In the windowless office beyond the youngish man"s, his secretary was chatting with a big security bot.
Jay asked where the rest rooms were, and the bot offered to show him, gliding noiselessly down the faux-marble corridor.
"Tell me something," Jay said when the bot had come to a stop before the door. "Suppose that when I got through in there I went down to the lobby. Would there be anything to stop me from going out to the street?"
"No, sir."
"You"re going to be standing out here waiting for me when I come out, right? I"d never make it to the elevators."
"Will you need a guide at that point, sir?"
The blank metal face had told Jay nothing, and the pleasant baritone had suggested polite inquiry, and nothing else. Jay said, "I can find my way back all right."
"In that case, I have other duties, sir."
"Like talking to that girl?"
"Say woman, sir. To that young woman. They prefer it, and Valerie is an excellent source of intelligence. One cultivates one"s sources, sir, in police work."
Jay nodded, conceding the point. "Can you answer a couple more questions for me? If it"s not too much trouble?"
"If I can, sir. Certainly."
"How many dots have I got?"
"Are you referring to IA stars, sir?"
Jay nodded.
"Two, sir. Are you testing my vision, sir?"
"Sure. One more, and I"ll let you alone. What"s the name of the man I"ve been talking to? There"s no nameplate on his desk, and I never did catch it."
"Mr. Smith, sir."
"You"re kidding me."
"No, sir."
"John Smith? I"ll bet that"s it."
"No, sir. Mr. James R. Smith, sir."
"Well, I"ll be d.a.m.ned."
Scratching his chin, Jay went into the men"s room. There were at least a dozen mirrors there, as the youngish man had said. The little augmentation screen set into his forehead, blank and black since he hadreceived it between the fourth and the fifth grades, showed two glimmering stars now: five-or six-pointed, and scarlet or blue depending on the angle from which he viewed them.
For ten minutes or more he marveled at them. Then he relieved himself, washed his hands, and counted the money again. One hundred thousand in crisp, almost-new hundreds. Logically, it could be counterfeit. Logically, he should have shown one to the security bot arid asked its opinion.
Had the bot noticed his bulging pockets? Security bots would undoubtedly be programmed to take note of such things, and might well be more observant than a human officer.
He took out a fresh bill and examined it, riffling it between his fingers and holding it up to the light, reading its serial number under his breath. Good.
If the bot had called it bad, it would have been because the bot had been instructed to do so, and that was all.
Furthermore, someone had been afraid he would a.s.sault the youngish man the bot called James R.
Smith, presumably because metal detectors had picked up his hunting knife; but Smith had not asked him to remove it, or so much as mentioned it. Why?
Jay spent another fifteen or twenty seconds studying the stars in his IA screen and three full minutes concentrating before he left the rest room. There was no bot in the hall. A middle-aged man who looked important pa.s.sed him without a glance and went in.
Jay walked to the elevators, waved a hand for the motion detector, and rode a somewhat crowded car to the lobby. So far as he could see, no one was paying the least attention to him. There was another security bot in the lobby (as there had been when he had come in), but it appeared to pay no particular attention to him either.
Revolving doors admitted him to Sixth Avenue. He elbowed his way for half a block along a sidewalk much too crowded, and returned to the Globnet Building.
The security bot was chatting with the young woman in her windowless room again. When she saw Jay she nodded and smiled, and the doors to Smith"s office swung open.
Smith, who had said that he would be making calls, was standing at one of his floor-to-ceiling windows staring out at the gloomy December sky.
"I"m back," Jay said. "Sorry I took so long. I was trying to access the new chips you gave me."
"You can"t." Smith turned around.
"That"s what I found out."
Smith"s chair rolled backwards, and he seated himself at his desk. "Aren"t you going to ask me what they"re for?"
Jay shook his head.
"Okay, that will save me a lot of talking. You"ve still got the hundred thousand?"
Jay nodded.
"All right. In about forty-seven minutes we"re going to announce on all our channels that you"ve got it.
We"ll give your name, and show you leaving this building, but that"s all. It will be repeated on every newscast tonight, name, more pictures, a hundred thou in cash. Every banger and grifter in the city will be after you, and if you hide it, there"s a good chance they"ll stick your feet in a fire."
Smith waited, but Jay said nothing.
"You"ve never asked me what we"re paying you to do, but I"ll tell you now. We"re paying you to stay alive and get some good out of your money. That"s all. If you want to stay here and tough it out, that"s fine. If you want to run, that"s fine, too. As far as we"re concerned, you"re free to do whatever you feel you have to do."
Smith paused, studying Jay"s scarred face, then the empty, immaculate surface of his own desk. "You can"t take those chips out. Did you know that?"
Jay shook his head.
"It"s easy to put them in to upgrade, but d.a.m.ned near impossible to take them out without destroying the whole unit and killing its owner. They do that to make it hard to rob people of their upgrades. I can"t stop you from trying, but it won"t work and you might hurt yourself."
"I"ve got it." Jay counted the stars on Smith"s screen. Four. "The announcement will go out in forty-five minutes, and you have to leave the building before then so we can show you doing it."
The doors behind Jay swung open, and the security bot rolled in.
"Kaydee Nineteen will escort you." Smith sounded embarra.s.sed. "It"s just so we can get the pictures."
Jay rose.
"Is there anything you want to ask me before you go? We"ll have to keep it brief, but I"ll tell you all I can."
"No." Jay"s shoulders twitched. "Keep the money and stay alive. I"ve got it."
As they went out, Smith called, "Kaydee Nineteen won"t rob you. You don"t have to worry about that."
