The Genehunter - Simon Kewin - E-Book

The Genehunter E-Book

Simon Kewin

0,0
3,49 €

oder
-100%
Sammeln Sie Punkte in unserem Gutscheinprogramm und kaufen Sie E-Books und Hörbücher mit bis zu 100% Rabatt.
Mehr erfahren.
Beschreibung

Some secrets are best left buried…

Simms is a genehunter, paid to track down the DNA of the famous and infamous of history for his clients’ private collections. What they do with the DNA isn’t his problem – even if they are using it to create illegal clones.
He walks a line, pulled in many different directions at once. The law, competing genehunters, ex-lovers, religious nuts and anti-genehunter crazies. But when he works the Boneyard case he discovers that, sometimes, you have to decide which side of the line you’re on.

And when he starts to uncover the truth of his own origins he begins to question everything he is and does…

Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:

EPUB
Bewertungen
0,0
0
0
0
0
0
Mehr Informationen
Mehr Informationen
Legimi prüft nicht, ob Rezensionen von Nutzern stammen, die den betreffenden Titel tatsächlich gekauft oder gelesen/gehört haben. Wir entfernen aber gefälschte Rezensionen.



The Genehunter

Simon Kewin

For Pete, much missed

Table of Contents

1. The Wrong Tom Jacks

2 - The Zombies of Death

3 - The Clone Who Didn't Know

4 - A Soldier of Megiddo

5 - Boneyard

Bonus Story: Jumpjacker

Bonus Story: 22nd Century Genie

Simms' World

Landmarks

Cover

Table of Contents

Start of Book

1. The Wrong Tom Jacks

Simms stood in a circular white room, surrounded by the frozen heads of forty-two dead from the twentieth century.

He recorded every detail of the scene via his brain plug-in. Strictly speaking he had no business being here in the LA Bethesda Eternity Clinic and you never knew when information would come in useful. He didn't have the clinic's full client list, but each head sat encased within a two-meter silver cylinder, each bearing a small name plaque his plug-in could resolve. He stored each name away, the one he recognized and the forty-one he didn't.

“This way. The patient is over here.”

The ratty, unkempt clinician he'd bribed crossed the room, glancing backwards at Simms to make sure he was following. Simms smiled at all of it. At the attendant, so proud of his ridiculous little world, at their insistence on the word patient, at the whole insane set-up. Did these people actually think this was eternal life? That they could conveniently bypass society's slide into hell? Be woken up in a golden future with all their cancers healed?

Elsewhere in the clinic there were full bodies preserved. The ones who could afford the deluxe package. These poor unfortunates had gone for the cheaper option. Simms almost felt sorry for them. He wondered what sacrifices each had made for even this.

He put it out of his mind. What did it matter? Wasn't any business of his. People with money paid and facilities like this met the demand. No harm in any of it. Perhaps it wasn't so different to what he did.

“This is him.”

Simms stopped at the cylinder the attendant identified. It looked good. Tom Jacks, born 1954, suspended 2015. Yeah, right. Simms knew very little about him. A famous name, sure, but this Tom Jacks was a nobody. His searches had turned up nothing interesting at all. He was just a unique pattern of base-pairs that someone, somewhere was willing to pay for. Weird, sure, but he asked no questions. Collectors collected and he provided. He'd triple-checked they wanted this man and not his famous namesake. Most likely some relative researching the family-tree. Or it could be other things, but that was none of his business. Get the DNA, get paid, that was all that mattered.

The job made him uneasy, though. Damn thing was, he couldn't see why. It was straightforward enough. Maybe too straightforward. Things didn't go like this. It had only taken him a day and no one had threatened him, let alone tried to kill him. Here was the DNA, conveniently packaged up in a frozen brain. Somehow, he was sure, he was being played. He just couldn't see how.

He looked at the cylinder. The head was sealed inside, awaiting the dawn of the age of miracles. A dusting of frost coated the silver exterior. Was that right? Wasn't it supposed to be insulated?

“And you can extract a sample?” he said to the attendant. “You're sure it's clean, no decay?”

“Of course. There's an access point for biopsies. I'm sure you've heard the stories. How we don't really preserve anyone, just take their money to maintain empty chambers.”

The attendant shook his head at the things people believed. Simms said nothing. He wanted to get the job done and leave. Despite the cold and the sealed units, the place smelled of chemicals and decay. He was willing to bet the attendant came in here and talked to the damn heads when there was no one else around.

