Page 19 of Behemoth: B-Max


  A conduit the size of a sewer pipe emerges at ground level and snakes into the darkness. Clarke absently tags the next cam in line, following the line along the seabed.

  “Hey, what are you…”

  He doesn’t sound sleepy at all.

  She turns. Walsh is crouched half kneeling on the pallet, as though caught in the act of rising. He doesn’t move, though.

  “Hey, get back here. I wanna try again.” He’s going for a boyish grin. He’s wearing the Disarmingly Cute Face of Seduction. It’s a jarring contrast with his posture, which evokes the image of an eleven-year-old caught masturbating on the good linen.

  She eyes him curiously. “What’s up, Kev?”

  He laughs; it sounds like a hiccough. “Nothing’s up … we just didn’t, you know, finish…”

  A dull gray lump of realization congeals in her throat. Experimentally, she turns back to the board and trips the next surveillance cam in the chain. The seabed conduit winds on toward a distant hazy geometry of backlit shadows.

  Walsh tugs at her shoulder, nuzzles from behind. “Ladies’ choice. Limited time offer, expires soon…”

  Next cam.

  “Come on, Len—”

  Atlantis. A small knot of rifters has accreted at the junction of two wings, nowhere near any of the assigned surveillance stations. They appear to be taking measurements of some kind. Some of them are laden with strange cargo.

  Walsh has fallen silent. The lump in Clarke’s throat metastasizes.

  She turns. Kevin Walsh has backed away, a mixture of guilt and defiance on his face.

  “You gotta give her a chance, Len,” he says. “I mean, you gotta be more objective about this…”

  She regards him calmly. “You asshole.”

  “Oh right,” he flares. “Like anything I ever did mattered to you.”

  She grabs the disconnected pieces of her diveskin. They slide around her body like living things, fusing one to another, sealing her in, sealing him out, welcome liquid armor that reinforces the boundary between us and them.

  Only there is no us, she realizes. There never was. And what really pisses her off is that she’d forgotten that, that she never even saw this coming; even privy to her lover’s brainstem, even cognizant of all the guilt and pain and stupid masochistic yearning in there, she hadn’t picked up on this imminent betrayal. She’d sensed his resentment, of course, and his hurt, but that was nothing new. When it came right down to it, outright treachery just didn’t make enough of a difference in this relationship to register.

  She doesn’t look at him as she descends to the airlock.

  Kevin Walsh is one fucked-up little boy. It’s just as well she never got too attached.

  * * *

  Their words buzz back and forth among the shadows of the great structure: numbers, times, shear stress indices. A couple of rifters carry handpads; others fire click-trains of high-frequency sounds through acoustic rangefinders. One of them draws a big black X at some vital weak spot.

  How did Ken put it? For concealment, not effect. Obviously they aren’t going to make that mistake again.

  They’re expecting her, of course. Walsh didn’t warn them—not on the usual channels, anyway—but you can’t sneak up on the fine-tuned.

  Clarke pans the company. Nolan, three meters overhead, looks down at her. Cramer, Cheung, and Gomez accrete loosely around them. Creasy and Yeager—too distant for visual ID, but clear enough on the mindline—are otherwise occupied some ways down the hull.

  Nolan’s vibe overwhelms all the others: where once was resentment, now there’s triumph. But the anger—the sense of scores yet to be settled—hasn’t changed at all.

  “Don’t blame Kev,” Clarke buzzes. “He did his best.” She wonders offhand how far Nolan went to secure that loyalty.

  Nolan nods deliberately. “Kev’s a good kid. He’d do anything to help the group.” The slightest emphasis on anything slips through the machinery, but Clarke’s already seen it in the meat behind.

  That far.

  She forces herself to look deeper, to dig around for guilt or duplicity, but of course it’s pointless. If Nolan ever kept such secrets, she’s way past it now. Now she wears her intentions like a badge of honor.

  “So what’s going on?” Clarke asks.

  “Just planning for the worst,” Nolan says.

  “Uh-huh.” She nods at the X on the hull. “Planning for it, or provoking it?”

