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Chaos And Order_ The Gap Into Madness Part 36

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Angus didn't reply; but Morn knew the answer. Her comprehension was as intimate as rape. He didn't stand it. He'd spent his whole life fleeing from himself, running from violence to violence in an obsessed effort to escape his own darkness.

"How?" she repeated. Her voice quivered as if she were hypothermic. "How do you do it?"

Her question was entirely unlike her son's.

Angus understood her. "SOD-CMOS chips don't change state," he recited. "They add state. Physically, they can't be edited. Everybody knows the only way to affect them is, write in a filter that masks some of the data during playback. The data is still there. It just doesn't show.

"But that's useless. The filter shows. It plays back along with the rest of the data. Everybody knows that, too."



Morn s.h.i.+vered as if Angus were sneering at her.

"The trick," he continued inflexibly, "is to write a transparent transparent filter. It shows, but n.o.body sees it because everything else looks normal. But even that's impossible. The chip only filter. It shows, but n.o.body sees it because everything else looks normal. But even that's impossible. The chip only adds adds state. Everything in it is linear. Sequential. Even a transparent filter becomes obvious because it was written after the data it masks. Otherwise the filter wouldn't work." state. Everything in it is linear. Sequential. Even a transparent filter becomes obvious because it was written after the data it masks. Otherwise the filter wouldn't work."

He seemed to pause involuntarily, caught at the cusp of a logic-tree; trapped between UMCP programming and his own desperation. The colder Morn felt, the more his face streamed with sweat. His eyes rolled, giving off glints of yellow.

"Go on," Davies muttered. He sounded out of breath, almost exhausted; strained taut. "Don't stop now."

Abruptly Angus said, "Unless you know how to write a filter that looks exactly like the lattice of the chip itself." His voice sc.r.a.ped like a rusty blade in his throat. "Now it isn't transparent, it's invisible. You can't see it during playback because it's just like the physical chip-and you never see the physical chip. You only see the data."

Morn clasped her arms around herself to contain her s.h.i.+vers, but they were too strong. Long tremors shook her. Her teeth clicked against each other until she clenched them tight.

"I can't do that," Angus told her, "but the Amnion can. Their instruments and coding are that good. All they did was teach me how to use the information."

His eyes oozed need like running sores.

"If my datacore and Bright Beauty's Bright Beauty's were made the same way," he finished, "if the lattice is the same, I can write in a filter to block my priority-codes. Mask them. n.o.body else will be able to give me orders." were made the same way," he finished, "if the lattice is the same, I can write in a filter to block my priority-codes. Mask them. n.o.body else will be able to give me orders."

Full of gelid, s.h.i.+vering detachment, she thought that probably they were were made the same way. The UMCP was humankind's only authorized supplier of SOD-CMOS chips. She couldn't think of any reason why their manufacturing methods might have changed. made the same way. The UMCP was humankind's only authorized supplier of SOD-CMOS chips. She couldn't think of any reason why their manufacturing methods might have changed.

"s.h.i.+t." Davies stared at Angus in horrified fascination: despite his instinctive rejection, he'd been snagged by what Angus proposed. "Can you go deeper? Can you filter the original programming? Subst.i.tute your own?"

Angus shook his head. "No." He treated the question as if it came from Morn. "I don't know what code it's written in. I can only work with data I recognize."

"Like your priority-codes," Davies said for him.

"Like my priority-codes," Angus acknowledged stiffly.

No, Morn groaned to herself. She couldn't do it. It was too much. Absolutely too much. How often had he abused and humiliated her-raped her-hit her? Davies was right: she couldn't set Angus free.

Yet there was one more question she had to ask, in spite of her dismay and the tearing cold. One more crucial detail- "Angus, who knows you can do this?"

Which one of the plotters and counterplotters back at UMCPHQ could have planned for this?

Now he didn't respond. An ice of his own held him frozen. Thronging with supplication arid agony, his gaze clung to hers, but no sound came from his mouth. He'd run into one of his prewritten restrictions, and his zone implants closed his throat. He might have been strangling on words he couldn't say.

