“Yeah,” Casper agreed, “it's a nice recovery. I hadn't thought of this. If I surface, they can keep an eye on me and tie me up six ways to Sunday, and stage an accident if they decide it's necessary. But if I stay underground, I'll be discredited-they'll be able to ask everyone why I'm still hiding if I'm not a terrorist.”
“So what do you do?” Mirim asked.
“For now,” Casper replied, “I stall.” He reached into his pocket and extracted his wallet, then pulled out a bill. “Here, Celia,” he said, “take this as a retainer, would you?”
Cecelia didn't move. “Why?” she asked.
“Because you're going to surface, of course, and start negotiating my surrender.”
“I am?”
“Sure. Weren't you saying that keeping me alive was just a matter of the right P.R. and legal shenanigans? Well, here's your chance to prove it.”
“You're going to give up? The Spartacus File hasn't got some clever way to twist this around again?”
Casper shrugged. “Hey, Celia, they've got me-the File doesn't cover anything like this. Schiano and his people couldn't think of everything, and besides, this is really outside what Schiano had planned on. He was figuring on guerrillas and battles, not political duels. The Party's got the real political pros here, and they're finally using them. I'd hoped they wouldn't catch on in time, but they have. They've outmaneuvered me by giving up those Covert guys and saying they were acting alone, out of control. I don't have a power base to argue that from. If I stay underground now, it'll prove I'm a terrorist, as far as the public is concerned, so I've got to surface pretty soon-but I'm not about to just walk into the local cop shop. I could have an accident, or commit suicide. So I want you to stall until I'm sure I'll be safe.”
Casper noticed that Mirim was staring at him doubtfully.
Cecelia, too, clearly wasn't quite ready to accept this sudden acquiescence.
“I thought the Spartacus File was compelling you to rebel,” she said.
“It is,” Casper said, “but it doesn't have to be violent. Schiano assumed it would be violent, but it doesn't have to be; as long as I'm fighting the government, I'm okay. I can fight them in the courts, by proxy-or at the ballot box. I'm not about to go back to working as a liability analyst; I'm in the political reform business now.”
“You don't still think they'll kill you?”
“I don't know-that's one thing I want you to find out for me.”
“You don't think they'll kill me?”
Casper shook his head. “Not until they've got me,” he said. “You'll be their best link, and they'll know it. You just tell them that you were kidnapped, make whatever connections you need to keep yourself safe-that's another reason I want to stall, to give you time.” He pressed the bill toward her.
Reluctantly, she took it.
Casper smiled at her.
He knew why she was reluctant-he was doing exactly what she had wanted him to do all along, but he wasn't whining about it, wasn't putting up a struggle, and she didn't trust that. She thought there had to be a catch.
She was right, of course-there was a catch.
That was the next step in his plan.
The fact that his identity was known right from the first, and that he was too heavily outgunned to set up a guerrilla force in the wilderness somewhere, had made most of the preferred options in the Spartacus File impossible-Schiano hadn't compiled it with the U.S. in mind. Casper's promise to Mirim not to openly take power himself limited his choices still further. The government's disavowal of any ill intentions toward him narrowed it down even more.
He couldn't stay underground without ruining his position, and if he tried to operate in the open he could never succeed-they'd find a way to kill him if he started to get close. He had to find a third way.
And of course, the Spartacus File provided one. Schiano and the hundred other programmers who had worked on the File hadn't been able to think of every possible contingency, but they'd included every general case they could think of, and provided guidelines for choosing which model to follow.
It was pretty clear what to do in this situation. When presented with two unacceptable options, find a third choice even if it looks even worse on the surface. And here there was definitely such a choice, one that looked really bad at first:
Martyrdom.
Not suicide, of course-he had no intention of killing himself, and if he let himself be killed, who would lead the revolution? Who would guide People For Change into power? And he didn't want to die.
Spartacus had died for his revolt, and the revolt had died with him. Casper didn't want that, didn't want either part of it-he wanted to live, and he wanted his revolution to continue and grow. Martyrdom was a matter of public perception, not reality; all he had to do was appear to die, at the hands of a treacherous government.
He was pretty sure he could pull it off.
He hadn't yet worked out the details, though, and until he did, he wasn't about to let Cecelia in on his plans.
“Go on,” he told Cecelia, “go turn yourself in, or whatever.”
She stared at him a moment longer, then nodded.
“Okay,” she said. “I'll turn myself in to… let's see… CNN, I guess. Or maybe ABC would be better.”
He smiled wryly. “Not the cops?”
“Don't be an idiot, Casper. Hasn't that thing in your head taught you anything? They aren't going to shoot me live on TV; in private, though, who knows?”
Casper nodded. She was exactly right.
He wondered-if Cecelia had gone for one of Covert's optimizations, would she have gotten the Spartacus File? She seemed to have half the tactical knowledge already. Certainly, she had more of what it took to fight a revolution than he had had before his visit to NeuroTalents.
“Colby,” Cecelia called up the stairs, “could Rose or Tasha or someone drop me somewhere? And I need to make a shielded phone call.” She turned and headed back for the kitchen.
Casper watched her go, then settled onto the couch beside Mirim.
The news was still running, but had moved on to the financial report. Casper watched it, not really paying attention.
Mirim stared at him.
“Are you really giving up, Cas?” she asked at last.
He looked at her, startled, then smiled at her, a big, warm smile.
“Nope,” he said. “Come on, let's get the vidcam; as soon as Celia's gone I want to record some more speeches. And I need to check the nets, see if we've got some volunteers. After that we'll talk to Colby and the others about setting up maildrops and bank accounts for contributions.”
“So you're still going to try this political stuff?”
“Absolutely!” He stood up and reached down for her hand. “Come on,” he said. “We've got a campaign to launch.”
Bob Schiano stared at the screen in amazement. A dozen security men were shielding Cecelia Grand from the mob as she was led up the courthouse steps.
“Ms. Grand, a lawyer representing alleged terrorist Casper Beech, announced that she had come to negotiate Beech's surrender,” the off-screen reporter announced.
“But he can't,” Schiano said. “He can't surrender. The file won't let him.” He smacked a fist onto the table in front of him. “ I won't let him!”
The scene cut to Cecelia addressing the press.
“Mr. Beech is understandably wary,” she said. “Government agents openly tried to kill him on the streets of Philadelphia and again in New York, and while the administration may now say that those agents were acting without authorization, Mr. Beech feels that he needs greater assurance of his own safety before turning himself in.”
Schiano leaned back in his chair, staring at the screen.
Beech couldn't surrender. And especially not now, when he'd scored a victory and forced the government to disavow their attacks on him! Smith and his chief aide and two triggermen were packed away somewhere, being prepared as scapegoats; Schiano had been briefly concerned that they might even sacrifice him, but in the end they hadn't done anything that desperate. Good imprint programmers were hard to find.