Authors: Michael Grant
Tags: #Teen & Young Adult, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction
The Hounds came for Mr. Stern as he was picking up his morn-
ing bagel at Montague Street Bagels in Brooklyn. It was a short walk
from his home, and the McLure Security car and driver would be
waiting across the street.
There were twenty thousand self-replicating nanobots aboard
the Hound piloted remotely by a tech in the bowels of the Tulip. The
Twins watched on their eternal monitor. The nanobots themselves
were of course not twitcher run. They had been programmed by
the Twins via the app. These nanobots had been given a simple set
of instructions: to multiply as soon as they encountered a source
of carbon. To continue to do so for exactly forty minutes. Then to
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commit mechanical suicide and stop.
As Stern was crossing the sidewalk the Hound swept down Henry
Street before executing a sharp right onto Montague.
Stern bit into his bagel. The cream cheese oozed from the sides
and he licked a dollop before it could fall away.
And then he heard something strange. Like a ceiling fan, but
with blades going very fast. He even felt the downdraft and looked up
to see its source. The Hound was just six feet over his head.
The nanobots fell in a cloud, like dust.
Stern ran to the car, still clutching the bagel. The driver saw him,
started to jump out to open the door for him, then saw the urgency on
Stern’s face, so just released the lock and started the engine.
Stern reached the door just as he began to feel a burning sensa-
tion on his scalp.
He piled into the car and yelled, “Some kind of drone!”
The driver turned around and blanched visibly. “Jesus, boss!
Your head!”
Stern reached past the driver and yanked down the visor mirror.
In the narrow rectangle he saw that his scalp was red with blood.
“Drive!” Stern shouted. “To McLure Labs!”
“What’s happening?” the driver cried.
Stern tried to answer, but at that moment the nanobots had
chewed through his cheek and were tearing into his molars, and the
sound that came out of the security man was not decipherable as any-
thing but a cry of agony.
The driver yanked the car into traffic, leaned on the horn, and
forced his way past a parked UPS truck.
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SEVENTEEN
Caligula found himself almost nervous. How strange. Plath was just
a girl, after all.
He remembered the first time he had really met her, in a small but
vicious battle at the Tulip. He’d liked her. He’d thought he saw some
inner strength in her, but it had never occurred to him that she would
end up running the New York cell of BZRK. Vincent had seemed bul-
letproof—an odd concept for Caligula to think of. But Vincent really
had seemed indestructible.
For a while after Nijinsky’s fall from grace Caligula thought Lear
might place the burden of leadership on him. But no. Of course not.
Caligula had his purpose in life, and it was not shepherding a gaggle
of kids. He was useful to Lear, but only as a killer. And less and less
useful at that. Lear had found other ways.
Nijinsky, poor bastard. A clean bullet would have done the job.
No need for what he endured. No need for that cruelty.
He wondered what Plath would ask of him. Would she ask for
his help in bringing Burnofsky in so that he could be infested with a
new biot?
He hoped she would not ask him about Lear.
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MICHAEL GRANT
But of course she asked about Lear.
“It seems absurd to call each other Caligula and Plath,” Plath said.
Plath had picked the meeting place, and she was waiting for him
when he arrived. It was public but not: a dark booth in a dark bar. It
was against the law for her even to be sitting here across from him.
But there was a law for regular minors and then there was a very dif-
ferent law for minors who could hand a fistful of hundred-dollar bills
to a concerned bartender.
It amused Caligula that she had even found this place. It was
classically male, a dive bar in a pricey Manhattan neighborhood. An
easy walk from the safe house, which showed caution. After all, Sadie
McLure had changed her hair, but she could still be recognized if a
paparazzo spotted her. She had minimized the odds of that. Smart
girl.
He took in the surroundings as he did every few minutes, check-
ing for changes in personnel, in position and posture. There were a
couple of hipsters at the bar imagining themselves as latter-day Ker-
ouacs. A tired-looking woman who was almost certainly a hooker.
Three loud businessmen saying things like, “So I told him, ‘That is
not something I’m comfortable with.’ I mean, maybe he doesn’t give a
shit, but I do.” After a few more drinks they’d be complaining about
their wives and their kids.
But that’s not who Caligula watched out of the corner of his eye. It
was a woman, thirty-five maybe, in an inexpensive business suit with
slacks, sensible shoes, and khaki raincoat. She had brown hair cut
short, but not so short as to be fashionable. She ordered something he
didn’t overhear but that caused the bartender to look wary. It came
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BZRK APOCALYPSE
clear and fizzy in a tall glass: sparkling water.
If she wasn’t some kind of cop, she was doing a very good impres-
sion of one. She confirmed the impression by avoiding looking at
Caligula. It was a fact of life that any normal person would look at
him.
Had it come to this? Were even the cops on the trail? It was one
thing being shadowed by Armstrong people and by Plath’s security
people. It was a different matter entirely when secrecy was so compro-
mised that FBI or intelligence or even NYPD were watching.
Things were coming to an end. One way or the other. But wasn’t
that what Lear wanted?
“It does seem ridiculous,” Caligula allowed.
“Call me Sadie.”
“Call me Caligula.”
That earned him a wintry smile.
He did not lean toward her. He had not shaken her extended
hand—she would understand why. Caligula might be a part of BZRK
in his own way, but you simply did not trust people armed with biots.
A fleeting touch was all it took to send the tiny little beasties toward
his brain.
He was nursing a beer in a tall, sweating mug. He casually dragged
the mug across the table, left to right, leaving a trail of water behind.