Simms took out the sterile needle he'd bought with him and handed it to the attendant.

“Here. I will test the sequence against his known phenotype. Anything less than 99% and the deal's off. Understand?”

Usually this was the time they started to bargain, see problems, remember expenses. The attendant merely assented with a nod of his head. Either he was a fool or he was playing a part. Simms watched as the man flipped open a small hatch in the side of the cylinder and inserted the needle into the dead brain within. A small screen lit up on the surface of the cylinder so they could see the needle's progress.

When he had the sample, Simms inserted it into the sequencer he carried. The device sampled the DNA, flashed through a simulated development cycle to full maturity, ran comparisons against the known historical details of this Tom Jacks. Within a minute, the results were communicated to Simms' brain.

His job would be a lot damn easier if everyone just got a number tattooed onto them at birth.

He looked at the attendant, waiting by the cylinder, breathing through his nose like this was the most exciting thing that had ever happened to him. Or like he might bolt at any moment. He could be a useful contact. This job was junk, sure, but you never knew what the next one would be. A cryogenic clinic attendant amenable to bribery might be a very useful person to know. Especially since Simms now had recorded proof he had been bribed.

“The sample is good. Here's your forty K.”

Simms transferred the agreed sum, encrypted and untraceable. He saw the moment the money reached the attendant: the smile that brightened on the man's face was like the summer sun rising. Doubling your annual pay can do that. Which only troubled Simms all the more. The guy was an amateur. Someone was playing both of them. He'd been careful. He was always careful. When he crossed the line he made sure he left no evidence. Always gave clients the full speech about the uses to which recovered DNA could be put, word-for-word from the law. So far as the authorities knew, he accessed only public records. The bribe to this attendant was an infringement, sure, but no one would be able to prove a connection. He'd run through everything several times but could see no loopholes. It nagged at him. He hated that.

“I'd like to leave now,” he said.

The attendant nodded as he sealed up the cylinder. They left Tom to his long wait and walked out, past room after room of frozen remains. Simms wished he could grab the names on all the units, but the doors were sealed. The attendant, whose name he still didn't know, was taking enough risk letting Simms do what he'd done. They could always come up with some line about visiting a relative if challenged, but if the clinic owners found out what their employee had done, it would be all over for him. For a set-up like this, public perception was everything.

They stopped at security doors while the attendant let the machinery sample his DNA. What was that all about? Controlling who came in made perfect sense, but controlling who left? Did they think the dead were going to rise up and try to escape? They'd seen too many old movies.

The security doors hinged open and they were back in the warmer air of the clinic's lobby, all polished marble and subtle music. Vases of flowers. Real flowers. A group of relatives sat in silence on the leather chairs, their expressions blank, no one talking. He thought about them all: the thousands and thousands of dead people in there, the thousands and thousands of estates paying fees in perpetuity. It was a beautiful thing. Maybe he should start one up himself. A few big contracts and he'd have enough money. Then he could sit back and enjoy life, let others do the work. He was willing to bet the myths about these places were true, often as not. Make it look good, professional like a real hospital, and people would pay. You didn't need to actually freeze the remains. Who would know?

Turning the pleasant fantasy over in his mind, he walked to the clinic's jump node. Normally he avoided them. The public jump infrastructure was shot to shit. But with a job came expenses and with expenses came the wonder of private networks. He instructed the system to take him back to London. He dialled in a few random jumps around the world en route, too, to throw anyone who might be following him. Private networks were more reliable, sure, but he didn't trust them to be any more secure.

He knew something had gone wrong the moment he stepped out of the destination node. This was definitely not London Euston. Too clean, for one thing. Too quiet. He stood in a bare, square room; bright white walls, no doors or windows. The only way in or out was via the jump node he'd stepped from. He scanned it, as he habitually did, hoping to probe the network logs for anyone following him. The plug-ins required for this were highly illegal, but he happened to have a set hidden away in his skull. He got the node's address but nothing more. The gateway was deactivated. He checked his clock. Ten seconds had elapsed since he'd left the clinic. While you were in the jump network you technically didn't exist, had no consciousness of the passage of time. But, wherever he was, at least he had materialised. Everyone knew the stories about people trapped inside the jump networks, stuck for so long no one dared extract them to tell them. It was immortality of sorts, he supposed. Beat having your head cut off and frozen.

