Invisible Sun Read online

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  For a half second the young jack leers at Vienne, until she fires a burst past his head. Then he joins his mother and the board of directors sucking up carpet lint.

  Behind Vienne, the penthouse lift opens. Troopers pour out like hungry cockroaches, only to be met with a rain of bullets that turns the drop-down ceiling to dust. While they scramble for position, Vienne tosses a smoke grenade, then hops onto the ledge of the shattered window.

  “Thanks for your cooperation,” she says.

  And steps into empty space.

  I remove the sunglasses, then pull the data chip—I’ve got what I came for—and walk away from Mr. Gilbert, who is wriggling like a fluke worm on the floor.

  I stroll by the librarian like I own the joint, because at one point, my family actually did own it. Once upon a time, I spent many hours at that desk, haranguing my father’s employees into doing my homework.

  I exit the Special Collections office and take the lift to the first floor. In the lobby, more shouting guards rush past me and into the street.

  “Sir?” the librarian calls.

  Verflucht, I curse. What did I screw up this time? “Yes?”

  “The specs. You took them off,” she says. “I like the change. It’s a shame to cover up such pretty eyes.”

  “Thank you.” I muster another wink. Behind her, a multivid screen is displaying a celebration: Squatters in Favela are cavorting around a straw man being burned in effigy. It’s definitely not your traditional Spirit Festival dance. “What’s all the ruckus?”

  “Haven’t you heard?” she says. “Stringfellow died in prison last night. Cancer finally killed the old poxer.”

  By Stringfellow, she means John Stringfellow, disgraced former CEO of Zealand Corporation. He’s spent the last years of his life rotting in the Norilsk Gulag. How am I aware of this? Because I know him not as Stringfellow but as Father. I also know that he didn’t die in prison last night. It was a month ago. CEO Bragg held on to the news until today, so as to coincide with the Spirit Festival. I reckon manipulating the media goes hand in hand with being CEO.

  “You really hadn’t heard,” she says, mildly shocked. “What planet have you been on?”

  The sunglasses go back on. “Mars.”

  I step outside. Look up at the thirteenth floor of Parliament Tower and see the blown-out glass and smoke billowing out of it.

  “Excellent,” I say to Mimi. “Couldn’t have done it better myself.”

  “You are delusional,” Mimi says. “Being terrified of any height over three meters, you could not have done it at all.”

  “Everybody’s a critic.”

  “I prefer the term dialectical of genius to critic.”

  “Most critics do,” I say. A crowd gathers, and I get washed away in the flood of humanity. “Got a read on Vienne’s biorhythms? The zone’s about to get hot.”

  “She’s two meters out and closing on your six,” Mimi says. “So, by the way, is a squad of troopers.”

  “Roger that.”

  Slipping away from the Circus, I stay out of the way of the soldiers, who are swinging truncheons and ramming through the mob, trying to provoke a reaction. It’s their not too subtle way of flushing out Desperta Ferro insurgents.

  A few moments later Vienne, now wearing a different hat and coat, takes my arm. “Got the data, chief?” she asks me.

  “Right here.” I pat the pocket of my peacoat. “And no more of that ‘chief’ stuff, right? Call me Durango.”

  “Yes, chief,” she says, and laughs, a sound so rare that it catches me off guard.

  It also attracts the kind of attention we don’t want. I get a glimpse of a pair of Rangers eyeballing us, the leader clicking his jaw muscles and rolling his shoulders, ready to pounce at any hint of resistance.

  Kuso! I tuck my chin inside my collar and look down as if the cracks in the pavement are the most interesting thing ever, an act of subservience I learned while enduring my Battle School instructors’ endless acid-tongued lectures.

  Vienne, though, doesn’t know the meaning of subservient. She meets the lead Ranger’s eyes and gives him that hard steel stare that betrays her iron will.

  He veers toward her.

  Vienne reaches for her armalite.

  I reach for a handful of her coat.

  Too late.

  “Halt!” the lead Ranger shouts, and they both shove the crowd aside, bearing down on us, battle rifles ready.

  “Move it!” I yell to Vienne.

  After a frustrated growl, she cinches the belt on her trench coat and slips away.

  Crack!

  A warning shot fires.

