surprise in store.
The panzer, she decides, is a place only a junkie could love. A cozy cybernetic womb of
masculine scent, soft blinking lights, the studs that feed one's addiction. Whatever Cowboy's is,
she doesn't want to know. Porn mainlined to the forebrain, electric orgasms courtesy of induction,
screaming synthetic highs circuited to the mind, technicolor power fantasies jabbed right into
one's primal need. Sarah looks at the headset with sudden distrust. It might be tuned to Cowboy's
channel, and if so, she isn't interested.
Cowboy strips unself-consciously and attaches the electrodes and a rubber urine collector.
Sarah thinks of Daud, his insensate and lacerated flesh, no more human than an oozing, fresh-
killed slab of pork. She tries to shrug deeper into her alcove. Pain chooses this moment to crawl
over her ribs. She closes her eyes and puts her head on a naked pillow.
Pumps begin throbbing, hydraulic links hissing. There is the whine of a starter and the
shriek of an engine. A lurch as the panzer rises on its cushion, a flutter in her stomach as it
wheels and begins to move toward the highway. Sarah shifts in the bunk and the pain in her side
fades. Weariness rises like a mist and she feels the tension drain out of her. She is cushioned in
someone else's armored fantasy, being carried to someone else's destination. Her own armor, for
the moment anyway, is superfluous.
The sound of the engine seems more and more distant. Sarah feels sleep beginning to ooze
into her mind. It is, she realizes, someone else's job to get her through this next Moment. She
decides to go to sleep and let him get on with his work.
Cowboy's deep in the face, paying no attention to Sarah once he's shown her the fixtures.
Keeping watch on the columns of green, the video views of the exterior of the panzer. He keeps the
escort aware of his intentions, listens to their chatter. Balances the panzer while it runs on
only one engine, saving fuel as long as its speed is harnessed to that of the escort.
Once onto the interstate he says adios to the escort and starts the second engine. The
surface is pitted and holed, the concrete of some bridges crumbled down to the rebar. Anything
with wheels hugs the rightward lane and moves slowly, cursing the chuckholes. The ground-effect
panzer rides smoothly on its air cushion, crossing the outer lanes of traffic to the two inner
lanes reserved for vehicles moving over a hundred miles per hour.
Cowboy reds out the engines, mindful of his passenger and accelerating slowly until he's
moving at over 200. He's a lot faster than the bigger cargo-carrying ground-effect jobs and
slaloms around them with ease, hearing through his armor the low-dopplered sounds of their
saluting horns as he torches past. The slow-moving automobiles are stationary objects. Trees are a
continuous green blur. His concentration narrows to the tunnel ahead and the one behind, to the
(42 of 137) [7/17/03 11:28:34 PM]
crumbling track over which he roars on his cushion of air, coordinating his video track with the
readout on his forward-looking radars, the instantaneous radio echo, the fluorescent abstract
images that might be anything, clouds or boxes or the spectra of subatomic particles in
scintillators, superimposed onto his video display and resolving into other vehicles, the
guardrail, stands of trees, the outskirts of sprawling cities impacted by war.
The border flashes by-no customs on the Georgia side but a long line of traffic going the
other way into the American Concessions, waiting to pass inspection. He refuels in South Carolina
and again in Virginia, robot pumps finding the fuel intakes, engaging without need for human
intervention, without even a glance from the bored operator sitting in his bulletproof tower. It's
early afternoon when he crosses the Maryland line and leaves the interstate, finds a patch of flat
ground at a rest stop and deflates the cushion, waiting for his escort. He pulls off his helmet
and unjacks.
Sarah, to his surprise, seems to be asleep. He had almost forgotten her existence. He
disengages the urine collector, which he hasn't used, and pisses into the chemical toilet. Then he
steps up the ladder to open the dorsal hatch and bring in some fresh air. He looks out at the
rolling green countryside, the wide crumbling interstate slicing across it, eroding like an
artery.
