Part 57 (1/2)

nightfall in the paradigm world.

The head lifted out of the blackness of the desktop and smiled.

”Yuan? You fancy lunch?”

Li Yuan grinned back at his elder brother, then eased back in his hydraulic chair. ”I've a few things to do here, but yes. Where d'you want to meet?” ”Yang's. In Kennedy Avenue. I'll be there at one.”

”Make it half-past”

”Okay.”

The head winked, then reformed back into the blackness of the surface. Li Yuan looked up, across the busy trading room. Nearby his partner, Cho Yi, was hard at work, head down, the lead that connected him directly to the terminal flexing and unflexing as he ducked this way and that He was a big man, a southerner from Hunan, and like all of his uncles on his mother's side, he had gone bald in his late twenties. Now, in his early seventies, he seemed eternal, unchanging. Yuan smiled. Cho was one of those people who had a very basic approach to things. When he read a letter, his lips formed the words, when he talked, he spoke as much with his hands as with his mouth, and when he was plugged in, his whole body responded to the datastream, as if all those computer-simulated images really existed somewhere.

But for all that, Cho was a genius, and more than half the reason why Spring Day was so successful. It was Yuan's father's firm, but Cho was senior partner. And rightly so. Without him they'd have been sunk long ago. Cho looked up and, finding Yuan watching him, did a double-take. He raised a hand, as if to say ”I won't be a minute”, then, with a flourish on the keyboard in front of him, cut connection, the wire snaking back into the console with a swish and a clunk. ”What is it?” Cho asked.

”I'm meeting Han Ch'in for lunch. Half one at Yang's. You want to come? We could get the dung to cover.”

The clung was a computer simulant, designed by Cho and programmed to operate the way Cho operated, complete down to the last idiosyncrasy. When the dung was running there was no way - in the short term - that anyone could tell the difference from Cho himself. But Cho, Yuan knew, did not like to leave things in the hands of mere machines.

”I don't know,” Cho said, frowning, the lines in his forehead like the lines in a piece of old carved ivory.

”This once,” Yuan pleaded. ”You know how much Han loves your company. Put a limit on the dung's transactions. An hour, Cho. What can go wrong in an hour?” Cho answered him sternly. ”A tremendous amount But this once I'll come If s ages since I saw Han. Whaf s he doing now?” Yuan smiled. Even this - this small chit-chat - was a concession on Cho's part. When the market was open he liked to be dealing one hundred per cent of the time. Making money. Building their tiny empire. While he talked they missed out on deals, and on the commission on those deals. While they talked, Spring Day stood still. ”He's a Major now,” Yuan answered; then, gesturing to his own wire, he said.

”But let him tell you. Come Cho. Lefs make money.”

Across town, in the eastern suburbs of Beijing, DeVore was sitting in the back of a glide, his legs stretched out in front of him, the plush white leather and silk interior extending for yards in every direction. The screen between him and the driver's compartment was blacked out, the screen showing the state of the markets, the colourful 3-D diagrams changing every moment All was stable. World trade was flouris.h.i.+ng. And with the arrival of President Newell in Beijing tomorrow, there was every indication that things would stay that way, especially if he and President Wei agreed to extend the bilateral agreement. And that seemed almost a formality.

Yet things were not as they seemed.

DeVore spoke to the air. ”Tell Wyatt to meet me at the Park. And tell him to bring the woman. I want to check her out myself.”

The woman would be crucial. President Newell liked only a certain type. And if Wyatt was right, the woman was just that type. Getting her into the reception was the easy part. Getting her into Newell's bed would be much harder.

Or maybe not, if what he'd heard was right

DeVore steepled his hands before his face and smiled. All was in place now, every stone set in its proper place on the board. All, that was, except the last He took a long, relaxing breath, then spoke again. ”Opaque the windows.” As the ice of the windows cleared, he found himself looking out over a sprawl of ancient Han buildings, six to eight levels high, each level smaller than the last, like the steps of a giant pyramid. Hutong, they called these nests of alleyways and rat-runs. They were crawling with life beneath their protective meshes - five, six, sometimes even eight families to a living unit, wallowing in their own filth. If he'd had his way he would have had them cleared years ago. They and the teeming hordes who inhabited them. Yes, he'd have ga.s.sed them and bulldozed the district flat And then he'd have built something better. Something deaner.

Below him the airlanes were packed with barely-moving traffic, but up here he was alone. Not that that surprised him. He had paid for exclusive use of this lane.

