Red Planet Blues - By Robert J. Sawyer Page 0,97

Takahashi booked to come to Mars, you got curious. It didn’t take much digging to find out who she was. And, well, a collector of one sort knows collectors of other sorts: she’d doubtless made inquiries about selling the only extant copy of her father’s diary—and you figured it might note the location of the Alpha. Couldn’t have something like that kicking around. And so you sent in the clones.”

“They’re not clones,” Van Dyke snapped.

“Work with me,” I replied. “You’ve spent most of the last thirty-plus years on ice. Physically, you’re—what?—thirty? Thirty-two?”

Van Dyke glared at me defiantly for a moment, and I raised the gun higher. “Thirty-eight,” he said at last. And then, acknowledging that he didn’t even look that old despite the ravages of cancer, he added, “I stay out of the sun.”

“I guess it’s a good deal for InnerSystem Lines,” said Rory. “Your training stays fresh. From your point of view, it’s been only a couple of years since you first started your job. You just thaw out for a few days or weeks between each journey, while this ship is prepared for its next voyage.”

“I usually don’t even bother coming out of deep freeze here on Mars,” Van Dyke said. “When I do come back to living here, I’m going to come back in style.”

“You’re going to transfer,” I said.

Van Dyke snorted.

“What?” I said.

“Like I would ever do that.”

“But that’s the cure for cancer. Hell, that’s the cure for everything.”

“No,” said Van Dyke. “It isn’t—but there will be a cure for cancer.”

“That’s what they’ve been saying forever,” said Pickover. “But it seems like it’s always twenty years in the future.”

“The are making progress,” Van Dyke said. “I check, every time I come out of hibernation. I’m guessing it’s just ten years off now . . .”

“And if you can stay on ice for most of that time,” I said, “you can get the cure.” I shook my head. “But why not just transfer? I know it was hellishly expensive back when you were first diagnosed, but—”

“That’s not the reason.”

I frowned and it came to me. “Lakshmi—the writer-in-residence here—told me that you’re devoutly religious. Is that why you haven’t transferred?”

“Transferring,” he said. “Such crap. It’s not the same person.”

Rory tilted his head to look at the man who’d been slicing him open. “People feel differently about it now.”

“God doesn’t,” said Van Dyke.

Rory couldn’t dispute that and so he fell silent.

“And what are you going to do when they find a cure?” I asked. “When you’re well again?”

“Go fly a kite.”

“Okay. I’ll tell you. Weingarten and O’Reilly promised you a share of the proceeds from the Alpha. And you want what you think is coming to you. When you’re well, you’re going to work that claim.”

“And you’re out to stop anyone who might exploit it first,” said Rory.

“Hence hiring the thugs with Dazzling Don Hutchison’s face,” I added. But then I found myself taking a step backward. “No,” I said. “No, wait a minute. You didn’t hire those guys.” The word “skytop” was echoing in my head—the decades-old slang Tres had used. “Christ, you are those other guys. You’re—my God—you’re all three of them. You have transferred. That’s why Tres called you ‘Actual’—you’re the actual Willem Van Dyke, and they’re copies.”

Van Dyke looked like he was going to deny it. But someone who had gone to such extraordinary lengths to stay alive doubtless had a certain appreciation for what my Smith & Wesson could do to him. “I’ve made proxies, that’s all,” he said, in his thin, disease-ravaged voice. “I’m the real me; I’m the one with the soul. Those are just knockoffs. I made a deal with the guy who runs NewYou here to produce them in secret.”

“Horatio Fernandez?” Rory asked.

“No, no. His name is—”

“Joshua Wilkins,” I supplied.

“That’s him. Nasty man, but he could be bought. I had him create the three Dazzling Dons a couple of years ago.”

“It’s illegal to make multiple versions of the same person,” Rory said. “It’s obscene to do so.”

“They were disposable—and they aren’t people.”

“What do they think about that?” I asked.

“Same thing I do, of course.”

“Why three guys who look the same?”

Van Dyke lifted his eyebrows as if it were obvious. “To remind them that they aren’t real people. They’re ersatz; interchangeable; disposable.”

I nodded. “And I bet they were supposed to be each other’s alibis—one would be seen in public while the others did whatever needed to be done to protect the Alpha; they were never meant to all be seen in

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