‘I’m a man of simple tastes.’
‘But you know what you like.’
Dreyfus smiled slightly. ‘I saw that sculpture you were working on — the big one with the face.’
‘And what did you think of it?’
‘It unsettled me.’
‘It was meant to. Perhaps you’re not a man of such simple tastes as you think.’
Dreyfus studied her for several moments before speaking. ‘You appear to be taking the matter of your death quite lightly, Delphine.’
‘I’m not dead.’
‘I’m investigating your murder.’
‘As well you should — a version of me has been killed. But the one that counts — the one that matters to me now — is the one talking to you. As difficult as it may be for you to accept, I feel completely alive. Don’t get me wrong: I want justice. But I’m not going to mourn myself.’
‘I admire the strength of your convictions.’
‘It’s not about conviction. It’s about the way I feel. I was raised by a family that regarded beta-level simulation as a perfectly natural state of existence. My mother died in Chasm City, years before I was born from a cloned copy of her womb. I only knew her from her beta-level, but she’s been as real to me as any person I’ve ever known.’
‘I don’t doubt it.’
‘If someone close to you died, would you refuse to acknowledge the authenticity of their beta-level?’
‘The question’s never arisen.’
She looked sceptical. ‘Then no one close to you — no one with a beta-level back-up — has ever died? In
‘I didn’t say that.’
‘Then someone has died?’
‘We’re not here to talk about abstract matters,’ Dreyfus said.
‘I’m not sure I can think of anything less abstract than life and death.’
‘Let’s get back to Dravidian.’
‘I touched a nerve, didn’t I?’
‘Tell me about the Ultras.’
But just as Delphine started speaking — the look on her face said she wasn’t going to answer his question directly — the black outline of a door appeared in the passwall behind her. The white surface within the outline flowed open enough to admit the stocky form of Sparver, then resealed behind him.
‘Freeze invocation,’ Dreyfus said, irritated that he’d been disturbed. ‘Sparver, I thought I said that I wasn’t to be—’
‘Had to reach you, Boss. This is urgent.’
‘Then why didn’t you summon me on my bracelet?’
‘Because you’d turned it off.’
‘Oh.’ Dreyfus glanced down at his sleeve. ‘So I did.’
‘Jane told me to pull you out of whatever you were doing, no matter how much you screamed and kicked. There’s been a development.’
Dreyfus whispered a command to return Delphine to storage. ‘This had better be good,’ he told Sparver when the beta-level had vanished. ‘I was close to getting a set of watertight testimonies tying the
‘I don’t think you need to persuade him to hand over the ship.’
Dreyfus frowned momentarily, still irked. ‘What?’
‘It’s already on its way. It’s headed straight for us.’
CHAPTER 6
When Sparver prodded Dreyfus awake, they’d arrived within visual range of the
‘Jane polled on the nukes,’ the hyperpig said. ‘We’re good to go.’
‘What about the harbourmaster?’
‘No further contact with Seraphim, or any other representative of the Ultras. But we do have a shipload of secondary headaches to worry about.’
‘Just when I was starting to get used to the ones we already had.’
‘Headquarters says there’s a storm brewing over Ruskin-Sartorious — the news is beginning to break. Not the full facts — no one else knows exactly which ship was involved — but there are a hundred million citizens out there capable of joining the dots.’
‘Are people starting to work out that Ultras had to be involved?’
‘Definite speculation along those lines. A handful of spectators have noticed the drifting ship and are beginning to think it must be tied to the atrocity.’
‘Great.’
‘In a perfect world, they’d see the ship as evidence that a crime has been committed and that the Ultras have acted with the necessary swiftness, punishing their own.’
Dreyfus scratched at stubble. He needed a shave. ‘But if this was a perfect world, you and I’d be out of a job.’
‘Jane says we have to consider the very real possibility that some parties may attempt unilateral punitive action if they conclude that Ultras were responsible.’
‘In other words, we could be looking at war between the Glitter Band and the Ultras.’
‘I’m hoping no one will be
‘I’m a baseline human.’
‘You’re weird.’
Captain Pell turned away from the console towards them and flipped up his goggles. ‘Final approach now, sir. There’s a lot of debris and gas boiling off, so I suggest we hold at three thousand metres.’
Pell had turned most of the hull transparent, so that the
The ship, Dreyfus realised, was burning from inside.
‘I guess we’re seeing what passes for justice in Ultra circles,’ Sparver said.
‘They can call it what they like,’ Dreyfus snapped back. ‘I asked for witnesses, not a shipload of charred corpses.’ He turned to Pell. ‘How long until it hits the edge of the Glitter Band?’
‘Four hours and twenty-eight minutes.’
‘I told Jane we’d destroy it three hours before it reaches the outer habitat orbit. That gives us ninety minutes’ grace. How are the nukes coming along?’