Midnight, Water City

Chris McKinney, 1973-

Book - 2021

"2150: An unnamed police detective receives a message from Akira Kimura, the preeminent scientist and living legend who vanquished a world-ending meteor thirty years ago. As Akira's former head of security-and perhaps her only friend-he is one of the few who knows of the sacrifices that were necessary for her to complete Ascalon, the cosmic ray that neutralized the global threat. Ascalon's Scar remains emblazoned in the sky, a permanent reminder of humanity's close call with extinction. When he arrives at Akira's home and finds her methodically dismembered, he must dig into their shared past-with the help of a mysterious synesthesia that no one else knows he has-to find her killer. Through a future of underwater cit...ies, floating suburbs, skin-dyed teenagers, and a wealth gap that has outlived a near-apocalypse, McKinney's cinematic novel is the perfect blend of dark cyberpunk and thrilling detective procedural, all while posing the ultimate question of what we are willing to sacrifice to engineer the world we want"--

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Subjects
Genres
Science fiction
Dystopian fiction
Detective and mystery fiction
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Soho Press Inc./Soho Crime [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Chris McKinney, 1973- (author)
Physical Description
305 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781641292405
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In this first installment of a projected sf noir trilogy set more than a century in the future, humanity is still pulling itself back together after a near-catastrophic event. Akira Kimura, the woman who quite literally saved the world, is dead: murdered. The narrator has known the victim for decades; he used to be in charge of her personal security. Now he's a cop, and he's determined to nail her killer. Although it has plenty of science-fiction elements (personal artificial intelligences, massive undersea living complexes), this is at its heart a traditional murder mystery, much in the same way Ben H. Winters' The Last Policeman (2012) was a cop story set in a science-fictional environment. McKinney gives us a grisly murder; a cop with a history of violence; a surly, dim-witted police captain; an assortment of unsavory supporting characters; and some really effective twists. Readers who like mysteries with a futuristic feel will love this one, but the novel also works as straight-up sf.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Set in the 22nd century, this exceptional mystery-SF hybrid from McKinney (The Tattoo), a trilogy kickoff, boasts impressive worldbuilding and a classic morally compromised lead thrust into a high-stakes homicide investigation. In 2102, Earth was almost destroyed by an asteroid, but the brilliant scientist who detected it, Akira Kimura, was also able to invent a cosmic ray that prevented the disaster. Forty years later, she contacts her former head of security, an unnamed investigator with a unique form of synesthesia, now on the police force, because she fears her life is in danger. After the investigator arrives in her underwater home at the bottom of the world's largest seascraper, deadly solar flares having led many to seek safe havens in the oceans, he sees green, a sign for him of murder, coming from the sealed hibernation chamber humans have been using to rejuvenate themselves. Inside, he's shocked to find Akira's frozen and cut-up corpse. The path toward the truth behind the murder is satisfyingly complex, yielding a logical, if gut-wrenching, solution. Comparisons to Philip K. Dick's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, the inspiration for the movie Blade Runner, are warranted. (July)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