He sat back, smiling now, imagining the panic - the pure fear - that would run through that nest of tiny alleyways.

If it worked.

DeVore grinned fiercely. Of course it would f.u.c.king work. He hadn't spent the last twenty-five years setting this up for nothing. Why, once it got going, it would be unstoppable. The b.a.s.t.a.r.ds would feed upon themselves like wounded sharks.

Fear. That was the key. That was the engine that would drive the world to self-destruction. Simple naked fear.

And now he laughed. ”Tomorrow,” he said, making a toast in the air with an imaginary gla.s.s. ”Here's to tomorrow!”

Kim sat there watching K. at work, feeling his own frustration mounting by the moment. At last, unable to help himself, he stood. ”Are you sure I can't help?”

K. stopped and turned, looking at him. ”I'm almost done now. But if you want...”

”No ...” Kim smiled, then slowly sat again. ”No, you're right Please, carry on.” It was true. It would have taken K. much longer to teach Kim how to recalibrate the machine than for him to do it himself, and time was of the essence. Even so, he watched, trying to make sense of the tiny alterations K. was making.

”Earlier, when you were speaking of it, you called it the paradigm world. Why?” K. frowned with concentration a moment, then, ”You'll see. The moment you enter it. If s different” ”How?”

But K. was saying no more. He gave the machine one final little tweak, then straightened up, a look of immense satisfaction on his face. He had changed a great deal these past few days. Gone was the moroseness of former days. And no wonder. It was not every day a man got his dead wife given back to him.

Kim stared at his twin admiringly. It was narcissistic, he knew, but he could not help it. It was like seeing himself in one of those distorting mirrors that gave back a flattering image of oneself. Only this mirror was real. Was himself. ”Don't you think we ought to tell the others? I mean... what if something goes wrong?”

K. glanced at him again. ”We'll be in and out of there before anyone realises we've gone. Besides, they'd only argue against it You know they would.” ”And rightly so.” Kim sighed. He was still not sure about this. ”Can't we let Karr know? Swear him to keep it a secret Then if something does go wrong, he could come after us.”

K. shook his head. ”Karr would just go and tell Kao Chen. And Chen would tell Ebert, and then ...”

Kim raised a hand. ”Okay. Just you and me. But we find out what”s happening and we get back. Okay? No risks, no danger.” ”Okay. And then ... and only then ... we have that strategy meeting. Agreed?” ”Agreed.” ”Good. Then are you ready, Kim? If s time to go.”

Yang's occupied the whole of the 135th floor of the old Tiananmen building on Kennedy Avenue, overlooking the Imperial Park, Lung Tan Lake to the left, the Tien Tan -the Temple of Heaven - to the right Beyond it, less than three miles south, began the megalithic sprawl of the new city, its walls like a breaking wave of gla.s.s that reflected back the clouds that drifted past its upper storeys.

From his seat beside the ma.s.sive wall-length window, Yuan looked down, his eyes resting briefly on the ancient three-tiered temple. From this height it seemed to jut like an erect nipple from the centre of its great circular base. Yuan smiled at the thought, and found himself momentarily wondering what it had been like in those days.

If he'd been Emperor he would have f.u.c.ked every beautiful woman in the land. A new one every night.

As it was ...

He looked away, determined not to dwell on the break-up of his latest marriage. Across from him, Cho Yi was scanning the desktop comset, checking that all was well back at the office.

As Cho looked up again, he smiled. ”All's well.” ”Good,” Yuan said, then turned, in time to see his brother Han come striding across the floor of the eating hall towards him, his huge, muscular frame seeming to strain the seams of his uniform.

Han Ch'in was wearing his full military regalia and as he moved between the tables, Li Yuan saw how heads turned, giving a tiny bow of respect as they saw the three golden stars on his bright red epaulettes. Yuan stood and gave a bow, then, as Han stepped closer, embraced him in a hug that was returned with equal warmth.

”Yuan!” Han Ch'in said, showing his perfect white teeth in a wide grin. ”How are you, little brother?”

”I'm fine,” Yuan said, beaming delightedly. ”And you?” ”Hungry,” Han Ch'in answered, and laughed. Then, noticing Cho Yi for the first time, he whooped. ”Master Cho!”

Cho Yi stood and gave Han Ch'in a deep, dignified bow, only to be grasped and hugged by Li Yuan's bear-like elder brother.

”How good to see you, Cho Yi! Are your mother and father well?” ”They are very well, thank you,” Cho said, smiling with pleasure at the politeness.