  The chase is on.

  Chapter 1

  North of Noctis Labyrinthus, Tharsis Plain

  Zealand Prefecture

  ANNOS MARTIS 238. 7. 18. 12:52

  Picture a wide-open plain as broad and flat as the open sea, interrupted by only the occasional stone outcropping. Beneath one of the outcroppings—a green, rolling field split by a narrow dirt road. A warm zephyr blows the tall grass, gently, softly. A swarm of bees rises from the grass, gathers itself into a tight knot, then disappears behind a hill, right before—

  Roar!

  Over the outcropping we come!

  Riding a three-wheeled bike that’s two parts motorcycle and one part rocket. Trying to outrun a Noriker armored truck that’s hot on our six, caked in mud and dirt, its red and blue lights flashing, a warning that we’d better stop if we know what’s best for us.

  Ha! Vienne and I are dalit Regulators, mercenary soldiers who do dirty, dangerous jobs for very little pay. We never know what’s best for us.

  “The Rangers are back!” I yell into Vienne’s helmet, shouting above the roar of the engine as she leans over the handlebars.

  “What did you expect?” Her visor is flipped down, but behind it, she’s beaming as battle rifle shots zip by. “That’s what you get for stealing top-secret military data!”

  “It’s your fault they chased us in the first place!”

  “My fault?” she calls back. “You’re the one who said to move it! If you’d let me take them out in the Circus—”

  “Then there’d be a hundred Rangers, not just two!” Two Rangers who’d tailed us all the way from Christchurch. Twice, we thought we’d ditched them, but they kept picking up our trail. Nothing motivates a Ranger like a runner with a bounty on his head.

  A forty-five-caliber bullet whistles past my ear. It hits the handlebars of our motorbike and shatters into a million tiny pieces.

  “We’re taking fire! Again!” I shout, my face streaked with sweat, teeth chattering from the choppy road. “You should let me drive! You’re the better shot!”

  “I’m the better driver, too!”

  Vienne punches the gas, and the engine finds an overdrive I didn’t know existed. We rocket along the hard-packed dirt, almost leaving my stomach behind. For a second the bike seems to float—all three wheels rising above the ground—and my queasy stomach rises with them. Then I make the horrible mistake of looking to my left, where the narrow trail takes us to the thinnest cusp of the canyon.

  A kilometer below, a green valley full of wheat and corn stretches out as far as the eye can see.

  I’m going to hurl.

  “Vienne! We’re going to crash into the canyon!”

  She laughs. “Suck it up, Durango!”

  The world turns swirly, and my head lolls to one side. Vertigo—it’s my biggest weakness. I wish I could bury my face in Vienne’s back, squeeze my eyes tight, and pretend that we’re not doing 120 kilometers per hour, only centimeters from certain, horrifying, mangling death. But I’m lousy at pretending, and Vienne wouldn’t take kindly to the head-burying idea.

  Instead, I turn to the right and face the horizon. The Labyrinth of the Night stretches out like broken fingers across the Plains of Tharsis, forming canyons so deep and wide, they make Earth’s Grand Canyon look like a drainage ditch. Beyond the vista, the mountains of Tharsis rise like trip
let mortar shells from the plains. In turn, they are overshadowed by the snow-capped monster of Olympus Mons, the largest mountain in the solar system. It’s so mammoth, Earthers can see it with a handheld telescope.

  That’s what they tell me, anyway. I wouldn’t know firsthand. I’ve never been to Earth, and the Hell’s Cross mines will see daylight before I ever go.

  “Oh, that’s quite a bit of poetry for somebody being shot at,” says Mimi. “Perhaps you should extricate yourself from Vienne’s admittedly impressive midriff and return fire.”

  “I’ll pass,” I subvocalize.

  “You will pass?” Mimi says. “Have you forgotten that you are a Regulator? Regulators are required by the Tenets to shoot back. It is a time-honored tradition and an excellent means of survival.”

  “Yeah, see, I’m not so big on the Tenets anymore,” I say. “Plus, their bullets can’t penetrate our symbiarmor, which means they can shoot all day, and it won’t amount to a hill of beans.” I check on the Noriker, which is weaving around a rut in the road. “I’m a lot more afraid of crashing to a burning death at the bottom of this canyon than I am of a couple of CorpCom Rangers.”

