Marked
Marked
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Author(s): Hughes, Alex
ISBN No.: 9780451466938
Pages: 352
Year: 201404
Format: Mass Market
Price: $ 11.03
Status: Out Of Print

Lying in a society of telepaths was possible, but just barely. The key was not to think about the lie at all-something akin to spinning a plate on top of your head while standing on one foot and reciting multiplication tables-or to lie to yourself first, and often. The frightening thing was how often someone got away with it. The even more frightening thing was that lying well-and being caught at it-seemed to give a certain cache to the telepath involved, and more often than not came with job offers. In the world of the normals this was also true, though lying wasn''t as hard if you didn''t have to do it mind-to-mind. Politicians seemed to get reelected more readily after a good lie, bureaucrats seemed to thrive on them, and in my job, contractor interrogator for the DeKalb County Police Department, a good lie to a suspect would get you anything you wanted. I was learning to lie well to the suspects. The trouble was, nearly everyone I met these days was suspect in one way or another.


Homicide detective Isabella Cherabino stuck her head in the door. "We have a murder, Adam." "Oh, goody," I replied. She looked at me. "You realize I''m in the middle of an interview," I said. I helped her out on murder cases, but I was technically employed as an interviewer. The interview rooms were supposed to come first. "You have ten minutes," she said, and closed the door behind her as she left.


I turned back to the suspect, a thirty-something housewife accused of auto theft. "You know, I''m a Level Eight Guild-trained telepath," I said conversationally. Exactly nine minutes later, she had just finished explaining how she subverted the cars'' antigravity engine lock systems, and how none of the crew she used appreciated her. I made all the right noises, and she finished the confession with times and dates. Finally she looked up with bloodshot eyes and asked me quietly, "Do you think I need a lawyer?" "I certainly don''t know what to think," I said, the standard answer. I went to find a police officer to go sit with her. The empty spot in the room behind me, the spot that would have been Officer Bellury''s if he were still alive, seemed to echo. Not only did I need another person to do paperwork if I wasn''t going to be here, but it would be nice to have a witness who could testify in court.


I was a convicted ex-felon (drug charges only, and more than three years clean out of rehab), and while a video of a confession would hold in court regardless of the interrogator, I certainly couldn''t testify. Credibility and all that. Besides, any day that I spent with Cherabino was a good day. I even liked helping with the murders. One of the secretaries found me on the way out and handed me a message slip. Kara, it read. Call Kara Chenoa immediately. Emergency.


"Immediately" was underlined three times. Kara had been my fiancée once upon a time, well, until she''d reported me to the Guild for the drug habit that had gotten me kicked out more than ten years ago. These days we were on decent terms-well, when I didn''t think too hard about the past. She had moved up in the Guild since we''d been together, to the position of attaché to the city, and she helped me with the occasional case I needed Guild information from. In exchange I tried not to resent her new job and new husband. Kara wasn''t given to hysterics. If she said emergency, it was. "Are you coming or not?" Cherabino asked, literally tapping her foot in impatience.


"Yeah," I said distantly. "I''m going to need a phone." "I need to get to the crime scene before Bransen docks me for overtime for the forensics techs. There will be a pay phone close by. After you do your reading mumbo jumbo." My attention turned back to her. "It''s highly delicate, trained analysis of what the victim left behind in Mindspace, not mumbo jumbo." "Don''t be touchy.


" I made a frustrated sound and trotted after her. She was in one of her moods, clearly. Cherabino hustled down the main floor of the DeKalb County Police Department, the secretaries busy in the large pool to the left, the suspects screaming in a long line in front of Booking to the right, citizens waiting in front of Reception to the front, near the doors she was headed to. The ordered chaos was home. This job, even with all the stress and the budget cuts, was part of what kept me sane and on the wagon. It helped that they refused to give me pay directly, so I had nothing to buy my drug with. "Where''s Michael?" I asked. Michael was a wiry Korean guy with a calm personality and a close-cut haircut, a new detective she''d promoted up out of uniforms when he''d helped with a case.