A barrier to the tiny bugs.
“I never thanked you. For that first time.” Plath nodded at him, a
regal move that seemed natural for her. “You saved our lives.”
“You’re welcome,” he said. And waited.
“I need you,” she said.
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MICHAEL GRANT
“For?”
“Lear wants the computer servers in the Tulip destroyed.”
“They’ll have backups.”
She shook her head. “We don’t think so. They’re so paranoid
they keep several systems cut off from one another. We’ve had access
to many of their networks, but some of their computers are entirely
unreachable from the outside. No Internet links at all. No phone
lines. They might as well be something out of the 1980s.”
He nodded, accepting this as a likely fact. “It’s a large building.
They are well guarded. This is not a movie; I could not do it alone, or
do it even with your people.”
“How
could
you do it?”
“By destroying the entire building.”
She stared at him. He watched her eyes. Interesting. Her pupils
had expanded. A pleasure reaction. But then her eyes had narrowed,
and she had drawn away. Of course: she was conflicted.
“Destroying . . .”
“There will be natural gas pipelines in the basement. If you were
to fill some of the sublevels with that gas and ignite a spark, it would
very likely collapse the entire structure.”
“Like . . .”
“Like what, Sadie?” He knew like what. He had a pretty good idea
what was being done to her. He could guess Lear’s direction. But he
wanted Sadie to say it.
“Like the World Trade Center. Like 9/11”
“Yes,” Caligula said. “We could obliterate the building itself. It
would kill everyone inside. Which is what you would want, Sadie.
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BZRK APOCALYPSE
You would
want
all the scientists in there to die. It would set back
nanobot technology several years at least. It would be the practical
end of Armstrong Fancy Gifts. By the time they recovered, someone
else would have developed the same capacity. Someone perhaps a bit
less . . . visionary?”
There was a TV on over the bar. It showed what every screen in
the world was showing: the Nobel madness. Cut to the American
president’s suicide. Back to the Nobel madness. Cut to the Brazilian
president.
Plath was shaking her head. “No.”
“If you destroy the servers and let the scientists walk away—”
“It’s not just scientists in that building. There are regular people.
Clerks and janitors and people who just answer the phones.” She was
pleading with him to find a different answer.
“It would be mass murder. It would make you one of the great-
est terrorists in history.” He watched her eyes. She was repelled. She
was sickened. But she was not surprised. So that idea had definitely
already occurred to her.
And she did not get up and walk away.
Jesus Christ
, Caligula thought, this
is the new way, the new real-
ity.
Sixteen-year-old girls could be made into terrorists. They could
be wired for mass murder.
Plath, for her part, could see it in her imagination. She could see
that phallic monstrosity of a building collapsing into the fire that
raged at its base.
My God
, she thought,
it
could
be done
.
“We can’t do that,” she said. To emphasize her point, she reached
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MICHAEL GRANT
most of the way across the table and pounded it with her index finger.
“There have to be limits. There’s a line.”
“Do there? Is there?”
The table was lacquered wood. To Keats’s biot eyes, it was a bit
like an aerial map of someplace like Afghanistan. There were steep,
deep valleys below formed by the grain of the wood. But filling in
those valleys was the smooth lacquer finish. The result was a feel-
ing like skimming along over mountains, flying at the height of the
peaks.
The great problem with biots moving over large dis-
tances—distances measured in centimeters or meters rather than
millimeters—was finding your way. A biot’s view of the macro world
was fuzzy and distorted.
Caligula felt safe on his side of the table. There were two feet
separating his arm, resting on the edge of the table, from Plath’s arm
on the opposite side. A long run for a biot, and worse, a hard target
to keep track of. Then there was the wall of water left by Caligula’s
deliberate dragging of his beer.
But Plath, too, had been playing games with the tabletop. Seem-
ingly fidgeting pensively, Plath had picked up the saltshaker, picked at
some dried-on food, then put it down on the table.
She put it down toward the far left end of Caligula’s water obstacle.
From the point of view of Keat’s biot the saltshaker was the Tower
of Babel and the Empire State Building all rolled into one. He saw it as
a distant shape, a feature of the landscape like some impossibly sym-
metrical mountain.
He saw it from there. But he also saw it through the tap he’d
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placed on Plath’s eye using his other biot. One of Plath’s own biots
was standing beside him there. Plath made her biot tap Keats’s crea-
ture and make a gesture meant to convey going around the saltshaker.
Biots could not speak to each other, so this was a primitive but effec-
tive way to convey basic signals.
On the table surface Keats’s other biot rolled farther left, mov-
ing at top speed, racing to get around the saltshaker and avoid being
slowed by the water.
Had Caligula noticed? That would be the question.
Keats cleared the saltshaker tower. He spotted the wall of water
off to his right but was well clear of it. Ahead, far in the distance, was
a wall of indeterminate color.
Keats’s first biot, K1—the one inside Plath’s brain—turned awk-
wardly to Plath’s P2 and made a gesture using two claws meant to
convey that he was closing in.
In the macro Plath was dragging the conversation out to give
Keats time.
Caligula drained the last of his beer and set the glass down just
behind the saltshaker.
Deliberate?
Plath’s P2 looked at Keats’s K1. A body shake that was the equiva-
lent of a headshake.
No, that didn’t get me.
But it had been close, very close. The glass—a rainbow-swirling
object so big it looked a bit like some rainbow-hued desert mesa—
came crashing down out of the sky. It sent vibration and water
droplets in all directions. One of them, an Olympic pool of water,
crashed behind him as he sped on.