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  Off to his own, then. With Genghis Mao in such fine shape, Shadrach feels free to sleep until sleep is done with him, even if that is midafternoon. Crowfoot already lies curled and dozing in his hammock; he strips, snuggles in beside her, delicately coils his belly and thighs against her back and buttocks, and lets consciousness go from him.

  He is awakened some hours later by an internal jolt that nearly throws him from the hammock. A geyser of adrenalin floods his bloodstream; his heart begins to pound, his limbs tremble, all systems switching on in a violent alarm reaction. Automatically he begins a process of self-diagnosis, considering and rejecting within the first fraction of a second such possibilities as a coronary thrombosis, a cerebral hemorrhage, pulmonary edema; a moment later, as the thunderous tachycardia begins to subside and his breathing starts to return to normal, he realizes that it is nothing more serious than an episode of shock leading into a classic fight-or-flight syndrome; and an instant after that he becomes aware that it is all purely vicarious, that there is nothing wrong with him at all but that he is getting an intense overload via the telemetering system that links him to Genghis Mao.

  He leaps from the hammock, sending it swinging wildly. “Shadrach?” Nikki asks, her voice groggy and dim. “Shadrach, what’s happening?”

  Catching the hammock for a moment to stabilize it, he mutters an apology. “Trouble with the Khan,” he says, groping along the floor for his casually discarded clothing. He is fully awake now, but his body is so saturated with the hormonal outpourings engendered by surprise and alarm that his hands shake and his jangled mind refuses to focus on the simple tasks of dressing. Has the Chairman’s life-support system malfunctioned? Have assassins broken into Genghis Mao’s bedroom? The Chairman still lives—the telemetering leaves no doubt of that—and whatever it was that gave Genghis Mao so severe a shock seems already to be over, for his biophysical output is settling back toward normal, though there are ample indications of continuing neurasthenic hyperesthesia and associated cardiovascular and vasomotor distress.

  Wearing only his trousers and still feeling wobbly—never before, in all the time he has worn the implants, have the signals from Genghis Mao had such an impact on him—he approaches the interface. “Shadrach Mordecai to serve the Khan,” he says, and waits, and nothing happens for nearly a minute. Dr. Mordecai repeats the password, more urgently. Still the door remains shut. “Come on!” he snaps. “The Khan might be dying in there, and I have to get to him, you idiot machine!” Lights flash, scanners scan, but nothing else occurs. Shadrach realizes that the interface system must have gone into emergency mode, under which the flow of personnel to and from the inner chambers is even more strictly controlled than usual. This supports the hypothesis of an assassination attempt. Shadrach shouts, gesticulates, pounds the interface with his fists, even makes faces at it; but the security system is obviously concerned with other matters, and it will not let him in. By the time the door finally does open, he estimates, four or five minutes have elapsed. The data coming from Genghis Mao holds firm, at least: the Khan’s signals indicate that he is still disturbed and overexcited but that he is slowly recovering from his moment of alarm.

  Maddeningly, Shadrach is kept another minute or so in the inner holding chamber; at last it yields, and he lopes swiftly through Surveillance Vector One, which is deserted, to Genghis Mao’s bedroom. Here the secondary door scanner delays him no more than the usual microsecond, and he bursts in to find Genghis Mao alive and awake, sitting up in bed, surrounded by five or six servants and a dozen or more members of the Committee, all milling about in a frenzied excitement very much contraindicated at this phase of the Chairman’s recuperation. Mordecai sees General Gonchigdorge, Vice-Chairman Ionigylakis, Security Chief Avogadro, even Béla Horthy, looking horribly liverish and hung over after his excessive night in Karakorum. And more people are constantly arriving. Shadrach is appalled. He can hear the voice of Genghis Mao, clear but weak, cutting through the overall hubbub, but there is such a mob around the bed that Mordecai is unable to reach the Khan’s side.

  “Terrible, terrible,” Ionigylakis says, shaking his head from side to side like a wounded bear.

  Shadrach turns to him. “What’s going on?”

  “Mangu,” Ionigylakis blurts. “Assassinated!”

