Read Idoru Online

Authors: William Gibson

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Science Fiction

Idoru (23 page)

Chia saw that Maryalice didn't have her hair-extensions in anymore. “When they were taking DNA samples, in SeaTac,” Chia said, “you stuck the end of your extension in there…”

Maryalice cracked the seal on the little bottle, opened it, drained it in a single gulp, and shivered. “Those extensions are all my own hair,” she said. “Grew 'em out when I was on sort of a health diet, understand? They catch people doing recreationals, when they take those hair samples. Some recreationals, they stay in your hair a long time.” Maryalice put the empty bottle down beside the blue dish. “What's he doing?” Pointing at Masahiko.

“Porting,” Chia said, unable to think of a quick way to explain the Walled City.

“I can see that. You came here 'cause these places'll re-post, right?”

“But you found us anyway.”

“I got connections with a cab company. I figured it was worth a try. But the Russians'll think of it, too, if they haven't already.”

“But how'd you get in? It was all locked.”

“I know my way around these places, honey. I know my way entirely too well.”

Masahiko removed the black cups that covered his eyes, saw Maryalice, looked down at the cups, then back up at Chia.

“Maryalice,” Chia said.

Gomi Boy presented like a life-size anime of himself, huge eyes and even taller hair. “Who drank the vodka?” he asked.

“Maryalice,” Chia said.

“Who's Maryalice?”

“She's in the room at the hotel,” Chia said.

“That was the equivalent of twenty minutes porting,” Gomi Boy said. “How can there be someone in your room at the Hotel Di?”

“It's complicated,” Chia said. They were back in Masahiko's room in the Walled City. They'd just clicked back, none of that maze-running like the first time. Past an icon reminding her she'd her Venice open, but too late for that. Maybe once you were in here, you got back fast. But Masahiko'd said they had to, quick, there was trouble. Maryalice had said she didn't mind, but Chia didn't like it at all that Maryalice was in the room with them while they were porting.

“Your cash card is good for twenty-six more minutes of room-time,” Gomi Boy said. “Unless your friend hits the mini-bar again. Do you have an account in Seattle?”

“No,” Chia said, “just my mother…”

“We've already looked at that,” Masahiko said. “Your mother's credit would not sustain rental of the room plus porting charges. Your father—”

“My
father?

“Has an expense account with his employer in Singapore, a merchant bank—”

“How do you know that?”

Gomi Boy shrugged. “Walled City. We find things out. There are people here who know things.”

“You can't tap into my father's account,” Chia said. “It's for his job.”

“Twenty-five minutes remaining,” Masahiko said.

Chia pulled her goggles off. Maryalice was taking another miniature bottle from the little fridge. “Don't open that!”

Maryalice gave a guilty little shriek and dropped the bottle. “Just maybe some rice crackers,” she said.

“Nothing,” Chia said. “It's too expensive! We're running out of money!”

“Oh,” Maryalice said, blinking. “Right. I don't have any, though. Eddie's cut my cards off, for sure, and the first time I plug one, he'll know exactly where I am.”

Masahiko spoke to Chia without removing the eyecups. “We have your father's expense account on line…”

Maryalice smiled. “What we like to hear, right?”

Chia was pulling off her tip-sets. “Youll have to take it to them,” she said to Maryalice, “the nano-thing. I'll give it to you now, you take it to them, give it to them, tell them it was all a mistake.” She scooted on her hands and knees over to where her bag sat open on the floor. She dug for the thing, found it, held it out to Maryalice in what was left of the blue and yellow bag from the SeaTac duty-free. The dark gray plastic and the rows of little holes made it look like some kind of deformed designer pepper grinder. “Take it. Explain to them. Tell them it was just a mistake.”

Maryalice cringed. “Put it back, okay?” She swallowed. “See, the problem isn't whether or not there's been a mistake. The problem's they'll kill us now anyway, because we know about it. And Eddie, he'll let 'em. 'Cause he has to. And 'cause he's just sort of generally fed up with me, the ungrateful little greasy shithead motherfucker…” Maryalice shook her head sadly. “It's about the end of our relationship, you ask me.”

“Account accessed,” Masahiko said. “Join us here now, please. You have another visitor.”

29. Her Bad Side

Arleigh's van smelled of long-chain monomers and warm electronics. The rear seats had been removed to make room for the collection of black consoles, cabled together and wedged into place with creaking wads of bubble-pack.

