CHAPTER ONE
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The shape of data screaming in the October night.
Fox, asleep in his clothes, jolted into consciousness. The cilia on his head picked
up the patterns and the digital signalling began to resolve itself into pictures
filling his mind. Running through a devastated landscape, boots treading on a
decapitated head with its eyes still glaring. Then light, a white flare filling
the sky, and on the horizon the gold and copper cloud of an atomic detonation.
He wanted it to stop but the augmentation inside his
head only craved more, savouring each moment before devouring.
The flash of a fantastic thought. He would wrench
open the bedroom floorboards and get one of the hidden guns. Go outside and
blast the head off whoever was out there causing this.
Instead he poured a glass of grappa from the bottle
on the bedside table and drained that before putting on his overcoat and
heading out of the flat and down to the street.
The old soldier was on the pavement outside the Cafe
Castringius, his back against the lamp post and knees drawn up. He wore one of
those cheap suits they sell ex-soldiers when they first arrive in Genesia.
“I know you,” the soldier said.
He wasn’t old, not really, but drinking had worn
deep scallops into his face.
“No,” Fox said.
“Least we had ones like you, with all those worms
coming out of their head. You in intelligence? Ugly blighter aren’t you. No
offence.”
Fox had never been part of the soldier’s war but people
with an augmentation like his were invaluable to an army.
“I have to go,” Fox said and took out his wallet and
pressed the twenty crown note, which he intended to give to Max, into the soldier’s
hand.
“That’s very kind, very kind.”
“Next time find another place to spend the night. No
offence.”
Fox walked quickly through Little Alexandria, with
its gabled houses so close together they nearly touched above his head. Even
during the day these streets were tunnels of shadow. At night the lighting cut
arcs in the darkness but never entirely banished it.
It would be best now to find something more
palatable than war stories to feed his augmentation. He might have sought out
those places in the city with intact servers with databases that hadn’t entirely
decayed. Instead he just walked without aim waiting for the augmentation to
quieten.
The soldier had seen a lot of combat, killed a few
times and watched as comrades died from radiation. A rich and tasty dish for
the augmentation that Fox found hard dispel. In the end he just gave up and sat
in the alcove of the back door of a building. When he saw the atomic explosion
again he got the grappa bottle out from the inside pocket of his coat.
He must have been there for some time. He found that
he had been swaying his head to the sound of the muffled music from beyond the
door. It was a mild night and he saw no reason to move but the grappa bottle
was empty and there was something crawling up the outside of his jacket sleeve.
It might have been a tiny shield the size of coin moving in slow jerks. It
reached the crook of his arm and then stopped. It was a large beetle, its
elytra catching the lamplight and making it glow. Fox picked it up and turned
it over. The miniaturisation was so accomplished that he could only just distinguish
that there were different parts there, an escapement, cogs and cams. There was
a tiny turning crown on one side and Fox wound this. The bug’s legs came to
life, tapping out silently in the air as he held it. He set it on his arm again so it could resume
its journey up towards his shoulder.
It was just something that some people did. You came
across a clockwork bug or bird that had wound down and you turned its key or
crown, gave life back to its mainspring. Clockwork automata had arrived in Genesia
during the days of Count Septimus. They’d come as swarms of insects and flocks
of birds; then humanoids, the ultraclocks, had followed. Their origin was
obscure but it was presumed it was in accordance with some caprice of the
Count, developing the city’s long obsession with puppets and masks, clockwork
toys.
During the Court of Comedians there had been
attempts to get rid of the automata but that had ended with the revolt that had
established the Provisional Government.
The bug reached his neck and its feet tickled. Fox
picked it up and put it on his wrist so it could start its climb again. This
might have gone on for hours but then the door he was resting against opened,
warm air came out with the sound of discordant thumping jazz.
“There you are little cousin.”
It was voice like the soft piping of a wind instrument.
Fox looked up at her, up her long legs and the
garter of her stockings, low around her knees. The rest of her legs were bare
up to the lace fringed edge of a very short dress that barely covered her
thighs. He noticed most of all that the skin, of her legs, her bare arms above
the long red gloves she wore, was smoother than glass.
He scrambled up onto his feet somehow kicking the
grappa bottle into the gutter.
“Yours?”
He plucked the beetle off his arm and held it out to
her. She smiled.
She came towards him, stretching out her hand, the velvet
glove up to the elbow. Her movements were sinuous not mechanical, yet not entirely
natural. More like a dance or a mime.
“You wound it up?” she said.
“Yes.”
It was difficult not to think of a doll, of
porcelain fragility. But she wasn’t the representation of a child. She had been
constructed under the scrutiny of a gaze that had eroticised her almost
completely, curved and full bosomed. Her abundant dark hair was tied up in
ringlets. She was smiling, a big smile, and her large eyes caught the light.