  “What? How?”

  “Out the window. Off the balcony.” Ponderously the big Greek pantomimes the action with great sweeps of his arm—the open window, the draperies fluttering in the breeze, the curve of the body as it executes its swooping seventy-five-story descent, the abrupt ghastly termination of the graceful dive, the hideous impact at plaza level, the tiny final rebounding motion of the crumpled body.

  Shadrach shudders. “When was this?”

  “Ten, fifteen minutes ago. Horthy was just arriving at the tower. He saw the whole thing.”

  “Who notified the Khan? Horthy?”

  Ionigylakis shrugs. “How would I know?”

  “They should have waited. The shock of news like that—”

  “First I heard of it, I was at my desk in Committee Vector One and the lights flash emergency mode. Then people running around everywhere, crazy. Then everyone running in here.”

  “Which is even crazier,” Shadrach says, scowling. “Making a lot of noise, upsetting the Khan’s nervous system, filling the room with potentially infectious bacteria—doesn’t anyone have any sense? We’re jeopardizing his life in this chaos. Help me clear the room.”

  “But the Khan has sent for these people!”

  “Doesn’t matter. He doesn’t need them all. I’m responsible for his health, and I want everybody out of here except, oh, Avogadro and Gonchigdorge and maybe Eyuboglu.”

  “But—”

  “No buts. The rest of you ought to return to Committee Vector One so you can handle more trouble if more trouble comes. What if this is the start of a worldwide revolutionary uprising? Who’s going to face the crisis if you’re all in here? Go. Go. I want to clear the room. Get everybody out, will you? That’s an order.”

  Ionigylakis still looks doubtful, but after a moment’s hesitation he nods and begins pushing people enthusiastically toward the door, bellowing at them that they must leave, while Shadrach, catching the attention of the security chief, tells him to post his men in the hall to keep visitors out.

  Shadrach approaches the bed. Genghis Mao looks drawn and tense, his forehead moist, shiny, his skin tone pallid and grayish. He is breathing shallowly and his eyes, always restless, move now with manic intensity. The life-support system has activated itself and is feeding the Khan a steady flow of glucose, sodium chloride, and blood plasma; Shadrach, glancing quickly at the readings on the instrument panel and integrating them with his own telemetered inputs, assesses Genghis Mao’s level of blood potassium and plasma magnesium, his capillary permeability, his arteriolar vasoconstriction, and his venous pressure, and makes manual adjustments in the rate of medication. “Try to relax,” he tells Genghis Mao. “Sit back. Let your limbs go limp.”

  “They killed him,” the Khan says hoarsely. “Have you heard? They threw him from his window.”

  “Yes. I know. Lie back, please, sir.”

  “The killers must still be somewhere inside this building. I’ll supervise the investigation myself. Wheel me into Surveillance Vector One, Shadrach.”

  “That won’t be possible. You’ll have to remain here, sir.”

  “Don’t talk that way to me. Avogadro! Avogadro! Help me into the wheelchair!”

  “I’m sorry, sir,” Shadrach murmurs, signaling frantically behind his back to Avogadro to ignore the command of Genghis Mao. At the same time Shadrach nudges a pedal that sends a flow of tranquilizing 9-pordenone into the Chairman’s body. “It could be fatal for you to leave the bed now, sir. Do you understand me? It could kill you.”