“Ah, Simms. There you are.”

A disembodied voice from a metal grill in the opposite wall. He recognized it immediately. Things began to slot into place. So this was it? The whole job had been a GMA sting? Checking up licences?

“Agent Ballard of the Genetic Monitoring Agency,” said Simms. “Hit another puzzle you can't solve? Having trouble telling the time, maybe?”

Ballard laughed his deep, rolling laugh. Was he nearby or somewhere remote? It didn't matter. It was typical of Ballard to lurk in the shadows. Simms really couldn't blame him. They'd met physically once or twice. If his face was as disfigured as Ballard's, if his features dripped like melted plastic, he'd stay hidden too. Acid thrown in his face, it was said, years back. Some thug resisting arrest. Ballard could have got it fixed long ago. Word was he liked his shocking appearance just fine. Found it useful when it came to playing the scary GMA agent.

“Simms, Simms. I'd really be more polite if I were you. I've pulled you out of the jump network to count how many laws you've broken today. Make my day any worse and I'll have to start looking real close.”

The GMAn sounded delighted at the prospect.

“Investigate away. You won't find anything, but perhaps it'll make you feel like you're doing something useful with your life.”

As he talked, Simms glanced around the room, trying to figure out an escape plan. He came up with precisely nothing. He had good plug-ins, unregistered military-grade tech that might be able to reactivate the jump mechanism. But they would take time to work and the GMA would have counter-measures. Plus, the less Ballard knew about his brain-boosters, the better.

“So,” said Ballard. “According to the logs, you've been commissioned to track down the DNA of a Tom Jacks. Purpose: addition to an unnamed collector's molecule library. All completely above-board and legal.”

“That's correct. And well done on the reading. Some of those words are tricky.”

“I'm puzzled, though,” Ballard continued. “You specialise in musicians. Rock gods and dance divas from history. This man was a no one. Times hard are they?”

“I have to work to make a living. You should try it some time.”

“Surely you're not intending to pass this Tom Jacks off as the Tom Jacks to some unfortunate citizen?”

“Obviously not. That would be illegal.”

“Oh, but wait, what's this?” Ballard continued. “I see you're on your way home from the Bethesda Eternity Clinic, last resting place of Tom Jacks - the wrong Tom Jacks - currently cryogenically preserved and awaiting a cure for pancreatic cancer. Now that is odd, because the estate of this Mr. Jacks has granted no access to his remains.”

“Which is why my trip was futile,” said Simms. “Shame, but that's how it goes.”

“So you didn't, say, illegally acquire this poor, dead man's DNA?”

“That's right. I didn't illegally acquire this poor, dead man's DNA.”

“And the large sum of money you just sent from one of your accounts?”

Simms smiled, sure Ballard could at least see him. “A down payment on a slot at the clinic for myself. And thanks for being so concerned about my well-being.”

Ballard snorted with laughter. “And if I let the techs loose on your brain and all those exotic plug-ins of yours, you're saying they won't find the DNA of Mr. Jacks encrypted away somewhere?”

A warrant for a full brain-dump on a suspect was still hard to get, even on a genehunter. They both knew that. Simms had to hope it was too much trouble for Ballard to bother.

“Obviously not. That would also be illegal, Agent Ballard. I'm shocked at the suggestion.”

“Or, I suppose I could visit the clinic myself,” Ballard said. “Ask a few questions, see what really occurred?”

There was the weakness. The attendant should have expunged logs as instructed. He probably wouldn't stick to his story with Ballard bellowing away at him. Yet this was such a small-time job going to all that trouble made no sense. Ballard was having fun with him. Or… yes. He saw, then, what this really was. Some things didn't change.

“You could do all that, yes,” said Simms. “And if I have accidentally transgressed some minor regulation, I suppose I'd have to pay some fine?”

“Approaching an official of a registered clinic without the estate's consent is a transgression, Simms.”

“OK, Ballard. Just tell me how much you want.”

“Forty K should cover it.”

Simms considered for a moment. But there wasn't a damn thing he could do. If he refused he'd find his licence revoked one sunny day and that would be that. None of this fine would go near the authorities, sure, but he had no choice.

“Here's your money, Ballard. Now activate this node.”

“My pleasure, Simms. And you be careful out there. There are all sorts of people trying to rip you off.”

“Yeah. I heard that.”