McKinney opens his futuristic Water City Trilogy with a slice of post-apocalyptic noir even darker and more stylized than Blade Runner. Called to Akira Kimura's penthouse in the undersea mansion of Volcano Vista to provide personal security for his old friend, the nameless narrator finds his prospective client flooded with nitro and dismembered inside her hibernation chamber. It's a grim fate for the most famous person in the world, the scientist who back in 2102 spotted the asteroid Sessho-seki on a collision course with Earth and overcame the relentless objections of people like NASA scientist Dr. Karlin Brum to launch the Ascalon Project, whose cosmic ray split The Killing Rock into halves that darted off in different, non-Earthbound directions. But it's far from the most bizarre thing that will happen to the narrator, an 80-year-old detective who served as Akira's bodyguard while she worked on the project. Over the next week he'll quit his job during an interrogation by his boss, pull a thermal blade on Akira's wealthy grad school friend Jerry Caldwell, get arrested for murder when Jerry's killed soon afterward, submit to another interrogation by Sabrina, the fourth wife he mentored when she was a rookie cop, and enlist his friend Akeem Buhari to accompany him on a midnight visit to Akira's mausoleum to fulfill her last request: that he find the daughter she abandoned years ago and apologize to her. The landscape is so densely imagined in both technological and political terms (think class warfare and cellphones on steroids) that it's no easy task to concentrate on the self-tormenting hero, who reflects that "violence is when I'm most in tune with my flow," or his investigation. Even the most ardent readers are more likely to turn the last page exhausted rather than eager for the sequels. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 Forty years ago, in the year 2102, the asteroid Sessho-seki hurled toward Earth at nineteen miles per second. Only one person could spot it: Akira Kimura. Scientist, savior, hero of the goddamn human race. She did so with the largest telescope ever built, atop the tallest mountain on Earth, to map its trajectory and engineer a weapon to counter it: Ascalon, the cosmic ray that saved the world. It fired with so much energy that its path remains visible, a permanent slash across the sky. People call it Ascalon's Scar. One in every four girls born in the last decade is named Ascalon, including my youngest daughter, who's nearing eighteen months. Irritating, but my wife insisted. At least the name's popularity is down from one in two, which it was after those world-saving events. I'd guess that by now, only half of the population can recall the name Sessho-seki--The Killing Rock--but everybody remembers Ascalon. Probably doesn't help that Akira gave the asteroid a Japanese name. But being Japanese is coming to mean less and less anyway. Being white, Black, Latino, too. 177 atmospheres below sea level in Volcano Vista, the world's largest seascraper, is where I'm heading. That used to be the crush depth of a super-sub, but we beat crush depth like we beat global warming, Sessho-seki, and sixty being old. I'm eighty now, finally the right age to collect Social Security, but I'll need to grind away another five to ten years. I'm on my fourth marriage and quite a few kids, but Ascalon is the most like me--can't sit still, never sleeps, loves to walk backward. It's probably deluded and egomaniacal to like that she takes after me. I'm basically old enough to be her ancestor. The older I get, the more I care about numbers. I think about them too damn much, which is funny because I'm getting worse at running calculations in my head. At least my iE can do that for me. The elevator opens, and a boy, maybe sixteen and completely tat-dyed blue, steps out. He's got the indifferent swagger of a teenager and androgynous pink hair draped over the right half of his face. He's trying hard to look like a cartoon. Maybe that's all we ever wanted from the beginning, to look like cartoons. Well, we're certainly succeeding. We all wear the same snug, temp-controlled foam fits spun from synthetic yarn coated with conductive metal. It's like an old-school wetsuit, except it's got a scaly metallic sheen to it that can change pattern and color. Some people, like my wife, like to wear a thin overcoat over theirs. Kids nowadays, they like to retract the sleeves and midriffs, while us older folk constrict it to take advantage of its girdling abilities. Either way, adjust the temp with your iE, and you're good to go for rain, shine, or a frolic in the ocean. This boy, he's wearing one, too, of course. He scratches his mechanical blue tail with an unusually long pinky finger as he walks past me, diving into his uncanny valley, a synthetic form of natural reality that looks plain creepy. Maybe fake tails, like the slang "hemo" and "semi," are in with the kids now? Who knows or even wants to. A weary-looking couple steps into the elevator with me, the woman fighting to re-convert her umbrella-style skirt back into a stiff, conical one. The skirt's clearly winning, and I get it. As the door closes, I look in its mirrored surface at my own reflection. I'm fighting age so hard, I look like a ventriloquist's doll. This couple has the look of twelve-volt-intellect renters who could never really afford this place. Working their hardest the last decade but not breaking even. They get off at atmosphere five, and I'm alone in the gorilla-glass tube as I continue down. I look out onto a Volcano Vista feed observation platform. A cloud of plankton, freshly released. A school of fish swoops in, mouths wide open, constantly moving, constantly feeding. Then marlin and sharks come for the small fish to keep the food chain spectacle going. Down deeper still, darkness. The sprinkle of marine snow. Bioluminescent jellyfish and creatures that drip instead of swim. I find myself half-wishing the glass would web and shatter, killing this old man by drowning or water pressure imploding my skull. I feel like I'm drowning anyway, and everyone around me is trying to throw me anchors. This building I'm descending is in essence a buoy, and the life drawn to it gets weirder and weirder-looking as I go. At atmosphere ninety-nine, a vampire squid with glowing blue eyes swims by slowly. Always slowly--the absence of heat and light from the sun forces them to conserve energy. This species is older than dinosaurs. The creature turns itself inside out. Something must be coming for it. Ah, no, it's