Winner of the 1996 Locus Award for Best First Novel
Bantam Spectra, April 1995, ISBN# 0-553-56925-2
Phousita, a young woman from the slums of Sunda, becomes infected with the Bohr Maker -- a stolen nanotech device that allows her control over the biochemical processes of her own body, and in time, over that of others. Nikko is the young man responsible for the Maker's theft, but his plans have gone awry. Now his body has begun an insidious, pre-programed failure that will end in his death if he cannot recover the Maker. He must find Phousita, before the ruthless officers of the Commonwealth police beat him to the prize.
The following text is excerpted from THE BOHR MAKER by Linda Nagata. Copyright © 1995 by Linda Nagata. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or republished without permission in writing from the author.
CHAPTER 1
Just past dawn a dead man came floating down the river. The
current carried him under the old river-straddling warehouse, where
he fetched up against one of the fluff booms Arif had strung
between the rotting pilings. Phousita found him when she came to
gather the night's harvest of fluff. He floated face down. His
head had wedged under the fluff boom; his long black hair swayed
like a silk veil in the current.
Phousita glanced nervously overhead. The trap door that opened
onto the main floor of the abandoned warehouse hung open. She
debated with herself a moment. It would be so easy to slip into
the water, ease the dead man's body off the boom and guide him back
into the current before Arif discovered he was here. She would
never have to worry about who he might have been or what bitter
spirits still haunted his flesh. Let someone else farther down the
river have him!
But her conscience wouldn't let her do it. Even in the dusky
light under the river warehouse she could tell he'd been a wealthy
man. Such fine clothes! And he might have money on him, jewels.
The clan was hungry. She glanced again at the trap door.
"Sumiati," she called softly.
The termite-eaten floorboards creaked, then Sumiati peered
through the door. She had an empty bucket in her hands, ready to
pass it to Phousita. "So fast today! Did you fill the first
bucket already? It's about time our catch improved!" Her dark
eyes widened when she saw the body. She sucked in a little breath
of surprise. "Phousita, he's still got his clothes! Hold him!
Don't let the current take tuan away. I'll come down.
Look how beautiful his robe is. Oh, do you think we're the first
to find him?" She put the bucket down, then turned to climb
through the trap door, moving awkwardly as she bent over her
pregnant belly. She hung for a moment from the insulated wire
rope, looking like some rare, ripe fruit. Then she dropped
gracefully to the narrow metal plank that Arif had lashed between
the pilings. It shivered under the impact.
Phousita reached out a hand to steady her. Sumiati was a small
woman, but even beside her, Phousita was tiny. She stood no taller
than a petite child of seven or eight, though she was nearly twenty
five years old. Despite her size, her body was that of a woman:
slender and beautifully proportioned, endowed with ample breasts
and rounded hips, but on a scale that seemed unnaturally small.
With her pretty round face, her dark eyes, and her thick black hair
carefully coiled at the nape of her neck, she might have been a
diminutive spirit out of some forgotten mythology.
Her unusual appearance had once attracted many clients
after-hours in the business district. But she'd promised Arif she
wouldn't venture down there anymore. She was hungrier these days.
The clothes from this dead man would buy a large quantity of
rice.
And yet she hesitated. Easy wealth was so often cursed with
misfortune. "I don't like finding the tuan here," she
told Sumiati, instinctively using the traditional honorific.
"There's no telling what evil influences tuan carries with
him. Let's work quickly, then I'll shove him back into the
river."
Sumiati looked suddenly concerned. "Maybe we should call
Arif."
"No!" Sumiati jerked at the sharp tone of Phousita's voice.
Phousita hunched her shoulders; she looked across at the dead man.
"No," she said more gently. "No need to wake Arif. We can do it."
Pulling the close-fitting skirt of her sarong up above her knees,
she eased herself into the water until her tiny feet touched the
clean gravel that cushioned the river's concrete bed. The current
swirled in cool streams around her waist, gradually soaking her
faded blue breastcloth. She reached back to help Sumiati down,
then grabbed the empty fluff bucket and started wading towards the
dead man, one hand on the fluff boom for balance.
Arif had constructed the boom shortly after he'd moved the clan
into the abandoned warehouse. He'd gathered rare old plastic
bottles, the kind that didn't disintegrate in only a few weeks.