He''d proven invaluable, even if he and I had tension sometimes. He was just so . nice. I didn''t know what to do with nice. Cherabino held the door for me. "He''s getting the car." In that moment, I got a whiff of impatience along the mental Link between us. I''d established a bridge between our minds by accident during an earlier case, and she still wasn''t quite comfortable with it.


In fact, she wanted it gone as quickly as possible, and told me so. Often. "What?" she asked, as I stood there too long. Michael landed the car up to the front of the station with a small squeal of an abused anti-grav system. Cherabino''s method of driving must be wearing off on him; he used to be a great deal safer. Moving quickly to get out of the cold November wind, we piled in the car, Cherabino in the front, me exiled to the back with the fast food wrappers. Cherabino shielded mentally, using the technique I''d shown her to block me out of her mind, long rows of bricks going up between us. But she left one little brick unset, so I could still feel the edge of her presence like a dim beam of light landing on the floor of my mind.


I held on to that light like a lifeline. It hadn''t been so long ago that I had felt nothing but her mind over the Link; I''d injured my mind in a life-and-death confrontation with a suspect, and it had taken a couple of months to heal fully. That is, if it was, in fact, fully healed. I put my seat belt on. Michael flipped the sirens on and accelerated. He obeyed most traffic laws most of the time, and had lights and sirens on when he did not. I''d only feared for my life once total when he was driving, and that hadn''t been strictly his fault. To distract myself-a pillar of strategy in the Twelve Steps-I asked Michael, "What do we know about the victim?" He was still connected to his old network as a beat cop; plus he had a knack for research and detail that wouldn''t quit.


If there was something to be known at this stage, he would know it. Also, I added, "Thanks for driving." "Just a second." Michael cut through smaller city streets, found a skylane entrance-an actual official entrance-and squeezed around a car stopped to let him by. He settled into the upper, mostly empty, skylane with plenty of room to spare for the floating anti-grav markers, and only then started to talk. "Victim is Noah Wright, a sixty-seven-year-old white male, unemployed, found at home. First officer on the scene indicates extreme violence." "Blunt force trauma? Gun?" Cherabino asked.


"What is ''extreme violence'' exactly?" I sighed. I hated the messy scenes. "Officer at the scene indicates a small fire ax found on-site and no further details. I''m betting the violence was with the ax or she wouldn''t have mentioned it. The ME is running late, so we''ll likely have to make the initial call." Cherabino huffed. "Why call for a senior detective?" "The lieutenant didn''t tell me," Michael said. "It could be the violence level.


" They talked about that for a minute, and Cherabino asked another question about the scene. "Adam!" "What?" "We''re here," Cherabino said. "Oh," I said, and started paying attention to the surroundings. Crime scene, after all. And I was still on the clock, still being paid for this, for better or for worse. I needed to do my job, especially since the budget crisis meant if I didn''t, I''d be on the street. I might be anyway, if a miracle didn''t arrive. We were in a small driveway in a small lot on a row of identical small boxy brick houses.


They had different-colored doors, and a few flags hung from doorposts, touting different political stances. Block parties must be interesting in this neighborhood. The house had patchy grass, and a different-colored roof and door than the rest. Otherwise it was the same boxy brick house with one window up front that everyone else had. This one didn''t have bars on the windows. We pulled in, a police cruiser parked crooked on the driveway in front of us, its undercarriage flashing with the occasional burst of orange light, the whine you could hear in the air saying its anti-grav hadn''t been properly shut down. The officer would be lucky to get it working again with a good mechanic and a hefty bill; if not, he''d be grounded and his wages garnished until the department could afford to fix it. Next to the cruiser was a huge metal structure, burnished bronze and discolored steel, what might have been a weather vane designed by an antiestablishment artist on a strong drug.


It flashed in time with the cruiser''s light. Maybe an electrical field at play or some kind of quantum property that entangled to the cruiser''s engine and caused the mechanical trouble. Either way I stayed well clear. "You okay?" Cherabino asked. "Yeah," I said and got out of the car next to her. Even though the wind was bitterly cold, the concrete pathway was warm, some kind of deicing setup I could feel even through the shoes. There were small metallic flowers holding lights along the walkway, and the ove.


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