemies as it should. Rather, it loses you any friends you might have and earns you suspicion and contempt from all sides.”

“The war isn't this far south yet,” Wardani pointed out.

Djoko Roespinoedji placed a hand gravely on his chest. “For which we are all extremely grateful. But these days, not being on the front line merely means you are under occupation of one form or another. Landfall is barely eight hundred kilometers to our west. We are close enough to be considered a perimeter post, which means a state militia garrison and periodic visits from the Cartel's political assessors.” He sighed again. “It is all
very
costly.”

I looked at him suspiciously. “You're garrisoned? Where are they?”

“Over there.” The boy jerked a thumb at the ragged group of irregulars. “Oh, there are a few more back at the uplink bunker, as per regulations, but essentially what you see here is the garrison.”


That's
the state militia?” asked Tanya Wardani.

“It is.” Roespinoedji looked sadly at them for a moment, then turned back to us. “Of course, when I said it was costly, I was referring mostly to the cost of making the political assessor's visits congenial. For us and for him, that is. The assessor is not a very sophisticated man, but he does have substantial, um, appetites. And of course ensuring that he remains
our
political assessor displaces a certain amount of expenditure, too. Generally they are rotated every few months.”

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