Forewarning: This story concerns adult fantasy topics, especially in the area of (big surprise for this site) breast enlargement. It also hopefully contains characterizations and a plotline interesting enough to make the reader briefly forget about where the sex scenes went to. Since all of the above are considered to be adult topics, especially the idea of plot, you have to be over the age of discretion in your home country to read further. Sorry about that. Comments and correspondence can be sent to sam_tuirel@nac.net, with the understanding that the tone of the missive will be the tone of the reply. Minor note: in the absence of text tricks, I use < > to indicate thought and { } for typed communication. _ _ underlines words in between. The Real Tough Format will be along. One day. For benefits of file space, mailing ease, and continuity, this is Part III. If you haven't read Part I yet, you might want to. Even part II. It's proven helpful in the past. Once upon a time... 13. 46: The court of last resort Sounds of a genetics lab in full swing. "Where the hell are the peptide charts?" "Over on top of the electron microscope, last time I looked. You can always tell where Sadira's been working." "Hey! I knew where it was!" "Yeah, but I needed it. Mouse, if you think this is fun, try living with her. I never let homework out of my sight. It would quickly and quietly vanish away." "I never touched your papers --" "-- I know. Your piles were Boojums. They made things disappear on their own." "Pamela: your file. Sadira: the blood tests are done." They crowded around to see the results. Jason rediscovered one of the benefits of being tall: he could clear a lot of space by opening his stance and arms. "Not spreadable," he said. "I couldn't even find any virus corpses." "Nice to know part of the design worked." Pamela looked further down. "Those are the hormone readings? Are those decimal points in the right places?" Sadira looked. "Ya, dey are. Welcome ta Chemical Central." The rest was read in silence. "That's the total picture," Jason eventually said. "Metabolism, tissue buildup --" Sadira unconsciously rubbed the side of her right breast: she'd taken her own cell samples "-- ATP carriers, site interactions, the works. Sadira, are your nails and hair growing any faster?" She glanced at her hands. "Not really." Sadira thought it over. "So current cells aren't dying any faster." "No, just general repairs, and replication in the breast tissue and surrounding skin. You're not prematurely aging." Sadira drew back slightly: she had never considered the possibility. <"You have to learn to think things through..."> "And now that we have a definite statement on what's happening," Pamela said, "we focus on stopping it. The photocopier's in the far left corner, Mouse: one for each of us." "Agreed," Jason said, and handed the printout to Pamela. She looked at it, then at him, then shook her head and headed for the photocopier. Sadira watched her go. "I see you're learning how to handle her," she said softly. It wasn't really necessary: the age of the building and odd layout of equipment killed the acoustics. Combined with the humming of the machinery, they had to yell to each other from thirty feet. "You could have given me a manual," Jason replied sotto voce. "Figuring her out from scratch -- it would easier to re-code the entire human genome." "Don't worry. She likes you." Jason glanced around the maze, trying to see if Pamela was coming back. "How can you tell?" "You're not trying to get the paper out of your throat." He cleared the aforementioned body part. "Oh." A long pause. "What time is it, anyway?" "Eleven-forty. Must have been the Powerbar you two split: you haven't slowed down." "The Great Dictator hasn't told us to knock off for the night. Besides, I like the taste. Raisin-zinc, right?" Sadira stuck her tongue out at him and walked over to the computers: before leaving the apartment, they'd grabbed every piece of Pamela's personal system. She sat down in front of the left-hand keyboard -- she could still face the screen and type -- and, glancing at the printout, began working with the pregnancy database they'd spent most of the day constructing. "All right. These hormones usually start appearing in the body in the last months, when breast growth is ending, and before lactation begins." "And let's _really_ try not to confuse those sets," Pamela broke in, coming up behind them. "So when the pregnancy is over --" she went to the right-side keyboard and started her own one-handed patter "-- those chemicals are out of the body. But there's another set of hormones and carrier bionisms that enter the picture, as the body starts going back to normal -- and some of those haven't been identified for function. Isn't this fun?" "Hormone therapy?" Jason postulated. "Find out which of these causes shutdown and inject it." Sadira looked up at Jason. "How do we go about gathering samples without a budget and paperwork?" "The local pregnant women?" Jason proposed. "Only if we did a drug screening first," Pamela answered, "And how are we going to find them within hours of giving birth? If we wait outside the maternity wards and persuade them as they leave, they're probably going to want money. Anyone got enough money and time for a thousand samples?" Silence. Pamela turned to Sadira. "Actually, good news: if we find the stall, we still need the samples to test with, and we need the samples to find the stall -- but I think I can get a few pieces from those I've 'assisted' at other labs." She shrugged. "Blackmail. There goes _my_ reputation." Sadira finished the thought. "And if there's a neutralizer, my body _can't_ produce it as long as the sequences are active. If the injected stop hormones are as strong as the growth ones, then it's a stalling action until we find a cure -- but my body has to be told to turn off. Ideally, _I_ have to generate the hormone." The smile was fairly sincere. "However, if either of you come up with a stall, I'll take it." Pamela's voice dropped. "And anything we get, we'd better be damn sure of, because the only test subject is you. All this has to be worked out from the general and then applied onto the specific -- your genetic code. And if the first cure we try goes wrong --" She couldn't finish. "Small scale?" Sadira suggested, trying to keep their spirits -- and her own -- up. "Test it out on cell samples, see what it does." "Of course, but it still doesn't tell us what it'll do to the body as a _unit_," Jason pointed out. "We can get a sample from every major and minor system, but it doesn't tell us what happens when they all get hit together." He leaned against the support column, hips out, palms bracing his back. "I wish we had some uninfected samples to work with: we could hit them with BE-1 and BE-2 in combination, see how the factors interact with each other. It would help a little." "Not if we're going from general to specific on _my_ genetic code," Sadira said sadly. "There's only one of those, and all my cells are infected." There was a span of quiet, at the end of which both Jason and Sadira realized they were waiting for Pamela to say something. They both looked at her. She was still sitting, staring somewhere beyond the screen. "Oh, yes," she whispered. "Oh, _perfect_." "What?" Simultaneous from the other two. "Your genetic code is unique, Iv," Pamela said, the feral grin beginning to spread across her face, "but there's a pretty close copy available for testing." Dead silence filled the lab. Pam's grin got wider. "But she never had leukemia --" Sadira started. "I think I can compensate for that," Jason said. "I've been studying the effects of the disease on cells: I can bring it down to the DNA level." "She's close enough for a bone marrow transplant," Pamela added through her teeth, the grin remaining behind the words like a distorted Cheshire Cat. "Genetically, she's the closest possible variant we could ask for. And --" her teeth parted slightly, and her tongue was momentarily visible "-- it'll really piss her off. We'll have to disrupt her schedule. She'll lose money. _Her_ reputation gets shot." Sadira didn't move. Jason said, "But how do we find her? She's a dancer: she travels all over the country. Probably outside it, too -- and then we have to contact her, convince her to come --" "She's getting a choice?" Pamela rhetorically asked. "I think I can find her, though. Internet time." Jason stepped over to Pamela's station. "You have a plan." "Some dancers have web sites -- read an article in _Web World_. Their fans send them Email, they sell merchandise, put up pictures for download -- and put up schedules so their fans know where to find them. And from what Sadira's told me, she would _never_ pass up an opportunity to make money. Right, Ebs?" It was either a nod, or her head just lolled forward a bit. The Search page came up. Pamela looked like a snow leopard about to pounce. "What's her stage name? Princess something..." "Pirou," Jason said. "Try it." Pamela typed, waited, then began scrolling down. "Danni's Hard Drive, Crazy Horse Saloon, Pinups -- her ass is _mine_!" She double-clicked. Any resemblance to gunshots was purely inspirational. The text came up first. "Welcome to the Princess Pirou Web Page, my Subjects -- lays it on a bit thick, doesn't she?" Pamela nodded. "Yes, I am over eighteen and wish to see the next link -- pay per view? Fine: five dollars to log on, one time only, or enter ID number." Pamela reached back for her purse, which was hung over the back of the chair. "Here's my Visa number, dear: it's worth it." The next screen came up, a background of flowing Arabic script against which frames were rapidly appearing. Pam went for the scroll bar as soon as it showed up and pulled down. "Schedule!" More clicks. The page was practically all text: they ignored the arriving picture and looked down. "Week of March 18th-25th," Jason read, "Al's Barn --" and his grin mirrored Pamela's "-- Philadelphia." "Showtimes 1, 6, 9, 11, and 2 in the morning," Pamela finished. "It's almost midnight now: think we can make it in time?" "I've seen the way you drive. I think we can make it yesterday." "Forget aiding and abetting." Pamela rubbed her hands in delight. "We might just add _kidnapping_ to our rap sheets." They both looked at Sadira, still smiling. Sadira was sitting quietly, expressionless, eyes vacant. Jason put his hands on her shoulders. "Sadira?" "I want," she said very slowly, face unchanging, "to make one stop first." "Three in the morning!" Pamela slammed a fist against the steering wheel, awakening Jason, who had been sleeping in the back. Sadira had snoozed on and off on the way down. There had been plenty of time for naps: the New Jersey Turnpike Authority had for once wisely decided that the best time to repair the roads was a time when virtually no one was using them: early in the a.m. Unfortunately, _virtually_ no one still comprised a few hundred cars and trucks trying to creep through a single lane at the twenty mils per hour requested by the signs. While few New York or New Jersey drivers had respect for speed limits, the numerous police cars parked between the road crews and the smaller signs that said {Traffic fines tripled in work areas} had added to their lawfulness. The usual breakneck ninety-minute drive to Philadelphia had taken nearly double that, with additional time to find the strip club. "I know these damn shows never start on time," Pamela swore, "but we're pushing the limits." Sadira looked at her ex-roommate. "'I read an article on dancer web sites,'" she paraphrased. "'I know these shows don't start on time.' Exactly where were you going to on your occasional 'Wednesday night recharges?'" "Research," Pamela said, trying -- and failing -- to keep the embarrassment out of her voice. "Shaddap." Jason stretched within what space he had and reached for the door. "No," Sadira said. "This is just me. You two wait here." Pamela's voice immediately went to disappointment. "You're not asking me to miss this, are you? I want to see her face..." "Me," Sadira said, opening the door. The man in the booth at the bottom of the staircase was still collecting admission fees an hour before closing, but was apparently too tired to check ID or look to see who was handing him money: Sadira slid a five through the slot and went in. The strip club was practically empty: the dancers were on the verge of outnumbering the people. Three were engaged in very close dancing -- they were practically in the men's laps -- while two more slowly swayed on a large, partially elevated stage which sat in the center of the huge room, with chairs and the occasional occupant arrayed around it. A well-stocked bar occupied most of the wall closest to the entrance, and there were tables, chairs, waitresses, and drunks everywhere else. Two couples were quietly talking, and one woman was studying a textbook. Both feats bordered on the miraculous, because the sound system was too loud and the lighting wasn't pleasant to the eyes. The overall effect was of a disco that had exploded. Three seconds after she walked in, a waitress tried to sell her two mandatory drinks. Sadira gave her twelve dollars -- the two plus the tip -- and left before she could ask for an order. Working on instinct, Sadira picked out the largest, best-dressed, most bored looking man in the room and went up to him. "Pardon me," she carefully began. The man looked down. He was huge -- he was Jason's height, but considerably wider in all directions. His body was blocking most of a pink curtain above which the words "Champagne Room" had been embossed in glitter. Sadira caught him squinting at her: either nearsighted or he'd been in the club more than twenty minutes. "Can I help you, miss?" The voice was amazingly gentle. "I hope so. I'm looking for Jasmine Archer. Is she here?" "I'm sorry. I don't know anyone by that name." The big head scanned the room like a rotating lighthouse. "You seem to be our only female customer. Are you sure you have the right club?" "How about Princess Pirou?" The big man nodded. "That's her real name? Yes, she's still here: finished up her last set twenty minutes ago, posed for a few photos with customers, and went to the feature's dressing room." "Where is that?" A smile. "I'm sorry, miss, but I can't let fans backstage. You can wait for her out here if you like, but when she was here last year, she stayed until closing every night." The waitress came up. "Miss, your drinks..." She was also squinting. It had to be the lighting. "Later," Sadira said, then, "I'm not a fan. I'm a sister. Can I go backstage?" The big man bent down slightly and squinted at her face: Sadira stood on tiptoe to help him and found her balance dubious -- then went flat-footed again and said, "You can probably see the facial resemblance. And --" suddenly inspired, she unzipped the extra-roomy jacket Pam had bought her at the House and got it open in a single move "-- the physical ones." He looked at her, up and down. She held her gaze (and the edges of the jacket) and waited. "I can see it." He grinned: it was like watching a glacier break off an ice cliff. "You've got a better sense of humor, though." He brought a ham hand up and rubbed his chin, considering. "I'll take you back." They went through a shadowed door and suddenly stood in normal human lighting: the big man spent several seconds blinking. "Third door on the left," he whispered. "I take it you want to surprise her." "Yeah. What's your name?" "Emmitt." "Thanks, Emmitt. I appreciate this." "No problem." He began to turn, heading back for the door -- stopped, gave her the lightest of touches on her right arm with a huge fist, whispered, "Give her hell," and left. Sadira stared after him. She looked down the hall at the partially-open door with the gold star at head height. It suddenly seemed very far away. She steeled herself, took a few bites of an supposedly-apple- flavored Powerbar so everything else would seem better by comparison, and started walking, her right hand reaching into a pocket for the first of her prior purchases. Within actual seconds and perceptual hours, she was next to the door. Sadira peered around the corner, the item held ready. It was a decent-sized room. There was a large makeup station close to the door on the right wall, with full lighting and a tremendous array of cosmetics racked around a three-mirror setup. An expensive notebook computer lay next to a tray of eyeshadow. The rest of the paint had been covered by graffiti, dozens of small comments from the dancers who had passed through, as if they'd wanted to leave proof of their existence. Sadira quickly and automatically read a few that she had the angle for: they ranged from funny observances to quiet sadness. The far wall held costumes on long poles, about fifteen of them, including fashion nightmares of sparkles and feathers, silken veils -- naturally -- service and sports uniforms, a Western set with a short lasso, and something that reminded her of the leather armor her favorite role-playing character had always worn -- but only because they were both leather. There were several large, open carrying cases near the racks. The left wall held a cot, and the cot held Jasmine. Sadira was looking at her from the back: Jasmine was sitting up with a clipboard braced against the rear support of the bed, facing the costume wall. She was writing, the pen slowly scritching from one line to the next. From Sadira's angle, she could make out no features, but the posture (familiar from long hours of homework), combined with the side view, was enough. She could also see Jasmine's hair, which had grown out until it nearly matched her own length, all of it dyed bottle-blond, falling gently over street clothes. Sadira quietly moved until she was fully inside, object at the ready and angled at the mirror, where both of their images were visible. Jasmine kept writing. "Jasmine," Sadira said, the first word in over four years, and waited. Jasmine's back stiffened, and her neck snapped up, gaze removed from the clipboard -- but she didn't turn. She just sat there, facing the veiled costume. "What the hell are you doing here?" Her voice was a little higher than Sadira's, a little sharper. "I came to see you. I --" and the next words were so hard "-- I need your help." Jasmine nodded. "Fuck off," she said, and went back to the clipboard. "Oh, I forgot: you don't know _how_ to fuck off. Paid anyone to take your virginity yet? If that's the help you came for, I'll be happy to lend you the three million it'll take to persuade someone to jump your skinny ass." Sadira went through over a hundred