Part 33 (2/2)

A sign appeared when Talia hit the water b.u.t.ton, letting her know that the water she was using had been recycled and would be recycled again.

But that didn't make her feel any less decadent. Especially when she sat in that chair, water dripping around her like those pictures of rain forests she'd seen in school. She'd set the water as hot as she could stand it. It was working some of the soreness out of her shoulders and back, but it wasn't quite enough to make her feel better.

She wasn't sure anything could make her feel better.

What was wrong with her? The people around her, the people who cared for her, got attacked. Her dad could have died. Then she went to help him like she'd promised herself she would after her mother got kidnapped, and that man had put a gun against her neck.

The spot was still sore. So was her stomach. She had a long bruise that ran from her hip to her rib cage where his arm had clutched her so tightly she was afraid she was going to vomit.

She hadn't, of course. But she'd been hoping she would. She would have gotten him with it, startling him, and helping herself and her dad escape.

All those fantasies, and they never came true. Not even the attack fantasy. Attacking the attacker didn't make things better, like she had always thought.

It had made things worse. She wiped her wet hair off her face. Steam rose around her, coating the etched gla.s.s that protected the shower area from the rest of the bathroom.

This was nice. It was the kind of thing her dad could afford but wouldn't. He was weirdly stingy, wanting a kind of life that didn't rely on money.

Maybe that was why he worked so hard, even when he said he wouldn't. Because he didn't want to think about the money he had.

She wasn't sure how she could deal with him working anymore, now that she knew the danger he was always talking about was real. And how focused he got. Just like Mom. Mom wasn't ever thinking about Talia.

Mom was thinking about the next experiment, the problems on the job, the way that the company wanted her to be.

And all she'd done was get mad at Talia.

At least, her dad had let Talia help.

Although that hadn't made her feel better, either. All that stuff she'd learned about Ki Bowles had been disturbing. Ki Bowles had a lot of people after her, so she needed orders of protection. And a lot of people hated her because she was so good at her job.

Talia didn't understand any of it.

She wasn't sure she wanted to.

Maybe that was why she'd been trying to leave. To visit those other girls, who were just exactly like her-exactly like her, down to the DNA structure-to see if they'd found a life that was better, one that didn't involve parents who worked too hard or people who hated them because of their jobs or, G.o.d forbid, kidnapping.

Talia ran a hand over her face, smoothing the water off it. Then she closed her eyes and tilted her head back.

At least here she felt better than she had all day. Here she could pretend everything was all right, even when it wasn't. She could pretend that she was cherished and loved and safe. Just like the girls she called sisters.

56.

Flint hunched over the nonnetworked computer in Van Alen's office, blocking her view of his work with his body. Not that she was trying to look at it. She was doing her own work, setting up his case, handling parts of the crisis that had descended on the office during the power glitch.

Talia was still in the bathroom. He was going to send Van Alen for her if she hadn't come out when the food arrived.

But he wanted to be calmer by then. Because he'd been reading Gramming's legal files, and they turned his stomach.

Gramming had originally been set up as a humanitarian corporation attached to Speidel Corporation. Cloning sometimes went wrong. Not the way it had in the spectacular early years, when a cloned child might have a finger growing out of its belly, but something a bit more subtle.

If an elderly couple wanted to clone their dead adult child, they'd often instruct the company to make several attempts. Gene manipulation, particularly certain kinds of enhancements, made the adult different than the baby had been.

Some parents wanted a child just like the one they'd raised. Others wanted a child just like the adult the dead person had made himself into.

Often cloning companies like Speidel showed the parents the cloned child, only to have them reject that child as ”not right.” That child-a living, breathing human being-then became property of Speidel. And Speidel wasn't set up to raise dozens (and in the early days hundreds) of children. So it set up Gramming, where, for a small fee, families who wanted to could adopt the clones and raise them as their own.

Adoption had fallen out of favor in many parts of the sector. It was easier to have a child carried through a surrogate or grown in a vat from the parents' mixed sperm and egg than it used to be. But creating an original child from sperm and egg, however it was done, remained expensive.

And the people who couldn't afford to create their own children and who couldn't have them the natural way often adopted because adoption was so much cheaper.

The one thing Gramming did from the beginning was insist that Speidel hide the clone mark. Most clone marks were visible behind the neck. But Talia's, like that of every other clone made at Speidel, was behind the ear and under the skin.

Most adoptive parents would never know that the baby they'd raised from a few weeks of age was a clone. Gramming had done studies. People didn't want to raise clones. They wanted to raise ”real children.”

As Speidel cut the amount of human cloning work it did in favor of agricultural products, the money that went to Gramming faded as well.

That loss of revenue threatened Gramming since, despite the intent of the corporation's founders, it had become a tidy for-profit business.

So the new CEO-Ohari Kinoy-had spoken to his lawyers about that. His lawyer. Justinian Wagner.

Who suggested that certain clones might have more value than others. Say, clones of a highly regarded scientist who married one of the most gifted computer programmers in the city. Clones whose original had a tested intelligence that was higher than her parents' combined.

Flint went cold as he stared at that. Because Justinian Wagner-years younger, but just as cold-had been talking about five clones of Emmeline, clones that Rhonda had made to protect herself, not their living, breathing daughter.

He made himself continue. Wagner had made the same argument about babies whose parents had award-winning beauty or some highly desirable talent, things that got pa.s.sed through the genes.

As close to designer babies as a company could get. The clones were created for other reasons that, like Rhonda's, often weren't specified in the files.

And the clones that weren't wanted-the ”defective” ones, the ones that didn't quite look like Uncle John or Aunt Susan-were property of Speidel or Aleyd or whatever corporation had paid for the cloning.

So, Wagner had suggested, on special children, b.u.mp the fee. Deal with the parents yourself so that no one else would know.

And Kinoy had done that. For almost twenty years.

He'd sold babies and made a hefty profit for Gramming. Some of that profit went to WSX in the form of consulting fees-probably keeping-quiet fees-and some of it went directly into Kinoy's pocket, before it ever saw Gramming's books.

Gramming itself, the five regular employees and the six part-timers, only saw the standard fee. They handled the records exactly as they would handle them for a straight adoption.

The only difference was that the boss handled the case and kept the most d.a.m.ning records on file with his law firm.

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