“But you and Sarah?” Should she tell him about Lorenza now? Or would it make it more dangerous for him? She was too tired to think.
“We should be safe now that they know she’s not you.”
“Buttons, there’s something we need to tell you—” Ronnie had lowered his voice. “It’s really important. George and I think we know—”
“Not here. Take Brun, get down to our place, and stay there. I’ll be along as soon as Sarah can travel. They’ll probably send her down for regen treatment when she’s stabilized. Dad’s on his way, too.”
Buttons turned away with a little wave; Brun suddenly felt the weight of fear and exhaustion settle back on her shoulders. Her feet hurt.
“He’s right,” she said. “Let’s go home.”
Chapter Seventeen
The grounds of the Institute of Neuroscience had lush green lawns and flowering shrubs. A few low domes protruded through the greenery, and a stubby blocklike building rose from a grove of trees in the distance. Heris rode a silent electric car hardly big enough for her and the driver from the public transit stop to the entrance, and wondered aloud at the spaciousness.
“A bomb attack thirty years ago,” the driver said, over his shoulder. “The Benignity, of course. They thought they were getting a manufacturing complex . . . we rebuilt underground, even though that’s no real protection against modern munitions. But it was all ugly and crowded before; this way we have something pretty to look at.”
At the front desk, Heris handed over her official documents, with the Royal Seal of the Familias Regnant. She had noticed three nondescript men in the waiting room . . . Geralds all, scattered among the other patients.
“Ah—are you the patient, Captain?”
“No. But I would prefer not to explain here.”
“Of course. Perhaps you and . . . is the patient here?” The clerk managed, heroically Heris thought, not to peer into the waiting room.
“Yes.”
“Then perhaps you and the patient would come this way.” Heris gave the hand signal the Geralds had taught her, and one by one they ambled up to the desk, leaned over, and took the colored card the clerk held up. Her eyes widened but she said nothing.
Doctors Koshinsky and Velun. Male and female, short and tall, thick and thin, dark and fair. Koshinsky’s dark beard was only slightly darker than his skin, and he came up to Velun’s elegant silk-clad shoulder. Heris wondered what they thought of her and the clones. The clones had shed their disguises, and now wore identical coveralls; they looked like a frieze of tall blond princes, to which she was a short dark punctuation. Or, in the metaphor of music (she still thought it was strange to name a planet Music), “da-da-da-dum.”
“Can you describe the problem any more precisely, Captain?” asked Dr. Velun. Height, blonde hair, a glacial beauty . . . she could be mother or aunt to those princes.
“I thought that was in the king’s letter.”
“Unfortunately not. What it says is that he was given a demonstration of a drug to inhibit higher cognitive processes, and its reversibility, in a person of his son’s age. Then that same drug—he thinks—was administered to his son, causing a relative inability to learn and perform cognitive tasks at the level his innate abilities warranted—” She broke off and gave Heris a hostile look. “Quite frankly, Captain Serrano, we would regard such a use of any method of lowering intelligence to be quite unethical. In our culture, intelligence is respected.”
“If I understand correctly,” Heris said, “the king was given a choice of having his son partially and temporarily incapacitated or assassinated; his older sons had both died, one by assassination and one in . . . er . . . dubious circumstances. It was not an easy choice.”
“Even so,” Dr. Velun said. “And now, I understand, he wants to see if the effect can be reversed by someone other than the . . . mmm . . . perpetrator?”
“That’s right. I should also mention that the use of clone doubles is not only unethical but illegal in our society.”
“Not here,” Dr. Koshinsky said. “We grow clones all the time; we’ve nothing against clones. They have full legal identity.”
“The problem is, these clones have been trained to be the prince’s doubles. Now each of them claims he is not the prince, that the prince is somewhere else. I was twice informed that the person I was taking aboard was the prince, only . . .” Heris nodded at the three. “Only I have no way of telling the difference. And I think it likely that they are somehow programmed or conditioned not to reveal the prince’s identity.”
“Were the clones also treated to inhibit their intelligence?”
“I don’t know. I wasn’t even told there were clones.”
“Hmm. Then, the first step is to examine these young men—with their permission of course—”
“Certainly,” said the three princes, or clones, or Geralds. And, still in unison, “You won’t be able to distinguish us from one another.” Heris had her doubts. Anyone who could scan weapons an R.S.S. ship would miss might well have new and better ways to tell a prime from its clone.
Two days later, Dr. Velun called Heris in for another conference. She had a stack of data cubes and a cube player already set up.
“Let me tell you what we’ve found out so far . . . do you have a medical background, by any chance?”
“No, sorry.”
“Well—I’ll do my best. Do ask questions when they occur, will you? Now. We know that the prince is a Registered Embryo. Now in the Familias Regnant, that means an embryo guaranteed to carry the genetic markers of the certified biological parents. All known flaws eliminated, and enhancements included—”
“Enhancements?”
The doctor was glad to explain. “Legally, all the genes—whole genes—must come from either the certified mother or the certified father. Given a sufficiency of sperm and ova, from almost anyone, it’s possible to select desirable—even outstanding—gene fragments. Humans are superbly heterozygous; it’s only a question of knowing which sequences correlate with which desired trait. But there are practical limits on the quantity of genetic material . . . time constraints, for instance. By the time you’ve located the single recessive gene you want, in one of the fifty million sperm you examined, the ovum may be overripe. If it’s not to be a gamble, much like the original, you use enhancements.”
“And those are?”
“Gene fragments, not whole genes, which means they can be substituted—with the usual techniques—” Heris had no idea what the usual techniques were and didn’t really care. “For instance, intelligence. Everyone has known since Old Earth times that intelligence is not a single entity, a single faculty. There are modules, specialized clumps of neurons which preferentially work with certain inputs.” That made Heris think of the yacht’s scanning computers—this one for detecting one kind of input and interpreting it, and that one for another. She said that and Dr. Velun looked pained. “Not really. Or rather, in a way, but not completely. The human brain has developmental preferences, but it’s also remarkably plastic: it responds to experience, so that the more experience in a cognitive domain, the more likely that function is to work well. But more important, to this patient, is what happens when things go wrong.”
Heris nodded. She found it hard to concentrate, even though she needed to be able to explain to the king later. What had gone wrong was the prince got stupid: simple, and—if not reparable—the end of the king’s hopes. The doctor talked on and on, and Heris felt herself falling more and more behind. What was a dedicated neuron? What did Dr. Velun mean by saying that some of them were supposed to die off?
Dr. Velun began to talk about drugs that might have caused the prince’s problem. “One thing that would work is a protein that blocks the production of a given neurotransmitter by tying up the RNA on which the protein would be constructed—I presume you do know something about biochemistry—?”