Fox couldn’t work out how her face moved, how her features were not fixed and
still like the doll impression he had.
“He’s my little pet,” she said and reached out to
take the beetle from him. She passed the bug from one hand to the other so that
it scuttled over her fingers and it began to move up her arm. She was
breathing, her chest rising with a slightly exaggerated movement.
“It was here,” Fox said.
Fox’s augmentation was worrying him for data. All
those interfaces between his own brain and its filaments were tingling. It
couldn’t fathom her. Computers it knew. Humans with life-bugs it read easily. Even
un-augmented humans gave off an electrical pattern that, though indecipherable,
was a definite presence.
But it was always baffling to be close to an
ultraclock. And the augmentation was further interested because Fox was,
because she was somehow beautiful. He wanted to touch her to check if she was
real but that wouldn’t have been enough because he wanted to know that she, in
turn, knew that she was real, that the words she spoke were not some kind of
clever trick, as though she were a rather complex music box.
Yet there was nothing for the augmentation to read.
She let the beetle crawl down her glove then held
her hands together so it moved onto her other hand, tilting her head to watch
its progress. Once again her movements struck him. She was like a priest
performing the hand signs of a ritual that had been repeated so many times they
no longer needed to be directed.
“Why did you do that?”
Fox didn’t understand what she meant.
“Why did you wind it up?”
When she said wind
there was a slight hesitation, almost a savouring of the word.
“I don’t know. People do.”
“It was very kind of you. If he’d been left out
here, run down, then someone could have trod on him. Or deliberately broken
him.”
Yes, there were people who did that to automata.
“Olympia,” came a deep voice, “What are you doing?”
“Waiting out here,” she said.
A figure came out of the door and filled the
remaining space in the alcove. It was another automaton, tall with an almost
art-deco elegance. He was smooth, pewter coloured and without any attempt—hair,
eyebrows—to a cosmetic humanity.
“Here,” the ultraclock said to Olympia handing her
an umbrella. She hesitated for a moment and held out the beetle to Fox. It
crawled onto his arm.
“My coat,” she said, taking the umbrella, “I must
have my coat.”
“Who is this?”
There was no expression on his face as he looked at
Fox and Fox was not sure his features were capable of movement. It might have
been described as a noble face, like a classical statue but one that had been
cast in the machine shops of a vanished industrial era.
“He had my beetle,” Olympia said, “Now please Victor
fetch me my coat.”
Victor inspected Fox for a moment longer then
disappeared back inside into a short corridor with a shabby carpet and several
doors. The music suddenly stopped to be followed by clapping.
“Your name is Olympia?”
“I sing here,” she said, “The Cabaret Vaucanson. You
must come and see me.”
“I try to avoid large crowds. For some reason I
scare people.”
Her face went blank. Blank in a way a human being’s
face never could. She blinked and her eyes darted across Fox’s head, over the
cilia coming out of the left side of his face, temple and crown. It was as
though she was noting the deformity for the first time. Fox wondered if she saw
him differently, but then how did she see him at all without the firing of
optic nerves?
“Yes, you have a rather unusual appearance.”
Victor emerged and carefully wrapped around her a
long otter-skin coat that reached to the ground. Then he placed over her head a
silver chain with a key attached to it. The key fell gently between her
breasts, the movement of her breath settling it there.
“What are you doing here?” Victor said to Fox. “Are
you some kind of stage-door Johnny?”
“Leave him alone.”
Fox took a step back. He couldn’t tell if Victor was
angry but he knew he was powerful. Fox staggered against the kerb.
“Are you quite well?” Olympia said.
“He’s drunk,” said Victor, “Can’t you tell? Look
he’s even left his bottle there.”
“And yet he saved the little beetle’s life.”
“He wouldn’t even consider it to be life.”
Fox realised Victor wanted him to object, to say
something that would rile him.
“I should be going,” Fox said picking the beetle
from his shoulder and holding it out, watching its legs working.
Olympia opened her palm and Fox placed the beetle
there. For an instant Fox touched her cold skin.
“Thank you,” she said. “What is your name?”
Fox reached inside his coat and drew out one of his
cards. It was frayed at the edges because it had been there so long.
She read. “Evergreen Fox? Private Detective. Café
Castringius.”
“A detective,” said Victor, “Something out of an old
film.”
“How delightful,” said Olympia.
“Sure,” Fox smiled.
He had wanted to call himself something else, a locater or a finder. But
nothing sounded right.
Olympia was smiling at him, a miraculously produced
mechanical smile that did not look mechanical.
“Were you spying on us?” Victor said.
“No, I…”
“Don’t be frightened, Victor won’t do you any harm.”
“Oh, wouldn’t I?”
It was some little game that had little to do with
Fox.
Victor began to pull the door shut. Olympia was
looking at the bug, she tilted it onto the hand that held the umbrella and it
scuttled onto the handle, following the inner arc.