responses before she found one that was safe to say. "I wouldn't have come if I wasn't serious." "Seriously forgetful. In case it slipped your mind, let me refresh your memory: we hate each other. We had a little contest, I won, and you resented it." "Adolescence isn't a contest." "You're saying that because you lost." She shook her head. "I wouldn't help you into the street to get hit by a bus." She paused. "No, that's the exception." "Jasmine, _turn around_." There must have been something in the tone, something that couldn't be denied, or perhaps Jasmine just thought she could deal out more pain face-to-face. Whatever it was, she turned, pivoting her body on the mattress, and looked. The instant Sadira spotted her eyes -- the moment she saw awareness and the first effects crossing her face -- she hit the button. The camera flashed. Jasmine, startled, recoiled, nearly losing her balance, trying to blink away the light. Sadira took the camera away from the door frame and pocketed it. "You know," she said pleasantly, leaning against it herself, "everything I've been through in the past few days -- the running, the wreck, panic, desperation, all of it -- that just balanced the books." Jasmine, her eyes clear again, sat up straight, stared, then said "_Come here_," in almost the same tone Sadira had mustered. Sadira took one casual step forward. Jasmine stood up. Nearly identical faces, concealing very different minds, considered each other carefully. "You're real," Jasmine said slowly. "You can tell?" "I've been dancing four years. Real flesh, even in a bra, moves in a way that implants don't. Most of the features can spot a boob job across the room through two layers." Sadira could hear the shock in her voice -- the insulating, isolating kind. "And of course, you're even better at it." Jasmine, still too stunned to catch the tone, just nodded. "You're still smaller than me," she said, rallying a little. "Wait about sixty hours." Sadira was, despite everything, enjoying herself. Jasmine either missed or ignored most of the implications: Sadira would have bet on the later. "What do you need my help for? I sell old bras to the suckers for a hundred and fifty each. Go talk to Crystal Storm: she's an easy touch." It was about to become less fun. "Jasmine, I have a disease. That's what's causing the growth." "A _disease_!" Jasmine snorted. "Fuck, I know people who would pay you to give it to them. I'll give you five thousand for one good infection: I won't have to go for the boob job in July." It was Sadira's turn to recoil: Jasmine saw it, and was visibly pleased. "You're going to have an enlargement?" "Right, _genius_: I can at least _think_ about a _surgical procedure_ without needing a sedative. I've been dancing at this size for four years. If I get a boost, my income gets one." She patted her breasts, one hand each. "The surgeons tell me that with my natural size, there's room to pump me up quite a bit and still look natural. Not that the rubes care if I'm shaped like those stupid dice you used to roll. Can I ask _you_ a favor?" Her eyes glinted. "Will you come into the operating room and hold my hand while they put me under?" The anger came first, Sadira's arm going back, hand curling into a fist -- and then, a split second later, the memories followed. Her hand fell open as her senses reeled, and she stumbled back against the door frame. "Haven't thought about that for a while, have you? If you've got some bug that finally did you the favor of giving you something to look at besides your grades -- you're stuck wherever it leaves you, aren't you?" It was meant to hurt, it started out as a torture implement -- but somewhere in the middle, it had taken on a thoughtful tone. "Sixty hours? How fast are you growing?" "Four inches a day, for the rest of my life," Sadira spat. "Mark it on your calendar, Jasmine: sometime around four p.m. Thursday, the "big" sister and the "little" sister switch positions." The next words were a growl, a voice that went five rungs down the evolutionary ladder. "You're right: I am forgetful. I had to forget seven years of hell to have _any_ hope that you would help me. Isn't it nice to see me being an idiot? Consider it as four years worth of belated birthday presents. In fact, let me give you the rest of the lifetime's now: without your help, I'm probably going to die, and you literally won't have to lift a finger to make it happen." She turned and left the room. Sadira got three steps down the hall before she heard "You're serious." She had taken her fear, so close to the surface at that moment, and molded it, directed it at Jasmine's weak spot: her ego. It was hard to reign over a corpse -- and the crack about passing her might have hit home, too: Jasmine had stopped mentioning Kay as another "true" Archer when their cousin first showed signs of potentially getting bigger than her. In Jasmine's world, everyone else had to be second. She stopped, and waited. "This is like the leukemia, right? You need something from me to stop this." Sadira didn't turn. "Money or me?" "You." She could hear the deep breath. "And without me, you're dead." Sadira kept quiet. "So," and the mockery was back, "my genius sister needs me to save her life _again_." "Right." Sadira could also hear the smile. "Then I win again." Silence. Finally, Jasmine said, "How long is this going to take?" "How long are they going to take?" Pamela was alternating stares at the door and her watch, ten seconds between shifts. "I should have gone in there. I should have kicked Jasmine's ass all the way back to New York." "Give them time," Jason suggested. "They haven't seen each other in four years. They have to talk it out." A small truck pulled up behind them, and a medium-sized man got out, rubbing his stomach as he headed for the door. Pamela watched him: the club closed in fifty minutes, and he was the first customer she'd seen. He had to be desperate to be up this late. "Three minutes," Pamela said, "and then I'm personally taking Normandy from the Germans." Ron walked slowly down the stairs, contentedly burping. He'd been attempting to live off the strip club buffet for most of the day, and had found it was impossible to survive on bad lasanga and grey stew. It had been getting late, and he'd decided to risk a run on the twenty-four hour Burger King half a mile away. He wasn't allowed to bring food into the club, and he'd meant to eat it outside the door, but it had smelled so good that he'd had to try a french fry, and then he'd just stood there and enjoyed himself. Overall, it was one of the weirder assignments Nigilo had thrown his way: follow this exotic dancer, change your appearance every so often so she doesn't get suspicious, and see if her sister contacts her. Here's a head-and-shoulders ID photo. Memorize it. If -- when she comes by, catch her, stop her, do what you have to, that's another reason you should use makeup. Grab her on the way out, or tail her -- you're the expert. Just get her back to me. At least he got to watch the girls -- the Princess wasn't the best performer: her act consisted of strutting and shaking. It was three in the morning, for Christ's sake. What could he have missed? Jasmine finished typing, pulled the modem line out of the wall, and snapped the notebook computer shut. "Fred will send someone to get my things and pull a vacationer in to finish the week." "You don't feel sorry for her, do you?" "Why should I? It's your fault for catching this." Sadira hadn't told her about the occurrence of infection. "I bet all the AIDS rights group send you donation requests." "No, you're thinking of the rapists who write from prison. I keep donating your address, but no one's done anything with it. I guess there's some things even a psycho won't touch." She grabbed a large duffel bag: Sadira could make out the outline of video tape cases. "We'll go back to my hotel and pick up my clothes. How long _is_ this going to take, anyway? I have a vacation next week." "I don't know. One day with incredible luck and smarts --" "-- two strikes on you --" "-- probably longer. You'll probably have to stay the whole time." It wasn't a fate worse than death, but it had its foot over the dividing line, ready to step across. "Trust you to fuck my life up." "Then I guess I am doing some fucking after all." "Yeah. And that's the only kind you get to do." Sadira controlled her reaction: she just hadn't seen the rebound coming off the boards. "I'm ready. Let's go." Jasmine went past her and headed down the hall. Sadira followed. Ron took his seat and gazed at the stage. It would soon be time for the night shift. Jack had to watch the Princess' hotel while she slept. He'd lost the coin toss. The first quiet day of what promised to be a very profitable job -- if he didn't blow it all back on tips to the dancers. His expense account was limited to travel, residence, food, admissions, and bribes. Then again, a tip was a sort of bribe. He'd heard that if you gave the girls enough money, Something Could Happen. At some point, he was going to try it. The door to the ladies' area opened, and he automatically glanced at it. The Princess was going home: time to wrap it up for the night. There was another girl behind her. He looked closer. Jasmine and Sadira walked across the room. To be precise, Sadira walked. Jasmine marched. "Have a good night," Emmitt said. Jasmine snorted. Emmitt shrugged at Sadira as she went by. She returned the gesture and followed Jasmine up the stairs. They reached the open air quickly: Sadira squinted at the Neon, barely able to make out Jason and Pamela through the tinted windows on the dark street. "That's the car." A man's voice, right behind them, said, "No, it's not." Ron poked his index fingers forward, one for each sister's lower back. They froze. "That's the car: the red Toyota truck. Both of you get in." He hadn't figured on both sisters leaving together, but what the hell: bonus money. "Mr. Nigilo wants to see you." "Jasmine," the sister said to the Princess, still looking at the Neon. "Is this thing in my back what I think it is?" The Princess grudgingly nodded. "Fifty-fifty. I know which half I'm rooting for on _your_ spine." Pamela and Jason stared, afraid to get out of the car. One wrong move, anything that panicked the gunman... Jason looked closely at the scene, squinting through the window, looking for an edge, a chance... "Pam," he said slowly, "Sadira's winking at us." Pamela looked at him, then hit a button. Jason heard all the doors unlock. "Oh," Sadira said faintly. "Then I guess I have no choice." She brought her left foot up and _back_. There was a very satisfying crunch, but not as good as it could have been: she'd caught him on the thigh. It was still enough to stagger him back. Sadira spun around, somehow managing to keep her balance, prevent her feet from tripping on each other, _and_ get her second purchase out of her pocket in one motion. The man, starting to recover, tried to focus on her hand. "Asshole," she said, "I'm from Brooklyn." Sadira thrust the taser forward. A blue spark leapt, and she smelled the faintest trace of ozone, barely distinguishable over the sensory assault from the man's scream. Jasmine ran for the Neon. "Back passenger seat!" Sadira yelled, grabbing the shotgun position. The sisters Archer jumped in the car: Pamela started the engine, and it leapt into gear, screeching down the road. 14. 47: The curbs of Philadelphia Sadira automatically went for her seat belt, laughing all the way. "My father taught _me_ the difference between a finger and a gun!" Pamela immediately figured it out and started giggling herself. Jasmine had dived into and across the passenger seat, covering her head with her arms as if waiting for the gunshot to fly over her. This position left her sprawled across Jason's lap -- something she was just beginning to become aware of. She rolled onto her back and looked up. Jason, who had been aware of the problem for some time, but uncertain as to how he was going to express it, just looked forward. Jasmine took a moment and appreciated what she could see of his profile. "Hi," she said casually. "Hello," Jason replied. Jasmine carefully said, "_Who_ wants to see you?" The laughter from the front seats, already subsiding, abruptly stopped. "Nigilo," came Sadira's slow reply. "But why would he put a tail on her?" Pamela asked. "Did he guess we were going to grab her for samples?" "If he thought I was going to contact her under normal circumstances, then he's working from the wrong data base," Sadira said. Jason leaned forward. "Then he must think we're working on a cure -- but why not snatch Jasmine and use her as a bargaining chip?" Pamela shook her head. "Because he figured we'd beat that bluff with a deuce-high --" "_What the hell is going on here_!" Through mirrors and direct vision, they all looked at Jasmine, still in Jason's lap. Jasmine slowly sat up, leaving Jason unencumbered, then said to Sadira, "I thought we were actually going into a hospital. They'd do some testing on me, on you, inject something, done. Or, knowing you, do it all on the pavilion _outside_ the hospital. Instead, I walk outside, have someone pull a finger on me --" she paused briefly as the word structure came across "-- says someone wants to see you -- and he was talking to _you_, Sadira. And these two don't look like doctors and that one --" pointing at Pamela "-- looks like an corpse." She ignored the sharp intake of breath from the driver's seat. "So I repeat: what the hell is going on here? If this is one of your stupid pranks, I'm not laughing!" Pamela hit the brakes and pulled over. When the others finished realigning their necks, they found the car parked parallel to the street in the middle of a huge driveway, ten feet from a sign that said {No Parking. Loading Zone Only.} Pamela cut the engine, unfastened her seat belt, and turned around, torquing at the waist and moving closer to her door, until her breasts touched the seat and she faced Jasmine at an angle. A streetlight illuminated the interior of the car from the front windshield. Pamela had a pretty good idea what it looked like to Jasmine: the blue eyes in the white face, with the light glaring in the background: something three inches to the wrong side of the natural world. "So," she said, voice patient and neutral, "you want to know what's going on." "Fucking straight I do!" There was the slightest of quavers. Every word was at exactly the same pitch. "Oh, it's very easy to explain. You're right. We're not doctors. Not recognized doctors, anyway. We're trying to recreate the work of Victor Frankenstein, but we decided to go with an intact body that was already missing a brain. Sadira suggested you. And here you are." The feral smile appeared. "Now don't you feel better for knowing that?" Sadira stared at Pamela. No one noticed. Jasmine stared at Pamela, who held ground until Jasmine said "Fuck you." "You should be so lucky." Pamela glanced at Sadira, who hadn't blinked yet. "I paid for the taser. I told you to use it on her if she gave you any trouble. Can I have it back now?" Sadira's right hand tightened around the plastic box. Jasmine looked at Jason, who was looking at the other women, then went to Sadira. "Okay, Casper is insane. So _again_, what the --" "-- sorry, what was that?" Pamela's voice had gotten very low. "Enough!" Jason threw his arms into the space between the front seats. "We're never going to get anywhere if you just fight with each other!" Sadira looked at Pamela for a moment longer, trying to project her thought. It didn't work. They were _never_ going to prove psionics at this rate. Jason slowly brought his arms back to a ready position. "Jasmine, my name is Jason Pterros. I work -- worked with Sadira at GenTree. There was an accident with a non-contagious virus. I overheard one of the top executives ordering a search to get Sadira back. That's the first sign we've seen of it." The sisters automatically focused on each other. Jasmine spoke, slow and steady. "I was at risk and you didn't see fit to tell me?" "We never thought they would target you --" Jason broke in again. "Sadira has the virus and the knowledge to create it. She's the primary target. They must have been hoping she'd come to you at some point." "For the cure?" Jasmine said. "The genius is right for once: there's no other way we'd see each other." "You're not the cure. You're our means of testing any potential cure we might devise. Pamela and I are geneticists: we're working together on --" "-- on using _me_ as a guinea pig?" Jasmine's voice was getting higher, faster. "You're _all_ nuts! I'm getting out --" Sadira felt a wrench, and then her hand was empty as Pamela held the sparking taser in front of Jasmine's face, arm stretched out in a way that came close to dislocating her shoulder. "Shut up," Pamela suggested, "and let the man explain." The man explained. Jasmine listened until she had it all, interrupting once to suggest that they start heading for her hotel to grab her clothing. Pamela had quietly put the car back on the road and followed the occasional, somewhat more polite directions. When Jason finished, Jasmine said, "She did it to herself, didn't she?" Jason said nothing. Jasmine turned to Sadira and continued. "What was it? Dropped it, fumbled it into your eyes, tripped? That's what 'accident' always means around you." Sadira instinctively averted her eyes, an answer in itself. Jasmine shook her head, blond strands shifting. "You develop a virus to make breasts grow and then _you_ catch it. Maybe it wasn't an accident at all." "I don't think you understand." The first words out of Pamela in five minutes. "This is potentially fatal." "How? No one ever died from having big tits." Sadira's mind whirled. "It's possible," Jason said tightly. "And before that..." He didn't want to set Sadira off by detailing the chain. Jasmine sat back and thought. "Kidnapped by mad scientists with my looney sister in charge." She took a deep breath. "Are we at the hotel yet?" They reached the Adam's Mark five minutes later. Pamela pulled into the circular driveway and parked. "According to the instructions, a taser hit lasts about twenty minutes, and he's not going to be driving well for a while after that. It took us fifteen minutes to get here from the club. We're probably fine, but I'm not giving the lab rat --" a glance in the rear view mirror at Jasmine "-- a chance to reconsider. Mouse, help her with the bags." Jason nodded. Pamela unlocked the doors, and the back seat emptied out. They went into the hotel. Sadira folded her arms over her chest -- it felt weird. She put her hands in her lap. "What were