THE
SHIP WHO SEARCHED
By:
Anne McCaffrey
CHAPTER
ONE
The ruby light on the com unit was
blinking when Hypatia Cade emerged from beneath the tutor's hood, with
quadratic equations dancing before her seven year old eyes. Not the steady
blink that meant a recorded message, nor the triple-beat that meant Mum or Dad
had left her a note, but the double blink with a pause between each pair that
meant there was someone Upstairs, waiting for her to open the channel.
Someone Upstairs meant an unscheduled
ship. Tia knew very well when all the scheduled visits were; they were on the
family calendar and were the first things reported by the AI when they all had
breakfast That made it important for her to answer, quickly, and not take the
time to suit up and run to the dig for Mum or Dad. It must not have been an
emergency, though, or the AI would have interrupted her lesson.
She rubbed her eyes to rid them of the
dancing variables, and pushed her stool over to the com console so she could
reach all the touch-pads when she stood on it. She would never have been able
to reach things sitting in a chair, of course. With brisk efficiency that
someone three times her age might have envied, she cleared the board, warmed up
the relay, and opened the line.
"Exploratory Team
Cee-One-Two-One," she enunciated carefully, for the microphone was old,
and often lost anything not spoken clearly. "Exploratory Team
Cee-One-Two-One, receiving. Come in, please. Over."
She counted out the four second lag to
orbit and back, nervously. One-hypotenuse, Two-hypotenuse, Three-hypotenuse,
Four-hypotenuse. Who could it be? They didn't get unscheduled ships very often,
and it meant bad news as often as not. Planet pirates, plague, or slavers.
Trouble with some of the colony planets. Or worse, artifact thieves in the
area. A tiny dig like this one was all too vulnerable to a hit-and-run raid. Of
course, digs on the Salomon-Kildaire Entities rarely yielded anything a
collector would lust after, but would thieves know that? Tia had her orders, if
raiders came and she was alone, to duck down the hidden escape tunnel that
would blow the dome; to run to the dark little hidey away from the dig that was
the first thing Mum and Dad put in once the dome was up.
"This is courier TM Three-Seventy.
Tia, dearest, is that you? Don't worry, love, we have a non-urgent message run
and you're on the way, so we brought you your packets early. Over." The
rich, contralto voice was a bit flattened by the poor speaker, but still
welcome and familiar, Tia jumped up and down a bit on her stool in excitement.
"Moira! Yes, yes, it's me! But,
" She frowned a little. The last time Moira had been here, her designation
had been CM, not TM. "Moira, what happened to Charlie?" Her seven
year old voice took on the half scolding tones of someone much older.
"Moira, did you scare away another brawn? Shame on you! Remember what they
told you when you kicked Ari out your airlock! Uh, over."
Four seconds; an eternity. "I didn't
scare him away, darling," Moira replied, though Tia thought she sounded
just a little guilty. "He decided to get married, raise a brood of his
own, and settle down as a dirtsider. Don't worry, this will be the last one,
I'm sure of it. Tomas and I get along famously. Over."
"That's what you said about
Charlie," Tia reminded her darkly. "And about Ari, and Lilian, and
Jules, and, "
She was still reciting names when Moira
interrupted her. "Turn on the landing beacon, Tia, please. We can talk
when I'm not burning fuel in orbital adjustments." Her voice turned a
little bit sly. "Besides, I brought you a birthday present. That's why I
couldn't miss stopping here. Over."
As if a birthday present was going to
distract her from the litany of Moira's foiled attempts to settle on a brawn!
Well, maybe just a little.
She turned on the beacon, then feeling a
little smug, activated the rest of the landing sequence, bringing up the pad
lights and guidance monitors, then hooking in the AI and letting it know it
needed to talk to Moira's navigational system. She hadn't known how to do all
that, the last time Moira was here. Moira'd had to set down with no help at
all.
She leaned forward for the benefit of the
mike. "All clear and ready to engage landing sequence, Moira. Uh, what did
you bring me? Over,"
"Oh, you bright little penny!"
Moira exclaimed, her voice brimming with delight. "You've got the whole
system up! You have been learning things since I was here last! Thank you,
dear, and you'll find out what I brought when I get down there. Over and
out."
Oh well, she had tried. She jumped down
from her stool, letting the AI that ran the house and external systems take
over the job of bringing the brainship in. Or rather, giving the brainship the
information she needed to bring herself in; Moira never handed over her helm to
anyone if she had a choice in the matter. That was part of the problem she'd
had with keeping brawns. She didn't trust them at the helm, and let them know
that. Ari, in particular, had been less than amused with her attitude and had
actually tried to disable her helm controls to prove he could pilot as well as
she.
Now,
the next decision: should she suit up and fetch Mum and Dad? It was no use
trying to get them on the com; they probably had their suit-speakers off. Even
though they weren't supposed to do that. And this wasn't an emergency; they
would be decidedly annoyed if she buzzed in on them, and they found out it was
just an unscheduled social call from a courier ship, even if it was Moira. They
might be more than annoyed if they were in the middle of something important,
like documenting a find or running an age assay, and she joggled their elbows.
Moira didn't say it was important She
wouldn't have talked about errant brawns and birthday presents if what she
carried was really, really earth-shaking.
Tia glanced at the clock; it wasn't more
than a half hour until lunch break. If there was one thing that Pota
Andropolous-Cade (Doctor of Science in Bio-Forensics, Doctor of Xenology,
Doctor of Archeology), and her husband Braddon Maartens-Cade (Doctor of Science
in Geology, Doctor of Physics in Cosmology, Associate Degree in Archeology, and
licensed Astrogator) had in common, besides daughter Hypatia and their
enduring, if absent-minded love for each other, it was punctuality. At
precisely oh seven hundred every 'morning', no matter where they were, the
Cades had breakfast together. At precisely twelve hundred, they arrived at the
dome for lunch together. The AI saw that Hypatia had a snack at sixteen
hundred. And at precisely nineteen hundred, the Cades returned from the dig for
dinner together.
So in thirty minutes, precisely, Pota and
Braddon would be here. Moira couldn't possibly land in less than twenty
minutes. The visitor, or visitors; there was no telling if there was someone on
board besides the brawn, the yet-un-met Tomas, would not have long to wait.
She trotted around the living room of the
dome; picking up her books and puzzles, straightening the pillows on the sofa,
turning on lights and the holoscape of waving blue trees by a green lagoon on
Mycon, where her parents had met. She told the kitchen to start coffee,
overriding the lunch program to instruct it to make selection V-l, a setup
program Braddon had logged for her for munchies for visitors. She decided on
music on her own; the Arkenstone Suite, a lively synthesizer piece she thought
matched the holo-mural.
There wasn't much else to do, so she sat
down and waited, something she had learned how to do very early. She thought
she did it very well, actually. There had certainly been enough of it in her
life. The lot of an archeologists' child was full of waiting, usually alone,
and required her to be mostly self-sufficient.
She had never had playmates or been around
very many children of her own age. Usually Mum and Dad were alone on a dig, for
they specialized in Class One Evaluation sites; when they weren't, it was
usually on a Class Two dig, Exploratory. Never a Class Three Excavation dig,
with hundreds of people and their families. It wasn't often that the other
scientists her parents' age on a Class Two dig had children younger than their
teens. And even those were usually away somewhere at school.
She knew that other people thought that
the Cades were eccentric for bringing their daughter with them on every dig,
especially so young a child. Most parents with a remote job to do left their
offspring with relatives or sent them to boarding schools. Tia listened to the
adults around her, who usually spoke as if she couldn't understand what they
were talking about She learned a great deal that way; probably more even than
her Mum and Dad suspected.
One of the things she overheard, quite
frequently in fact, was that she seemed like something of an afterthought. Or
perhaps an 'accident', she'd overheard that before, too.
She knew very well what was meant by the
'afterthought or accident' comment. The last time someone had said that, she'd
decided that she'd heard it often enough.
It had been at a reception, following the
reading of several scientific papers. She'd marched straight up to the lady in
question and had informed her solemnly that she, Tia, had been planned very
carefully, thank you. That Braddon and Pota had determined that their careers
would be secure just about when Pota's biological clock had the last few seconds
on it, and that was when they would have one, singular, female child. Herself.
Hypatia. Planned from the beginning. From the leave-time to give birth to the
way she had been brought on each assignment; from the pressure-bubble glovebox
that had served as her cradle until she could crawl, to the pressure-tent that
became a crib, to the kind of AI that would best perform the dual functions of
tutor and guardian.
The lady in question, red-faced, hadn't
known what to say. Her escort had tried to laugh it away, telling her that the
'child' was just parroting what she'd overheard and couldn't possibly
understand any of it.
Whereupon Tia, well-versed in the
ethnological habits, including courtship and mating, of four separate sapient
species, including homo sap., had proceeded to prove that he was wrong.
Then, while the escort was still
spluttering, she had turned back to the original offender and informed her,
with earnest sincerity, that she had better think about having her children
soon, too, since it was obvious that she couldn't have much more time before
menopause.
Tia had, quite literally, silenced that
section of the room. When reproached later for her behavior by the host of the
party, Tia had been completely unrepentant "She was being rude and
nasty," Tia had said. When the host protested that the remark hadn't been
meant for her, Tia had replied, "Then she shouldn't have said it so loudly
that everyone else laughed. And besides," she had continued with
inexorable logic, "being rude about someone is worse than being rude to
them."
Braddon, summoned to deal with his erring
daughter, had shrugged casually and said only, "I warned you. And you
didn't believe me."
Though exactly what it was Dad had warned
Doctor Julius about, Tia never discovered.
The remarks about being 'unplanned' or an
'accident' stopped, at least in her presence, but people still seemed concerned
that she was 'too precocious', and that she had no one of her own age to
socialize with.
