Выбрать главу

Gaul sat back from the table and pushed his glasses back up.

“I see. Interesting. So, are some Witches more valuable than others?”

“Certainly. Older, wiser, more powerful Witches command more respect. Those who control the cattle, the humans. Those successful in the war against your kind. All of them, they are above me,” Evelyn explained, her voice wandering and distant. “But there is no hierarchy as you understand it, no leader for you to speak to. There are those among us who would listen to what you had to say out of curiosity, but they would be no more able to sway our society as a whole than you would.”

“So, if I understand you correctly,” Gaul said tiredly, “There is no way to negotiate with your kind. Not even to secure your own release.”

Evelyn looked him in the eyes, her expression desperate but not quite, he thought, defeated.

“Not even to surrender,” she said flatly. “We have some understanding of your concepts of diplomacy. But we do not agree with the philosophy behind it.”

“That is… unfortunate,” Gaul said reluctantly. “That would require one side or the other to be completely wiped out for the conflict to end.”

Evelyn nodded mutely.

“The intelligence you provided us has proved valid,” Gaul said woodenly, consulting the Etheric Network. “Empathic and telepathic probes, as well as basic self interest, indicate that you are being honest with us, as far as that goes.”

“Of course,” Evelyn said shakily. “What would I gain with lies? I am dead to my people as it is. Even if I were somehow to escape, they would kill me out of distrust. I have been contaminated by you people.”

Gaul’s frown tightened.

“One of my associates has made a rather alarming suggestion. She claims that your emotions are manufactured,” Gaul said, his voice returning to normal as he regarded her critically, observing her through the filter of the empathic protocol that he had downloaded. “She claims that you have fabricated a persona, complete with the kind of emotional responses to stimuli that we would expect, for the sole purpose of feigning humanity, and appealing to our own.”

Gaul waited and watched while Evelyn fidgeted and twitched, but nothing came of it. He hated downloading empathic protocols; it was all too touchy-feely for him. He always felt dirty afterward, as if he gotten too close and caught something.

“Well? Is it true?”

Evelyn spoke slowly when she responded, as if she were under tremendous pressure, as if the words were torn from deep within her, and only at a grievous personal cost.

“If my persona is manufactured, then I would have no more awareness of it than you would. Do you understand? I would not be able to differentiate between the persona and my own identity. For all intents and purposes, an implanted persona completely replaces the preexisting personality when it is installed.”

“And this would be true if a human was implanted with a persona?”

“Certainly,” Evelyn said, with a muted nod.

“An Operator?”

“If that is possible, then yes.”

“Evelyn, when the Auditors took you, were you working for the Anathema? With Anathema? With any Operators at all?”

“No,” Evelyn said, shaking her head vigorously. “As far as we are concerned there is no difference between you and them. An Operator is an Operator, regardless of your petty disputes. We do not engage in alliances. We have slaves, but we do not have allies.”

“Then why is it,” Gaul asked, leaning forward, “that we keep finding Witches and Operators working together lately?”

“I don’t know.”

“What about the Terrie Cartel?”

“I don’t know anything about it,” Evelyn said, shivering. “Alice Gallow didn’t believe me either. Nevertheless, I genuinely don’t. I can tell you this much, though. It’s a lesson that we teach our young from their first days — anyone can be controlled. All that’s needed is the right leverage.”

“You think the Anathema have found a way to manipulate Witches?”

“What do I know?” Evelyn answered, spreading her hands helplessly. “I’m not important. It isn't impossible. As far as I know, there are no Witches working with Operators, so any you have encountered have either gone rogue, or they are under outside control. Do you believe me, Director?”

Gaul shrugged concomitantly.

“My fear, my pain, is every bit as a real as yours,” Evelyn said, her hands out imploringly. “I don’t want to be hurt. I don’t want to see Alice Gallow again. I don’t want to die in that cell, and I will ransom my life with whatever I can offer. Is there something that you want from me, Director?”

Gaul’s pale red eyes narrowed.

“As a matter of fact,” he said softly, with quiet satisfaction. “There is. We conducted a raid in Shanghai recently, as part of the mop-up of the Terrie Cartel. Instead of finding Witches, we found the Anathema — heretic Operators. So tell me, Evelyn — we aren’t fighting you this time, are we?”

He could see the surprise in her eyes, and it annoyed him.

“Of course not,” Evelyn said. “Have you only now realized?”

“Exquisite,” Alice said, running one gloved finger across the blood-smear on the pitted concrete floor. “I’ve never seen another protocol like it. This is what Rebecca and Alistair were so desperate to keep secret. I thought that your ability was permanently restricted. I’m pleased to see that isn’t the case. How long have you been able to use it?”

Mitsuru sat down heavily on the floor of the basement room. Behind her, the cement wall was spattered with her blood, evidence of the stomach wound the she had sustained, still dripping on to the floor around her in little rivulets. Of the five Anathema she had found in the basement, there were only two intact corpses, leaking from various bullet wounds. The rest were in smaller pieces that were scattered across the room. It looked like a slaughterhouse, and it was starting to smell that way, too.

“Since last week,” Mitsuru admitted, poking experimentally at the gouge that ran from her side to her belly above her belt line. “I’ve been trying for months, but nothing worked. Then, that night that I brought Alex Warner back…”

“Aha!” Alice cried, delighted, still inspecting the carnage. “I thought it might be down to that little delinquent. I wondered why they were so damn eager to get me to take over your spot, administering The Program.”

“Yeah, me too,” Mitsuru said, leaning back against the wall and closing her eyes, “guess I know why, now. I helped him stretch out a cramp the other day, and the bindings around the Black Door, the ones that the Board installed in me, they snapped like rubber bands.”

“Okay, I see the gunshots, and the knife work,” Alice said approvingly, turning her attention to dissected corpse of a middle-aged man in the center of the room, more a collection of mangled parts than a body, “but what did you do to this unfortunate bastard?”

“He was the one who wounded me,” Mitsuru said, wrinkling her nose in disgust, “I didn’t even see him, somehow, until he was right on top of me. The thing is, when I activate the protocol, I can do all sorts of things. That,” Mitsuru said, inclining her head at the body without opening her eyes, “is what it looks like, afterwards.”

“Nasty,” Alice said approvingly.

Mitsuru gritted her teeth and all around her a deep red tint to the air filled the air, as if Alice was watching through a filtered lens. The blood seeping from the wound in her stomach staunched itself abruptly, coagulating in fast-forward. Mitsuru gasped, opening her eyes and blinking several times to clear her vision.

“Oh, Mitzi, I like you more and more all the time,” Alice said, hugging her knees to her chest and leering at her. “So why did you call me? Not that I mind, you understand…”

“I can’t tell Alistair about this,” Mitsuru said meekly, waving her hand to indicate the massacre around her. “He’d freak. And there was another one with them, who got away before I could stop her. She was an Operator. I was hoping we could go after her.”