Chapter Two TIME: 11:15 PM PLACE: World Science Coalition Headquarters Building COUNTRY: Vienna, Austria "Clarkfork here...Yes, Commissioner, it's all been started. Investigation of Prototype Subject 3 has begun on schedule, and is currently underway." His eyes narrowed. "No, Sir, I don't think Subject 3 has acquired any know- ledge on the matter. As you know, the Quantum Transformant Humanoid Project was disbanded nearly twenty-six years ago, but we've gotten reports of a former Project member using illegally copied Project documents to conduct unauthorized experiments in the field of cybernetic human replication." He listened. "No, not just cyborgs this time, sir. Complete, fully functional, independently thinking human androids. And this time sir," Clarkfork leaned forward in his chair, "I think Subject 3 was successfully completed and is now functional." His eyebrows furrowed. "I am very much aware of the import of the situation, should that be the case, sir. The consequences could very well be disastrous if the unit is actually functionING, instead of merely functionAL." Clarkfork fell silent. "Um, I believe the individual was the late Professor Kisaragi, sir. . . Yes, sir, I am pretty sure. . .I know, sir, but until the definitive proof is found, we can't be 100% certain. All we have that con- nects Professor Kisaragi are some charred fragments of what appeared to be stolen QTH Project files in the ruins of his house. . . Yes, sir, I said 'charred'. . . Yes, sir; completely gutted, no survivors, I am led to under- stand. Yes, there was a daughter at one time. She married and had a child of her own. Tragically, she died several years before this clandestine enterprise seems to have begun. At last report, the widowed husband and daughter relocated to London, England. Oh, you were aware of that? I didn't know." Again he fell silent, listening to the voice on the other end of the line. His eyes widened, and his jaw dropped in amazement. "I...did...NOT...know that!" he whispered. "An entire database downloaded from his daughter's brain just before death, you say? That could indeed be an interesting development! Just think...if a human's entire intellect were transferred to a computerized, electronic brain, just think of the pos- sibilities! And..." He sat bolt upright with a jerk, his face expressive of acute consternation. "I just realized that this could be very, very bad if it indeed happened, sir. What would happen if the machine successfully assimilated the analog rhythms of the human brain, and actually began to function, conduct mental activities and even be persuaded that it were ALIVE? If we were to just thunder into the scene and take over, the moral, ethical and legal ramifica- tions could be devastating. And if the faintest spark of spontaneous free will, emotion or imagination existed within the electronic matrix, the entire game is up, and for nothing." Clarkfork listened some more, and watched the rain spatter lightly across the window of his office. Outside, the nocturnal life of the Koenigstrasse began to stir. Young lovers strolling down the lamplit lanes; the typical enor- mous, buxom Hausfrau striding through the mob of nocturnal hofbrau-goers, an improbable number of Lagersteinen in her massive fists; the angry young bo- hemian artist-errant prowling the streets for inspiration to render his can- vas into another cry of impotent rage against the bourgeoisie. "No, sir. I don't recognize an immediate threat, but if Subject 3 has the parameters described in the QTH Project outlines, we could have one bloody hell of a mess if it gets out of control." The rain sighed against the glass. "A.I., sir? Automated, artificial self-awareness? That was one of the ancillary goals of QTH, but the primary objective was to create a weapons system which was small enough to get in close to any military hot spots and tough enough to take anything given to it and still dish out enough to make a real difference. A.I. was deemed a high risk, but a necessary one. I mean, what would happen if one of those machines were to develop a conscience and decide not to fight, or worse, an inflated ego and turn on its own troops? The result would be disaster." Clarkfork reached across his desk and picked up a folder. Leafing through it, he began to read. "Fortunately," he said, propping the phone receiver with his shoulder and spreading the papers with his hands, "there was a failsafe. Should the unit go renegade or consciously override its primary programming, there would be a small activation mechanism in the possession of the commanding field officer. When the button was pressed, an electric jamming impulse would paralyze the unit and low-level incendiaries would render the unit permanently inoper- ative. However, that renders a very touchy problem: If the unit was indeed programmed for self-awareness, there might be ethical issues to destroying what might amount to an artificial but very real life-form. That was one of the reasons the QTH Project was disbanded in the first place; the problem of whether those units would be actually 'alive' and therefore subject to moral and ethical laws and privileges, or if they were simply following a complex series of routines and subroutines within the cerebrocomputer matrix." Outside, a polka band struck up a merry tune which drifted cheerfully and incongruously through the rainy evening. Clarkfork studied the fingernails of his right hand. "In essence, sir," he continued, "Professor