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by Anne Harris
In a near-future Detroit, the living polymer industry has the city in its grip. While vat-divers struggle to organize, the GeneSys Corporation works on making human workers obsolete. An escaped mutant, a con-artist and a techno-geek team up to unravel corporate blackmail, deceit and murder. One thing is certain: the city and the world will never be the same once the latest R&D development is unleashed.
Chapter 19 — Speaking In Tongues
Of
all the old buildings Chango had been in, the Fisher was by far the
most beautiful, and instead of being a ruin, its frescoes and pillars
and inlaid floors were all lovingly preserved. She was glad she
had reason to come back here, she thought as she crossed the mezzanine
to the elevators. Before, they’d brought her in to lock-up through
the garage, and when she was released, she’d been in too big a hurry
to take it all in.
Above
her, the second and third floor balconies were lined with brass grillwork.
There were inscriptions in gold lettering over the archways, and the
whole place was lit by great oblong chandeliers of overlapping frosted
panels, like pine cones made of glass.
It
was like a cathedral. A cathedral to industry, she thought, noting
the inset semi-circles high up on the walls, just before the curve of
the arched ceiling. They showed stylized pictures of animals,
buildings, beehives, and bore labels such as “commerce” and “agriculture.”
Here was one of the greatest architectural treasures of Detroit, happily
preserved by the gods to whom it was dedicated.
At
this hour the ground floor was deserted, the shops shuttered.
Her footsteps echoed as she walked the length of the gallery.
The sound made her feel very small and exposed. She quickened
her pace.
Even
the details have details, she thought, looking at the elevator doors
- brass panels etched with lotuses and goldfish surrounded by an interlocking
geometric border. How wonderful, she thought as she pressed the
elevator button, for something so carefully made to still exist.
A brass chart on the wall above traced the positions of the elevators
with lighted numbers. Most of them were up above the tenth floor,
but there was one two floors below, and rising.
When
the doors opened, Chango saw Benny standing inside. He was grimy
and streaked with sweat. He held a welding mask in one hand, a
blow torch in the other. For a moment they both stood frozen,
staring at each other, and then, like the chiming of a bell in a distant
land, the elevator behind her pinged open.
Chango spun on her heel and dove inside it, rolling to her knees and
frantically punching the close door button. From around the edge
of the doorway she saw Benny drop his equipment and run after her.
He reached the elevator just in time to wedge his hands between the
closing doors. His fingers protruded through the crack like pink,
searching tentacles, and Chango hammered at them with her fists but
her efforts were in vain. The elevator, sensing something stuck
between its doors, opened them of its own accord and he stepped through,
filling the small space with his presence.
oOo
Before
she ever opened her eyes, the smell of the air told Helix where she
was, and filled her with panic, longing, and rage. She sat up to find
herself against a metal door in a wide hallway with a cement floor and
glazed cinder block walls. It was empty and quiet except for the
distant hum of the vats.
She
got to her feet and tried the door. The handle turned, but the
door wouldn’t budge. She pounded at the unforgiving metal but
the booming of her striking fists brought her to a halt. She would
not be heard by anyone outside, and she did not want to be heard by
anyone inside.
She
turned again and slumped against the door. She was whole existences
away from that scene on the playground, and nevertheless, here she was,
where it really happened. The force of the returning memory held
her motionless against the doorway, waiting for footsteps, for screams,
for rending teeth and clutching hands, but these imminent horrors did
not materialize.
Taking
a long, deep breath she forced the terror back down her throat, swallowed
it, and crept along the wall, towards the vats.
oOo
Chango
lifted her eyes to Benny’s face and what she saw there backed her
right up against the wall of the elevator. Ada’s tanks bumped
against the paneling and she winced. They’d probably marred
the fine grain wood. Benny approached her, reaching his big hands out
towards her head. “What- what are you doing? Chango gasped
as one hand fell on her shoulder, pinning her to the wall. “What
have you done with Helix?” she fairly shouted in his ear just before
he grabbed the back of her head and yanked it forward. He leaned
closer. All Chango could see was her knees, but she knew he was
reading the initials on the tanks.
