Riker
March 2178
Sol
“Hello, Mr. Vickers.”
The man at the other end of the call looked briefly surprised, but recovered quickly. “Well, I’m impressed. There was so question about whether you’d ever manage to figure things out. I guess it was too much to hope for that you’d just destroy each other, instead.”
I smiled at him—the kind of smile a cat shows to a bird. Just teeth. “Uh huh. You’ve been a busy little beaver. We’ve determined that the attacks on Brazil were also your work. I assu the idea was to try to font another war, maybe knock off a few more people. So those deaths are also on you.”
Vickers waved a hand dismissively. “They had the chance to go voluntarily. It’s our duty to help them along. I don’t expect you to understand.”
“I doubt if you even care if anyone understands. My guess is, your ‘announcents’ are more about ego than any desire to help or inform.”
Vickers grinned at . “Already descending to personal insults? I expected a little bit more from you.”
“You flatter yourself. This isn’t a duel of words. You aren’t important enough. I’m satisfying my curiosity, nothing more.” I carefully kept my face neutral. I didn’t want to give this guy any satisfaction. “And on that subject, this whole VEHENT thing seems more like a vehicle for you than a cause. People like you aren’t joiners, unless you think the organization can benefit you. So what’s your ultimate goal?”
A flash of anger crossed Vickers’ face. “If you must know, replicant, I’m your maker. I invented the replicant systems that you inhabit. The systems that FAITH stole without as much as a nod. You don’t deserve to exist, you shouldn’t be alive. VEHENT is a suitable tool for achieving that goal.”
“I doubt that the mbers of VEHENT will feel good about finding out they’ve been used.”
“Don’t be naïve, replicant. They know I have my own motivations. They use , I use them. Everyone gets what they want.”
“And what does Ambassador Gerrold get out of it?”
“Gerrold was working with on the replicant systems in Australia. When you stole from , you stole from him. He was a little more interested in the fiduciary rewards—typical small mind—but his hate is useful.”
I nodded. I had about everything I needed. Except the one last item. Permission.
“Hor committed suicide, you know. Couldn’t live with what you’d made him do.”
“Good. It’s no more than he, and all of you, deserve.”
Permission received.
“And the people you killed, in Brazil and elsewhere? Do you care about them?”
“I think I’ve already answered that question. Is there anything else that you wanted to say that might actually interest ? Before I continue the task of ending your existence? You can’t stop , you know. You’re simply not good enough.” Vickers gave a condescending smile.
“Hmm, well, before I called you, I stenciled your na on a ship-buster. It should be there in about twenty seconds. Let’s see if that’s good enough.”
Vickers shook his head, the smile never wavering. “And you’ll have missed. You’ll take out VEHENT headquarters, but not .”
I cocked my head sideways. “Oh, you misunderstand. There’s a buster heading there, too. But the one I’m talking about is coming in on your position, fifty-five kiloters north and two kiloters east of the VEHENT base. Little red farmhouse, to all outside appearances.”
The smile left Vickers’ face. His eyes went wide and he turned towards the window. The window that had allowed the drones to verify his actual location. Nobody thinks of everything.
“If you have so variation on a god, asshole, you might want to have a very quick conversation with him. And fuck you to hell!”
Vickers leaped from his chair just as the buster arrived. One thousand pounds of high-tensile steel impacted the ground at planetary escape velocity. It wouldn’t quite match the Barringer crater, but it was good enough for pest control. The video cut off as the entire area was vaporized. At the sa mont, another impact fifty-odd kiloters south created a matching crater. New Zealand would have a couple of new lakes, by and by.
From a video window off to the side, Bill began a slow clap, echoed by Charles and Ralph.
* * *
“After all your talk, you’re not above pumling the Earth when it’s convenient.” Gerrold glared out of the video window at . I had preempted today’s UN session to announce the effective end of VEHENT.
I couldn’t decide if Gerrold was trying to bluff his way through this, or if he thought his connection with VEHENT was still unknown. In any case, I wasn’t in the mood.
I stood up, placed my hands on my desk, and leaned into the cara. As I opened my mouth to speak, I realized I was too enraged even to form words. At that mont, if I’d had a ship-buster in position, Gerrold would have died.
I fra-jacked slightly, and took a few deep breaths. Just barely in control, I glared at him. “Listen, you putrid, self-inflated bag of air. A good friend of mine is dead, driven to suicide by your friend and forr co-worker with your full knowledge and cooperation. People in Brazil are dead for no other reason than to fulfill his sick political goals and to allay your butt-hurt. Again, with your knowledge and approval. And most of the rest of humanity is on starvation rations at the mont. So I am not in the mood to put up with your hypocritical yamring, and the only question right now is whether I let your own countryn impeach and hopefully lynch you, or whether I co and get you myself, take you upstairs, and push you out an airlock. Why don’t you mouth off just one more ti, you festering pile of crap. Go ahead. Just one more word!” I glared out the video window at him. In the entire UN gathering, there was not so much as a cough. I held the mont for another heartbeat, then sneered at him. “If you show up tomorrow, I’m going with plan B. I’m just sayin’.”
With a flourish, I cut the connection.
Charles grinned at . “Say, you’re kind of scary when you get riled.”
I was too upset to smile back, but I did give him a shrug. “That’s for Hor.”
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