He said good-bye to Cathy two nights before. She had left his life the way she'd entered
it, climbing out the eighth-floor window of his hotel room in Norfolk, grinning up from under the
brim of the white Stetson he'd given her as she worked her way toward the four inches of brackish
tide creeping over East Main. They'd said some things about keeping in touch, but he thinks if
they meet again it will be another accident. He doesn't spend much time in Virginia and she won't
be due for another furlough till next year. It's pointless to plan that far ahead. The laws might
catch him in that time, or the sea might claim her. Best to have a clean farewell.
When he turns around, Sarah is awake and rolling down the netting on her bunk. Half
asleep, she seems a lot less hard.
"Want some lunch?"
She nods, running her fingers through her hair. He opens a locker and brings some
sandwiches out of the cooler. "What would you like to drink? Coffee? Orange juice? Ice tea?"
"Iced tea." She swings her legs out of the bunk, accepts the cool plastic container, peels
off the top. "Gracias."
Cowboy leans against the ladder and opens a sandwich. He can hear birds calling through
the open hatch. "Were you brought up speaking Spanish?" he asks.
"Spanglish, anyway. My father was part Cuban, part Gypsy. My mother was an Anglo." Now
that she's awake, Cowboy notices, her cooler personality seems to be taking control, the look in
her eyes abstracting off somewhere, not turning dreamy but seemingly involved in some intent
calculation. The words "father" and "mother" seem to have some kind of negative charge, as if
stripped of any emotional content.
"Did you lose them in the war?" Cowboy guesses.
She gives him a quick glance, as if sizing him in some way. "Yes," she says. The answer
comes too quickly and Cowboy can't entirely believe it, but also can't figure out why she'd bother
not telling the truth.
Sarah bites a sandwich and looks at him in surprise. "This is real ham," she says. "Not
soy or anything."
Cowboy swallows chicken salad. "Pony Express riders eat only of the best," he says.
Cowboy conceals his amusement as Sarah gobbles down two more sandwiches. Jet engines and
throbbing props doppler past on the freeway. There are some apricots for dessert. Cowboy looks at
his watch. Their escort is a few minutes late.
"Mind if I look out the hatch," Sarah asks. "I've never seen this part of the world."
"It's a nice-looking part. Civilized kind of country."
She straps on the machine pistol. Cowboy watches her.
"You hardwired for that?" he asks.
"Hardwired and chipped." Her look is challenging again, as if he had somehow questioned
her competence.
"That'll be useful," he says, pretending he's glad to know he's so well protected. "Do you
have the full Santistevan or an Owari?"
She gives him a glance, then dons her mirrorshades. Armor, he thinks, for the emotions,
like the jacket, the strut, the attitude. "Owari," she says. That means the hardwiring needs a
trigger, usually an inhaled chemical streetnamed hardfire, before it will work efficiently. His
own more expensive job triggers on a command from his crystal.
Sarah squeezes past him in the corridor, climbs the short ladder, and props her arms on
(43 of 137) [7/17/03 11:28:34 PM]
the edge of the hatch, watching through the heat shimmer of the cooling engines the low green
hills, the close-packed corn across the road, a square white farmhouse that looks like something
off a postcard.
"I have the Santistevan," Cowboy says. His voice comes up muffled through the hatch.
"What do you need it for? You do your driving through the face. "
"I used to fly deltas. We needed arms, legs, fingers, crystal, eyes, everything."
Sarah hadn't realized that Cowboy was that much a veteran. He must be good at this if he's
survived so long. She thinks of Maurice, the West Indian cutterjock with his old-model metal eyes
and the military sockets on his wrists and ankles, his pictures of dead comrades on the wall. Lost
in a past that was brighter than all his futures put together. She wonders if that is Cowboy's
fate, retreating to some cool memory grotto when he finally bashes his panzer up against something
that won't move aside for him, when the last bit of hope dies.
"I knew you had the eyes," she says. "Standing there in bright sunlight this morning
without having to squint."