you doing?" "Giving tactical instructions. Did you want to? I always called group tactics in the games." "You know exactly what I mean." "Apparently not, or I wouldn't be using the following words: what exactly do you mean?" "You're trying to start a fight with Jasmine." "You mean you'd object to seeing me hit her?" Sadira gave up on the lap stance and went for the folded arms again. It worked better if she held them lower. "I've never known you to go after someone without _some_ provocation. Even a phone call before noon. The corpse crack was a little below your usual standards for pit bull mode. She got in the car and you were off the leash and going for her _throat_." "She's been attacking you for how many years? This friendship started because I wouldn't let you get back at someone on your own." She was no longer looking directly at Sadira: Pamela's gaze went past her, checking the hotel doors. Sadira brought her right hand to the matching temple. "Look, it was my idea to get the camera, and I'll treasure the picture, because it might be the only good thing I get out of this." She briefly smiled. "I guess I'm that petty. But it was _still stupid_. I probably nearly blew my chance of getting her to help with that. If you're feeling some displaced revenge -- look, if she goes after you, that's one thing, but don't drive her off because you're trying to make up for my lost time." "That's what you want, then?" Very quiet, almost ethereal. "Well, don't give yourself a stroke trying to keep it all in. I know how aggravating Jasmine can be. Just don't feel you have to play knight in shining armor." "No, that's the Mouse. Only he can't ride." Sadira, thinking she'd pinned it down with half about of her mind, doubting with roughly another fifty percent, and using whatever was left over to consider the last remark, waited for Jason and Jasmine to come out. Ron had, after the initial blast wore off, crawled into a nearby shadow and waited for the remaining effects to recede. It was like watching clouds move across the sun, waiting for the light to break through: there were times when the cover thinned, and he thought that coordinated movement was seconds away -- and then the wind would shift. But he was in the dark, where no one was going to see him and call an ambulance, or the police. If he was arrested or in a hospital, getting to a phone would be difficult. And he had to get to a phone. So he lay there, and groaned, and waited until the sun finally shone. Ron limped down the street to the pay phone and managed to dial the right number on the first try. "Jack," he said hoarsely, "get to the hotel. They're making a break for it, the Princess and the target. They might go there. There might be more of them: the car pulled out like there was someone behind the wheel. Black Neon. The sister has a taser. Just move." Jack hadn't said a word. He'd listened, drawn his own conclusions, and went to work. That was what Ron liked about Jack. Jasmine didn't talk to Jason all the way to the twelfth floor, all the way down the hall, or when he took the electronic key, triggered the door, and went in first to check for intruders. He didn't think he was missing anything. In the middle of gathering clothing -- Jasmine kept the hotel room like Sadira kept her lab -- she said, "So, how long have you known my sister?" "Sadira." "Right. That's her name." The tone was playful. "So how long?" "About nine months." "Partners?" She grabbed a towel from the back of the desk chair. The words "Adam's Mark Hotel" were clearly visible. "We're assigned to the same project." "So you were working on the breast enlargement thing." She scooped the notepad into a purse, pocketed the pens. "You like big breasts?" Jason, who had been leaning inside the doorway, watching the hall and Jasmine on alternate shifts, focused completely on the hallway. "We were working on the leukemia editor. The BE viruses were Sadira's personal project." "Oh, they would be. Leukemia, huh? You didn't answer my question." "What question was that?" Still no one coming down the hallway. He was starting to wish someone would. He was considering making someone up. "Do you like big breasts?" Her voice had an almost eerie innocence to it. He didn't look at her. "I'm not going to answer that." "That's okay," she said breezily. "That _is_ an answer. I'm done." She walked out past him, carrying two large bags, one in each hand -- and despite the fact that the bags should have kept her away from his body, she _still_ managed to brush her chest against him as she went by. A calm, utterly detached portion of his brain noted that Jasmine looked somewhat smaller than she had in the _Gent_ layout, after allowing for the different arm position. She pushed a bag at him, eyes suggesting. He took it and the point position, using his longer legs to gain ground. The silence in the car was becoming deafening. Sadira reached for the radio and flipped it on, searching the dial until she found a instrumental piece, then left it there. It was a soft theme, a bridge to something -- she could almost identify it -- -- Jasmine and Jason came out of the hotel, each carrying a bag. Pamela noticed them, hit another button, and popped the trunk. They loaded the cases, closed the trunk, came around to the sides -- -- a silver Thunderbird was staring to pull up behind them. Jason glanced back at it: he'd always appreciated classic lines on a car, and this one was in perfect condition. They got in the car, Pamela shifted out of neutral -- -- and the slowing Thunderbird leapt back to life, accelerating into the curve. Pamela, checking the rear-view mirror, noticed immediately. She pulled back onto the street, heading for Route 1 North and eventual access to the Turnpike. Three blocks later, she swerved to the left without benefit of turn signal or sufficient time, wheels hopping around the curb as they barreled down the side street, still picking up speed. Jasmine, who disdained seatbelts, was thrown into Jason. "Ivory --!" Sadira yelled. Her brain took a moment and pinned down the music: _Ride of the Valkyries_. Pamela glanced back. The Thunderbird made the turn, its body riding up onto the sidewalk before thudding back onto the street, accelerating all the way. "We're being followed," Pamela said calmly. "His mistake." The accelerator pedal hit the floor with a deadly thud. "He's overmatched." The briefest of side glances to Sadira. "Tri-Delta sorority house. The beer bash." Sadira automatically let out a heartfelt groan. "Jason, grab ahold of something." Jason, who already had something whose hands seemed to be grabbing ahold of _him_, pushed Jasmine upright and pulled the seat belt across her waist, trying to ignore the areas he was crossing and brushing against. "Tri-Delta?" "Science sorority. Supposedly. Some of the girls could barely spell the symbol for oxygen --" Pamela pulled the wheel to the right and held on, avoiding a cluster of trash cans awaiting pickup. "We tried to join before we found out what a bunch of assholes they were -- asked us to dress up in each other's clothing for the initiation rite, took pictures, and pasted them all over the Residence Hall --" The Thunderbird took the corner and the trash cans head on, knocking them aside like bowling pins and leaving a seven-ten split. Jason winced as he saw the dents in the hood; sympathy for the vehicle. "Pamela, we're not faster than that thing!" Pamela was either lost in reminiscence or didn't consider it an issue: she kept talking, rocking against the steering wheel as if she was trying to push the car forward. "-- there's an chemical that neutralizes alcohol in a normal liquid base, non-poisonous, doesn't work in the bloodstream, unfortunately. Sadira made some and we sneaked into the basement of the sorority house, unspiked all the kegs --" There was a red light up ahead, marking the entrance to a wide intersection, there was a huge delivery truck starting to make that crossing, and Pamela wasn't slowing down. Sadira closed her eyes. Jasmine screamed. Pamela said "-- couldn't be tasted and doesn't really affect the taste of the beer --" and swerved hard to the left, leaping onto the sidewalk, the car shaking from the jump, and drove a good forty feet across the concrete before the car went back into the street -- now driving on the wrong side. "--and they didn't know what we did even after they caught us coming out --" A Fiat went by, horn blaring as it changed lanes to avoid the collision. Jason, hands clenched against the back of Sadira's seat, looked back to see the Thunderbird making the turn, taking the leap over the sidewalk without grace -- the car was built for speed, not strength of suspension -- and was visibly rocked as it returned to the street. They all heard the long, angry honk of the truck as it sped away -- Jason realized it had been going on for some time -- and that small, detached part of his mind took over his mouth and said, "Then what happened?" "Sadira distracted most of them so I could get out -- I'm not exactly built for speed --" but the Neon was built for more speed than the model would have indicated, and it didn't matter, because the Thunderbird had been made for speed and nothing but, and it was gaining ground. "-- and we managed to get to my car. They decided to chase us." They were approaching another intersection, and Pamela was easing the wheel to the left, as if getting ready for another turn another onto another wrong-way street, wildly checking all mirrors and windows, still not slowing down. "And then?" Jason asked, watching as the Thunderbird got closer -- the driver's window was rolling down, and he thought he could see the slightest glint of light off metal... "Oh," Pamela said, "something like _this_ --" She spun the wheel to the right, _hard_. The car dived across the intersection, driver's side scraping against the lane divider as they sped through, but there wasn't enough time to reach the street again, the wheels couldn't react that fast, they were heading for a space between a streetlight and a fence and there wasn't three inches clearance on either side -- -- they went through without touching, house light flashing through the wooden fence like a mad strobe before Pamela brought the car back onto the road two inches past a hydrant, pedal still flush against the floor -- -- Jason, Sadira, and Jasmine all looked back in time to see the Thunderbird try to make the turn, controlling the vehicle smoothly through the still-empty intersection, but winding up with the same choice Pamela had wound up with: go between fence and streetlight or crash into one of them. The Thunderbird was significantly wider than the Neon. They all heard the desperate screech of brakes as the driver realized he'd been had, too little, too late, it was fence or streetlight, pick one -- Streetlight. Bad choice. The front of the Thunderbird caved in as the momentum bent the post forward, sparks flying from the grinding metal, dividing the car in half as if someone had taken a chainsaw to a block of cheese, the razor teeth stopping a bare millimeter from the windshield. Pamela eased her foot onto the brakes. " -- only worse," she added as they finally slowed down. "Anyway, they went back to the party and drank all the beer. Unfortunately, that chemical is a very powerful emetic..." Jasmine had somehow managed to dump enough adrenaline from her system to fall asleep leaning against the passenger door. Sadira had started to feel the first after-effects of the chase and promptly scarfed two Powerbars. Seventy miles later, Jason's heart was still beating too loudly for him to sleep. "Mouse," Pamela said, "exactly why did you want to pull Sadira out of GenTree? After that little performance, I'd like a bit more data to work with." Jason looked at Sadira, who had also fallen asleep. The difference between the sisters was marked. Jasmine wriggled and shifted almost constantly, straining towards any new sound. Sadira simply sat in place, head slightly tilted, her breathing slow, oblivious. "Nothing specific, really." "So give me general." Jason shrugged. "Rumors. I kept hearing that certain members of the staff had been caught on ethical or legal violations, and some of them were kicked up to bigger projects, or put onto private ones. One guy -- Temperi -- supposedly got caught having sex in his lab --" "-- big deal --" "-- with a twelve-year old. He claimed he didn't know and couldn't tell, and he got a raise and a bigger lab two weeks later. No charges." Jason shrugged. "I heard whispers like that about a third of the employes in R&D, and no one ever seemed to be fired. That some of the projects were of dubious medical benefit, and the results were for sale to the highest bidder. Rumors fly around every lab, but not like those. I was scared of what might happen to Sadira if she went to them for help." "Like what?" "Isolation. Testing. Replication." Silence summarized every other possibility. "They might have helped her find a cure -- if I was wrong, I don't want to think about how much time we lost -- but if I was right..." "Oh, you were right," Pamela assured him. "No one pulls stunts like we just saw for laughs. Protecting their reputation or whatever, they want her back." She laughed softly: Jasmine stirred and then settled down again. "I was hoping that two minutes after you left the building, Nigilo turned around and said, 'No, it's too impractical. Let her go. We'll never get her back anyway.' When we didn't see anyone..." She sighed. "But why watch the Princess and not come to me? Do they know I'm out there? How much time do we have before they find us?" Jason had been thinking about it for over an hour. "I don't know. They've got Sadira's college files: that's a given. They must know what you do for a living." "Maybe. Maybe not. I don't exactly advertise these days and I'm not on the best of terms with the school. No one wants their employers to know they went for outside help." Pamela smiled. "And I'm going to hang onto that delusion as long as I can -- but we have to be ready for anything." Jason interlocked his fingers and leaned forward. "I thought about going to the control agencies a few times," he said, "but I never had any proof, and with all the security around GenTree, I had no way to discover any. I was bonded and they had me locked down. There was nothing I could do. And we were doing good work, looking for a way to cure leukemia, ahead of everyone else in the country and when Sadira came on the project, we picked up speed. I thought it would all even out. That the cure covered whatever corruption there was." "'Do the ends justify the means?'" Pamela semi-quoted. She looked at Sadira. "This time, they do." There was the usual hassle in waking Sadira up: Pamela finally had to tickle her. They all staggered up the stairs. Pamela entered the apartment as if she was establishing a beachhead and found no enemy to fight. She gestured the others in. Jasmine stepped through carefully, looking at the boxes. "I think we're safe here," Pamela said. "I'm renting this place from the real owner for three hundred a month more than she's paying: it has rent control. The price is still pretty good, but it isn't under my name, and I have to get my mail at a P.O. Box. They'd have to go through a tangle of paperwork to get here without following us." Jason looked around the apartment and realized just how small it really was: with four people, it was going to be almost impossible to manage space. Jasmine staggered in last, rubbing her eyes. Jason stepped out of the way, heading for the kitchen. She looked around and realized the same thing. "Give me the address of this lab. I'll go to a hotel." "No, you won't," Pamela told her. "None of us go anywhere alone after that chase. We travel together, two or four." Jasmine turned towards her, about to protest -- and got her first full-length look at Pamela. She kept looking. Pamela stepped closer to Jasmine as Sadira headed to the refrigerator, looking for a drink. "Right," she said softly. "I'm bigger than you --" a mischievous pause "-- and taller than you, and a hell of a lot meaner, and you're going to listen to me because I'm right. Fair enough?" Jasmine glared up at her and said nothing. Pamela nodded and made her own survey of the apartment, yawning widely. "Okay, how are we going to work this -- got it. Mouse, on the floor. Princess, you too. Sadira, you've got the bed with me." Everyone looked at Pamela. "On top," Pamela amended, then, very quickly, "of the sheets. I've seen the way you hog covers. I'll get a second set of blankets." She knelt down and started pulling out blankets from the hidden shelves beneath the bed. Sadira nodded sleepily and grabbed the next bra in line from the top of a box before going into the bathroom to change. Jason caught a thrown bundle of sheets and pillows and bedded down in his previous spot. Jasmine, after some thought, shifted a few boxes (after a quick, curious peek at the contents which ended with a jerk backwards and a blanching face) and laid down next to him in her own group of sheets. They were both asleep by the time Sadira got out of the bathroom, wearing one of Pam's nightgowns -- the House hadn't had everything they'd needed. Pamela finished laying down the sheets, closed the heavy curtains across the picture window, and headed for the bathroom. By the time she came out, Sadira was asleep again. Pamela picked her way through the prone forms and took the right side of the bed, wryly noticing that Sadira had already pulled the sheets into a cylinder. She was on her back, leaning towards the center of the bed. Pamela got in, leaned over, and, knowing Sadira wouldn't feel it, gave her a quick kiss on her cheek before nestling among her pillows and finally letting her body shut down. 15. 