Dorian zapped the door’s lock circuitry with a single burst from the maser embedded in his wrist. A small circle of the tough composite smoldered and blistered. He pushed hard, applying the strength of his boosted musculature. There was a creaking sound, lost in the raucous music. The door popped open. He walked through the screening and into the relative quiet of the corridor. His sensor scans were immediately subject to a barrage of interference. Voices yelped and groaned behind the closed doors on either side. At the far end, Mellanie had got the escape hatch open. She jerked around. Half of her skin was silver, inserts and OCtattoos directing the interference directly at him. He scanned what he could of her with interest. She was doing the same to him. More effectively, he knew, but he could see what he needed to.
“No weapons,” he said. “How curious.”
“I’ve got a message for Alessandra.”
He took a step forward. “What?”
Her inserts transmitted an encrypted signal into the corridor’s small array. The sprinkler system went off above him. Water poured down as the fire alarm sounded.
Dorian gave her a pitying look as the deluge soaked his shirt and pants. “Nobody can hear that.” Beyond the shower, Mellanie smiled.
The cattle prod lying on the floor by Dorian’s feet discharged. The water allowed its full current load to slam into him. His body convulsed, steam fizzing out of his clothes and hair. He arched his back, screaming briefly as his eyes bulged and his tongue protruded. The optical fibers woven into his hair melted. Black lines appeared on his skin when organic circuits burned, sending out thin wisps of smoke to mingle with the steam and water. Flesh ruptured volcanically where his weapons’ power cells were implanted. Blood and gore splattered across the walls.
It took five seconds for the cattle prod battery to exhaust itself. When the current failed, Dorian’s juddering corpse crashed to the floor. The SIsubroutine switched off the corridor’s sprinklers.
Mellanie walked over and peered down at the gently steaming body. The legs spasmed a couple of times.
“I’ll tell her myself,” she said.
Kaspar Murdo was enjoying the evening. It was a good crowd in the Cypress Island’s club. He knew a lot of them, and there were several promising newbies. Everyone said Death by Orgy was hot. He was looking forward to seeing them perform.
Then this vision in a fluffy white top and miniskirt sidled up to the bar barely a couple of meters away and asked for a beer. A first-lifer by the looks of her. She appeared slightly shaky, as if she was shocked by what she was seeing and trying not to show it. That meant she was curious, and not instantly repelled. It was a vulnerability he knew exactly how to take advantage of. He’d be able to encourage her at first, drawing her closer, reassuring her until she trusted him. Then with that trust established he could begin her training.
His bulk allowed him to push easily through the eager authoritarian animalists and bizarreos who were gathering like storm clouds around their oblivious prey. He glared any objectors down, snarling back when he was barked at by a canineman. “This one is on me,” he told her as the girl proffered a one-pound note to the barman. “I insist. That means there can be no argument.”
She nodded with nervous gratitude, glancing at the instruments on the end of his chains. “Thank you.”
“Kaspar,” he said.
“Saskia.”
He grinned in a friendly, paternal fashion, and lifted one of his chains to show off the crude iron and leather device on the end. “Crazy, aren’t they?” he asked in a fashion that invited her to share the joke.
She smiled sheepishly. And Kaspar’s evening became the best in a long, long time.
***
It was close to midnight local time when the express from Paris slipped into Tridelta’s CST station. Renne was secretly delighted about that: it meant they’d get a look at the jungle. “Get us a riverside hotel as close as you can to the Octavious,” she told Vic Russell.
“Absolutely,” he said enthusiastically.
“The closest and cheapest, Vic.”
“Yeah, yeah.”
“Aren’t we going straight to the Halgarth team?” Matthew Oldfield asked.
“They can handle the rest of tonight’s shift,” Renne said. “Warren will let me know if there’s any status change.”
“Okay.”
“Gives us a chance to settle in before we see what Bernadette is up to. Don’t you want to see the jungle?”
“Hell, yeah.”
“Right then.” She told her e-butler to call Tarlo. “Where are you?” she asked when he accepted the call.
“Stakeout in a garage on Uraltic Street. A police informant we interviewed earlier said Beard would be here tonight.”
“I hope you’re wearing rubber socks. Those car batteries have a lot of current in them.”
“Very funny. What do you want?”
“I’m at the CST station.”
“In Tridelta?”
“Yeah.”
“Why? Has Hogan sent you as backup?”
“No. I’m following Bernadette Halgarth, Isabella’s mother.”
“You’re doing what?”
“Don’t worry, I’ve got Vic and Matthew with me.”