Shadows of cloud drift across the quiet landscape. Corn rustles in its rows. She finds
herself oddly off-balance in this pastoral scene, not knowing what to expect. Her life is bounded
by concrete, steel, ruins, flooded lands, the sea...This long green horizon promises softness,
melody, ease.
Sarah glances up, seeing the silver power stations in the sky, keeping watch on the planet
for their masters, and then from over one of the low hills comes a robot harvester, a vast alloy
machine with a cybernetic heart. No human tills this soil, and no human owns it: the pretty white
frame house is either the residence of some employee who supervises the planting of this part of
Pennsylvania, or the house no longer belongs to the farm at all, owned by a family that no longer
controls the fields that begin just outside their window.
It's the same as the city, Sarah knows, the same hierarchy of power, beginning with the
blocs in their orbits and ending with people who might as well be the fieldmice in front of the
blades of the harvester, pointless, countless lives in the path of a structure that can't be
stopped. She feels the anger coiling around her like armor. The chance to rest, she thinks, was
nice enough while it lasted. But right now another fragment of time must be survived.
Three vehicles coil off the interstate, two flying red warning flags. Time for business.
"Our escort," she says, and raises a hand in greeting.
Andrei has flown up from Florida with his guards and has rented a car along with the
panzer escort. He leans a head out of the window as he drives onto the verge, and Sarah tells him
all's well. Behind Andrei the harvester mows corn in its efficient, mindless fashion.
She slams the hatch down and dogs it, seeing Cowboy already in his seat, inserting studs
into his sockets. Pumps begin to throb. Sarah rolls herself into the bunk as the starter wails.
She hesitates for a moment as she looks at the headset, then takes it in her hands and presses it
on, one hand guiding the featherweight mic on its hair-thin wire to its place at the corner of her
mouth.
Distant music bounces indistinctly in her head, some radio program from far away. There is
a selector switch above her ear and she turns it, hearing more music, voices hammering in some
Russian dialect, a startlingly clear vid of some glittery drama set in, of all things, an African
circus. A turn of the switch and she's into Cowboy's interface, jerking with surprise as the green
walls of Pennsylvania rise on all sides of her, interwoven with columns, numbers, bright neon
colors that are the panzer monitors, all of it seemingly painted on the inside of her skull,
overlaid with the data of her eyes and ears. She's walled out from Cowboy's mind, a passive
observer only, barred from the crackle of decision as Cowboy guides the panzer along the road.
It's less vivid than it would be if she were getting it fed through, sockets, like Cowboy,
straight to the optical centers of her brain, but still the input is overwhelming, stunning her
with its complexity, and she almost rips the set off her head to end the fluorescing burst of
sensation.
But she's used to headsets and what they do, and after a moment settles in. She's been in
simulations of things more complicated than this: orbital maneuvers, auto races, even combat.
Voices echo in her head, Cowboy chatting with the escort, and she can feel, secondhand, the
impacts of his decisions in the twitches of the big rudders, the movement of the jets, the
emphasis placed on certain of the displays. After a while Sarah decides it isn't very interesting.
The panzer travels across twenty miles of decaying road, Sarah seeing a series of hills
rising in the west, misty gray and shadowed in cloud. But here is a stake planted by the road with
a pair of fluorescent orange streamers, marking the place to turn off. The escort trucks pull onto
the grassy shoulder, the drivers waving their temporary good-byes. Andrei's limo slides into the
turnoff. The panzer wallows across a ditch and follows.
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The meet turns out to be at another picturesque farmhouse set among shade trees. The
others are waiting-an unarmored ground-effects truck sitting under its four-bladed propellers and
a pair of men leaning against a dark blue Subaru limousine. Cowboy's attention seems to switch to
the terrain: there are close-up amplified views of the windows of the house, selected spots behind
the trees, the low ridge of ground to the left.
Sarah, her mind strobing colors, reaches blindly into her pocket, finds her inhaler,
triggers it once up each nostril. Her nerves burn with electric light.