49: The bloodhounds of war The first thing she was aware of was weight. She was on her back, breathing more quickly as she came to full awareness. There was almost a resistance to the movements of her rib cage, the weight pushing back at her -- not interfering or hurting, the body could shift more mass than that -- but there, well past ignoring. Sadira propped herself up on her elbows, finding it just a little trickier than previous days, and looked over to the floor near the counter. Jason and Jasmine were still asleep. A glance at the curtained window found a background shine of light against the fabric. She finally spotted the clock: two in the afternoon. Pamela was still asleep, the pillows arranged to let her sleep comfortably on a sort of side angle. Her breathing was quiet and slow. One arm was partially outstretched, as if reaching for Sadira's left shoulder. Sadira managed to reach the bathroom without falling over anyone and locked the door behind her, nibbling on another Powerbar. (She was starting to get used to them, which worried her) College rules: first one up dominates the bathroom until the roommate starts complaining. She brushed her teeth, got out of the tight bra, looked down -- -- looked up. "Sixty hours," she whispered. A noticeable percentage of that time had passed. A prior thought came to her, and she reached down to the left breast, got one hand under it -- thought it over and used both -- and lifted, tilting her head down. The nipple was easily reachable by her lips. Sadira looked at it for a moment, noting the growth that had taken place: it was significantly larger even when not erect, a dark protrusion against the slightly lighter expanse of the areola. went through her head as she regarded her body -- and it was her body, wasn't it? These things were part of her. It was hard to keep believing it when they were changing so fast. She was perfectly serious about it. She was a scientist. Scientists experimented. Sadira lowered her head slightly, put her lips against the nipple, and gently applied suction. The sensations rushed from breast and mouth to spine to brain: she could feel them moving, colliding and mixing: the odd texture of the nipple against lips and tongue, the unfamiliar warmth spreading outwards from the center, infusing the breast and moving deeper, the near- electric half-burning from the nipple itself, a shock that heated, dissolved, and washed away all worries in a flood of liquid fire... Sadira's hands pulled away from the underside, and the breast dropped, thudding against her ribs with discernable impact. It vibrated for a fraction of a second, then stopped. Sadira looked down. The nipple was quite erect, protruding about an inch from her breast. She had no idea how much time had passed between contact and dissolution. She leaned back against the sink, breathing hard. Pamela had enjoyed it, but it had seemed to be more of an enhancement to other sensations. Sadira dimly remembered that it was something a little different for every woman -- and this was hers. Lots of nerves, lots of trigger points, and lots of whatever she was supposed to call _that_. There was a soft knock on the bathroom door. "Sadira? Are you in there?" Pamela's voice was somewhat dull: she woke up immediately, but not always well. "Come on: I took out my contacts last night. You _know_ I can't see anything without them. I think I stepped on someone." Sadira pulled the nightgown back on and cracked the door open: half-lidded pink eyes regarded her wearily. "Just let me get my sight back and then you can have it to yourself, okay?" Sadira nodded and left the bathroom: Pamela slid past her, closed the door, and locked it. Loudly. "Sucker!" she said clearly. Sadira heard the shower start up. She sighed, rubbed her stomach, and stepped into the kitchen just as Jason opened his eyes. Nigilo watched Carmody read the transcript of Ron's phone call, fingers drumming on the desk. He was something less than happy, but there was too much confusion in his mind to allow pure rage. Carmody read quickly: he put the papers down and waited. Nigilo shook his head. "It was too early," he said, keeping most of the internal turmoil out of his voice -- and whatever was left, Carmody wasn't going to say anything about. "I thought that once Archer had surpassed her sister in size, she'd show up to boast, get some revenge. I put Ron on her immediately in case her growth accelerated. That's how sibling rivalries work, Carmody. No one lets accomplishments sit quietly. According to Ron, she was considerably larger than she was in the train station -- but still smaller than her sister. Why go early?" "She could have had another motive," Carmody suggested. "Perhaps she needs Jasmine for other purposes?" Nigilo met his eyes. "Jasmine?" "I can't use 'Archer' for both sisters without inciting confusion," Carmody calmly explained. "One of them has to have another name." Nigilo grudgingly nodded. "What 'other purpose' could she have had? I somehow can't picture her saying 'Let me show myself now while I'm inferior and taunt her with the knowledge that I'll _soon_ be superior.' It doesn't fit the personality profile. " <_Your_ personality profile. How much attention did you pay to hers?> "If you believe she's reached that level of dementia, then perhaps she's kidnapped her sister for medical experiments." His jaw clamped shut. The words hadn't been meant for vocalization. He never joked in front of Nigilo, and rarely otherwise: it was generally unhealthy. Nigilo, however, didn't seem to be taking it as a joke. Carmody could see him turning the thought around in his mind, examining it from every angle, ignoring any traces of humor. "You're learning," he said slowly -- and there was even a hint of admiration. "You know, that's entirely possible, Carmody. It's such a brilliant idea that I'd ordinarily take credit for it -- but being as how it's your first, I'm going to leave the origin point with you." Nigilo stood up. "It's perfect behavior for a -- that woman. Perhaps my influence is finally starting to impress itself on you." "Perhaps, sir." "Then we assume that -- "Jasmine" -- is out of the picture for now, and we go back to worrying about locating Archer. If she was able to reach her sister so quickly, then she may be on the East Coast to stay -- have you made any progress in locating her roommate?" "Unfortunately, no," Carmody replied. "When she graduated college, she dropped out of contact with the alumni association. One professor recalled her saying she was moving to New York City. The same teacher said that she had a trust fund and was going to open her own business: that's why I originally believed she had her own operation. I was able to get information on the trust fund: it's been cleaned out. The school has no current address on file for her. "In addition, our search of Ms. Archer's apartment has found no phone bills, so we cannot attempt to locate her with a reverse directory. We did find a few notes that might concern the breast research or the leukemia project: our scientists are looking at them now." "No phone bills?" Nigilo tilted his head to the left and regarded Carmody warily. "In that mess?" "Or credit card bills, or anything that could be potentially dangerous if someone picked it out of the trash. She is a poor housekeeper, but a careful one." "Of all the areas to show a practical streak," Nigilo grumbled. "I take it the phone company won't give us the records?" "Only to a law enforcement agency. And if we report her missing, that creates another series of problems." "True. Then we concentrate on finding the fourth." Carmody's left eyebrow momentarily twitched. "Sir?" "Ron said that the Archers both went into the car on the passenger side, and the vehicle pulled away immediately. Jack reports that Pterros and the dancer got into the car via the back doors at the hotel, and again, the car was moving immediately. While Pterros could have driving the first time and Archer the second, it's likely that we're looking for a fourth person. Archer's silent partner. Possibly this former roommate: Jack said the person behind the wheel drove like a New York maniac." "Did he see the license plate?" "He may have. He can't remember. His airbag triggered in the collision, but he suffered a mild concussion. His memories of the later part of the chase are somewhat scrambled. And Ron wasn't in position to see the plate at the strip bar. The windows on the car were tinted, so he didn't get the best view of the interior." "Mr. Nigilo," Carmody began, hesitant to pursue the question -- then realized he couldn't get tackled for something that was someone else's fault. "Why exactly did Ron stick his fingers in their backs?" Nigilo did something that surprised Carmody. He sighed, and smiled tolerantly. "Because he only had one gun, two sisters to deal with, and he felt that I would be better served if he brought them both to me, since they had seen each other and the dancer might report a disappearance. I had also asked him to bring me Archer alive and ready to work. So he put out his fingers and gave it his best lack of shot. Not the most intelligent man, but he tries, as does his partner. "Jack did try to use his gun towards the end: he thought he might be able to shoot out a tire. The thought that Archer might be killed in the crash -- or just if he missed -- didn't occur to him. This is why I'm paying _one_ of them for this assignment. Adjust the books." The smile became something else. Pamela would have recognized it, sometimes in the mirror. "For some reason, I'm in a merciful mood today. It must be spring on the way." "The snow is melting nicely, sir," Carmody said, because there didn't seem to be much else he could say. "Yes. It puts a bounce in one's step." He headed for the door. "This roommate -- Shaw -- runs her own business, but has no interest in being found. Nothing in the phone book, no contacts, no deliveries to particular address?" "Nothing I can find at this point, sir. According to her professors, she has something of a persecution streak. An isolationist. She's an albino: she may disavow public contact." "No one can run a business without leaving a trail," Nigilo said, his voice tight again. "If she's still alive, she's leaving papers behind her. Find them. And concentrate the search on New York. Even in a city of eight million, an albino is fairly distinctive. Acquire the college yearbook and get a picture." The smile returned. "Six-six, albino -- she has to learn to hang around less visible people. Wouldn't you say, Carmody?" "Quite, sir." "And we're going to have to tell our people to be more careful." The smile vanished, replaced by an expression that quietly echoed the next words. "After all, she's dangerously insane." "Yes, sir," Carmody said simply. They went to check on the research wing. It was a very quiet breakfast -- lunch, really. Most of the words exchanged concerned the passing of various implements and seasonings. There were, however, numerous glances, dirty looks, cautioning stares, and a cutlery store's assortment of airborne daggers. There were a lot of things _almost_ said, between Pamela and Jasmine or Jasmine and Sadira. This led to the daggers. At first, Jason had sat prepared to serve as mediator, but had found nothing which he could stop: invisible knives were impossible to intercept. There were other distractions to deal with. He was sitting next to Jasmine, and he kept getting bumped by her feet, or brushed against as she turned to grab the salt -- or pepper -- or any one of a hundred things she needed to reach for. Her bust size seemed somewhat increased, back to the layout level. He saw Sadira's face during one of the passes, watching his. There was a quiet acceptance there which somehow worried him. Pamela made two stops on the way to the lab. The first was at a car rental agency, where she picked up a blue Civic with tinted windows (Sadira followed her in the Neon to a park-by-the-month garage, and they left the car there). They also waited in the car while Pamela ran into the post office with a box containing the J through L bras with a note which read "unused," and beneath that, another Post-it which read "What the hell is Level II?" "Cell samples," Pamela said as they got past the final lock and entered Terragen. "Into the bathroom, Princess. You've got a date with a needle." Jasmine stopped. "If you think I'm letting you anywhere near me with a sharp object --" "I'll do it," Sadira broke in. "I took them on myself. You two just get the work going. Jasmine: the bathroom's that way: I'll meet you in a second." Jasmine glared at Sadira, but moved away. Sadira glanced at Pamela with a look that said , then followed her. "I don't like her," Pamela said when they were far enough away. "I mean, I'm not overly fond of death and taxes, but I _really_ don't like her." "She was --" Jason stopped. He wasn't sure how to say it -- but surely Pamela had seen some of the contact. "I'm sure she was. On guard, Mouse. That's the one of the meanest cats I've ever seen, and she'll eat you alive." Sadira walked into the bathroom holding a small tray. Jasmine looked apprehensively at the array of objects. "What are those for?" "Sterile sampling needles, contact anesthetic, blood pack, Band- Aids. Nothing dangerous. Just strip down: that's your area of expertise." Jasmine smirked and reached for the edge of her sweater. "And I even know how to do it in front of men." She looked at the tray again. "Aren't you afraid of that shit?" Sadira shrugged. "I'm not a doctor," she said. "Aren't you afraid of letting _me_ near you with a sharp object?" "No." The word emerged without flavorings. Sadira didn't know exactly how Jasmine meant it. Jasmine took off her blouse, then reached back and undid the bra. Sadira reached for it as it came off and folded it on top of the sink, automatically counting hooks (seven) and reading the size label (33 X P) -- She looked closely at the bra, then back at Jasmine. "Padding?" For the second time in twenty-four hours, she took her sister completely by surprise: her features contorted for a second as she tried to regain control. "I've got to prepare the rubes for the boob job. I've been wearing it to the photo shoots." "Right. After all, they won't believe spontaneous growth." "There's a sucker born every minute, and they come with money attached to the hip. For some of them, it's a dick substitute. Or tits. Casper is gay, isn't she?" Sadira checked the needle: the sterile wrapping was intact. "I don't know. She does what she likes. And her name is Pamela." "I care?" "No." The same tone as her sister's earlier use of the word. She looked at her sister's breasts, trying to find the right place to insert the needle. In absolute terms, Pamela was larger than Jasmine, but visually, they seemed to be roughly the same size: Jasmine's sat on a smaller frame. (Sadira was starting to realize that while the two-inch difference between zero and B was very visible, going from X to Z was more difficult to spot.) The similarities ended there. Jasmine's breasts reached down to her navel, swelling quickly towards the bottoms: her nipples seemed to be pointing at Sadira's feet. Her areola were small in contrast to Sadira's own proportionate development, as were the nipples. She was lighter than Sadira in hue: it looked as if there had been a tanning contest between the sisters with Jasmine quitting after the third day and Sadira sticking it out for two more sessions. Sadira could see a faint tracing of veins and arteries under the skin, along with a small bruise on the side of the left breast. Combined with the blond hair (and the bit of dyed pubic hair that rose above her waistline), she gave Sadira the impression of having been caught in a genetic blender set on puree. It was almost the same impression she got when she looked in a mirror -- only hers had been on frappe. "Blond?" she questioned, mostly rhetorically. "The rubes like blondes. They think it makes me exotic." Sadira stepped to Jasmine's side, holding the jar of anesthetic paste. "You're a Yorkshire/Mecca cross. How much more exotic are you supposed to get? Rub this in here." She poked the spot with the plunger of the needle, near the edge of the bruise. "You can't do it?" Teasing, taunting. Sadira looked her in the eyes. "Not on a bet." She thrust the cold jar against Jasmine's breast: her sister recoiled slightly before taking it. Sadira gave her an application cloth. "If you do it by hand, your fingers will get numb." "Then I'll handle things like you usually do." Jasmine started rubbing. "How did you get that bruise?" "Why do you care?" Sadira perched on the edge of the sink. "Maybe because we're going to be together for a while and I don't feel like fighting every second. Maybe because we haven't seen each other in over four years. Or maybe I'm setting you up for something later. Take your pick." "Option three," Jasmine said, rubbing harder, spreading some of the cream towards the injury -- but then she answered. "Friday night. I was in Billings --" "-- I know." "You keep an eye on me?" Vaguely bemused and a little triumphant. "I met an acquaintance of yours on the train out of Billings. Douglas Pollota." "Oh, _him_." Jasmine snorted. Sadira didn't know when she'd picked up the habit, but she was doing it with fair frequency. "Weirdo." "I liked him." Another snort, this one with less disgust and more disdain. "Of course, he'd never ask you to pose, not unless he wanted to put someone out of business." "Actually --" and the words truly reached her for the first time, with stunning force. Completing the sentence immediately might have had more of an impact -- but the pause got Jasmine's attention. "Actually what?" "He said --" she paraphrased "-- I have appeal which you don't." "Rotting meat appeals to rats." "I can smile." Jasmine stopped rubbing and looked at Sadira, who was withholding the discussed expression. "A pole." "What?" "I hit my tit on a pole. I spun too fast and got a bruise. I didn't put makeup on it this morning since I don't have to perform. Satisfied? All nice and sisterly?" Sadira gave up. "Is the area numb?" "Yeah." "All right." Sadira unsheathed the needle and took the sample. Jasmine never flinched. "The next one's a blood sample. Left arm." Sadira dipped another cloth and started rubbing Jasmine's inner elbow. "So you can touch my arm, but not my tit?" Sadira stopped. "Right." She resumed. Jasmine's voice dropped, became sincere, concerned, and sisterly. Sadira was instantly suspicious. "Have you told Mom and Dad?" "I can't." "Coward." There was still a hint of blood relation. "No. I mean I can't. They're still on vacation." "They're on vacation?" Sadira knew she couldn't do a decent parrot squawk: the sound was purely mental. "They left last Wednesday. Mom finally got some time off from the clinic and Dad was convinced -- forcefully -- that his assistants could handle things for three weeks. They won't be back until April. They're touring Europe." More slowly. "They've been saving for two years. When was the last time you called them?" "Last July on my birthday --" "-- our birthday --" Jasmine ignored it. "-- and they didn't mention it." "Maybe they'd tell you what they were planning if you told them where you were once in a while." "They've got a computer. They can find out where I am. My agent forwards mail." "At ten dollars for each page of reply." Jasmine stared. Sadira plunged the needle home and watched the blood pack rapidly fill. "Douglas was very informative." Jasmine quickly rallied. "And they pay it. And I write them myself. People get what they pay for with me." "Yeah." Sadira got another needle ready, one with a wider bore. "Cheap goods." Without ceremony or anesthetic, she plunged it home. Pamela and Jason looked up from the computer. Jason spoke first. "What was that?" "Muscle tissue sample," Pamela replied, and went back to typing. The sisters emerged ten minutes later, Sadira passing the tray to Jason, who took it to another area of the lab to begin his compensation techniques. "Remember, Princess," Pamela smiled, "if anything goes wrong with those, we'll have to do that again." Jasmine reached into her purse, pulled out a group of letters and stalked off. "Well," Pamela dryly commented, "at least someone's making money. I'm going to get her to pay for _something_ before this is over." Sadira had told them about the words-for-money scheme on the drive to Philadelphia. Sadira sat down at the computer and stared at her. "What? I'm being good. I just told her we might need more samples. And she calls herself Princess." Sadira shook her head and turned to the keyboard -- -- she sat there, staring down, then pushed her seat back and stretched her arms. Pamela stood up. "Which bra are you wearing, Ebs?" "The Q." She thought back. "That's about when I started having trouble." Pamela walked behind Sadira's seat and spun it. "Time to teach you the Shaw Keyboarding Method. Put your left hand on the board: the home keys are --" "Pamela?" "What is it?" "I'm right-handed." Pamela quickly spun the chair in the opposite direction. "No problem. Your home keys are --" 16. 