‘What’s the use in not being talkative? You’re going to make me speak one way or another.’ The words emerged dry as charcoal, each one forced out separately. Something horrible rattled down in his lungs.
Dreyfus tucked his hands together in his lap. ‘We have a situation, Sheridan. I thought you might be able to shed some more light on it.’
‘I told you everything I know.’
‘We have a handle on Aurora now, but there’s still a lot more we’d like to know.’ He checked his bracelet. ‘Thirty minutes ago, House Aubusson and Szlumper Oneill began releasing clouds of manufactured entities into Glitter Band space. We’re still not sure what those entities are yet, but at least now we have some idea of where they’re headed. They’re not expanding in all directions. They’re moving in two directed flows, like wasps following a scent trail. In less than two hours, those flows will come into contact with two other habitats with combined populations exceeding six hundred and fifty thousand citizens. Do you want to speculate about what might happen when those flows touch the habitats?’
Gaffney’s expression hadn’t changed since Dreyfus had entered the room. His mask of a face was still fixated on the ceiling. ‘If you’re so worried, why don’t you move the habitats?’
‘You know we can’t change the orbit of a fifty-million-tonne structure just by clicking our fingers. We can’t stop the arrival of the flow of entities either: the individual elements might be vulnerable, but there are just too many of them. The best we can do is alert those habitats, get them to prepare their defences and initiate whatever kind of evacuation programme they have in place. We’ve already done that, of course, but given the time available, we’ll be lucky to offload more than ten thousand citizens by the time the flows hit.’ Dreyfus leaned closer to the bedside. ‘That’s why I’d really like to know what’s going to happen, Sheridan.’
‘Then you’re shit out of luck, Tommy-boy.’
‘I’m disappointed, Sheridan. You know better than any of us that there’s no sense in withholding information. We’ll get it out of you eventually, by hook or by crook. I have the authorisation to run a deep-cortex trawl, for one. Or I could go with one of those Model Cs so dear to your heart. See how you like a dose of enhanced subject compliance.’
‘In my condition, how long do you think I’d last?’
‘That’s a fair point,’ Dreyfus conceded. ‘So perhaps the trawl would be a safer bet. What would you go for, just out of interest?’
‘I’m old-fashioned. Never could get on with trawls.’
Dreyfus nodded. ‘You’d like that, wouldn’t you? I run a whiphound on you, you die before you spill your guts, end of story.’
‘I could think of worse outcomes.’
Dreyfus unlaced his hands and tapped a finger against the side of his brow. ‘Here’s what I don’t get, Sheridan. You’re a solid Panoply man, as good a prefect as any of us. What exactly did Aurora have on you that made you turn traitor?’
At last the mask fashioned a grimace-like smile. ‘You’re the traitor, Tom, not me. You and all the other cowards who turn a blind eye to what’s really going on in the Glitter Band. It’s been clear to me since we walked away from Hell-Five. The people voted us the power to protect them. Problem is we abdicated that responsibility years ago. We let the people down.’
‘That’s not quite the way it looks from where I’m sitting,’ Dreyfus said.
‘If only you saw the bigger picture, you’d understand.’
‘Enlighten me, Sheridan. Tell me what I’m not seeing. Would Aurora’s glimpse into the future have anything to do with it?’
After a while Gaffney said, ‘You know about Exordium, then.’
‘Enough to know where to start trawling if you don’t tell me about it now.’
‘Aurora saw the end of everything we hold precious, Tom. We’ve created something wonderful around Yellowstone, something glorious, something unheralded in all the human history that’s come before us. Something fit to last a thousand years, or ten thousand. And yet it ends. Less than a hundred years from now, all this is over. Humanity opened a window into paradise, and in eighty or ninety years it closes. The Garden of Eden isn’t some ancient Biblical story about the fall of paradise thousands of years ago. It’s a premonition.’
‘How does it end?’
‘Everything goes, in a matter of hours and days. Aurora walked amongst their dreams. She saw habitats burning, she saw people screaming in agony, she saw Chasm City turning against its own inhabitants, becoming something monstrous.’
‘A time of plague,’ Dreyfus said.
‘No one sees it coming. There’s no time to prepare. It hits us when we feel at our least vulnerable, in our highest, brightest hour.’ Gaffney halted and caught his breath, the air rasping in and out of his lungs. ‘Aurora couldn’t let that happen, Tom. She believes the Glitter Band deserves better than to crash and burn.’
‘But we’re still talking about something eighty or ninety years in the future. Why is she taking action now?’
‘Prudence,’ Gaffney said. ‘Aurora believes the content of the Exordium prognostications, but not necessarily the detail. She’s worried that the Conjoiners were wrong about the timeline, that perhaps it might happen sooner than they predicted. There’s no time to wait for warning signals. If action is to be taken to ensure the future survival of the Glitter Band, we must move now, not in twenty years, or fifty years. Only then can she be certain of success.’
‘And this action?’ Dreyfus ventured, wondering how much Gaffney was going to give up without coercion.
But Gaffney looked disappointed. ‘Isn’t it obvious? A benign takeover. The installation of a new authority that will ensure the Glitter Band’s security for time immemorial.’
‘She could have just come to us, if she had reasonable concerns.’
‘And how do you think Panoply would have reacted?’ Gaffney asked. ‘Not by taking the necessary measures, that’s for certain. We’ve already let the people take our guns away. Do you think that kind of ready submission implies an organisation with the necessary spine to take difficult, unpopular action, just because it happens to be in the public good?’
‘I think you answered that question for yourself.’
‘I love this organisation,’ Gaffney said. ‘I’ve given it my life. But little by little I’ve watched it allow the citizenry to erode its power. We were complicit in that, no question about it. We rolled over and handed the people back the very tools they’d given us to do our work. We’ve reached the point now where we have to beg for the right to arm our agents. And what happens when we finally issue that request? The people spit it back in our faces. They love the idea of a police force, Tom. Just not one with the teeth to actually do anything.’
‘Maybe taking guns off us wasn’t such a bad idea.’
‘It’s not just the guns. When we perform a lockdown, we spend the next year defending our actions. They’ll take lockdown authority from us next. Before you know it, we won’t even be allowed near our own polling cores. Aurora saw this coming. She knew that Panoply’s usefulness was always going to be limited, and that if the people were really to be protected, someone else was going to have to do it for them.’
‘This someone else being Aurora, and whoever’s with her,’ Dreyfus said quietly.
‘She’s no tyrant, if that’s what you’re thinking.’
‘A takeover sounds more than a little tyrannical, frankly.’
‘It won’t be like that. Aurora merely envisages a state of affairs in which the people are protected from the consequences of their own worst actions. Under Aurora’s regime, life in the habitats will continue exactly as it does now. The citizenry will still have access to the same technologies they’ve grown to depend upon. No one will be denied longevity treatments, or any other medicines they need. The people will continue to enjoy the same luxuries as they do now, and on a day-to-day level their societies will look much the same. The artists will still work.’