the Noise Within (2010) (43 page)

BOOK: the Noise Within (2010)
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She wore a figure-hugging dress, black and expertly tailored, ending just above the knee and boasting a slit which exposed thighs as shapely as her calves. Her skin looked as pale as new-fallen snow, suggesting that wherever she came from they didn't see much natural sunlight.

All this he registered in two quick glances, before looking down once more and getting back to what he was there for: drinking and brooding.

Yet he was fully conscious of her presence as she lifted herself smoothly onto one of the stools near him. Being one of New Paris's swankier drinking holes, even the bar stools were elegant affairs, each composed of four sweeping rods of chrome which emerged from splayed feet and then curved upward to end in scroll-like curls that supported the seat proper. And what a seat. Mock leather skins stuffed with smart foam which moulded itself to your shape, constantly refiguring as you fidgeted or adjusted your balance, even responding to changes as slight as your leaning forward to pick up a drink.

The girl gave an "Oh!" of surprise and Leyton couldn't help but smile, knowing full well why. Their eyes met and she smiled in return.

"This'll take some getting used to."

A sweet, young voice. He couldn't place the accent; her pronunciation was crisp, precise, perhaps even a little old fashioned.

"I know. It feels as though someone's caressing your buttocks, doesn't it?"

She laughed, appearing to be caught off-guard and perhaps even a little shocked by his candour. "Yes, it feels exactly like that!"

"May I buy you a drink?" The words slipped out automatically, his commitment to an evening of solitary introspection crumbling like so much piled sand overrun by the waves.

She hesitated as if wary, but only for a breath or two, before smiling and nodding. "Thank you."

"What would you like?"

She shook her head and shrugged. "I've just arrived. No idea what one's expected to drink here, so why don't you surprise me?"

He thought for a moment and then ordered her a cocktail, not too bitter, not too sweet; a drink constructed around vodka and two very different citrus fruits, with a dash of Xanashu - a liqueur from Minos III which he'd developed a taste for a few years back - and crowned with a sprinkling of delphy seeds, which sank slowly through the drink, lending it a bitter hint but also making it sparkle enticingly.

The girl took a tentative sip, looked up at him, smiled and then took a longer one. "Mmm... this is good," she said. "Well chosen."

"Glad you like it. I'm Jim, by the way."

"Kethi. Pleased to meet you, Jim."

Kethi
? That rang a bell, but he couldn't quite place why. Someone he'd known in the past? He didn't think so. Someone he'd heard about perhaps. "Unusual name," was all he said.

"Do you mean unusual in a good way or a bad way?"

He smiled. "Oh, in a good way, I reckon."

"That's all right, then." She turned her attention back to the drink. "What do they call this, again?"

"A Star Fall."

"Ah, because of the delphy seeds. Very apt." She took another sip. "I'd order this again, no question."

He noted her casual recognition of the delphy seeds. Hardly a momentous feat but at the same time they weren't common. His respect for her went up a notch. He was growing increasingly intrigued by this strange, pale, elfin-faced girl.

"So what do you do?"

"Several things, to be honest, but I suppose basically I'm an analyst."

"A human analyst? I thought we had computers and AIs to do that sort of thing these days?"

Her smile this time was a little thin, as if she'd heard similar responses often enough to be tired of them. "You're right of course. Computers are far swifter and more efficient at sifting data than we are, but they can't intuit. They can't make leaps of logic and extract meaning from the faintest of hints and scattered clues in the same way a human can, so there's still room for us organics in the analytical game."

"Really?" It made sense when she put the argument like that, but he had never considered it before. "That's fascinating."

She snorted. "You think? Try sitting on your jacksie sifting data for days on end. I promise you, the fascination would soon wear off."

He laughed. "I'm sure you're right."

The evening wore on and they continued to chat easily. Jim's thoughts were turning towards where the evening might end up with a bit of luck, when he asked the wrong question.

