Livvy was able to buy a few amenities at the High Speed Onboard Mall, including an aquamarine silk blouse that helped her feel a little less like a fugitive. The blouse was so thin she was actually grateful for the armored vest underneath. She had abandoned her belt and now carried her pistol, comu, D-cards, and other necessities in a small bag that she could wear slung over her shoulder.
Now, standing in front of the security panel at Paula Bedford’s Fifth Avenue apartment building and trying to project confidence and reliability, she looked at Chris and noticed that he didn’t seem to be trying. He just did. She wondered if it was natural to his personality, the result of the experience of many years of perpetual prime-of-life living, or more than 75 years in Enforcement that enabled him. Probably all three, she decided. As a combination, tough to get over.
“Ms. Bedford, we’re here from D.C. LLE. We came up here to talk to you. May we come in, please?” Chris said to the security line link.
“No, please just go back. I’m sorry for all of your inconvenience, I truly am, but you should have called first,” came the disembodied voice. Paula could see them, of course, and Chris had positioned them so that Livvy and he, wearing their credentials around their necks, were both plainly visible. Livvy kept her face calm, confident, and benign, mirroring Chris’ voice and expression. There was no way they could tell if she was continuing to listen or if she had broken the communication link.
“Four days ago, your father got together with a doctor with some seriously dangerous skills, a doctor whose research he’s been supporting for many years. Whatever is going to happen is happening now. We intend to stop him from hurting anyone else. We would appreciate your help,” Chris said succintly.
There was a long silence, during which Chris and Livvy continued to stand outside the building and transmit resolve and trustworthiness. A full two minutes later, a pleasing chime signaled acceptance, and they stepped over to the door.
The doorman in the vestibule opened for them, and ushered them through the next two doors into the lobby. He used a key to unlock the vintage elevator doors and gestured them inside.
“Ms. Bedford will assist you with the elevator control. Good day, sir, madam,” he said courteously and gave a slight bow.
“How did you know what to say?” Livvy asked once the elevator had started.
“You don’t believe in that old saying about honesty?”
“’I probably had a crush on you. Isabella,’” Livvy quoted, deepening her voice.
“That was just courtesy, which she knew as well,” Chris said. “With Ms. Bedford… three years ago she came to Joshua’s funeral. They may have been brother and sister, but they were separated by ten years and raised by different mothers in different cities. I suspect she barely knew him. From all reports, she didn’t approach her father or say one word to him during the whole time she was in D.C. She respects family, but she certainly wasn’t there for her father’s sake. She doesn’t trust him.”
The elevator opened into an ornate vestibule to Paula Bedford’s penthouse, which occupied the top two floors. They could see her, a tall, pale brunette wearing a long flowing dress in golden tones and standing behind two more layers of security glass. There was a sturdy-looking formally dressed man standing attentively to the side. Paula hesitated briefly, then she said something and the man pressed his palm to the locks on the inner and outer doors and let them in.
Chris appeared to ignore their surroundings, but Livvy looked around curiously. As with so many who were plugged into Longevity and who had the wealth to indulge their whims, including Livvy’s parents, Paula Bedford chose to live in surroundings that suggested the classic styles of an earlier century. Livvy always suspected that it meant they secretly longed for the simplicity and elegance of those pre-Longevity times. In Paula Bedford’s case, the style was 18th century, Louis XV, with appropriate gilt and damask.
“Please, sit down,” Paula said graciously.
“How do you think I can help you? I have no knowledge of my father’s activities.”
“I’m sure you don’t,” Chris said. “But at this point, anything you can tell us that would be revealing of his character and the direction his… inclinations might take him would be helpful.”
“You mean his obsession,” Paula said.
“If you want to call it that,” Chris said.
Paula hesitated, as though she were choosing her words with care. “My father’s problem is that he was born in a time when creating a dynasty has become in some ways obsolete. When people can live for centuries, and their children have all of that time to live their own lives and build their own empires… and when the cost of having a single child is the loss of fifty years of one’s own life… Without Longevity, he might have been a very different man. A devoted family man.”
She settled back in her delicately ornate armchair and arranged the folds of her shimmering silk dress over her long legs.
“I say that, and it is suitable for even my intimate friends to think I believe it, but of course I don’t. His obsession precludes any empathy, even with his children. He will not accept his own death. He believes, very deeply, that he is worthy of exception.
“You understand the incredible price he feels he paid for Joshua and me. It must have been an extremely difficult choice for him. In earlier times, such men were compelled to face their own, inevitable mortality. Even then, there were roads to immortality of a kind: children and grandchildren, if one were a loving family man, or some public monument, or art or literature, if one were civic-minded or creative. No one held out the hope of something more. Now, there is. For a man who is neither loving, nor creative, nor civic-minded, and who despises obstacles to his will, and who sees true immortality within his grasp, what stops him? The Law?”
“So I’ve imagined,” Chris said.
“We are all good at rationalizing our choices, without even being aware we are doing so,” Paula said. Her eyes flicked over Livvy in much the same way Isabella’s had, then came back to Chris. “I suppose that my father is better at it than most. Respect for the Law will not even make him pause. You will need to compel him.”
Livvy wasn’t prepared to be dismissed. “What would he do to satisfy his obsession?” she asked mildly.
Paula turned back to consider her once more. “Anything. Which is why you are now sitting here, instead of standing downstairs still waiting. My father would choose his own life – his own survival, to be clear – above any other. He believes – he has to believe – he is a Titan, after all. He doesn’t stoop to seeking justification.”
She lifted a hand and the formally dressed man, who was standing by with the customary tea tray, came over and set it on a table between her and her guests. Livvy wondered if the very wealthy, largely confined now to their fortified mansions, would ever abandon this pleasant custom.
“I can tell you my own story, but I’m not sure how much that will help you. My mother told me that once he found out I was a girl he asked her to have an abortion. She refused and he never forgave her. They divorced shortly thereafter and he proceeded to ignore me for most of my life until about 25 years ago when he asked me to give him a grandson. He was prepared to be generous, but not only do I not need the money – my mother’s family has their own resources – but it wouldn’t have mattered if I did. Understand that in the right situation, I might have welcomed children. I would never, under any circumstances, expose them to my father, although I cannot say that he was ever anything worse than neglectful or dismissive.”
“Nothing worse than… Ms. Bedford, do you really believe that your brother’s death was an accident?” Chris asked.
The question didn’t startle her so much as make her turn to him thoughtfully.