Emergence (Fox Meridian Book 5) (4 page)

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Authors: Niall Teasdale

Tags: #detective, #singularity, #fox meridian, #robot, #uploading, #AI, #Science Fiction, #action, #serial killer, #police procedural, #cybernetics, #Sci-fi, #artificial intelligence

BOOK: Emergence (Fox Meridian Book 5)
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‘It was appreciated. Even if I can’t actually move.’

‘Moving is overrated,’ Jason commented.

‘Have to eventually. If I forget to say this before I go, this has been great. I was so nervous and you’ve all been so nice. Even Kit’s had a good time. Thank you.’

‘Our pleasure,’ Monique said.

‘Any woman who can get Jason to stop working long enough to pay her any attention is worth meeting,’ Pascal added.

‘I was expecting you to be some sort of sorceress for pulling
that
trick off,’ Gaby said.

‘I am not that bad,’ Jason grumbled. There was a second or so of silence. ‘All right, perhaps I am, but you don’t have to point it out so vigorously.’

‘Yes,’ Monique said, ‘we do. You might relapse without constant reminders.’

‘I’m feeling put-upon.’

Fox leaned over and patted his hand. ‘Big, strong man like you? I’m sure you’ll cope.’

New York Metro, 26
th
December.

It was around five p.m. before Fox made it into Sam’s lounge. She had managed to get home not long after two, but then she had called Jason just to let him know that she had arrived safely, and had ended up in a teleconference chat with his family. There was still some snow on the ground in Toronto while New York was sitting under a glowering blanket of cloud, which was keeping the temperature well above freezing, so that had required discussion as part of the ‘how did the journey go’ conversation.

Then there had been a shower, because travelling often made Fox feel a little grimy, and a change of clothes, and then she had felt ready to be among humans again so she had trooped down to find Sam and Marie on a sofa watching vids. Sam was shirtless; the ideogram over his right nipple seemed to be more complicated than usual and Fox suspected it might say ‘Merry Christmas’ or something like that. Marie was in a long T-shirt and short shorts, neither of which glowed. They looked relaxed.

‘Did you spend all of yesterday naked and writhing?’ Fox asked.

‘Not
all
of yesterday,’ Marie replied. ‘We were talking to you for some of it. And we watched some vids.’

‘Marie had never seen
It’s a Wonderful Life
,’ Sam said. He handed Fox a glass of wine which she realised she needed, somewhat to her surprise.

‘Neither have I,’ Fox said, dropping onto the sofa. ‘Too feel-good for me. It’s kind of like a variant on
A Christmas Carol
, as far as I know, with James Stewart and an angel.’

‘Called Clarence,’ Marie supplied.

‘See, that’s just wrong. Angel names should be like Azriel or... something.’

‘Michael, Gabriel,’ Sam said. ‘Clarence sounds sort of reasonable.’

Kit appeared, genie-like. ‘Both Michael and Gabriel have an “el” ending, which means “of God.” Clarence, however, is a reference to the River Clare, in Ireland.’

‘The internet has spoken,’ Fox stated, ‘and I’m right, so there. We ate too much, drank too much, and chatted a lot about nothing consequential. It was good.’

‘No one hated you then?’ Sam asked. ‘I said you’d be fine.’

‘No one hated me. Gaby was too fascinated with Kit to even consider it.’

‘And I got to see real snow,’ Kit said, beaming. ‘It was cold, and alarmingly militant.’

‘I threw a snowball at her.’

‘I recall snowball fights on a couple of occasions in Boston,’ Sam said. ‘Fun while they last, and then you’re cold and a little damp.’

Fox nodded. ‘You can say that about a lot of things. Almost a metaphor for life.’

Marie giggled. ‘What are you doing tomorrow?’ she asked.

‘Board meeting first thing. We’re trying to keep things light until after New Year, but we need to keep an eye on the preparations for the start of the contracts.’

‘The tenth of January, right?’

‘Yup. There’s parallel NAPA coverage for about six months, which gives us time to train up cops in the regions like Topeka. And for the areas where we’re providing full coverage, it gives us a chance to make sure we have enough people and equipment in place. Getting that lot ready is keeping Ryan busy. I’m getting off pretty lightly, but I do need to make sure I’ve got enough detectives available where they’re needed.’

‘I don’t start shooting again until the third. Final bits for the first few episodes, and then we see how the audience figures pan out to see if we keep going.’

