Peter went down to the small den off the front hall and found the videophone. It was engaged, and the screen was filled with numbers. Peter recognized the logo of the Royal Bank of Canada; Sandra must have been logged on to do some at-home banking when she’d been interrupted by the deliveryman. Peter broke the connection.
Suddenly the killer appeared in the doorway. The gouge across the side of his head was dry. Beneath it, Peter could see what looked like shiny metal—
Shiny metal. God.
An immortal. An actual immortal. Well, why not? The fucking guy made enough money.
Peter still had Sandra’s gun. He aimed it at the man.
“Who are you?” said the Australian. Yellow teeth were visible when he spoke.
“I — I’m the guy who hired you,” said Peter.
“Bull.”
“I am. I hired you by electronic mail. I paid you one hundred twenty-five thousand dollars to kill Hans Larsen, and a hundred K to kill this detective. But I’ve changed my mind. I don’t want her dead.”
“You’re Avenger?” said the man. “You’re the guy who hired me to cut that bloke’s dick off?”
Good God, thought Peter. So that’s what the mutilation had been. “Yes,” he said, trying not to show his revulsion.
“Yes.”
The Australian rubbed his forehead. “I ought to kill you for what you tried to do to me.”
“You can keep the hundred thousand. Just get the hell out of here.”
“Damn straight I’ll keep the money. I did my job.”
The tableau held for several moments. The Australian was clearly sizing Peter up — whether he would use the gun again, whether Peter deserved to die for having taken a shot at him.
Peter cocked the trigger. “I know I can’t kill an immortal,” he said, “but I can slow you down long enough for the police to get here.” He swallowed hard. “I understand a life sentence is a terrifying thought to someone who will live forever.”
“Give me back my beamer.”
“Not a chance,” said Peter.
“Come on, mate — that thing cost forty grand.”
“Bill me for it.” He waved the gun again.
The Australian weighed his options for a moment more, then nodded. “Don’t leave any fingerprints, mate,” he said, then turned and left through the still-open front door.
Peter leaned over the phone, thought for a second, then selected text-only mode and dialed 9-1-1. He typed:
Police officer wounded, 216 Melville Av., Don Mills. Ambulance needed.
All calls to 9-1-1 were recorded, but this way there’d be no voiceprint to identify him. Sandra was unconscious; she hadn’t seen Peter, and the police would probably have no reason to think anyone had been there besides the assailant, whom Sandra presumably could describe.
Peter reached behind the phone, disconnected the keyboard, and wiped the keyboard jack with Kleenex. Still carrying the keyboard, he went back upstairs to check on Sandra. She was still unconscious, but she was also still alive. Peter, shaken to his very core, retrieved the tire iron. As he staggered out the door, he wiped the doorknob, then headed out to find his car. As he drove slowly away, he passed an ambulance, its sirens blaring, heading toward Sandra’s house.
Peter drove for kilometers, not really sure where he was going. Finally, before he killed himself or someone else through his carelessness, he pulled over and called Sarkar at work on his car phone.
“Peter!” said Sarkar. “I was just about to call you.”
“What is it?”
“The virus is ready.”
“Have you released it yet?”
“No. I want to test it first.”
“How?”
“I’ve got pristine versions of all three sims backed up on disk at Raheema’s office.” Sarkar’s wife worked only a few blocks from Mirror Image. “Fortunately, I use her place for off-site storage of backups. Otherwise that police raid would have turned them up. Anyway, for a test run, I want to mount versions on a fully isolated system and then release the virus.”
Peter nodded. “Thank God. I wanted to come see you anyway — I’ve got a device here that I can’t identify. I’ll be there in…” He paused, looked around, trying to figure out exactly where he was. Lawrence East. And that was Yonge Street up ahead. “I’ll be there in forty minutes.”
When Peter arrived, he showed Sarkar the gray plastic device that looked like an overstuffed, rigid wallet.
“Where did you get that?” asked Sarkar.
“From the hit man.”
“The hit man?”
Peter explained what had happened. Sarkar looked shaken. “You say you called the police?”
“No — an ambulance. But I’m sure the police are there by now, too.”
“Was she alive when you left?”
“Yes.”
“So, what is that thing?” said Sarkar, pointing at the device Peter had brought with him.
“A weapon of some sort, I think.”
“I’ve never seen anything like it,” said Sarkar.
“The guy called it a ‘beamer.’”
Sarkar’s jaw dropped. “Subhanallah!” he said. “A beamer…”
“You know what that is?”
Sarkar nodded. “I’ve read about them. Particle-beam weapons. They pump concentrated radiation into the body.” He exhaled. “Nasty. They’re banned in North America. Completely silent, and you can hold one inside a pocket and fire it from in there. Clothing, or even thin wooden doors, are transparent to it.”
“Christ,” said Peter.
“But you say the woman was alive?”
“She was breathing.”
“If she was shot with that, at the very least they’re going to have to carve hunks out of her to save what’s left. More likely, though, she’ll be dead in a day or two. If he had shot her in the brain, she would have died immediately.”
“Her gun wasn’t far from her. Maybe she’d been going for that when I came in.”
“Then he might not have had time to aim. Perhaps he hit her in the back — scramble the spinal cord and her legs would simply stop working.”
“And I smashed the window in before he could finish the job. God damn it,” said Peter. “God damn every bit of this. We’ve got to stop it.”
Sarkar nodded. “We can. I have my test all set up.” He gestured at a workstation in the center of the room. “This unit is completely isolated. I’ve removed all network connections, phone lines, modems, and cellular linkups. And I’ve loaded new copies of the three sims onto the workstation’s hard drive.”
“And the virus?” said Peter.
“Here.” Sarkar held up a black PCMCIA memory card, smaller than and almost as thin as a business card. He placed it into the workstation’s card slot.
Peter pulled up a chair next to the workstation. “To do the test properly,” said Sarkar, “we should really have these new sims running.”
Peter hesitated. The idea of activating new versions of.himself just so they could be killed was unsettling. But if it was necessary … “Do it,” said Peter.
Sarkar pressed some keys. “They’re alive,” he said.
“How can you tell?”
He pointed a bony finger at some data on the workstation’s screen. It was gibberish to Peter. “Here,” said Sarkar, realizing that. “Let me represent it in a different way.” He pushed some keys. Three lines started rolling across the screen. “That’s essentially a simulated EEG for each of the sims, converting their neural-net activity into something akin to brain waves.”
Peter pointed at each of the lines in turn. Violent spikes were appearing. “Look at that.”
Sarkar nodded. “Panic. They don’t know what’s going on. They’ve woken up blind, deaf, and utterly alone.”
“Those poor guys,” said Peter.
“Let me release the virus,” Sarkar said, touching a few keys. “Executing.”
“Exactly,” said Peter, shuddering.
The panicked EEGs continued for several minutes. “I don’t think it’s working,” said Peter.
“It takes time to check for the signature patterns,” said Sarkar. “Those sims are huge, after all. Just wait a — there.”