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Chapter 10
"No," Police
General Felix Buckman said, shaking his head rigidly. "Jason Taverner does
exist. He's somehow managed to get the data out of all the matrix banks."
The police general pondered. "You're sure you can lay your hands on him if
you have to?"
"A downer
about that, Mr. Buckman," McNulty said. "He's found the microtrans and
snuffed it. So we don't know if he's still in Vegas. If he has any sense
he's hustled on. Which he almost certainly has."
Buckman
said, "You had better come back here. If he can lift data, prime source
material like that, out of our banks, he's involved in effective activity
that's probably major. How precise is your fix on him?"
"He is - was
- located in one apartment of eighty-five in one wing of a complex of six
hundred units, all expensive and fashionable in the West Fireflash
District, a place called Copperfield II."
"Better ask
Vegas to go through the eighty-five units until they find him. And when
you get him, have him air-mailed directly to me. But I still want you at
your desk. Take a couple of uppers, forget your hyped-out nap, and get
down here."
"Yes, Mr.
Buckman," McNulty said, with a trace of pain. He grimaced.
"You don't
think we're going to find him in Vegas," Buckman said.
"No, sir."
"Maybe we
will. By snuffing the microtrans he may rationalize that he's safe, now."
"I beg to
differ," McNulty said. "By finding it he'd know we had bugged him to there
in West Fireflash. He'd split. Fast."
Buckman
said, "He would if people acted rationally. But they don't. Or haven't you
noticed that, McNulty? Mostly they function in a chaotic fashion." Which,
he mediated, probably serves them in good stead ... it makes them less
predictable.
"I've
noticed that -"
"Be at your
desk in half an hour," Buckman said, and broke the connection. McNulty's
pedantic foppery, and the fogged-up lethargy of a hype after dark,
irritated him always.
Alys,
observing everything, said, " A man who's unexisted himself. Has that ever
happened before?"
"No,"
Buckman said. "And it hasn't happened this time. Somewhere, some obscure
place, he's overlooked a micro-document of a minor nature. We'll keep
searching until we find it. Sooner or later we'll match up a voiceprint or
an EEG print and then we'll know who he really is."
"Maybe he's
exactly who he says he is." Alys had been examining McNulty's grotesque
notes. "Subject belongs to musicians' union. Says he's a singer. Maybe a
voiceprint would be your -"
"Get out of
my office," Buckman said to her.
"I'm just
speculating. Maybe he recorded that new pornochord hit, 'Go Down, Moses'
that -"
"I'll tell
you what," Buckman said. "Go home and look in the study, in a glassine
envelope in the center drawer of my maple desk. You'll find a lightly
canceled perfectly centered copy of the one-dollar black U.S.
Trans-Mississippi issue. I got it for my own collection but you can have
it for yours; I'll get another. Just go. Go and get the damn stamp and put
it away in your album in your safe forever. Don't ever even look at it
again; just have it. And leave me alone at work. Is that a deal?"
"Jesus,"
Alys said, her eyes alive with light. "Where'd you get it?"
"From a
political prisoner on his way to a forced-labor camp. He traded it for his
freedom. I thought it was an equitable arrangement. Don't you?"
Alys said,
"The most beautifully engraved stamp ever issued. At any time. By any
country."
"Do you want
it?" he said.
"Yes." She
moved from the office, out into the corridor. "I'll see you tomorrow. But
you don't have to give me something like that to make me go; I want to go
home and take a shower and change my clothes and go to bed for a few
hours. On the other hand, if you want to -"
"I want to,"
Buckman said, and to himself he added, because I'm so goddamn afraid of
you, so basically, ontologically scared of everything about you, even your
willingness to leave. I'm even afraid of that!
Why?
he asked himself as he watched her head for the secluded prison ascent
tube at the far end of his suite of offices. I've known her as a child and
I feared her then. Because, I think, in some fundamental way that I don't
comprehend, she doesn't play by the rules. We all have rules; they differ,
but we all play by them. For example, he conjectured, we don't murder a
man who has just done us a favor. Even in this, a police state - even we
observe that rule. And we don't deliberately destroy objects precious to
us. But Alys is capable of going home, finding the one-dollar black, and
setting fire to it with her cigarette. I know that and yet I gave it to
her; I'm still praying that underneath or eventually or whatever she'll
come back and shoot marbles the way the rest of us do.
But she
never will.