“Well,”
he said, pushing her up against the wall again, “I guess you’d better
meet Mr. Graham.” He held her with one hand splayed across her chest,
and pivoted to punch the floor button. He had to turn his head
to find the right floor, and when he did Chango sank down, unbalancing
his already awkward stance, and loosening his hold on her. She
shrugged the tanks from her shoulders and in one fluid movement born
of panic swung them around into Benny’s midsection. He doubled
over at the blow, and she lost her grip on the tanks. They skittered
across the elevator floor, bumping into the panelling on the other side.
The doors were closing. Chango ducked around Benny and grabbed
for the tanks, but he swung around, still bent at the waist, and pulled
her legs out from under her. She turned her head as she hit the
ground, saw the doors sealing together, and felt the floor pressing
further into her aching cheek as the elevator rose.
oOo
The
closer she got to the vat floor, the less the place looked, felt, and
smelled like an ordinary vat house. For one thing, the air was
steamy wet, its warm touch welcoming to her skin. She stripped
off her tunic and bodysuit, to feel it better. Once she was out
of the hallway there were plants everywhere, hanging from the balcony
ringing the room and standing in pots on disused instrument stands and
casings. And the light was different too. Somewhere they had found purple-hued
grow lights and installed them in all the fixtures.
From
above her, shielded and distorted by the tall curving walls of the two
vats, she heard soft splashing noises, and... singing? Or was
that voice inside her, awakening now to these sights and smells, to
the air that was nearly water itself? She rested her hands on the metal
ladder that climbed the side of the vat and looked up, gripped by a
joyous rage which overwhelmed her rational fear. For among the
redolent odors of the waters was the smell of one whose call she would
do anything, kill or die, to answer.
oOo
Benny
hauled Chango up off the floor by the scruff of her neck and pushed
her into the elevator wall. He had a gun, and he poked it in her
back. “Funny little Chango.” he whispered in her ear, “It’s
been a real riot, watching you sniff all around the truth these past
five years, but now I guess you finally found something, huh? Where
did you think you were going with these, anyway?” The tanks scraped
across the floor as he dragged them closer with his foot.
Chango
hung in his grasp unable to answer, suddenly limp with the realization
that though he was acting in ways she would have thought impossible
for him, this was Benny. It was still Benny and all Benny; the
person she’d thought she’d known, and this.
In
the scramble since she got out of jail she’d forgotten it. She’d
accepted the comforting idea that this Benny, the murderer spy, was
someone new and distinct from her trusted friend. Now, pressed
face first against the wall, his breath in her ear, she realized that
it had been him, all along.
The
elevator stopped. He kept the gun in her back as he reached down
and slung the tanks over his shoulders. Its muzzle bore into her
vertebrae as the door opened and he pushed her out ahead of him.
With his other hand on her shoulder he guided
her down the hall, walking swiftly. Chango pretended to trip,
and rolled towards him, striking his shins with her body. With the tanks
on his back, Benny over balanced and went down. Chango scrambled
up and ran back towards the elevators. There was a gun shot, and
a bullet carved a deep furrow in the brass doors to her right.
She swerved to the other side of the hall and grappled open the door
to the stairs. She took them up, her footsteps hastened by the
crash of the door as Benny threw it open. She turned the corner
to the next flight of stairs just ahead of his next bullet. At
the top of this flight was another door, with a trash can beside it.
She sent the trash can down the stairs, and slipped through the door.
This
hallway was much like the one a floor below. Grey carpeting and
beige plaint utilitarian in comparison to the splendor of the ground
floor. She scurried down the hall, trying doors. The fifth
one was unlocked, and she darted inside.
Clean
cut men and women in sylk suits turned to stare at her with wide eyes.
They were sitting at a table above which glowed a holographic chart.
She stood beside the door, panting.
“Can
I help you? One of the men stood and took a step towards her.
The door burst inward and Benny came through, brandishing his gun.
Several of the suits screamed. Chango fled her spot by the wall,
and Benny chased her around the table. One woman jumped out of
her chair in a misguided effort to get out of the way, effectively placing
herself in Chango’s path. Chango ducked under the table, squirming
among the legs of chairs and people, finally breaking free to find Benny
still entangled in the suits around the table. She heard their
shouts as she dashed for the door, and just as she reached it, a shot
and a scream. She didn’t look back. She was running again.
At
the end of the hall was a narrow wooden door that read “maintenance
only” in faded black stenciled letters. She tried the handle.
