"Rammed by who?" He ignored the question, a little too coolly; he'd already said too much.
Twenty had waited in the cabin while the others fetched me; now she took charge. "I don't know what fantasies Kuwale's been feeding you. Portraying us as rabid fanatics, no doubt." She was a tall, slender black woman with a Francophone accent,
"No, ve told me you were moderates. Weren't you listening?"
I said wearily, "What do you expect other ACs to call you?"
"Forget other ACs. You should make your own judgment—once you've heard all the facts."
"I think you blew any chance of a favorable opinion when you infected me with your home-brewed cholera."
"That wasn't us."
"No? Who was it, then?"
"The same people who infected Yasuko Nishide with a virulent natural strain of pneumococcus."
A chill ran through me. I didn't know if I believed her, but it fit with Kuwale's description of the extremists.
Nineteen said, "Are you recording, now?"
"No." It was the truth; although I'd captured their faces, I'd stopped continuous filming hours before, back in the hold.
"Then start. Please." Nineteen looked and sounded Scandinavian; it seemed every faction of AC was relentlessly internationalist. Those cynics who claimed that people who forged transglobal friendships on the nets never came together in the flesh were wrong, of course. All it required was a good enough reason.
"Why?"
"You're here to make a documentary about Violet Mosala, aren't you? Don't you want to tell the whole story? Right to the end?"
Twenty explained, "When Mosala's dead, there'll be an uproar, naturally, and we'll have to go into hiding. And we're not interested in martyrdom—but we're not afraid of being identified, once the mission's over. We're not ashamed of what we're doing here; we have no reason to be. And we want someone objective, non-partisan, trustworthy, to carry our side of the story to the world."
I stared at her. She sounded perfectly sincere—and even formally apologetic, as if she was asking for a slightly inconvenient favor.
I glanced at the others. Three regarded me with studied nonchalance. Five was tinkering with the electronics. Nineteen stared back, unwavering in her solidarity.
I said, "Forget it. I don't do snuff movies." It was a nice line; if I hadn't recalled Daniel Cavolini's interrogation the moment the words were out, I might have had a warm inner glow for hours.
Twenty put me straight, politely. "No one expects you to film Mosala's death. That would be impractical, as well as tasteless. We only want you to be in a position to explain to your viewers
My grasp on reality was slipping. In the hold, I'd anticipated torture. I'd imagined, in detail, the process of being made to look like a plausible victim of a shark attack.
But not this.
I forced myself to speak evenly. "I'm not interested in an exclusive interview with my subject's murderers." The thought crossed my mind that half of SeeNet's executives would never forgive those words, if they ever found out that I'd uttered them. "Why don't you take out a paid spot on TechnoLalia? I'm sure their viewers would give you an unqualified vote of support—if you pointed out that it was necessary to kill Mosala in order to preserve the possibility
Twenty frowned, unjustly slandered. "I knew Kuwale was feeding you poisonous lies. Is that what ve told you?"
I was growing light-headed, disbelieving; her obsessive concern with exactly the wrong proprieties was surreal. I shouted, "It doesn't matter what the fucking reason is!" I tried to stretch my hands out, to implore her to see sense; they were tied firmly to the back of the chair. I said numbly, "I don't know… maybe you just think Henry Buzzo has more gravitas, more presidential style. A suitably Jehovian manner. Or maybe you think he has more elegant equations." I very nearly told them what Mosala had told me: Buzzo's methodology was fatally flawed; their favorite contender could never be the Keystone. I caught myself in time. "I don't care. It's still murder."
"But it's not. It's self-defense."
I turned. The voice had come from the doorway of the cabin.
Helen Wu met my eyes, and explained sadly, "Wormholes have nothing to do with it. Buzzo has nothing to do with it. But if we don't intervene, Violet will soon have the power to kill us all."
22
After Helen Wu entered the cabin, I recorded everything. Not for SeeNet. For Interpol.