Kisaragi seemed at the onset of his own activities to be on the very threshold of what the QTH Project had aspired towards, but with very different goals in mind, and using a radically different approach. We're still going through his papers, trying to replicate his achievements." He listened. "Well, in addition to his A.I. work, Kisaragi appeared to be able to literally create chemical distillations based on EMOTIONS. Yes, sir, that's exactly right. He could make 'angry,' 'sad,' 'happy,' or any emotion into a literal crystalline substance. I believe that according to his design, he intended for those crystals to function in the same factor as a human heart. I know there is no 'blood,' per se, save in the epidermis, but the crystal would serve to concentrate and channel the electric impulses of the chassis' inner circuit network. In fact, we have created one of them right in the laboratory for study. I believe it is the emotion for anger. We've also managed to replicate the actual trans-titanium chassis and protein-polymerase dermal covering for our own QTH unit itself. Instead of being a simpering flower-child, this unit will be a full-fledged fighting unit, ready to see duty in the heaviest military situations our society has to offer." The wind outside the office drove the rain against the window, creating a static-like hissing against the glass. "That's right, sir. We've created a QTH unit, based on the old project schematics and Kisaragi's own work...well, what survives of it. What we're waiting on is the final verdict on the actual nature of this unit. What kind of mental pattern should we install within it, and would it be truly 'alive,' as our own definition of life pertains to this circumstance. Anyway, we call it 'Subject 4,' codename: Sable." Clarkfork reached into his desk drawer, pulled out a pen and tablet of paper, and began writing. "Yes," he said. "Uh-huh...Okay...I understand. My contact will be waiting outside Queen's Hall in London, and he will present me with additional in- structions about how to obtain Subject 3 and determine if the unit actually falls within the parameters of being 'alive.' Also, I will be given a list of names to assemble on the questioning committee, and who would preside over them. Oh, you can? Who is it, then?" He paused for a moment, listening, and then resumed writing. "Mayor Justice Light, of Cosplay City Experimental Community. I understand. He is to preside over the research committee and determine just how 'alive' Subject 3 actually is, and to determine a plausible course of disposition if consciousness and self-awareness are actually merely being simulated rather than truly manifest. I understand perfectly. Thank you, sir. Very well; goodbye." Clarkfork hung up the phone and leaned back in his chair to look out the window and study the night. "Imagine," he thought. "We've been struggling and struggling for decades to achieve A.I. in machines, all without success, and one man achieves it, and he uses his knowledge to bring his daughter back from the dead. How morbidly intriguing. And the irony of it is: He died before he even had a chance to be aware of his success." There was a knock at his office door. "Come," he grunted. A young aide craned around the door. "I think you might be interested in this, Mr. Clarkfork," he said, pushing a newly-printed sheaf of newsbulletins around the jamb. "Well, bring it in." The young man approached the desk and handed Clarkfork the papers. "You have instructions to act on this matter immediately, sir." Clarkfork grunted, absently dismissed the aide with a wave and began to read: POSSIBLE UFO SPLASHDOWN IN WESTERN PACIFIC At approximately two-fifteen this afternoon, radar tracking instal- lations in Japan, Australia, Russia and the American forces at NORAD tracked what appeared to be an unregistered air-or-space vehicle of unknown origin descending from an orbit of about five hundred miles over an area of the western Pacific Ocean, approximately sixty miles offshore of Japan. The object had followed a definite sub-orbital trajectory and was observed on radar to undergo deceleration maneuvers just before disappearing from scanner screens. Sensor buoys were dropped in the area immediately thereafter, and planes were combing the area without success. The UN is recommending that a representative of the World Science Coalition take immediate action to oversee the procedure and lend what advice and assistance the parties conducting the search might deem necessary. "So it's done," grunted Clarkfork, his mouth twitching slightly in disap- proval. "Done, sir?" asked the aide. "Never mind. It appears that I'm going to make a little side trip after my initial business trip." He looked up at the aide as he rose from his desk. "I want you to book a two a.m. flight to London for one, one way. After that, I need a plane ticket from London to Cosplay City Experimental Com- munity." "That's a rather odd travel agenda," commented the aide. "Sir, if I may, could you..." "No, you may not," Clarkfork clipped the young man's anticipated question short. "This is strictly confidential; is that understood?" "Clearly, sir," said the aide. "Your reservations will be ready within a few minutes." "Thank you," replied Clarkfork. "As for now, I'm going home to pack." *** The front door to the WSC building swung open and then shut, admitting a trenchcoat-clad figure to the rainy Vienna street. Clarkfork trudged along the sidewalk on the way to the parking lot and