He'd cut them in half and then lashed them to a plank stripped from
the warehouse. They floated half-submerged in the water and when
the fluff came floating down the river they trapped it, like huge
hands grasping at the feast. The system had worked well for many
months. It would still work, if only there were more fluff in the
river... or fewer hungry people. Her gaze scanned the thin line of
brown foam bobbing against the boom. A dismal catch. Not enough
there to feed three people and there were thirty-nine empty bellies
in the clan. Forty, counting Sumiati's soon-to-be-born. Phousita
tried not to think about it.
Fierce rays of yellow light lanced under the river house as the
sun leapt up over the city. Phousita touched the dead man's head.
Bright white flecks of bone and torn, pink flesh could be seen
through his black hair. The back of his skull had been caved-in by
a blow. The current still washed dilute puffs of blood from the
wound. He must have been only minutes in the water. She lifted
his head carefully by the long hair. His face was pale,
nondescript European. His eyes were closed. A single
kanji glowed in soft, luminescent red on his cheek. She
couldn't read it. "Look, tuan was robbed," she said,
pointing at the torn lobes of his ears where earrings must have
been. Sumiati peered over her shoulder.
Out of principle Phousita touched his neck, checked for a pulse.
It was a ceremony the Chinese doctor insisted upon, even when the
patient was obviously dead. Perhaps it helped ease the frightened
spirit still trapped within the body. Sumiati looked on, a worried
pout on her lips until Phousita shook her head. Sumiati
smiled.
"Even if tuan was robbed, he still has his clothes,"
she said. "Maybe the thieves overlooked something." She quickly
checked his pockets, but found nothing. Phousita worked at the
fastenings on his robe. In minutes they had the body stripped.
Phousita stepped back in relief.
Sumiati's eyes glowed as she held the fluff bucket stuffed full
of fine clothing. "Push him off the boom," she urged. "Let's
hurry. We have to take these to temple market. It's a long walk,
but we'll get the best price there. We can take some water to sell
too. And then we can buy rice. Enough for everyone to eat until
their stomachs complain! And clothes. Henri and Maman need new
clothes. And medicines, of course. You'll know the ones to buy.
And the Chinese doctor is always glad to see you...."
Phousita smiled at Sumiati's nervous chatter. The dead man had
indeed brought them good fortune. And now she could send him on
his way. She reached for the dead man's arm. Twisted it gently,
to ease him off the boom. Hurry now. In a moment he would be
gone.
"Phousita!"
Her hands jerked back in guilty surprise. She looked up as Arif
dropped through the trap door. He landed on the metal plank. His
slim, hard body -- clothed only in worn shorts -- was poised in a
fighter's stance. Arif was always fighting, she thought bitterly.
And he'd do anything, anything at all to survive.
He stared at her, cruel violet eyes so out of place amongst the
swollen, exaggerated features of his laughing, yellow,
bioluminescent joker's face. Sumiati, blind to his moods, started
to bubble forth in her good-natured way with the tale of their
find, but Arif cut her off with a gesture. "Phousita," he growled
softly. "What are you doing?"
Phousita glanced at the nude body of the dead man. Without his
clothes he seemed a pale, ghostly thing. "Take the basket up,
Sumiati," she said softly. "Arif will help me now."
Sumiati nodded, confused. Arif helped her out of the river and
onto the plank, then stepped back, out of her way. She climbed the
rope. "Close the door behind you," he said. He still stared at
Phousita. In the harsh shadows under the warehouse, his ogre-ugly
face glowed brilliant yellow with its own generated light.
By his own admission Arif had been a wicked child. His mother
had sold him to a sorcerer who poisoned him with a spell that
exposed his sins upon his face. With his ridiculously elongated
nose and chin, his cheeks as round and full as over-ripe guavas,
and his glowing yellow complexion, he resembled one of the comical
servants of the wayang theater. Except his eyes.
His gaze flickered upward as the corrugated metal door closed
with a creak. Soft footsteps moved off across the warehouse floor.
When Sumiati was out of earshot, Arif spoke: "He's food, Phousita."
He walked to the end of the plank. "Why would you throw away
food?"
Suddenly Arif dove, slicing like a sunbeam through the water,
his thick black hair, tied up in a short pony tail, trailing behind
him. He surfaced next to Phousita, startling her with an explosion
of bubbles. He threw his swollen yellow head back and laughed,
then hugged her tiny figure quickly, his arms encircling her waist.
"Don't be afraid, Phousita," he crooned. "The old witch filled
your head with all kinds of lies. It's just a body.
Tuan's spirit is gone."
