Read Zero Point (Owner Trilogy 2) Online
Authors: Neal Asher
‘We no longer have a political director,’ Var declared.
‘Why?’
‘Because I shot him.’
Neumann just stared at her for a long moment, before bowing her head in acknowledgement. ‘So you are now as independent as we are?’
‘I don’t actually know how independent
you
are. I am in charge merely because that was easiest, and because leadership contests aren’t a good idea when you’re
fighting for survival.’ She glanced at Christen, who flinched. ‘But certainly we don’t have an “Owner” here.’
Neumann said, ‘He styles himself the Owner because it’s a title not completely degraded by its misuse on Earth. He now
owns
this station because its computers are part of his
mind, and all its robots and cams are just extensions of his hands and eyes.’
‘Biochips, comlife,’ interjected Rhone. Var glanced round at him and he stabbed a finger at the screen. ‘Her . . . that’s the sort of stuff she was talking about –
human minds interfaced with computers.’
Var absorbed that information, not entirely sure of the detail but pretty sure of the results. She turned back to the screen.
‘It still sounds arrogant,’ she said to Neumann, trying to keep her voice level.
Neumann shrugged. ‘He dropped the Argus satellite network on Inspectorate HQs all across Earth, and turned all the robots of Earth against the Committee. He wiped out something like
two-thirds of the upper Committee administration and military and most of the Committee itself, including Messina, who is now . . . our prisoner. So I think I’ll allow him his
arrogance.’ She paused for a second, then went on, ‘But you’ve got more immediate problems. Have you had deaths there, within the last three months, from something you may have
identified as Ebola?’
Var nodded numbly. How did this woman know that?
Neumann continued, ‘Right, the signal must have got through despite the solar storm. The deaths we had here only happened after we turned off the EM shield.’ She paused for a second,
contemplatively, then continued, ‘They were caused by a cybernetic virus emitted by biochips integral to your ID implants. That means you need to get all your implants removed, and fast. The
woman who now styles herself the ruler of Earth, one Serene Galahad, seems to have the power to activate that virus in any implant she chooses, and she might just decide that independents on Mars
are not something she wants.’
‘Jesus, that was it!’ exclaimed chief medical officer Da Vinci.
‘Galahad has no scruples in this area,’ Neumann added. ‘You’ve seen recent images from Earth?’
‘Some sort of plague,’ said Var. ‘We’re not getting much.’
‘It’s the same thing, and it killed just about every zero asset on Earth within one day – eight billion of them. It then went on to kill the remaining twenty-four delegates on
Earth, except Galahad herself. And it tends to affect anyone who in any way questions Galahad’s authority.’
‘Eight billion,’ Martinez repeated numbly, others behind him echoing his words.
Var suddenly found a reason for hope. Maybe this news would be enough to dispel some of the bitterness in the atmosphere of the base. Then she pulled back from the thought, suddenly feeling very
selfish as the true import of this woman’s words impacted.
Eight billion.
‘You need to get on with removing your implants now,’ Neumann insisted. ‘We’ll talk again in twenty hours precisely. There’s no hurry, as we’ve got plenty of
talk time before we meet face to face.’
The screen darkened. Var whirled around to Da Vinci, her stomach feeling like a knot of lead. ‘That’s true?’
He was distracted for a moment, still mulling over the horrifying news, then after another moment her words impinged. ‘Almost certainly.’ He nodded. ‘In every case the
infection was concentrated in the arm, around the implant. And I thought that maybe, due to sloppy aseptic procedures . . .’
‘Move fast, then, to get all remaining implants removed.’ Her own was gone, so she had no worries for herself, but she could ill afford to lose any more personnel. ‘Come on,
let’s get moving.’ She stood up. Best to keep people busy and distracted, and not let them think about this revelation too much.
‘Wait,’ said Rhone, nodding towards the screen.
There was an image there again, highly distorted and really creepy because the face there seemed to possess pink eyes.
‘Why . . . do I know you?’ whispered a voice that sent chills down her spine.
‘Who is this?’ she asked.