  “Your penchant for stating the obvious is remarkable,” Mimi says.

  “Thank you.”

  “That was not meant as a compliment, cowboy.”

  “Knew that—ow!” A rifle round pops me between the shoulder blades, and I flinch. “That one stung!”

  “Explosive ammunition,” Mimi says. “May I suggest, oh, returning fire?”

  “This is a waste of ammo, you know.” I pull my armalite from its holster. Flick the switch to full auto and spray a clip of bullets at the Noriker.

  Headlamps shatter.

  The windshield cracks, and lines spread across the glass, blocking the Rangers’ view. The driver doesn’t even swerve.

  The Noriker eats up more trail.

  Getting closer.

  “They’re gaining!” I say to no one. And no one answers, which is surprising because Mimi always has something smart to say.

  “Not always,” she says. “Sometimes, silence is the wisest response.”

  Crash! A Ranger’s boot appears through the Noriker’s windshield. The passenger kicks out the rest of the damaged safety glass, and I can see plainly the sunburst insignia on his uniform—Second Cavalry. My father’s old division. It would’ve been mine, too, if not for a string of unfortunate decisions on Father’s part, as well as my complete lack of interest in following in his deep footsteps.

  “The irony is thick today,” Mimi says. “So is the manure.”

  I start to remind her of the wisdom of silence, as useless as that would be, when the barrel of a rocket launcher appears on the Noriker’s dashboard.

  My armor is the most technologically advanced suit on the planet, controlled by a network of nanobots that in turn are commanded by my overly conversant AI. But no symbiarmor ever made can stop a rocket.

  Like the rocket that explodes from its launcher with a puff of smoke and comes slithering toward us like a pissed-off scorpion.

  “Evasive!”

  Vienne jerks the bike hard to her nine. The front wheel catches the lip of a rock slab, and we swing so close to the precipice of the canyon, dislodged rocks and debris fall over the edge. Where they go—

  —down, down, down—

  —with nothing to stop them.

  “Re malaka,” I murmur.

  Five meters ahead of us, the rocket explodes.

  “Chief!” Vienne shouts. “Get them off my tail!”

  The sound of her voice, and the wild swing she makes to three o’clock, rocks me back to reality.

  There’s nothing left to do but shoot. “I hate when this happens!”

  I let go of Vienne’s waist and climb atop the seat, then engage the grenade launcher attachment on my armalite and reach for my ammo belt.

  One grenade left.

  One lousy grenade.

  “Ja vitut!”

  “Waste not, want not,” Mimi says.

  “Thank you, George Washington.”

  “Ahem. Poor Richard’s Almanack?”

  “Thank you, Poor Richard,” I say. “What kind of fossiker would name their son ‘Poor’?”

  “Benjamin Franklin wrote Poor Richard’s Almanack!” Mimi yells in my ears. “How does a Battle School graduate who was tops in his class not know the basic literary canon of his forefathers?”

  I jam the shell into the chamber. “I’m a soldier, not a hopeless Romantic.”

  “No, you’re just hopeless.”

  “Har, har.” I pull the gas-powered trigger to launch my last grenade.

  The shell tumbles through the air and lands with a clack on the hood of the Noriker. For a nanosecond it hangs there, suspended by wind and gravity, before it rolls forward and out of sight.

  The driver points and laughs at me.

  I make a hand gesture that calls his parentals’ marital status into doubt as my grenade, which has lodged in the grill, explodes.

  Debris blows back into the Noriker cab. As the driver throws up an arm to shield his eyes, the truck hood—unlatched by the explosion—rises up like a metal sail. It flaps in the wind for a second or two, then breaks at the hinges and hammers the empty windshield.

  Wham!

  The Noriker veers off the trail, a cloud of butterscotch-hued grime encasing it.

  “Heewack!” I yell. “That’ll fix the fossikers for shooting at us! Right, Vienne? Right?”

  She doesn’t answer, which is weird because as stoic as she pretends to be, Vienne loves a good shoot-out. So I turn around in time to see—

  A narrow bridge.

  A hundred meters off and closing fast.