Kaydee Nineteen chuckled when Smith"s doors had closed behind them. "I bet you never even thought of that, sir."
"You"re right," Jay told him.
"Are you going to ask where the holo cameras are, sir?"
"In the lobby and out in the street. They have to be."
"That"s right, sir. Don"t go looking around for them, though. It looks bad, and they"ll have to edit it out."
"I"d like to see the announcement they"re going to run," Jay said as they halted before an elevator.
"Can you tell me where I might be able to do that?"
"Certainly, sir. A block north and turn right. They call it the Studio." The elevator doors slid back, moving less smoothly than Smith"s; Kaydee Nineteen paused, perhaps to make certain the car was empty, then said, "Only you be careful, sir. Just one drink. That"s plenty."
Jay stepped into the elevator.
"They"ve got a good holo setup, I"m told, sir. Our people go there all the time to watch the shows they"ve worked on."
When the elevator doors had closed, Jay said, "I don"t suppose you could tell me where I could buy a gun?"
Kaydee Nineteen shook his head. "I ought to arrest you, sir, just for asking. Don"t you know the police will take care of you? As long as we"ve police, everybody"s safe."
The elevator started down.
"I just hoped you might know," Jay said apologetically.
"Maybe I do, sir. It doesn"t mean I tell."
Slipping his hand into his side pocket, Jay broke the paper band on a sheaf of hundreds, separated two without taking the sheaf from his pocket, and held them up. "For the information. It can"t be a crime to tell me."
"Wait a minute, sir." Kaydee Nineteen inserted the fourth finger of his left hand into the STOP b.u.t.ton, turned it, and pushed. The elevator"s smooth descent ended with shocking abruptness.
"Here, take it." Jay held out the bills.
Kaydee Nineteen motioned him to silence. A strip of paper was emerging from his mouth; he caught it before it fell. "Best dealer in the city, sir. I"m not saying she won"t rip you off. She will. Only she won"t rip you off as badly as the rest, and she sells quality. If she sells you home-workshop, she tells you home-workshop."
He handed the slip to Jay, accepted the hundreds, and dropped them into his utility pouch. "You call her up first, sir. There"s an address on that paper, too, but don"t go there until you call. You say Kincaid said to. If she asks his apartment number or anything like that, you have to say number nineteen. Do you understand me, sir?"
Jay nodded.
"It"s all written out for you, and some good advice in case you forget. Only you chew that paper up and swallow it once you got your piece, sir. Are you going to do that?"
"Yes," Jay said. "You have my word." "It better be good, sir, because if you get arrested, you"re going to need friends. If they find that paper on you, you won"t have any."
Jay walked through the lobby alone, careful not to look for the holo camera. Those outside would be in trucks or vanettes, presumably, but might conceivably be in the upper windows of buildings on the other side of Sixth. He turned north, as directed. Glancing to his right at the end of the next block, he saw the Studio"s sign, over which virtual stagehands moved virtual lights and props eternally; but he continued to walk north for two more blocks, then turned toward Fifth and followed the side street until he found a store in which he bought a slouch hat and an inexpensive black raincoat large enough to wear over his hunting coat.
Returning to the Studio, he approached it from both west and east, never coming closer than half a block, without spotting anyone watching the entrance. It was possible-just possible, he decided reluctantly-that Kaydee Nineteen had been as helpful as he seemed. Not likely, but possible.
In a changing booth in another clothing store, he read the slip of paper:
Try Jane MacKann, Bldg. 18 Unit 8 in Greentree Gardens. 1028 7773-0320. Call her first and say Kincaid. Say mine if she asks about any number. She will not talk to anybody n.o.body sent, so you must say mine. She likes money, so say you want good quality and will pay for it. When you get there, offer half what she asks for and go from there. You should get ten, twenty percent off her price. Do not pay her asking price. Do not take a cab. Walk or ride the bus. Do not fail to phone first. Be careful.
It took him the better part of an hour to find a pay phone in the store that looked secure. He fed bills-the change from the purchase of his raincoat-into it and keyed the number on Kaydee Nineteen"s paper slip.
Three rings, and the image of a heavyset frowning woman in a black plastic shirt and a dark skirt appeared above the phone; she had frizzy red hair and freckles, and looked as though she should be smiling. "h.e.l.lo. I"m not here right now, but if you"ll leave a message at the tone I"ll call you back as soon as I can."
The tone sounded.
"My name"s Skeeter." Jay spoke rapidly to hide his nervousness. "I"m a friend of Kinkaid"s. He said to call you when I got into the city, but I"m calling from a booth, so you can"t call me. I"ll call again when I get settled."
None of the clerks looked intelligent. He circled the store slowly, pretending to look at cheap electric razors and souvenir shirts until he found a door at the back labeled DO NOT ENTER. He knocked and stepped inside.
The manager flicked off his PC, though not before Jay had seen naked women embracing reflected in the dark window behind him. "Yes, sir. What"s the problem?"
"You don"t have one," Jay told him, "but I do, and I"ll pay a hundred"-he held up a bill-"to you to help me with it. I want to rent this office for one half hour so that I can use your phone. I won"t touch your papers, and I won"t steal anything. You go out in your store and take care of business. Or go out and get a drink or a sandwich, whatever you want. After half an hour you come back and I leave."
"If it"s long distance..."
Jay shook his head. "Local calls, all of them."
"You promise that?" The manager looked dubious.
"Absolutely."
"All right. Give me the money."
Jay handed the bill over.
"Wait a minute." The manager switched on his computer, studied the screen, moved his mouse and clicked, studied the result, and clicked again. Jay was looking at the phone. As he had expected, its number was written on its base.