

It was sheer indulgence, this system, costing at least two months' rent to install, but once the security-black security, black-market and blackest-night effective, run off an illegal direct-line power tap-had been in place, it had seemed a shame not to install the convenience systems as well. She swore under her breath-that had been Trouble's chore-and went to the panel herself, switched light and heat to full and touched the button that brought the opaque screen down over the window. A yellow light flashed on the display by the door instead, warning her that she hadn't replaced the main battery. She shivered, and reached overhead into the web of invisible control beams that crisscrossed the apartment, waved her hand twice to bring on the main light. On the horizon, beyond the five- and six-story buildings of the local neighborhood, neon flickered to life, running like lightning along the edges of the buildings. The sun dropped into a bank of dirty cloud, and the light went out as though someone had flicked a switch. A reflection like a spark flared from the highest side windows of the Lomaro Building half a mile away-three-quarters of a kilometer, she corrected automatically-and faded as she stared. Outside the single window, the sun was setting beyond the buildings on the far side of the little park, throwing a last cold light across the grey stone and concrete. She turned away from the wall of blank screens and cubbies filled with data decks and players, the ugly oyster-grey carpet squeaking underfoot, and looked around the little room as though she was seeing it for the first time. The voice that broke from the speaker was familiar, but not Trouble-Carlie, babbling on about something she couldn't be bothered to hear right now-and she killed the message, not bothering to save it for later. There was no paper note.Ī light was flashing on the media console, and she touched the code keys to retrieve the single message. Half the system was gone, Trouble's half, the portable holo-multex drive and the brainbox and the braid of cables and biojacks that carried signals to the implanted processors in their brains.


She went through the two rooms in the greyed light of the winter afternoon, checked the single closet and the battered trunks that held the rest of their clothes, not looking at the computers until the last, already sure of what she would find. Cerise had known it from the moment she entered the strangely neat apartment, the inevitable clutter-disks, books and papers, here a sweater, there a pair of shoes-all missing along with Trouble.