“Victor.” Someone called from further down the
street at the junction where it met a wider thoroughfare. A small stocky man was approaching. Emerging
into the fall of the streetlight, his formal suit not sitting too well on him.
Both Victor and Olympia turned towards him
“Victor,” the man called again, “It is I your master
come to fetch you.”
And he laughed as he strode up to meet them, playing
another game Fox didn’t understand. The man glared at Fox for a moment. Fox
realised he was leaning against a wall now.
“Who’s this?” the man asked pointing at Fox.
“I think,” said Victor, “that it is someone under
the delusion that he is a detective.”
“A what?”
“Come on,” said Olympia, “Let us go and leave Herr
Fox in peace.”
She would be gone soon so Fox stepped forward and
reached for her hand. She watched as he drew it to his lips and kissed it. Cold
but soft.
“Come on Olympia,” Victor said, “we shall walk you
home.”
Victor started to follow the man who was already
walking away.
“Here,” said Olympia. She plucked the little beetle
from the handle of the umbrella and gave it to Fox. It marched up his palm.
“You saved his life,” she said, “now you have to
look after him. Wind him up when he runs down and keep him out of mischief.”
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CHAPTER TWO
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It felt as though he’d hardly slept when there was a
banging on the door and Fox heard Max telling him that there was a call for him
in the café. Fox checked the alarm and saw that it was gone one o’clock. He was
usually there by now, spending most afternoons in the Café Castringius, in the
back street where he lived.
Eating his meals there got round some of the
problems with shopping. Food imports these days being patchy. Staying in the
café also meant he was less likely to be seen by people who weren’t used to him.
Or who knew him and didn’t like him. Fox always sat at the same table at the
back, beneath a print of one of Nicholas Castringius’s late erotic masterpieces.
“She said she’d call back,” Max said as Fox sat
down.
Max bought coffee, a glass of water, a semmel roll
and little pots of butter and apricot jam. Fox took the morning edition of the Genesia Gazette from the newspaper
table. He always read the Gazette because it was mostly local news with fewer
horror stories from the war than in other papers. He shook out the feuilleton
but there was nothing there about the Cabaret Vaucanson, just the usual opera
gossip and book reviews.
He was some way into an article about the
Provisional Government’s latest decree on public libraries when Max brought the
telephone over, trailing the wire from the bar counter.
“This is Fox,” he said.
“You are rather a late riser it appears.” It was a
woman’s voice, not young, not poor.
“A rather important case needed my attention into
the small hours, Frau..?”
“My name is Anna Pfaff, am I correct in
understanding that you are the Herr Fox, the detective of note?”
Fox didn’t know he was of note. He wasn’t sure how
to take it.
“How can I be of service to..?”
“You are at this…Café Castringius now?”
“Certainly.”
“Then I will be along presently. It is Little
Alexandria?”
“Go to Pecheneg Square. There is a street off there,
Kangalistrasse. The café is there.”
“I will be there directly.”
“Perhaps you could tell me…”
She rang off and when Max came back for the telephone
Fox ordered another coffee and tried not to read the article that had someone
found its way into the Gazette. The forces of secessionist Burgundy had
recaptured Marseilles, which, from the photograph, was little more than a pile
of rubble around the naval base. Fox hadn’t heard that Burgundy had broken away
from the remnant that had continued to call itself the United States of Europe,
which must now just be bits of France, Italy and Spain.
The woman arrived as he was eating rindsuppe. Max
pointed Fox out and she tried very carefully not to stare at his head as she
walked through the café. She didn’t quite manage it.
“Herr Fox?”
“Please, take a seat.”
She might be nearly seventy and was neatly turned
out in a short hunting style jacket, taupe dress with a peter-pan collar edged
in white lace. Only her hat seemed dated, not the cloche hats of fashion but a
broad-brimmed affair with a feather, the sort of hat that had come back into
vogue out of the late nineteenth to the late twenty-first century, only to
disappear again. She looked at the chair for a moment and Fox realised, just
too late, that he was expected to pull it out for her. Instead she moved it
awkwardly and positioned herself at the table.
“Your friend,” she said looking Fox in the eye and
trying not to let her gaze roam, “the policewoman told me that you might be of
some assistance.”
Felice. Fox’s only friend in the police force.
“And what is it that you would like me to help you
with?”
“You have a strange accent young man.”
Fox didn’t mention that it was likely that he was much
older than her.
“English. I’m from London. Originally.”
“Ah,” she said, “Unfortunate what happened to
London. But then so many places…”
Like most of Genesia it was, to her, all a long way
away.
“Of course.”
“And this,” she said, and she turned away and gave a
finger wave at his head without looking, “Is this something that happened
because of the war?”
She spoke strict German rather than the melange of
five languages that had become a local dialect in the last fifty years. It
struck Fox suddenly that he couldn’t recall what language he had spoken with Olympia.
