Frank Herbert - The Eyes of Heisenberg

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Public Law 10927 was clear and direct. Parents were permitted to watch the genetic alterations of their gametes by skilled surgeons… only no one ever requested it.
When Lizbeth and Harvey Durant decided to invoke the Law; when Dr. Potter did not rearrange the most unusual genetic structure of their future son, barely an embryo growing in the State’s special vat—the consequences of these decisions threatened to be catastrophic.
For never before had anyone dared defy the Rulers’ decrees… and if They found out, it was well known that the price of disobedience was the extermination of the human race…

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But we created these Folk, Schruille thought. How did we create dissatisfied men?

He turned then and saw that Calapine and Nourse were weeping.

“Why do you weep?” Schruille demanded.

But they remained silent.

15.

Where the last skyway ended, the van took the turn away from the undermountain tube, and held to the wide surface track on the Lester by-way. It led upward through old tunnels to the wilderness reserve and breeder-leave resorts along an almost deserted air-blasted roadbed. There were no slavelights up here, only the moon and the stabbing cyclops beam of the van’s headlight.

An occasional omnibus passed them on the down-track, the passenger seats occupied by silent, moody couples, their breeder-leave ended, heading back to the megalopolis. If any of them focused on the van, it was dismissed as a supply carrier for the resorts.

On a banked curve below the Homish Resort Complex, the Cyborg driver made a series of adjustments to his lift controls. Venturis narrowed. Softness went out of the ride. Turbines whined upward to a near destructive keening. The van turned off the roadbed.

Within the narrow box that concealed them, Harvey Durant clutched the bench with one hand and Lizbeth with the other as the van lurched and bounced across the eroded mounds of an ancient railroad right of way, crashed through a screen of alders and turned onto a game track that followed the right of way upward through buck brush and rhododendrons.

“What’s happening?” Lizbeth wailed.

The driver’s voice rasped through the speaker, “We have left the road. There is nothing to fear.”

Nothing to fear, Harvey thought. The idea appeared so ludicrous he had to suppress a chuckle which he realized might be near hysteria.

The driver had turned off all exterior lights and was relying now on the moon and his infrared vision.

The Cyborg-boosted vision revealed the trail as a snail track through the brush. The van gulped this track for two kilometers, leaving a dusty, leaf-whirling wake to a point where the game trail intersected a forest patrol road—a cleared track matted with dead sallow and bracken from the passage of the patrol vehicles. Here, it turned right like a great hissing prehistoric monster, labored up a hill, roared down the other side and to the top of another hill where it stopped.

Turbines whined down to silence and the van settled onto its skids. The driver emerged, a blocky stub-legged figure with glittering prosthetic arms attached for its present needs. A side panel was ripped off and the Cyborg began unloading cargo, tossing it indiscriminately down through a stand of hemlock into a deep gully.

Within their compartment, Igan lurched to his feet, put his mouth near the speaker-phone, hissed, “Where are we?”

Silence.

“That was stupid,” Harvey said. “How do you know why he’s stopped?”

Igan ignored the insult. It came after all from a semi-educated dolt. “You can hear him shifting cargo,” Igan said. He leaned across Harvey, pounded a palm against the compartment’s side. “What’s going on out there?”

“Oh, sit down,” Harvey said. He put a hand on Igan’s chest, pushed. The surgeon stumbled backward onto the opposite bench.

Igan started to bounce back, his face dark, eyes glaring. Boumour restrained him, rumbled, “Serenity, friend Igan.”

Igan settled back. Slowly, a look of patience came over his features. “It’s odd,” he said, “how one’s emotions have a way of asserting themselves in spite of -”

“That will pass,” Boumour said.

Harvey found Lizbeth’s hand, clutched it, signaled, “ Igan’s chestit’s convex and hard as plasmeld. I felt it under his jacket.”

“You think he’s Cyborg?”

“He breathes normally.”

“And he has emotions. I read fear on him.”

“Yes… but…”

“We will be careful.”

Boumour said, “You should place more trust in us, Durant. Doctor Igan had deduced that our driver would not be moving cargo unless certain sounds were safe.”

“How do we know who’s moving cargo?” Harvey asked.

A look of caution fled across Boumour’s massive calm.

Harvey read it, smiled.

“Harvey!” Lizbeth said. “ You don’t think the -”

“It’s our driver out there,” Harvey reassured her. “ I can smell the wilderness in the air. There’s been no sound of a struggle. One doesn’t take a Cyborg without a struggle.”

“But where are we?” she asked.

“In the mountains, the wilderness,” Harvey said. “ From the feel of the ride, we’re well off the main by-ways.”

Abruptly, their compartment lurched, slid sideways. The single light was extinguished. In the sudden darkness, the wall behind Harvey dropped away. He clutched Lizbeth, whirled, found himself looking out into darkness… moonlight… their driver a blocky shadow against a distant panorama of the megalopolis with its shimmering networks of light. The moon silvered the tops of trees below them and there was a sharp smell of forest duff, resinous, dank, churned up by the van and not yet settled. The wilderness lay silent as though waiting, analyzing the intrusion.

“Out,” the driver said.

The Cyborg turned. Harvey saw the features suddenly illuminated by moonlight, said, “Glisson!”

“Greetings, Durant,” Glisson said.

“Why you?” Harvey asked.

“Why not?” Glisson asked. “Get out of there now.”

Harvey said: “But my wife isn’t -”

“I know about your wife, Durant. She’s had plenty of time since the treatment. She can walk if she doesn’t exert herself.”

Igan spoke at Harvey’s ear, “She’ll be quite all right. Sit her up gently and help her down.”

“I… feel all right,” Lizbeth said. “Here.” She put an arm over Harvey’s shoulder. Together, they slid down to the ground.

Igan followed, asked, “Where are we?”

“We are someplace headed for someplace else,” Glisson said. “What is the condition of our prisoner?”

Boumour spoke from within the compartment, “He’s coming around. Help me lift him out.”

“Why’ve we stopped?” Harvey asked.

“There is steep climbing ahead,” Glisson said. “We’re dropping the load. A van isn’t built for this work.”

Boumour and Igan shouldered past them carrying Svengaard, propped him against a stump beside the track.

“Wait here while I disengage the trailer,” Glisson said. “You might be considering whether we should abandon Svengaard.”

Hearing his name, Svengaard opened his eyes, found himself staring out and down at the distant lights of the megalopolis. His jaw ached where Harvey had struck him and there was a throbbing in his head. He felt hungry, thirsty. His hands were numb beyond the bindings. A dry smell of evergreen needles filled his nostrils. He sneezed.

“Perhaps we should get rid of Svengaard,” Igan said.

“I think not,” Boumour said. “He’s a trained man, a possible ally. We’re going to need trained men.”

Svengaard looked toward the voices. They stood beside the van which was a long silvery shape behind a stubby double cab. A wrenching of metal sounded there. The trailer slid backward on its skids almost two meters before stopping against a mound of dirt.

Glisson returned, squatted beside Svengaard. “What is our decision?” asked the Cyborg. “Kill him or keep him?”

Harvey gulped, felt Lizbeth clutch his arm.

“Keep him yet awhile,” Boumour said.

“If he causes no more trouble,” Igan said.

“We could always use his parts,” Glisson said. “Or try to grow a new Svengaard and retrain it.” The Cyborg stood. “An immediate decision isn’t necessary. It is a thing to consider.”

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