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Gregory Bear - Blood Music

Here you can read online Gregory Bear - Blood Music full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: New York, year: 2005, publisher: ibooks, Incorporated, genre: Science fiction. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Gregory Bear Blood Music
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    Blood Music
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    ibooks, Incorporated
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  • Year:
    2005
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    New York
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    1596871067
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The book that launched the career of Hugo and Nebula Award-winning author Greg Bearand earned him an avalanche of praise from the SF worldBlood Music offers a dazzling flight of disciplined imagination. (Its) one of the most interesting stories to come along in years (Poul Anderson).

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Greg Bear

Blood Music

Interphase

Each hour, a myriad of trillions of little live thingsmicrobes, bacteria, the peasants of natureare born and die, not counting for much except in the bulk of their numbers and the accumulation of their tiny lives. They do not perceive deeply, nor do they suffer. A hundred trillion, dying, would not begin to have the same importance as a single human death.

Within the ranks of magnitude of all creatures, small as microbes or great as humans, there is an equality of elan, just as the branches of a tall tree, gathered together, equal the bulk of the limbs below, and all the limbs equal the bulk of the trunk.

We believe this as firmly as the kings of France believed in their hierarchy. Which of our generations will come to disagree?

Anaphase:

June-September

1

La Jolla, California

The rectangular slate-black sign stood on a low mound of bright green and clumpy Korean grass, surrounded by irises and sided by a dark cement-bedded brook filled with koi. Carved into the street side of the sign was the name GENETRON in Times Roman letters of insignia red, and beneath the name the motto, Where Small Things Make Big Changes.

The Genetron labs and business offices were housed in a U-shaped, bare concrete Bauhaus structure surrounding a rectangular garden court. The main complex had two levels with open-air walkways. Beyond the courtyard and just behind an artificial hummock of earth, not yet filled in with new greenery, was a four-story black glass-sided cube fenced with electrified razor-wire.

These were the two sides of Genetron; the open labs, where biochip research was conducted, and the defense contracts building, where military applications were investigated.

Security was strict even in the open labs. All employees wore laser-printed badges and non-employee access to the labs was carefully monitored. The management of Genetronfive Stanford graduates who had founded the company just three years out of schoolrealized that industrial espionage was even more likely than an intelligence breach in the black cube. Yet the outward atmosphere was serene, and every attempt was made to soft-pedal the security measures.

A tall, stoop-shouldered man with unruly black hair untangled himself from the interior of a red Volvo sports car and sneezed twice before crossing the employee parking lot. The grasses were tuning up for an early summer orgy of irritation. He casually greeted Walter, the middle-aged and whippet-wiry guard. Walter just as casually confirmed his badge by running it through the laser reader. Not much sleep last night, Mr. Ulam? Walter asked.

Vergil pursed his lips and shook his head. Parties, Walter. His eyes were red and his nose was swollen from constant rubbing with the handkerchief that now resided,abused and submissive, in his pocket.

How working men like you can party on a weeknight, I dont know.

The ladies demand it, Walter, Vergil said, passing through. Walter grinned and nodded, though he sincerely doubted Vergil was getting much action, parties or no. Unless standards had severely declined since Walters day, nobody with a weeks growth of beard was getting much action.

Ulam was not the most prepossessing figure at Genetron. He stood six feet two inches on very large flat feet. He was twenty-five pounds overweight and at thirty-two years of age, his back hurt him, he had high blood pressure, and he could never shave close enough to eliminate an Emmett Kelly shadow.

His voice seemed designed not to win friendsharsh, slightly grating, tending toward loudness. Two decades in California had smoothed his Texas accent, but when he became excited or angry, the Panhandle asserted itself with an almost painful edge.

His sole distinction was an exquisite pair of emerald green eyes, wide and expressive, defended by a luxurious set of lashes. The eyes were more decorative than functional, how ever; they were covered by a large pair of black-framed glasses. Vergil was near-sighted.

He ascended the stairs two and three steps at a time, long powerful legs making the concrete and steel steps resound. On the second floor, he walked along the open corridor to the Advanced Biochip Divisions joint equipment room, known as the share lab. His mornings usually began with a check on specimens in one of the five ultracentrifuges. His most recent batch had been rotating for sixty hours at 200,000 Gs and was now ready for analysis.

For such a large man, Vergil had surprisingly delicate and sensitive hands. He removed an expensive black titanium rotor from the ultracentrifuge and slid shut the steel vacuum seal. Placing the rotor on a workbench, one by one he removed and squinted at the five squat plastic tubes suspended in slings beneath its mushroom-like cap. Several well-defined beige layers had formed in each tube.

Vergils heavy black eyebrows arched and drew together behind the thick rims of his glasses. He smiled, revealing teeth spotted brown from a childhood of drinking naturally fluoridated water.

He was about to suction off the buffer solution and the unwanted layers when the lab phone beeped. He placed the tube in a rack and picked up the receiver. Share lab, Ulam here.

Vergil, this is Rita. I saw you come in, but you werent in your lab

Home away from home, Rita. Whats up?

You asked metold meto let you know if a certain gentleman arrived. I think hes here, Vergil.

Michael Bernard? Vergil asked, his voice rising.

I think its him. But Vergil

Ill be right down.

Vergil

He hung up and dithered for a moment over the tubes, then left them where they were.

Genetrons reception area was a circular extrusion from the ground floor on the east corner, surrounded by picture windows and liberally supplied with aspidistras in chrome ceramic pots. Morning light slanted white and dazzling across the sky-blue carpet as Vergil entered from the lab side. Rita stood up behind her desk as he passed by.

Vergil

Thanks, he said. His eyes were on the distinguished-looking gray-haired man standing by the single lobby couch. There was no doubt about it; Michael Bernard. Vergil recognized him from photos and the cover portrait Time Magazine had printed three years before. Vergil extended his hand and put on an enormous smile. Pleased to meet you, Mr. Bernard.

Bernard shook Vergils hand but appeared confused.

Gerald T. Harrison stood in the broad double door of Genetrons fancy for-show office, phone receiver gripped between ear and shoulder. Bernard looked to Harrison for an explanation.

Im very glad you got my message Vergil continued before Harrisons presence registered.

Harrison immediately made his farewells on the phone and slammed it on its cradle. Rank hath its privileges, Vergil, he said, smiling too broadly and taking a stance beside Bernard.

Im sorrywhat message? Bernard asked.

This is Vergil Ulam, one of our top researchers, Harrison said obsequiously. Were all very pleased to have you visiting, Mr. Bernard. Vergil, Ill get back to you later about that matter you wanted to discuss.

He hadnt asked to talk to Harrison about anything. Sure, Vergil said. He rankled under the old familiar feeling: being sidestepped, pushed aside.

Bernard didnt know him from Adam.

Later, Vergil, Harrison said pointedly.

Sure, of course. He backed away, glanced at Bernard pleadingly, then turned and shambled back through the rear door.

Who was that? Bernard asked.

A very ambitious fellow, Harrison said darkly. But we have him under control.

Harrison kept his work office in a ground floor space on the west end of the lab building. The room was surrounded by wooden shelves neatly filled with books. The eye-level shelf behind the desk held familiar black plastic ring-bound books from Cold Spring Harbor. Arranged below were a row of telephone directoriesHarrison collected antique phone booksand several shelves of computer science volumes. His graph-ruled black desktop supported a leather-edged blotting pad and a VDT.

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