Having learnt most of them through his augmentation it was sometimes like that.
“It’s an augmentation,” Fox said, “I had it put in
me. A long time ago.”
“But its…It’s awful. The disintegration. Those things…”
“They’re semi-organic cilia, they’re what it uses to
interface. It didn’t start like this. It was a little disc called Omnisense
that connected to my head, made it easy for me to tap into all sorts of data.
Lots of people had it but it spread like an infection. Most of those who had it
died. I guess I’m lucky.”
“So,” she realised then. And Fox could almost see
the pfennig drop. “You are not as young as you appear to be. That kind of
technology…”
“As you say.”
“I’m sorry,” she said, “I have been very rude.”
“You’re still sitting there. That’s good enough for
me.”
She shifted in her chair and looked around for a
moment. Max came over.
“I would like an einspänner,” she said and then to
Fox, “I usually take ice coffee but the weather has begun to turn has it not?”
Max knew what Fox would want.
“Now,” Fox said, “we should see if I can help you.”
She dabbed the corners of her mouth with a napkin
even though her drink hadn’t even arrived.
“Well, there is a certain legal matter that perhaps
you could be of some assistance with. A matter of…clarification more than
anything. I thought perhaps that a certain interpretation of the law might aid
me but it is to no avail. Our city, it seems, has always indulged a certain
eccentricity. Of course it reached its nadir with Count Septimus, and then all
the disruption since then...”
“What precisely is this matter?”
She eyed her einspänner as Max placed the glass
carefully in front of her. The mound of cream was perfectly formed. For a
moment it looked as though she might not want to touch it but she picked up a
spoon and dug a chunk out, popped it into her mouth and then did her
well-practiced dab at her lips. She held the napkin there until the mouthful of
cream had been disposed of.
“There is a certain will,” she said, “that I would
like you to locate.”
“How old is it?”
“It would be, well, at least thirty-five years old.
Possibly older. I think my father would have set his affairs in order long
before his death.”
“Well I suppose then it could have been digital. But
I’m afraid it’s likely to have suffered in the decay. The legal archives were
infected. Not so bad as a lot of other places but still.”
“Nevertheless,” she said, “I would appreciate if you
could ascertain if it exists. I am also assuming my father ensured there was a
hard-copy. But we’ll discuss that should the need arise.”
“I’d prefer to discuss it now. I assume it relevant.
Because you could have asked for an official search of the electronic
archives.”
She almost dabbed again.
“I have done so, but I am not sure a standard search
would retrieve anything. I suspect there might be some perfidy at play. You see
I am not the eldest child. I have a sister. But it is unthinkable that my
father would have left the entirety of the estate to her. Yet when my father
died supposedly intestate she inherited the house. If the need arises I would
like you to visit her and ask her. Ask her if she is blocking my search and if
I might see the hard-copy of my father’s will.”
“Why don’t you just ask her yourself?”
She drank the coffee now, letting the remnant of
cream smear her upper lip seemingly just so she could wipe it afterwards.
“My sister is of the eccentric sort. We do not get
on. In fact we haven’t spoken for some years. She occupies my father’s house.
The house where I grew up but from which she fled when she was seventeen to
lead a rather dissolute life. The last time I went there I found it upsetting.”
“How so?”
“She is an incorrigible collector and hoarder of the
most outré artefacts. What was once a neat and presentable family home had
become something akin to a cabinet of curiosities.”
Fox would do the search and likely it would turn up
negative. He wasn’t sure about visiting the sister if it came to that. It
seemed like he might be used as a way to intimidate some harmless old lady.
“My standard fee for a digital search is one hundred
marks.”
“Well, I…”
“What you are asking me to do is illegal, you do
know that don’t you Frau Pfaff?”
She looked around her but discovered the tables
nearby were empty.
“Very well,” she said.
“Fifty marks in advance.”
She scowled but opened her bag. Hunched over she
counted money that was tucked into an envelope. She put some money back into
the bag and handed Fox the envelope.
“My card is inside,” she said. “You will call me
when you have completed your search.”
She was already rising, leaving Fox to pay for her
coffee. Outside he saw her draw her thick jacket around her and wondered why
she didn’t have a coat. Then he wondered why she hadn’t asked him to call on
her at home. On her card there was no address, just a telephone number.
Max was looking over from where he was putting away
glasses, or at least pretending to. He had already seen the envelope but would
never ask for anything directly.
Fox had already begun dividing up the money, a little
rent, his tab with Max. He folded the five ten mark notes and stood to put them
into his trousers pocket. There was something there. He took out the clockwork
beetle and wound its little crown and watched as it circled the coffee glass
left by Frau Pfaff. Just before it ran into a blob of cream on the table Fox
picked it up and let it run around his palm. Max was still watching.
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