52: Mixed doubles They'd quit at three in the morning. Jason had successfully mimicked most of the leukemia effects on the first try: only three extra samples had been required, which disappointed Pamela. The cultures had been placed in the storage area to quietly replicate. Jasmine had run out of letters by midnight, her handwriting getting smaller every hour. (She was trying to make the work last, but she was damned if she was going to give her customers more than they'd paid for.) When she finished, hand cramping, she tried to go for a walk and was stopped by Pamela, who reminded her about the injunction on solo travel and gave her a brief education on the neighborhood she was planning to walk in. This left her with nothing to do but wander the lab, flipping switches on unused equipment, with results from negligible to nearly disastrous -- after which Pamela took her to task again. Jasmine spent the last hour pretending to read printouts and bothering Jason for translations of terms. Despite Jasmine's help, they'd made some progress: six hormones and two gene sequences had been eliminated through basic deduction. Jason also sorrowfully dismissed an estrogen control drug that had been considered as a stall: only a small portion of the growth was estrogen controlled. The computer simulations said that only an overdose would have any effect: convulsions and death. Dinner was a four-way split of a thirty-piece bucket of fried chicken, and sleep (after the entirely-predictable and unavoidable bathroom queue) was nearly instantaneous. "Get your hands off that!" Jasmine pulled her arms back as if the machine had shocked her. "That's a Mark XII Mutator. Hit the wrong switch and you'll drip slime." "I'm bored," Jasmine snarled at Pamela. "I've been sitting around this lab for two days, I'm out of letters to write, and I'm not allowed to touch anything. The least you could do is get me something to read besides these fucking files!" "Is it my fault if you don't have the brains to understand them? Why don't consider this as a chance for a crash course in advanced genetics and do something with your brain besides keeping your skull from caving in!" Most of this was in fairly low tones, but the last few words caught Sadira and Jason as they were coming back from the photocopier. "Not again," Jason said, voice tired: he was getting sick of keeping the two separated. "What is it this time? Spontaneous file dump?" "Like I'm letting her anywhere near the computer --" Jasmine, having been rejected by the alpha female, turned to the only possible alpha male available. "Jason, I need something to read. I'm going nuts from boredom. I've got to do _something_." "Suffer," Pamela suggested, and turned back to the computer. "I've got work to do, and if the Princess is feeling a pea under her mattress, it's not my concern." Sadira stepped forward, about to pull Pamela off for _another_ private conference, and got interrupted by a very sincere "Shit!" "What's wrong?" Sadira asked, stepping in on Pamela's right. "Bad sectors. I lost the data on the XACT-Q28 site. _Damn it_!" Pamela typed quickly. "Well, the computer will never write data to that area again." She sighed. "I never knew this thing had bad sectors. It's never been this full before. Sadira, I'm going to need another copy off the zip disk." "What about the disk you put it in with?" "I copied pregnancy data onto it. Do you have the zip disk on you?" Sadira shook her head. "It's at the apartment. I can't fit all my stuff in these pockets." "It would help if you used a purse." "Fine," Jasmine said. "Since we can't go anywhere alone, Jason and I will go get something to read, and you two go back to the apartment and retrieve the disk. Is that _fair_?" Everyone took a moment and looked at everyone else. "Pamela," Jason finally asked, "can you keep going without the data?" "Not on this line of research, and it looks too promising to switch. And if we all leave the lab, then no one's working." "If she's not reading something," Jason pointed out, "then we lose time fixing whatever she touches. And if the three of you go out, I'm at the lab alone." Pamela thought it over. She had plenty of books at the apartment -- okay, hundreds -- but she didn't think any of them were within Jasmine's comprehension level. "It's about time to eat anyway. Jason, you've got the codes and the keys: use the trains. We'll meet you back here in --" she glanced at her watch: rush hour "-- two hours if traffic is really bad. Take her to a bookstore and let her buy out a few supermarket rags." Pamela turned off the computer and stood up fast. "Just get her out of my sight for a while." Jasmine opened her mouth -- and Jason, finally seeing something he could do, took her hand and pulled her towards the door. Surprised, she allowed herself to be led away. Pamela and Sadira watched them go, waited a minute for them to clear the hallway, and headed for the street. Jasmine knew exactly what trains had to be taken to get from Alphabet City to the bookstore, and insisted on going there before eating. Jason saw why when they got there. _Bookstore_ wasn't quite the right word: it was a multimedia wonderland. There were three huge floors, containing books, movies, music, and software, all subjects, all ages, all around him. He could have spent a merry two weeks wandering through non-fiction, cheerfully starving to death, and when they found his body, it would have been smiling. Someone had spent some time considering the problem, because a portion of the first floor had been set aside for a restaurant. Jasmine strode happily through the store, picking books from every section. Fantasy, romance, mysteries, sports, introductory-level genetics -- no genre or category was overlooked. Jason watched in amazement, occasionally working out of the stun long enough to pick some volumes for himself -- and when Jasmine saw him carrying them, she took them from his hands and added them to her basket without a word. The final total was over three hundred dollars, and Jasmine paid cash. She handed Jason his bag and headed for the restaurant. Jason looked at the name on the bag: _Borders_. He had fallen in love with the store within twelve seconds of walking in: it was nice to have a name to pin the feelings on. He followed Jasmine in and took a seat across from her in a comfortable booth. Comfortable for him, anyway: there was actually leg room -- but Jasmine's breasts poked into and rested partially on the table in her current posture. It could be resolved by leaning back -- but she wasn't. "Isn't this place great?" she asked rhetorically as the waiter dropped off their menus and left walking backwards, staring at Jasmine. "I come here every time I'm in Manhattan. There's nothing like it." "You're going to read all that?" "I'm probably going to read it all by the end of the week." She shrugged, reached into the bag next to her, and pulled out the _Basic Genetics_ volume. "I might as well learn some of this shit if I've got to hang around you three. Anyway -- I'm on the road performing forty- six weeks a year, and there's a _lot_ of time between shows. I get sick of trying to remember what TV stations cover which areas, a lot of the clubs don't have TV's, and the house girls don't always want to talk because half of them think you're stealing their money. For the feature dancers, it's either find something to do or go bugfuck. I read. I didn't use to -- but I had to do something, and now I'm addicted. I probably know every used bookstore in the country: I'll trade these in when I'm done." She smiled gently at him. The change was startling: since he'd first seen Jasmine, her face had always held some anger. This was a calm, settled woman, completely in her element. "I left my magazines under the cot in Phily -- I usually just stick to the local stuff on my first day in. I was going to go shopping on Tuesday, but this is better." The smile faded a bit, and she angled a hand under her chin and glanced at his eyes. "You think I'm pretty stupid, don't you?" "I never said that." It was a workable defense. "You were working with Sadira for months. You picked up the impression. 'No, Jasmine couldn't get through _Time Detectives_ unless someone drew cute kittens in the margins and named the characters Dick and Jane.'" "The first time Sadira mentioned you was the day of the accident, about an hour before it happened -- right after her presentation got rejected." "Well, that makes sense. After all, _I_ didn't get a full doctorate in four years." Bitterness had entered her voice: Jason could almost taste it in his mouth. "How old are you, Jason?" "Twenty-six." "And how long did you have to go to college before you went to -- GenTree, right?" "Six years." Jasmine finally leaned back. "Well, that's fast, but it's a little more normal. Oh -- and I apologize." She reached out and quickly patted his right hand, which was holding the menu. "I didn't really think you thought I was dumb. I'm just used to it from people who hang around my sister." "Look --" He put the menu down and folded his hands on the table. "As long as I've know Sadira, she's never said anything bad about anyone's intellect except to call _herself_ stupid if she missed something." "I've known her longer," Jasmine reminded him. "I grew up with her. What did she say when she finally did mention me?" <'I got boyfriends and she stole them.'> "Just that you were a dancer, her twin, and the two of you never talked." "Yeah, well, we don't have a lot in common to talk about. Two parents -- and even with the resemblance, I'm not sure one of us wasn't adopted. She was reading at _two_. Not sounding out words and seeing Spot run, working through _The Hobbit_. Straight A's all through school, National Honor Everything, and then she got that scholarship offer with a guaranteed job for as long as it took her to get through college." She held her hands palms-down above the table and jerked them to the sides. "You try growing up with that for a sister." Jason said nothing. He had been reading at three. "All the time, it was 'Look at Sadira. She's the smart one!' 'Look what Sadira's learned to do now! Jasmine? Oh, we just got her potty trained.' Really fun, don't you think?" "I was smarter than my brothers," Jason said, "but it didn't really matter. Heracles was bigger than me, and a better athlete: he got a basketball scholarship last year. Castor and Pollux had each other, and they went on the track team --" "-- Argonauts?" Jasmine started laughing. "Your folks named you after the _Argonauts_?!" Jason stared at her. "You know about --" "-- I read it last month!" The mirth was escalating. "I thought I had it bad being stuck in the _Arabian Nights_! Someone's parents were more nuts!" Jason started chuckling. "My mom is a professor of Greek Mythology. We were basically doomed from conception." "My dad agreed to use Mom's last name if he got to name the kids,"" Jasmine laughed. "Is _everyone's_ family this screwed up, or are we just lucky?" "I got off easy," Jason pointed out. "I'm the oldest: I got the first name in line. You could have been -- oh, Scheherazade --" "-- that's Sadira's middle name!" Jason stopped cold. "You're kidding." "No! Mom and Dad fought for hours: it was going to be her first name until she threatened to withhold sex for a year --" and that did it: they both went down laughing, dabbing at their eyes with the tiny napkins. The waiter walked by, decided they weren't ready to order, and walked away again after taking another long look at Jasmine. The mirth finally bubbled to a halt. Jasmine put the damp napkin down and said, "I like you, Jason. You're not exactly a normal egghead." "You're --" He could understand the sister's relationship a little better now. He and his brothers had always had an attribute to themselves -- or shared, with the twins. There was always something to excel at where the others had to watch and learn. He couldn't believe that Sadira had deliberately done anything to provoke the rivalry -- Jasmine had said as much -- but she was taking it all personally, not realizing that her words were in partial contradiction to her feelings. And Jasmine wasn't exactly average: he'd seen some of the material she'd shoveled into her basket. Jason couldn't get through _Our dreaming mind_ without a flamethrower. There were still more levels to go through before he got to the full truth. "You're not what I expected," he finished. She reached out and touched his hand again, and this time she maintained the contact. "You're not either," she said -- -- and the waiter came back. Jason resolved to give him a huge tip. "I'm ready to order," he said. He glanced at Jasmine. "You?" "Sure." She looked back at Jason, who had lifted the menu again, looking for a side dish. He didn't see her lick her lips. "I'm in the mood for a big meal." "Want to eat in?" Sadira sat down on the bed, zip disk in hand. "Sure. I'll probably get sick of fast food." "Bad news, then: I was going to serve cold duck and Won Ton soup. _Local_ fast food." "Noodletown?" "How did you know?" "I recommended it to you. Years ago." "Damn." Pamela chuckled and reached into the refrigerator. "We never got to follow through on most of those plans, did we? You went to work the day after graduation and I came here. No riding the Cyclone at Coney Island, no heading out to Shea for a ballgame and maybe a foul hit in our direction -- and now we're too busy for any of it." "This won't last forever, you know. We'll have some time." "Have you really thought about what you're going to do once we get you cured? You're out of work, you've broken bond --" "-- no." Sadira put her hands in her lap and stared at the ceiling. "I mean, I have, but it's not a priority item right now. I keep thinking that if we find a cure, everything else will sort out." "Deal with the impossible and the improbable falls into place?" Pamela emerged from the refrigerator to see Sadira's right hand, still holding the disk, moving up to cover her face. "I'm sorry. I didn't mean to say --" "It was done. It can be undone." Sadira brought her hand back down -- -- the disk slipped out of her fingers and hit the carpet halfway between bed and counter. Sadira inhaled sharply, looked at her traitorous fingers, then got up, walked over to the disk, bent over -- -- stayed there. "Ow," came the too-soft voice. Pamela turned away from the microwave and saw Sadira, bent at the waist, fingers grasping the disk, and not moving. "Your back." "Yeah." Almost whispering, "Help." Pamela came around the counter and got on Sadira's right side, "I'm going to put my arms around your waist and carry you to the bed." "Why not just help me stand back up?" "Because you _really wouldn't enjoy it_. Trust me." "I don't have a lot of choice right now." Sadira was starting to feel a little silly. Even in the bra, her breasts had swung forward, and quite a bit of her limited view was impeded. Combined with the sharp pain, it made for a very annoying set of sensations. "Brace yourself. I'm going to lift you. Ready?" Sadira was breathing fast; short, sharp pants. "Honestly?" Pamela lifted. Sadira came off the floor as a unit, and Pamela staggered her over to the bed, gently lying her down on the pillows, then went to the other side of the bed. Sadira heard her pick up the phone and dial. "The answering machine triggers when someone walks in the lab -- Hi, Mouse. We're at the apartment. Sadira threw her back out: we'll catch up when she can move again. Work harder." She hung up and walked back into Sadira's sight. "From the knees," Pamela sighed. "I should have told you to reach down bending from the _knees_, damn it. You're carrying about eighteen, twenty pounds right now. I let you down --" "-- Pamela? _Painkillers_." "Sorry." Pamela headed for the bathroom. "Some teacher I am. You don't disarm land mines by stepping on them..." She was back seconds later with three capsules and a small cup of yellow liquid. "Acetaminophen, 1500 milligrams, with 800 milligrams of Ibuprofen in a liquid solution. It's over-the-counter stuff, but I upped the limits a bit. You'll have to eat something with the Ibuprofen." "As long as it isn't a Powerbar." Pamela smiled and vanished again. Sadira, who had been in the exact same position since her back had disintegrated, tried to move her arms. This worked. Her toes wriggled, and the knees functioned without hassle. She tried to straighten out. This was a mistake. She stiffened again, bit back the scream, then reached for the capsules and dry-swallowed them. "I was saving this for when we got BE-2 in your system and working, but this seems like a good time. A little pleasure to go with the pain." She held the rectangle out to Sadira, who flinched upon seeing the gold wrapper -- and looked up again as she read it. "Nehaus? You bought me Nehaus chocolate?" There was something akin to lust in her voice. "The shop next to the post office. You're not the only one who can remember small details." Pamela sat down next to Sadira's legs