  Genghis Mao understands that. He sinks back against the pillow, looking almost relieved at being overruled, and as the drug takes effect his face relaxes, his demeanor becomes far les
s intense. Genghis Mao is much weaker, Shadrach realizes, than the instruments indicate. “They killed him,” the Khan says again, ruminatingly, absent-voicedly. “Only a boy and they killed him. He had no enemies.” And to Shadrach’s amazement the old man’s lips begin to quiver and his eyes fill with tears, Eh? What’s this? A show of some genuine emotion by Genghis Mao? A kind of quasi-paternal grief seizing the old man? But how can that be, considering the bleak fate Genghis Mao had himself intended for Mangu? Either yesterday’s surgery has so enfeebled the Khan that he has grown uncharacteristically sentimental, suddenly entering an inconceivable dotage, or else Mordecai is misreading the signs: not grief but fear, cognizance of personal peril, awareness that if assassins could reach Mangu they might well find a way into the sanctum of Genghis Mao. That must be it. The Khan is angry and afraid, but because he is so diminished physically by his operation, his anger and fear momentarily take the form of sorrow. And indeed, after a few moments more Genghis Mao grows calm again, and says, in a low, controlled, newly resonant voice. “This is the first successful attack against our rule that we have experienced. It is unprecedented and must be met with force to demonstrate that we have lost none of our vigor and that our authority will not be undermined.” He beckons Avogadro to his bedside and begins to dictate plans for mass arrests, wholesale interrogation of suspected subversives, tightened security measures both within the Grand Tower and in Ulan Bator in general. He sounds now less like a bereaved elder than a threatened despot. The loss of Mangu, it quickly becomes clear, means little or nothing to him personally, Mangu having been such a cipher, but it is a frightening omen of a breach in the power of his regime, and will require a reign of terror.

  In the midst of these grim plans Genghis Mao suddenly looks up at Shadrach as if noticing him for the first time that morning, and says amiably, “You have nothing on but your trousers, Doctor. Why is that?”

  “I came here in a hurry. I got a tremendous jolt from the implants, strong enough to wake me up, and I knew there must be trouble.”

  “Yes. When Horthy brought me news of the assassination I became quite agitated.”

  “Your damned doors kept me waiting for five minutes, though. We ought to do something about that. Someday it’ll be a critical matter for me to get to you in time, and Interface Three will give me the business again and it’ll be too late.”

  “Mmm. We’ll talk about that.” The Khan eyes Shadrach’s bare torso with some amusement and, it would seem, admiration, surveying the pronounced ridges of muscle down his belly, the long lean arms, the wide powerful shoulders. It is a pleasing body, Shadrach knows, trim and shapely and covered all over with smooth lovely chocolate skin, an athletic and graceful body, not much changed from the days nearly twenty years ago when he was a respectable college sprinter and passable basketball player, but nevertheless there is something weird and unnerving about this close inspection. After a moment the Khan says, sounding almost jolly, “You look very healthy, Shadrach.”

  “I try to keep in shape, sir.”

  “A wise doctor you are. So many of your profession worry about everyone’s health except their own. But why were you still in bed at this hour of the morning?”

  “I was in Karakorum late last night,” Shadrach confesses.

  Genghis Mao laughs explosively. “Dissipation! Debauchery! So that’s how you keep in shape, is it?”

  “Well—”

  “At ease. I’m not serious.” The Chairman’s mood has changed astonishingly in these few minutes. This badgering banter, this light teasing—it is hard to believe that he was weeping for dead Mangu just a moment ago. “You can go and get your shirt, if you like. I think I can spare you for a few minutes, Shadrach.”

  “I’d prefer to stay a while longer, sir. It’s not chilly this way.”

  “As you wish.” Genghis Mao seems to lose interest in him. He turns back to Avogadro, still waiting by the bedside, and rattles off half a dozen more repressive measures to be put into effect at once. Then, dismissing the security chief, the Chairman summons Vice-Chairman Eyuboglu and outlines, seemingly impromptu, an elaborate program for the virtual canonization of Mangu: a colossal state funeral, a prolonged period of global mourning, the renaming of highways and cities, the erection of costly and imposing memorial monuments in every major capital. All this for such a trifling boy? Why? Shadrach wonders. This is an outpouring of mortuary energy worthy of a demigod, an Augustus Caesar, a Siegfried, even an Osiris. Why? Why, if not that Mangu was a symbolic extension of Genghis Mao himself, his link to tomorrow, his hope of bodily reincarnation? Yes, Shadrach decides. In ordering this bizarrely inappropriate posthumous inflation of the murdered man, Genghis Mao must be mourning not Mangu but himself.

