"I shouldn't think they'd discriminate. It's against the law. As long as one has enough money." Fukuda turned to the other man. "Visiting someone, then?"
The elevator door opened to reveal a young woman inside the cabin, her face entirely covered in a pixel tattoo that currently played a film loop of dolphins gliding along underwater. Even so, she gave the two camouflaged-faced men a suspicious, disapproving look as she emerged.
"Iris-hi," Fukuda all but blurted. "Nice to see you."
The woman paused and looked at Fukuda a little strangely. "Hi, Mr., um."
"Fukuda."
"Yeah, hi. Ah, how's your daughter?" "Good. Good, thanks."
"That's good." The dolphins were replaced by another film loop of teeming, glassy jellyfish. "Well-have a good night."
"You, too."
Fukuda's neighbor walked off in the direction of the complex's front doors. Watching after her, the man on his left said, "You asked if we were visiting someone. The answer is yes." He took hold of Fukuda's elbow. "We're here to visit you."
Fukuda began to jerk his arm free of the clone's strong grip, but the other stepped close to him and Fukuda felt the muzzle of a gun poke into his ribs. "Get inside," said Mr. Jones.
The three of them entered the elevator cabin and its door whispered shut. Fukuda said, "There's a camera in here, you know."
Mr. Doe grinned. "There are a good number of Blue War clones in Punktown, Mr. Fukuda. And every one of us looks exactly the same."
"Push the key for your floor," Jones commanded.
"Push it yourself."
"We don't know the precise floor or number. So would you kindly accommodate us?"
"Why don't you tell me what you want?"
"In the privacy of your apartment."
Fukuda made no move to touch the keyboard. "I am not bringing you inside my apartment."
"Afraid your lovely daughter might be home from school? Don't worry, she isn't. She had her driver bring her and some friends to the Canberra Mall."
Fukuda's jaw tightened. "You sons of bitches are watching my daughter?"
"It's not your daughter we're interested in, Mr. Fukuda."
"Yes, so I gathered. You work for Adrian Tableau ."
"Will you push that button so we can talk about this in a more comfortable location?"
"There's nothing to talk about. I don't know anything about Tableau's daughter. She has nothing to do with me."
"No? But you seem to be of the opinion that she stole your daughter's special little toy."
"I am examining all possibilities about that matter."
"Including the possibility that Mr. Tableau's child took it? His missing child?"
Fukuda looked from one mottled face to its indistinguishable duplicate. "What did you do to the guard in the lobby?"
"He's alive. Just resting. Our other friend is watching over him."
"Go back and tell your boss that his criminal tactics won't work on me."
On the other side of the door, someone punched the elevator's call button. Doe quickly tapped the button for the second floor, and the cabin began rising. "You'd best take us to your apartment, Mr. Fukuda, or things may become ugly."
"Really? I thought you already were ugly."
Jones drew back his arm and struck Fukuda on the ear with the pistol's butt. Fukuda yelped and fell back against the rear of the cabin, clutching his ear with one hand and raising his other arm to ward off a second blow. "All right! All right!" he cried.
The clone holstered the handgun and nodded politely. "Thank you, Mr. Fukuda."
Jeremy Stake was pinned under Janice Poole when his phone rang through his wrist comp. He strained to reach it on her bedside table. For a moment, playfully, she took hold of his arm in both hands to stop him, but when he looked up at her hotly she let go of him right away. He almost dropped the device, fumbling it into his hands.
But it was not her. Not Thi Gonh. The screen showed only darkness. There was sound, however:
"You asked if we were visiting someone. The answer is yes. We're here to visit you."
"Get inside."
"There's a camera in here, you know."
Stake could see that the call was coming from John Fukuda's hand phone. He didn't know that the darkness of the screen was the darkness inside Fukuda's suit jacket pocket, or that Fukuda had covered up the beeps of the buttons as he punched in Stake's number by talking loudly to his neighbor Iris. But Stake could at least figure out that his employer had called him so that he might overhear this conversation.
"What…" Janice started to say, but he gave her another fiery look, this time with a finger to his lips. He activated the MUTE key so he and Janice wouldn't be heard on the other end. The voices continued:
"Push the key for your floor."
"Push it yourself."
"We don't know the precise floor or number. So would you kindly accommodate us?"
Stake scrambled out from beneath Janice, almost toppling her off the bed. "Tableau's men are at Fukuda's apartment."
"Maybe you should call the forcers."
"He didn't phone the forcers. He phoned me."
Stake began to dress hurriedly. As he did so, he only hoped that since his employer was being clever, he would also have the foresight to leave his apartment door unlocked.
It was fortunate that Janice's apartment was much closer to Fukuda's than was his own. By the time he reached Fukuda's place on his hoverbike, better able to negotiate the tight evening traffic than his hovercar, Stake figured he would have lost his physical resemblance to Yuki's biology teacher-who watched him from the bed as he gathered up his holstered Darwin .55.
"What is that?" John Fukuda asked warily. He had been placed in a chair in the center of his living room's sea of expensive carpeting, his hands cuffed behind his back. "Truth serum?"
Mr. Jones had removed his bowler hat, exposing his hairless head, which looked like a blue planet of many continents as seen from space. He was making an adjustment to a syringe-like instrument. In a pleasant, conversational tone, he said, "Recently I read an article about truth serums and truth scans. It said more and more corporate types are having firewall chips implanted in their brains to block the effects of such serums, I suppose in case an ambitious coworker wants to loosen their tongue by spiking their coffee. Mainly, though, the chips are to prevent scans from reading their minds. Apparently they're afraid that business rivals engaging in espionage might try to access their thoughts through phone calls or other remote means, or even by putting telepathic mutants on their payrolls."
"That's all very interesting, but I don't have a chip like that."
"No? Well, would you tell me if you did? So you see, I don't trust truth serums and truth scans." He held the syringe up to the light, squinting one eye at the transparent cartridge. A silvery glitter writhed within. "What I trust is pain."
"What are you talking about?"
"These are nanomites. You ought to recognize them, huh? You produce similar creatures yourself. I used this type with a lot of success in the Blue War, on Ha Jiin prisoners. Oh, it was against the code. The nanomites were for emergency surgical procedures in the field. But their programming is adaptable." He held the instrument ready, and then moved toward his prisoner.
Fukuda stiffened. He had to force himself not to get up and bolt. Lounging back on a love seat nearby was Doe, aiming a handgun in his direction. Fukuda knew it was a type that fired beams instead of solid projectiles. He said, "Look, I told you the truth! I swear it on my daughter's life! I don't know what happened to Krimson Tableau!" Jones pressed the syringe's tip against the side of his neck. "Please, don't!"
There was no pain. Was it his imagination, though, or did he feel the rustle of thousands of microscopic clawed feet as the machine-like insects scurried into his system?