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And Michael Mavens started talking about wormholes.

The map he produced from his briefcase and spread over the table was hand-drawn on unheaded paper. Evidently, Kate thought, Mavens was straying into speculations he hadn’t wanted to share with his FBI colleagues, or even commit to the dubious security of a SoftScreen.

He said, “This is a map of the route Marine One took yesterday, over the suburbs of Havana. I’ve marked time points with these crosses. You can see that when the key Juarez-Huxtable onboard conversation took place — it only lasted a couple of minutes — the chopper was here.”

Hiram frowned, and tapped a hatched box highlighted on the map, right under the Sikorsky’s position at the start of the conversation. “And what’s this?”

Mavens grinned. “It’s yours, Mr. Patterson. That is an OurWorld DataPipe terminal. A wormhole mouth, linking to your central facility here in Seattle. I believe the DataPipe terminal under Marine One is the mechanism you used to get your information from the story.”

Hiram’s eyes narrowed.

Kate listened, but with growing abstraction, as Mavens speculated — a little wildly — about directional microphones and the amplifying effects of the gravitational fields of wormhole mouths. His theory, as it emerged, was that Hiram must be using the fixed DataPipe anchors to perform his bugging.

It was obvious that Mavens had stumbled on some aspects of the truth, but didn’t yet have it all.

“Bull,” said Hiram evenly. “There are holes in your theory I could fly a 747 through.”

“Such as,” Kate said gently, “OurWorld’s ability to get cameras to places where there is no DataPipe wormhole terminal. Like those hurricane-struck Philippine islands. Or Secretary-General Halliwell’s cleavage.”

Hiram glared at Kate warningly. Shut up.

Mavens looked confused, but dogged. “Mr. Patterson, I’m no physicist. I haven’t yet figured out all the details. But I’m convinced that just as your wormhole technology is your competitive advantage in data transmission, so it must be in your news-gathering operations.”

“Oh, come on, Hiram,” she said. “He has most of it.”

Hiram growled, “Damn it, Manzoni. I told you I wanted plausible deniability at every stage.”

Mavens looked inquiringly at Kate.

She said, “He means, cover for the existence of the WormCams.”

Mavens smiled. “WormCams. I can guess what that means. I knew it.”

Kate went on, “But deniability wasn’t always possible. And not in this case. You knew it, Hiram, before you approved the story. It was just too good a lead to pass on… I think you should tell him what he wants to know.”

Hiram glared at her. “Why the hell should I?”

“Because,” said Mavens, “I think I can help you.”

Mavens stared wide-eyed at David’s first wormhole mouth, already a museum piece, the spacetime pearl still embedded in its glass block. “And you don’t need anchors. You can plant a WormCam eye anywhere, watch anything… And you can pick up sound too?”

“Not yet,” Hiram said. “But the Search Engine is a pretty good lipreader. And we have human experts to back it up. Now, Special Agent. Tell me how you can help me.”

Reluctantly, Mavens set the glass block down on the table. “As Ms. Manzoni deduced, the rest of my team is only a couple of steps behind me. There will probably be a raid on your facilities tomorrow.”

Kate frowned. “Then surely you shouldn’t be here, tipping us off.”

“No, I shouldn’t,” Mavens said seriously. “Look, Mr. Patterson, Ms. Manzoni, I’ll be frank. I’m arrogant enough to believe that on this issue I can see a little more clearly than my superiors, which is why I’m stepping over the mark. Your WormCam technology — even what I was able to deduce about it for myself — is fantastically powerful. And it could do an immense amount of good: bringing criminals to justice, counterespionage, surveillance.”

“If it was in the right hands,” Hiram said heavily.

“If it was in the right hands.”

“And that means yours. The Bureau’s.”

“Not just us. But in the public domain, yes. I can’t agree with your reporting of the Juarez-Huxtable conversation. But your exposure of the fraudulent science behind the Galveston desalination project, for example, was a masterful piece of journalism. By uncovering that particular scam alone you saved the public purse billions of dollars. I’d like to see responsible news-gathering of that kind continue. But I am a servant of the people. And the people — we — need the technology too, Mr. Patterson.”

“To invade citizens’ privacy?” Kate asked.

Mavens shook his head. “Any technology is open to abuse. There would have to be controls. But — you may not believe it, Ms. Manzoni — on the whole we civil servants are pretty clean. And we need all the help we can get. These are increasingly difficult times, as you must know, Ms. Manzoni.”

“The Wormwood.”

“Yes.” He frowned, looking troubled. “People seem reluctant to take responsibility for themselves, let alone for others, their community. A rise in crime is being matched by a rise in apathy about it. Presumably this will only grow worse as the years go by, as the Wormwood grows closer.”

Hiram seemed intrigued. “But what difference does it make if the Wormwood is going to cream us all anyhow? When I was a kid in England, we grew up believing that when the nuclear war broke out we’d have just four minutes’ warning. We used to talk about it. What would you do with your four minutes? I’d have got blind drunk and…”

“We have centuries,” said Mavens. “Not just minutes. We have a duty to keep society functioning as best we can, as long as possible. What else can we do? And sir, meanwhile — as has been true for decades — this country has more enemies than any nation in the world. National security may have a higher priority over issues of individual rights.”

“Tell us what you’re proposing,” Kate said.

Mavens took a deep breath. “I want to try to set up a deal. Mr. Patterson, this is your technology. You’re entitled to profit from it. I’d propose that you’d keep the patents and industry monopoly. But you’d license your technology to the government, to be used in the public interest, under suitably drafted legislation.”

Hiram snapped, “You have no authority to offer such a deal.”

Mavens shrugged. “Of course not. But this is obviously a sensible compromise, a win-win for all concerned — including the people of this country. I think I could sell it to my immediate superior, and then…”

Kate smiled. “You really have risked everything for this, haven’t you? It’s that important?”

“Yes, ma’am, I believe it is.”

Hiram shook his head, wondering. “You bloody kids and your sentimental idealism.”

Mavens was watching him. “So what do you say, Mr. Patterson? You want to help me sell this? Or will you wait for the raid tomorrow?”

Kate said, “They’ll be grateful, Hiram. In public, anyhow. Maybe Marine One will come collect you from the helipad on your lawn so the Prez can pin a medal on your chest. This is a step closer to the centre of power.”

“For me and my sons,” Hiram said.

“Yes.”

“And I’d maintain my commercial monopoly?”

“Yes, sir.”

Abruptly Hiram grinned. His mood immediately switched as he accepted this defeat and started to revise his plans. “Let’s do it, Special Agent.” He reached across the table and shook Mavens’ hand So the secrecy was over; the power the WormCam had granted Hiram would be counterbalanced. Kate felt an immense relief.