Rez rode up front, beside the driver, the ponytailed Japanese Californian from Akihabara. Laney squatted on a console, between Arleigh and Yamazaki, with Willy Jude and the red-haired tech behind them. Laney's ribs hurt, where he'd come down on the table, and that seemed to be getting worse. He'd discovered that the top of his left sock was sticky with blood, but he wasn't sure where it had come from or even if it was his own.

Arleigh had her phone pressed to her ear. “Option eight,” she said, evidently to the driver, who touched the pad beside the dashboard map. Laney glimpsed Tokyo grid-segments whipping past on the screen. “We're taking Rez back with us.”

“Take me to the Imperial,” Rez said.

“Blackwell's orders,” Arleigh said.

“Let me talk to him.” Reaching back for the phone.

They swung left, into a wider street, their lights picking out a small crowd speedwalking away from the Western World, all of them trying to look as though they just happened to be there, out for a brisk stroll. The neighborhood was nondescript and generically urban and, aside from the guilty-looking speedwalkers, quite deserted.

“Keithy,” Rez said, “I want to go back to the hotel.” The terrible white daystar of a police helicopter swept over them, carbon-black shadows speeding away across concrete. Rez was listening to the phone. They passed an all-night noodle wagon, its interior ghostly behind curtains of yellowed plastic. Images flicking past on a small screen behind the counter. Arleigh nudged Laney's knee, pointed past Rez's shoulder. A trio of white armored cars shot through the approaching intersection, blue lights flashing on their rectangular turrets, and vanished without a sound. Rez turned, handing the phone back to her. “Keithy's being his para self. He wants me to go to your hotel and wait for him.”

Arleigh took the phone. “Does he know what it was about?”

“Autograph-hunters?” Rez started to turn back around in his seat.

“What happened to the idoru?” Laney asked.

Rez peered at him. “If you kidnapped that new platform—and I thought it was wonderful—what exactly would you have?”

“I don't know.”

“Rei's only reality is the realm of ongoing serial creation,” Rez said. “Entirely
process;
infinitely more than the combined sum of her various selves. The platforms sink beneath her, one after another, as she grows denser and more complex…” The long green eyes seemed to grow dreamy, in the light of passing storefronts, and then the singer turned away.

Laney watched Arleigh dab at the cut corner of her mouth with a tissue.

“Laney-san…” Yamazaki, a whisper. Putting something into his hand. A cabled set of eyephones. “We have global fan-activity database…”

His ribs hurt. Was his leg bleeding? “Later, okay?”

Arleigh's suite was at least twice as large as Laney's room. It had its own miniature sitting room, separated from the bedroom and bath with gilded French doors. The four chairs in the sitting room had very tall, very narrow backs, each one tapering to a rendition of the elf hat, done in sandblasted steel. These chairs were quite amazingly uncomfortable, and Laney was hunched forward on one now, in considerable pain, hugging his bruised ribs. The blood in his sock had turned out to be his own, from a skinned patch on his left shin. He'd plastered it over with micropore from the professional-looking first-aid kit in Arleigh's bathroom. He doubted there was anything there for his ribs, but he was wondering if some kind of elastic bandage might help.

Yamazaki was on the chair to his right, reattaching the sleeve of his plaid jacket with bright gold safety pins from an Evil Elf Hat emergency sewing kit. Laney had never actually seen anyone use a hotel room's emergency sewing kit for anything. Yamazaki had removed his damaged glasses and was working with the jacket held close to his face. This made him look older, and somehow calmer. To Yamazaki's right, the red-haired technician, who was called Shannon, was sitting up very straight and reading a complimentary style magazine.

Rez was sprawled on the bed, propped up on the maximum available number of pillows, and Willy Jude sat at its foot, channel-surfing with his video units. The panic at the Western World apparently hadn't made the news yet, although the drummer said he'd caught an oblique reference on one of the clubbing channels.

Arleigh was standing by the window, pressing an ice cube in a white washcloth against her swollen lip.

“Did he give you any idea of when he might turn up?” Rez, from the bed.

“No,” Arleigh said, “but he made it clear he wanted you to wait.”

Rez sighed.

“Let the people take care of you, Rez,” Willy Jude said. “It's what they're paid for.”

Laney had taken it for granted that all of them were expected to wait, along with Rez, for Blackwell. Now he decided to try to return to his room. All they could do was stop him.