  Nobody speaks.

  “You do realize we control the generators. We can shut them down any time we want. Blowing the hull would be major overkill.”

  “Oh, we’d never do for excessive force.” That’s Cramer, off to the left. “Especially since they always be so gentle.”

  “We just think it would be wise to have other options,” Chen buzzes, apologetic but unswayable. “Just in case something compromises Plan A.”

  “Such as?”

  “Such as the way certain hands pump the cocks of the mouths that bite them,” Gomez says.

  Clarke spins casually to face him. “Articulate as always, Gomer. I can see why you don’t talk much.”

  “If I were you—” Nolan begins.

  “Shut the fuck up.”

  Clarke turns slowly in their midst, her guts convecting in a slow freezing boil. “Anything they did to you, they did to me first. Any shit they threw at you, they threw way more at me. Way more.”

  “Which ended up landing on everyone but you,” Nolan points out.

  “You think I’m gonna stick my tongue up their ass just because they missed when they tried to kill me?”

  “Are you?”

  She coasts up until her face is scant centimeters from Nolan’s. “Don’t you fucking dare question my loyalty again, Grace. I was down here before any of you miserable haploids. While you were all back on shore pissing and moaning about job security, I broke into their fucking castle and personally kicked Rowan and her buddies off the pot.”

  “Sure you did. Then you joined her sorority two days later. You play VR games with her daughter, for Chrissake!”

  “Yeah? And what exactly did her daughter do to deserve you dropping the whole Atlantic Ocean onto her head? Even if you’re right—even if you’re right—did their kids fuck you over? What did their families and their servants and their toilet-scrubbers ever do to you?”

  The words vibrate off into the distance. The deep, almost subsonic hum of some nearby piece of life-support sounds especially loud in their wake.

  Maybe the tiniest bit of uncertainty in the collective vibe, now. Maybe even a tiny bit in Nolan’s.

  But she’s not giving a micron. “You want to know what they did, Len? They chose sides. The wives and the husbands and the medics and even any pet toilet-scrubbers those stumpfucks may have kept around for old time’s sake. They all chose sides. Which is more than I can say for you.”

  “This is not a good idea,” Clarke buzzes.

  “Thanks for your opinion, Len. We’ll let you know if we need you for anything. In the meantime, stay out of my way. The sight of you makes me want to puke.”

  Clarke plays her final card. “It’s not me you have to worry about.”

  “What made you think we were ever worried about you?” The contempt comes off of Nolan in waves.

  “Ken gets very unhappy when he’s caught in the middle of some half-assed fiasco like this. I’ve seen it happen. He’s the kind of guy who finds it much easier to shut something down up front than clean up after it. You can deal with him.”

  “We already have,” Nolan buzzes. “He knows all about it.”

  “Even gave us a few pointers,” Gomez adds.

  “Sorry, sweetie.” Nolan leans in close to Clarke; their hoods slip frictionlessly past each other, a mannequin nuzzle. “But you really should have seen that coming.”

  Without another word the group goes back to work, as if cued by some stimulus to which Lenie Clarke is blind and deaf. She hangs there in the water, stunned, betrayed. Bits and piece
s of some best-laid plan assemble themselves around her.

  She turns and swims away.

  HARPODON

  ONCE upon a time, back during the uprising, a couple of corpses commandeered a multisub named Harpodon III. To this day Patricia Rowan has no idea what they were trying to accomplish; Harpodon’s spinal bays were empty of any construction or demolition modules that might have served as weapons. The sub was as stripped as a fish skeleton, and about as useful: cockpit up front, impellors in back, and a whole lot of nothing hanging off the segmented spine between.

  Maybe they’d just been running for it.

  But the rifters didn’t bother asking, once they’d caught on and caught up. They hadn’t come unequipped: they had torches and rivet guns, not quite enough to cut Harpodon in half but certainly enough to paralyze it from the neck down. They punched out the electrolysis assembly and the Lox tanks; the fugitives got to watch their supply of breathable atmosphere drop from infinite down to the little bubble of nitrox already turning stale in the cockpit.