“Oh, and one more thing before you go. Who is Boneyard?”

Motherfucker. So this whole thing with the money was just a little extra for Ballard? He really, really hated the GMAn.

“Never heard of him. Friend of yours? Sounds unpleasant enough.”

“A person I'd like to meet. I figure someone living in the gutter like you might have heard a whisper or two.”

“And if I had?”

“Then you'd tell me. And we stay friends.”

“Well, I'm sorry to be a disappointment.”

“Oh, I'm used to it. But keep your ears open, OK, Simms? Bring me something useful and I'll think even more highly of you than I already do.”

“Good bye, Ballard,” said Simms. “And, just a suggestion, maybe spend that money you stole from me on cosmetic surgery? They can work miracles these days, you know.”

Simms stepped out of a node in the twelve-by-twelve array at Euston and pushed his way through the crowds out onto the streets. The stacktower where he lived was a twenty minute walk away. As he strode along, he sent a ping out to the agent who'd employed him on the Jacks job. He didn't know who his real employer was, of course. He knew the agent only as Mann. Which was not going to be his real name.

Mann replied immediately. Simms had the uncomfortable feeling Mann had known he'd be calling. Was Ballard mixed up in this somehow? Was Mann one of them, a GMAn? Was his name what passed for humour in the GMA? Christ. How was a guy to make an illegal living with these mosquitoes buzzing around, sucking his blood?

“Mr. Simms. You have the DNA sequence my client requested?”

The voice on the other end was calm, thoughtful. More the voice of a lawyer, someone used to weighing words carefully.

“I have it here,” said Simms. “Plus documentation to prove provenance. Send payment and you can have the code right now.”

“My client will have to test the DNA first, Mr. Simms. He or she does not intend to pay for some random sequence of numbers or the genetic sequence of, let us say, a dead baboon.”

“You employed me because you could trust me.”

“Still, I am under instruction. This is what we agreed.”

“And if I send you the code and never hear from you again?”

“Then you would have cause to be angry and could lodge a complaint with the authorities.”

“Yeah, yeah.”

Simms sent the sequence off through the ether. They'd agreed encryption keys up front so there was no danger it could be intercepted as it traversed the net.

“Many thanks, Mrs. Simms. I shall be in touch at the earliest opportunity.”

“Make sure you are. Mann.”

Simms closed the link and turned his attention to the London street. The usual shit, piles of rubble, dead… things. The rain hammered down, a blur of spray on the hard ground. Why was it always raining? Surely it could be sunny occasionally? At least the rain helped wash the stench of decay and burning plastic away. He was old enough to remember how it had once been, when the streets were more-or-less safe and everything more-or-less worked. Now look at it. People used to say everything was going to hell. They didn't say it any more did they? They knew it had damn well gone.

He shook his head. Nothing he could do. He felt like this because he'd finished a job. Normally, some investigation would be bouncing around in his brain and he wouldn't notice his surroundings, the scowling people, the filth. Now he did. He hated the emptiness that inactivity brought.

Still, he had money to burn. Despite Ballard's cut, he'd be solvent once Mann's money came through. He could afford some downtime. He'd earned it. He called up an overlay from the relevant plug-in to shut London out. Immediately, an augmented version of the city replaced the ruined original. Trees lined spotless streets. The air smelt of roses. Contented people strolled by, hand-in-hand. Children played. They were dangerous, these false realities. People got lost in them. But he could control it. Right now it was fine.

Back home, he decided, what the hell, to ping Kelly. They hadn't spoken for, what, two months? She'd said she was going to get back to him. He was still waiting.

“Simms? What is it?”

To his surprise, the connection went straight through. She sounded harassed, though, like she didn't really want to speak to him.

“Just seeing how you are. You didn't call, I was worried.”

“Yeah, right.”

“Come on, Kelly. That's not fair. How many times do I need to apologize to you?”

“Oh, plenty more yet.”

“OK, OK. Look, I wanted to know how you've been, for Christ's sake.”

She paused for a moment before replying, like she was regretting her harsh words. So he liked to imagine.

“I'm fine. Busy. We're taking more in each day. We're going to have to expand to house everyone soon.”

Another dig at him. He was to blame? He collected DNA. If other people used it to fill their private zoos with black-market copies of the great and famous, how was that down to him? He didn't operate the cloning vats, he didn't discard the damaged misshapes when they turned out wrong. He just did his job. Jesus Christ, everyone was on his back today.

