Read Zero Point (Owner Trilogy 2) Online
Authors: Neal Asher
Alex could think of many reasons, however, why they would get no help. Carefully he said, ‘But we saw what happened back there.’
‘We saw, but we also know that Committee power is still current – so we have to try.’
Ah, the optimism of a four-year-old
, thought Alex. He watched her intently. ‘What can you do?’
Alexandra pointed towards the outer edge of the station. ‘There’ll be dishes out there,’ she said. ‘I should be able to hack one and get a signal out, and I’m
certain
someone
will be listening, despite everything.’
He tried to cast doubt: ‘I have to wonder if Delegate Serene Galahad would be prepared to help us. It seems quite likely that she won’t want the Chairman back.’
Alexandra looked quite offended by the very idea. ‘We have to try,’ she pronounced.
He nodded and smiled, realizing that he wouldn’t be able to educate her any further today.
‘It seems to me,’ he said, ‘that even if she doesn’t want Alessandro back, she certainly won’t want this station to remain in the hands of terrorists and
subversives. We’ll have to play on that, so let’s go.’
As he pushed himself away from the wall, ready to head for the nearest exit from their hideaway, Alex called up his visor display, noting he had about eight hours of air left. Since they shared
air between them, that figure applied equally to Alexandra. Over their time as refugees they had resupplied themselves through dangerous forays into pressurized parts of the station, occasionally
grabbing some water but otherwise reusing the water processed out of their urine packs, and very occasionally finding something to eat. If they came close to really running out of the means of
survival, if all options to that end were finally closed down, as seemed to be Lang-strom’s aim, what then? Surrender?
In some emotionless part of his mind, Alex realized that even surrender might give them a further chance to free the Chairman, but his conditioning prevented him from contemplating it too
deeply, at least for now. As he found his way out towards the edge of the station, he vaguely recollected those long sessions with his teachers, interspersed with the regular visits to surgery,
followed by thumping headaches and healing cuts in his skull.
Earth
Amazing, just a month after the population reduction around the Great Lakes, and the sewage plants were already back at optimum performance, processing everything heading
their way. Clean water was being pumped back into the system while well-rotted and dried human sewage was coming out of the conveyors to pour into the backs of automated trucks. These then conveyed
this form of fertilizer to the maize fields further south. They now even had hydrogen fuel available for that. The only fly in the ointment was that half of the trucks had necessarily been
reassigned, along with something like fifty per cent of the Great Lakes transport system, to move the bodies, and that many of the maize fields were now occupied by fresh pyres.
‘You’ll have more up-to-date stats than me,’ she said to the figure appearing on her screen wall. It was a lie, of course, as she knew precisely what the numbers were.
‘It’s now gone over twenty million,’ said the dead-faced woman, Gene. She was the environmental officer for Serene’s new North American delegate, and a woman who had
recently lost her husband and two children to the Scour. These three had died along with the previous delegate and any of his staff possessing knowledge of the report on effluent pollution of the
lakes. After all, Serene did not want anyone joining up the dots.
Gene continued, now with a flash of anger, ‘You’re going to get him for us, ma’am. You’re really going to get him. It’s not all talk . . .’
Serene nodded confidently, suppressing the anger she felt at having this menial dare question her. ‘Alan Saul and the rest of those rebels aboard Argus Station will pay for their crimes,
for their assault against Earth and against humanity. They will pay the ultimate price. My only regret is that they cannot be made to pay it a billion times over.’ Then again, the more she
learned about the research and development conducted by this Hannah Neumann, the more she realized how people could die more than once. ‘Something like twenty per cent of the resources of
Earth are now being diverted to this end. Space-plane production has recommenced, and I’ll soon be making another announcement concerning that matter. However, the business of running this
planet cannot be neglected, so I would like you to continue with your report.’
