containers from ocean freighters at the nearby Potomac Docks, gracefully transferring the air-gel crates to waiting cargo-zeppelins for the journey cross continent. A deceptively graceful, swaying dance that propelled the engines of commerce.
The passenger terminal-dwarfed by comparison to those giants-seemed to beckon with a promise of safety. But indicators showed that it still lay ten minutes away.
A glance at spec-telltales showed Tor that, indeed, the group mind was doing its best. Shouting alarm toward every official protective service, from Defense to Homeworld Security. Individual members were lapel-grabbing friends and acquaintances, while smart-mob attendance levels climbed into five figures, and more. At this rate, surely the professionals would be taking heed. Any minute now.
“Too slow,” she said, watching the figures with a sinking heart. Each second that it took to get action from the Protector Caste, the perpetrators of this scheme would also grow aware that the
Speaking of the perps, Tor wondered aloud.
“What can they be hoping to accomplish?”
One problem with a smart-mob. The very same traits that multiplied intelligence could also make it seem dispassionate. Insensitive. Individual members surely felt anguish and concern over Tor’s plight. She might even access their messages, if she had time for commiseration.
But pragmatic help was preferable. She kept to the group mind level.
“
“Enough!” Tor cut in. Almost a minute had passed since realization of danger and the issuance of a clamor. And so far, no one had offered anything like a practical suggestion.
“Don’t forget that I’m here, now. We have to do something.”
“CUT THE TOWING CABLE.
(Emergency release in gondola. Reachable in four minutes.
Risk: possible interference from staff. Ineffective at saving the zeppelin/passengers.)
“PERSUADE ZEP COMPANY TO COMMENCE EMERGENCY VENTING PROCEDURES.
(Communication in progress. Response so far: obstinate refusal…)
“PERSUADE ONBOARD STAFF TO COMMENCE EMERGENCY VENTING PROCEDURES.
(Attempting communication despite company interference…)
“PERSUADE COMPANY TO ORDER PASSENGER EVACUATION.
(Communication in progress. Response so far: obstinate refusal…)
“UPGRADE CLAMOR. CONTACT PASSENGERS. URGE THEM TO EVACUATE.
(Risks: delay, disbelief, panic, injuries, fatalities, lawsuits…)”
The list of suggestions seemed to scroll on and on. Rank-ordered by plausibility-evaluation algorithms, slanted by urgency, and scored by likelihood of successful outcome. Individuals and subgroups within the smart-mob split apart to urge different options with frantic vehemence. Her specs flared, threatening overload.
“Oh, screw this,” Tor muttered, reaching up and tearing them off.
The real world-unfiltered. For all of its paucity of layering and data-supported detail, it had one special trait.
At that moment, the zep crew attendant arrived. He rounded the final corner of a towering gas cell, coming into direct view-no longer a shadowy authority figure, warped and refracted by the tinted polymer membranes. Up close, it turned out to be a small man, middle-aged and clearly frightened by what his own specs had started telling him. All intention to arrest or detain Tor had evaporated before he made that turn. She could see this in his face, as clearly as if she had been monitoring vital signs.
WARREN, said a company nametag.
“Wha-what can I do to help?” he asked in a hoarse whisper.
Though hired for gracile weight and people skills, the fellow clearly possessed some courage. By now he knew what filled many of the slim, green-tinted membranes surrounding them both. And it didn’t take a genius to realize the zep company was unlikely to help, during the time they had left.
“Tool kit!” Tor held out her hand.
Warren fumbled at his waist pouch. Precious seconds passed as he unfolded a slim implement case. Tor found one promising item-a vibrocutter.
“Keyed to your biometrics?”
He nodded. Passengers weren’t allowed to bring anything aboard that might become a weapon. This cutter would respond to his personal touch and no other. It required not only a fingerprint, but volition-physiological signs of the owner’s will.
“You must do the cutting, then.”
“C-cutting…?”
Tor explained quickly.
“We’ve got to vent this ship. Empty the gas
A shaky nod. She could tell Warren was getting online advice, perhaps from the zep company. More likely from the same smart-mob that she had called into being. She felt strong temptation to put her own specs back on-to link-in once more. But she resisted. Kibitzers would only slow her down right now.
“It might work…,” said the attendant in a frightened whisper. “But the reffers will realize, as soon as we start-”
“They realize now!” She tried not to shout. “We may have only moments to act.”
Another nod. This time a bit stronger, though Warren was shaking so badly that Tor had to help him draw the cutter from its sleeve. She steadied his hand.
“We must slice through a helium bag in order to reach the big hydro cell,” he said, pressing the biometric- sensitive stud. Reacting to his individual touch, a knife edge of acoustic waves began to flicker at the cutter tip, sharper than steel. A soft tone filled the air.
Tor swallowed hard. That flicker resembled a hot flame.
“Pick one.”
They had no way to tell which of the greenish helium cells had been refilled, or what would happen when the cutter helped unite gas from neighboring compartments. Perhaps the only thing accomplished would be an early detonation. But even that had advantages, if it messed up the timing of this scheme.
One lesson you learned early nowadays: It simply made no sense, any longer, to rely for perfect safety upon a flawless professional protective caste. The police and military, the bureaucrats, and intelligence services. No matter how skilled and sophisticated they might grow, with infinite tax dollars to spend on advanced instrumentalities, they could still be overwhelmed, or cleverly bypassed. Human beings, they made mistakes. And when that happened,