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He shook his head.

‘I’ll go and get some help,’ he said, in Quechua.

He stepped past her to the front door and opened it.

Then, in the flood of light from outside, he swivelled quietly and shot her once more, through the back of the head.

CHAPTER TWO

They arrested him, of course.

Drawn by the gunfire, a squad of body-armoured camp security came scuttling up the street, clinging to the cover of building edges and stopped vehicles like so many man-sized beetles. Sunlight gleamed on their dull blue chest carapaces and the tops of their helmets, glinted off the barrels of the short, blunt assault rifles they carried. They were as silent as beetles too – in all probability, their GH-stamped riot gear and weaponry came with an induction mike and comms link package. He imagined it from their point of view. Hushed, shocked voices on the wire. Goggle-eyed vision.

They found Carl seated cross-legged on the steps up to the prefab’s front door, hands offered outward, palms up. It was a tanindo meditation stance, one he’d learnt from Sutherland, but he was anything but meditative. The effects of the mesh were ebbing now, and the pain from his injured side was beginning to creep back. He breathed through it and kept his body immobile. Watched intently as the security squad crept up the street towards him. He’d set out the Haag pistol and his Agency licence in the street, a good four or five metres away from where he sat, and as soon as the first armoured form nosed up to him, assault rifle slanting down from the shoulder, he lifted his hands slowly into the air above his head. The boy in the riot gear was breathing harshly and under the helmet and goggles his young face was taut with stress.

‘I am a genetic licensing agent,’ Carl recited loudly in Spanish. ‘Retained under contract by UNGLA. That’s my authorisation, lying there in the street with my gun. I am unarmed.’

The rest of the squad moved up, weapons similarly levelled. They were all in their teens. A slightly older squad leader arrived and took stock, but his sweat-dewed face didn’t look any more confident. Carl sat still and repeated himself. He needed to get through to them before they looked inside the ’fab. He needed to establish some authority, even if it wasn’t his. Inside the high-tech riot gear, these were conscripts just like the ones he’d ridden into town with. Most of them would have left school at fourteen, some of them even earlier than that. The European Court might mean next to nothing to them, and their attitude to the UN was likely to be ambivalent at best, but the Agency licence was an impressive looking piece of plastic and hologear. With luck it would weigh in the balance when they found the bodies.

The squad leader lowered his rifle, knelt beside the licence and picked it up. He tipped the holoshot back and forth, comparing it with Carl’s face. He stood up and prodded the Haag gun doubtfully with the toe of his boot.

‘We heard shots,’ he said.

‘Yes, that’s correct. I attempted to arrest two suspects in a UNGLA live case and they attacked me. They’re both dead.’

Looks shuttled back and forth among the young, helmeted faces. The captain nodded at two of his squad, a boy and a girl, and they slid to the sides of the prefab door. The girl called a warning into the house.

‘There’s no one alive in there,’ Carl told them. ‘Really.’

The two squad members took the door in approved fashion, swung inside and banged about from room to room, still shouting their redundant warnings to surrender. The rest of them waited, weapons still levelled on Carl. Finally, the female member of the entry team came out with her assault rifle slung, crossed to the captain and muttered in his ear. Carl saw how the squad leader’s face darkened with anger as he listened. When the girl had finished her report, he nodded and took off his sun-lenses. Carl sighed and met the customary stare. The same old mix, fear and disgust. And this young man was already unfastening a blue plastic binding loop from his belt. He pointed at Carl like something dirty.

‘You, get up,’ he said coldly. ‘Get your fucking hands behind your back.’

By the time they cut him loose again, his fingers were numb and his shoulders ached in their sockets from trying to press his wrists closer together. They’d drawn the loop savagely tight – even clenching his fists as they did it hadn’t won him much slack when he relaxed his hands again, and the tension in his arms tended to force his wrists apart so that however he positioned himself, the loop cut into flesh. On top of the stab wound in his side, it wasn’t what he needed.

They’d found the injury when they searched him, but they were more concerned with emptying out his pockets than treating him for damage. They didn’t take off the binding loop. As long as he didn’t die in custody, he guessed they didn’t much care what shape he was in. At the camp security centre, they cut his clothing back and a barely interested medic prodded around the wound, declared it superficial, sprayed it with antibac, glued it shut and taped a dressing to it. No analgesics. Then they left him in a lightly piss-scented plastic holding cell while the GH director pretended for two hours that he had more pressing matters to attend to than a double shooting in his camp.

Carl spent the time going over the confrontation with Gray, looking for a way to play it that didn’t leave Gaby dead. He measured the angles, the words he’d used, the way the conversation had developed. He came to the same conclusion a dozen times. There was only one sure procedure that would have saved Gaby’s life, and that was to shoot Gray dead the moment he stepped out of the bathroom.

Sutherland would have been pissed off, he knew.

No such thing as time travel, he’d rumbled patiently, once. Only live with what you’ve done, and try in future to only do what you’re happy to live with. That’s the whole game, soak, that’s all there is.

Hard on the heels of the memory, Carl’s own thoughts came looking for him.

I don’t want to do this any more.

Finally, two members of the security squad, male and unarmoured, came and marched him out of the cell without removing the loop, then took him to a small office at the other end of the security station. The camp director sat on one corner of a desk swinging his leg and watched as they cut Carl loose without ceremony. The solvent squirt left a couple of drops on his skin that scorched. It didn’t feel accidental.

‘I’m very sorry about this,’ the director said, in English and without visible remorse. He was pretty much the type, a tall, mid-forties white guy in designer casuals that approximated light trekking gear. His name, Carl knew from previous research, was Axel Bailey, but he didn’t offer it, or his hand.

‘So am I.’

‘Yes, clearly you’ve been detained unnecessarily. But if you had identified yourself before running around my camp playing at detective, we might have avoided a lot of unpleasantness.’

Carl said nothing, just rubbed at his hands and waited for the pain as his hands renewed their acquaintance with blood flow.

Bailey cleared his throat.

‘Yes, well, we’ve confirmed that Rodriguez was in fact who you claim he was. Some kind of slip-up in vetting there, it looks like. Anyway, your office want you to contact them with a preliminary statement on the shooting, but since we won’t contest the jurisdiction, of course, there’ll be no need for more than that at this stage. However, I would like your assurance that you will file a full report with COLIN as soon as you get back to London, citing our co-operation. If that’s agreed, you’re free to go, and in fact we can assist you with transport out.’

Carl nodded. The first traceries of pain branched spikily out through the flesh of his fingers. ‘Got it. You want me gone before the press come looking for the story.’