But the fact was that Tia simply didn't
care that she had no other children to play with. She had the best lessons in
the known universe, via the database; she had the AI to talk to. She had plenty
of things to play with and lots of freedom to do what she wanted, once lessons
were done. And most of all, she had Mum and Dad, who spent hours more with her
than most people spent with their children. She knew that, because both the
statistics in the books she had read on childcare and the Socrates, the AI that
traveled with them everywhere, told her so. They were never boring, and they
always talked to her as if she was grown up. If she didn't understand
something, all she had to do was tell them and they would backtrack and explain
until she did. When they weren't doing something that meant they needed all
their concentration, they encouraged her to come out to the digs with them when
her lessons were over. She hadn't ever heard of too many children who got to be
with their parents at work.
If anything, sometimes Mum and Dad explained
a little too much. She distinctly remembered the time that she started asking
"Why?" to everything. Socrates told her that "Why?" was a
stage all children went through, mostly to get attention. But Pota and Braddon
had taken her literally ...
The AI told her not long ago that her
"Why?" period might have been the shortest on record, because Mum and
Dad answered every "Why?" in detail. And made sure she understood, so
that she wouldn't ask that particular "Why?" again.
After a month, "Why?" wasn't fun
anymore, and she went on to other things.
She really didn't miss other children at
all. Most of the time when she'd encountered them, it had been with the wary
feeling of an anthropologist approaching a new and potentially dangerous
species. The feeling seemed to be mutual. And so for, other children had proven
to be rather boring creatures. Their interests and their worlds were very
narrow, their vocabulary a fraction of Tia's. Most of them hadn't the faintest
idea of how to play chess, for instance.
Mum had a story she told at parties about
how Tia, at the age of two, had stunned an overly effusive professorial spouse
into absolute silence. There had been a chess set, a lovely antique, up on one
of the tables just out of Tia's reach. She had stared longingly at it for
nearly half an hour before the lady noticed what she was looking at.
Tia remembered that incident quite well,
too. The lady had picked up an intricately carved knight and waggled it at her.
"See the horsie?" she had gushed. "Isn't it a pretty
horsie?"
Tia's sense of fitness had been outraged,
and that wasn't all. Her intelligence had been insulted, and she was very well
aware of it. She had stood up, very straight, and looked the lady right in the
eye. "Is not a horsie," she had announced, coldly and clearly.
"Is a knight. It moves like the letter L. And Mum says it is piece most
often sacri- sacer- sacra-"
Mum had come up by then, as she grew
red-faced, trying to remember how to say the word she wanted. "Sacrificed?"
Mum had asked, helpfully. "It means 'given up'."
Beaming with gratitude, Tia had nodded.
"Most often given up after the pawn." Then she glared at the lady.
"Which is not a little man!"
The lady had retired to a corner and did
not emerge while Tia and her parents were there, although her Mum's superior
had then taken down the set and challenged Tia to a game. He had won, of
course, but she had at least shown she really knew how to play. He had been
impressed and intrigued, and had taken her out on the porch to point out
various species of birds at the feeders there.
She couldn't help but think that she
affected grownups in only two ways. They were either delighted by her, or
scandalized by her. Moira was among the 'delighted' sort, though most of her
brawns hadn't been. Charlie had, though, which was why she had thought that he
just might be the one to stay with the brainship. He actually seemed to enjoy
the fact that she could beat him at chess. She sighed. Probably this new brawn
would be of the other sort.
Not that it really mattered how she
affected adults. She didn't see that many of them, and then it was never for
very long. Though it was important to impress Mum's and Dad's superiors in a
positive sense. She at least knew that much now.
"Your visitor is at the
airlock," said the AI, breaking in on her thoughts. "His name is
Tomas. While he is cycling, Moira would like you to have me turn on the
ground-based radio link so that she can join the conversation."
"Go ahead, Socrates," she told
the AI. That was the problem with AIs; if they didn't already have
instructions, you had to tell them to do something before they would, where a
shell-person would just do it if it made sense. "Tomas has your birthday present," Moira said, a moment
later. "I hope you like it."
"You mean, you hope I like him,"
she replied shrewdly. "You hope I don't scare him."
"Let's say I use you as a kind of
litmus test, all right?" Moira admitted. "And, darling, Charlie
really did fall in love with a ground-pounder. Even I could see he wanted to be
with her more than he wanted space." She sighed. "It was really
awfully romantic; you don't see old-style love at first sight anymore. Michiko
is such a charming little thing. I really can't blame him. And it's partly your
fault, dear. He was so taken with you that all he could talk about was how he
wanted children just like you. Well, anyway, she persuaded Admin to find him a
ground job, and they traded me Tomas for him, with no fine, because it wasn't
my fault this time."
"It's going to take you forever to
buy out of those fines for bouncing brawns," Tia began, when the inner
airlock door cycled, and a pressure-suited person came through, holding a box
and his helmet.
Tia frowned at seeing the helmet; he'd
taken it off in the lock, once the pressure was equalized. That wasn't a good
idea, because locks had been known to blow, especially old ones like the Class
One digs had. So already he was one in the minus column as far as Tia was
concerned. But he had a nice face, with kind eyes, and that wasn't so bad; a
round, tanned face, with curly black hair and bright brown eyes, and a wide
mouth that didn't have those tense lines at the corners that Ari'd had. So that
was one in the plus column. He came out even so far.
"Hello, Tomas," she said,
neutrally. "You shouldn't take your helmet off in the lock, you know, you
should wait until the interior door cycles."
"She's right, Tomas," Moira
piped up from the com console. "These Class One digs always get the last
pick of equipment. All of it is old, and some of it isn't reliable. Door seals
blow all the time."
"It blew last month, when I came
in," Tia added helpfully. "It took Mum hours to install the new seal,
and she's not altogether happy with it." Tomas' eyes were wide with
surprise, and he was clearly taken aback. He had probably intended to ask her
where her parents were. He had not expected to be greeted by a lecture on
pressure-suit safety.
"Oh," was all he could say.
"Ah, thank you. I will remember that in the future."
"You're welcome," she replied.
"Mum and Dad are at the dig; I'm sorry they weren't here to meet
you."
"I ought to make proper
introductions," Moira said from the console. "Tomas, this is Hypatia
Cade. Her mother is Doctor Pota Andropolous-Cade and her father is Doctor
Braddon Maartens-Cade. Tia, this is Tomas Delacorte-Ibanez."
"I'm very pleased to meet you,
Tomas," she replied with careful formality. "Mum and Dad will be here
in," she glanced at her wrist-chrono, "ten minutes. In the meantime,
there is fresh coffee, and may I offer you anything to eat?"
Once again, he was taken aback.
"Coffee, please," he replied after a moment. "If you would be so
kind."
She fetched it from the kitchen; by the
time she returned with the cup balanced in one hand and the refreshments in the
other, he had removed his suit. She had to admit that he did look very handsome
in the skintight ship-suit he wore beneath it. But then, all of Moira's brawns
had been good-looking. That was part of the problem; she tended to pick brawns
on the basis of looks first and personality second.
He accepted the coffee and food from her
gravely, and a little warily, for all the world as if he had decided to treat
her as some kind of new, unknown sentient. She tried not to giggle.
"That is a very unusual name that you
were given," he said, after an awkward pause. "Hypatia, is it?"
"Yes," she said, "I was
named for the first and only female librarian of the Great Library at
Alexandria on Terra. She was also the last librarian there."
His eyes showed some recognition of the
names at least. So he wasn't completely ignorant of history, the way Julio had
been. "Ah. That would have been when the Romans burned it, in the time of
Cleopatra, " he began. She interrupted him with a shake of her head.
"No, the library wasn't destroyed
then, not at all, not even close. It persisted as a famous library into the day
of Constantine," she continued, warming to her favorite story, reciting it
exactly as Pota had told it to her, as it was written in the history database.
"It was when Hypatia was the librarian that a pack of unwashed Christian
fanatics stormed it, led by some people who called themselves prophets and holy
men, intending to burn it to the ground because it contained 'pagan books,
lies, and heresies'. When Hypatia tried to stop them, she was murdered, stoned
to death, then trampled."
"Oh," Tomas said weakly, the
wind taken quite out of his sails. He seemed to be searching for something to
say, and evidently chose the first thing that sprang to mind. "Uh, why did
you call them 'unwashed Christian fanatics?'"
"Because they were," she replied
impatiently. "They were fanatics, and most of them were stylites and other
hermits who made a point of not ever bathing because taking baths was Roman and
pagan and not taking baths was Christian and mortifying the flesh." She
sniffed. "I suppose it didn't matter to them that it was also giving them
fleas and making them smell, I shan't even mention the disease!"
"I don't imagine that ever entered
their minds." Tomas said carefully.
"Anyway, I think Hypatia was very
brave, but she could have been a little smarter," Tia concluded. "I
don't think I would have stood there to let them throw stones at me; I would
have run away or locked the door or something."
Tomas smiled unexpectedly; he had a lovely
smile, very white teeth in his darkly tanned face. "Well, maybe she didn't
have much choice," he said. "I expect that by the time she realized she
wasn't going to be able to stop those people, it was too late to get
away."
Tia nodded, slowly, considering the
ancient Alexandrian garments, how cumbersome they were and how difficult to run
in. "I think you're right," she agreed. "I would hate to think
that the librarian was stupid."
He laughed at that. "You mean you'd
hate to think that the great lady you were named for was stupid," he
teased. "And I don't blame you. It's much nicer to be named for someone
who was brave and heroic on purpose than someone people think was a hero just
because she was too dense to get out of the way of trouble!"