"So what brings you to New Paris?" It seemed an innocent enough thing to say.

"Believe it or not, I've got a message to deliver to someone."

He stared at her. "And that's it?"

"That's it."

"Must be a pretty important message."

"Oh, it is."

"Would it be nosy of me to ask who you're delivering it to?"

"Probably. Is that going to stop you?"

"No," he admitted.

"Well in that case, I'll tell you anyway. It's for you, Jim."

His blood ran cold. "Pardon?"

A setup. He should have guessed - a beautiful girl like this just happening to sit down next to him.

"I'm here especially to see you."

"Well done. You know, I was actually beginning to like you." All gaiety had gone. He was suddenly stone cold sober and all business, all suspicion, all offended anger. "So, why the charade? Why didn't you just come straight out and say your piece?"

"Who said it was a charade? I had to know you really were Jim Leyton, and I had to know you were worthy of receiving the message."

Pretentious, but it piqued his interest again. "And do I pass?"

She smiled. "You do, on both counts."

"Fine; then say what you have to and then get out of here." Out of the bar, out of his life.

"If that's what you want after you've heard me out, then fine; but at least listen first."

He didn't say anything, just glared. Then he nodded - an almost imperceptible bob of the head.

"It's about Mya," the girl said. He froze.
Mya
? "She's in trouble, Jim;
real
trouble, and she needs your help desperately."

He didn't say anything. A dozen reactions chased each other through his thoughts without any of them condensing into words. She stood up, saying into his silence, "I'm going to leave now. If you're interested in helping her, follow me. If you're not, don't, and you'll never see me again. Nor Mya, for that matter. It's up to you."

She turned and walked out. Not hurriedly, not anxiously, but as calm as you like, without once looking back. Leyton watched her cross the room, until she was out the door and gone. Keeping tight rein on his thoughts and his emotions, he pushed the stool back and stood up.

He followed after her.

 

SHINE
Edited By Jetse De Vries

A collection of near-future, optimistic SF stories where some of the genre’s brightest stars and most exciting new talents portray the possible roads to a better tomorrow. Definitely not a plethora of Pollyannas (but neither a barrage of dystopias), SHINE will show that positive change is far from being a foregone conclusion, but needs to be hard fought, innovative, robust and imaginative.

Let´s make our tomorrows SHINE.

 

SOLARIS
[email protected]
www.solarisbooks.com

 

THE AGE OF RA
Eric Brown

The Ancient Egyptian gods have defeated all the other pantheons and claimed dominion over the earth, dividing it into warring factions. Lt. David Westwynter, a British soldier, stumbles into Freegypt, the only place to have remained independent of the gods’ influence. There, he encounters the followers of a humanist leader known as the Lightbringer, who has vowed to rid mankind of the shackles of divine oppression. As the world heads towards an apocalyptic battle, there is far more to this freedom fighter than it seems...

 

SOLARIS
[email protected]
www.solarisbooks.com

 

THE AGE OF ZEUS
James Lovegrove

The Olympians appeared a decade ago, living incarnations of the Ancient Greek gods on a mission to bring permanent order and stability to the world. Resistance has proved futile, and now humankind is under the jackboot of divine oppression. Until former London police officer Sam Akehurst receives an invitation too tempting to turn down: the chance to join a small band of guerrilla rebels armed with high-tech weapons and battlesuits. Calling themselves the Titans, they square off against the Olympians and their ferocious mythological monsters in a war of attrition which some will not survive.

 

SOLARIS
[email protected]
www.solarisbooks.com

 

DARKLORD
Ed Greenwood

Rod Everlar is about to become the most unlikely hero the world of Falconfar has ever seen...

When he mysteriously finds himself drawn into a world of his own devising, writer Rod Everlar is confronted by a shocking truth—he has lost control of his creation to a brooding cabal of evil. In order to save his creation, and himself, he must seize control of Falconfar and halt the spread of corruption before it’s too late.

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