COUNT ZERO by William Gibson

The receptionist in the cool gray anteroom of the Galerie Duperey might well have grown there, a lovely and likely poisonous plant, rooted behind a slab of polished marble inlaid with an enameled keyboard. She raised lustrous eyes as Marly approached. Marly imagined the click and whirr of shutters, her bedraggled image whisked away to some far corner of Josef Virek’s empire. `Marly Krushkhova,” she said, fighting the urge to pro- duce the compacted wad of telefax, smooth it pathetically on the cool and flawless marble. “For Herr Virek.” “Fraulein Krushkhova,” the receptionist said, “Herr Virek is unable to be in Brussels today.” Marly stared at the perfect lips, simultaneously aware of the pain the words caused her and the sharp pleasure she was learning to take in disappointment. “I see.” “However, he has chosen to conduct the interview via a sensory link. If you will please enter the third door on your left .

The room was bare and white. On two walls hung un- framed sheets of what looked like rain-stained cardboard, stabbed through repeatedly with a variety of instruments. Katatonenkunst. Conservative. The sort of work one sold to committees sent round by the boards of Dutch commercial banks. She sat down on a low bench covered in leather and finally allowed herself to release the telefax. She was alone, but assumed that she was being observed somehow. “Fraulein Krushkhova.” A young man in a technician’s dark green smock stood in the doorway opposite the one through which she’d entered. “In a moment, please, you will cross the room and step through this door. Please grasp the knob slowly, firmly, and in a manner that affords maximum contact with the flesh of your palm. Step through carefully. There should be a minimum of spatial disorientation.” She blinked at him “I beg” “The sensory link,” he said, and withdrew, the door clos- ing behind him. She rose, tried to tug some shape into the damp lapels of her jacket, touched her hair, thought better of it, took a deep breath, and crossed to the door. The receptionist’s phrase had prepared her for the only kind of link she knew, a simstim signal routed via Bell Europa. She’d assumed she’d wear a helmet studded with dermatrodes, that Virek would use a passive viewer as a human camera. But Virek’s wealth was on another scale of magnitude entirely. As her fingers closed around the cool brass knob, it seemed to squirm, sliding along a touch spectrum of texture and temperature in the first second of contact. Then it became metal again, green-painted iron, sweeping out and down, along a line of perspective, an old railing she grasped now in wonder. A few drops of rain blew into her face. Smell of rain and wet earth. A confusion of small details, her own memory of a drunken art school picnic warring with the perfection of Virek’s illusion. Below her lay the unmistakable panorama of Barcelona, smoke hazing the strange spires of the Church of the Sagrada Familia. She caught the railing with her other hand as well, fighting vertigo. She knew this place She was in the Guell Park, Antonio Gaudi’s tatty fairyland, on its barren rise be- hind the center of the city. To her left, a giant lizard of crazy-quilt ceramic was frozen in midslide down a ramp of rough stone. Its fountain-grin watered a bed of tired flowers. “You are disoriented. Please forgive me.” Josef Virek was perched below her on one of the park’s serpentine benches, his wide shoulders hunched in a soft topeoat. His features had been vaguely familiar to her all her she remembered, for some reason, a photograph of life. Now Virek and the king of England. He smiled at her. His head was large and beautifully shaped beneath a brush of stiff dark gray hair. His nostrils were permanently flared, as though he sniffed invisible winds of art and commerce. His eyes, very large behind the round, rimless glasses that were a trademark, were pale blue and strangely soft. “Please.” He patted the bench’s random mosaic of shat- ftered pottery with a narrow hand. “You must forgive my reliance on technology. I have been confined for over a decade to a vat. In some hideous industrial suburb of Stock- holm. Or perhaps of hell. I am not a well man, Marly. Sit beside me.” Taking a deep breath, she descended the stone steps and crossed the cobbles “Herr Virek,” she said, “I saw you lecture in Munich, two years ago. A critique of Faessler and his autisuches Theater. You seemed well then “Faessler?” Virek’s tanned forehead wrinkled. “You saw a double. A hologram perhaps. Many things, Marly, are perpetrated in my name. Aspects of my wealth have become autonomous, by degrees; at times they even war with one I another. Rebellion in the fiscal extremities. However, for reasons so complex as to be entirely occult, the fact of my illness has never been made public.” She took her place beside him and peered down at the dirty pavement between the scuffed toes of her black Paris boots. She saw a chip of pale gravel, a rusted paper clip, the small dusty corpse of a bee or hornet. “It’s amazingly detailed. “Yes,” he said, “the new Maas biochips. You should know,” he continued, “that what I know of your private life is very nearly as detailed. More than you yourself do, in sox~~e instances.” “You do?” It was easiest, she found, to focus on the