Tia had to laugh at that, and right then
was when she decided that she was going to like Tomas. He hadn't quite known
what to make of her at first, but he'd settled down nicely and was treating her
quite like an intelligent sentient now.
Evidently Moira had decided the same
thing, for when she spoke, her voice sounded much less anxious.
"Tomas, aren't you forgetting? You
brought Tia her late birthday present."
"I certainly did forget!" he
exclaimed. "I do beg your pardon, Tia!"
He handed her the box he had brought, and
she controlled herself very well, taking it from him politely, and not grabbing
like a rude child would have. "Thank you, Moira," she said to the com
console. "I don't mind that it's late. It's kind of like getting my
birthday all over again this way."
"You are just too civilized for your
own good, dear," Moira giggled. "Well, go ahead, open it!"
She did, carefully undoing the fastenings
of the rather plain box and exposing bright-colored wrapping beneath. The
wrapped package within was odd-shaped, lumpy. She couldn't stand it any longer;
she tore into the present just like any other child.
"Oh!" she exclaimed when she
revealed her prize, for once caught without a word, holding him up to the
light.
"Do you like it?" Moira asked
anxiously. "I mean, I know you asked, but you grow so fast, I was afraid
you'd have outgrown him by now."
"I love him!" Tia exclaimed,
hugging the bright blue bear suddenly, reveling in the soft fur against her
cheek. "Oh Moira, I just love him!"
"Well, it was quite a trick to find
him, let me tell you," Moira replied, her voice sounding very relieved, as
Tomas grinned even wider. "You people move around so much. I had to find a
teddy bear that would take repeated decontam procedures, one that would stand
up to about anything quarantine could hand out And it's hard to find bears at
all, they seem to have gone right out of style. You don't mind that he's
blue?"
"I like blue," she said happily.
"And you like him fuzzy? That was
Tomas' idea."
"Thank you, Tomas," she told the
brawn, who beamed. "He feels wonderful."
"I had a fuzzy dog when I was your
age," he replied. "When Moira told me that you wanted a bear like the
one she had before she went into her shell, I thought this fellow felt better
than the smooth bears."
He leaned down confidentially, and for a
moment Tia was afraid that he was going to be patronizing just because she'd
gone so enthusiastic over the toy.
"I have to tell you the truth, Tia, I
really enjoyed digging into all those toy shops," he whispered. "A
lot of that stuff is wasted on children. I found some logic puzzles you just
wouldn't believe and a set of magic tricks I couldn't resist, and I'm afraid I
spent far too much money on spaceship models."
She giggled. "I won't tell if you
don't," she replied, in a conspiratorial whisper.
"Pota and Braddon are in the
airlock," Socrates interrupted. "Shall I order the kitchen to make
lunch now?"
"So why exactly are you here?"
Tomas asked, after all the initial topics of conversation had been exhausted,
and the subject turned, inevitably, to Pota and Braddon's work. He gestured at
the landscape beyond the viewport; spectacular mountains, many times taller
than anything found on Terra or any other inhabited planet. This little ball of
rock with a thin skin of dirt was much like the wilder parts of Mars before it
had been terraformed, and had a sky so dark at midday that the sun shared the
sky with the stars. "I wouldn't expect to find much of anything out there
for an archeologist, it's the next thing to airless, after all. The scenery is
amazing, but that's no reason to stay here."
Braddon chuckled, the generous mouth in
his lantern-jawed face widening in a smile, and Tia hid a grin. Whether or not
Tomas knew it, he had just triggered her Dad's lecture mechanism. Fortunately,
Braddon had a gift for lecturing. He was always a popular speaker whenever he
could be tempted to go to conferences.
"No one expected to find anything on
planets like this one, Tomas," Braddon replied, leaning back against the
supporting cushions of the sofa and tucking his hands behind his head.
"That's why the Salomon-Kildaire culture is so intriguing. James Salomon
and Tory Kildaire discovered the first buildings on the fourth moon of Beta
Orianis Three, and there have never been any verifiable artifacts uncovered in
what you and I would call 'normal' conditions. Virtually every find has been on
airless or near-airless bodies. Pota and I have excavated over a dozen sites,
doing the Class One studies, and they're all like this one."
Tomas glanced out the viewport again.
"Surely that implies that they were,
"
"Space-going, yes," Pota
supplied, nodding her head so that her gray-brown curls vibrated. "I don't
think there's any doubt of it. Although we've never found any trace of whatever
it was they used to move them from colony to colony, but that isn't the real
mystery."
Braddon gestured agreement. "The real
mystery is that they never seem to have set up anything permanent. They never
seem to have spent more than a few decades in any one place. No one knows why
they left, or why they came here in the first place."
Tomas laughed. "They seem to have
hopped planets as often as you two," he said. "Perhaps they were
simply doing what you are doing, excavating an earlier culture and following it
across the stars."
Braddon exclaimed in mock horror.
"Please!" he said. "Don't even think that!"
Pota only laughed. "If they had been,
we'd have found signs of that," she told both of them, tapping Braddon's
knee in playful admonition. "After all, as bleak as these places are, they
preserve things wonderfully. If the EsKays had been archeologists, we'd have
found the standard tools of the trade. We break and wear out brushes and
digging tools all the time, and just leave them in our discard piles. They
would have done the same. No matter how you try to alter it, there are only so
many ways you can make a brush or a trowel."
"There would be bad castings,"
Tia piped up. "You throw out bad castings all the time, Mum; if they were
archeologists, we'd find a pile of bad castings somewhere."
"Bless me, Tia's right," Braddon
nodded. "There you are, Tomas; irrefutable proof."
"Good enough for me," Tomas
replied, good naturedly.
"And if that idea was true, there
also ought to be signs of the earlier culture, shouldn't there?" Moira
asked. "And you've never found anything mixed in with the EsKay
artifacts."
"Exactly so," Pota replied, and
smiled. "And so, Tomas, you see how easily an archeologist's theories can
be disposed of."
"Then I'm going to be thankful to be
Moira's partner," Tomas said gracefully, "and leave all the
theorizing to better heads than mine."
After a while, the talk turned to the
doings of the Institute, and both professional and personal news of Pota and
Braddon's friends and rivals. Tia glanced at the clock again; it was long past
time when her parents would have gone back to the dig. They must have decided
to take the rest of the day off.
But these weren't subjects that interested
her, especially not when the talk went into politics, both of the Institute and
the Central Worlds government. She took her bear, politely excused herself, and
went back to her room.
She hadn't had a chance to really look him
over when Tomas gave him to her. The last time Moira had come to visit, she'd
told Tia some stories about what going into the shell-person program had been
like, for unlike most shell-persons, she hadn't been popped into her shell
until she'd been nearly four. Until that time, there had been some hope that
there would have been a palliative for her particular congenital condition,
premature aging that had caused her body to resemble a sixty-year-old woman at
the age of three. But there was no cure, and at four, her family finally
admitted it. Into the shell she went, and since there was nothing wrong with
her very fine brain, she soon caught up and passed by many of her classmates
that had been in their shells since birth.
But one of the toys she'd had, her very
favorite, in fact, had been a stuffed teddy bear. She'd made up adventures for
Ivan the Bearable, sending him in a troika across the windswept steppes of Novi
Gagarin, and she'd told Tia some of those stories. That, and the Zen of Pooh
book Moira brought her, had solidified a longing she hadn't anticipated.
For Tia had been entranced by the tales
and by Pooh, and had wanted a bear like Moira's. A simple toy that did nothing,
with no intel-chips; a toy that couldn't talk, or teach, or walk. Something
that was just there to be hugged and cuddled; something to listen when she
didn't want anything else to overhear.
Moira had promised. Moira didn't forget
Tia closed the door to her room and paged
the AI. "Socrates, would you open a link to Moira in here for me,
please?" she asked. Moira would be perfectly capable of following the
conversation in the other room and still talk to her in here, too.
"Tia, do you really like your
present?" Moira asked anxiously, as soon as the link had been established.
"He's wonderful," Tia answered
firmly. "I've even got a name for him. Theodore Edward Bear."
"Or Ted E. Bear for short?"
Moira chuckled. "I like it. It fits him. He's such a solemn-faced little
fellow. One would think he was a software executive. He looks like a bear with
a great deal on his mind."
Tia studied Ted carefully. Moira was
right; he was a sober little bear, with a very studious expression, as if he
was listening very hard to whatever was being said. His bright blue coloration
in no way contradicted the seriousness of his face, nor did the frivolous
little red shirt he was wearing with the blue and yellow Courier Service
circle-and-lightning-bolt on the front
"Is there anything going on that I
need to know, Moira?" she asked, giving over her careful examination of
her new friend and hugging him to her chest instead.
"The results of your last batch of
tests seems to have satisfied all the Psych people out there that you're a
perfectly well-balanced and self-sufficient girl," Moira replied, knowing
without Tia prompting her just what was on her mind. "So there's no more
talk of making your parents send you to boarding school."
Tia sighed with relief; that had been a
very real worry the last time Moira had been here. The ship had left with the
results of a battery of tests and psychprofiles that had taken two days to
complete.
"I have to tell you that I added to
that," Moira said, slyly. "I told them what kind of a birthday
present you had asked for from me."
"What did they say?" Tia asked,
anxiously. Had they thought she was being immature, or worse yet, that it meant
she harbored some kind of neurosis?
"Oh, it was funny. They were
questioning me on open com, as if I was some kind of AI that wouldn't respond
to anything that wasn't a direct question, so of course I could hear everything
they said. There was silence for a moment, and then the worst of the lot
finally blurted out, 'Good heavens, the child is normal,' as if he'd expected
you to ask for a Singularity simulator or something." Moira chuckled.
"I know who it was, too," Tia
said shrewdly. "It was Doctor Phelps-Pittman, wasn't it?"