It was locked, but there was a ventilation grating at the base of the
door. A small, old square of metal covered with several layers
of beige plaint. And one corner was loose. Chango worked
her fingers underneath it and pried it from the door. The three
remaining screws popped out. She gathered them up and pushed the
grating edgewise through the hole to hide it from her pursuer.
If he ever got free of the suits; she still heard noises from the office
down the hall.
Her
shoulders barely fit through the square opening, and it took her precious
seconds to wriggle her hips through. She was in a small grey stairwell
threaded with wires, pipes and ventilation shafts.
Helix
stood on the diving platform and looked down into the vat where she
lay floating in the waters, her long dark hair streaming around her,
dreaming, and opened her eyes. For a moment everything ceased.
Nothing existed except for those bright blue eyes that were her eyes,
that face that was her face, and then, with a scream, Helix leapt into
the vat.
She
plunged deep down into the emerald green spaces and rolled over, looking
up at the surface like a sky quickly clouding as her sisters scrambled
into the waters, creating turbulence with their limbs. They were
swimming towards the queen. Several of them spotted her and broke
off from the wave, diving below the surface to converge with her as
she sought what they all sought, their mother, who was turning now and
swimming to meet her.
Her
sisters clamored between them, filling the waters with their bodies,
congealing into two knots, one around her, the other around Lilith.
As they surrounded and grappled her, Helix felt their panic. One
of them wrapped her arms around Helix’s neck and hung on. Her
face swam through Helix’s field of vision, a face like her own, but
with more delicate features. Helix saw the terror in those blue
eyes and felt, with no need for words, her message, “If you kill each
other we will all die.”
It
was true, but still Helix struggled and thrashed against the restraining
arms all around her. She didn’t want to hurt them, she just
wanted to get past them, but as they tightened their holds on her she
bit and clawed to break free. A hand she had savaged let go of
her upper right arm, and Helix reared back and butted the creature directly
before her with her forehead. Doggedly, Helix pulled herself through
the small wedge in the living wall around her and reached out with stiffened
fingers to poke the next available sister in the throat.
The
closer Helix and Lilith managed to claw towards each other, the more
the others pushed them together in their frantic efforts to get back
in between them. Soft, dark tendrils of her mother’s hair drifted
past her face and Helix twined her fingers in it, pulling her closer.
Lilith came readily enough, mouth wide and hands outstretched.
She grabbed Helix by the head and pulled her face to hers, laying open
Helix’s cheek with the sweep of a fang.
Helix
felt her blood that was not really blood flow into the waters; felt
the waters flow into her. She almost relished being cut again,
it would bring her that much closer to the depths. But this language
of touch, which she could not help hearing though she felt it through
violence, had not yet robbed her of all sense of self-preservation.
She ducked and angled under Lilith, grabbing her by her upper armpits
as she went. With her forearms Helix forced Lilith’s lower arms
against the shoulder joint, and they rolled together in a stately somersault,
ringed now by her sisters who gave them room and waited, watching.
In a small corner of her mind, Helix realized she had not breathed since
she dived from the platform, but it didn’t seem important, because
everywhere else, she was talking to her mother.
“This
is wrong,” said Lilith through Helix’s skin. “There can
only be one of us here. You have to be somewhere else to be you.”
“I
know,” Helix answered. “But I am here, and we will be either
one or none.”
Their
struggle became a slow match of strength as Lilith grasped at Helix’s
upper wrists and their hands clasped. They grappled with each
other, each trying to push the other back through the waters and eventually
out of the vat. But they were evenly matched, and each advantage
gained by either one only served to bind them tighter together. The
cut in Helix’s palm began to ache, and Lilith forced that hand back
against the wrist and scissored her lower arms in towards her body,
freeing them from Helix’s hold. For a moment it was all shifting
limbs and reaching hands, and then Lilith grasped her by the waist,
and with a nudge of her knee between Helix’s legs, sent her rotating
like a spinner until her face was between Lilith’s legs, her head
gripped in her knees.
Arms
wrapped around abdomens, heads cradled in legs, their bodies interlocked
like magnets in alignment. As Lilith spoke to her in her mother
tongue, Helix lowered her face to her soft damp mat of hair, salty like
the sea and full of stories.
oOo
Colin slept on a plastic sheet spread
on the floor, dreaming of the sun on a warm afternoon, beating down
on his hat as he dozed on the porch and waited for the stranger to come.