Harsh with self-coercion, she rasped, "Isaac, this is Gabriel priority. Answer my question.

"Who knows you can do this?"

A shrug like a spasm shook him. "Warden Dios." He might have been shouting, crying, I'm not your son. I'm not your son. "As far as I know, he's the only one." I "As far as I know, he's the only one." I am not your am not your f.u.c.king f.u.c.king SON! SON! "But he didn't make me explain it. And he said he couldn't tell anyone else. Too dangerous. He used the word 'suicide.' " "But he didn't make me explain it. And he said he couldn't tell anyone else. Too dangerous. He used the word 'suicide.' "

Suicide? Morn paused as if she'd fallen into the still point between one wave of chills and the next. This gambit-giving Angus' priority-codes to Davies, cursing her and her son with the burden of decision-had been set in motion by Warden Dios. But it wasn't aimed at Has.h.i.+ Lebwohl. Or Min Donner. They were his subordinates: they simply weren't strong enough to threaten him. There was only one power in human s.p.a.ce great enough for that.

Only Holt Fasner could destroy the director of the UMCP.

She was in the early stages of zone implant withdrawal. Prolonged doses of cat had postponed the crisis; but now it'd caught up with her, sinking its claws into her nerves, drawing her chills into a high-pitched wail of cold.

Warden Dios had given Davies control over Angus.

Why? What did he want from her son? What did he think Davies could do to save him from the Dragon?

How much more suffering did he think she could survive?

Davies pushed toward her from the rail of the companionway. The small impact as he gripped her shoulders moved her backward, away from Angus. s.h.i.+vers rose against his hands; she trembled as if she were about to shake apart in his grasp.

He brought his face close to hers, forcing his resemblance to his father on her.

"Morn, I keep saying the same thing." His voice was soft and fatal-a whisper like the sound of atmosphere venting to the void. "None "None of this matters. Not of this matters. Not here. here. Not to Not to us. us. We can't guess whose side we're supposed to be on. We don't know whose game this is, or what they want from us. We can't guess whose side we're supposed to be on. We don't know whose game this is, or what they want from us. That That isn't our problem. isn't our problem.

"Our problem is Nick. Nick. We need to get ready for him. We need to get ready for him.

"We don't know when he's coming back. Once he puts Vector to work, he might decide to wait here for the results. Playing with us to pa.s.s the time.

"We can't let him catch us before we're ready."

His fingers dug into her shoulders as if he thought the pressure might stifle her chills.

"Start giving Angus orders," he insisted softly. "Or I'll do it, if you hurt too much. We need to move." move."

Angus didn't argue. Apparently he'd come to the end of his appeal. Sweat beaded on his skin, squeezed out by the pressure of his need, but he stood still, saying nothing, asking nothing.

He wanted Morn to set him free.

All her life she'd been a woman who knew how to hold a grudge. She'd never forgiven her parents for leaving her in the name of their service to the UMCP. Because she was a child then, she'd never forgiven herself. When her mother had died saving Intransigent Intransigent from from Gutbuster Gutbuster, she'd made the decision to be a cop herself, hoping to turn her old, unanswered grievance outward; appease her guilt. That commitment had failed, however, when her gap-sickness had destroyed Starmaster. Starmaster. On some primal level-beyond reason or logic-her guilt had been confirmed. On some primal level-beyond reason or logic-her guilt had been confirmed. Starmaster Starmaster died because she hadn't forgiven her parents. That was the source of her gap-sickness; the flaw in her brain. Welded to her grudge, she'd brought about her parents' deaths. died because she hadn't forgiven her parents. That was the source of her gap-sickness; the flaw in her brain. Welded to her grudge, she'd brought about her parents' deaths.