"Dead on the target, wenchette,"
Moira replied, still chuckling. "I still don't think he's forgiven you for
beating him in Battle Chess. By the way, what is your secret?"
"He moves the Queen too often,"
Tia said absently. "I think he likes to watch her hips wiggle when she
walks. It's probably something Freudian."
A splutter of static was all that followed
that pronouncement, as Moira lost control of the circuit briefly. "My,
my," she replied, when she came back online. "You are a little
terror. One might almost suspect you of having as much control as a
shell-person!"
Tia took that in the spirit it was meant,
as a compliment.
"I promise not to tell him your
weakness," the ship continued, teasingly.
"What's that?" Tia was
surprised; she hadn't known she had one.
"You hate to see the pawns
sacrificed. I think you feel sorry for the little guys."
Tia digested this in silence for a moment,
then nodded reluctant agreement. "I think you're right," she
admitted. "It seems as if everybody can beat them up, and it doesn't seem
fair."
"You don't have the problem with an
ordinary holo-board game," Moira observed casually.
"That's because they're just little
blobby pieces on a holo-board game," Tia explained. "In Battle Chess
they're little pikemen. And they're cute." She giggled. "I really
love it when Pawn takes Knight and he hits the Knight with the butt of his pike
right in the, "
"And that's why you frighten old
Phelps-Pittman," Moira said severely, though Tia could tell she didn't
mean it. "He keeps thinking you're going to do the same to him."
"Well, I won't have to see old
sour-face for another year and a half," she said comfortably." Maybe
I can figure out how to act like a normal girl by then."
"Maybe you can," Moira
replied. "I wouldn't put even that past you. Now, how about a game of
Battle Chess? Ted Bear can referee."
"Of course," she agreed.
"You can use the practice. I'll even spot you a pawn."
"Oh come now! You haven't gotten that
much better since I saw you last." At Tia's continued silence, the ship
asked, tentatively, "Have you?"
Tia shrugged. "Check my record with
Socrates," she suggested.
There was silence as Moira did just that.
Then. "Oh, damn it," she said in mock disgust. "You really are
exasperating. I should demand that you spot me two pawns."
"Not a chance," Tia replied,
ordering the AI to set up the game, with a Battle Chess field in front of her.
"You're taking advantage enough of a child as it is."
"Taking advantage of a child?
Ha!" Moira said ironically. "You're not a child. I'm beginning to
agree with Phelps-Pittman. You're an eighty-year-old midget in a little-girl
costume."
"Oh, all right," Tia said,
good-naturedly. "I won't give you another pawn, but I will let you have
white."
"Good." Moira studied the analog
of the board in her memory, as Tia studied the holo-board in front of her.
"All right, unnatural child. Have at ye!"
Moira and Tomas couldn't stay long; by
dinner the ship had lifted, and the pad was empty, and the Cade family was back
on schedule.
Pota and Braddon spent the evening
catching up with the message-packets Moira had brought them, mostly dispatches
from friends at other digs, more scholarly papers in their various fields, and
the latest in edicts from the Institute. Since Tia knew, thanks to Moira, that
none of those edicts concerned her, she was free to watch one of the holos
Moira had brought for her entertainment. All carefully screened by the teachers
at the Institute, of course, who oversaw the education of every child that was
on-site with its parents. But even the teachers didn't see anything wrong with
history holos, provided they were properly educational and accurate. The fact
that most of these holos had been intended for adult viewing didn't seem to
bother them.
Perhaps it was just as well that the
Psychs had no idea what she was watching. They would probably have gone into
strong hysterics.
Moira had an uncanny ability to pick out
the ones that had good scripts and actors, unlike whoever it was that picked
out most of the holos for the Remote Educational Department
This one, a four-part series on Alexander
the Great, looked especially good, since it covered only the early parts of his
life, before he became a great leader. Tia felt a certain kinship for anyone
who'd been labeled 'precocious'; and although she already knew that Alexander's
childhood had been far from happy, she was looking forward to viewing this.
Having Ted beside her to whisper comments
to made it even more fun.
At the end of the first part, even though
she was fascinated, she virtuously told Socrates to shut everything down and
went into the main room to say good-night to her Mum and Dad. The next courier
wasn't due for a while, and she wanted to make her treats last as long as
possible.
Both of them were so deep in their readers
that she had to shake their elbows to get them to realize she was there, but
once they came out of their preoccupied daze, they gave her big hugs and
kisses, with no sign of annoyance at being interrupted.
"I have a really good Mum and
Dad," she told Ted before drifting off to sleep. "I really, really
do. Not like Alexander."
The next day, it was back to the usual
schedule. Socrates woke her, and she got herself cleaned up and dressed,
leaving Ted to reside on the carefully made bed until she returned. When she
entered the main room, Pota and Braddon were already there, blinking sleepily
over steaming cups of coffee.
"Hello, darling," Pota greeted
her as she fetched her milk and cereal from the kitchen. "Did you enjoy
Alexander?"
"We-ell, it was interesting,"
Tia said truthfully. "And I liked the actors and the story. The costumes
and the horses were really stellar! But his mother and father were kind of odd,
weren't they?"
Braddon looked up from his coffee with his
curly dark hair over one brown eye, and gave his daughter a wry grin.
"They were certifiable crazy-cases by our standards, pumpkin," he
replied. "But after all, there wasn't anyone around to apply those
standards back then."
"And no Board of Mental Health to
enforce them," Pota added, her thin, delicate face creasing with a puckish
smile. "Remember, oh curious little chick, they were not the ones that had
the most influence on Alexander. That was left to his tutors, Aristotle, of
course, being the main one, and nurses. I think he succeeded in spite of his
parents, personally, and not because of them."
Tia nodded sagely. "Can I come help
at the dig today?" she asked eagerly. This was one of the best things
about the fact that her parents had picked the EsKays to specialize in. With
next to no atmosphere, there were no indigent life-forms to worry about. By the
time Tia was five, she had pressure-suit protocol down pat, and there was no
reason why she couldn't come to the digs, or even wander about within specified
limits on her own. "The biggest sandbox in the universe," Braddon
called it; so long as she stayed within eye and earshot, neither of them minded
having her about outside.
"Not today, dearest," Pota said
apologetically. "We've found some glassware, and we're making holos. As
soon as we're done with that, we'll make the castings, and after that you can
come run errands for us." In the thin atmosphere and chill of the site,
castings were tricky to make; one reason why Pota discarded so many. But no
artifact could be moved without first making a good casting of it, as well as
holos from all possible angles. Too many times the artifacts crumbled to nothing,
despite the most careful handling, once they were moved.
She sighed; holos and castings meant she
couldn't even come near the site, lest the vibrations she made walking
interfere. "All right," she agreed. "Can I go outside, though?
As long as I stay dose to the airlock?"
"Stay dose to the lock and keep the
emergency cart nearby, and I don't see any reason why you can't play
outside," Pota said after a moment. Then she smiled. "And how is your
dig coming?"
"You mean really, or for
pretend?" she asked.
"Pretend, of course," said
Braddon. "Pretend is always more fun than really. That's why we became
archeologists in the first place, because we get to play pretend for months at
a time until we have to be serious and write papers!"
He gave her a conspiratorial grin, and she
giggled.
"We-ell," she said, and drew her
face down into a frown just like Doctor Heinz Marius-Llewellyn, when he was
about to put everyone to sleep. "I've found the village site of a race of
flint-using primitives who were used as slave labor by the EsKays at your
site."
"Have you!" Pota fell right in
with the pretense, as Braddon nodded seriously. "Well that certainly
explains why we haven't found any servos. They must have used slaves to do all
their manual labor!"
"Yes. And the Flint People worshipped
them as gods from the sky," Tia continued. "That was why they didn't
revolt; all the slave labor was a form of worship. They'd go back to their
village and then they'd try to make flint tools just like the things that the
sky-gods used. They probably made pottery things, too, but I haven't found
anything but shards."
"Well, pottery doesn't hold up well
in conditions like this," Pota agreed. "It goes brittle very quickly
under the extremes of surface temperature. What have you got so far?"
"A flint disrupter-pistol, a flint
wrist-com, a flint flashlight, and some more things," she said solemnly.
"I haven't found any arrowheads or spear-points or things like that, but
that's because there's nothing to hunt here. They were vegetarians, and they
ate nothing but lichen."
Braddon made a face. "Awful. Worse
than the food at the Institute cafeteria! No wonder they didn't survive. The
food probably bored them to death!"
Pota rose and gathered up their plates and
cups, stowing them neatly in the dishwasher. "Well, enjoy your lessons,
pumpkin. We'll see you at lunch."
She smiled, hugged them both goodbye
before they suited up, then went off to the schoolroom.
That afternoon, once lessons were done, she
took down her own pressure-suit from the rack beside the airlock inner door.
Her suit was designed a little differently from her parents', with accordion
folds at wrists and elbows, ankles and knees, and at the waist, to allow for
the growth spurts of a child. This was a brand new suit, for she had been about
to outgrow the last one just before they went out on this dig. She liked it a
lot better than the old one; the manufacturer of the last one had some kind of
stupid idea that a child's suit should have cavorting flowers with smiling
faces all over it. She had been ashamed to have anyone but her parents see her
in the awful thing. She thought it made her look like a little clown.
It had come second-hand from a child on a
Class Three dig, like most of the things that the Cades got. Evaluation digs
simply didn't have that high a priority when it came to getting anything other
than the bare essentials. But Tia'd had the bright idea when her birthday came
around to ask her parents' superiors at the Institute for a new pressure-suit
And when it came out that she was imitating her parents, by creating her own
little dig-site, she had so tickled them that they actually sent her one. Brand
new, good for three or four years at least, and the only difference between it
and a grown-up suit was that hers had extra helmet lights and a com that
couldn't be turned off, a locator beacon that was always on, and bright
fluorescent stripes on the helmet and down the arms and legs. A small price to
pay for dignity.