his car, his mind racing like a runaway locomotive over the events of the past few hours. The object NASA had tracked from Saturn's orbit only a few days before had indeed reached Earth, as anticipated. Its speed had been many, many times faster and more purposeful than anything natural, such as an asteroid, comet or meteor, and had even surpassed all known artificial sources. Charkfork had been stunned at first, realizing the object had traversed nearly one billion miles from the ringed Saturn system all the way to Earth in the same time it took any manned spaceflight to reach the moon, a mere fraction of the distance. Nothing, absolutely NOTHING known could have come close to that kind of speed. The object hadn't been travelling even close to the speed of light, but Clarkfork wouldn't have been surprised if it actually possessed that capability. When the news had reached his superiors, they had wasted no time in informing him that they wanted that object, no matter what the cost. They already had agents in position, talking to the President of the United States, the Prime Ministers of both Japan and England, and nearly every other major nation of the world. It seemed that their wish was very close to being granted. Now it was up to one man to bring all the threads of the web together. That one man was he himself, Aigram Clarkfork. Clarkfork's mouth curled in a wan smile as he unlocked the door to his car, a 1998 Fiat, and slid behind the driver's seat. His rainsoaked coat made a slimy track on the upholstery, but he didn't care. "So what am I," he remarked. "Am I the vanguard to an entirely new and unknown type of science, or just a cleanup crew for the big guys in the network?" His smile turned slightly bitter. After all these years as a field investigator for the WSC he was still doing the lion's share of the dirty work. He'd been in more ugly situations than most people could even dream of. He'd been spied on, shot at and imprisoned more times than he could count. However, every time the WSC scions had intervened to get him out of harm's way, and "rescued" him, only to send him out on the next mis- sion. He'd been to nearly every political hot spot in the world, on assign- ment as a field observer for both sides, making notes on the weaponry invol- ved, the effectiveness thereof, and any possible improvements which could be made. Although the WSC was primarily a science organization, it had its fingers in many of the world's pies, including weaponry and ordinance, agriculture and even political decision-making with regard to the environ- ment. Only recently the WSC had been able to send investigators into the former Soviet-bloc countries to evaluate the situations within, and formulate effective remedial strategies. Clarkfork himself had just returned from Bosnia-Herzegovina only three months before. As he had been evacuated from the front lines, a Serb sniper had caught his range. Clarkfork still had an aching shoulder from where the bullet had winged him. With a sigh, Clarkfork broke from his reverie and started the engine. The Fiat purred its way out of the carport and onto the street. The nighttime scene slowly pulsed bright, dark, bright, dark as the car passed beneath the streetlights. At last, Clarkfork pulled onto the Johann Straussplatz where his flat was located. He pulled to the curb and left the car, heading for the stairs. "Okay," he muttered to the empty air within his apartment, "Here we go again." He packed quickly, only taking the essentials and little else. Three suits and a suitcase full of necessities, his shoes, wallet and of course his passport. Suddenly he paused. He was holding a black holster with a sinister black handgrip protruding from it. He frowned. Should he take his gun, or not? He pondered a moment longer before he made his decision, tossing it almost casually into the suitcase. The rain still dripped limpidly from the heavens as Clarkfork at last pulled away from the apartment building. He flipped on his cell-phone and dialed rapidly, his eyes never leaving the street ahead. "Clarkfork here," he said to the unseen voice who replied to the signal. "Are my reservations ready? "Yes sir," replied the voice on the other end. "You are to proceed to the Vienna airport and take the two a.m. flight to Paris, and then catch the Channel Subway to London." "What? No direct flight?" "It couldn't be helped, sir. There was an airtraffic tie-up in Heathrow, so we tried the next-best thing. You should get to London by seven-fifteen a.m." Clarkfork's brow furrowed, but he said nothing. If the situation couldn't be helped, it couldn't be helped. The WSC had an extremely wide reach, but it couldn't control absolutely everything. "Very well," he said. "I'm on my way right now. Direct all my incoming calls and memoes to Haderlitz in Office 14 until I get back. Understood?" "Clearly, sir," replied the voice. "Good luck on your trip. And one more thing: Your contact has already been apprised of the situation, and has the item you will be needing. He will be waiting outside the Queen's Hall at eight-fifteen. You will know him because he will be reading a "New York Times" newspaper. "Eight-fifteen at the Queen's Hall, reading the "New York Times. Got it." Clarkfork hung up the phone and the fiat continued on towards the airport. *** TIME: 8:15 AM PLACE: The Entrance to the Queen's Hall, London, England The man had been waiting for nearly an hour. Impatiently he checked his wristwatch again, and glanced