and peeled the wrapper. "Take a bite." She held the bar in front of Sadira's mouth and pushed it gently against her lips until they opened. Nehaus chocolate was a rare treat for Sadira: it had been nearly impossible to find at college, and was completely unavailable around Helena: God knew she'd looked. She asked her parents to send it for birthdays, exams, and similar special occasions. She'd _meant_ to take small bites. "Leave the fingers, Ebs," Pamela suggested, and Sadira guiltily swallowed the Ibuprofen. "Now we wait. The medication should normally start taking effect in about twelve minutes -- for your metabolism, maybe six." "More positive side effects," Sadira said. "If we could get rid of the breast growth, we could sell this." "Probably. But here's the bad news: you have to eat a Powerbar now. Maybe two. You have to keep going." "Lollipop before the dentist's drill?" "You got it." Pamela got up again. "Sewage or wall insulation?" "Once of each." Sadira ate in silence until Pamela said, "Just remember, you're going to burn out the medication almost as fast. I'm putting some extras on the nightstand: when you feel the slightest twinge, take one." "I thought we were going to leave when the pain went away." "But the injury is still there. I'm just waiting for the medicine to work so I can move you into a position where I can work on your back. I know a few quick tricks that'll get you back on your feet until we can --" "-- find enough time for you to heal." "I thought I was healing. I've had some twinges before this, but they always felt better in the morning." "Better, but not gone?" "Yeah." Sadira sighed. "I remember what Coach Lynn said. The part that heals slowest is the knees, and the back is right behind them." "Well, if you have to pick something up, it's one or the other, unless you were planning on developing telekinesis." "It would be handy -- oh." "What's wrong?" "The pain just -- blinked out. No fading; it's just _gone_." "That was fast." Pamela started shuffling pillows. "Don't try moving yet. I'm going to get you on your stomach." "You're kidding." "New trick. Hang on." "I'm _not_ going anywhere." A few seconds later, Pamela slowly straightened Sadira out, stopping when her ex-roommate gasped: the drugs stopped what pain was there, but they didn't prevent new agony from appearing. Once the ninety-degree angle had vanished, she carefully rolled Sadira over and up onto the piled pillows, leaving her head and shoulders elevated, with her breasts comfortably resting on the mattress between columns. The pillow groups gradually lowered in height until Sadira's feet were against the mattress. Pamela sat down next to her, legs automatically going into the lotus. "I'm going to have to probe. This might hurt --" It did, but then it hurt less as Pamela worked her hands across Sadira back, kneading and pushing here and there. "I had to learn this in case I ever had trouble and needed a temporary reset. I do a lot of back exercises -- and I start teaching them to you tomorrow morning -- but this will give you a little time so your metabolism can give you another partial fix. After that, you'll just have to be careful." "So I'm going to be a cripple." "No, you're going to adjust, and I'm going to help you. I told you that." Sadira relaxed as Pamela's hands pushed and prodded. "You're going to be okay. Always remember that." The kneading moved gradually up from the lower back. Sadira, who had almost fallen asleep under the gentle assault, didn't notice until the gentle pressure reached her shoulders. She turned her head and unsuccessfully tried to look up at Pamela. "Sorry. You're all knots and tangles. I thought as long as I was in the area..." "No, go ahead." Sadira was feeling _very_ relaxed, better than she had since Jasmine had been pulled into the group. Pamela slid her fingers under the shirt and pushed down the bra straps, exposing the shoulders for massage. She worked in silence for several seconds. Sadira's soft voice seemed to waft up to her. "Do you remember the last time we did this?" "You never threw your back out before this." "No, a shoulder and neck message." Pamela remembered. Sadira was in no position to see the blush. "It was our last week of finals _ever_. It was about two in the morning, we were still up studying and getting ready to present our theses, and I just started cramping up." "And I pulled my chair next to yours and started giving you a massage," Pamela said softly, remembering. "You said 'I wish there was a way I could relax you more. Well, there is, but I'm scared to try it.' I couldn't believe you'd be afraid to try anything." "So you said, 'Go ahead. It couldn't hurt.' Were you expecting it?" Pamela unfolded her legs and leaned closer, almost whispering in Sadira's ear. "No," Sadira said. "But I kissed you back..." And she turned over and kissed Pamela first. Pamela fell into the kiss, her body responding as she reached out, arms encircling, all sensation coming from the lips -- and then she withdrew, and couldn't believe that she had. "Sadira," she said carefully, speaking from her conscience. "You've been under a lot of stress lately. This isn't exactly normal circumstances..." Pamela's libido looked at her conscience and screamed Sadira looked up at Pamela. "Ivory?" Pamela nodded. "Shaddap." She reached up and pulled her closer, and the kiss began again. This time, it was allowed to finish. Pamela gently got Sadira off the pillows -- but if the shorter woman was still in any pain, she was ignoring it. They wound up sitting across from each other on the edge of the bed. "Me first," Sadira said, and reached for Pamela's sweater, pulling the fabric up and over. Pamela wriggled and shifted, trying to help. Eventually, they got it off. Pamela sat there, still blushing a little, her face a bright shade of rose. Sadira ignored it and reached around for the bra hooks -- and once again found she couldn't get close enough. Pamela saw the problem and turned, kicking her shoes off on the way and getting all the lower garments removed as Sadira worked on the black bra. Finally, she turned back, and Sadira smiled at her. Pamela always felt a little odd naked in company -- naked in private, for that matter. Her body was snow-white all over, face to breasts, head hair and pubic curls. Her breasts thrust proudly, only slightly touched by gravity (the natural consequence of growing up with an expert bra-maker in the family) and further buoyed by the development of muscle across her back, shoulders, and pectorals: any sag was a natural consequence of her size. There was the faintest suggestion of areola, and a touch of what imagination could make into pink in the nipples. She was built a bit broader in the beam than Sadira, naturally thicker through the waist and hips, and her legs were well contoured and perfectly shaved. She gave Sadira a small, slightly shy smile and reached for her sweater. Sadira pulled back slightly. Pamela's smile became a little stronger. "You're still beautiful, Ebony," she whispered, and reached again. This time, Sadira let her take the garment off, and the other ones, until again, the bra was last. Sadira's hands stayed at her sides until the last hook was undone and the bra was removed, then reached up to briefly feel her contours. Pamela looked. It was the same as it had been in the bathtub, just expanded significantly in all directions. Her cleavage was longer, but still tight. The nipples, already erect, were significant. To Pamela, Sadira's breasts were beautiful. To Pamela, Sadira had always been beautiful, flat or buxom, passive or leading, because no matter what, the loving smile was always the same. She reached and gently lowered Sadira back on the bed, trying to keep her spine from being jolted. Sadira's breasts sloped off to the sides a bit: Pamela gathered them back together. "Now," she whispered, "I'm going to show you what those good things are like _directly_ --" and she lowered her head towards the left nipple, teased it with her tongue, a shock of red between white teeth, then gently, lovingly sucked. Sadira gasped, and Pamela accelerated a little, then switched breasts. Sadira's hands reached out, and she began massaging Pamela's breasts, working slowly, trying to think about returning the sensation to her friend when her mind was drowning in fire, and the fire was spreading to every part of her body -- -- Sadira's back arched, but the pain was lost in the flood of pleasure, a jolt of power that reverberated through every cell and rebounded at the edges, from breasts to body and back again -- -- she opened her eyes to see Pamela pulled back, staring at Sadira with shock and worry. "Are you okay? You just bucked and gasped --" Sadira breathed deeply, riding the last of the aftershocks to level ground. "That was an orgasm, silly!" "That was an climax?" Sadira nodded and sat up. "Just from my sucking on your nipples? Lucky! I thought that only existed in women's magazines!" "I seem to recall what does it to you," Sadira softly replied, and leaned closer. "You told me about this, remember --" and kissed her friend while her right hand moved down and _in_. Pamela jerked at the sudden contact, then relaxed and began working with Sadira, the kiss continuing as she moved her hips against Sadira's own movements, setting up a rhythm. Sadira broke the kiss first -- Pamela looked momentarily betrayed -- but she'd thought of a new experiment: she wanted to see if she could stimulate nipples and pussy at the same time. She partially succeeded: the best she could do was one nipple at a time. It was Pamela's turn to gasp, eyes closing as the rhythm built and accelerated, pushing against Sadira's hand as she tried to reach between her lover's legs, fumbling blindly until her questing fingers found the spot and slipped inside. She was rewarded by a soft, pleased cry and an increase in momentum: they pulled closer together and slipped deeper inside each other. Pamela got her right hand onto Sadira's breasts, massaging the nipples in turn as Sadira switched breasts on her body, never losing the rhythm as the barriers between bodies began to break down, knowing each other, loving each other -- She bit back a moan, then another, then finally tightened her lips, clenched her teeth, and fell back, her left hand slipping out, the additional stimulation pushing Sadira past the threshold again: she cried out as they went down. They wound up with Sadira lying partially on top of Pamela, and Pamela sprawled backwards on the bed. "And what was that?" Sadira asked, removing her fingers and speaking against the breast, using it as a pillow. "An orgasm. What did you think it was?" Pamela started giggling. Sadira looked up. "That quiet little thing?" "I was masturbating across the room from you for four years! By the time I figured out that nothing was going to wake you up, I couldn't break the habit!" "Oh, so it's all my fault, is it?" Sadira's right hand snaked off out of sight. "Well, if you'd told me that in the first place --" "Dem's fightin' words," Sadira told her, and the hand came back with a pillow. The smack was solid and possibly even deserved. Pamela stared at her for a moment, then gave a war whoop and grabbed for a pillow of her own. There was plenty of ammunition available. The pillows were well made, so it didn't end with feathers strewn across the room. When they were finally finished, having landed a blow on every available part of the anatomy, they were lying side by side on the bed, giggling helplessly until it seemed like the most natural thing to reach for each other again and try something different, and in the end, it was impossible to tell which had felt better, the loving or the laughter. There was every chance they were the same thing. 17. 53: Status reports Jasmine stared at Sadira as she walked in, chatting merrily with Pamela, laughing, moving as if suspended on a cushion of air. Jasmine considered herself to be a very good judge of body language -- in her profession, it was the first line of defense. Is the man staring at me because he wants my attention or because he wants me dead in an alleyway? Does the manager like to "keep tips safe until the end of the day" because she's concerned I might lose something or does she like to take a little off the top? Is this director completely out of his mind, or will he be fine once the cocaine wears off? Sadira had spent a lot of time trying to conceal her feelings from Jasmine -- but Jasmine had put in just as much time learning to read them. This time, one wasn't even trying, and the other didn't have to try very hard. "You're kidding me," Jasmine whispered, and watched Jason go up to them, seemingly oblivious, inquiring about Sadira's back. She'd seen the look many times before, but never from Sadira. "Not really," Sadira said. She reached into her pockets and pulled out a pill case. "Now I have to take these any time I feel a twinge and I have to be really careful how I move. I won't get a chance to fully heal until we stop the growth -- and then my metabolism will slow to normal, and it'll take weeks." "We stopped at the pharmacy and got one of everything," Pamela explained. "She might become resistant to the medication just as fast, so we'll keep cycling through and make sure we don't hit any bad combinations." She reached into her purse and pulled out the disk. "Now if you'll pardon me, it's work time." Jasmine watched Pamela cross the room from the little desk she'd set up next to the door. Bingo: all the signs were there. She hadn't considered this -- she _couldn't_ have seen this angle coming. It was going to take some thought. Jasmine turned back to the book. Mendel had been staring at his plants for three pages, and something interesting was due to happen. The electron microscope worked perfectly well once it was running: it just took three to ten minutes to power up. There were some faulty relays which eventually clicked over -- and cost a few thousand dollars to repair. Pamela had learned to live with it. Sadira would have normally stood around tapping her feet and arching eyebrows, waiting for the damn thing to warm up -- but now she was just staring at the screen, looking at the reflection of the smile on her face. It was a little wide, and more than a little silly, and it wouldn't go away. It had been the third time they'd made love -- the second had been the last night before moving out of the residence halls, a sort of farewell -- and then they'd just never brought it up again. Sadira really didn't know why she hadn't mentioned it in their phone calls: she didn't know why Pamela didn't bring it up. The subject just never arose. Sadira looked deeper into the screen. No matter how far in she went, it was still black. She watched the smile fade from the screen. <-- because I needed to feel loved. I needed to feel like someone was attracted to me.> Sadira was familiar with a term that Jasmine had used repeatedly in describing both her sister's sex life and the only way she could see her sister _having_ a sex life: mercy fuck. She smiled again. Still... Sadira wondered if her perspectives were a little weird. She'd had few male friends in high school or college -- she had listened to the phrase "We should just be friends" often enough to get sick of it. The ones she chased, Jasmine took -- and Sadira was more than bright enough to realize that the men who really found intelligence attractive were hard to find -- at least, the ones who still possessed single status: they usually got taken early. In college, there had been work, and lots of it -- while she had been grateful to GenTree for the free ride, she didn't want to lock herself into one company for a moment longer than necessary. She and Pamela had spent many late nights mentally building a genetics lab, talking about the projects they would research together, the diseases they could cure. Even after nine months in her own lab, she'd still thought that on the last day of the fourth year, she would be packing for New York. So she'd gone to winter sessions, summer sessions, day and night classes, with the occasional practical joke to blow off steam, letters to family to get a view of life outside the classroom, Pamela to keep her sane. There had been no time to pursue relationships. She'd walked into the dorm, taken one look at Pamela, and decided that any man she pursued would glance at her roommate and be lost: by the time she found out the truth... She'd given up. So she didn't have relationships, she had friendships, and she'd forgotten how to look for more -- so when Pamela had kissed her -- and beyond -- it had been friendship. It seemed to make sense -- but Sadira knew it was easy to build a perfectly logical conclusion starting from false premises. She was still staring at the screen, trying to force the next word, when she saw Jason's reflection in the glass. "You've got to watch your position. Leaning forward like that could hurt your back." "Don't worry." "I'm doped to the gills right now." "And you'll feel it when it wears off." She turned around: he stepped back slightly to give her room. "If you become resistant to all the conventional drugs --" "-- then we can get something stronger on the sidewalk." She almost laughed at his reaction. "I'm starting to think Pamela gave you exactly the right nickname. You really are a country mouse." "I grew up on a farm," Jason defended. "You know how to score drugs and I know how to get my hand up a horse's..." The next moment was reserved for staring in disbelief, Sadira at Jason, he at himself in the screen. "Not that it comes in handy all that often..." "Any knowledge can be useful," Sadira told him. "And I don't know how to score drugs. I had one cigarette when I was fifteen, someone else had to buy the pack for me, and I spent an hour throwing up behind the gym. It put me off going to the next level. Besides," and her voice dropped, "if the pain gets that severe, then just about anything I could take would keep me from thinking straight." "So watch your posture." He stepped behind her, gently placed his hands on her shoulders, and pulled her back. "Find a comfortable zone and stay there." The contact abruptly terminated. "I've got to sort out the rest of these sample hormones. See you later." He stepped back into sight. Sadira had part of the first shipment under the scanner. "Someone else delivered?" She hadn't heard the intercom go off. "Three minutes ago. He didn't look very happy." Jason shrugged. "Pamela was right: her reputation is going to be shot when this is over. Blackmail isn't the best way to influence people." He smiled, a passable imitation of Pamela's more vicious variants. "Effective, though." Sadira watched him walk away and then turned back to the screen, which still wasn't on. Her heart stood up, climbed through the neck until it was standing behind her brain, and kicked her _hard_. she immediately thought. It was too late to stop it. <-- not to me. Not for me. Because I'm a nerd and Jasmine's pretty and I can't get anyone and she takes everyone and I'm ugly no matter what anyone says stop stop STOP!