
make him understand what true belonging meant. In truth, Simon thought, no
one except himself did. That would change eventually.
Simon used his DNI to feed a series of commands to the autopilot, and the
helicopter swung round over the little circular park at the top end of the main
street. As he came back to the scrubland truck lot he'd identified as a landing
zone, he saw that some kids had spray painted an open eye on the corrugated
roof of a derelict shop. The fading green and blue symbol was big enough to
stare up at all the strategic security division helicopters that zipped through the
tropical skies above the town. Like a perfect portrait painting, its gaze followed
Simon as the TVL77D extended its undercarriage and sank down on the baked-
mud surface. Rotor downwash sent a flurry of crushed tins and junk-food
wrappers tumbling away from them as the fuselage lost its gray sky-blur
integument, reverting to ominous matte black.
He paused for a moment as the turbines wound down. His personal AS had
extended trawlers to retrieve all the emergency service e-traffic within the local
datapool. The relevant messages were relayed straight through his DNI. A
display grid snapped up within his apparent field of vision, its indigo color,
invisible to the human eye, ensuring it didn't obscure anything in his actual
physical sight. But for all the torrent of information presented to him, he was still
left lamentably short of hard facts. Nobody on the scene had yet established what
had actually happened. So far they just had the one unconfirmed report of a
suited Skin running amok.
His attention flicked to one of the medical grids. He called it up, and five high-
resolution graphs expanded for him as he stepped from the helicopter cabin. The
handheld blood analyzers that the paramedic teams were applying to the victims
were establishing links to the Cairns General Hospital's databank, working
through chemical profiles to identify the agent involved in the poisoning.
Simon put on a pair of old-fashioned wraparound sunglasses. "Interesting," he
murmured. "Do you see this?" He had sent copies of the analyzer results to Z-B's
bioweapons division AS, which gave him a positive match on the agent His DNI
relayed the secure package to Adul.
"Skin toxin," Adul observed. "An updosed incapacitation shot." He shook his
head in disapproval before unfolding his own sunshade membranes across his
nose. "One definite fatality. And those two with allergic reactions are going to
wind up with nerve damage."
"If they're lucky," Simon said. "And only if these paramedics get them to the
hospital fast enough." He ran a hand over his brow, dabbing at a thin layer of
perspiration that had already accumulated in the intense heat "Shall I have the
antidote dispatched to the emergency room?"
"Incapacitation toxins don't need an antidote; they clear automatically. It's
what they're designed for."
"That dosage level will put a hell of a strain on their kidneys, though."
Simon stopped and looked at Adul. "My dear fellow, we're here to investigate