They were all waiting. Waiting with the rhythm of the sun that
was a blade of grass waving in the breeze and then the rhythm, the sun
and the dream were torn apart by a scream.
Colin
sprang from the floor to find himself alone, the door standing open
and mist roiling in from outside. Swearing, he slammed the door
shut and scrambled into his divesuit. His head was swimming.
He felt as if he’d been suddenly yanked from deep water, into the
air, and he’d forgotten how to breathe. He shook his head, pulled
the face mask on and clamped it tight. Slipping his lips around
the mouthpiece he gulped at the clean air for a few panicked moments,
wondering how long the door had been open.
He
hadn’t had much to do in the last day and half except ponder what
might be leaching through the ventilation system into the room, and
what his chances were of contracting vatsickness from the exposure he
had already received. Now he figured he could stop wondering and
pretty much plan to die of it; maybe not right away, maybe not for years
and years, but sooner or later, and for certain.
All
the same he double checked the suit’s seals before opening the door
and going out onto the balcony. In the vat below the waters were
aroil with the bodies of tetras. They were swarming so densely
that he couldn’t make out anything more than thrashing arms and legs.
Behind him, through the door he’d heedlessly left open, he heard the
transceiver ringing.
He
dashed back inside to answer it. It was Hector Martin. His
hair was in disarray, as if he’d been sleeping and hadn’t had a
chance to comb it. “Slatermeyer? Is that you?”
Colin
checked the suit’s radio and found that it was still on broadcast.
“Yes. Dr. Martin, something’s happening. The tetra’s,
they’re -”
“Graham
put Helix in the vat room. You have to keep her away from Lilith.
They’re both queens. They’ll fight each other until one or
both of them is killed.”
“Well,
I think it’s too late for that. I was sleeping. When I
woke up the tetra guarding me was gone. She left the door open.
They’re... swarming in the vat where Lilith sleeps. If Helix
got in here, as you say, that would explain it.”
“Slatermeyer,
you’re already suited. You have to go in there and break them
up.”
“Are
you crazy? I can’t even see anything — they’re fighting so
closely all I can make out is arms and legs. I don’t stand a
chance of getting through the tetras, let alone separating Helix and
Lilith. I’ll get killed. They’ll rip my mask off, or
pull open my seals.”
Hector
shook his head. “You have to try. Lilith and the others
attacked Helix when she hatched, and drove her out of the vat.
They’ll kill her now. Or she’ll kill Lilith. You have
to try to stop it. Please. If I could get there, I’d do
it, but Graham’s lackey, Benny, welded the door shut. There’s
no one else. You have to do something.”
Colin
shook his head reluctantly. He’d already suffered who knew how
much exposure to the growth medium. If he threw himself into that
mob of fighting tetras, he’d surely get more.
“Please.”
Hector stared at him, his eyes wide and desperate.
Colin
sighed. “I’ll try. But I’m not going to risk whatever’s
left of my life in a futile effort to separate them. You know
how strong they are. But I’ll get in, and I’ll try to talk
to the other tetras, try at least to get them to back off. I’m
sorry, Doctor, but they’re your brainchildren, not mine.”
Hector
slammed his fist down on the coffee table in front of him. The
impact must have jarred the transceiver recording his image. His
face blurred, and then came back into focus, but sideways. “Go,”
he said. “Do what you can.”
oOo
Hector
walked into the bathroom and splashed cold water on his face.
Straightening, he stared at his image in the mirror. How, he asked
himself, how had things gotten this bad? At what point had he
crossed over from the sane and illustrious life of a corporate researcher
to this — this mad nightmare where he asked his assistant to risk his
life for the good of a project that would never meet its stated goals?
He thought back over the decisions he had made, and realized that it
was in the very beginning, when he’d had the dream and decided to
follow it. He had stopped being an employee of GeneSys right then,
had stopped caring, really, if this project was in their best interests,
or his. Though he hadn’t known it at the time, he had offered
himself up in service to Lilith and her kind, and since he’d taken
that step, there was never any time afterwards when he could have changed
anything.
