"Skywriting," the Aussie said, sitting down again. "Wish we had some binocs. I don't see a plane."
"Very small drone," said the big Japanese. "Or maybe it's made of glass." By now everyone on the roof was looking, pointing, and shading their eyes.
3 A 3 v - 0\...
"It's code," the Aussie said. "Gotta be the voodoo boys."
The wind had blown the first letters to shreds, but there was more.... = A_-S.. .
"Three A Three Vee Blank Zero Back-slash Equals A
Blank Blank S," the Aussie repeated slowly. "What in bloody hell are they getting at?"
"Maybe it's their evacuation signal," said the big man.
"You wish," the Aussie said.
The smaller Japanese began laughing. "No verticals in the letters," he announced triumphantly. "Bad programming.
Grenada was never any good with drones."
"No verticals?" the Aussie said, staring upward. "Oh. I get it. `BABYLON FALLS,' eh? Cheeky bastards."
"I guess they never really thought this would happen," the small man said. "Or they'd have done a better job announc- ing it."
"Still, you gotta give 'em credit," the Aussie said. "Invis- ible finger, writing in blood on the sky... probably would have scared the living crap out of people, if they hadn't fucked it up." He chuckled. "Murphy's Law, huh? Now it's just more weirdness."
Laura left them on their luggage trolley. Another chopper had appeared, coming in-a small one. She decided she would take it if she could-the talk had unsettled her.
As she neared the pad she heard low, piteous sobbing. Not demonstrative just uncontrollable moans and snivels.
The sobbing man was crouched under the rounded bulk of a rooftop storage tank. He was scanning the sky again and again, as if in terror of another message.
He was a sharpie-like the villains on Chinese television.
Thirtyish bedroom-eyed guys who were all laser-cut hairdos and jade cig holders. Only now he was squatting on his heels, under the cool white bulk of the tank, his shoulders wrapped in a black felt blanket clutched two-handed across his chest.
He was twitchy as a basket of crabs.
As she watched him he somehow got a grip on himself, wiped his eyes. He looked like he'd once been important.
Years of tailored suits and handball and complaisant massage girls. But now he looked like some kind of rat-eating terrier from a sawdust pit.
One of those Grenadian pellets was in him somewhere, oozing its milligrams of liquid fear. He knew it, anyone who saw him knew it news about the pellets had been all over
Government TV But he hadn't had time to have it located and dug out of him.
The others were avoiding him. He was bad luck.
A twin-rotored Coast Guard chopper settled to the pad. Its . wind gust scoured the building and Laura tightened the sari over her head. Bad Luck jumped to his feet and made a run for it; he was there at the door, panting, before anyone else.
When it shunted open he scrambled aboard.
Laura followed him and buckled into one of the hard plastic benches at the back. A dozen, more refugees crowded on, avoiding Bad Luck.
A tight-faced little Coast Guard sergeant in camo flight suit and helmet looked in on them. "Hey, missy," yelled the fat guy ahead of Laura. "When we getting salted almonds?" The other refugees chuckled dismally.
Power went into the rotors and the world fell away under them.
They flew southwest, through the brutal, thrusting skyscrapers of Queenstown. Then over a cluster of offshore islands with names like the bonging of gamelans: Samulun,
Merlimau, Seraya. Clumps of clotted tropical green cut with towering beachfront hotels. White, sandy shorelines cinched in by elaborate dams and jetties.
Good-bye, Singapore.
They changed course over the monsoon-ruffled waters of the Malacca Straits. It was loud inside the cabin. The passen- gers made a little hoarse, guarded conversation, but no one approached her. Laura leaned her head against the bare plastic by the little fist-sized porthole and fell into a stunned half-doze.
She came to as the chopper pulled up, yawing dizzily.
They were hovering over a cargo ship. Ships had become familiar to her at the loading docks: this was a tramp clipper, with the strange rotating wind columns that had been a big hit back in the 'teens.
Crewpeople-or rather, more refugees lurked on the deck, in a variety of rumpled skivvies.
The little sergeant came back again. She had a jelly-gun slung over her shoulder. "This is it," she shouted.
"There's no landing pad!" pointed out the fat guy.
"You jump." She slung open the cargo door. Wind gusted through. They were hovering five feet over the deck. The sergeant slapped another woman on the shoulder. "You first. Go!"
Somehow they all left. Thumping, falling, sprawling onto the gently rolling deck. Those onboard helped a little, clum- sily trying to catch them.
The last one out was Bad Luck. He tumbled out as if kicked. Then the chopper peeled away, showing them an underbelly lumpy with flotation pads. "Where are we?" Bad
Luck demanded, rubbing a bruised kneecap.
A mossy-toothed Chinese technician in a songkak hat an- swered him. "This is the Ali Khamenei. Bound for Abadan."
"Abadan!" Bad Luck screeched. "No! Not the fucking
Iranians!" People stared at him-recognizing his affliction, some began to edge away.
"Islamic Republic," the technician corrected.
"I knew it!" Bad Luck said. "They gave us to the damn Koran thumpers! They'll chop our hands off! I'll never punch deck again!"
"Calming down," advised the tech, giving Bad Luck a sidelong look.
"They sold us! They dumped us on this robot ship to starve to death!"
"Not to worry," said a hefty European woman, sensibly dressed for catastrophe in a sturdy denim work shirt and corduroy jeans. "We've examined the cargo-there's plenty of Soy Moo and Weetabix." She smirked, raising one plucked eyebrow. "And we met the ship's captain-poor little bloke!
He's got a retrovirus-no immune system left." Bad Luck went even paler.
"No! The captain has plague?"
"Who else would take such a rotten job, working all alone on this barge?" the woman said. "He's hiding now in the wheelhouse. Afraid of catching an infection from us. He's a lot more afraid of us than we are of him." She looked at
Laura curiously. "Do I know you?"
Laura looked down at the deck and muttered something about being in data processing. "Is there a phone here, la?"
"You'll have to stand in line, dearie. Everybody wants on the Net.... You kept money outside Singapore, yes? Very smart. "
"Singapore robbed us," Bad Luck grumbled.
"At least they got us out," said the European woman practically. "It's better than waiting for those voodoo canni- bals to poison us... . Or the globalist law courts... . The
Islamics aren't so bad."
Bad Luck stared at her. "They murder technicians! Anti-
Western purges!"
"That was years ago-anyway, maybe that's why they want us now! Stop fretting, eh! People like us, we can always find a place." She glanced at Laura. "You play bridge, dearie?"
Laura shook her head.
"Cribbage? Pinochle?"
"Sorry." Laura adjusted her hood.
"You getting used to the chador already?" The woman traipsed off, defeated.
Laura walked unobtrusively toward the bow, avoiding scat- tered groups of dazed, shiftless refugees. No one tried to bother her.
Around the Ali Khamenei the gray waters of the straits were full of shipping-reefers, dry-bulk carriers, pallet ships.
Korean, Chinese, Maphilindonesian, some with no flag at all, simply corporate logos.
There was real majesty in the sight. Distance-tinged blue ships, gray sea, the distant green-humped rise of Sumatra.
These straits, between the bulk of Asia and the offshore sprawl of Sumatra and Java and Borneo, had been one of the world's great routes since the dawn of civilization. The loca- tion had made Singapore; and lifting the embargoes on the island would be like unclogging a global artery.