  Normally the rifters would have just holed the hull and let the ocean finish the job. This time, though, they hauled Harpodon back to one of Atlantis’s viewports as a kind of object lesson: the runaways suffocated within view of all the corpses they’d left behind. There’d already been some rifter casualties, as it turned out, and Grace Nolan had been leading the team that shift.

  But back then, not even Nolan was entirely without pity. Once the runaways were well and truly dead, once the moral of the story had properly sunk in, the rifters mated the wounded sub to the nearest docking hatch and let the corpses reclaim the bodies. Harpodon hasn’t moved in all the years since. It’s still grafted onto the service lock, protruding from the body of Atlantis like a parasitic male anglerfish fused to the flank of his gigantic mate. It’s not a place that anybody goes.

  Which makes it the perfect spot for Patricia Rowan to consort with the enemy.

  The diver ’lock is an elongate blister distending the deck of the cockpit, just aft of the copilot’s seat where Rowan sits staring at rows of dark instruments. It gurgles behind her; she hears a tired pneumatic sigh as its coffin lid swings open, hears the soft slap of wet feet against the plates.

  She’s left the lights off, of course—it wouldn’t do for anyone to know of her presence here—but some flashing beacon, way along the curve of Atlantis’s hull, sends pulses of dim brightness through the viewports. The cockpit interior blinks lazily in and out of existence, a jumbled topography of metal viscera keeping the abyss at bay.

  Lenie Clarke climbs into the pilot’s seat beside her.

  “Anyone see you?” Rowan asks, not turning her head.

  “If they had,” the rifter says, “they’d probably be finishing the job right now.” Referring, no doubt, to the injuries sustained by Harpodon in days gone by. “Any progress?”

  “Eight of the samples tested positive. No fix yet.” Rowan takes a deep breath. “How goes the battle on your end?”

  “Maybe you could pick a different expression. Something a bit less literal.”

  “Is it that bad?”

  “I don’t think I can hold them back, Pat.”

  “Surely you can,” Rowan says. “You’re the Meltdown Madonna, remember? The Alpha Femme.”

  “Not any more.”

  Rowan turns to look at the other woman.

  “Grace is—some of them are taking steps.” Lenie’s face switches on and off in the pulsating gloom. “They’re mine-laying again. Right out in the open this time.”

  Rowan considers. “What does Ken think about that?”

  “Actually, I think he’s okay with it.”

  Lenie sounds as though she’d been surprised by that. Rowan isn’t. “Mine-laying again?” she repeats. “So you know who set them the first time?”

  “Not really. Not yet. Not that it matters.” Lenie sighs. “Hell, some people still think you planted the first round yourselves.”

  “That’s absurd, Lenie. Why would we?”

  “To give you an—excuse, I guess. Or as some kind of last-ditch self-destruct, to take us out with you. I don’t know.” Lenie shrugs. “I’m not saying they’re making sense. I’m just telling you where they’re at.”

  “And how are we supposed to be putting together all this ordinance, when you people control our fabrication facilities?”

  “Ken says you can get a standard Calvin cycler to make explosives if you tweak the wiring the right way.”

  Ken again.

  Rowan still isn’t sure how to broach the subject. There’s a bond between Lenie and Ken, a connection both absurd and inevitable between two people for whom the term friendship should be as alien as a Europan microbe. It’s nothing sexual—the way Ken swings it hardly could be, although Rowan suspects that Lenie still doesn’t know about that—but in its own repressed way, it’s almost as intimate. There’s a protectiveness, not to be taken lightly. If you attack one, you better watch out for the other.

  And yet, from the sound of it, Ken Lubin is beginning to draw different alliances …

  She decides to risk it. “Lenie, has it occurred to you that Ken might be—”

  “That’s crazy.” The rifter kills the question before she has to answer it.

  “Why?” Rowan asks. “Who else has the expertise? Who else is addicted to killing people?”

  “You gave him that. He was on your payroll.”

  Rowan shakes her head. “I’m sorry, Lenie, but you know that isn’t true. We instilled his threat-response reflex, yes. But that was only to make sure he took the necessary steps—”

  “To make sure he killed people,” Lenie interjects.

