“I don’t employ any other kind.”
“And I don’t employ any other kind of field prefect. I want you to understand that you are appreciated, no matter how… frustrating you must occasionally find your position.”
“I’m perfectly happy with my role in the organisation.”
“I’m glad you feel that way.” There was a lull.
“Tell me something, Jane. Now that we’re having this conversation.”
“Go ahead, Tom.”
“I want you to answer truthfully. I’m going to be poking around under some stones. There may be things under them that bite back. I need to be certain that I have your complete confidence when I go out there to do my job.”
“You have it. Unconditionally.”
“Then there’s no reason for me to think that I might have disappointed you, or underperformed, in my line of work?”
“Why would you feel that way?”
“I sense that I have your confidence. You’ve given me Pangolin clearance, which I appreciate. I’m entitled to sit in with the senior prefects. But I’m still a field, after all these years.”
“There’s no shame in that.”
“I know.”
“If it wasn’t for this… thing on my neck, maybe I’d still be out there as well.”
“Not very likely, Jane. You’d have been promoted out of fieldwork whether you liked it or not. They’d have kept you inside Panoply anyway, where you can be of most benefit to the organisation.”
“And if I’d said no?”
“They’d have thanked you for your opinion and ignored you anyway. People get promoted out of field while they’re still at the top of their game. That’s the way it works.”
“And if I told you I thought the best way for you to serve Panoply was to remain a field prefect?”
“I’m getting old and tired, Jane. I’ve started making mistakes.”
“None that have reached my attention.” She addressed him with sudden urgency, as if she’d been indulging him until then but now it was time to lay down the law.
“Tom, listen to me. I don’t want to hear any more of this. You’re the best we have. I wouldn’t say that if I didn’t mean it.”
“Then I have your confidence?”
“I’ve said it once already. Go and look under as many stones as you want. I’ll be right behind you.”
CHAPTER 9
Ahead, the whiphound was a nervous black squiggle against a brightening red glow. The escort servitor had broken down, but it had given Thalia clear instructions about where she should go. Now she quickened her pace, the cylinder weighing heavily on her wrist, until she emerged into a huge arena-like space. She appeared to be standing on a railed balcony, the opposite wall an easy hundred metres away. The wall was divided into endless boxlike partitions, stacked on many levels, but the blood-red light was too dim for Thalia to see more than that. Above was only inky darkness, with no suggestion of how high the ceiling was. Next to her, the whiphound snapped around agitatedly, sizing up the new space in which it found itself.
“Easy,” she whispered.
“Maintain defence posture one.” That was when a new voice boomed out of nowhere.
“Welcome, Thalia. This is Orson Newkirk speaking. I’m sorry about your tribulations with the servitor.” She raised her own voice in return.
“I can’t see you, Citizen Newkirk.”
“My apologies. It’s spectacularly bad form not to be there to greet your guests, but I haven’t been unplugged in a while and there was a problem with one of my disconnect valves. All fixed now, though. I’m on my way down as I speak. Be with you in a jiffy.”
“On your way down?” she asked, looking up.
“How much do you know about us, Thalia?” he asked, his voice cheerfully playful.
“I know that you stay out of trouble with Panoply,” she said, giving a non-answer that she hoped would mask her ignorance.
“Well, that’s good. At least you haven’t heard anything bad.”
Thalia was getting a crick in her neck.
“Should I have?”
“We have our critics. People who think the level of abstraction we practise here is somehow wrong, or immoral.”
“I’m not here to judge. I’m here to install a software patch.”
She could see something now: a mote of light in the darkness above, descending towards her. As Orson Newkirk came fully into view, Thalia saw that he was contained inside a rectangular glass box, which was being lowered down on a barely visible line. The box wasn’t much larger than a suitcase.
He was a bust, Thalia thought: a human head, half of the upper torso, and nothing else. Nothing below the ribs. No arms, no shoulders. Just a head and a chest, the base of his torso vanishing into a ring-shaped life-support device. A padded framework rose up behind him, supporting the torso, neck and head.
“They say we’re just heads,” Newkirk said chattily.
“They couldn’t be more wrong! Anyone can keep a head alive, but without the hormonal environment of the rest of the body, you don’t get anything remotely resembling the rich texture of human consciousness. We’re creatures of chemistry, not wiring. That’s why we keep as much as possible, while throwing out everything we don’t need. I still have glands, you know. Glands make all the difference. Glands maketh the man.”
“All your glands?” Thalia asked, glancing at the truncated torso.
“Things can be moved around and rerouted, Thalia. Open me up and you’d find a very efficient utilisation of space.”
The box came to a halt with Newkirk’s head level with Thalia’s.
“I don’t understand,” she said, thinking about the echoing, musty spaces she had already walked through.
“Why have you done this to yourself? It can’t be that you need the room.”
“It’s not about room. It’s about resources.” Newkirk smiled at her. He had a young man’s face, not unattractive when one ignored everything else about him. His eyes were white orbs, blank save for a tiny dot of a pupil. They trembled constantly, with the coordinated motion of someone in deep REM sleep.
“Resources?” she asked.
“Funds have to be used in the most efficient manner possible. There are more than a million people living in Sea-Tac. If every single one of them had the mass-energy demands of an adult human, we’d be spending so much money keeping them all fed and watered that we wouldn’t have a penny left over for bandwidth.”
“Bandwidth?” Thalia asked, blearily conscious of where this was heading.
“For abstraction, of course,” Newkirk said, sounding surprised that this wasn’t obvious.
“But there isn’t any. My glasses were dead.”
“That’s because you were outside the participatory core. It’s heavily shielded. We don’t waste a watt broadcasting abstraction where it isn’t needed.” She cut him off.
“Where is everyone, Citizen?”
“We’re all right here.” Lights blazed on, descending in a wave from a vanishing point that appeared to be almost infinitely far above. Thalia saw tier upon tier of compartments, each of which held an identical glass box to the one in which Newkirk resided. There wasn’t room for this inside the habitat, she started to think, before realising that she must be looking along one of the connecting spokes, all the way to the weightless hub.
“Why have you done this to yourselves?”
“That’s not the right question. What you should be asking is, who do I have to kill to join?” She grinned