‘Lake Huron is dead,’ Gene said, ‘well, apart from the masses of anaerobic bacteria it contains. It’s now just sixty thousand square kilometres of sludge, so what
we’re doing will make little difference in the short term.’ Her image gave way to one side to show an image of the lake, divided up by the fish-farm barriers, processing plants and
floating roadways, and surrounded by sprawl heaped up like technological mountains. Processions of big tipper trucks previously used to bring in feed, along with the cargo flatbeds that used to be
employed to transport out the processed fish protein, were working all across the lake. The tippers were emptying their contents into the lake; forklifts were unloading the flatbeds. The lake had
thus far swallowed seven million corpses, and was now acting as a giant digester tank.
‘What’s left of Lake Ontario we might just as well fill in, what with the heavy metal pollution, but Superior and Michigan are doing surprisingly well, and the water-purification
plants are making some headway there. We’ve done better with Erie because of its size, and we have short-term algae blooms and some small areas of water weed re-establishing. If things
continue at the present rate, we may be able to start restocking that lake at least within five years.’ Gene paused, her expression turning bitter. ‘The Scour seems to have spared at
least some of them.’
‘I don’t think that’s somewhere we want to go, do you?’ Serene berated her, suppressing her own delight. Now, if only she could find some excuse to start demolishing the
surrounding sprawl, natural landscape could be exposed, trees planted . . .
‘I’m sorry,’ said Gene. She gazed out of the screen speculatively. ‘I’m a little distracted . . . I’ve been asking for reassignment.’
Why did she think Serene needed to know this?
‘Really?’
‘I want to go offworld and help with our projects out there, help to bring Alan Saul back . . .’
‘I understand,’ said Serene. ‘Everybody wants vengeance and everyone who has lost someone wants to be involved. However, you must remember that you
are
involved.
Everything you do to improve efficiency, rebuild infrastructure and ensure the smooth running of our planet means more resources can be diverted towards dealing with Alan Saul. With your expertise,
Gene, you are better placed where you are.’
‘But—’
‘No buts,’ Serene interrupted, her voice hardening. ‘Consider yourself lucky to be alive and in a position to help, and try to remain alive in order to do so.’ Serene
swiftly cut the link.
The damned cheek of it!
Just because her own ruthlessness had not been overt, well – she eyed the expanse of self-cleaning carpet before her desk – outside
her immediate vicinity at least, there were people who thought they could question her. Perhaps she needed to be a bit more blatantly ruthless?
‘Ma’am.’
The channel was assigned Priority One through her fone, so he’d better have a damned good reason for contacting her through it.
‘What is it, Clay?’
‘We’ve got communications from Argus Station, and I felt you needed to know about this at once.’
‘Alan Saul?’
‘No, it seems there’s a small undercover squad, one of Messina’s, still free on the station. They’ve managed to turn a dish towards us and get in contact. Apparently they
made an assassination attempt on Alan Saul, and he may well be dead, but now they’re in hiding.’
Serene experienced a sudden surge of disappointment, followed briefly by anger. It annoyed her that Saul might have been killed by some means other than as a result of her own orders.
‘What do they want?’ she snapped.
‘Data. They lost a lot of data and equipment recently. They want station schematics and access to a tactical planning team.’
‘To what purpose?’
‘They want to rescue Alessandro Messina, who is apparently still alive.’
‘And they think I would like to help them? I hope you didn’t laugh out loud.’
‘Certainly not, ma’am – they’re a good source of data, and are giving us some gold on the current situation aboard the station. That structural work we observed in the
recent Hubble pictures is them enclosing the station disc.’
‘I need to talk to them,’ Serene decided.
‘You can, but there’s a com delay of thirty seconds and their situation, as regards their oxygen supply, is critical.’
‘Okay, give them station schematics and limited tactical planning – just enough for them to resupply themselves. Then I’ll speak to them.’
‘Will do, ma’am.’ He closed the channel.
Serene sat back in her chair, her elbows on its arms and her fingers interlaced under her chin. The
Alexander
had already test fired its railgun and was now just days away from test
firing its main engine. And then, after maybe a further few months of testing and work on the internals, it would be ready to begin its pursuit of Argus. It seemed to her that she felt the hand of
destiny on her shoulder.