“Look, Kelly, I'm sorry, OK? Sorry for what I do. Sorry for all the people who wash up there with you. It's not my fault, OK? None of it's my fault.”

“Is that right, Simms?”

“Look, the thing is, work's been going well. I was thinking I could come over. I know the refuge always need funds. I could make a contribution. Something. I mean, no one likes to see the state these people are in. And maybe we could do something together. Go some place.”

It was partly his age, but fleshbots didn't cut it for him. Even when they proxied for a real person somewhere distant. You still knew. You always knew. The thought of sex with Kelly, the real Kelly, would make everything - Ballard, London, Mann - everything better.

“You want to give us money from some DNA job? To help the people here?”

For a moment, he thought she was warming to the idea. “Yeah. I thought, you know, it would be something.”

“You're unbelievable, Simms. Un-fucking-believable.”

“Kelly, I…”

But she cut the connection. She was gone. He didn't try to ping her back.

His eyes focused on reality once more. He stood and stared out of his stackroom window at the grey clouds sweeping in across the London skyline. God damn. Why did he bother? It wasn't like she'd been completely innocent was it? Wasn't that what she was doing, out there in the Arizona desert? Making amends, trying to put something back? He got that. He'd do it himself, one day, if he could. Enough money from a few big deals and he could start his own refuge. They could run it together, the past forgotten. He could idle away his days in the sun while she divided her time between him and saving the world's cloning victims. All those brain-damaged Elvises and broken Mandela-copies living out their remaining years. She'd be full of gratitude. It would be beautiful.

Well. If he couldn't have her, a fleshbot would have to do. He'd paid for good emulation, although he could always tell when it - she - said or did something the real Kelly wouldn't. When its sex-toy programming was a little too near the surface. Weirdly, that was always an instant turn-off. But it would have to do.

And, if he couldn't have the real Kelly, he could at least have real acid. He didn't go in for direct-brain electronic analogues. He had the plug-ins, sure, but didn't use them. Nothing touched the real stuff. You could still buy it if you knew the right people. And Simms prided himself on always knowing the right people.

He made sure the stackroom was secure. The fleshbot booted up and moved towards him, swinging its hips a little too much to be believable. Sims sighed. He wondered what would happen if he gave it acid, too. That could be funny.

The call interrupted him an hour later. It took him some time to grasp what it was. His com plug-in had trouble presenting his consciousness with an avatar of his caller. Had trouble finding his consciousness. Simms saw the sun turning into a vast face, becoming a mouth that screamed at him from the sky. Eventually he grasped someone was trying to reach him.

He shunned direct-brain drugs, but electronic detox could be damn useful. He kicked one off now, flushing the shit from his brain, sharpening the lines of reality around him. Slowly everything came into focus. Was his room always this small? Jesus. When he was ready he answered the ping.

“Hi, Mann. You got my money?”

“Can we talk?”

“What is there to talk about? I've done what you asked, now you pay the bill. That's how that works.”

“I'd like to talk to you about another contract.”

“Always happy to discuss a job. Let's complete the old one, then we can move onto the new one.”

Didn't they have the money? But then, why bother to get in touch? More likely, they had a problem with what he'd done. The wrong Tom Jacks after all? He couldn't see how, but he didn't need an unsatisfied customer seeking revenge. Especially some big shot used to getting their way. He wished he'd spent more time researching Mann, found out who he worked for. But the amount of money involved had been so small he hadn't bothered.

“Of course, of course. Here's your money, Mr. Simms.”

The man's tone made it clear the amount was so trifling he'd simply forgotten to send it. Simms watched the zeroes counting up in his brain.

“OK,” he said. “Now we can talk.”

“Excellent. As a matter of fact, I'd like to meet up with you.”

Alarm bells rang. He was still a bit out of it, a bit paranoid, but employers wanting to meet up generally meant bad things. He'd seen it happen often enough over the years.

“Why? This conversation is completely secure. No one can overhear.”

“My employer is rather old-fashioned. He or she likes to, ah, stare a man in the eye. Apparently, by these means, he or she is able to judge character very effectively.”

“You want to set up a meeting between me and your employer?”

“That's correct.”