As
he gazed in the mirror, the ventilation grating on the wall behind him
popped off, and a woman crawled out. Hector turned to face her.
She dusted off her jeans and straightened up, looking around her.
“Oh, sorry. I had no idea what room I’d end up in. In
fact, I was afraid I had the wrong apartment. You’re Hector
Martin, aren’t you?”
Mutely,
he nodded.
She
smiled and offered her hand. “Chango Chichelski. Boy am
I glad you’re home. I was supposed to bring you my sister’s
air tanks. Vonda tested them and there’d been blast inside.
But Benny caught me, and he got them. He-” she paused, struggling
with the possibilities. “He was coming upstairs. He had a blowtorch.”
“They
welded her inside,” said Hector.
“What?
Where?”
“In
the vat room. Down in the sub-basement. There’s an old
biopoly lab with test vats. It was in disuse for years until I
took it over for the project.” Hector glanced at the hole in the wall
above Chango’s head. “We have to get in there.”
Chango
followed his gaze. “I got into a maintenance stairway.
Lots of places to go from there. Big conduit housings, access
crawl ways for plumbing. I took the ventilation system.”
“And
you found your way here.”
“I
had to pop out and check the circuit boxes. They label them by
apartment. I couldn’t really be sure I had it right, but I do
have a pretty good sense of direction.”
Hector
bit his lip. “Do you think you could make it down there?”
Chango
puffed out her cheeks. “Geez, that’s a long haul. It’d
take awhile. I don’t know.”
“Maybe
we should just go down there and unweld that door. I’m afraid they
may be killing each other right now.”
“They?”
“Helix
and Lilith — her mother.”
“Oh,
her mother...”
The
transceiver at Hector’s wrist bleeped and he answered it. It
was Slatermeyer. “What happened?”
“Well,
they’re not fighting anymore. They’re just sort of... wrapped
around each other.”
“What
are they doing?”
Slatermeyer
laughed, the sound distorted by his suit’s radio into a harsh grate.
He shrugged. “I know what it looks like.”
oOo
There
was her body, but she was someplace else. Her body was busy, it
had no use of her mind, and her mind swam amid black waters of nowhere,
like a question gone unanswered, and then the answer came, and she was
there, here, her. Lilith and she, entwined in thought and body,
asking and answering each other the question of their being.
“They
say it began in a garden,” said Lilith, “but I know better.
It began with a dream.”
The
brilliant blackness of the void faded around them, and they stood in
a green place with a tree and a snake in the tree. Her sisters
were there, adorned with fig leaves. They stood with their arms
linked in a crisscross pattern, like a row of x’s with legs.
“Before
we existed we were a dream dreaming ourselves into existence,” thought
Lilith as one of the sisters broke out of the line, lay down and closed
her eyes. Soon another detached herself and danced over the head
of the sleeper. “We crossed over into the world through the
mind of Hector Martin.” The sleeper turned over and wakened,
and the dancer rolled over her bowed back in a somersault and stood,
arms outstretched, at the head of the dreamer.
“This
is how we happened, but I remember before the dream, before anything.
I remember the void.”
The
tree was made of cardboard, and Helix saw the void reach up with empty
hands behind it, and the blackness rushed in and toppled it and her
sisters were gone. All that remained was a ring of x’s, spinning around
them.
“This
is where we came from.” Helix knew somehow.
“Everything
comes from here,” either she or Lilith thought, she couldn’t keep
track anymore. “From the well of possibility, where nothing
is known. Everything comes from here, everything returns here,
but only in the world do we know that we exist.”
“But
what difference does it make, if we only end up here again?”
“All
the difference. All the difference in the world. We are
a pattern, and the pattern continues. We return to the void, but
our pattern is forever in the weave of the world.”
The
void around them gradually returned to being the waters of the vat,
and Helix realized she could open her eyes and lift her head.
She and Lilith separated, and the sisters flowed in to buffer them from
one another.
The
consuming rage that had driven her into her mother’s arms was gone,
and she allowed her sisters to guide her with numerous small hands,
up onto the dive platform and down into the other vat.
They
had been designed to replace the vatdivers; trading cheap labor for
in-house slavery. But it hadn't worked out the way GeneSys wanted.
Instead of docile biological machines, it had gotten the Lilim, and
now, they were here to stay.
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