Cerberus: A WOLF IN THE FOLD (33 page)

BOOK: Cerberus: A WOLF IN THE FOLD
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"All right," Laroo began, "you win this round. We contacted five of the top psychs in the area, including your own, and two out of five agreed with you while the other three weren't sure. All things considered, I can't take the chance on you right now. I also toyed with the idea of replacing your wife—a very simple procedure, really."

 
I tensed, but said nothing.

 
"However," he continued, "Dumonia said that doing so would eventually turn you into a suicidal assassin of the first rank, which would mean killing you immediately. It's still an attractive idea—and you might consider that you won't know if and when I decide to do it —but I won't for now. The fact is, your kind of mind comes along all too seldom around
here,
and your type is one I find fascinating and useful."

 
"Aside from the fact that if you replaced Dylan I'd know the first time we swapped minds, assuming I survived the swap."

 
He sighed. "Yes, that
is
the compelling reason. See what I mean? You think right. And because you think right, I'm inclined to give you a chance. I'm inclined to let you try."

 
I relaxed. Second big hurdle crossed.
"When?"

 
"As soon as possible," he told me. "Ordinarily I'd take this up at the semiannual meeting of the Lords of the Diamond, which is the day after tomorrow, but with Kreegan gone I can no longer afford the luxury of committee decisions.
He
usually made them, anyway. I will, however, bring the matter up at the time." He rose, as if to dismiss me.

 
"My wife," I reminded him.
"The down payment."

 
He hesitated,
then
sighed.
"Very well.
Call Dumonia when you get back to shore. I'll arrange things through him. Get it done quickly. But the psych commands and network remain. You understand that?
And the credit dependency.
If she tries to get out of the motherhood again, I'll fix it so she'll beg for mercy—and you, too. Also, her life as well as yours is in your hands as of now.
One
cross,
one
little slip by either of you,
one
thing going even slightly off—even if it's something beyond your doing or control—and both of you won'rbe dead, but you'll wish you were. You understand?"

 
I nodded seriously, noting the vicious undertone in his voice. It was an edge, a
very
slight chilling
undertone, that
had been absent before. I realized suddenly that I was facing the real Wagant Laroo, although I hadn't the first time, and I felt the odds tilt very slightly back to me. I could recognize him if I was careful.
Could pick him out in his room full of doubles.
Those others, that first one, were damned good actors, but the kind of emotional undertone here had to be, I felt, unique to the real "one.

 
Bogen suddenly paled as a worthy opponent' in my eyes. I could see him shrink into insignificance in my mind, a minor-league security chief. Wagant Laroo was the most chillingly dangerous human being I had ever met. I never doubted for a second his threat, or his ability to make good on it.

 

 

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN - Creative Psych and Proposition Time

 

 

"I still can't believe you managed it," Dylan told me on the way over to Dumonia's. "My God, Qwin! In one year you've come here, framed a big shot, become a company president, wormed your way into a high-level security project, and now you've even managed to get a judgment reversed—a judgment not too many months old!"

 
I nodded and smiled, but that dark edge that came in when things were underway and out of control was
irrepressible,
"Still, we're only halfway home. The trickiest parts are yet to come, and this guy Laroo really bothers me. Dylan, I looked at him and I knew real fear, real danger. These Four Lords are the best of their kind, an ultimate evolutionary type. The whole Warden Diamond concept was the dumbest thing the Confederacy ever accomplished. I see that now. They put the absolute best, most brilliant criminal psychopaths together on one spot. The survivor of such struggles has to be the perfection of their kind—thoroughly brilliant, totally amoral,
totally
ruthless. He thought of every way to screw me up just while I was sitting there, and I think he knows, or at least suspects, what I'm up to."

 
"But you talked yourself out of his traps," she pointed out, "and he went along wjth you. If he's
that
good, why did he?"

 
"I think I know. Consider his position. His biggest weakness is his fear that at any moment his enormous and growing power may be snuffed out. It was already a fear before, but now that one of the Four Lords is gone, it has become an obsession. He has the best minds on Cerberus working on his ultimate solution—including Merton, who may be one of the best minds in that area, period. And they can't crack it. He
needs
Project Phoenix. So even figuring on a double-cross of some kind, he's willing to let me go ahead anyway. He has no choice. The only thing he can do is let me go all the way, using Merton and the others to uncover my tricks, in the hopes that I'll still solve the problem for him. It's the ultimate challenge, Dylan. He's betting his ego against mine that he can outfox me before I can outfox him."

 
"You're sure he knows you're planning something?"

 
I nodded. "He knows. Like Bogen said, you get a gut feeling, pro to pro. Like the gut feelings you relied on most heavily in the bork hunts. He knows simply because of the bottom line. Once I deliver, he has everything to fear from me and nothing to gain by keeping me around. We both understand that. He knows I'll have to pull something, and he is betting he can figure it out. That's why the free leash right jiow, the giving in to my conditions. It doesn't matter—as long as I deliver the goods."

 
She looked at me.
"Can
you deliver?"

 
I shrugged. "I haven't the slightest idea. That'll be up to Otah and my brother and Krega and those above
him.
In the end, I have to bet on their being able to come up with the solution to the problem."

 
She just nodded and turned and looked back out the window of the helicab.

 
Soon we arrived at Dumonia's offices and were quickly ushered hi. Laroo had wasted no
tim^
in setting all this up, since he saw assassins in every corner. He was probably right.