off into the distance. Big Ben, the mighty bell within the Clock Tower, had just "GONGED" out the quarter-hour. He sighed and tried to make himself unobtrusive, hiding behind his newspaper and pretending to read. The midmorning hubbub of pedestrian and automotive traffic became an undifferentiated drone to his ears. He had been instructed to give important information to an American WSC agent who was supposed to be arriving soon from Austria. No specific time had been given, but the in- structions had been quite specific. Wait in front of the Queen's Hall until a man addressed him with the proper greeting, and then hand over a small object, wrapped in rough brown paper. That was all there was to it. A loud, snorting HONK came from the river as a weatherbeaten freighter ship shouldered its way beneath the Tower Bridge. "Pardon me, Sir," said a voice. The man looked up and saw what appeared to be a nondescript gentleman, perhaps aged in the mid forties, with thinning hair combed neatly back from a high forehead. Blue eyes glinted out from beneath rather heavy brows. "Yes?" was the reply. "What do you want?" "My name is Julius Caesar. Is there a store nearby in which I can purchase some truffles?" The man pricked up his ears, hearing the required phrase. "I'm sorry," he replied, "but truffles are out of season. Actually," he said suddenly, fishing around within his coat, "I happen to have one here. You may have it, with the Queen's compliments." He handed over a plain brown package which contained the precious paper-covered item. "Thank you very much," said the stranger, "And, I might add, the President thanks you. Please give my regards to the Queen." "Before you leave," said the man, "I must ask: Are you a great fan of snipe hunting?" "Indeed I am," came the reply. "In fact, I've heard tell of a big one getting shot out east. Over the water, so I hear tell." The man's eyes narrowed thoughtfully. "Really?" he inquired. "Undoubtedly. Just after practice at nine, in fact." The second through sixth words had been inflected a bit more strongly than the others. "Does the Mayor know?" "Not right now, but I will inform him." "Very well. I'm afraid I must be going, however. Very good to meet you at last, Julius." "Likewise, indeed." The two men stood back from each other and the first individual hurried off, quickly getting lost in the crowd. Clarkfork stared after, fingering the DVD within his pocket. On that disc were the names of all individuals who were to be summoned for the impending action against Subject 3, as well as all the diagrams, specs and parameters of the entire QTH project. It was now his job to turn this disc over to the proper analysis in order to determine whether the project had truly, albeit posthumously, achieved its goal. All he had left to do was return to the WSC headquarters and start the ball rolling. However, on the way home, he had a little side trip to make, one involving the new establishment of Cosplay City. He had one uncomfortable twinge, how- ever. He knew Justice Light personally, and he was well aware that getting him to play adjunct prosecutor would be extraordinarily difficult. According to his sources, Clarkfork knew that Mayor Light had been in steady contact with Subject 3 and seemed to regard it (Clarkfork was careful to avoid the pronoun "her") as an extremely valuable asset and tool for ridding Cosplay City of a tremendous share of its crime network. True, the city had a long way to go before being perfectly safe, but wonders had indeed been done, most of them by the implementation of Subject 3. None of this was out of keeping with Subject 3's behavior parameters, but several additional activities were. The unit had been observed undertaking a number of activities which in humans might have been considered idle, and was even observed once playing tennis. As innocuous as that sounded, it was much too unusual, perhaps dangerously unusual, to be ignored. Subject 3 had to be investigated and quickly in order to ascertain exactly what was causing these extraordinary lapses of protocol, without letting the unit fall into a total programming rebellion. Should that happen, the failsafe initiator would have to be used, and a one- of-a-kind piece of workmanship would be forever lost, perhaps never to be replicated. He flipped open his cell-phone and began dialing. "Commissioner?" he said. "Clarkfork here. I'm calling from London with news that the item has been secured. I am now on my way to Cosplay City to over- see the recovery of our prize there." Suddenly he froze, his eyes wide. "Someone beat us to it?" he demanded, his heart like ice. "Have you any idea at all who, sir?" He listened. "The prize is now located in maximum security at the Cosplay military aero- drome," he said, echoing the words he had just heard over the phone. The frigid grip loosened slightly. "That's a very bad situation, sir, but not anywhere near as bad as it might have become. At least the military beat the public to the punch this time." Clarkfork was rapidly decompressing. "In fact, all we need to do is have the military feed the public some cock-and- bull story and get to work." He listened for a moment and then gave a thin- lipped smile. "Absolutely, sir. You are quite right. EXACTLY like Roswell." Clarkfork heard the "click" of the phone line being disconnected on the other end. He folded his cell-phone and returned it to his coat pocket, and then began to look for a taxi to take him to Heathrow Airport.