And then Angus had taken her: the incarnation and apotheosis of the punishment she deserved. She'd turned her grudge against herself with a vengeance. After all the harm she'd done-and all she'd received-she hadn't been able to conceive any way out of her plight except by accepting her zone implant control from Angus and casting in with Nick; by dedicating herself to the profound falsehood of confirming Nick's illusions. She'd disdained rescue so that she would continue to be punished.

But Davies had changed her. Having a child had forced her to step outside her grudges and self-brutalization in order to consider other questions; larger issues. Vector had told her that the cops were corrupt. At the time that information had horrified her. But how was their suppression of Intertech's antimutagen research different from her use of her black box against Nick? Or against herself? If she wanted her life and her son's to be any better than Nick's-or Angus'-she had to begin making decisions of another kind.

As far as I'm concerned, she'd once told Davies, you're the second most important thing in the galaxy. You're my you're the second most important thing in the galaxy. You're my son. son. But the But the first first, the the most most important thing is to not betray my humanity. important thing is to not betray my humanity. And later, when he'd wanted to lock Nick out of And later, when he'd wanted to lock Nick out of Trumpet Trumpet, she'd said like a promise, You're a cop. From now on, I'm going to be a cop myself. We don't do things like that. You're a cop. From now on, I'm going to be a cop myself. We don't do things like that.

Fine sentiments. But they meant nothing if she didn't act on them.

Yet if acting on them meant setting Angus free- s.h.i.+vering in revulsion, she turned the question back on him. Past her son's shoulder, she asked, "Why should we help you? Davies is right-we can find some way to deal with Nick that doesn't get you paralyzed. You'll work for us, you'll have to, you'll take our orders instead of Nick's, and we won't need to be afraid of you all the time." Use him as a tool, the same way Warden Dios and Nick did. Less brutally, perhaps. Or with more subtlety. But still as a tool. A thing. "Why should I think for a second that either of us will be safe with you?"

"Morn!" Davies protested, grinding his fingers into her shoulders and shaking her.

She ignored her son. The necessary focus of her attention was as constricted as Angus'. For the moment nothing mattered except his answer.

"Because I could have stopped you," he said on the heels of Davies' outcry. All trace of belligerence had left his face: only his need remained, naked and pure.

"Bulls.h.i.+t!" Davies flung away from Morn, wheeled to face Angus. "You couldn't stop anything. You were beaten beaten, Nick beat beat you, you didn't have any choices you, you didn't have any choices left. left. You would have sold him your soul to keep yourself alive, but he didn't give you the chance. You handed her the control and let her go"-his fists lashed the air-"because there was You would have sold him your soul to keep yourself alive, but he didn't give you the chance. You handed her the control and let her go"-his fists lashed the air-"because there was nothing else you could do!" nothing else you could do!"

Angus shook his head as if his neck were breaking. Still he spoke only to Morn.

"I could have proved I was framed. I knew about Nick's link with Com-Mine Security. I could have traced the link to Milos. All I had to do was say something, and Security would have stopped you. You and Nick. Even if they didn't believe me, they would have stopped you. Until they learned the truth. Then you were finished.

"That link was real. It would nail Milos. And he would sell anything to save himself. Maybe they would have executed me-if I couldn't bargain with them-but I would have taken you and Nick down with ms.

"But I didn't. And I didn't do it later, after you were gone. I didn't defend myself at all. Not even to save Bright Beauty." Bright Beauty." Dumb pain ached in his eyes. "I let them do whatever they wanted to me. So they wouldn't go after Nick. So you could get away." Dumb pain ached in his eyes. "I let them do whatever they wanted to me. So they wouldn't go after Nick. So you could get away."

He surprised her; almost shocked her. For a heartbeat or two the cold let go of her, allowing her to concentrate.

"Why?"

Why did you care?

His voice dropped until she could barely hear him. "Because I made a deal with you." He sounded incongruously vulnerable, like a wounded child. "I gave you the zone implant control. You let me live. And I kept my end. Whether you kept yours or not."

In a small, sore whisper, he admitted as if he were laying bare his heart, "When I hurt you, I hurt myself."