‘I am . . . I am the Owner.’ He faded away, and the screen turned white.
The voice sounded almost as if it hadn’t issued from a human being, so why, oh why did it seem so familiar to her?
Earth
Kelly Shimbaum nervously proffered a squat little ten-terabyte memory stick. Serene eyed it for a moment, then took it and set it down with an emphatic click on the desk
beside her palmtop.
‘I asked you to tell me about the
Alexander
,’ she said quietly. ‘So tell me.’
Shimbaum gestured at the stick. ‘The Chairman . . .’ he began, then realized his danger and changed that. ‘Messina liked me to make a video presentation of the latest status
update.’
Serene glanced towards one wall of the office, which presently looked just like a huge window offering a view across the extensive and lush gardens surrounding the house. The entire wall was in
fact a high-resolution screen on which she could view the presentation Shimbaum had handed her. She contemplated the screen for a long moment then shifted her gaze along the adjacent wall to a
short column on which perched a sculpture looking something like the by-blow of a hawk and a praying mantis rendered in heat-coloured iron.
‘That’s all very well, Kelly . . . I can call you Kelly?’ The nervous little man gave a stiff nod as Serene swung her gaze back to him. She supposed she could call him anything
she liked and he would have to grin and like it. ‘Good. Now, what you have to understand, Kelly, is that until about twenty hours ago I wasn’t even aware of this project, so updating me
on something I know nothing about might result in some confusion, you understand?’
‘Yes, ma’am.’
‘So I repeat: tell me about the
Alexander
.’
‘Messina started the project twenty years ago,’ he began, his face now sheened with sweat, some of which had already soaked into his collar. ‘He wanted a big stick to wield out
there because of the danger of the stations or Mars slipping out of his control.’
That made perfect sense. The problem with off-Earth environments was that only intelligent and highly trained personnel could work satisfactorily in them, and such people were not as easy to
control as the average zero asset. Antares Base on Mars seemed a case in point that needed to be investigated: despite Serene ordering communications with the base to be opened once again, there
had been no reply from its political staff. This could be due to solar interference, which was still high, but it had also been mooted that they, along with everyone else there, were now dead
– which had been the intention. However, Hubble images showed the base still powered up and some signs of activity about it. Perhaps the radio transmitter had been destroyed during Political
Officer Ricard’s thinning-out of the population? Serene shook her head in irritation and got back to the point.
‘How come so few in the Committee knew about this project?’ She did not know who had known about it, only that she hadn’t.
‘I didn’t question his instructions.’
Serene repressed her irritation at that response and continued, ‘So, after twenty years . . . how far along are you? What are the
Alexander
’s capabilities, and how big is
it?’
‘The
Alexander
is the first ever space battleship. It was built around the engine taken from Mars Traveller IV.’ He paused, then added, ‘Documentation detailing the
smelting of that engine on Argus was falsified.’
‘Do go on.’
‘The ship is two kilometres long, and four hundred metres in diameter at its widest point. Eight further fusion engines fixed in rings of four at two points along its body enable it to
turn very quickly. It’s carrying seven hundred tactical atomic cruise missiles, with yields ranging from one kiloton to one megaton. These can be launched by its railgun or can launch under
their own power from its ports. That same railgun is also supplied with case-hardened iron slugs that can be accelerated beyond scramjet missile speeds to deliver a cold yield of nearly half a
kiloton. Additionally it possesses twelve antimissile lasers and a not-yet functional long-range maser. The crew complement is one hundred, with quarters for two thousand vacuum-penetration troops,
and below the main bridge turret are Messina’s extensive quarters – currently being fitted out.’
‘Of course,’ said Serene, feeling as if her guts were trying to crawl out through her throat.
Such power
. ‘So it is ready to fly?’
He shook his head. ‘Unfortunately not, ma’am. Messina wanted to take it to Argus Station with him, after that place was seized, but its construction scaffolds are still in place and
all internal systems have yet to be connected up and tested.’