Mann had his attention now. Simms reached out and deactivated the fleshbot kneeling on the floor in front of him. What was going on here? It could all be a line. A convincing tale. Still, it could also be something sweet. A meeting with the money behind the façade generally meant they were taking you more seriously. Which meant more of the money. If they were unhappy with him, why go to all this trouble? They could deal with him from afar: a shot in the night, an EM pulse sending his plug-ins into meltdown. But not polite conversation for fuck's sake.

“OK,” he said. “Tell me when and where.”

In the day he had spare, Simms took the time to do his job properly: find out who he was really dealing with, what their angle was. It didn't take a genius to work some of it out. The smoke and mirrors made it obvious. The party required DNA and they needed to be sure Simms was reliable. Now they knew. Problem was, Simms knew nothing about them. Knowledge was power. Anything could give him an edge, even if it only meant he could cut a better deal.

Standard trawls through the archives turned up nothing. Inevitably. With only a few hours to go before their meeting, unable to think of anything else, Simms decided to try Devi. Devi knew everyone.

Devi was another hunter, and hunters usually didn't mix. They were competitors. If you had a job another hunter knew something about they became your best friend. But if they decided to kill you and take the job themselves, they became your worst enemy. Devi had tried to kill Simms on at least three occasions.

Simms' ping went nowhere. Either she was offline or dead. He tried every ID he had but got a no response on all of them. OK. There were other ways to track down genehunters. None of them could stand to be unavailable for long in case a dream job came along, transporting them to a life of thrills and riches. Einstein's brain or the DNA of The Beatles. There was always a way to get in touch. You just had to know whom to ask.

He strode back to Euston, no overlays, still raining, and jumped half-way around the world to San Francisco. The Double Helix bar on Fisherman's Wharf was the closest thing genehunters had to home. It was an actual bar, a place people went to hang out, sit in shadowy corners, consume intoxicants and cut deals with each other. Like in the old days. Now such places were rare, old-fashioned, weird. For some reason, most hunters liked it. Perhaps for the same reason Simms preferred real acid. Nostalgia for the past, the good old days.

Inside it was quiet, the smoky air thick with murmuring. Glasses made of real glass clinked on tables that had once been living trees. People glanced up at him, looked away. He was known, welcome. Anyone could come into the Double Helix, sure, and sometimes tourists did wander in. But they left quickly, aware they weren't meant to be there.

Simms crossed to the bar. He felt relaxed. The Double Helix was, by common consent, neutral territory.

“What can I get you?”

Mac stood behind the old-fashioned bar, upturned bottles lined up behind him full of coloured liquids. Mac was always there, all wild hair and devil tattoos. His name wasn't really Mac. It just seemed like it should be, so everyone called him that. The joke was there were lots of Macs, clones taking turns to man the place. Day or night, there he was, never getting any older.

“The usual.”

Most barmen would use a plug-in to work out what that meant. Facial recognition and a quick database lookup. Mac didn't need to bother with any of that.

“Quiet tonight,” said Simms while Mac poured the Scotch.

Mac shrugged, unconcerned. Quiet was good. They all liked quiet.

“I'm after Devi,” said Simms. “Heard from her?”

Mac looked into his eyes, assessing. He wouldn't want it too quiet. Bad for business to have his customers killing each other.

“Don't worry, just need her help,” said Simms. “A few questions.”

“This time.”

“You know where she is?”

“I know where most of her is. The bits that are left.”

“She's dead?”

“Oh no, she's alive. Amazing what they can do these days, huh?”

Details on Devi cost three more doubles, finest Scotch. Simms saw it as a win/win. Before he left he transferred more money, double what he'd already spent, then hit Mac with his final question.

“You heard of someone called Boneyard?”

Mac's eyes narrowed. He'd heard something.

“Sure.”

“Who is it?”

“Don't know. Why you asking?”

“Because our old friend Ballard asked me, and I don't like to know less than a GMAn about anything. It's embarrassing.”

Mac shrugged, like it was none of his problem. Which it probably wasn't.

“So, what?” said Simms. “What do you know?”

“That it's a thing, not a person.”

“What else?”

“Only that it's something heavy. Bad for business.”

“Ours or yours?”

“Same thing, ain't it, Simms?”

With the leads Mac had provided, Simms tracked Devi down to a hospital in Cairo where the medics were cultivating her a new set of internal organs. Seems her last job had gone badly wrong.