just spooked by the giant cubes of trash being parachuted up by massive, billowing mechanical jellyfish. Now we're getting close to where The Money lives. The deeper you go, the more primo the real estate. At 177 atmospheres, the bottom of the ocean, the elevator slows to a stop. Outside are black volcanic chimneys, one source of our geothermal energy. Zombie worms also live out there, grinding whale bones to dust. I spot the hull of a passenger jet from that day, decades ago, that the Great Sun Storm knocked all the planes out of the sky. Oh, and a cannonball from an old pirate ship--there's no way that's the same one I dropped from above the surface all those years ago? The elevator beeps, and I pivot back toward my reflection. Behind this door is the woman who's supposed to help me. My oldest and perhaps dearest friend. Years ago, before she became a deity among us, she used to tell me I was her best friend, too. People have told me this often. It used to make me feel good, until I realized I was surrounded by people without friends. There was a reason no one else could stand these motherfuckers. And for Akira Kimura, that reason was probably that it's tough to put up with the smartest person on Earth. Akira has called me to moonlight as personal security for her, just like in the old days. She says she's been getting the weird sense that she's in danger. A vision. A halo. And once again, a woman who says she trusts only me. But she's always been a little paranoid. She's offered to pay me well, more than enough to get myself out from under. That's the funny thing about The Money. They'll gift each other artifact and libation equal to most people's annual income. But anyone who ain't them's gotta work for it. I'll give you this, but you've gotta do something for me. Because they know a gift to the Less Than is truly a gift, not a trade. And rich or poor, no one wants to give away a thing for free. I look into the elevator's facial recognition scan. I have clearance, just like she said. Right before the door slides open, my wife pings me on my iE. It zooms to a halt in front of my face to emphasize the importance of the message. Sabrina's got this psychic power for pinging me at the worst times. But if I'm being honest with myself, it's not that hard for her to figure out. I'm not in love anymore, so they're all the worst times. I pluck my iE out of the air and tuck it into my shoulder pocket before stepping into the penthouse. The place is half furnished. This is a woman who lives at work, at her telescope, so the lack of armchairs isn't surprising. I'm way too early. Around thirty minutes, so I poke around. Doesn't look like she's home. Odd--she's more pathological about punctuality than me. I peep through her ocean telescope and look up through the atmospheres. All this modern underwater architecture, lit up with bioluminescence. Condos, aqua resorts, plazas, lighted vac tubes connecting them all. Like a twenty-first century skyline flipped upside down and dropped into the ocean. Refuse drones designed to look like yeti crabs claw out of septic cubes and scurry to the surface, flexing their mechanical limbs. Everything is hydro-powered, motion-powered, geo-powered. Sewage, heated and pressurized into biodiesel. Holographic ads circle their gilded prey, telling people they can somehow live forever while looking like a million bucks. The underwater city is always on, data-scavenging all our habits and using the info to create a more efficient place. An underwater panoramic, lubricated by the grease of America. And that's when I see green. A small wisp of it, weaving its way under Akira's bedroom door, its scent an ambergris perfume. I step inside and look around closely. Nothing out of the ordinary. The only pieces inside are a dresser, a Japanese tea table with two black cushions, and a bullet-shaped AMP hibernation chamber, a grade people would kill to own. I sense death. I can hear it like an off-key strum. But I don't see blood. Even though I'm colorblind, I know what it looks like, and there isn't any. But the perfume is overpowering in here. The wafts start coming at me. Other people can't sense them. You can't recreate them through canvas or theater. I've tried to paint them hundreds of times myself and never gotten it right. Murder has a smell like pure ambergris, and I'm the only one who knows it. Death is red, murder green. I finally see them more distinctly. The faintest red circling the AMP chamber, its seal lined in green. The way that thing is constructed, nothing can seep out. So I know murder's been locked in there. I step over to open it. It won't budge. An old-school padlock is holding the machine's opening handles tightly together. I take out my knife and crank the heat up on its blade, then cut through the clunky shank. The lock clanks on the floor as I open the hatch. Mist puffs out of the chamber. I swat the freezing cold puffs away. A solid, cloudy chunk glows from within the chamber. There's a frozen body in all that nitrogen, but except for a pair of hands flexed, pressing upward, it's tough to make out a face. I pull out my knife and start chipping away at the solid nitro. It's harder than ice. I turn the heat up even higher on my blade and stab at it again and again. A chunk breaks off. My iE alerts me that my blood pressure is rising quickly, that my pulse is racing. I silence it and turn my blade to where the head is. I'm desperate now. I need to see if it's her. I thrust the blade into the block with everything I've got. Again and again. The smell gets stronger and stronger the closer I get to the face. The green wafts are making me tear up, but I've gotta know. It could be Akira in there. I cut and twist. A small chunk flies out of the chamber and skids across the room. I look down. An eye. Open. Always open, always seeing. The pupil is cloudy. Barely perceptible green curls up from them. Akira Kimura, one of the greatest minds to ever exist, has been reduced to breathless ice. I stand up. Close my eyes. The smell is giving me a ferocious headache. The lock means she was trapped in there. And the green . . . This was murder, not suicide. I think for a moment, but it's tough to hang onto the flotsam of each detail in this mental flood. Procedure , I tell myself. You're a detective. Stuff the personal. Procedure . But I look at the broken lock and melting chunks of nitro on the floor and know I've already crossed that line. Excerpted from Midnight, Water City by Chris Mckinney All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.