Serene just stared at him. His tone had turned slightly patronizing for a moment – the superior technical director of the
Alexander
Project having to apprise a mere politician of
physical engineering realities. She picked up the memory stick, touched a control on her chair arm, and a panel in the desk’s surface slid aside to reveal various ports and controls. She
inserted the stick and routed its contents to her screen wall.
‘It seems odd to me that construction scaffolds remain in place when all that remains to be done is internal systems work.’ She gestured to two bamboo seats on either side of an
occasional table set against one wall of the room. ‘You can now take a seat while I watch your status report.’
He walked over woodenly, slightly more afraid than when he had first entered the room. Perhaps he was remembering that she was a physicist by training, who had then branched out into
nanotechnology, long before her distaste of the political inefficiencies all around her had driven her into a new career. What he didn’t know was that she had already obtained information
over and above what he was currently presenting her with, because she had her own source on the
Alexander
itself.
The presentation was as glossy and as slick as she expected. The video of the
Alexander
in its station seemed grainier, less impressive, less real than a science-fiction CGI. However,
noticing someone space-walking on the station gave her more of a sense of its scale and she began to
know
this was for real.
The narrative wasn’t delivered by the technical director, but by someone obviously recruited for his assured verbal delivery, but the words had certainly been carefully drafted by Shimbaum
himself. Serene easily read the subtext and quickly confirmed much of what her source had told her. There was absolutely no reason for the construction scaffold still to be in place; it was in fact
a hindrance to systems testing and the impending engine and weapons testing. She opened her palmtop and rescanned various reports she had read during the scramjet flight here to Italy. So long as
the ship remained confined within that station, Shimbaum retained his power-base. Meanwhile, the highly trained crewmen and Captain Scotonis were obliged to sit on their hands or repeat virtual
weapons drills and emergency procedures.
The presentation ended, with various credits – listing names she would be sure to have investigated. She gestured to the space immediately before her desk and Shimbaum headed back over to
stand like a naughty pupil before his headmistress.
‘The rather extreme reduction in Earth’s population,’ she said, ‘has freed up many resources, Kelly. Yet still our population is too high, and the one resource we have in
excess is people.’ She gazed down at the controls exposed in the desk before her. Among them lay a miniature screen which, when tapped with her forefinger, displayed a simple menu
selection.
‘I don’t understand,’ he said, jerking his head slightly so that a droplet of sweat fell from his nose onto the floor.
Serene gazed down at the spot where it had fallen. The white carpet was one of those that rotated its fibres into combs in the underlay, cleaning out all dust, dirt and spillages, which were
then conveyed away through a network of microtubules. She returned her gaze to his face.
‘Earth requires vengeance,’ she said, ‘and it requires the genetic database and samples currently aboard Argus Station. What it doesn’t require is little empire builders
like you undermining the efficiency of its projects so as to retain personal power and status.’
‘I’ve done the best I can. The Chairman has been more than pleased with my—’
‘Not good enough,’ she interrupted, touching her finger to one menu selection and sitting back.
Atop its short pillar, the sculpture opened out its two scythe-like wings and fantail before it launched, the wings blurring into motion with a sound like a clapped-out petrol engine starting.
It rose to a hover even as Shimbaum turned towards it, his mouth dropping open. The razorbird unfolded two chicken limbs below, each terminating in a long glass hook. Then, the sound of it turning
to a high, ear-piercing whine, it shot towards the terrified man.
‘I—’ he managed, then the thing was on him with a noise like a hatchet chopping into a watermelon. He staggered as it clattered away from him and then turned smoothly to head
back to its perch. Blood gouted from his neck, from his nose, and from the widening line dividing his head from forehead to chin. His skull fell in half as he collapsed, pumping blood across the
self-cleaning carpet.
‘Sack,’ instructed Serene through her fone, ‘in here now.’
Her personal bodyguard was through the door in a moment, gazing down at the corpse on the floor with something approaching disappointment. She eyed him for a second, suddenly attracted by the
sheer physical presence of the big man, but then, knowing the ultimate reason behind the sexual frisson she was feeling, she dismissed it – at least for now.