> Sadira brought a hand up and shaded her eyes as she closed them, breathing hard. She opened her eyes and the screen was still blank. she stepped back and looked at as much of her body as the screen could reflect <-- look at me.> Sadira looked down. and a safety cut in, blocking the car, but it didn't stop the rest of the train from proceeding. A smaller voice said and was lost in the howling storm. She was shaking. She put her hands against the screen, bracing herself physically if not mentally, trying to get back under control, but the last thought kept echoing, and she couldn't make it stop. "Ebs? Are you okay?" "I'm fine, Pamela," she lied. "I'm just sick of waiting for this machine to start working --" and she felt the screen grow warm under her hands. "Never mind. I stopped watching the pot and it boiled." She resumed a more normal posture. "I'm going to start checking the structure of these hormones." "Okay," Pamela said slowly. "Just take it easy. That stance isn't good for your back." "Nothing is," Sadira replied, and began working the controls. "Are you sure you're --" "-- I won't be if I don't get this work done." Pamela looked at her friend, saw the intensity in her face, and didn't know how to respond to it, how to help. She walked away. Pamela hit the photocopier's Start button harder than absolutely necessary. One of her earlier thoughts came back to her, slightly altered. Her direct view was blocked, but she still threw a venomous glance in Jasmine's direction. The thought came, and she let it through. Unfortunately, another thought insisted on following. Sadira had told her about some of Jasmine's "relationships": wham, bam, move on 'mam. The concept wouldn't materialize. And towards the end of the afterglow, basking in the warmth of Sadira's body, she'd allowed herself to think, just for the briefest of moments, Happily ever after. Pamela wasn't as smart as Sadira, not on the raw intelligence tests, but she felt she was _wiser_. She believed that the instant she assumed all was going well was the same moment the universe was planning to shoot her from the front -- it hurt more when she could see it coming and couldn't stop it. However, _knowing_ it and _remembering_ it were different things. She'd thought it, and now she was going to pay for it. Genetics was the science of fighting back at the universe, taking all the bad hands people had been dealt and forcing a fresh deal. Pamela believed it was possible to win -- she just always had to consider the power of her opponent. Opponents. One, maybe two -- probably three. Because if she kept going down that line, she was going to wind up fighting herself, and that wouldn't help Sadira. The cure was important. Collating the copies was important because it might lead to the cure. Her feelings could wait. Somehow. Jason held the small tube up to the light. Human hormones did not come naturally in quantity: they had to be collected, filtered, and protected. This one, roughly an ounce's worth, was an odd gray-green. He wondered if the color was visible in the bloodstream, little specks flowing through the red rivers. He separated a few cells from the cultures he'd modified off Jasmine's base, then applied the BE-1 virus to them and, looking through the enhancement port, watched the infection begin. It was almost instantaneous: contact, invasion, chromosomal reprogramming, death --and the cells began to send out new messages. The hormone was, in all probability, going to take a lot longer to work. "All right," he murmured, staining the culture, "stall like a cheap carburetor..." He felt eyes on him and looked up: Jasmine was gazing at him, one hand under her chin, the other marking her place in the book: she'd gotten about forty pages in. He nodded to her and turned back to the machine. and his own brain interrupted him. Jason shared a feeling with every sentient being since the dawn of time: a desire to find that small, detached, rational portion of his brain and put a fist through it. The cells were starting to react to the hormone. great, talking in second person to himself <-- how Pamela and Sadira looked when they came in. Especially Pamela. She looked so happy -- too happy for someone's back going out.> He had a good idea. He didn't want to pursue it. Jason focused on the cells: the signals that promoted growth were slowing as the hormone was absorbed, the cell walls taking on a gray hue -- -- the walls ruptured, and the cells died, flattening against the slide as their contents flowed out. Jason jerked his head back, unable to watch. the detached part inquired. 18. 57: A place of healing The budget was being stretched in all sorts of creative directions. Nigilo began to offer various chemicals and drugs to his agents in lieu of cash. A genetics lab had access to all sorts of interesting, ordinarily controlled substances that could be converted into cash on the street. Most of the people he talked to took the offer. He began to suspect the existence of a network when, three calls later, he was asked about the neothorazine before he had a chance to bring it up. Shaw had not posed for a formal yearbook picture, but there was still a photograph of her in the tome. It was a mood shot -- according to the caption, it had been taken the day after the Mark XI simulators had been installed, and it showed Shaw staring at the new controls in annoyance. She looked as if she was about to bite through the console. Overall, Nigilo considered the photograph as a lucky break: yearbook graduation photos were head-and-shoulder: this gave him a full-body portrait. He spent a lot of time looking at the body before deciding it added to his "jealousy" theory: Archer had amazing luck when it came to living with extremely buxom women. He also remembered Carmody's mention of "roommate experimentation." It said something, although he wasn't quite sure what. Matching a friend? Some sort of triangle? Non-monetary or family relationships were outside Nigilo's field: he dismissed the ideas for lack of evidence. The photograph was duplicated and faxed to all agents, along with better pictures of Pterros -- and, just in case, (clothed) images of the Princess. All pictures of Archer remained head-and-shoulders: Nigilo was concerned that anyone who knew about the viruses would figure out the profit angle and sell her to someone else. The original agents had been told to look for a very busty woman. As the days had worn on, a few more "very's" had been added to the description. Carmody slept in his office, took all the calls, summarized and relayed information, and made himself heroically available. Nigilo actually appreciated it: it was an amazing effort. Little food, little sleep, just a lot of work. The research team found that the five percent of the data which had dropped out was more crucial than they had originally wanted to believe. There was no blueprint for the enlargement virus, and several interaction sites seemed to missing. They were trying to recreate the work, but they were also testing every piece of it to make sure Archer hadn't left them false data. It slowed things down -- and even as a team, they just weren't as bright. Nigilo knew the rule about finding the average IQ of a group: add all indexes together and divide by the number of people in the team -- squared. He'd been hoping that whatever points remained would be enough to solve the problem. So far, it wasn't working. Eventually, he'd had to admit that his frequent drop-ins on the lab weren't having any positive effects, and remained in his office. And as he waited, two dozen agents moved about the five boroughs of New York City, checking the streets and occasionally risking a direct inquiry -- after all, they didn't want the target to know how intensive the search was. There were some areas they didn't check, of course. No point in checking Wall Street: Shaw's company had no public trading. Rockefeller Center? Why would they bother skating? Alphabet City? No one was crazy enough to put a genetics lab in the middle of that nightmare. They concentrated on talking to other labs, asking if they'd had any dealings with Shaw. All of them said no. Some of them said it a little vehemently, but that was to be expected when discussing competition. None of them knew where she was. The supply houses didn't have any customers by the name of Shaw. They did have one named Delacroix, who owned the building which Pamela rented in, and got things delivered to under his name for tax purposes, but no Shaw. Since Pamela had done her shopping by phone and computer, the face wasn't familiar. Some interest was expressed in the body. They searched, and continued to search. If they were in New York, there were only eight million people to hide among. It was an distinct improvement over five billion. Eventually, they would be found. It was just a matter of time. Sadira's original estimate had been a little off. At five o'clock on Thursday, she walked out the bathroom with the new bra on and caught Jasmine on her way in. Her sister froze, staring at her. The difference between X and Z might be difficult to spot at a glance -- but Sadira had been wearing an N when they saw each other, and the difference between N and X was a lot easier to see. Jasmine was wearing the padded bra to look a little larger, but Sadira knew it -- and Jasmine _knew_ that she knew. Sadira quickly drew an equal sign in the air and moved off, feeling very petty and somewhat triumphant. Mostly petty. The shirt had cost Jasmine forty dollars to have made when they were sixteen: she'd gotten to use it once, and then Sadira had shown the garment to their parents. One week grounded each: Jasmine for designing and Sadira for squealing. "The two of you have to learn to work together," Mom had said as she threw down the punishment. Jasmine had snuck out every night. She hadn't shown Sadira how to do it, so she'd missed a movie premiere and seen the film the day after the house arrest ended. The lesson hadn't stuck. Pamela intercepted her on the way to the refrigerator. "Did you just change again?" "Yeah. Every six hours, set your watch." Not quite true: she slept through the night growth without difficulty. It was just more uncomfortable when she finally had to change. It meant that one bra out of every four was being unused. "Where did you put the old bra?" "I left it in the bathroom. Why?" "I was thinking about sending the old ones back to Aunt Susan -- maybe she'd cut me a break, sell them used, or at least suggest someplace to donate them for a tax break. I can't _find_ any of them." "Laundry?" "No. I figured you were just throwing them around, same as usual -- but they're nowhere in the house or the lab. I don't think the Mouse is keeping them for -- personal reasons, and I'm sure not wearing any by mistake. Where are they going?" "Time-release disintegration? Good for six hours of wear and gone?" "Get serious." Sadira considered the source -- and then Pamela looked past her, at something moving through the maze. "Does the Princess always take a bag to the bathroom?" "If it had a book in it --" They both moved. Pamela got there first. "Okay, open it." "What?" Too-sincere confusion. Pamela grabbed the bag and dumped the contents on the floor. Both stepped back a bit to look down. One book, one bra. "Making yourself useful?" Pamela inquired. "I really don't need a janitor." "Making money," Jasmine snarled. "I'm losing the week because of this shit. You owe me something." "Making -- you're going to sell them, aren't you? Your bags are stuffed with old bras!" Sadira caught up just in time to see Pamela's hands push out, straight into Jasmine's shoulders, knocking her back. "What are you getting? Eighty each? A hundred? More? Look, guys, bras from when the little Princess was growing up! Never mind that they've never even seen a full day of use!" She pushed again: Jasmine reeled. "Going to make money from someone else's misery, you little piece of --" A hand came out of nowhere and grabbed her left wrist. The strength of the grip made her think Mouse until she saw the hand: Sadira. "That's it! Both of you, neutral corners, _now!_" Jasmine slowly got her balance back: Pamela pulled in a thin breath and pushed out "Sadira? My arm..." "Oh." Sadira let go. Pamela rubbed her aching wrist and decided that the enhanced ATP carriers were something else they should try to separate out for sale. Jason came running up. "What's going on --" "Nothing." Sadira said. "Jasmine had a plan. She'll sell the old bras through her fan club, give the original cost back to Ivory, and split the profits fifty-fifty, since it was her idea. No problem at all. _Right?_" "Right," Pamela said, rubbing her wrist. Jasmine said nothing, but slowly nodded. "Fine. We have more important things ta worry 'bout than what we're gonna do wif de fuckin' bras!" And Sadira stalked off. "Did she just say 'fucking?'" Jason asked. No one answered. "Okay," Pamela slowly mustered, "The center is holding nicely..." She'd forgotten Jasmine was five feet away. "Have you tried a bubble bath?" They both looked at Jasmine before Pamela said "Yes," and walked away, gesturing for Jason to follow. They headed for one of the lab's quiet corners -- literally: the otherworldly acoustics meant that whatever was said there stayed there. "We're going to wind up saving the body and losing the soul. I'm not going to allow that," Pamela said firmly -- and then her voice and body partially collapsed: she leaned against a support column, arms falling slack at her side. "And I'm running out of ideas on how to do it." She looked up at Jason, eyes wide and slightly pleading. "Mouse, what have you got left?" "I've eliminated three more hormones, two gene sites, and one bottle of aspirin. Everything else is 'left.'" Pamela slammed a fist backwards, hitting the column solidly. (Now her wrist _and_ hand were aching.) Every one of the next words was a sentence in itself. "That's not what I meant. We have to keep her spirits up, reassure her that we will find a cure -- help her get used to how she looks now." She'd caught Sadira going through elaborate measures to literally avoid herself -- arms moving wide to avoid contact with her breasts -- more difficult now, as there was some small overlap even in the bra. "We've got to make her understand that we love her no matter what she looks like." Jason looked at her until Pamela said, "Right. I said we, and I said love. Now go ahead and lie to me again. Even if the Princess is leading you by the balls, you _felt_ it, even if you don't now. I want this said, from both sides." Jason found a nearby support column and leaned against it, arms folded. The staring match went on for about two eons. He blinked first. "Okay. I have --" it felt so strange to say it aloud "-- something of a crush under the friendship. I feel for her. I wish I'd found a way to say it to her before this, but --" He shrugged. "But I'm the kind of guy women like to be friends with. They come to me when their dates go bad and cry on my shoulder. I'm no threat to anyone: I'm a very tall teddy bear. The thought that I might be the cure for those problems never occurs to them, and on the few times I proposed it, they just looked at me and said 'But you're my friend. I could never think of you that way.'" "Then you've been talking to the wrong women. Anyone who needs a bit of menace to be happy in a relationship is less than sane." He shrugged again. "Call it a knack. So what do we do?" Pamela closed her eyes and said, "First, we call a truce. We haven't been actively competitive that I'm aware of, but she could be picking up vibes. We work together, we get this cured, worry about the rest later." She opened her eyes and smiled. "Frankly, Mouse, if it wasn't me, I'd want it to be you." She extended her left hand. Jason grasped it, and they solemnly shook. "Ditto." He smiled as he felt his heart crack. "Two mature adults, aren't we?" "No, but we fake it pretty well." She felt a dull pain throbbing behind her ribs. "I don't think I could beat you at anything, anyway." "Reaching high shelves," Pamela quipped, and leaned back again. "Second -- what is up between you and the Princess?" Jason told her everything. Pamela listened closely and said, "No personal experience: I'm an only child. Maybe a bitch turns into a beauty when she's out of range -- but I think with that werewolf, the full moon's always shining somewhere." "Third," Jason continued, "we think of a way to keep Sadira emotionally stable -- which means that we both can't tell her how we feel. That's not something I want to add to her burden." "Right. And it can't be just one of us, either. So we've just eliminated that little option. What do we do to cheer her up? Bubble baths won't help, we really can't go to the movies, sex isn't a proven cure --" Pamela stopped. The last words had been meant for mental play only. "I guessed," Jason starkly replied. "Oh." Just for that one word, her voice was very small and soft. "I was a little obvious." "The whistling was a giveaway." He forced down the emotions, stepped on them, ground them to dust, watched them reassemble. "Which still leaves us with the original problem." Pamela sighed and stared at nothing. Her eyes narrowed, and she looked up. "I have an idea," she said, "and the best part is, it puts both of us at risk." "This isn't the way back to your apartment. Did we pick up a tail?" Pamela, who had just stopped the car at a red light, glanced over to Sadira. "No. We're just not going home. It's nearly midnight and we practically worked straight through. The Mouse and I think it's time for a little relaxation." "At midnight? What do we do at this hour?" Sadira had been cold and withdrawn for most of the day, hiding among the machines, speaking only in response to direct questions, and keeping her test results in carefully modulated order. Pamela was getting scared. "You've been out of the city too long. In Montana, you get to watch snow fall or grass grow. Here, we've got _options_." The light changed, and Pamela turned right. "We're going out for a few hours. Powerbar?" Sadira took it automatically. "Where?" "Oh, I don't know. Somewhere." Jasmine had fallen asleep and slumped onto