city, picking out landmarks remembered from a half-dozen student holidays. There, just there, would be the Ramblas, parrots and flowers, the taverns serving dark beer and squid. “Yes I know that it was your lover who convinced you that you had found a lost Cornell original . Many shut her eyes. “He commissioned the forgery, hiring two talented student- artisans and an established historian who found himself in certain personal difficulties . . . He paid them with money he’d already extracted from your gallery, as you have no doubt guessed. You are crying . Marly nodded. A cool forefinger tapped her wrist. “I bought Gnass. I bought the police off the case. The press weren’t worth buying; they rarely are And now, per- haps, your slight notoriety may work to your advantage.” “Herr Virek, I” “A moment, please. Paco! Come here, child.” Marly opened her eyes and saw a child of perhaps six years, tightly gotten up in dark suit coat and knickers, pale stockings, high-buttoned black patent boots. Brown hair fell across his forehead in a smooth wing. He held something in his hands, a box of some kind. “Gaudi began the park in 1900,” Virek said “Paco wears the period costume. Come here, child. Show us your marvel.” “Sefior,” Paco lisped, bowing, and stepped forward to exhibit the thing he held. Marly stared. Box of plain wood, glass-fronted. Objects. “Cornell,” she said, her tears forgotten. “Cornell?” She turned to Virek. “Of course not. The object set into that length of bone is a Braun biomonitor. This is the work of a living artist.” “There are more? More boxes?” “I have found seven. Over a period of three years. The Virek Collection, you see, is a sort of black hole. The unnatu- ral density of my wealth drags irresistibly at the rarest works of the human spirit. An autonomous process, and one I ordinarily take little interest in But Marly was lost in the box, in its evocation of impossi- ble distances, of loss and yearning. It was somber, gentle, and somehow childlike. It contained seven objects. The slender fluted bone, surely formed for flight, surely from the wing of some large bird. Three archaic circuit boards, faced with mazes of gold A smooth white sphere of baked clay. An age-blackened fragment of lace. A finger- length segment of what she assumed was bone from a human wrist, grayish white, inset smoothly with the silicon shaft of a small instrument that must once have ridden flush with the surface of the skinbut the thing’s face was seared and blackened. The box was a universe, a poem, frozen on the boundaries of human experience. “Gracias, Paco.” Box and boy were gone. She gaped. “Ah. Forgive me, I have forgotten that these transitions are too abrupt for you. Now, however, we must discuss your assignment . “Herr Virek,” she said, “what is `Paco’?” “A subprogram.” “I see.” “I have hired you to find the maker of the box “But, Herr Virek, with your resources” “Of which you are now one, child. Do you not wish to be employed? When the business of Gnass having been stung with a forged Cornell came to my attention, I saw that you might be of use in this matter.” He shrugged. “Credit me with a certain talent for obtaining desired results.” “Certainly, Herr Virek! And, yes, I do wish to work!” “Very well You will be paid a salary. You will be given access to certain lines of credit, although, should you need to purchase, let us say. substantial amounts of real estate” “Real estate?” “Or a corporation, or spacecraft. In that event, you will require my indirect authorization. Which you will almost certainly be given Otherwise, you will have a free hand I suggest, however, that you work on a scale with which you yourself are comfortable. Otherwise, you run the risk of losing touch with your intuition, and intuition, in a case such as this, is of crucial importance.” The famous smile glittered for her once more. She took a deep breath. “Herr Virek, what if I fail? How long do I have to locate this artist?” “The rest of your life,” he said. Forgive me,” she found herself saying, to her horror, “but I understood you to say that you live in aa vat?” “Yes, Marly. And from that rather terminal perspective, I should advise you to strive to live hourly in your own flesh. Not in the past, if you understand me. I speak as one who can no longer tolerate that simple state, the cells of my body having opted for the quixotic pursuit of individual careers. I imagine that a more fortunate man, or a poorer one, would have been allowed to die at last, or be coded at the core of some bit of hardware. But I seem constrained, by a byzantine net of circumstance that requires, I understand, something like a tenth of my annual income. Making me, I suppose, the world’s most expensive invalid. I was touched, Marly, at your affairs of the heart. I envy you the ordered flesh from which they unfold.” And, for an instant, she stared directly into those soft blue eyes and knew, with an instinctive mammalian certainty, that the exceedingly rich were no longer even remotely human. A wing of night swept Barcelona’s sky. like the twitch of a vast slow shutter, and Virek and Gdell were gone, and she found herself seated again on the low leather bench, staring at torn sheets of stained cardboard. 3 ~I~y `3IJIi~ A WI[~IiN

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