"Angus," Davies began harshly, "G.o.d d.a.m.n it-" But then his protest trailed away. He seemed to have no words for what he felt. With his back to Morn, he stood as if he were huddling into himself, crouching against a pain he couldn't understand.

She put her hand on his shoulder. When she felt his muscles knotting under the strange fabric of his s.h.i.+psuit, she knew what she had to do.

She had to make this decision; make it now and act on it. Warden Dios had sent it to her son, but it didn't belong to him.

He'd been force-grown with her mind, but he wasn't her. her. His father was part of him as well. And he was caught between them-between his memory of her pain and his recognition of Angus'. Anger was his only defense. When it failed, he was lost. His father was part of him as well. And he was caught between them-between his memory of her pain and his recognition of Angus'. Anger was his only defense. When it failed, he was lost.

This decision was beyond him.

She, on the other hand- You're the second most important thing in the galaxy. You're my son. son.

She was the woman Angus had raped and degraded. Whether he knew it or not, he'd given her the right to choose his doom.

But the first first, the the most most important thing is to not betray my humanity. important thing is to not betray my humanity.

Everything she'd learned came to this: revenge was too expensive. Humankind couldn't afford it.

Deliberately she set a lifetime of grudges and self-punishment aside.

"We'll do it," she told Angus, although her voice nearly stuck in her throat, and the hammering of her heart brought her chills up again with redoubled force. "We'll trust you."

More for Davies' benefit than for Angus', she added, "It's not just you. We'll trust whoever wrote your core programming." s.h.i.+vering like the d.a.m.ned. "I think it was Warden Dios. I think he's trying to find some way to fight Holt Fasner. And if he is, I think we should help him."

s.h.i.+vering as if the cold had become metaphysical-a tremor of the soul which only incidentally affected her body.

Nevertheless she finished, "We're cops. We don't use use people." people."

Angus began to clench and unclench his fists while his mouth slowly pulled back into a feral grin.

She started to weep as soon as Davies turned and put his arms around her.

NICK.

Nick Succorso walked in the light g of the Lab's asteroid like he was riding a cloud. He was elevated by triumph, nearly giddy with aspiration. Hungers which had hag-ridden his life were about to be fed; were were being fed. being fed. Trumpet Trumpet had become had become his. his. For reasons which meant nothing to him and didn't interest him, Warden Dios had given him his own pet cyborg. Mikka and Vector were stuck taking his orders. Soon he would possess an effectively limitless supply of UMCPDA's mutagen immunity drug-all the wealth he would ever need. Morn herself was For reasons which meant nothing to him and didn't interest him, Warden Dios had given him his own pet cyborg. Mikka and Vector were stuck taking his orders. Soon he would possess an effectively limitless supply of UMCPDA's mutagen immunity drug-all the wealth he would ever need. Morn herself was his his as surely as as surely as Trumpet Trumpet and Angus, ripe to be hurt. and Angus, ripe to be hurt.

And Soar Soar was here, Sorus Chatelaine was was here, Sorus Chatelaine was here. here.

His heart and head were so full that they seemed to lift him from step to step, almost carrying him off his feet. He could hardly keep track of the deck.

With Mikka and Vector at his shoulders, Sib and Pup behind him, he left Trumpet's Trumpet's airlock to enter the access pa.s.sage which led into Deaner Beckmann's installation. airlock to enter the access pa.s.sage which led into Deaner Beckmann's installation.

Mikka glared murderously past her bandage, but Vector had perfected his look of mild calm, and his face showed nothing. As for Sib and Pup, Nick didn't give a s.h.i.+t what they thought or felt. He intended to sacrifice them in any case. Get even with them for daring to turn against him. Only Vector truly mattered. Mikka was just cover. And he'd made sure that she didn't know Soar Soar was in. She wouldn't interfere because she wouldn't be able to guess his intentions. was in. She wouldn't interfere because she wouldn't be able to guess his intentions.