The roar of the great city hummed through the white walls. A thousand tubes and wires snaked from under Devi's covers to a silver box, where an array of lights blinked rhythmically. A box that more-or-less was Devi while her new body parts matured up from stem-cells. Devi looked deflated, her face more grey than olive. Her brown eyes were blurry and indistinct but she grinned her familiar, pained grin when Simms entered.

“How did you get in here?” she croaked.

“Told them I was a friend.”

“Always were a convincing liar.”

She shut her eyes, like she was drifting off to sleep already. He didn't have long to explain his situation. When he finished she nodded, as if everything made sense.

“What is it?” said Simms. “What do you know?”

“You got a voiceprint of this Mann of yours?”

“Sure.”

Her plug-ins were fried so he had to relay the recording orally, letting his brain hardware control his mouth to make him sound like Mann. Wasn't perfect, but close enough. Sure felt weird, though.

“Yeah, that's him,” she said.

“What do you know?” Simms asked in his own sweet voice once more.

“Remember Sanchez?”

“Sure.”

“Your Mann was her Smith. She hooked up with them for some big deal about five years back.”

“She's MIA, now. You're saying these people were responsible?”

It wasn't unknown for clients to dispense with their genehunters once they'd got the DNA they wanted. Dispense with them permanently. Cheaper than paying and it covered their tracks. The secret was to be indispensable. A rich client with a private zoo would always need more DNA. If they trusted you they would keep you on and everyone would be happy.

“No,” Devi replied after a moment's thought. “I think you're good. Things went crazy for Sanchez after that. These people were straight. Kept quiet, paid their bills. You'll be OK as long as you don't fuck them around.”

“Who, me?”

“Yes. You.”

“She say anything else about them?”

“They're zookeepers, sure. A private menagerie of dead rock stars somewhere in the Caribbean. Word is they have more than that, too. A dark zoo of dictators and mass-murderers.”

“And you're not telling me this to get me killed?”

“When that happens I want to be there.”

Simms smiled, although Devi couldn't see it. “Thanks. You've been helpful. I owe you.”

“Yeah.”

Simms turned to leave. At the door he stopped.

“Oh, and Devi, get yourself fixed, OK? Shooting you in this state would be no fun at all.”

She waved him away with a single finger.

“Mr. Simms.”

“Mann.”

Simms stood in an office, well-furnished but with no windows, no way of knowing where in the world he was. A room at the end of a jump address.

Mann looked like he sounded: a smart, highly-paid lawyer, dressed in expensive clothes, someone used to the finer things in life. He had no fear of Simms. On his own patch, protected by who-knew-what tech, he would be untouchable.

“So,” said Simms. “Where's your master?”

“They may join us soon.”

“Once you've checked me out.”

“I'm sure they'll value my assessment of you.”

“And, of course, they're watching everything that happens right now.”

“No comment. But, if this situation is not to your liking, feel free to leave and we'll say no more about it. No harm, no foul.”

“Sure, sure. Go on. The situation is to my liking. So long as you can talk for them?”

“I have full executive authority in this regard.”

“Yeah, like I said. So, what's the issue?”

“Tom Jacks.”

“Tom Jacks.”

“Tell me, did you think it odd you were employed to acquire the gene sequence of, how should I put it, the wrong Tom Jacks?”

That wasn't good. That wasn't good at all. Had they paid him just to lure him here? What was this, some twisted revenge set-up because the code wasn't to their liking?

“Now hang on. I established all that very clearly. The Jacks you wanted was most definitely not the Tom Jacks. What are you trying to pull here?”

“Mr. Simms, please. There is no need for anxiety. You completed the job we requested most capably and efficiently.”

“Pleased to hear it.”

“So, I'll ask you again. Did you think it odd?”

“It's not my place to question.”

“Very well. Let me put it this way. If we had requested you retrieve the DNA sequence of the real Tom Jacks, the famous Tom Jacks, would your reaction have been any different?”

“I'd have wanted more money for one thing.”

Mann smiled at that. “Understood. But, for the moment, recompense is not the issue here. The question is one of attitude. You have proved yourself a competent and discreet DNA Detective. I ask you again. If we had asked you to hunt the gene sequence of the real Tom Jacks, perhaps without anyone else knowing you were so employed, would you have been amenable?”

“Are you asking me to hunt the gene sequence of the real Tom Jacks? Or is this an interesting hypothetical conversation we're having?”

“That's what we're asking you, Mr. Simms.”