“I was seven,” he said, his voice intimate and quiet. “I was practicing spells, and my grandfather was watching me. He had dozed off in a chair, the way he usually did. Suddenly he clutched his head, groaned, and fell down. I ran to him, but he wasn’t breathing. He had a brain aneurysm. I ran downstairs and told my grandmother that Grandfather died. She told me that laziness was the worst trait in a man, and making up lies to get out of practice wasn’t much better. Then she told Gerard, her servant, to take me to the study and lock me in there. I sat on the floor for two hours looking at my grandfather’s corpse.”
Oh God.
A faint noise came from the hallway. A small dog trotted into view. He was squat, with huge, triangular ears and a pushed-up muzzle that said that somewhere in his ancestry there was an adventurous French bulldog. The origin of the rest of his DNA was a mystery. He was solid black, his coat fuzzy and wiry, and he moved like he owned the place.
“Hey, Napoleon,” I said.
Napoleon regarded me with solemn dark eyes from his cute gargoyle face. Then he turned around and padded into the hallway.
“A dog guide,” Mad Rogan said.
“Yes. Be careful. Bug likes to string clear fishing line around. If you pull one, bad things will happen.”
“What kind of bad things?” he asked.
“Exploding kind.”
We followed Napoleon through the maze of hallways up to the third floor. A heavy steel door barred our way. I took the Taser out of my backpack.
“No killing.”
“I’ll be on my best behavior,” Mad Rogan assured me.
The door clanged and opened, revealing a room lined with monitors. They sprouted from the walls and ceiling on narrow mounts, like rectangular electronic flowers blooming among vines of cables. In the middle of this digital jungle, in a broken circle of keyboards thrusting from the walls, a man sat on a rotating platform. His clothes, a grimy, dark, long-sleeved T-shirt and a pair of fatigue pants that had seen better days, hung on his slight frame. His disheveled dark hair, dragged rather than brushed from his broad, high forehead, competed with his clothes to see which lasted without washing the longest. A small nose and a small mouth combined with a triangular jaw made his face look top-heavy. His big eyes with brown irises burned with a manic intensity. His hands shook.
“Give it to me.” He jumped off his chair. He was about my height and weighed maybe twenty pounds less. “Give me.”
I raised the Taser. “Work first.”
He bounced in place. “I need it. Give it to me.”
“Work first.”
“Give! Give, give give gimme . . .” He was moving too fast, jittery, shaking. His words began to blend. “Giveittomebitch give giveme need-need-need . . .”
“Work first.”
“Fuck!” Bug spun on his foot. “What?”
“Adam Pierce. Find him.”
He held up a finger. “To take the edge off. One. One!”
I passed the vial to Mad Rogan, keeping the Taser on Bug. He’d made a lunge at me before. “Please give him one pill.”
Mad Rogan opened the jar. A pill rose in the air. Wow. The man’s control was crazy.
The pill floated to Bug. He snatched it out of the air, yanked a knife from the sheath on his belt, put the pill on the table, and sliced a third off. His fingers trembled. He swiped the smaller section of the pill off the desk and slid it in his mouth. Bug froze, standing on his toes, his hands straight down, as if he’d been about to take flight. The shaking stopped. He became completely and utterly still.
Mad Rogan glanced at me.
“Equzol,” I told him.
Equzol was a military drug designed to level you out. If you were sleepy, it would keep you awake; if you were hyper, it would calm you down. When you took it, the world became clear. You saw everything, were aware of everything, reacted fast, but nothing freaked you out. It was issued to snipers and convoy drivers. They would take it to keep from overcorrecting or giving in to fatigue, and once it wore off, they’d sleep for twenty hours straight. It was a classified substance, but my mother still had connections.
Bug opened his eyes. The strange, jittery hysteria was still there, but it receded, curling down for a rest deep inside him.
“They’re quiet,” he said softly and smiled.
I nodded at the jar. “Adam Pierce.”
Bug slid into his seat and pulled up the sleeves of his dark, grimy, long-sleeved shirt. Dozens of tiny dots marked his forearms, each a tiny individual tattoo blending together into an arcane design. His hands flew over half a dozen keyboards as if he’d been a virtuoso pianist. Tranquil sounds of trance music filled the space. The screens scrolled too fast to follow, the images flickering. He was tapping into the security cameras on the streets. I’d seen him do it before, and he was expert at it.
Mad Rogan’s face had hardened into a cold, determined expression. His eyes turned merciless.
“What is it?” I asked quietly.
“He’s a swarmer,” he ground through his teeth.
“Yes.”
“How long?”
“How long has he been one?”
“Yes.”
“Three years. He was bound to a swarm two years into his enlistment, and he’s been out of the Air Force for one.”
Mad Rogan stared at Bug. “He should be dead. Their life expectancy after the binding is eighteen months.”
“Bug is special.”
Swarmers were surveillance specialists. They were bound by magic to what they themselves described as swarms. Swarms had no physical manifestation. They lived somehow inside the swarmer’s psyche, letting him or her split his attention over hundreds of independent tasks, like a river splitting into narrow streams. Swarmers processed information at a superhuman speed. Most of them had the binding done in the military, and most of them didn’t live two years past that. Those who volunteered for the procedure were either terminally ill or tempted by a huge bonus payable to their families. Bug somehow survived. It might have been his deprivation chamber, or maybe he was just better suited for it than most, but he lived, got out of Air Force, and hid here, away from everyone.
Mad Rogan locked his teeth. It made his jaw look even more square.
“Does it bother you?” I asked.
“It bothers me that they do this to soldiers, squeeze everything they can out of them, and then discard them like garbage. People know this goes on and nobody gives a shit. Acceptable losses.” He said the word like it burned his mouth.