 
Dumonia, too, seemed impressed. While Dylan was off with the thirteen judges assembled on Laroo's orders just for this purpose, we sat, relaxed, and talked. I liked Dumonia, although I didn't trust him.

 
"Well, so you blew the lid off your cover," he noted casually.

 
I nodded.
"Why not?
It was always shaky anyway.

 
And frankly, if
you
knew, it'd eventually get out in any event."

 
He winced. "Am I
that
disreputable?"

 
"For all I know, you're exactly what you seem to be. Or you
could
be Wagant Laroo himself. On this world, who can tell?"

 
He found the idea amusing. "That's the most common problem we face, you know, here on Cerberus.
Paranoia.
Fear of who's who. It's the thing that keeps the people in line. We have a really nasty element in our population, courtesy of the Confederacy, but it takes something like that to keep us as peaceful and relatively crime-free as we are.
That and the threat of a judgment, or death, if caught.
I suspect that that's why I love this place so much. Think of the
business/"

 
I
had thought a lot about Svarc Dumonia over the past several weeks, and had been extra careful even in choosing him. The man was a total contradiction—a totally amoral, cynical person with criminal tendencies in the mass and abstract sense, yet totally devoted to helping and curing his individual patients.

 
"Just your idea that I might be Laroo is a good example," he said. "Total paranoia reigns. But I'm
not
Laroo. I couldn't ever
be
Laroo, for the very simple reason that I hate governments. I hate
all
institutions, from the Confederacy to the Cerberan government to the local medical society.
Organized anthills, all of 'em.
Designed to stifle and straitjacket the -individual human spirit, and doing a damned good job as well. Religions are just as bad, maybe worse.
Dogma.
You have to believe this; you ' have to behave like that. Run around wasting time in silly rituals instead of being productive. You know we have a hundred and seventy different faiths in Medlam alone? Everything from the Catholic Church and Orthodox Judaism—consider the problems with sex changing, circumcision, and the rest
they
face in our changeable world—to local nut cults that believe the gods are sleeping inside Cerberus and will awaken to take us to the Millennium someday."

 
"You're an anarchist, then."

 
"Oh, I suppose. A comfortable, upper-class anarchist

 
a
sort, wearing tailored suits and having a seaside resort home I can get to in my private flier. That's where the old philosophers went wrong, you know. Anarchism isn't the way for the masses. Hell, they
want
to be led, or they wouldn't keep tolerating and creating all these new bureaucratic institutions' to tell them what to think.
It's an individual" philosophy.
You compromise, becoming as much of an anarchist as you can without worrying about man in the collective. The only thing you can do in the collective sense is to shake them up periodically, give 'em a revolutionary kick in the pants. It never lasts—it creates its own dogmas and bureaucracies. But the'shake-up is healthy. When the Confederacy got so institutionalized that even a little revolt here and there was impossible, that's when dry rot set in."

 
I began to see where he was heading. "And you think I'm a local revolutionary?"

 
"Oh, you'll probably get your fool head blown off, but maybe you'll give 'em a kick. Eventually you'll become what you destroy even if you succeed, but then some new smart ass will come along and do the same to you. It'll keep the juices flowing for the long run."

 
I accepted that. I
liked
-Dumonia, although not necessarily all that he said or believed. I certainly couldn't see myself as another Laroo and said so.

 
"But you
are,"
he responded. "You told me you felt real apprehension and fear when you met him. Know why? Because you looked at Laroo and knew, deep down, that you were looking at yourself.
Knew that you were looking straight into the eyes of somebody whose mind worked just like yours."
<

 
"I don't worship power." ^

 
"Because you've never had that degree of power, so you can't really imagine what it might do to you. But you
do
love it. Every time you took on an opponent, a system, something, and won, you exercised power and demonstrated your mastery over those people, that system."

 
"I hope not. I sincerely hope you're wrong. But tell you what. In the incredibly unlikely event that I ever get to be Lord of Cerberus, I'll continue to see you often just to have you kick me in the rear.
How's that?"

 
He^ didn't laugh. "No, you won't. You won't like, or will choose not to believe, what I tell you, and you'll eventually grow sick of it. I
know.
You see, twenty years ago I had almost this identical conversation with Wagant Laroo."

 
"What!"

 
He nodded. "I've seen 'em come and go. I helped put him in, and I'll help put
you
in if I can, but nothing will change."

 
"How do you stay alive, Doc?"

 
He grinned.
"My little secret.
But remember, everybody now running this place has at one time or another been a patient of mine."

 
"Including me," I muttered, more to myself than him. I suddenly realized that here in this office was truly the smartest, most devious man on Cerberus—and oddly, not one to be feared, at least yet. Dumonia could have been Lord any time he wanted, but he didn't want it
Running
a place was against his religion.

 
"Well, let's get on to more direct matters," I suggested, feeling more and more uncomfortable. "You said that if Dylan were out of judgment you might
effect
a complete cure. Well, that's going to be the case. Now, what needs to be done?"

 
He assumed a more professional tone. "Frankly, the easiest thing to do is to stop here and let it ride.
The safest, too.
She's quite a bit better now. She knows who she is and what she is and understands herself pretty well. Most of her old personality is back, and some of the confidence, too. The remaining block is that she's scared .deep down of losing you. If not now, then years down the pike. Not by violence, which seems likely—she could accept that, I think. She lived with friends and co-workers dying for five years. But, well, losing your
heart,
so to speak. There's really only one way to show her it's a groundless fear, and it involves tremendous risk to both of you."

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