  10

  Was Mango really murdered, though? Avogadro, waiting for Mordecai in the hallway when the doctor finally leaves Genghis Mao, is not so sure of that. The security chief, a big-boned, thick-bodied, quick-witted man with cool eyes and a wide, quizzical mouth, draws Shadrach aside near the entrance to Surveillance Vector One and says softly. “Is he on any medication that might be making him mentally unstable?”

  “Not particularly. Why?”

  “I’ve never seen him as upset as this before.”

  “He’s never had his viceroy assassinated before, either.”

  “What leads you to think there’s been an assassination?”

  “Because I—because Ionigylakis said—because—” Shadrach pauses, confused. “Wasn’t there one?”

  “Who knows? Horthy says he saw Mangu fall out the window. Period. He didn’t see anyone pushing him. We’ve already run playback checks on all personnel scanners and there’s no record of any unauthorized individual entering or leaving the entire building this morning, let alone having reached the seventy-fifth floor.”

  “Perhaps somebody was hiding up here overnight,” Shadrach suggests.

  Avogadro sighs. He looks faintly amused. “Spare me the amateur detective work. Doctor. Naturally, we’ve looked through yesterday’s records too.”

  “I’m sorry if I—”

  “I didn’t mean to be sarcastic. My point is simply that we’ve considered most of the obvious possibilities. It’s not easy for an assassin to get inside this building, and I don’t seriously believe that any assassins did. Naturally, that doesn’t rule out the chance that Mangu was pushed by someone whose presence within the building would not seem unusual, as for example General Gonchigdorge, or you, or me—”

  “Or Genghis Mao,” Shadrach offers. “Tiptoeing from his bed and tossing Mangu through the window.”

  “You get the idea. What I’m saying is that anyone up here might have killed Mangu. Except that there’s no evidence that anyone did. You know, whenever someone passes through a door up here, it’s recorded. No one entered Mangu’s bedroom this morning, either on the interface side or the elevator side. The tracking cores are absolutely blank. The last one to go in was Mangu himself, about midnight. Preliminary inspection indicates no traces of intruders in the room, no strange fingerprints, no flecks of someone else’s dandruff, no stray hairs, no bits of lint. And no sign of a struggle. Mangu was a strong man, you know. He wouldn’t have been easy to overpower.”

  “You’re suggesting it was probably suicide?” Shadrach asks.

  “I am. Obviously. No one on my staff takes any other theory at all seriously at this point. But the Chairman is certain it was an assassination, and you should have seen him before you got here. Almost hysterical, wild-eyed, raving. You know, it doesn’t look good for me and my men if he believes there’s been an assassination. We’re supposed to make assassinations impossible up here. But it goes beyond whether I lose my job, Doctor. There’s this whole fantastic purge that he’s instituting, the arrests, the interrogations, restrictive measures, a tremendously messy and unpleasant and expensive enterprise, all of it, so far as I can see, absolutely useless. What I want to know,” Avogadro says, “is whether you think there’s some chance the Chairman will be willin
g to take a more rational attitude toward Mangu’s death when he’s further along in his recovery.”

  “I don’t know. But I don’t think so. I’ve never seen him change his mind about anything.”

  “But the operation—”

  “Has weakened him, sure. Physically and psychologically. But it hasn’t greatly affected his reason in any way that I can perceive. He’s always had this thing about assassins, of course, and obviously he’s assuming Mangu was murdered because it fulfills some kind of inner need for him, some fantasy projection, something very dark and intricate. I think he’d have made the same assumption even if he’d been in perfect health when Mangu went out the window. So his recovery per se isn’t going to be a factor in getting him to reevaluate Mangu’s death. All I can suggest is that you wait three or four days until he’s strong enough to be getting back on the job and go in there with the findings of your completed investigation, show him conclusively that there’s no evidence whatsoever of murder, and count on his basic sanity to bring him to an acceptance of the fact that Mangu killed himself.”

  “Suppose I bring him the report this afternoon?”

  “He’s not really ready for all this stress. Besides, is such a speedy investigation going to be plausible to him? No, I’d recommend waiting at least three days, preferably four or five.”

 

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