Read Saga Online

Authors: Connor Kostick

Saga (21 page)

BOOK: Saga
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“Grand Vizier.” We open a communications channel.
“Your Highness?”
“Have the characters of five human beings brought to Us, one at a time. Not forcibly, for they will simply exit the world; instead, offer them a card promotion in return for their time.”
“Yes, Your Highness.”
We need to find one willing to reprogram Us. One who will not take the opportunity to destroy Saga. In some ways, Cindella, while dangerous, would be ideal. For she has already proven that she is not willing to murder Us.
Chapter 19
HESLINGTON HOUSE
The easiest way
to get food, without having to take any risk that we might be recognized while shopping, was to order a huge delivery of pizza and ice cream to an abandoned office complex. When the airbike came, I paid the delivery girl, then entered the building. I went straight through to the back and out, to join the others in a place I considered relatively safe: a disused indoor amphitheater in a run-down part of the City. This was one of the arenas to which kids, and even sometimes grown-ups, used to come and battle their toy airships against each other. It was a craze some years ago, but no one did it anymore. Airboarding had taken over.
It is strange, the positive effect on the mind of having an abundance of food on hand. We sat in a line along the edge of a great bowl, half-empty boxes of pizza strewn around us, all in excellent humor.
“Can you believe it, huh?” Milan mused while chewing heartily at a slice. “Air-race champions. Show the race again, would you, Athena? I still need to see it to believe it.”
A moment later, the projector began to play the newscast once more, in giant, ninety-foot images on the far wall, filling the chamber with green-and-red-tinged flickering light.
“Oh no, skip this part.” Nathan blushed as once more he stumbled over his words about the anarchist colors of the tank.
“Keep going, keep going. I’m on again in a second.” Milan waved his pizza slice around, barely keeping the topping on it. “Mmm,” he grunted happily as he saw himself speak: “This win is for all the anarcho-punks out there. We were the rebel entry, and we kicked ass!” It was strange to hear his voice echoing through the chamber and have him beside me, drumming his heels on the wall with enthusiasm for his recorded self.
Then there was our escape, or at least the part of it up until we had shot the last of the cameras.
“Again!” Milan threw away a box by its corner, watching it spin down to the rubble and junk at the bottom of the amphitheater. He reached for another box.
“Just a second. There are some new threads on the APC forums. Jay and Carter have posted to say hi, good job, and stuff. They wish they’d been in there with us. I’m gonna thank them, yes?” Athena leaned forward so she could look along the line at us.
“Sure.” Milan was expansive. “Tell them to organize a cele-bratory party.”
“There already is one. A silent party.” Athena changed the output of the projector so we could see what she was looking at. The anarcho-punk community was really enthusiastic about our win; the forums were full of posts about how awesome our tank had been. There were threads over a thousand posts long, mostly just with a short comment like “Class!” Beneath every comment was the highly elaborate design of the name tag of the person who had sent the post. More often than not, people contributed to forums simply because their tag would then be on show. This wasn’t unreasonable, given the amount of artistic endeavor that went into creating a really good tag.
“What’s that thread about injuries?” asked Nathan. “Did many get hurt?”
Athena quickly scrolled through the original post and subsequent comments. “Looks like twenty-one in hospital: shock, laceration, six broken bones, sprains. Nothing serious.”
“No,” Nathan agreed. “It could have been worse. Some of those vehicles came down pretty heavily. The helicopter, though. That was awful.”
No one spoke; the sound of chewing ceased. True. Those people had died today, and we were all aware that the consequences were profound. In the end, it had not been our decision, and perhaps the others took comfort from that. But I had wanted the helicopter downed. When the crisis had come, I had been willing to kill to survive capture, and that was a new, sobering discovery about myself. I met it face-on, though, unflinching.
“How’s Defiance doing?” Nathan asked, noticing Athena check once more on the number of registrations.
“Nine thousand and seventeen. It’s down to less than a hundred an hour, but I think we’ll pass ten thousand sometime tomorrow.” She laughed. “That’s cool—we are now entitled to a member on the board of the Queen’s Palace Middle School.”