The panzer moves next to the truck and spins, keeping its jet exhaust away from the
truck's crew while training the off-load ramp toward the truck. Then the engines die and the
panzer settles down onto its deflated cushion.
"Keep the headset, Sarah." Cowboy's voice pulses into her aural centers. "You can talk to
me."
"Can you cut me out of your displays?" she asks. "They're too distracting."
Abruptly the video dies, the bright colors fading with only the lightest persistence.
Sarah shakes her head and rolls out of the bunk. She zips her jacket to the throat and checks the
pistol on her hip. She looks at Cowboy, the helmeted figure sitting motionless beneath the
shimmering red and green, and hesitates for a moment at the bottom of the ladder.
"Cowboy," she says. "I think you should know something. The Hetman thinks we're being set
up."
He turns in his couch and she can see his dark plastic eyes looking at her from under the
brow of the helmet. "Thanks, Sarah," he says. "But I figured that from the fact that I'm here at
all."
Sarah looks at him for a moment, surprise shimmering in her mind, and then she nods and
pops the hatch, climbing the ladder while slipping on her shades. Sullen faces look back at her
from the windows of the truck. She slips the Heckler & Koch from its holster and holds it just
below the rim of the hatch. The farm smells of fuel, hot metal, and lubricant.
Sarah can feel her shoulder blades tense, as if in anticipation of a shot. Flame runs
along her nerve paths. The Hetman sensed something wrong here, and she knows his antennae are
good. Her interior landscapes are urban and she's not used to this kind of terrain, but she
decides Cowboy's eye was intelligent enough and flicks her gaze to the farmhouse windows, the
trees, the ridge behind them, then back to the farmyard.
The principals seem to be Andrei and a thin black man dressed in a gray silk suit. He
wears a knit wool cap pulled over his dreadlocks and a Cantinflas mustache, just a strip of hair
on either side of his mouth with most of the upper lip shaved. The abrazo is absent from their
greeting just a handshake and a quick, murmured discussion of business. The black man turns back
to his car and gives an order, and two of his associates, one white, one black, open the trunk and
bring out a heavy metal trunk. There is a jolt of recognition in Sarah's mind, thinking she's seen
the white man before, but they're both wearing straw sun hats and big shades and she's met so many
big guys without necks in her life that she can't be sure about this one. They look like men who
spend a lot of time working with weights, but the trunk has them breathing hard by the time they
get it to the middle of the yard.
The black man bends to open the trunk. Andrei squats down on his heels and inspects the
contents while the black man stands back. Under the Cantinflas mustache is a superior smile.
Sarah can feel sweat trickling down her spine. Her gaze jumps from the yard to the faces
of the men in the truck, to the yard again, then to the ridge behind, then to the windows of the
farmhouse. Lace curtains flutter in the windows. She tries to remember if she's ever seen lace
curtains in anything but pictures.
Andrei straightens and turns to give a signal to someone in his car, who raises a hand mic
to his lips. Cowboy's voice rings in Sarah's head as he acknowledges, and then there's a gush of
hydraulics as the panzer's armored cargo gate swings open.
Sarah's gaze flicks to the windows, the truck drivers, to Andrei and the black man walking
toward the panzer. Things have separated too much for her to keep good watch. Her nerves are
sparking like strings of fireworks. She forces the muscles in her arms to relax. She can feel her
own sweat on the pistol grip of the Heckler & Koch.
Andrei and the black man step into the panzer. The black man will be opening boxes at
random, checking the seals, checking that the comp matrices are there. Sarah's eyes; flicker like
lightning, ridge to truck to windows. She licks, her lips, tasting salt.
The two men leave the panzer and walk into the yard. Andrei's two guards come out of their
car to carry the gold payment into the trunk. The black man picks at a grease spot in the elbow of
his silk suit as he walks toward his Subaru. On the far side of the truck a door opens, and the
two men move to get out, to transfer the cargo.