The flowered suit had gone back to the
Institute, to be endured by some other unfortunate child.
And the price to be paid for her relative
freedom to roam was waiting in the airlock. A wagon, child-sized and modified
from the pull-wagon many children had as toys, but this one had powered
crawler-tracks and was loaded with an auxiliary power unit and air-pack and
full face-mask. If her suit failed, she had been drilled in what to do so many
times she could easily have saved herself when asleep. One, take a deep breath
and pop the helmet. Two, pull the mask on, making sure the seals around her
face were secure. Three, turn on the air and Four, plug into the APU, which
would keep the suit heat up with the helmet off. Then walk, slowly, carefully,
to the airlock, towing the wagon behind. There was no reason why she should
suffer anything worse than a bit of frostbite.
It had never happened. That didn't mean it
wouldn't. Tia had no intention of becoming a tragic tale in the newsbytes.
Tragic tales were all very well in drama and history, but they were not what
one wanted in real life.
So the wagon went with her, inconvenient
as it was.
The filters in this suit were good ones;
the last suit had always smelled a little musty, but the air in this one was
fresh and clean. She trotted over the uneven surface, towing the cart behind,
kicking up little puffs of dust and sand. Everything out here was very sharp
edged and dear; red and yellow desert, reddish-purple mountains, dark blue sky.
The sun, Sigma Marinara, hung right above her head, so all the shadows were
tiny pools of dark black at the bases of things. She hadn't been out to her
'site' for several weeks, not since the last time Mum and Dad had asked her to
stay away. That had been right at the beginning, when they first got here and
uncovered enough to prove it was an EsKay site. Since that time there had been
a couple of sandstorms, and Tia was a bit apprehensive that her 'dig' had
gotten buried. Unlike her parents' dig, she did not have force-shields
protecting her trench from storms.
But when she reached her site, she
discovered to her amazement that more was uncovered than she had left. Instead
of burying her dig in sand, the storm had scoured the area clean.
There were several likely-looking lumps at
the farther end of the trench, all fused together into a bumpy whole.
Wonderful! There would be hours of potential pretend here; freeing the lumps
from the sandy matrix, cleaning them off, figuring out what the Flint People
had been trying to copy.
She took the tools her parents had
discarded out of the wagon; the broken trowel that Braddon had mended for her,
the worn brushes, the blunted probes, and set to work.
Several hours later, she sat back on her
heels and looked at her first find, frowning. This wasn't a lump of flint after
all. In fact, it seemed to be some kind of layered substance, with the layers
fused together. Odd, it looked kind of wadded up. It certainly wasn't any kind
of layered rock she'd ever seen before, and it didn't match any of the rocks
she'd uncovered until now.
She chewed her lower lip in thought and
stared at it; letting her mind just drift, to see if it could identify what
kind of rock it was. It didn't look sedimentary.
Actually, it didn't look much like a rock
at all. Not like a rock. What if it isn't a rock?
She blinked, and suddenly knew what it did
look like; layers of thin cloth or paper, wadded up, then discarded.
Finagle! Have I-
She gently, very gently, pried another
lump off the outcropping, and carefully freed it of its gritty coating. And
there was no doubt this time that what she had was the work of intelligent
hands. Under the layer of half-fused sand and flaking, powdery dust, gleamed a
spot of white porcelain, with the matte edge of a break showing why it had been
discarded.
Oh, decom, I found the garbage dump!
Or, at least, she had found a little trash
heap. That was probably it; likely
there was just this lump of discard and no more. But anything the EsKays left
behind was important, and it was equally important to stop digging now, mark
the site in case another sandstorm came up and capriciously buried it as it had
capriciously uncovered it, and bring some evidence to show Mum and Dad what she
had found.
Except that she didn't have a holo-camera.
Or anything to cast with.
Finally she gave up trying to think of
what to do. There was only one thing for it Bring her two finds inside and show
them. The lump of fabric might not survive the touch of real air, but the
porcelain thing surely would. Porcelain, unlike glass, was more resilient to
the stresses of repeated temperature changes and was not likely to go to powder
at the first touch of air.
She went back inside the dome and rummaged
around for a bit before returning with a plastic food container for the
artifacts, and a length of plastic pipe and the plastic tail from a kite-kit
she'd never had a chance to use. Another well-meant but stupid gift from
someone Dad worked with; someone who never once thought that on a Mars-type
world there weren't very many opportunities to fly kites.
With the site marked as securely as she
could manage, and the two artifacts sealed into the plastic tub, she returned
to the dome again, waiting impatiently for her parents to get back.
She had hoped that the seal on the plastic
tub would be good enough to keep the artifacts safely protected from the air of
the dome. She knew as soon as the airlock pressurized, though, that her attempt
to keep them safe had failed. Even before she pulled off her helmet, the
external suit-mike picked up the hiss of air leaking into the container. And
when she held the plastic tub up to the light, it was easy enough to see that
one of the lumps had begun to disintegrate. She pried the lid off for a quick
peek, and sneezed at the dust The wadded lump was not going to look like much
when her parents got home.
Decom it, she thought resentfully. That's
not fair!
She put it down carefully on the counter
top; if she didn't jar it, there might still be enough left when Mum and Dad
got back in that they would at least be able to tell what it had been.
She stripped out of her suit and sat down
to wait. She tried to read a book, but she just couldn't get interested. Mum
and Dad were going to be so surprised, and even better, now the Psychs at the
Institute would have no reason to keep her away from the Class Two site
anymore, because this would surely prove that she knew what to do when she
accidentally found something. The numbers on the clock moved with agonizing
slowness, as she waited for the moment when they would finally return.
The sky outside the viewport couldn't get
much darker, but the shadows lengthened, and the light faded. Soon now, soon.
Finally she heard them in the outer lock,
and her heart began to beat faster. Suddenly she was no longer so certain that
she had done the right thing. What if they were angry that she dissected the
first two artifacts? What if she had done the wrong thing in moving them?
The 'what ifs' piled up in her head as she
waited for the lock to cycle.
Finally the inner door hissed, and Braddon
and Pota came through, already pulling off their helmets and continuing a
high-speed conversation that must have begun back at the dig.
"but the matrix is all wrong for it
to be a food preparation area, "
"yes, yes," Pota replied
impatiently, " but what about the integument, "
"Mum!"
Tia said, running up to them and tugging it her mother's elbow. "I've
found something!"
"Hello,
pumpkin, that's very nice," her mother replied absently, hugging her, and
going right on with her conversation. Her intense expression showed that she
was thinking while she spoke, and her eyes never wandered from her husband's
face, and as for Braddon, the rest of the world simply did not exist.
"Mum!" Tia persisted. "I've
found an artifact!"
"In a moment, dear," Pota
replied. "But what about, "
"MUM!" Tia shouted, disobeying
every rule of not interrupting grown-ups in desperation, knowing from all the
signs that she would never get their attention otherwise. Conversations like
this one could go on for hours. "I've found an artifact!"
Both her parents stopped their argument in
midsentence and stared at her. Silence enveloped the room; an ominous silence.
Tia gulped nervously.
"Tia," Braddon finally said,
disapproval creeping into his voice. "Your mother and I are in the middle
of a very important conversation. This is not the time for pretend."
"Dad, it's not pretend!" she
said insistently, pointing :o her plastic box. "It's not! I found an
artifact, and there's more."
Pota raised an eyebrow at her husband and
shrugged. Braddon picked up the box, carelessly, and Tia winced as the first
lump inside visibly disintegrated more.
"I am going to respect your
intelligence and integrity enough to assume that you think you found an
artifact," Braddon replied, prying the lid from the container. "But
Tia, you know better than to, "
He glanced down inside, and his eyebrows
arched upward in the greatest show of surprise that Tia had ever seen him make.
"I told you," Tia could not
resist saying, triumphantly.
"so they took the big lights out to
the trench, and the extra field-generators," she told Ted E. Bear after
she'd been put to bed for the night. "They were out there for hours, and
they let me wait up to hear what it was. And it was, I did find a garbage dump!
A big one, too! Mum made a special call to the Institute, 'cause this is the
first really big EsKay dump anybody's ever found."
She hugged Ted closer, basking in
the warmth of Pota's praise, a warmth that still lingered and made he fed happy
right down to her toes. "You did everything exactly right with the
equipment you had," Pota had told her. "I've had undergraduates that
didn't do a well as you did, pumpkin! You remember what I told you, when you
asked me about why I wanted to find garbage?"
"That we learn more from sentients'
garbage than from anything other than their literature," she recited
dutifully.
"Well," Pota had replied,
sitting on the edge of he bed and touching her nose with one finger, playfully.
"You, my curious little chick, have just upgraded this site from a Class
One to a Class Three with four hours of work! That's more than Braddon and I
have ever done!"
"Does that mean that we'll be
leaving?" she'd asked in confusion.
"Eventually," Pota told her, a
certain gloating glee in her voice. "But it takes time to put together a
Class Three team, and we happen to be right here. Your father and I will be
making gigabytes of important discoveries before the team gets here to replace
us. And with that much already invested, they may not replace us!"
Tia had shaken her head, confused.
Pota had hugged her. "What I mean,
pumpkin, is that there is a very good chance that we'll stay on here as the dig
supervisors! An instant promotion from Class One supervisor to Class Three
supervisor! There'll be better equipment, a better dome to live in, you'll have
some playmates, couriers will be by every week instead of every few months, not
to mention the raises in pay and status! All the papers on this site will go
out under our names! And all because you were my clever, bright, careful little
girl, who knew what she saw and knew when to stop playing!"
