Technobabel (38 page)

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Authors: Stephen Kenson

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BOOK: Technobabel
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She looked over to where a slightly confused David Hague gave her a quizzical look before leaving the courtroom, no doubt eager to get off the station and back on solid ground.
Sorry,
David,
but
I
didn’t
have
time
to
let
you
in
on
all
of
the
facts,
and
I
wouldn’t
have
even
had
I
had
the
time
.
From
what
Villiers
tells
me,
your
Japanese
friends
are
going
to
be
as
much
trouble
to
us
as
Renraku
.
And
if
push
comes
to
shove,
he’s
not
entirely
convinced
you
can
be
trusted,
and
neither
am
I
.

As Priault left the courtroom, Osborne was now alone in the Rotunda. She couldn’t help but wonder what was next. Fuchi and Renraku would deal with their differences outside of the court, but the
Corporate Court
existed to help negotiate the differences between the megacorporations because direct conflict could lead to open warfare. If Fuchi and Renraku’s troubles escalated, they could flare up into a conflict the court could never prevent in time, not without being dragged into it. There was trouble on the horizon down on Earth, which made Osborne that much gladder she was remaining on board Zurich-Orbital.

Better
to
serve
in
Heaven
than
reign
in
Hell,
she thought, reversing the familiar quote. She would leave the Hell of the surface world to people who already fallen from grace, the shadowrunners and the black operatives who worked in the dirty cracks between the corporations. After all, wasn’t that what they were for?

29

I
am
brother
to
dragons
and
a
companion
to
owls
.
My
skin
is
black
upon
me,
and
my
bones
are
burned
with
heat
.

—Job 30:29-30

In a secret sanctuary in Africa, hidden from the eyes of the world by some of the most sophisticated computer technology known to exist, a pact was being concluded between beings of great power and influence.

Leonardo, master of the place, sat comfortably in a favorite chair behind a magnificently carved wooden desk that would have commanded a small fortune on the open market if any collectors of antiquities knew it existed. Leonardo had once feared he would be forced to sell his precious collection of art and antiques to serve his plans, but his dealings with Renraku had made it unnecessary to part with any of his favorite treasures. The corporation was more than willing to give him billions in exchange for mere scraps and crumbs of the technology Leonardo had at his command.

He was at ease here in his stronghold, and his simple garments showed their quality in the rich texture of the fabrics and the delicate artistry of the stitching. They were made from natural materials worked by hand, worth enough to feed a family in the Rox for a year or more. He slouched a bit in his chair, elbows resting on the table in front of him and fingers steepled in front of his face while he thought.

Across the table, Leonardo’s guest finished examining his collection of drawings and diagrams. She was a feast to his artistic eye. Her features were classic and regal, with a long neck and a face composed of planes and angles, sharp cheekbones and delicately pointed chin. Her hair was unbound and flowed like an auburn waterfall nearly to her waist, and her lips were a delicate shade of cinnamon, while the same spicy scent lingered in the air around her. The entire picture nearly demanded a portrait or a statue to capture her sublime beauty, all the more amazing because Leonardo knew it was only an illusion.

"Well?" he asked after a long moment of silence.

The woman looked up from her examinations. The only flaw in her image was the eyes. They were
a deep
amber, like no human or elven eyes created by nature. They were more like the flat yellow eyes of a reptile, but where a reptile’s eyes were cold, hers were warm, burning with a powerful fire deep inside. Leonardo found those eyes fascinating although he suspected others would find them disquieting.

"Your plans seem to be going well," she said, her tone noncommittal. But Leonardo could see she was intrigued. He had successfully baited the hook. All that remained was to draw in his catch.

He acknowledged the compliment with a slight incline of his head. "The work is difficult," he said, "but not as much as it once was. I have made many, many improvements on the original crude designs over the years.
So many that magic is hardly needed except for the most basic and most delicate work.
The power of machines and programming provides the rest."

"Impressive.
And what of the inhabitants of your masterpiece?"

"That, too, is progressing," he said. "I have been combing the Matrix and compiling information on possible candidates for my community. The best and brightest of humanity will be gathered under the aegis of my shelter when the time comes."

"It must be difficult to choose only a few to survive and leave the rest to their fate," his guest responded.

Leonardo found it a strange thing for her to say. It was almost... compassionate. "It is, but some sacrifices need to be made. These are dangerous times."

The woman nodded sagely. "True. I am still not certain your predictions are accurate," she said. "I have heard whispers in the spirit world telling that the danger you fear may be past for a long time to come, rumors about a great magic to keep the cycle on its natural course."

That statement was more of what Leonardo expected.
The arrogance, the certainty that no one like himself could be right when she had not noticed the danger.

"I am certain, dear lady," Leonard said with a note of irony at the title he offered her. "And if I am wrong, then it is only a matter of time. One cannot cheat Fate, as we both well know."

"True. What you propose has merit," she said. "I have recently considered what role I am to play in this world, or what role Fate has cast me in, perhaps. The death of Dunkelzahn and his legacy to the world have given me much to consider. You and I are rare among our kind, Leonardo, two of the few who are interested in the welfare of others.
You through your work and me through mine.
I hope we might be able to offer more than shelter from the storm to those in need of our gifts."

"Then we have reached an historic moment," Leonardo said, rising from his chair. The woman rose also, taller even than the tall and willowy elf.

