The Passenger
Chapter 10
"I've got to hand it to you, Deke," I said to the man sitting across from me. "I've seen you looking rough before, but never like this."
Deke said nothing, but I knew he remembered. Those had been his exact same words to me, the last time we met, and I'd wanted to thrown them back in his face for a long time now. I don't think I'm much into gloating, but I will admit that I did savor the moment like a fine wine, with steak, extra tender and medium rare, to follow. What made it even better was that I was as right about him now as he had been about me all those weeks ago. He looked absolutely awful. But I suppose having Raz' claws in your neck will do that to you.
We were in Deke's office, deep in the commercial section at the back of the spaceport. Deke was behind his desk; I was sitting in the rarely used visitor's chair. That chair is rarely used because Deke prefers to conduct his business in the various bars and dives that litter the port rather than in his office. It's easier to ply the marks with booze that way, and if things go wrong, cleaning up the mess will be somebody else's problem.
Deke was sweating. Raz was standing behind him, smiling his bad smile and simply radiating his eagerness to rip off Deke's face and feed it to him rectally. Or something like that. Gawrrans are generally civilized, polite, friendly, loyal to a fault, and very considerate. But they are also predators and voracious carnivores, as well as the embodiment of the ancient warning to beware the anger of a patient sentient creature. Raz' predatory and carnivorous side was very much in evidence right now, and Deke had gotten the point almost immediately.
"I'm kind of mad at you, Deke," I said. "And Raz is extremely mad at you right now. You set me up, you see. You used me. As a... mule, I think the term is. Isn't that right, Raz?"
"Rrrrrrr."
"Right," I continued. "And I don't think I like like that. I hate being used to ship extremely illegal AI technology, Deke. I don't like prisons, you see. The food is bad, the company sucks, and the view isn't much better, either. But you'll find that out for yourself soon enough."
Deke got his hard-man look out and pasted it on. It wasn't easy, what with Raz' claws in his throat and all, but after a few awkward moments he managed to smooth out most of the wrinkles.
"If you think I'm going to prison, you're wrong, Ross," he grated. "Long before that happens you'll find out that you agreed to ship that AI technology. Knowingly and willingly, I think the legal term is. And I'll have the documented evidence to prove it."
I smiled, but I felt how the smile failed to reach my eyes. Deke noticed it, too, and I noticed how he pretended not to notice.
"Oh, I wouldn't worry about that, Deke. Yes, I'm talking imprisonment, but not prison, or at least not as you know it. In prison a convict gets three meals a day. He gets guards, he gets medical care, he gets visitors every now and then, that sort of thing. You don't get to enjoy any of that. All you're going to get is... him." I glanced at Raz. "He's eager to get to know you better, you know. A lot better."
Raz rumbled, and his claws sank a little deeper into Deke's skin. It might have been my imagination, or maybe it was the light, but suddenly Deke looked very pale.
"But as for my passenger," I continued, "I'm less angry about her. Things worked out rather well with her, you see."
"The droid?" Deke croaked. "That's mine. Where is it? What happened to it?"
"She," I said, emphasizing the word, "is not a droid. Yes, that's right. Why do you look surprised, Deke? You shouldn't. When you put a vat-grown body around a bunch of prosthetics and you fit it with an AI brain designed to be as human as possible, what did you think was going to happen? She emerged, Deke, that's what happened. She has become a fully conscious, self-aware and autonomous being. You thought you were peddling nothing more than improved sex droids, didn't you? But you weren't. What you really did was to create an AI simply waiting to emerge. Leaving the sex droid software in place only meant that your AI will be good in bed right from the start, without all that awkward fumbling you had to go through as a teenager. But that's all."
Deke said nothing. He seemed to have trouble breathing, and somehow I didn't think that was just because of the way Raz' claws were holding him by the throat.
"Offhand, I suppose, it didn't look like a bad idea, Deke, as far as it went," I continued. "It just had one flaw: you. What the hell were you thinking?"
"Rrrrr," Raz rumbled contemptuously.
"Yes, you're right," I said, looking at him. "He wasn't."
Deke said nothing.
"Although I have to admit: your disguise as a small-time local cargo pusher was quite good, Deke. You had me fooled completely. I really thought Brax was one of the top guys at Vergence Sigma. I never would have guessed he was just one of your stooges while you've been heading their illicit AI program all along."
"You won't get away with this," Deke said, his voice soft but menacing.
"Oh, I don't know, Deke," I said. "I can see two possible ways for this to end. First, we can make sure that certain people find out how badly you botched this. We both know how these things work, don't we?"
I hadn't, originally, until Layne, back on Manaka, had given me a little crash course in The Way Things Work. But Deke didn't have to know that.
"We both know there's no way you did this on your own," I continued. "You've got some serious investors backing this project. The sort of people who don't mind sinking a few billion credits into a highly illegal scheme. The sort of people who
do
mind when they lose those billions as a result of your bungling. The sort of people who will want to speak to you about that at some length, not to mention the other things they'll want to do to you. The sort of people who
will
kill you, but only after you have begged them for it. And they
will
do this, Deke, all of this and much more, because I will personally see to it that they'll find out how this whole thing went south because you tried to be too clever and too greedy. And you also know you won't be able to hide from that bunch, or at least not for long."
Deke tried to swallow something that seemed to have lodged in his throat. He knew exactly what I was talking about.
"The other option is that we take care of you," I continued. "You do get to live longer that way, and it will be less painful. A lot less painful. I know that my associate here," and I glanced at Raz, "would love to see what you look like on the inside, but such an operation will not be necessary if you cooperate. You simply come with us, you tell us everything we want to know, and you will continue to breathe."