The fact that young Glen looked just like his dad, but was subdued and reserved.
The fact that Glen had gone to a different soothsayer.
The fact that Rodger’s taste in receptionists was… unusual.
The pieces all fit—that part of my sooth, at least, must have been read correctly; I
Ray Chen would sort out the legalities; he was an expert at that kind of thing. He’d find a way to smooth over my unauthorized soothsaying before we brought this to trial.
I got in a cab and headed off to Wheel Three to confront the killer.
“Hold it right there,” I said, coming down the long, gently curving corridor at Francis Crick. “You’re under arrest.”
Glen Hissock stopped dead in his tracks. “What for?”
I looked around, then drew Glen into an empty classroom. “For the murder of your uncle, Skye Hissock. Or should I say, for the murder of your brother? The semantics are a bit tricky.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” said Glen, in that subdued, nervous voice of his.
I shook my head. Soothsayer Skye
He glared at me. “Like that makes it better.”
“When did it start?”
He was quiet for a time, then gave a little shrug, as if realizing there was no point in pretending any longer. “When I was twelve— as soon as I entered puberty. Not every night, you understand. But often enough.” He paused, then: “How’d you figure it out?”
I decided to tell him the truth. “There are only two different sets of DNA in your house—one female, as you’d expect, and just one male.”
Glen said nothing.
“I had the male DNA read. I was looking for a trait that might have provided a motive for your father. You know what I found.”
Glen was still silent.
“When your dad’s sooth was read just after birth, maybe his parents were told that he was sterile. Certainly the proof is there, in his DNA: an inability to produce viable sperm.” I paused, remembering the details Rundstedt had explained to me. “But the soothsayer back then couldn’t have known the effect of having the variant form of gene ABL-419d, with over a hundred T-A-T repeats. That variation’s function hadn’t been identified that long ago. But it
Glen was motionless, a statue.
“And so Skye lied to your dad. Oh, he told him about his sterility, all right, but he figured there was no point in getting into an argument about what that variant gene meant.”
Glen looked at the ground. When at last he did speak, his voice was bitter. “I had thought Dad knew. I confronted him— Christ sakes, Dad, if you knew you had a gene for incestuous pedophilia, why the hell didn’t you seek counseling? Why the hell did you have kids?”
“But your father didn’t know, did he?”
Glen shook his head. “That bastard Uncle Skye hadn’t told him.”
“In fairness,” I said, “Skye probably figured that since your father couldn’t have kids, the problem would never come up. But your dad made a lot of money, and wanted it to pass to an heir. And since he couldn’t have an heir the normal way…”
Glen’s voice was full of disgust. “Since he couldn’t have an heir the normal way, he had one made.”
I looked the boy up and down. I’d never met a clone before. Glen really was the spitting image of the old man—a chip off the old block. But like any dynasty, the Hissock-Connolly clan wanted not just an heir, but an heir and a spare. Little Billy, ten years younger than Glen, was likewise an exact genetic duplicate of Rodger Hissock, produced from Rodger’s DNA placed into one of Rebecca’s eggs. All three Hissock males had indeed left DNA in that bathroom—exactly identical DNA.
“Have you always known you were a clone?” I asked.
Glen shook his head. “I only just found out. Before I went for my adult soothsaying, I wanted to see the report my parents had gotten when I was born. But none existed—my dad had decided to save some money. He didn’t need a new report done, he figured; my sooth would be identical to his, after all. When I went to get my sooth read and found that
“And so you took your father’s blaster, and, since your DNA is the same as his…”