‘You will,’ Sam stated.

Marie gave a little shrug. ‘I hope so. I think the pilot is looking strong, even with all the character setup we need to do. Adrian’s really got into his stride. And Naomi agreeing to let us film the opening in the chapter house
with real Sisters
was really great. I think it’ll grab people’s attention and keep them going until the action picks up again. But I’m still nervous.’ She grinned. ‘Gaby recognising me came as a surprise.’

‘Get used to it. It’s going to happen more and more often.’

‘Well, I’ll try not to let it go to my head. I don’t think we’re going to have hordes of fans camping outside the door.’

Fox sipped her wine. ‘Well, if we do, there’s an armed cyberframe on the roof we can use to chase them off.’

27
th
December.

‘We’ve got all the induction courses set for the third,’ Ryan Jarvis said. ‘Alice has the rooms booked here and we’ve got the training ready. That’s all pretty standard. We’ve been including basic familiarity with the detective-assist equipment for a couple of months.’

‘Three days, right?’ Fox asked. She sat at her desk, in her office, and looked out over the virtual conference room the Palladium board used for meetings. Nine months in, they had these things down to a reasonably fine art.

‘Yes, then we have the investigations staff scheduled for two days with you in New York.’

‘I’ve booked rooms for them all,’ Alice Vaughn said. ‘Transport from Chicago is arranged. You said you’d take care of the theatre, Fox.’

‘We’re not using a theatre,’ Fox said. ‘There’s lab space going free in the third tower at the moment, so we’re using some of that. And I’m kind of winging this. No one’s done this in the company so this is going to be a bit trial and error, but I’ve been through it all with Terri and Kit. We’ve got an agenda and a list of key points. We’re going to record everything and go through it afterward to see if we can do better.’

‘That sounds like a working plan.’ Garth Eaves sat at the head of the table, presiding over things and apparently rather pleased that he did not seem to be needed. ‘I just felt I should say something so that you all remember I’m around.’

‘Who are you again?’ Jarvis asked him, grinning.

‘I give you money.’

‘I thought that was the money fairy. Learn something new every day.’

‘Some of us do. Anything else on this?’ Eaves scanned the table, getting nothing. ‘Very well, the Sakura contract.’

‘Did I miss something?’ Fox asked.

‘We haven’t bothered you with this one since it came in late last week. Rush job with no investigative input.’ Eaves paused and then added, ‘We hope you won’t be needed anyway. Nishi Sakura, the musical artist, is giving a series of concerts to promote her new album. They had security organised, but something went wrong and they tagged us as a replacement.’

‘Something went wrong?’

‘They’re not saying what. As I said, it’s a rush job. The first concert is on the third, in Boston. She’s got three nights there, five nights in New York, starting on the tenth. Washington on the twenty-first, and Tokyo on the eighteenth of February. We’re covering all of them.’

‘We’ve got personnel for that?’

‘We’re covered,’ Jarvis said. ‘It’s a little tight, but we can do it. We’ll be running a lot of frames.’

‘That works?’

‘Miss Sakura was rather enthused about the idea,’ Vaughn said. ‘She thought it was very modern and wanted cambots flying over the crowd before the show starts. It’s supposed to give a dystopian “Big Brother is watching you” feel. She’s got a dark, cyberpunk sort of number she pushed to the head of the schedule.’

‘So we’ve set aside a few units with special programming,’ Jarvis went on. ‘They’ll loop around over the audience, pick out people and focus on them, that kind of stuff. Then the images from them are going to display on the screens she’s got backing the stage.’

‘Okay,’ Fox said. ‘Well, let me know if there’s anything you need from me.’

Jarvis nodded. ‘Hopefully, we won’t. This should be an easy one.’

Fox winced. ‘Oh… What were you thinking when you said that?’

‘Sorry. Blame lack of sleep.’

‘One more thing before we wrap,’ Eaves said, giving Jarvis what was probably a mock-withering look. ‘BioTek have another of their big announcements coming up’ – Jarvis groaned at that – ‘but they thought fit to actually tell us in advance this time.’

‘Makes a change,’ Jarvis grumbled. At the end of November, BioTek Microtechnologies, the biotechnology arm of MarTech, had issued a media statement announcing the release of various products based around what they called ‘Morphogenesis.’ This was a form of nanovirus which could be introduced into a living system, i.e. a person, to carry out cellular and molecular alterations while the host continued with their normal life. All the proposed applications were medical, but there had been three weeks of protests outside the MarTech towers in New York and Berlin, and MarTech’s memetics department was still busy countering the online propaganda. ‘What is it this time?’ Jarvis asked.