"Yes. We can set aside the differences between our peoples and work together for a mutual cause. It is time the ways of the past were considered in light of the future." The woman touched her fingers to her chest just above her heart, and Leonardo returned the gesture.

"Will you join me in a glass of
alamestra
to celebrate our new alliance, Lady?" he asked as he poured some of the iridescent liquor into a crystal goblet.

The woman smiled and shook her head. "No. I must return to my own affairs across the sea. Your cousins near my domain have been restive of late and I do not like the idea of being away for long, with the elves of Tir Taimgire
ratting
their sabers. In the future, it will be best if we communicate through the Matrix."

"That is my preference as well," Leonardo said with a smile. "You can be assured of complete privacy with my network at our disposal. There will be no . . . unfortunate security breaches as there have been in the past with others."

"Indeed?" the woman said with raised brows. "And here I had thought you responsible for them, oh, Master of the Matrix."

"Not I, fair lady," he said with a sweeping bow. "I suspect one of the Children of the Matrix."

"The otaku?
I didn’t think them clever enough.
But no matter.
I look forward to our next meeting, Leonardo."

"As do I, Hestaby." Leonardo touched his fingers to his chest again, and Hestaby returned the gesture before drawing the folds of her robe around her. He then tapped a hidden control panel on the surface of the antique desk, and his servant Salai appeared at the door of the chamber.

"Yes, Master?" Salai said.

"Please escort the Lady Hestaby out, Salai,
then
I will have some instructions for you." The handsome young man bowed deeply and left the chamber with the dragon-lady, leaving Leonardo alone with his thoughts.

His plans were going well. The scraps of advanced technology he fed to his corporate lapdog Renraku had them thoroughly in his power. They had foolishly managed to lose the toys he’d entrusted to them and were now banging on his door with their hands outstretched, begging for more.

And Leonardo planned to give them more once he had secured his plans for the future. The great shelter would be prepared for the coming of the Enemy, and the best and brightest of metahumanity would survive, with Leonardo as their savior. He would even have the pleasure of making an alliance with an old enemy to further the cause.

He took a long draught of the
alamestra,
savoring its spicy taste for a moment before allowing the warmth of the liquor to spread throughout his body. He downed the rest of the glass quickly and poured himself another. He was in the mood for a celebration. Perhaps he would gave Salai other instructions once his assistant finished escorting Hestaby out of the complex, but for now he was content to bask in the glow of his own success.

The elf’s thoughts were interrupted by movement here in his private chambers. A figure materialized out of the shadows in the far corner of the room, cloaked in those same shadows to appear as little more than a silhouette.

Leonardo turned sharply to face the strange intruder.

"Who are you?" he demanded. There were few beings in the world
who
could enter his personal sanctum unbidden and Leonardo’s mind began working through the list of possibilities.

"Why, Leonardo?" the figure said in a deep voice. "Why have you turned your back on the traditions and purpose of your people to pursue this mad course? Why have you interfered in affairs you would have done well to stay out of?"

"I knew this day would come," Leonardo said. "That there would be those who would object to my plans. I have done only what was necessary. They are coming. They are always coming, and there is nothing we can do to prevent it. It is the cycle of nature. When they come, the world will be destroyed and everything slowly built back up over the millennia will be swept away like dust by a giant hand. All that lives will be devoured to feed their endless hunger, or twisted and tortured to create new delicacies of pain to satisfy their jaded palettes." His voice trembled as he recalled those same tortures inflicted on a world he once knew, a world long dead.

The shadowy stranger was unmoved by the tirade. "You have gone too far. You have revealed too much. Your obsession with the life of DaVinci has gone past fondness into madness."

"No!" Leonardo shouted. "DaVinci was brilliant and accomplished more in a mortal life span than others have done in a thousand times that. It is only fitting to acknowledge such a brilliant lifetime when others consider him no more than another brief life among the herd."

"I might have been able to forgive your various ... eccentricities, Leonardo.
Your
playing at savior with humanity, your delusions of artistic greatness, your uneven temper, and your grudge against a religion you consider corrupt. I have tolerated them before. But you have interfered with
me,
and that, I cannot forgive."

"Forgive?" Leonardo said. "What do I need of your forgiveness? I am master here. You can do nothing against me!" He paused for a moment and smiled. "Have you come by yourself or did they send you to kill me? Who was it, Aithne?
Lugh?
All of the High Princes of Tir Tairngire together?
No matter. You can take their dreams of a new elven nation and play at empire-building all you want. You have no chance of overcoming the resources I have at my command here. This is
my
place of power. Show yourself to me before I see you die."

The intruder stepped closer and Leonardo prepared for an attack that did not come. The figure only laughed. "The Princes of Tir Tairngire do not command me. I command
them
. Always must I work to keep my foolish children under
control.
" The figure drew aside the veil of shadow to reveal the features of a man with pale golden eyes and long, white hair swept back from a high forehead above a face whose features seemed carved from stone. They were features Leonardo knew well, even as he knew the name that escaped unbidden from his lips, no more than a whisper. "Lofwyr . . ."

"Yes, Lofwyr.
And I have not appeared here to kill you, little elf," the great dragon continued. "Not all of us strike with tooth and claw, Leonardo, and the venom of my kind is still the most potent there is."

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