The pa.s.sage was featureless: a straight concrete corridor toward another airlock, lit by long, flat fluorescents which flickered as if their power source were unstable. Nick didn't see any scan fields and detection sensors. The Lab relied on other defenses, and he'd already pa.s.sed most of them.

Bouncing to the interior lock, he thumbed the intercom and announced, "Captain Succorso. We're here. Sorry to keep you waiting." He glanced backward to confirm that Trumpet Trumpet had resealed herself, then added, "My s.h.i.+p's lock is tight." The installation didn't need to hear this from him. Routine dock communications covered such points as a matter of safety. Nevertheless he always checked. "You can let us in." had resealed herself, then added, "My s.h.i.+p's lock is tight." The installation didn't need to hear this from him. Routine dock communications covered such points as a matter of safety. Nevertheless he always checked. "You can let us in."

"Thanks, Captain." The response suggested stifled impatience. "Stand by. We're opening now."

Servos hummed. A small gasp of air equalized the slight pressure differential. Then the airlock irised, letting Nick and his people into the warmer light of Beckmann's domain.

The lock admitted them to a room like a holding area-the Lab's version of Reception. It seemed full, almost crowded. Nick counted six guards in addition to three women and two men in labsuits-an entire reception committee.

The guards carried impact pistols. And they all sported prostheses of various kinds-scanners, communications gear, augmented limbs, and, presumably, concealed weapons. To that extent, they might have been transplanted here from Billingate. But the fact that they lived in a world substantially unlike the Bill's showed in their eyes, which were clear of the complex haze of chemical dependencies: stim or cat, nerve-juice or pseudoendorphins. Most of the surgery which they'd undergone was probably voluntary. In certain ways they were more dangerous than the men and women who'd served the Bill.

Nick didn't recognize any of the women in labsuits. He'd ignored the women the last time he was here: in his experience, women who dedicated themselves to research and labs were usually too ugly to live; certainly too ugly to notice. But he knew one of the men by sight.

Deaner Beckmann: the founder, driving force, and embodiment of the Lab in person.

Either Vector's name or Nick's hints had struck sparks in high places.

The director of the Lab was a short, squat man who looked even shorter and thicker because of the way he seemed to hunch into himself as if he was trying to increase his ma.s.s by an act of will. He alone might have been on drugs. His researchers projected alertness or subservience to varying degrees, but he had an air of being distracted and driven, almost frightened, as if he were crazed by dreams which were in danger of failing.

Gravitic tissue mutation, Nick snorted to himself. No wonder the man looked like he was losing his mind. If Beckmann wanted to live in a black hole, all he had to do was find one and let go. That would f.u.c.king cure him.

Nevertheless Nick kept his contempt private. As far as he was concerned, the more s.p.a.ces.h.i.+t crazy Beckmann was, the better. It would make the scientist easier to outmaneuver.

In any case Beckmann may have simply been concerned about the nearly subliminal unsteadiness which afflicted his lighting like an electron palsy.

"I'm Captain Succorso," Nick announced with a cheerful smile to the whole group. "Thanks for letting us in." Disingenuously he added, "I don't think you'll regret it."

"Captain Succorso, I'm Dr. Beckmann." In contrast to his anxious expression, his voice was clipped and decisive; impervious to doubt. "Forgive the guards. They aren't here to make you feel like a prisoner."

"We're here," one of them put in abruptly, "because your s.h.i.+p is a Needle-cla.s.s UMCP gap scout." Chevrons above the black sun sigil on his uniform distinguished him from the other guards. "The last time you were here, your vessel was a frigate of"-he pursed his mouth sternly-"questionable legality, Captain's Fancy. Captain's Fancy. Now you look like you're working for the cops." Now you look like you're working for the cops."

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Chaos And Order_ The Gap Into Madness Part 36 summary

You're reading Chaos And Order_ The Gap Into Madness. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): Stephen R. Donaldson. Already has 499 views.

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