‘They’ve got several next-generation nanosymbiont products coming out’ – a louder groan from Jarvis – ‘which are medical and cosmetic in nature at this point.’

‘Cosmetic nanobugs?’ Fox asked. ‘They think people are going to– Forget I said that.
Of course
, people will infect themselves with a nanovirus to look nicer.’

Eaves grinned at her. ‘Actually, it sounds kind of cool. They’re calling it PureClean. It coats the skin and gums and keeps everything clean. No body odour, no bad breath, and you don’t have to clean your teeth manually. There’s a small benefit in avoiding certain kinds of disease transmission as well.’

‘Huh. Okay, I can see people buying that one.’

‘There’s also an upgrade to their existing immune system booster. They’re claiming almost a two hundred per cent increase in efficacy, but it costs more, of course. And they’ve got something which is apparently guaranteed to eliminate cancer cells before they can spread. Early indications are that long-term use is likely to double lifespan.’

Fox frowned. ‘Potential can of worms right there.’

‘When’s the announcement?’ Jarvis asked.

‘The fourth of January,’ Eaves replied.

‘Happy New Year! I’ll make sure all leave requests for January are blocked.’

29
th
December.

‘So, it’s New Year soon,’ Marie said. Breakfast was being had in Sam’s lounge, because none of them had that much else to do.

‘I’d noticed that,’ Fox said.

‘I believe it’s come up in conversation,’ Sam agreed.

‘Yeah,’ Marie said. She was obviously going somewhere with this, but she paused to munch toast. ‘I was thinking… I’ve never done the whole New York New Year thing.’

‘There’s a thing?’ Fox asked.

‘You know, Times Square, the big ball dropping…’

‘The huge crowds, the bag-snatching, having to face the probability that some loser with halitosis is going to want to kiss you because it’s the only time of the year he gets any action…’

‘It’s only a few blocks over. We could walk and the forecast isn’t miserable.’

‘It
is
about the first New Year I haven’t worked in the last decade,’ Sam mused. ‘By choice, I might add. I have engagements tonight and tomorrow, but I decided I would free up my time for the actual night.’

Fox could see him thinking it might be a good idea. ‘Crazy, the both of you. It’s all right for you two, you can just play suck-face with each other until that bit’s done with. Jason’s going to be in Toronto. And then there’s what to wear. It’ll probably be freezing. Belle? What’s the forecast for Friday night?’

Belle, the house AI, resplendent in her usual blue suit, appeared beside the table. ‘Current predicted temperature at midnight on Friday is five to six degrees Celsius with clear skies and low humidity. Forecast certainty is ninety-two per cent.’

‘So it’s going to be cold and we’re supposed to dress for a party.’

‘Wear hose,’ Marie suggested, ‘and invite someone to come with us. There has to be
someone
you wouldn’t mind making out with.’

‘I could arrange something,’ Sam said.

Fox looked at him and narrowed her eyes. ‘Who?’

Sam smirked. ‘Someone.’

‘Now, see, that is
not
a face that’s going to make me want to go along with this…’

~~~

‘I can’t believe they talked me into it,’ Fox muttered.

‘Generally,’ Kit said, ‘when you get talked into something you claim is a bad idea, it is because you wanted to do it anyway.’

Fox made grumbling noises for a second, because Kit was right… ‘Sam’s going to basically set me up on a blind date!’

‘Just for a kiss.’

‘He’s up to something.’

Kit considered that to be highly likely, but saying so was not wise. ‘Belle could monitor his calls. You could keep watch on him through the house cameras.’

‘You don’t think that’s being a little paranoid?’

‘Yes, but you’re the one who thinks he’s up to something.’

‘Huh…’ Fox folded her arms and frowned at the wall opposite her sofa for a few seconds. ‘Wouldn’t work anyway. He can call someone when he’s out tonight.’

‘He probably just knows another registered prostitute who is not working that night,’ Kit suggested, trying to sound placating.

‘That is
not
better.’

‘It’s just a kiss, Fox.’

‘That’s what they all say. Next thing you know, they’ve got their hand down your panties.’

Kit pursed her lips. ‘Now you’re just escalating for no good reason. You can always say you’ve changed your mind, or…’

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