He thought,
and the reason I offered her the one-dollar black was because, simply, I
hoped to beguile her, tempt her, into returning to rules that we can
understand. Rules the rest of us can apply. I'm bribing her, and it's a
waste of time - if not much much more - and I know it and she knows it.
Yes, he thought. She probably will set fire to the one-dollar black, the
finest stamp ever issued, a philatelic item I have never seen for sale
during my lifetime. Even at auctions. And when I get home tonight she'll
show me the ashes. Maybe she'll leave a corner of it unburned, to prove
she really did it.
And I'll
believe it. And I'll be even more afraid.
***
Moodily,
General Buckman opened the third drawer of the large desk and placed a
tape- reel in the small transport he kept there. Dowland aires for four
voices ... he stood listening to one which he enjoyed very much, among all
the songs in Dowland's lute books.
... For
now left and forlorn
I sit, I sigh, I weep, I faint, I die
In deadly pain and endless misery.
The first
man, Buckman mused, to write a piece of abstract music. He removed the
tape, put in the lute one, and stood listening to the "Lachrimae Antiquae
Pavan." From this, he said to himself, came, at last, the Beethoven final
quartets. And everything else. Except for Wagner.
He detested
Wagner. Wagner and those like him, such as Berlioz, had set music back
three centuries. Until Karlheinz Stockhausen in his "Gesang der Junglinge"
had once more brought music up to date.
Standing by
the desk, he gazed down for a moment at the recent 4-D photo of Jason
Taverner - the photograph taken by Katharine Nelson. What a damn
good-looking man, he thought. Almost professionally good-looking. Well,
he's a singer; it fits. He's in show business.
Touching the
4-D photo, he listened to it say, "How now, brown cow?" And smiled. And,
listening once more to the "Lachrimae Antiquae Pavan," thought:
Flow, my
tears ...
Do I really
have pol-karma? he asked himself. Loving words and music like this? Yes,
he thought, I make a superb pol because I don't think like a pol. I don't,
for example, think like McNulty, who will always be - what did they used
to say? - a pig all his life. I think, not like the people we're trying to
apprehend, but like the important people we're trying to apprehend. Like
this man, he thought, this Jason Taverner. I have a hunch, an irrational
but beautifully functional intuition, that he's still in Vegas. We will
trap him there, and not where McNulty thinks: rationally and logically
somewhere farther on.
I am like
Byron, he thought, fighting for freedom, giving up his life to fight for
Greece. Except that I am not fighting for freedom; I am fighting for a
coherent society.
Is that
actually true? he asked himself. Is that why I do what I do? To create
order, structure, harmony? Rules. Yes, he thought; rules are goddamn
important to me, and that is why Alys threatens me; that's why I can cope
with so much else but not with her.
Thank God
they're not all like her, he said to himself. Thank God, in fact, that
she's one of a kind.
Pressing a
button on his desk intercom he said, "Herb, will you come in here,
please?"
Herbert
Maime entered the office, a stack of computer cards in his hands; he
looked harried.
"You want to
buy a bet, Herb?" Buckman said. "That Jason Taverner is in Las Vegas?"
"Why are you
concerning yourself with such a funky little chickenshit matter?" Herb
said. "It's on McNulty's level, not yours."
Seating
himself, Buckman began an idle colortone game with the picphone; he
flashed the flags of various extinct nations. "Look at what this man has
done Somehow he's managed to get all data pertaining to him out of every
data bank on the planet and the lunar and Martian colonies ... McNulty
even tried there. Think for a minute what it would take to do that. Money?
Huge sums. Bribes. Astronomical. If Taverner has used that kind of heavy
bread he's playing for big stakes. Influence? Same conclusion: he's got a
lot of power and we must consider him a major figure. It's who he
represents that concerns me most; I think some group, somewhere on earth,
is backing him, but I have no idea what for or why. All right; so they
expunge all data concerning him; Jason Taverner is the man who doesn't
exist. But, having done that, what have they achieved?"
Herb
pondered.
"I can't
make it out," Buckman said. "It has no sense to it. But, if they're
interested in doing it, it must signify something. Otherwise, they
wouldn't expend so much" - he gestured - whatever they've expended. Money,
time, influence, whatever. Maybe all three. Plus large slabs of effort."
"I see,"
Herb said, nodding.
Buckman
said, "Sometimes you catch big fish by hooking one small fish. That's what
you never know: will the next small fish you catch be the link with
something giant or" - he shrugged - just more small fry to be tossed
into the labor pool. Which, perhaps, is all Jason Taverner is. I may be
completely wrong. But I'm interested."