Leaner Society
There can be no logical explanation for the vicious genocidal attack upon Earth and its peoples by the madman Alan Saul. It could be supposed that his hatred of the
Committee was why he targeted the infrastructure of the most advanced socialist state the world has ever seen, but why did he then loose the Scour upon us? Was he motivated simply by a hatred of
all humanity? Whatever his motivation, and though he succeeded in committing the most heinous crime against humanity ever known, he failed to halt the progress of civilization. It can in fact be
argued that by killing nearly the entire zero-asset population and wiping out so large a portion of the bureaucracy required to control and direct it, he cleared the field for Serene
Galahad’s new world order. The factories of Earth were relatively untouched but, with a smaller population making demands on them, Galahad was able to build a leaner and more efficient
society – which it seems likely was not his aim at all.
Argus
Who are you?
Sometimes, for a frustrating period of time that could be either hours or microseconds long, he was aware of his condition, knew he had to wake up. The rest of the time he was washed to and fro
in a sea of information, some of it current, some past and some just plain fantasy.
I am Alan Saul. I am the Owner. Who are you?
Her face just hung there, untouched by those informational maelstroms. She looked like the ghost of a double exposure on old-style film, or like something indelibly etched into the underlying
reality of the universe. He knew her, he knew that face, he knew her from something deep and utterly integral within himself. Yet, in what passed for consciousness, partial as it was when it arose,
he knew her not at all. Merely the artefact of a damaged mind, then?
He drifted, found himself running through a crowded street, all around him people in ragged clothes watching with avid eyes, then big uniformed enforcers pushing them aside and liberally
applying those new handheld inducers, called disablers. The screaming, it was his fault; he should not have endangered them like this, he should not have put them in a position where enforcers had
to be sent to fetch them back.
Them?
He turned, searching all those faces. There was someone with him, someone important . . . His mind leapt away, unable to process that . . . instead found
somewhere else to go.
Minds
, ten of them the utter proof of how something good and right could come from something so ugly, like roses growing in pig shit. So much data, so much information . . . weaned from
the most inhuman research. That man called Nelson, or Leonardo, and his ways of maintaining life making the brilliant vivisection cruelties in HUD a possibility. Even Hannah’s research taken
there and hammered into new and horrible shapes . . . the most advanced robotics forced into an amalgam with screaming flesh.
Ten beautiful minds – touched on in dreams that seemed an age ago now, and free at last.
Who are you?
She wouldn’t go away. She was watching him, and he felt that she had always been watching him. He found himself discomfited by her gaze . . . while drifting, catching new information. Some
sort of news story acting as a further illustration of the horror caused by that arch demon Alan Saul?
The image was an old one, from the North India Region, from the Brahmaputra–Ganges flood basin. Saul gazed at the boy squatting by the mast of his small boat, a cloth over his mouth and
his eyes wide and black. He looked as if he was out on a fishing trip on a mountain lake. However, a closer study revealed the true picture, which, so the narrator informed the waiting public, was
taken only five kilometres from where millions upon millions of corpses had been heaped, literally into mountains. The climate and the flies had ensured that the corpses were quickly bloated,
rotten and seething with maggots, and a subsequent monsoon had caused the scene displayed here. The flood of billions of litres of water, maggots and fluids from dissolving corpses had completely
swamped the urban sprawl that occupied the flood basin, and this boy was one of the few survivors. His boat rode on the writhing glutinous mess while the mountain behind him consisted mainly of
bones to which a few stubborn fragments of flesh and gristle still clung.
‘He must be punished,’ continued Serene Galahad. ‘And we must retrieve the Gene Bank data he stole.’
Did it seem to him then that the other woman looked on with a slight twist of contempt to her mouth? No, no, she looked just the same – and she wasn’t looking there, she was looking
there . . .