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Wrong, Sarah thinks. One of them at least should get out on this side.
"Cowboy..." she says, eyes flickering madly, neurotransmitters firing along their paths,
her mind trying to encompass the yard as the gold thuds down into the trunk, as the black man
steps casually behind his car, as his two associates bend to reach into the Subaru.
The air is sliced apart by a rushing, hissing sound, and Sarah sees a silver needle
leaping from the upper story of the farmhouse, arrowing straight to Andrei's car. To Sarah's
hardwired senses it moves slowly, and her mind has plenty of time to scream as Andrei's windshield
caves in, as the rocket burrows into the car and turns into a widening bubble of fire that erupts
from the interior, and Sarah thinks, Daud. The bubble touches Andrei and his men and the three are
thrown down as if there were no bones in their bodies at all. The scream builds in Sarah's mind,
but she is already moving.
The machine pistol is up and already tracking onto the Subaru. She touches the trigger and
the gun rattles, jarring her as she braces against the armor of the hatch. There is an echo to the
scream in her mind but she pays it no attention. The bullets from the machine pistol make a
metallic spunk-spunk-spunk sound across the trunk of the Subaru, and then the two men bent over by
the rear door catch the rest of the burst, and the black man drops like a nerveless bundle of rags
and his associate falls backward, arms thrown up over his head, one big hand holding the stock of
an automatic shotgun. Spent rounds clatter like falling icicles on the Chobham armor. Sarah shifts
and fires again, hearing more spunk-spunk sounds. The white man is sheltered behind an armored
door.
The scream in her mind has become the scream of the starters, the big jets beginning to
turn, and Sarah almost leaps out of her skin as a slab of armor just aft of her suddenly slams
open and a turret rises with jackhammer quickness. There is an insistent hooting sound, a warning
siren, as the cargo gate hisses shut. Cowboy's voice is clamoring in her head, "Behind you,
Sarah," and she wheels around in the hatch and sees one of the two truck drivers peering out from
behind his ground-effects craft, ready with a pistol to shoot her in the back. The Heckler & Koch
yammers in her hands. She sees the fear in the man's eyes as he pulls his head back, as the
bullets climb spunk-spunk-spunk toward him.
Kawham-kawham. Sarah turns again at the sound of an automatic shotgun concussing the air
and sees dust leaping into the air around Andrei as the buckshot strikes. Andrei's body doesn't
even twitch. The white man is firing over the Subaru's hood. A harsh purr resounds near Sarah's
ear as the gun in the panzer's turret opens fire. Thirty-millimeter casings fountain into the sky,
and Sarah looks up to see the entire second story of the farmhouse leap into the air in a storm of
dust, as if every inch of paint had shed off the wood at the same instant. The turret gun tries to
hack down to the Subaru but fails the realization snaps into Sarah's mind that the gun is meant to
fire at aircraft and can't depress to ground targets. She snaps some rounds at the man behind the
Subaru, but the bolt locks back and she has to reach for another clip, and she has to turn around
again to watch the gunman behind the truck. The panzer gives a lurch as it rises onto its cushion.
Engine din fills the air.
The-upper story of the farmhouse is riddled, a round every few inches. Whoever fired the
rocket can't have survived. Sarah slams a new clip into the machine pistol by feel, swaying across
the hatch as the panzer begins to move. It's moving right across the yard, the armored bow heading
the Subaru. Sarah crouches as the man with the shotgun begins to turn, as the shotgun keeps firing
kawham-kawham. Pellets rattle off the armor. The man begins to run.
The panzer strikes the limo dead-on, pushing it ahead as if it were of no more weight than
a bicycle. The man darts to one side, trying awkwardly to bring up the shotgun. He's lost his hat
and shades. Sarah can feel her chips urging her to stand in the hatch, to bring the machine pistol
up in both hands and trigger it...
The white man spins as he falls, and Sarah can see the flaring agony in his eyes at the
exact moment of her own jarring leap of recognition, and she knows she's met this particular man
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