| Pier Ancru slowly came to, relishing in the feeling
of energy returning to his previously limp body. He
flexed a few of his muscles, they felt familiar, yet
he knew this was the first time they were under his
direct control. Regaining his senses he took in the
sterile environment of his surroundings - a small whitewashed,
windowless room with the med-table he was lying on the
only furniture. A somber looking servant waited on him.
The room was located in his quarters on the Pend Insurance
station in the Jolia system. Being the chairman and
main stockholder of Pend Insurance gave him apartments
in all their main stations, not to mention wealth and
resources few men enjoyed.
A man in his position had easy access to the newest
technology and, as the servant helped him put on a robe,
he yet again marveled at this new mind-transfer technology.
In the few short weeks since he started using it, it
had transformed his life in more ways than he could
imagine. No more tedious space travel, no more time
wasting on idle journeys through volatile regions. All
he had to do was set up clones of himself in places
he frequented, hook them into the mind-transfer machine,
and he could whiz halfway through the known world in
a heartbeat. He could spend the morning in a dour board
meeting on Alenia V, the afternoon sun-surfing in Maseera
and the evening dining at Giraldi¡¯s on Archavoinet
II. ¡®Ah, yes. Life is wonderful.¡¯ Ancru
mused.
Entering his living quarters, Ancru had just finished
dressing when his servant appeared, announcing the arrival
of one Jilaine Garat, the Police Commissioner for the
station. Ancru had met the middle-aged woman before
and knew her to be a committed and capable officer.
Ancru put the last touches to his appearance before
heading for the anteroom.
¡°I¡¯m sorry to bother you, sir,¡± Garat
started hesitantly after their formal greetings. ¡°I
rushed over here as soon as I heard you had¡ arrived,¡±
she finished, still a bit unsure about this new travel
method that few understood or even knew about. ¡°A
grave matter has come up that needs your immediate attention.
But first, can you answer me where you came from, sir?¡±
¡°From Sizamod system, I spent the night there,¡±
Ancru answered truthfully. ¡°What is this all about?¡±
¡°Last night senator Papadour was assassinated
in Palmon and it seems¡ it seems that it was you
that killed him.¡±
¡°Me?¡± Ancru laughed incredulously. ¡°That¡¯s
impossible! Why do you think that?¡±
¡°Well, the assassination took place at a banquet.
We have hundreds of witnesses testifying that you were
there, with the senator. Can someone confirm you being
in Sizamod last evening?¡±
¡°No,¡± Ancru said slowly. He was no stranger
to smear-campaigns in business or politics, but this
went way beyond anything he had experienced before.
¡°No, I was alone last night. Tell me what happened
at the banquet. How was the senator killed?¡±
¡°DNA poisoning no doubt. The killer - you - coated
his hand in poison that only a right DNA combination
could activate. Senator Papadour¡¯s DNA, in this
case. It¡¯s a common MO these days. I have here
a holoreel from the banquet, if you care to see it.¡±
Ancru nodded his agreement.
The holoreel showed a large, glamorous hall, with at
least 300 persons seated in their finest livery eating
a lush dinner. The picture zoomed in on one of the tables,
where senator Papadour and a man that looked identical
to Ancru were seated, amongst others. The people at
the table talked and laughed, everything looking perfectly
normal. Then suddenly the senator grabbed his throat
with both hands, his face turning red, before he collapsed
face-forward onto the table, his body raked by a few
spasms before becoming totally still and lifeless. Commotion
ensued, then Garat switched the holoreel off.
¡°Did you notice anything out of the ordinary?¡±
Commissioner Garat asked. ¡°That was undoubtedly
you, right?¡± Ancru didn¡¯t answer immediately,
he was deep in thought.
¡°It would seem so,¡± he finally said. ¡°But
there was something¡ Something not quite right.
I just can¡¯t put my finger on it. Can I see the
reel again?¡±
The second viewing didn¡¯t jolt his mind and Ancru
saw that Garat was becoming impatient, watching him
intently. Then suddenly it dawned on him.
¡°I¡¯ve got it! The man - me - was eating
left-handed. I¡¯m left-handed, but I still eat
right-handed.¡± Garat smiled at Ancru¡¯s words,
seemingly pleased.
¡°That¡¯s correct. Your¡ file states
this little fact and we noticed it. There were other
small peculiarities regarding speech pattern, hand movements
and facial expressions. Taken together, we can only
surmise this was a clone impostor. Very professionally
done, but not quite good enough.¡±
¡°You knew this was an impostor before you came
here?¡± Ancru asked.
¡°Of course, but I wanted to gauge your reactions
before revealing that fact. If we thought it really
had been you my¡ entry would have been more swift
and violent. Now let me ask you, do you have any information
about who¡¯s behind this? Any idea who wanted senator
Papadour dead and you in deep trouble?¡±
Ancru sat down, rubbing his templates, thinking hard.
He and Papadour had not been close, but they had rubbed
shoulders on that deal with the State¡ He let
his mind wander. The stakes were getting higher. Now,
if the rumors were true, then¡
¡°I have no idea who did this, Commissioner,¡±
he replied at last. ¡°But it will be fun finding
out.¡± He allowed a small smile to touch his lips
before summoning his servant to see the Commissioner
out. ¡°Oh, yes. It will be fun finding out.¡±
|