“I went there. That is cool; imagine turning up to a meeting, with your board, your hair longer than your collar, and a really outrageous tag on your shirt. Mr. Lindsey would freak and he couldn’t do anything about it.” Nath brushed back his bangs with a smile.
“You aren’t going to take any of the committee places?” Over the previous few hours, the rapid growth of Defiance had entitled the guild to places on the boards of hospitals, traffic control and residents’ committees, and schools in our area. It had displaced other guilds, forcing their representatives off, and it seemed a waste to me not to take them up, but it was Athena’s guild and her call. After all, I wasn’t even a member; I couldn’t register, seeing as how I had no identity.
“No. The only seat I would take is on the High Council, and we’re going to have to do something nuclear to get up there.” She noticed my querying look. “The thing is, Ghost, half the people registering for Defiance are doing it as a protest. That’s what our charter says, right? If we start playing the game, joining the committees, we’re going to look like every other guild. They’ll be disillusioned.”
“Go back to the party thread, would you, Athena?” Milan was tucking into the ice cream, with an occasional glance up at the far wall, on which Athena was projecting the pages of her notebook. He was bored with guild talk, which I suppose kind of proved Athena right.
“The sector is the number of members of Spaw.” Milan was studying the clues to the venue for the party. “And the street number is the amount of blue in the APC flag. Spaw has six people in its band, right?”
“Correct,” replied Athena.
“Affirmative,” I spoke at the same time, still in tank-crew mode.
“Wow, but that street name’s a toughie.” He stuck a spoon in his mouth and was a long time removing it. “The street number is the amount of blue in the APC flag? What’s that mean? The APC flag is red and black? They don’t have any blue at all.”
“Mmmm.” Nathan waved his own spoon while he swallowed hurriedly. “Yes, but on the standard color chart, the particular red they use is two hundred forty-five parts red, zero parts green, and sixty-one parts blue.”
Milan looked at him affectionately. “You know, you are the real deal. There’s a lot of kids out there who look more punk than you. No offense, but you look a bit nerdy, mate. Only in appearance, though. Inside, you are pure rock and roll. I’m proud to be in the same crew as you.”
“Thanks, Milan, you, too.” Nathan blushed.
When I came to think about it, Milan was right. Nath had been rock solid: no complaints about living rough, brilliant in the aircar race. He had surprised me.
“So, Sixty-First Street in Sector Six. Call it up there, would you, Athena?” Milan glanced down the line. At the other end of the row, Athena was holding a slice of pizza in her left hand, well away from her precious computer, while with her right she navigated to the display Milan wanted. She looked up from the pale screen, her glasses changing color as the reflected turquoise light left them, leaned to one side to take a bite from the slice, then hunched back over the notepad. It made me smile to see her eating without breaking her concentration. She probably hadn’t even noticed herself take that mouthful of pizza.
The image that was now displayed on the far wall was a street typical of the administrative sector of the City: rows of tall, stylish buildings, the sheen on the surface of their many windows reflecting the sky and the streetlights around them. Athena rushed the camera eye along Sixty-First Street. She paused when she came to a very striking circular tower building, whose floodlit interior gleamed with curving steel girders. The heart of the building was a hollow cone, with offices concentrated in a ring, thirty floors and more up toward the top, while at its base, a great hallway and reception area took up almost the entire ground floor. Heslington House. According to the label on the map, it was a government center for economic planning.
“Mmm. Has to be. It looks perfect.” Milan looked up at us, seeking agreement.
Athena nodded. “I’ll just check the rest of the sector all the same.”
There were one or two other tall buildings that might possibly have been the site of the silent party, but none had the sleek design of Heslington House. A party there made a lot of sense, fashionwise.
“Ready to go?” Milan threw away his empty ice-cream carton.
“I don’t want to go.”
“Jumping giant jeebies! Ghost, this is a party for us. We’re stars now. We can’t just miss it.”