  Marked by a bright red sign—DANGER: BRIDGE OUT.

  “Danger! Bridge out!” I scream. “Vienne! Stop! The wà kào bridge is out!”

  “I can read!”

  “Then stop! I order you to stop!”

  “You’re not giving the orders anymore!”

  “No! I take it back! We’re not equals! I’m your chief again, and I order you to halt!”

  “If I halt now,” she calls, “those Rangers will stay on our tail! Let’s get rid of them once and for all!”

  “And us, too!” I scream. “What part of ‘danger’ don’t you—ieeee!”

  Our front wheel hits the lip of the entryway. I bounce back into the seat and squeeze my legs against the growling engine, the pipes so hot they would burn my flesh if not for the symbiarmor.

  The bike eats up meter after meter of the bridge. Chunks of pavement fly from the road, flinging themselves into the chasm, and fall, fall, fall into the valley below.

  “Why does everything need to fall so far?” I groan.

  “Do I need to look up the word chicken in my thesaurus data bank?” Mimi chimes in. “Again?”

  “No!” I say. “Because I’m not chicken! I’m just not stupid!”

  “Acceptance,” Mimi says, “is the first step to recovery.”

  Ahead, a ramp appears out of nowhere, and I’m wondering how a ramp got there when I realize that no, it’s not a ramp; it’s a fallen piece of sheet metal that’s part of a barricade. A barricade that’s also marked DANGER. And beyond the DANGER, there’s a hole. A big, carking gap that separates one side of the bridge from the other.

  “Vienne! There’s a huge, carking gap—”

  “Lean back!”

  That’s the last thing I want to do. I’d rather wrestle the handlebars from her grip. And avoid all areas marked by words written in capital letters. But it’s too late for that. All I can do is think about what my former chief said when I was still a green Regulator: It’s not that heroes don’t know fear, it’s that they don’t let fear stop them from doing the job.

  “I love it when you quote me,” Mimi says.

  I grab Vienne’s shoulders. Plant both feet on the seat like a snowboarder coming down Tharsis Mons. And hang on for dear life as the bike—

  Slams against the r
amp.

  Sails across the gap.

  Lands hard on the other side, with enough force to vault me over Vienne. I roll along the bridge’s metal decking and slam!

  Into a concrete barricade.

  My armor seizes up to protect me. But for a few seconds, I’m frozen like a statue, my visor flipped up, eyes filled with road grit.

  Tires squeal as Vienne slams on the brakes, the front wheel

  sliding,

  sliding,

  sliding toward my head.

  “Mimi! Armor!”

  “Negative. System is overloaded, cowboy,” she says. “Rebooting now.”

  I try to raise a hand to shield my face but can’t budge. I squeeze my eyes shut and mentally brace for the collision . . .

  . . . that never comes.

  Something lightly touches my forehead. I take a peek. It’s the tire. Tendrils of smoke drift from the rubber, and tiny bits of gravel are wedged between the treads.

  “The word danger, “ I tell Vienne, “is not French for go faster.”

  She jumps from the bike and throws her arms around my statuelike body. “Yes! Wasn’t that fun? It was just like flying! I always wanted to fly!”

  “Next time you do,” I say, sighing, “use a velocicopter instead of a motorbike, okay?”

  Mimi chimes in. “System ready. In two.”

  The symbiarmor relaxes, and I fall into a heap. I pull off my helmet and gasp, swallowing something that rises from my gut. Then collapse spread-eagled on the decking.

  Why is it that I can order a whole crew of Regulators into battle against enemy soldiers, bioengineered insects the size of elephants, and even bloodthirsty cannibals, but I almost wet myself every time I’m more than ten meters above the ground? No matter how many times I face my fear of heights, the acrophobia never goes away. In fact, I’m starting to think it’s only getting worse.

  “It is only getting worse,” Mimi says. “Data from your cerebral cortex reports an unprecedented level of corto-steroids in your bloodstream.”

  My eyes roll back as relief washes over me. “Thank you for that disheartening report, Madame Curie.”

  “I aim to please, cowboy.”

  Vienne kneels beside me. “Are you hurt? I didn’t mean to throw you off the bike.” She laughs. “I thought you had better balance than that.”