Phousita was trembling. She sank into Arif's arms while the
cool river water rushed past. "You don't know what kind of man he
was," she whispered.
"It doesn't matter."
"It matters if we take his body into ours."
"Not his body. Only the fluff that grows from it. You helped
me plant them before. You ate the fluff."
She laid her head against his chest. He'd dismissed her
reluctance then, too. "Sutedjo and Piet were part of our clan,"
she said. "We knew them; they would wish us no harm. But this man
is a stranger; we don't know what evil he's done."
"It's gone with him."
"His spirit clings to the body."
But Arif's patience had eroded. "Spirit rides in the head and
his head's smashed in," he snapped. "Stupid country girl, he's
gone!" He ducked under the water. A moment later, he
surfaced on the other side of the boom. Grabbing the dead man's
wrists, he twisted the body roughly off the boom. "I wish you'd
never met that old witch! She chased your brains away. You want
to be a sorceress like her? Fah! She was just a stupid old hill
woman. I'm glad she's dead. I wish I could have planted her
too!"
Phousita slapped the water. "Stop it, Arif. Stop it! You
pretend you know so much. You don't know! You hear rumors on the
street and you think they're true. Shiny new magic. But even the
new sorcerers don't know everything. Arif!"
He wasn't listening. He'd turned his back on her, hauling the
dead man up the river. She took a deep breath and ducked awkwardly
under the boom. Fear filled her as water swirled past her face.
Then she burst to the surface, gasping and splashing for air. She
didn't know how to swim. Arif had promised to teach her. Oh, why
did she get angry? It did no good. Arif only wanted the best for
her, for everyone in the clan. It hurt him when she let her doubt
show.
"Arif." She caught up with him; helped him drag the body
against the current. They reached the edge of the river house.
Arif stopped. Phousita glanced down through the clear water to the
gravel beneath her feet. Scattered there she could still see the
remnants of Sutedjo's bones, bright white slivers that hadn't yet
turned to fluff. She glanced up. Arif studied her with violet
eyes. "It wasn't the old witch who cured you, Phousita. It was
the Chinese doctor. The old magic is dead."
He ducked under the water, hauling one leg of the dead man with
him. Phousita used her tiny body as an anchor to keep the corpse
from drifting downstream while Arif secured the man's foot to a
mooring stone on the bottom. He surfaced, took the other leg,
hauled that down too.
Over the next few days the body would slowly dissolve into a
rich harvest of fluff that would float to the surface and gather
downstream against the fluff boom. The clan would never know the
reason for their good fortune. They'd attribute the abundant
harvest to luck.
Fluff hadn't existed when the old woman was alive. That was
only a few years ago. Phousita could remember it easily. She'd
been perhaps twenty-one, still trapped in a child's body. The
river had been a stinking sewer then, a deadly thread of water
draining the city's filth. When the fluff first started collecting
on the river's banks, they'd paid no attention to it, assuming it
was just a new kind of pollution. Then Arif had seen the rats
eating it....
Now the river ran clear. The water was clean, drinkable, though
the city's filth still washed into it with every rain.
Arif surfaced again, took the dead man's right arm. "Help push
him under," he said gruffly. Phousita nodded. Arif stretched the
arm of the corpse beyond its head, then reached underwater for the
mooring stone. He found it, and glanced over his shoulder at
Phousita. "Now." She placed her palms flat against the cold,
slippery chest and leaned hard, forcing the body under.
Something gave way beneath her right hand. She could hear it
more than feel it, a sharp metal snick! The chest opened
like a blinking eye. A golden needle shot out of the black
orifice, to bury itself in Phousita's breast. She reared back in
horror, swiping at the spot of blood just above her breastcloth
that marked the point where the needle had disappeared. She
stumbled through the water. Her chest was on fire. She could hear
herself bleating like a terrified child: "Unh! unh! unh!"
The corpse twisted in the current, the shoulders rolled. She
saw a little white tear in the dead white chest before the corpse
turned face down again. Her gaze shifted to Arif. The horror in
his eyes must have echoed her own. Help me. She tried to
say it, but her mouth had gone dry. Her tongue grew puffy and
swollen as the needle's poison spread through her system. The
bubbling song of the river seemed to rise in volume, building like
a wall around her before it collapsed into a chaotic buzz. Her
vision blurred. She could see Arif reaching for her. But the
current was swifter. Her eyes closed as its cold hands caressed
her face and swirled through her hair.
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