Robert Sawyer - Triggers

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On the eve of a secret military operation, an assassin’s bullet strikes U.S. President Seth Jerrison. He is rushed to hospital, where surgeons struggle to save his life. At the same hospital, Canadian researcher Dr. Ranjip Singh is experimenting with a device that can erase traumatic memories. Then a terrorist bomb detonates. In the operating room, the president suffers cardiac arrest. He has a near-death experience—but the memories that flash through Jerrison’s mind are not his memories. It quickly becomes clear that the electromagnetic pulse generated by the bomb amplified and scrambled Dr. Singh’s equipment, allowing a random group of people to access one another’s minds. And now one of those people has access to the president’s memories—including classified information regarding an upcoming military mission, which, if revealed, could cost countless lives. But the task of determining who has switched memories with whom is a daunting one, particularly when some of the people involved have reasons to lie…

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“And does it suggest how to break them?” asked Susan.

“Well, um, no—no, I don’t have a clue how to do that. Entanglement is a tricky thing, and normally it’s quite fragile. But I’ll keep trying to find the answer.”

“Do that,” Susan said.

“I will. What about you? Any progress?”

Susan shook her head. “I still don’t know who’s reading the president.”

“What are you going to do if you can’t identify who it is?” Singh asked.

Susan said nothing.

“You can’t keep all the people here prisoner indefinitely.”

Again: nothing.

“They’ve committed no crime!” said Singh.

“One of them has in his or her possession classified information.”

“Not deliberately.”

She shook her head. “Doesn’t matter. Possession of such information is a felony, and they’re all suspects.”

“You’d like to…” Singh began, and then, not able to give voice to it, he tried again: “You’d like to have them disappear, wouldn’t you?”

Susan lifted her eyebrows. “It’s an option.”

“They’ve done nothing wrong!”

“Professor Singh,” Susan said, “look at me. My job is to die for the president, if need be: my life instead of his. I didn’t vote for him, I don’t agree with most of his policies, I don’t even particularly like him, but none of that matters. We live in a system in which the president is more important than anyone, and this president has been compromised in a way that has to be contained or eliminated. In fact, even breaking the link may not be enough. Yes, once it’s severed—if it ever is—the person may not be able to access new memories, but presumably they’ll still remember anything they’ve recalled while the link was intact, right?”

“I don’t know,” Singh said. “Honestly. No one has any experience with this.”

“Which means,” Susan said, “that we may indeed have to lock these people up indefinitely.”

“You can’t,” said Singh. “I’ll go public.”

“It’s not my call to make,” said Susan. “But don’t count on having that option. In fact…”

Singh narrowed his eyes. “Yes?”

“Your work may end up being classified. You have to recognize that you’ve developed the ultimate interrogation technique. Replicate the linking effect, but with only two people within the sphere. They’d each link to the other, right? An interrogator would know everything a prisoner knew—plans, names, dates, codes, whatever.”

“And vice versa, Agent Dawson. Don’t forget that.”

“Yes, you’d have to carefully choose your interrogator—make sure he doesn’t know anything vital…that is, if you ever expected to let the prisoner go free again.”

Singh had a shocked expression on his face, but Susan pressed ahead. “Let’s update the chart,” she said. The Sikh had redrawn his chart on the lab’s whiteboard. The grid had twenty columns and three rows; the rows were labeled “Name,” “Can Read,” and “Is Read By.”

Susan pointed to the column for Orrin Gillett. “Gillett can read Ivan Tarasov, a security guard.”

Singh filled in this information with a blue dry-erase marker.

“Ah,” said Singh. “I interviewed this Tarasov. He can read Dora Hennessey, who was here to donate a kidney to her father.” He wrote this in.

“Yes, I know who she is,” said Susan. “I interviewed Dora just before coming here. She’s able to read the memories of Ann January. Mrs. January is a surgical nurse, and—”

“Excuse me,” said Singh. “I’m sorry, but—are you sure?”

“Well, Dora didn’t tell me Ann’s exact job title,” Susan said, “but she’s some kind of nurse.”

“No, no. I mean, are you sure that Dora Hennessey is reading Ann January?”

“Oh, yes. No question.”

Singh pointed at a square on his whiteboard. “Because David January is reading Ann January, too. I just interviewed him.”

Susan came over to look at the board. “Husband and wife? Or brother and sister?” But before Singh could reply, she had the answer from his memory. “Husband and wife, right?” she said.

“Yes.”

“That’s very strange,” said Susan.

“Indeed it is,” said Singh. “We haven’t had two people linked to the same person before, and…”

“Yes?” prodded Susan.

Singh looked frustrated. “Well, I thought I was making progress puzzling this out. But multiple linkages wouldn’t work with the kind of quantum entanglement we were just talking about; a double linkage would require a complex superposition that I should think would rapidly decohere.”

Susan was astonished that talk like this actually now made sense to her. She thought about Singh’s theory—not so much the details, but his level of confidence in it. He had been sure he was on the right track, and—

“He’s lying,” Susan said.

“What?” said Singh.

“He’s lying. This David January fellow is lying.”

“Why would he lie about who he’s linked to?” asked Singh. But then he got it: “Oh! The president!”

“Exactly,” said Susan. “I’m going to have a word with Mr. January myself.” She looked at Singh. “Cheer up, Ranjip. Maybe we’ll only have to eliminate one person.”

Chapter 19

Susan left Singh’s lab and walked the short distance to his office, sitting down behind his kidney-shaped desk. She pored over the handwritten notes Singh had made on David January: he was, it turned out, the doctor who had operated the defibrillator that had been used on Prospector, and he’d been married for twenty-three years now to Ann January, who was indeed a surgical nurse. Susan googled his name, just to see what would come up, and then checked up on his wife. She then called hospital security and asked them to locate David January and bring him to Singh’s office.

A few minutes later, Dr. January arrived, accompanied, to Susan’s surprise, by a security guard whose nameplate read “Tarasov”—he was the person being read by Orrin Gillett. Tarasov was behaving oddly: he wouldn’t meet her gaze, and he seemed generally uncomfortable to be talking to her. She wondered if he was trying to hide something; she’d grill him next. But for now David January was her priority. She dismissed Tarasov.

January turned out to be the squat man she’d seen leaving Singh’s lab earlier. He was forty-four, according to Singh’s notes, and had hyperthyroid bulging eyes; he looked a bit like Peter Lorre.

“Have a seat, Mr. January,” Susan said. She deliberately chose not to call him “Doctor”—you never elevate an interrogee above the interrogator. “I’m just following up on the conversation you had with Professor Singh. I understand you told him you are linked to your wife.”

The big eyes got even bigger for a moment. “To Annie, yes.”

“How convenient, that,” Susan said, her tone neutral.

January smiled amiably. “I don’t know if it’s convenient, but there’s no one else I’d rather be linked to.”

“Well,” said Susan, trying on a disarming smile of her own, “I guess it’s what every woman wants in a man if you believe the magazines. You’ll no longer be able to say to her, ‘I can’t read minds,’ when she expects you to do something but doesn’t explicitly tell you, right?”

His smile now seemed forced. “I guess. It still seems so…so fantastic.” He spread his arms a bit. “I gotta tell you, it’s funny seeing myself as she sees me.”

“Funny?”

“You know, to have memories from her point of view, memories in which she sees me instead of me seeing her.”

Despite her suspicions, Susan was intrigued. “How closely do the memories match? I mean, do you see an almost three-dimensional scene, shifting from her perspective to your own and back again? Do they synch up that well?”

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