Blackwell opened the door from the corridor, pocketing some-thing black, something that definitely wasn't your standard-issue hotel key. There was a pale X of micropore across his right cheek, the longest arm reaching the tip of his chin.

“Evening, Keithy,” Rez said.

“You really mustn't piss off like that,” the bodyguard said. “Those Russians are a serious crew. Massive triers, those boys. Wouldn't do if they got hold of you, Rozzer. Not at all. You wouldn't like it.”

“Kuwayama and the platform?”

“Have to tell you, Rez.” Blackwell stood at the foot of the bed. “I've seen you go with women I wouldn't take to a shit-fight on a dark night, but at least they were human. Hear what I'm saying?”

“I do, Keithy,” the singer said. “I know how you feel about her. But you'll come around. It's the way of things, Keithy. The new way. New world.”

“I don't know anything about that. My old dad was a Painter and Docker; had a docky's brief. Broke his heart I turned out the sort of crim I did. Died before you'd got me out of B Division. Would've liked him to see me assume responsibility, Rez. For you. For your safety. But now I don't know. Might not impress him so. Might tell me I'm just minding a fool with a bloated sense of himself.”

Rez came up off the bed, surprising Laney with his speed, a performer's grace, and then he was in front of Blackwell, his hands on the huge shoulders. “But you don't think that, do you, Keithy? You didn't in Pentridge. Not when you came for me. And not when I came back for you.”

Blackwell's eyes glistened. He was about to say something, but Yamazaki suddenly stood up, blinking, and put his green plaid sportscoat on. He craned his neck, peering nearsightedly at the pins he'd used to mend it, then seemed to realize that everyone in the suite was looking at him. He coughed nervously and sat back down.

A silence followed. “Out of line, I was, Rozzer,” Blackwell said, breaking it.

Rez clapped the bodyguard's shoulder, releasing him. “Stressed. I know.” Rez smiled. “Kuwayama? The platform?”

“Had his own team there.”

“And our crashers?”

“That's a bit odd,” Blackwell said. “Kombinat, Rez. Say we've stolen something of theirs. Or at least that's all the one I questioned knew.”

Rez looked puzzled, but seemed to put whatever it was out of his mind. “Take me back to the hotel,” he said.

Blackwell checked his huge steel watch. “We're still sweeping, there. Another twenty minutes and I'll check with them.”

Laney took this as his opportunity, standing up and stepping past Blackwell to the door. “I'm going to take a hot shower,” he said. “Cracked my ribs up there.” No one said anything. “Call if you need me.” Then he opened the door, stepped out, closed it behind him, and limped in what he hoped was the direction of the elevator.

It was. In it, he leaned against the mirrored wall and touched the button for his floor.

It said something in a soothing tone, Japanese.

The door closed. He shut his eyes.

He opened his eyes as the door opened. Stepped out, turned the wrong way, then the right way. Fishing for his wallet, where he'd put his key. Still there. Bath, hot shower, these concepts more theoretical as he approached his room. Sleep. That was it. Undress and lie down and not be conscious.

He swiped the key down the slot. Nothing. Again. Click.

Kathy Torrance, sitting on the edge of his bed. She smiled at him. Pointed at the moving figures on the screen. One of whom was Laney, naked, with a larger erection than he recalled ever having had. The girl vaguely familiar, but whoever she was, he didn't remember doing that with her.

“Don't just stand there,” Kathy said. “You have to see this.”

“That's not me,” Laney said.

“I know,” she said, delighted. “He's
way
too big. And I'd
love
to see you try to prove it.”

30. The Etruscan

Chia worked the tips back on, regoggled, let Masahiko take her to his room. That same instant transition, the virtual Venice icon strobing…. Gomi Boy was there, and someone else, though at first she couldn't see him. Just this glass tumbler on the work-surface that hadn't been there before, mapped to a higher resolution than the rest of the room: filthy, chipped at the rim, something crusted at the bottom.

“That woman,” Gomi Boy began, but someone coughed. A strange dry rattle.

“You
are
an interesting young woman,” said a voice unlike any Chia had heard, a weird, attenuated rasp that might have been compiled from a library of faint, dry, random sounds. So that a word's long vowel might be wires in the wind, or the click of a consonant the rattle of a dead leaf against a window. “
Young
woman,” it said again, and then there was something indescribable, which she guessed was meant as laughter.

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