"Mum and Dad are really, really
happy," she told Ted, thinking about the glow of joy that had been on both
their faces when they finished the expensive link to the nearest Institute
supervisor. "I think we did a good thing. I think maybe you brought us
luck, Ted." She yawned. "Except about the other kids coming. But we
don't have to play with them if we don't want to, do we?"
Ted agreed silently, and she hugged him
again. "I'd rather talk to you, anyway," she told him. "You
never say anything dumb. Dad says that if you can't say something intelligent,
you shouldn't say anything; and Mum says that people who know when to shut up
are the smartest people of all, so I guess you must be pretty smart
Right?"
But she never got a chance to find out if
Ted agreed with that statement, because at that point she fell right asleep.
Over the course of the next few days, it
became evident that this was not just an ordinary garbage dump; This was one
containing scientific or medical debris. That raised the status of the site
from 'important' to 'priceless', and Pota and Braddon took to spending every
waking moment either at the site or preserving and examining their finds,
making copious notes, and any number of speculations. They hardly ever saw Tia
anymore; they had changed their schedule so that they were awake long before
she was and came in long after she went to bed.
Pota apologized, via a holo that she had
left to play for Tia as soon as she came in to breakfast this morning.
"Pumpkin," her image said, while
Tia sipped her juice. "I hope you can understand why we're doing this. The
more we find out before the team gets sent out, the more we make ourselves
essential to the dig, the better our chances for that promotion." Pota's
image ran a hand through her hair; to Tia's critical eyes, she looked very
tired, and a bit frazzled, but fairly satisfied. "It won't be more than a
few weeks, I promise. Then things will go back to normal. Better than normal,
in fact. I promise that we'll have a Family Day before the team gets here, all
right? So start thinking what you'd like to do."
Well, that would be stellar! Tia knew
exactly what she wanted to do. She wanted to go out to the mountains on the big
sled, and she wanted to drive it herself on the way.
"So forgive us, all right? We don't
love you any less and we think about you all the time, and we miss you like
anything." Pota blew a kiss toward the camera. I know you can take care of
yourself; in fact, we're counting on that. You're making a big difference to us.
I was you to know that. Love you, baby."
Tia finished her juice as the holo
flickered out, and certain temptation raised its head. This could be really
unique opportunity to play hooky, just a little bit. Mum and Dad were not going
to be checking the tutor to see how her lessons were going, and the Institute
Psychs wouldn't care; they thought she was too advanced for her age anyway. She
could even raid library for the holos she wasn't precisely supposed to watch.
"Oh, Finagle," she said, regretfully,
after a moment It might be fun, but it would be guilty fun. And besides, sooner
or later, Mum and Dad would find out what she'd done, and poof, there would go
the Family Day and probably a lot of other privileges. She weighed the
immediate pleasure of being lazy and watching forbidden holos against the
future pleasure of being able to pilot the sled up the mountains, and the
latter outranked the former. Piloting the sled was the closest she would get to
piloting a ship, and she wouldn't be able to do that for years and years and
years yet.
And if she fell on her nose now, right
when Mum and Dad trusted her most-they'd probably restrict her to the dome
forever and ever.
"Not worth it," she sighed,
jumping down from her stool. She frowned as she noticed that the
pins-and-needles feeling in her toes still hadn't gone away. It had been there
when she woke up this morning. It had been there yesterday too, and the day
before, but by breakfast it had worn off.
Well, it didn't bother her that much, and
it wouldn't take her mind off her Latin lesson. Too bad, too.
"Boring language," she muttered.
"Ick, ack, ock!"
Well, the sooner she got it over with, the
better off she'd be, and she could go back to nice logical quadratics.
The pins-and-needles feeling hadn't worn
off by afternoon, and although she felt all right, she decided that since Mum
and Dad were trusting her to do everything right, she probably ought to talk to
the AI about it
Socrates, engage Medic Mode, please,"
she said, sitting reluctantly in the tiny medic station. She really didn't like
being in the medic-station; it smelled of disinfectant and felt like being in a
too-small pressure suit. It was just about the size of a tiny lav, but
something about it made it feel smaller. Maybe because it was dark inside. And
of course, since it had been made for adults, the proportions were all wrong
for her. In order to reach hand-plates she had to scoot to the edge of the
seat, and in order to reach foot-plates she had to get right off the seat
entirely. The screen in front of her lit up with the smiling holo of someone
that was supposed to be a doctor. Privately, she doubted that the original had
ever been any closer to medicine than wearing the jumpsuit. He just looked too
polished. Too trustworthy, too handsome, too competent. Any time there was
anything official she had to interface with that seemed to scream trust me at
her, she immediately distrusted it and went very wary. Probably the original
for this holo had been an actor. Maybe he made adults feel calm, but he made
her think about the Psychs and their too-hearty greetings, their nosy
questions.
"Well, Tia," said the AI's
voice, changed to that of the 'doctor'. "What brings you here?"
"My toes feel like they're
asleep," she said dutifully. "They kind of tingle."
"Is that all?" the 'doctor'
asked, after a moment for the AI to access his library of symptoms. "Are
they colder than normal? Put your hand on the hand-plate, and your foot on the
foot-plate, Tia."
She obeyed, feeling very like a
contortionist "Well, the circulation seems to be fine," the 'doctor'
said, after the AI had a chance to read temperature and blood pressure, both of
which appeared in the upper right-hand corner of the screen. "Have you any
other symptoms?"
"No," she replied. "Not
really." The 'doctor' froze for a moment, as the AI analyzed all the other
readings it had taken from her during the past few days; what she'd eaten and
how much, what she'd done, her sleep patterns.
The 'doctor' unfroze. "Sometimes when
children start growing very fast, they get odd sensations in their
bodies," the AI said. "A long time ago, those were called 'growing
pains'. Now we know it's because sometimes different kinds of tissue grow at
different rates. I think that's probably what your problem is, Tia, and I don't
think you need to worry about it. I'll prescribe some vitamin supplements for
you, and in a few days you should be just fine."
"Thank you," she said politely,
and made her escape, relieved to have gotten off so lightly.
And in a few days, the pins-and-needles
did go away, and she thought no more about it. Thought no more, that is, until
she went outside to her new 'dig' and did something she hadn't done in a year,
she fell down. Well, she didn't exactly fall; she thought she'd sidestepped a
big rock, but she hadn't. She rammed her toes right into it and went heavily to
her knees.
The suit was intact, she discovered to her
relief, and she was quite ready to get up and keep going, until she realized
that her foot didn't hurt. And it should have, if she'd rammed it against the
outcropping hard enough to throw her to the ground.
So instead of going on, she went back to
the dome and pealed off suit and shoe and sock, and found her foot was
completely numb, but black-and-blue where she had slammed it into the
unyielding stone.
When she prodded it experimentally, she
discovered that her whole foot was numb, from the toes back to the arch. She
peeled off her other shoe and sock, and found that her left foot was as numb as
her right
"Decom it," she muttered. This
surely meant another check-in with the medic.
Once again she climbed into the
claustrophobic little closet at the back of the dome and called up the
'doctor'.
"Still got pins-and-needles,
Tia?" he said cheerfully, as she wriggled on the hard seat.
"No," she replied, "But
I've mashed my foot something awful. It's all black-and-blue."
"Put it on the foot-plate, and I'll
scan it," the 'doctor' replied. "I promise, it won't hurt a
bit."
Of course it won't, it doesn't hurt now,
she thought resentfully, but did as she was told.
"Well, no bones broken, but you
certainly did bruise it!" the 'doctor' said after a moment. Then he added
archly, "What were you doing, kicking the tutor?"
"No," she muttered. She really
hated it when the AI program made it get patronizing. "I stubbed it on a
rock, outside."
"Does it hurt?" the 'doctor'
continued, oblivious to her resentment.
"No," she said shortly.
"It's all numb."
"Well, if it does, I've authorized
your bathroom to give you some pills," the 'doctor' said with cloying
cheer. "Just go right ahead and take them if you need them. You know how
to get them."
The screen shut down before she had a
chance to say anything else. I guess it isn't anything to worry about, she
decided. The AI would have said something otherwise. It'll probably go away.
But it didn't go away, although the
bruises healed. Before long she had other bruises, and the numbness of her feet
extended to her ankles. But she told herself that the AI had said it would go
away, eventually, and anyway, this wasn't so bad, at least when she mashed
herself it didn't hurt.
She continued to play at her own little
excavation, the new one, which she had decided was a grave-site. The primitives
burned their dead though, and only buried the ashes with their flint-replicas
of the skygods' wonderful things, hoping that the dearly departed would be
reincarnated as sky-gods and return in wealth and triumph.
It wasn't as much fun though, without Mum
and Dad to talk to; and she was getting kind of tired of the way she kept
tripping and falling over the uneven ground at the new 'site'. She hadn't
damaged her new suit yet, but there were sharp rocks that could rip holes even
in the tough suit fabric, and if her suit was torn, there would go the promised
Family Day.
So, finally, she gave up on it and spent
her afternoons inside.
A few nights later, Pota peeked in her
room to see if she was still awake.
"I wanted you to know we were still
flesh-and-blood and not holos, pumpkin," her mum said, sitting down on the
side of her bed. "How are your excavations coming?"
Tia shook her head. "I kept tripping
on things, and I didn't want to tear my suit," she explained. "I
think that the Flint People must have put a curse on their grave-site. I don't
think I should dig there anymore."
Pota chuckled, hugged her, and said,
"That could very well be, dear. It never pays to underestimate the power
of religion. When the others arrive we'll research their religion and take the
curse on; all right?"
"Okay," she replied. She
wondered for a moment if she should mention her feet.