  “—in the event of a security breach. He was never supposed to get—addicted to it. And you know as well as I do: Ken has the know-how, he has access, he has grudges going all the way back to childhood. The only thing that kept him on the leash was Guilt Trip, and Spartacus took care of that.”

  “Spartacus was five years ago,” the rifter points out. “And Ken hasn’t gone on any killing sprees since then. If you’ll remember, he was one of exactly two people who prevented your last uprising from turning into The Great Corpse Massacre.”

  She sounds as if she’s trying to convince herself as much as anyone. “Lenie—”

  But she’s having none of it. “Guilt Trip was just something you people laid onto his brain after he came to work for you. He didn’t have it before, and he didn’t have it afterward, and you know why? Because he has rules, Pat. He came up with his own set of rules, and he damn well stuck to them, and no matter how much he wanted to, he never killed anyone without a reason.”

  “That’s true,” Rowan admits. “Which is why he started inventing reasons.”

  Lenie, strobing slowly, looks out a porthole and doesn’t answer.

  “Maybe you don’t know that part of the story,” Rowan continues. “You never wondered why we’d assign him to the rifter program in the first place? Why we’d waste a Black Ops Black Belt on the bottom of the ocean, scraping barnacles off geothermal pumps? It was because he’d started to slip up, Lenie. He was making mistakes, he was leaving loose ends all over the place. Of course he always tied them up with extreme prejudice, but that was rather the point. On some subconscious level, Ken was deliberately slipping up so that he’d have an excuse to seal the breach afterward.

  “Beebe Station was so far out in the boondocks that it should have been virtually impossible to encounter anything he could interpret as a security breach, no matter how much he bent his rules. That was our mistake, in hindsight.” Not even one of our bigger ones, more’s the pity. “But my point is, people with addictions sometimes fall off the wagon. People with self-imposed rules of conduct have been known to bend and twist and rationalize those rules to let them both have their cake and eat it. Seven years ago, our psych people told us that Ken was a classic case in point. There’s no reason to believe it isn’t just as true today.”

  The rifter doesn’t speak for a momen
t. Her disembodied face, a pale contrast against the darkness of her surroundings, flashes on and off like a beating heart.

  “I don’t know,” she says at last. “I met one of your psych people once, remember? You sent him down to observe us. We didn’t like him much.”

  Rowan nods. “Yves Scanlon.”

  “I tried to look him up when I got back to land.” Look him up: Leniespeak for hunt him down. “He wasn’t home.”

  “He was decirculated,” Rowan says, her own euphemism—as always—easily trumping the other woman’s.

  “Ah.”

  But since the subject has come up … “He—he had a theory about you people,” Rowan says. “He thought that rifter brains might be … sensitive, somehow. That you entered some heightened state of awareness when you spent too long on the bottom of the sea, with all those synthetics in your blood. Quantum signals from the brainstem. Some kind of Ganzfeld effect.”

  “Scanlon was an idiot,” Lenie remarks.

  “No doubt. But was he wrong?”

  Lenie smiles faintly.

  “I see,” Rowan says.

  “It’s not mind-reading. Nothing like that.”

  “But maybe, if you could … what would be the word, scan?”

  “We called it fine-tuning,” Lenie says, her voice as opaque as her eyes.

  “If you could fine-tune anybody who might have…”

  “Already done. It was Ken who suggested it, in fact. We didn’t find anything.”

  “Did you fine-tune Ken?”

  “You can’t—” She stops.

  “He blocked you, didn’t he?” Rowan nods to herself. “If it’s anything like Ganzfeld scanning, he blocks it without even thinking. Standard procedure.”

  They sit without speaking for a few moments.

  “I don’t think it’s Ken,” Clarke says after a while. “I know him, Pat. I’ve known him for years.”

  “I’ve known him longer.”

  “Not the same way.”

  “Granted. But if not Ken, who?”

  “Shit, Pat, the whole lot of us! Everybody has it in for you guys now. They’re convinced that Jerry and her buddies—”