Freedom

Free Freedom by Daniel Suárez Page A

Book: Freedom by Daniel Suárez Read Free Book Online
Authors: Daniel Suárez
long while. The only reminder of his quest was when he looked at Riley and saw the subtle aura glowing above her call-out—she was his current goal.
    He focused his attention out the window. A surprising amount of grass grew in the lowlands this time of year. It was beautiful.
    Sebeck sensed Riley studying him, but for several minutes they drove in silence. She finally spoke. “I know who you are.”
    Sebeck didn’t respond.
    “You’re that detective—Sergeant Peter Sebeck—the one who was framed for the Daemon hoax.”
    Sebeck nodded.
    “They put you to death.”
    Sebeck nodded somberly again. “If you believe the news.”
    “You’ve lost a great deal. Your career. Your reputation. I don’t imagine you’re here voluntarily.”
    “No.”
    “Did you know Matthew Sobol? Is that why he gave you this quest?”
    “Sobol was my primary suspect in a murder case. From the point my name entered the news, I was in the Daemon’s sights. Sobol effectively framed me with a computer program.”
    “How did you survive your execution?”
    Sebeck shrugged. “Ask Price. He was the one who revived me at the funeral home.”
    “You mean Chunky Monkey, the operative back at the travel center?”
    Sebeck just gave her a look. “His name is Laney Price. Another misfit the Daemon found somewhere.” He cast a glance at Riley. “No offense.”
    “None taken.”
    Sebeck decided to change the subject. “Is this your tribe’s land?”
    “No. Right now we’re passing through the Acoma reservation. I’m a Laguna Indian. We’ll reach Laguna land in about fifteen minutes. The Navajo nation is north of us—much larger—and the Zunis are to the west.”
    Sebeck gazed out the window at the mesas and light green grass bowing in a breeze. “This is beautiful country. I always thought of New Mexico as just sand and rocks.”
    “The Spanish word for lake is laguna . That’s how our tribe got its name. Access to water is what attracted Europeans.” She pointed into the distance and a line of tan rock on the horizon. “The Acoma pueblo up on that mesa was first settled in eleven hundred A.D. It’s the oldest continuously occupied community in North America.”
    Sebeck was genuinely surprised. “So they didn’t fall along with the Anasazi civilization?”
    “You have an interest in Anasazi history?”
    “It came up recently in conversation.”
    “Well, Acoma rose partly from the collapse of Chacoan society. Some of the survivors resettled here.
    “Acoma was attacked in the late fifteen-hundreds by the Spanish. They used cannons and attack dogs to force their way up the stone stairway onto the mesa. They killed all but two hundred and fifty of the twenty-five hundred inhabitants and cut one foot off every male survivor. The children were given to Catholic missionaries, but most of them wound up being sold into slavery. The Spanish then used the pueblo as a base to conquer the rest of the region.”
    Sebeck didn’t know what to say.
    “That was two centuries before the British colonies in the East declared their independence. We’ve been here a long time.”
    “And now you’re a darknet faction leader. Are you some sort of militant?”
    She laughed. “You mean, a violent fringe group? No, Sergeant. We’re builders.” A look came over her, and she tapped again at invisible objects on a hidden layer of D-Space. “In fact, you’ll see some of our work on the way.” She was about to say something, but then apparently thought better of it.
    “What?”
    “If you’re wondering whether I bear a grudge against the Spanish—or the U.S. government for that matter—I don’t. Nursing anger against people long dead is a waste of one’s life. Today if someone wrongs us, we do what anyone else does: we send our lawyers after them.” Riley fixed her gaze on Sebeck. “The Laguna value education highly. It is our rod and staff, as my father used to say.”
    “How did a woman your age get involved in the darknet?”
    “A

Similar Books

Surrendered Hearts

Carrie Turansky

The Exposé 4

Roxy Sloane

Flame Thrower

Alice Wade

The Gold Falcon

Katharine Kerr

The Antidote

Oliver Burkeman