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“In a couple of the vids—you seemed to be fooling Ryoval with a fake split personality. Talking to yourself… ?”

“I could never have fooled Ryoval with a fake anything. He was in this trade for decades, mucking about in the bottoms of people’s brains. But my personality didn’t exactly split. More like it … inverted.” Nothing could be called split, that felt so profoundly whole. “It wasn’t something I decided to do. It was just something I did.”

She was looking at him with extreme worry. He had to laugh out loud. But the effect of his good cheer was apparently not so reassuring to her as he might have desired.

“You have to understand,” he told her. “Sometimes, insanity is not a tragedy. Sometimes, it’s a strategy for survival. Sometimes … it’s a triumph.” He hesitated. “Do you know what a black-gang is?”

Mutely, she shook her head.

“Something I picked up in a museum in London, once. Way back in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, on Earth, they used to have ships that sailed across the tops of the oceans, that were powered by steam engines. The heat for the steam engines came from great coal fires in the bellies of the ships. And they had to have these suckers down there to stoke the coal into the furnaces. Down in the filth and the heat and the sweat and the stink. The coal made them black, so they were called the black-gang. And the officers and fine ladies up above would have nothing to do with these poor grotty thugs, socially. But without them, nothing moved. Nothing burned. Nothing lived. No steam. The black-gang. Unsung heroes. Ugly lower-class fellows.”

Now she thought he was babbling for sure. The panegyric of fierce loyalty for his black gang that he wanted to sing into her ear was … probably not a good idea, just now. Yeah, and nobody loves me, Gorge whispered plaintively. You’d better get used to it.

“Never mind.” He smiled instead. “But I can tell you, Galen looks … pretty small, after Ryoval. And Ryoval, I beat. In a strange sense, I feel very free, right now. And I intend to stay that way.”

“You appear to me to be … excuse me … a little manic, right now, Mark. In Miles, this would be normal. Well, usual. But eventually, he tops out, and finally he bottoms out. I think you need to watch out for this pattern, you may share it with him.”

“Are you saying it’s a mood swing on a bungee cord?”

A short laugh puffed from her lips despite herself. “Yes.”

“I’ll beware of the perigee.”

“Hm, yes. Though it’s the apogee where everybody else has to duck and run, usually.”

“I’m also on, well, several painkillers and stimulants, right now,” he mentioned. “Or I would never have made it through the last couple of hours. I’m afraid some of them are starting to wear off.” Good. That would account to her for some of his babble, perhaps, and had the advantage of being true.

“Do you want me to get Lilly Durona?”

“No. I just want to sit here. And not move.”

“I think that might be a good idea.” Elena swung out of her chair, and picked up her helmet.

“I know what I want to be when I grow up, now, though,” he offered to her suddenly. She paused, and raised her brows.

“I want to be an ImpSec analyst. Civilian. One who doesn’t send his people to the wrong place, or five days late. Or improperly prepared. I want to sit in a cubicle all day long, surrounded by a fortress, and get it right.” He waited for her to laugh at him.

Instead, to his surprise, she nodded seriously. “Speaking as the one out on the sharp end of the ImpSec stick, I would be delighted.”

She gave him a half-salute, and turned away. He puzzled over the look in her eyes, as she descended out of sight down the lift-tube. It wasn’t love. It wasn’t fear.

Oh. So that’s what respect looks like. Oh.

I could get used to that.

As Mark had declared to Elena, he just sat for a time, staring out the window. He was going to have to move sooner or later. Maybe he could use the excuse of his broken foot to inveigle a float-chair. Lilly had promised him that her stimulants would buy him six hours of coherence, after which the metabolic bill would be delivered by hulking bio-thugs with spiked clubs, virtual repo-men for his neuro-transmitter debt. He wondered if the absurd dreamy image was the first sign of the approaching biochemical breakdown. He prayed he’d hold out at least till he was safely in the ImpSec shuttle. Oh, Brother. Carry me home.

Voices echoed up the lift tube. Miles appeared, with a Durona trailing along after him. He was skeletally thin and ghostly pale, in his Durona-issued grey suit. The two of them seemed to be on some kind of growth-reciprocal. If he could magically transfer all the kilos Ryoval had foisted on him the last week directly to Miles, they would both look much better, Mark decided. But if he kept growing fatter, would Miles attenuate altogether, and vanish? Unsettling vision. It’s the drugs, boy, it’s the drugs.

“Oh, good,” said Miles, “Elena said you were still up here.” With the cheerful air of a magician presenting a particularly good trick, he urged the young woman to step forward. “Do you recognize her?”

“It’s a Durona, Miles,” said Mark, in a gentle, weary tone. “I’m going to see them in my dreams.” He paused. “Is this a trick question?” Then he sat up, shocked by recognition. You could tell clones apart—”It’s her!”

“Just so,” smiled Miles, pleased. “We smuggled her out from Bharaputra’s, Rowan and I. She’s going to go to Escobar with her sisters.”

“Ah!” Mark settled back. “Ah. Oh. Good.” Hesitantly, he rubbed his forehead. Take back your coup, Vasa Luigi! “I didn’t think you were interested in rescuing clones, Miles.”

Miles winced visibly. “You inspired me.”

Er. He hadn’t meant that as a reference to Ryoval’s. Clearly, Miles had dragged the reluctant girl up here in a bid to make Mark feel better. Less clearly to Miles, though like crystal to himself, was an element of subtle rivalry. For the first time in his life, Miles was feeling the hot breath of fraternal competition on the back of his neck. Do I make you uneasy? Ha! Get used to it, boy. I’ve lived with it for twenty-two years. Miles had spoken of Mark as “my brother” in the same tone he’d use for “my boots,” or maybe, “my horse.” Or—give credit, now—”my child.” A certain smug paternalism. Miles hadn’t been expecting an equal with an agenda of his own. Suddenly, Mark realized he had a delightful new hobby, one that would provide entertainment for years to come. God, I’m going to enjoy being your brother.

“Yes,” Mark said cheerily, “you can do it too. I knew you could, if you only tried.” He laughed. To his dismay, it turned into a sob in his throat. He choked off both. He didn’t dare laugh, or express any other emotion, right now. His control was much too thin. “I’m very glad,” he stated, as neutrally as he could.

Miles, whose eye had caught the whole play, nodded. “Good,” he stated, equally neutrally.

Bless you, Brother. Miles understood this, at least, what it was like to teeter on the raw edge.

They both glanced at the Durona girl. She moved uneasily, under the weight of this double expectation. She flipped back her hair, mustered words. “When I first saw you,” she said to Mark, “I didn’t like you much.”

When you first saw me, I didn’t like me much either. “Yes?” he encouraged.

“I still think you’re funny-looking. Even funnier-looking than the other one,” she nodded at Miles, who smiled blandly. “But … but …” Words failed her. As cautiously and hesitantly as a wild bird at a feeder, she ventured nearer to him, bent, and kissed him on one puffy cheek. Then like a bird, she fled.

“Hm,” said Miles, watching her swoop back down the lift-tube. “I was hoping for a little more enthusiastic a demonstration of gratitude.”