"Which,"
Herb said, "is too bad for Taverner."
"Yes."
Buckman nodded. "Now consider this." He paused a moment to quietly fart,
then continued, "Taverner made his way to an ID forger, a run-of-the-mill
forger operating behind an abandoned restaurant. He had no contacts; he
worked through, for God's sake, the desk clerk at the hotel he was staying
at, so he must have been desperate for ident cards. All right, where were
his powerful backers then? Why couldn't they supply him with excellent
forged ID cards, if they could do all this else? Good Christ; they sent
him out into the street, into the urban cesspool jungle, right to a pol
informant. They jeopardized everything!"
"Yes," Herb
said, nodding. "Something screwed up."
"Right.
Something went wrong. All of a sudden there he was, in the middle of the
city, with no ID. Everything he had on him Kathy Nelson forged. How did
that come to happen? How did they manage to fuck up and send him groping
desperately for forged ID cards, so he could walk three blocks on the
street? You see my point."
"But that's
how we get them."
"Pardon?"
Buckman said. He turned down the lute music on the tape player.
Herb said,
"If they didn't make mistakes like that we wouldn't have a chance. They'd
remain a metaphysical entity to us, never glimpsed or suspected. Mistakes
like that are what we live on. I don't see that it's important why
they made a mistake; all that matters is that they did. And we should be
damn glad of it."
I am,
Buckman thought to himself. Leaning, he dialed McNulty's extension. No
answer. McNulty wasn't back in the building yet. Buckman consulted his
watch. Another fifteen or so minutes.
He dialed
central clearing Blue. "What's the story on the Las Vegas operation in the
Fireflash District?" he asked the chick operators who sat perched on high
stools at the map board pushing little plastic representations with long
cue sticks. "The netpull of the individual calling himself Jason Taverner."
A whirr and
click of computers as the operator deftly punched buttons. "I'll tie you
in with the captain in charge of that detail." On Buckman's pic a
uniformed type appeared, looking idiotically placid. "Yes, General Buckman?"
"Have you
got Taverner?"
"Not yet,
sir. We've hit roughly thirty of the rental units in -"
"When you
have him," Buckman said, "call me direct." He gave the nerdish pol type
his extension code and rang off, feeling vaguely defeated.
"It takes
time," Herb said.
"Like good
beer," Buckman murmured, staring emptily ahead, his mind working. But
working without results.
"You and
your intuitions in the Jungian sense," Herb said. "That's what you are in
the Jungian typology: an intuitive, thinking personality, with intuition
your main function-mode and thinking -"
"Balls. " He
wadded up a page of McNulty's coarse notations and tossed it into the
shredder.
"Haven't you
read Jung?"
"Sure. When
I got my master's at Berkeley - the whole poli sci department had to read
Jung. I learned everything you learned and a lot more." He heard the
irritability in his voice and disliked it. "They're probably conducting
their hits like garbage collectors. Banging and clanking ... Taverner will
hear them long before they reach the apartment he's in."
"Do you
think you'll net anyone with Taverner? Someone who's his higher-up in the
-"
"He wouldn't
be with anyone crucial. Not with his ID cards in the local precinct
stationhouse. Not with us as close to him as he knows we are. I expect
nothing. Nothing but Taverner himself."
Herb said,
"I'll make you a bet."
"Okay."
"I'll bet
you five quinques, gold ones, that when you get him you get nothing."
Startled,
Buckman sat bolt upright. It sounded like his own style of intuition: no
facts, no data to base it on, just pure hunch.
"Want to
make the bet?" Herb said.
"I'll tell
you what I'll do," Buckman said. He got out his wallet, counted the money
in it. "I'll bet you one thousand paper dollars that when we net Taverner
we enter one of the most important areas we've ever gotten involved with."
Herb said,
"I won't bet that kind of money."
"Do you
think I'm right?"
The phone
buzzed; Buckman picked up the receiver. On the screen the features of the
nerdish Las Vegas functionary captain formed. "Our thermo-radex shows a
male of Taverner's weight and height and general body structure in one of
the as yet unapproached remaining apartments. We're moving in very
cautiously, getting everyone else out of the other nearby units."
"Don't kill
him," Buckman said.
"Absolutely
not, Mr. Buckman."
"Keep your
line to me open," Buckman said. "I want to sit in on this from here on
in."
"Yes, sir."
Buckman said
to Herb Maime, "They've really already got him." He smiled,
chuckling with delight.
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