But Pota kissed her and whisked out the
door before she could make up her mind.
Nothing more happened for several days,
and she got used to having numb feet. If she was careful to watch where she
stepped, and careful never to go barefoot, there really wasn't anything to
worry about. And the AI had said it was something that happened to other
children.
Besides, now Mum and Dad were really
finding important things. In a quick breakfast holo, a tired but excited
Braddon said that what they were uncovering now might mean a whole lot more
than just a promotion. It might mean the establishment of a fieldwide
reputation.
Just what that meant, exactly, Tia wasn't
certain, but there was no doubt that it must be important or Braddon wouldn't
have been so excited about it. So she decided that whatever was wrong with her
could wait It wouldn't be long now, and once Mum and Dad weren't involved in
this day-and-night frenzy of activity, she could explain everything and they
would see to it that the medics gave her the right shot or whatever it was that
she needed.
The next morning when she woke up, her
fingers were tingling.
Tia sighed and took her place inside the
medic booth. This was getting very tiresome.
The AI ran her through the standard
questions, which she answered as she had before. "So now you have that
same tingling in your hands as you did in your feet, is that right?" the
'doctor' asked.
"That's right," she said
shortly.
"The same tingling that went
away?" the 'doctor' persisted.
"Yes," she replied. Should I say
something about how it doesn't tingle anymore, about how now it's numb? But the
AI was continuing.
"Tia, I can't really find anything
wrong with you," it said. "Your circulation is fine, you don't have a
fever, your appetite and weight are fine, you're sleeping right. But you do
seem to have gotten very accident prone lately." The 'doctor' took on a
look of concern covering impatience. "Tia, I know that your parents are
very busy right now, and they don't have time to talk to you or play with you.
Is that what's really wrong? Are you angry with your parents for leaving you
alone so much? Would you like to talk to a Counselor?"
"No!" she snapped. The idea! The
stupid AI actually thought she was making this up to get attention!
"Well, you simply don't have any
other symptoms," the 'doctor' said, none too gently. "This hasn't got
to the point where I'd have to insist that you talk to a Counselor, but really,
without anything else to go on, I can't suggest anything else except that this
is a phase you'll grow out of."
"This hasn't got to the point where
I'd have to insist that you talk to a Counselor." Those were dangerous
words. The AI's 'Counselor' mode was only good for so much, and every single
thing she said and did would be recorded the moment that she started
'Counseling'. Then all the Psychs back at the Institute would be sent the
recordings via compressed-mode databurst and they'd be all over them, looking
for something wrong with her that needed Psyching. And if they found anything,
anything at all, Mum and Dad would get orders from the Board of Mental Health
that they couldn't ignore, and she'd be shipped back to a school on the next
courier run.
Oh no. You don't catch me that easy.
"You're right," she said
carefully. "But Mum and Dad trust me to tell you everything that's wrong,
so I am."
"All right then." The 'doctor's'
face lost that stern look. "So long as you're just being conscientious.
Keep taking those vitamin supplements, Tia, and everything will be fine."
But everything wasn't fine. Within days,
the tingling had stopped, to be replaced by numbness. Just like her feet. She
began having trouble holding things, and her lessons took twice as long now,
since she couldn't touch-type anymore and had to watch where her fingers went.
She completely gave up on doing anything
that required a lot of manual dexterity. Instead, she watched a lot of holos,
even boring ones, and played a great deal of holo-chess. She read a lot too,
from the screen, so that she could give one-key page-turning commands rather
than trying to turn paper pages herself. The numbness stopped at her wrists,
and for a few days she was so busy getting used to doing things without feeling
her hands, that she didn't notice that the numbness in her legs had spread from
her ankles to her knees.
Now she was afraid to go to the AI
'doctor' program, knowing that it would put her in for Counseling. She tried
looking things up herself in the database, but knew that she was going to have
to be very sneaky to avoid triggering flags in the AI. As the numbness stopped
at the knees, then began to spread up her arms, she kept telling herself that
it wouldn't, couldn't be much longer now. Soon Mum and Dad would be done, and
they would know she wasn't making this up to get attention. Soon she would be
able to tell them herself, and they'd make the stupid medic work right. Soon.
She woke up, as usual, to hands and feet
that acted like wooden blocks at the ends of her limbs. She got a shower, easy
enough, since the controls were pushbutton, then struggled into her clothing by
wriggling and using teeth and fingers that didn't really want to move. She
didn't bother too much with hair and teeth, it was just too hard. Shoving her
feet into slippers, since she hadn't been able to tie her shoes for the past couple
of days, she stumped out into the main room of the dome, only to find Pota and
Braddon waiting there for her, smiling over their coffee.
"Surprise!" Pota said
cheerfully. "We've done just about everything we can on our own, and we
zipped the findings off to the Institute last night. Now things can get back to
normal'"
"Oh Mum!" She couldn't help
herself, she was so overwhelmed by relief and joy that she started to run
across the room to fling herself into their arms.
Started to. Halfway there, she tripped, as
usual, and went flying through the air, crashing into the table and spilling
the hot coffee all over her arms and legs.
They picked her up, as she babbled
apologies about her clumsiness. She didn't even notice what the coffee had done
to her, didn't even think about it until her parents' expressions of horror
alerted her to the fact that there were burns and blisters already rising on
her lower arms.
"It doesn't hurt," she said,
dazedly, without thinking, just saying the first thing that came into her mind.
"It's okay, really, I've been kind of numb for a while so it doesn't hurt,
honest."
Pota and Braddon both froze. Something
about their expressions startled her into silence.
"You don't feel anything?" Pota
said, carefully. "No pain, nothing at all?"
She shook her head. "My hands and
feet were tingling for a while, and then they stopped and went numb. I thought
if I just waited you could take care of it when you weren't so busy."
They wouldn't let her say anything else.
Within moments they had established through careful prodding and tests with the
end of a sharp probe that the numb area now ended at mid-thigh and
mid-shoulder.
"How long has this been going
on?" Braddon asked, while Pota flew to the AI console to call up the
medical program the adults used.
"Oh, a few weeks," she said
vaguely. "Socrates said it wasn't anything, that I'd grow out of it. Then
he acted like I was making it up, and I didn't want him to get the Psychs on
me. So I figured I would ..."
Pota returned at that moment, her mouth
set in a grim line. "You are going straight to bed, pumpkin," she
said, with what Tia could tell was forced lightness, "Socrates thinks you
have pinched nerves; possibly a spinal defect that he can't scan for. So you
are going to bed, and we are calling for a courier to come get you. All
right?"
Braddon and Pota exchanged one of those
looks, the kind Tia couldn't read, and Tia's heart sank. "Okay," she
sighed with resignation. "I didn't mean to be such a bother, honest, I
didn't."
Braddon scooped her up in his arms and
carried her off to her room. "Don't even think that you're being a
bother," he said fiercely. "We love you, pumpkin. And we're going to
see that you get better as quickly as we can."
He tucked her into bed, with Ted beside
her, and called up a holo from the almost forbidden collection.
"Here," he said, kissing her tenderly. "Your Mum is going to be
in here in a minute to put something on those burns. Then we're going to spend
all our time making you the most disgustingly spoiled little brat in known
space! What you have to do is lie there and think really hard about getting
better. Is it a deal?"
"Sure, Dad," she replied,
managing to find a grin for him somewhere. "It's a deal."
CHAPTER TWO
Because Tia was in no danger of dying, and
because there was no craft available to come fetch her capable of Singularity
Drive, the AI drone that had been sent to take her to a Central Worlds hospital
took two more weeks to arrive. Two more long, interminable weeks, during which
the faces of her Mum and Dad grew drawn and frightened, and in which her
condition not only did not improve, it deteriorated.
By the end of that two weeks, she was in
much worse shape; she had not only lost all feeling in her limbs, she had lost
use of them as well. The clumsiness that had begun when she had trouble with
buttons and zippers had turned into paralysis. If she hadn't felt the need to
keep her parents' spirits up, she'd have cried. She couldn't even hold Ted
anymore.
She joked about it to her Mum, pretending
that she had always wanted to be waited on hand and foot She had to joke about
it; although she was terrified, the look of fear in her parents' eyes drove her
own terrors away. She was determined, absolutely determined, not to let them
know how frightened she was. They were already scared enough, if she lost her
courage, they might panic.
The time crawled by, as she watched holo
after holo and played endless games of chess against Braddon, and kept telling
herself that once she got to the hospital everything would be fine. Of course
it would be fine. There wasn't anything that a Central Worlds hospital couldn't
cure. Everyone knew that! Only congenital defects couldn't be cured. But she
had been fine, right up until the day this started. It was probably something
stupid.
"Socrates says it has to be pinched
nerves," Pota repeated, for the hundredth time, the day the ship was due.
"Once they get you to the hospital, you'll have to be really brave,
pumpkin. They're probably going to have to operate on you, and it's probably
going to take several months before you're back to normal."
She brushed Tia's hair and tied it in back
in a neat tail, the way Tia liked it. "I won't be able to do any lessons,
then, will I?" she asked, mostly to keep her mother's mind busy with
something trivial. Mom doesn't handle reality and real-time very well... Dad
doesn't either. "They're probably going to have me in a cast or something,
and all dopey with pain-pills. I'm going to fall behind, aren't I?"
"Well," Pota said, with false
cheer, "yes, I'm afraid so. But that will probably make the Psychs all
very happy, you know, they think that you're too far ahead as it is. But just
think, you'll have the whole library at the hospital to dig into any time you
want it!"
That was enough even to divert her for a
minute. The entire library at the hospital, magnitudes bigger than any library
they could carry with them. All the holos she wanted to watch, and proper reading
screens set up, instead of the jury-rig Dad had put together.
