“Even you aren’t that insane.”
“Twenty seconds, Carson. You make that turn or I’ll blast you into the next world.”
“The one where your Indigo is waiting?”
Sarmax doesn’t reply.
“You killed your girl,” says the Operative. “That’s okay. She was Rain. She had it coming. But now you’ve got a death-wish and you want to nail us all to your fucking ferry.”
“Who are you, Sigmund fucking Freud? Ten seconds.”
“You’ve gone crazy.”
“I’m the only one who’s definitely sane.”
“Which won’t matter if this railcar bites it.”
“Carson, I’ve got to be the one who makes the decision about the target. I can’t trust you or Lynx to do it. Two seconds.”
“I see it,” says the Operative—and with that he sends the car hurtling down a much narrower tunnel. There’s only one other rail besides theirs. But then that other rail cuts out.
“Faster,” says Sarmax.
“Can’t,” says the Operative. “Not without fucking with the zone to get this bitch beyond capacity.”
“Fuck that,” says Sarmax, “zone’s a party everybody’s gate-crashed.”
Gravity increases. The walls start to flicker on either side.
“Hello,” says the Operative.
“Jesus,” says Sarmax. “Is that what I think it is?”
It is. It’s space. They speed out of the tunnel and into the construction area. There’s nothing below their rail save vacuum. Scaffolding’s all around. The completed hull of the cylinder stretches right above them like some impossibly massive ceiling, sloping down to where their rail enters still another tunnel …
“This rail’s really starting to vibrate,” says Sarmax.
“That’s because it’s about as stable as you are,” says the Operative—and ducks his head as they rush into the tunnel. It’s narrow. There’s barely enough room for this single rail.
“Sure wish we had a better map,” says Sarmax.
“We’re through,” says the Operative.
And now gravity’s lessening slightly as they race out into a broader tunnel. But even as they do, something unfolds within the Operative’s head. He stares at the pattern that’s revealed. He traces all the implications.
And then suddenly he gets it.
“Leo.”
“Yeah?”
“I just woke up to what’s so critical about this target.”
“So talk fast.”
The fucking Eurasians,” says Linehan. “They’re here too.”
“Is that what the rumor mill’s saying?”
“That’s what the officers are saying! What the hell’s going on?”
“Sounds like you already know it.”
“You were going to tell me, right?”
“I only just found out myself,” says Spencer.
And it’s all he can do to keep up. To say this operation’s need-to-know is an understatement. But the data overlays now lighting up across the bridge are nothing if not precise. On the opposite side of the Platform’s orbit are eight Eurasian ships, spread out the same way the American ships are, able to support each other and cover the Platform simultaneously.
“They’re with us,” says Spencer. “Not against.”
“You sure about that?”
“Do I sound like I’m sure of fucking anything? I’m just saying what they’re telling us up here.”
“Down here, too. This is a joint operation.”
“Aimed at Autumn Rain.”
“Or the Euro Magnates,” says Linehan.
“Who may be the same thing by now.”
“Who may have always been.”
“You really think they’ve been pulling the Rain’s strings?”
“I think you’ve got it backward, Spencer. What’s the story with that chase you’re monitoring?”
“Getting weirder by the minute.”
Ice and tunnels and speed and it’s all falling short. They’ve got her number, suddenly springing to life, sweeping past her decoys, closing from both sides. Haskell shunts her ice-chunk off the main belt, sends it racing down an ancillary belt as she tries to figure out how the hell they’re tracking her. And while she’s at it, she’s trying to hack them directly.
But she’s unable to. She can’t seem to come to grips with them and has no idea why. It’s almost as though they’re not actually there, as though she’s clutching at illusion. It’s like they’re ghosts.
Which makes no sense. She’s the ghost. The one who slips through perimeters like a phantom. But not this time—she’s bringing all her force to bear upon the problem and she’s still coming up short.
Leaving only one possible answer. Her pursuers have found a back door to her. One that she needs to neutralize fast. But first she needs to find it. She starts racing through the code of her own brain even as her mind races through the Platform’s zone. She’s sending the ice she’s in forward through a tube whose heated walls start to liquefy what’s encasing her, causing water to pour across her visor. She’s caught up in that surge now, charging out beyond the frontiers of her own brain, closing in on the door that’s out there in that limbo—but everywhere she turns is dark. She sees exactly what she’s going to have to do if she can’t find the route they’ve found to her. Bailing out of zone is an act of desperation, but her pursuers are closing in. Before she pulls the plug, she tries one more thing—amplifies her decoys, sends them hurtling out in new directions.
But one of them isn’t listening.
She sends more commands. It’s not responding. It’s just circling in toward her, on a course to intercept both her and her pursuers, only a couple of klicks distant now. She stares at it. Realization hits her like a meteor smashing into a planet.
Fuck,” says the Operative, “lost it.”
“What the hell do you mean you lost it?”
“I mean I fucking lost the goddamn signal!”
“How the fuck did you manage to do that?” asks Sarmax. He’s no longer pointing his gun at the Operative. But he looks like he wouldn’t mind shooting him anyway. “Maybe our equipment fucked up.”
“Maybe you fucked up,” says Sarmax.
“What’s fucked up is this whole fucking scene.”
“No shit.”
The Operative shakes his head. He’s starting to feel like a pinball getting flung around inside a machine. He and Sarmax are still roaring through the bowels of the cylinder, still watching wall shoot past them. Still trying to make sense of the data that’s streaming through their skulls.
“It dropped off the zone,” says the Operative.
“That’s your fucking excuse?”
“That’s my fucking explanation.”
And it’ll have to do. Because the Operative can’t think of any others. Not without taking apart his armor and trying to see what makes that zone interface tick. Besides, that interface couldn’t really be malfunctioning. Because now it’s detecting something else, back in the area they started in. It’s very faint, and it quickly disappears. But for a moment there it was unmistakable. The Operative mentions this to Sarmax.