“Of course we can. If the police aren’t totally stupid, they will have figured out where the party is and also that there is a good chance we’ll be there.”
“Yeah, point taken. But still, I want to risk it. If they raid, we clear out fast on our boards and meet back here. After all, imagine the buzz when we come in. My hair is standing up just thinking about it.” Milan ran his hand over his close-shaved scalp. “Come on, Ghost, just for an hour, say. Just to taste it.”
“Milan, once you’re at that party, you’re not going to leave in an hour.”
“True, true.” He shrugged. “But still. We have to go. Don’t we, mate?” He slapped Nath on the shoulder.
“Actually, I think I would like to go. Sorry, Ghost.”
I looked at Athena.
“That building looks class.” She pushed her glasses back up her nose. “I’d like to see what the party looks like, at least. Plus we can drop a few Defiance tags around the place for people to see. Don’t worry, I won’t get lost. I’ll monitor for police activity and if it’s building up in any way around that sector, I’ll call it.”
“Yeah.” Milan leaped up, a big grin on his face, unconsciously flexing his biceps. “That’s fair enough, right, Ghost? If Athena calls it, we all scram fast.”
“I’m not happy, but I’ll come along. The only idea worse than going to this party is for us to split up.”
“Great. What can go wrong?”
“Milan, you idiot. You just can’t say things like that.” I was half-angry with him, for pushing us toward danger; the other half, though, was attracted to the party. After all, he was right: we would be stars.
“Sure I can. Come on.” Milan kicked his board into life. “Last one to Heslington House has moldy underwear.”
 
Silent parties usually took place in government buildings or the offices of major corporations. The APC would find a place where they could disable the security and then send out the word. We would all descend on the target building, each with our own music. From the outside you would see nothing; the windows were blanked. Nor would you hear anything. But inside, hundreds of people would be flowing around the venue, silently dancing to whatever was playing in their earphones. During the night, clusters of dancers would form wherever the BPM of the music they were moving to matched. Those who really thought they were on the same wavelength would sometimes share each other’s music. That wasn’t for me, though; I found the experience uncomfortably intimate. Conversation was discouraged, a whisper at most. The point wasn’t just to avoid detection; it was to create a strange world, one where we were ethereal creatures, flitting through an environment that was normally reserved for top-level cardholders and policy makers.
Heslington House was indeed the venue. Two powerful looking, middle-aged APC security men were nearby, in the shadows of the street. They nodded as we boarded toward them and slid open the door for us. If they recognized Milan and the others from the newscast, they did not show it on their somber faces.
The inside of the building lived up to the map we had examined. We were in the huge space at the foot of a cone. Polished silver girders stretched up the full forty or so floors to where the cone narrowed, a circle for a roof. Since the girders were all curving, the effect was to form a whorl that spread out from the roof like the arms of a spiral galaxy. This image was enhanced by the lighting, installed, perhaps, just for the night, by the APC. Hundreds of very narrow white beams were pointing upward from the ground floor, their reflections creating tens of thousands of stars above us.
Huge drapes some thirty feet high cut off the interior dancing area from the rest of the building. There were lights being played onto these also, and one of the images was of our tank crossing the finishing line. It was being looped over and over, Milan sitting across the cannon, waving. Nathan, Athena, and Arnie, all looking very happy, just below him. Good old Arnie. He was probably at an exclusive green nightclub right now, enjoying the attention and glory that he had longed for all his life.
A ripple spread through the crowd of dancers. They had noticed our arrival and were turning to face us, nearest first, waving their hands at us, fingers spread wide. Silent applause. It was a good moment. The respect of our peers.
The movement I now sensed, of someone approaching us through the celebrating throng, turned out to be that of Carter and Jay. I relaxed a little. They gave us knuckle slaps, and it was clear from the brightness of their eyes how much they were genuinely excited for us. Their enthusiasm was infectious, and I knew I was wearing a grin as wide and stupid as Milan’s. We made our way into the heart of the party, accepting with nods the waves of approval as we passed.
BOOK: Saga
8.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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