Jason's lap. It looked perfectly natural. "Let you know when we get there. If I figure it out." "You're up to something." "Sure. Two inches shy of six feet and one inch over five. Relax. We're almost there." "Almost where?" "Wherever we're going." Sadira got nothing out of her for the rest of the drive. Unfortunately, they had to wake Jasmine up and bring her with them. Pamela would have preferred to leave her in the car, but she didn't want to risk splitting the group up. They were already taking enough of a chance going anywhere besides the lab and the apartment -- but Sadira's sanity was at stake. The worst part was that she wasn't sure if this was going to help. With the wrong factors and plain bad luck, it could do some major damage -- and in a minor way, it might not be helpful for either the Mouse's or her own ultimate goals. When they'd discussed it at the lab, he'd seen the risk: she'd seen that in his face. He'd also agreed to it anyway. Pamela felt the risk was small -- but the need was greater. she thought. Following Pamela, they walked for two blocks, coming to a stop in front of an ordinary looking white door with brass numbers embedded at the top, and a golden doorknob. Sadira had lost track of the myriad turns, but she could see the World Trade Center if she tilted her head back: they were near the southern end of Manhattan Island, in the maze of little streets that bordered the Wall Street district. "What is this?" "Someplace different," Pamela replied as she fumbled in her purse, withdrawing a thin wallet. "A place I'm still suspicious of because it's too damn good to be true." She rifled through the wallet, finally withdrawing a small gold card with silver lettering. "It's invitation only. A man just came up to me on the street one day and handed it to me. It was a little bit nerve-wracking -- who knows what some of these people might have in mind -- but two months later, I couldn't sleep and decided to take a look. I brought -- help in case I needed it, but it wasn't necessary. Still..." She shook her head and handed Sadira the card. It was very simple. Two words in a fancy font and an address, with a magnetic strip on the back. Sadira read the words aloud. "'Fancy that?'" "Exactly." Jasmine stiffened. Her book nearly fell from nerveless fingers. "I've heard the name." Sadira glanced back at her. "I never knew anyone who was invited." "Well, you're all with me," Pamela said, "and we all qualify by their rules. They might let us all in. Let's try." She turned the knob and pushed the door in, and they stepped inside. The foyer was fairly large, with a coat room off to one side, and a large, deep burgundy curtain hung across a wide entrance at the other end. There were several chairs, rich mahogany wood, and one woman in her mid-forties sitting on a stool, gazing at a large book sitting on the dais in front of her through wide-lensed glasses. She was naturally blond and wondrously proportioned, with features that Michaelangelo would have barely dared to dream. She was also less than three feet tall. "No, don't tell me," she said, glancing up from the book at Pamela, who was standing at the front of the group. "Shane -- shall --- shawl? Shawl, right?" Pamela handed her the card. The woman ran it against a small magnetic reader, colored to match the wood. "Shaw, Grace. Pamela Shaw. Can I bring some friends?" She pointed at her following. "They need this place for a few hours." Pamela stood aside and gestured back. "Although I won't mind if you decide to keep the fake blonde out in the foyer. Or the cloak room. Just put her on a hanger until we're done." "Three?" Grace looked carefully at the trio. "Pamela, all or none. They all need some time here. Perhaps even especially the young lady. And it's been too long for you if you're speaking that way." "It's my habit. I happen to like it." Grace sighed. "I suppose you do. But it's still three or zero." "Three, then." Grace handed the card back to Pamela, then motioned the others forward and passed out cards, with the colors reversed. "These will give you two more visits before the question of dues will arise. Enjoy yourselves." She went back to the book. "Grace?" Pamela said carefully. "Oh, right! Forgetful of me. Mark!" A man walked up to the front of the cloak room and put out his arms. Pamela began to strip her coat off. "Don't get them mixed up, now." Mark nodded. He was of average height, but well muscled, and held himself as if he was guarding a treasury. His features were Afrimerican, and his skin was as white as Pamela's. "What is this place?" Jasmine hissed. Pamela looked back at her. "Something special," she said, and passed through the curtain. The first thing Sadira saw was the people. And the second, the third, and all the way up into the hundreds before she managed to look anywhere else. Taken as a whole, it was a beautiful place. Everything was done in rich, dark shades, with natural wood and carpeting plush enough to float on, but shallow enough to drop keys and not lose them. An old-fashioned bar, with hanging glasses, brass rails and a liquor selection that was a wine tasters' wet dream occupied most of a wall. Several people were sitting or standing next to it, chatting, laughing, and taking drinks from a large man with jolly red cheeks, a thick red mustache, a laugh that boomed across the room, and a blindfold. He spun from shelf to shelf along the beautifully arranged bar, scooping ingredients, mixing everything from margaritas to milkshakes without pause or mistake. It was only when Sadira tore her gaze away from his performance that she saw the blindfold was stretched tightly across his face -- tight enough to push into the space where there had once been eyes. There was a dance floor, lit perfectly, slightly elevated with ramps on every side, accessible from every angle to the wheelchair-bound performers who were attempting -- and laughing at their failure to accomplish -- a very intricate square dance. There was no music, but there was one soft-spoken caller who could barely direct for laughter. Most of the lighting came from suspended Tiffany lamps, the rainbows muting and blending into the room. One man in a dapper tuxedo was waving his arms towards the extra-high ceiling, as if he was conducting an orchestra -- and automatically avoiding the lights, which his outstretched limbs were more than long enough to reach. Tables and chairs, all comfortable, some with unusual shapes to allow better comfort for their occupants. A closer look showed that the tables were modular, sections of different angles, shapes, and heights that would allow an assembly to accommodate any party. There were no televisions and no jukeboxes. The two most dominant sounds were conversation and laughter, all taking place at a spirited level. Sadira saw two other albinos, and a man whose skin was an even purple hue, as if every inch was a birthmark. Heights ranged from dwarf to giant, and two of those extremes were engaged in a ferocious darts contest, the dwarf standing straight and the giant lying on the floor. There was heavy betting being placed on the match. There were people without legs, people without arms, sight, hearing, or speech. None of it slowed down the gesturing or conversation. Some just gestured with feet or argued with hands. Most people had a marked physical difference, something that would get them a second glance on the street. Not all were handicaps, and seeing how they laughed and played, it was hard to believe that any of them were. There were some very minor things -- one man had hair the color of brass, a woman with a extra finger on each hand, perfectly placed and functional, which she was using for some very animated sign language. Some people were very skinny, and one short, bespectacled blonde woman was very buxom, matching Pamela in proportion if not actual size. They were just things people would notice. There were some who looked ordinary, but there was something about their bearing that made them stand out more than the others. It was, Sadira decided, the one place in the world Carmody couldn't blend into. Jason was looking around, a slow smile spreading across his face. Pamela looked back and nodded to him. Jasmine was staring about wildly, eyes dancing in desperation from one person to another, looking for something ordinary to latch onto, and said "Fr--" That was as far as she got before Pamela clamped a hand over her mouth. "You too," she hissed, and brought her hand back down. Jasmine glared, but kept silent. If anyone in the room had even noticed, they were too polite to even glance over. Pamela looked around and spotted someone familiar: a woman with red hair -- pure red, without a hint of orange or brown -- who was nearly Jason's height. She was watching the darts contest. "I'll catch up," she promised, and headed across the room. "Hey, Skyler!" The redhead turned around, smiled, and met her halfway. Jason grinned again: they'd discussed it at the lab. They were both supposed to find something to do within seconds of entering, and then keep an eye on Sadira from afar for the first half-hour. "Excuse me," he said, "but this country mouse has a hankering for a good old- fashioned square dance." He strode to the dance floor and, with a little fast negotiation, got the microphone away from the laughing caller. "All right!" he sang out. "Swing your partner, dossie-do, line those wheels up in a row...!" "Sadira," Jasmine slowly breathed, "what is this place?" "I don't know," her sister replied, "But they have a bar." And she went up to it and took one of the high-backed plush stools. The bartender immediately came up to her and smiled. "A new face! And a pretty one, judging from the heart rate jump around here!" Several patrons, males and females, blushed. "What would you like to drink?" "Do you have Blackened Voodoo?" "Miss, there's nothing I don't have -- or can't make up on the spot." He spun, twirled, extracted a black bottle from seeming nothingness, uncapped it, and poured it into a mug that had appeared from the same place. "Blackened Voodoo! Take it slow, it's a powerful mix." "Thanks." Sadira lifted the mug and breathed the aroma. She seldom drank, but her tastes were exotic when she did indulge: Blackened Voodoo smelled like a forest under a full moon. "How much?" "How much?" He leaned close and whispered, "Nothing. Ever. For anything. And don't insult me with tips. But if you are going to insult me, make it devastating." He danced away to fill another order. Sadira smiled, took a sip -- the buzz seemed to hit and fade faster: another side blitz from her metabolism -- and had started to relax when a voice at her elbow said "Pardon me." She looked down. One of the shorter denizens, wearing an expensive brown business suit, a bald pate, and a smile, was looking back up at her. "You look like someone with far more practical knowledge of baseball than anyone should have," he said. Across the room, Pamela watched and smiled: set-up complete. "My friend and I --" he indicated a Asian woman wearing a sleeveless gown, which exposed her artificial arm "-- are having a rules debate on Batting Out Of Turn. Could you help resolve a bet?" Sadira, who was too far into amazement to add another layer -- and who suspected that she'd been set up anyway -- clambered down from the stool and went over to discuss baseball's most confusing rule (behind balking). She was quickly meshed into the debate, and was soon drawing diagrams on the table with a damp finger. Jason, his throat getting dry, passed off the microphone to another caller, got a drink, and joined Pamela at an empty dartboard near the fireplace. They each grabbed a set. "So what was the risk again?" he inquired as he checked on Sadira, who was moderating a lively debate on the makeup of the ultimate New York baseball team -- 25 positions, all squads and decades, no choice allowed to go unargued. They were currently doing their best _not_ to settle first base. "The Princess," Pamela replied, automatically checking on the dancer, who had wound up at a corner table, her book laid open as the man who had earlier led the invisible orchestra signed it. It seemed she had found the author. "You can guess what the rest of that word was going to be. She never struck me as the most tolerant person -- but she adapts quickly enough once she realizes she's outnumbered." Although that might be slightly unfair: the Princess was chatting merrily, trying to ferret out information on upcoming works from a man who was only too happy to be questioned. But she never looked at the rest of the room. Pamela wasn't sure what had led her to the big man in the first place: probably a dust jacket photo. She gently poked the dart tip into her finger: sharp and ready to go. "I was worried that for whatever reason, Sadira would take the same point of view: one among others, if you know what I mean. But I also wanted to show her that other people had things worse, and they still knew how to laugh and have a good time. That no matter what she looked like, there were still people who would talk instead of stare. Look at her." Jason looked. Sadira was making a push for Keith Hernandez, which was drawing some support from the younger crowd. "It may be a temporary pick-up, but we can come back -- without explanation, I hope. If it was a week from now, people would have to fight the urge to ask _hard_. But you don't discuss these things here. Club rule." "And I'm minor," Jason said. "No 'How's the weather up there,' nothing at all." He looked at Jasmine's companion. "I'm barely noticeable. Pamela, what is this place?" "A very private club. International sites: this is the East Coast branch, and the original. Like I said, it's invitation only. They try to keep out the fetish fans: plenty of people interested in amputees, tall and short... One of these days, I'm going to check the newsgroups and find alt.sex.albino. "If you get a card, you can try it. You can bring dates, but most people don't. It's a haven. Somewhere to go when the weight of the eyes drives you to your knees. If there's anything different about you, anything that some idiot would think disqualified you from the human race, you're in. Skin color, height, build -- and that includes macromastics, although I used to be the biggest one here. And geniuses, although you'd have to show your IQ test at the door. Sadira would have gotten in before: a lot of scholars hang out here. Actually, it includes just about everyone under the right circumstances. On the right day, you can find admission from being Caucasian. Club motto." Jason waited. Pamela smiled. "'Nobody's normal.' This place isn't for skin color or handicaps or oddities or genetic hiccups. It's for forgetting about them and everything else, at least for a little while. "The other risk is that she might meet someone really great, and then we're both out of luck -- but I don't see anyone here better than me." She smiled, threw the first dart, and proved that someone in the club was probably better at one thing by hitting the '2.' "Damn. Your turn." Jason sighted, threw, and nailed the '16.' "What are the dues?" "You pay what you can afford. The club gets supported by the original funding. It's been around for nearly a century. There's someone powerful behind it, but no one's seen him. Sometimes I think it's Grace: she makes the final decision on who's in or out. But you don't bring your troubles in here: club rule. This is for respite. Someplace to come when there's nowhere to go." She threw the second dart and got it just inside the '18.' "I still think it's too good to be true." "You would," Jason said without malice, and took aim again. "I like it just fine." "Yeah," Pamela said, checking on Sadira again. Third base, in true Brooklyn tradition, had three men occupying it. "So do I." "Defensive! Ordonez! Maybe he hasn't been around as long, but he makes the impossible plays like no one else!" "Sure, but he can't scoop up a routine grounder! We're looking for an all-around shortstop, and Rizzuto's in the Hall!" "Oh, so we're not going to even consider active players --" "Gentlemen!" Sadira threw up her hands, laughing. "And ladies. If I wanted a war, we would have started with the outfield. Do you think you can keep from killing each other until I get back from the bathroom? "Sure," Peter said. "I have other ways of dealing with --" he gave Elmora a hard stare "-- _Yankee fans_." There was a brief pause that in many other clubs would have been for the drawing of weapons -- but then the laughter swelled up, and Sadira headed for the bathroom. She finished and washed quickly, ready to get back to the discussion -- someone had to be ready to rally for Duke Snider when center field came up -- and caught a glimpse of herself in the mirror. Sadira stood there, looking. She rinsed her hands. But here, everything she'd seen in proxy to Jasmine and Pamela was wrong. People looked at her eyes, talked to her face. The talk was merry and equal: anyone with an opinion could get in. No one stared. No one cared what she looked like. They cared about what she had to say because they wanted to argue it. Pamela had said it: some people were good. Maybe you didn't have to be a little bit different to understand, and it was quite possible that some of those who were would be as narrow-minded as everyone else. The people of Fancy That were different, physically, mentally, socially, and perhaps they indulged in self-pity and sorrow when they were outside the club, but this was the inside, and at the moment, they didn't give a damn. And at the moment, neither did she. She smiled at herself in the mirror as she dried her hands. "This still might kill me," she whispered, "but if I live through it, then -- it really isn't everyone. No matter how big I end up, there's a place for me, to talk and laugh if nothing else." And the love issue was still under debate, and whether anyone would ever find her attractive again could be argued to the point of insanity. Maybe she'd need a wheelchair with an extended front platform to move, and all of that still scared her, terrified her sometimes, every day and hour a little different. But for the moment -- if only here and now, while it was all still fresh -- it was bearable. A precious second of peace. "Thanks, Ivory," she whispered, and headed back to the debate. And that night, when she changed into the larger bra so she'd be more comfortable in the morning, and found herself looking at the label -- a Z -- and realized she was about to leave the alphabet behind, venturing into mostly-unknown territory -- it still hurt. But it didn't hurt as much as she'd thought it would.