
bones when the Japanese were slaughtering the dolphins. A human lodestone, she tracked illicit nuclear waste,
monitored pollution, shrank from
yawning holes in the ozone as a coral polyp from a diver's probing spearpoint. Yes, she was an 'ecopath': she felt for
the Earth and suffered all of its sicknesses, and unlike the rest of us knew that she, too, was dying from them.
Trask looked at her: she was twenty-four and looked fifty. Despite his pity, perhaps paradoxically, he thought of her
in harsh, disassociated, almost disapproving terms - thick-lensed spectacles, liver spots, hearing aid, straggly-haired,
crumpled blouse, splay-legged - and knew he disliked her because she mirrored the decline of the world. And that was
his talent at work. Ben Trask was a human lie-detector: he recognized a lie when he saw, felt, heard, or otherwise
perceived one as other men recognize a slap in the face; so that conversely, in the absence of falsehood he must
acknowledge truth. Except Anna Marie English's truth was unbearable. If Greenpeace had her and could make the
world believe in her, they would win their case in one ... though of course it would be lost at one and the same time.
For they'd suspect that they were too late. But Trask also knew that it wasn't quite like that. The world was a huge
creature and had been sorely wounded, and Anna Marie English was just too small to sustain so much damage. But
while she was suffering almost beyond endurance, the Earth could go on taking it for a long time yet. This was Trask's
view of it, anyway. He supposed it made him an optimist, which was something of a paradox in itself.
'Can you see it?' he said. 'Do you have any idea what it's all about?'
She looked at him and saw a mousey-haired, green-eyed man in his late thirties. Trask was about five feet ten, a little
overweight and slope-shouldered, and wore what could only be described as a lugubrious expres-
sion. Perhaps it had to do with his talent: in a world where the plain truth was increasingly hard to find, it was no easy
thing being a lie-detector. White lies, half-truths, and downright fables came at Trask from all directions, until
sometimes he felt he didn't want to look any more.
But Anna Marie English had her own problems. Finally she nodded her bedraggled mop of a head. 'I see it, yes, but
don't ask me what it's all about. I woke up, saw it, and knew I had to come here. That's all. But I've a hunch the world's
a loser yet again.' Her voice was a coughing rasp.
'A hunch?'
This thing isn't specific to me,' she frowned. This time I'm just ... an onlooker? It isn't hurting me. I feel for him, yes,
but his fate doesn't seem to have made much impression on the world in general. Yet at the same time, somehow I
think it makes the world less.'
'Do you know him?'
'I feel that I should know him, certainly,' she answered, simultaneously shaking her head. And ruefully, 'I know that
I was watching him when I should have been watching the road. I went through two red lights at least!'
Trask nodded, took her by the elbow and guided her across the street. 'Let's join them and see if anyone else has a
clue.' In fact he already had more than a clue but was unwilling to give it voice. If he was right, then just like the
ecopath he could scarcely view this phenomenon as Earth-damaging. In fact it might even be a relief.
With Whitehall no more than a ten minute walk away, the torn front page from a discarded Pravda seemed strangely
out of place where it spun slowly in the current of the flooded gutter, inching soggily and
6
perhaps prophetically towards the iron-barred throat of a gurgling sump. But as if in defiance of the stinging rain, the
night, and all other distractions, the phantom hologram continued to display itself wherever the glances of Trask and
Anna Marie English happened to fall. It was there in the tiny unmanned foyer, playing on the neutral grey doors of the
elevator as if projected there from their eyeballs; and when the doors hissed open to admit them, they took it with them
into the cage to be carried up to the top floor offices of E-Branch HQ.
The rest of the building was a well-known hotel; bright lights at the front, and a uniformed doorman from the Corps
of Commissionaires sheltering from the rain under his striped plastic canopy, or more likely inside taking a coffee with
the night clerk now that all the guests were abed. But up here on the top floor . . .
This was a different world. And a weird one.
E-Branch: Ben Trask felt much the same about it now as he had fourteen years ago when he was first recruited, and
as every Branch esper before and since. Alec Kyle, an old friend and ex-Head of Branch was dead and gone now, (was
he? And his body, too? Was that what this was all about?) but he had come closest to it when he'd used to say,
'E-Branch? A bloody funny outfit, Ben! Science and sorcery — telemetry and telepathy - computerized probability
patterns and precogni-tion - gadgets and ghosts. We have access to all of these things .. . now.'
That 'now' had qualified it. For at the time, Kyle had been talking about Harry Keogh. And later he had become
Harry Keogh; Keogh's mind in Kyle's body, anyway ...
The cage jerked to a halt; its doors hissed open; Trask and the unnaturally aged 'girl', and the hologram, got out.
Hologram or phantom? Trask wondered. Gadget ... or ghost? When he was a kid he'd believed in ghosts. Then for a
time he hadn't. Now he worked for E-Branch and ... sometimes he wished he were a kid again. For then it was all in the
imagination.
lan Goodly, the Night Duty Officer, was waiting for them in the corridor. Very tall, skeletally thin and gangly, he was
a prognosticator or 'hunchman'. Grey and mainly gaunt-featured, Goodly's expression was usually grave; he rarely
smiled; only his eyes - large, brown, warm and totally disarming - belied what must otherwise constitute a rather
unfortunate first impression, that of a cadaverous mortician. 'Anna,' he offered the girl a polite nod. 'Ben?'
Trask returned the unspecified query. 'Do you see it, too?'
'We all do,' Goodly answered, his voice high-pitched and a little shrill, but not unusually so. And before Trask