"They're here," Braddon called
from the outer room. Pota compressed her lips into a line again and lifted Tia
out of the bed. And for the first time in weeks, Tia was bundled into her
pressure-suit, put inside as if Pota was dressing a giant doll. Braddon came in
to help in a moment, as she tried to cooperate as much as she could. She would
be going outside again. This time, though, she probably wouldn't be coming
back. Not to this dome, anyway.
"Wait!" she called, just before
Pota sealed her in. "Wait, 1 want my bear!" And at the look of doubt
her parents exchanged, she put on the most pleading expression she could
manage. "Please?" She couldn't stand the idea that she'd be going off
to a strange place with nothing familiar or warm in it Even if she couldn't
hold him, she could still talk to him and feel his fur against her cheek.
"Please?"
"All right, pumpkin," Pota said,
relenting. "I think there's just room for him in there with you."
Fortunately Ted was very squashable, and Tia herself was slender. There was
room for him in the body of the suit, and Tia took comfort in the feel of his
warm little bulk against her waist.
She didn't have any time to think of
anything else, for at that moment, two strangers dressed in the white
pressure-suits of CenCom Medical came in. There was a strange hiss at the back
of her air-pack, and the room went away.
She woke again in a strange white room,
dressed in a white paper gown. The only spot of color in the whole place was
Ted. He was propped beside her, in the crook of her arm, his head peeking out
from beneath the white blanket
She blinked, trying to orient herself, and
the cold hand of fear damped down on her throat. Where was she? A hospital
room, probably, but where were Mum and Dad? How did she get here so fast? What
had those two strangers done to her?
And why wasn't she feeling better? Why
couldn't she feel anything?
"She's awake," said a voice she
didn't recognize. She turned her head, which was all she could move, to see
someone in another white pressure-suit standing beside her, anonymous behind a
dark faceplate. The red cross of Medical was on one shoulder, and there was a
name-tag over the breast, but she couldn't read it from this angle. She
couldn't even tell if the person in the suit was male or female, or even human
or humanoid.
The faceplate bent over her; she would
have shrunk away if she could, feeling scared in spite of herself, the plate
was so blank, so impersonal. But then she realized that the person in the suit
had bent down so that she could see the face inside, past the glare of lights
on the plexi surface, and she relaxed a little.
"Hello, Hypatia," said the
person, a lady actually, a very nice lady from her face. Her voice sounded kind
of tinny, coming through the suit speaker; a little like Moira's over the
ancient com. The comparison made her feel a little calmer. At least the lady
knew her name and pronounced it right.
"Hello," she said cautiously.
"This is the hospital, isn't it? How come I don't remember the ship?"
"Well, Hypatia, may I call you
Tia?" At Tia's nod, the lady continued. "Tia, our first thought was
that you might have some kind of plague, even though your parents were all
right. The doctor and medic we sent on the ship decided that it was better to
be completely safe and keep you and your parents in isolation. The easiest way
to do that was to put all three of you in cold sleep and keep you in your suits
until we got you here. We didn't want to frighten you, so we asked your parents
not to tell you what we were going to do."
Tia digested that. "All right,"
she said, trying to be agreeable, since there wasn't anything she could have
done about it anyway. "It probably would have gotten really boring on the
ship. There probably wasn't much to watch or read, and they would have gotten
tired of playing chess with me."
The lady laughed. "Given that you
would have beaten the pants off both of them, quite probably," she agreed,
straightening up a little. Now that Tia knew there was a person behind the
faceplate, it didn't seem quite so threatening. "Now, we're going to keep
you in isolation for a while longer, while we see what it is that bit you.
You'll be seeing a lot of me. I'm one of your two doctors. My name is Anna
Jorgenson-Kepal, and you can call me Anna, or Doctor Anna if you like, but I
don't think we need to be that formal. Your other doctor is Kennet Uhua-Sorg.
You won't be seeing much of him until you're out of isolation, because he's a
paraplegic and he's in a Moto-Chair. Can't fit one of them into a
pressure-suit."
The holo-screen above the bed flickered
into life, and the head and shoulders of a thin, ascetic-looking young man
appeared there. "Call me Kenny, Tia," the young man said. "I
absolutely refuse to be stuffy with you. I'm sorry I can't meet you in person,
but it takes forever to decontam one of these fardling chairs, so Anna gets to
be my hands."
"That's your chair. It's kind of like
a modified shell, isn't it?" she asked curiously, deciding that if they
were going to bring the subject up, she wasn't going to be polite and avoid it.
"I know a shell-person. Moira, she's a brainship."
"Dead on!" Kenny said
cheerfully. "Medico on the half-shell, that's me! I just had a stupid
accident when I was a tweenie, not like you, getting bit by alien bugs!"
She smiled tentatively. I think I'm going
to like him."Did anyone ever tell you that you look just like Amenemhat
the Third?"
His large eyes widened even more.
"Well, no. That is definitely a new one. I hope it's a compliment! One of
my patients said I looked like Largo Delecron, the synthcom star, but I didn't
know she thought Largo looked like a refugee from a slaver camp!"
"It is," she assured him
hastily. "He's one of my favorite Pharaohs."
Tia, I have to see if I can't cultivate
the proper Pharaonic majesty, then," Kenny replied with a grin.
"It might do me some good when I have
to drum some sense into the heads of some of the Psychs around here! They've
been trying to get at you ever since we admitted you."
If she could have shivered with
apprehension, she would have. "I don't have to see them, do I?" she
asked in a small voice. "They never stop asking stupid questions!"
"Absolutely not," Anna said
firmly. "I have a double doctorate; one of them is in headshrinking. I am
quite capable of assessing you all by myself."
Tia's heart sank when Anna mentioned her
degree in Psych, but it rose the moment she referred to Psych as
'headshrinking'. None of the Psychs who had plagued her life until now ever
called their profession by something as frivolous as 'headshrinking'.
She patted Tia's shoulder. "Don't
worry, Tia. It's my opinion that you are a very brave young lady. A bit too
responsible, but otherwise just fine. They spend too much time analyzing
children and not enough time actually seeing them or paying attention to
them." She smiled inside her helmet, and a curl of hair escaped down to
dangle above her left eyebrow, making her look a lot more human.
"Listen, Tia, there's a little bit of
fur missing from your bear, and a scrap of stuffing," Kenny said.
"Anna says you wouldn't notice, but I thought we ought to tell you anyway.
We checked him over for alien bugs and neurotoxins, and he's got a clean bill
of health. When you come out of Coventry, we'll decontam him again to be sure,
but we know he wasn't the problem, in case you were wondering."
She had wondered. Moira wouldn't have done
anything on purpose, of course, but it would have been horrible if her sickness
had been due to Ted. Moira would have felt awful, not to mention how Tomas
would feel.
"What's his name?" Anna asked,
busying herself with something at the head of the bed. Tia couldn't turn her head
far enough to see what it was.
"Theodore Edward Bear," she
replied, surreptitiously rubbing her cheek against his soft fur. "Moira
gave him to me, because she used to have a bear named Ivan the Bearable."
"Excellent name, Theodore. It suits
him," Anna said. "You know, I think your Moira and I must be about
the same age. There was a kind of fad for bears when I was little. I had a
really nice bear in a flying suit called Amelia Bearhart." She chuckled.
"I still have her, actually, but she mostly sits on the bureau in my guest
room. She's gotten to be a very venerable matriarch in her old age."
But bears weren't really what she wanted
to talk about. Now that she knew where she was, and that she was in isolation.
"How long am I going to be in here?" she asked in a small voice.
Kenny turned very serious, and Anna
stopped fiddling with things. Kenny sucked on his lower lip for a moment before
actually replying, and the hum of the machinery in her room seemed very loud.
"The Psychs were trying to tell us that we should try and cushion you,
but, Tia, we think that you are a very unusual girl. We think you would rather
know the complete truth. Is that the case?" Would she? Or would she rather
pretend? But this wasn't like making up stories at a dig. If she pretended,
things would only seem worse when they finally told her the truth, if it was
bad.
"Ye-es," she told them both,
slowly. "Please."
"We
don't know," Anna told her. "I wish we did. We haven't found anything
in your blood, and we're only just now trying to isolate things in your nervous
system. But, well, we're assuming it's a bug that got you, a proto-virus,
maybe, but we don't know, and that's the truth. Until we know, we won't know if
we can fix you again."
Not when. If.
The possibility that she might stay like
this for the rest of her life chilled her.
"Your parents are in isolation,
too," Kenny said, hastily, "but they are one hundred percent fine.
There's nothing wrong with them at all. So that makes things harder."
"I understand, I think," she
said in a small, nervous sounding voice. She took a deep breath. "Am I
getting worse?"
Anna went very still. Kenny's face
darkened, and he bit his lower lip.
"Well," he said quietly.
"Yes. We're having to think about mobility, and maybe even life-support
for you. Something considerably more than my chair. I wish I could tell you
differently, Tia."
"That's all right," she said,
trying to ease his distress. "I'd rather know."
Anna leaned down to whisper something
through her suit-mike. "Tia, if you're afraid of crying, don't be. If I
were in your position, I'd cry. And if you would like to be alone, tell us, all
right?"
"Okay," she replied, faindy.
"Uh, can I be alone for a while, please?"
"Sure." She stopped pretending
to fuss with equipment and nodded shortly at the holo-screen. Kenny brought up
one hand to wave at her, and the screen blinked out. Anna left through what Tia
now realized was a decontam-airlock a moment later. Leaving her alone with the
hissing, humming equipment, and Ted.
She swallowed a lump in her throat and
thought very hard about what they'd told her.
She wasn't getting any better, she was
getting worse. They didn't know what was wrong. That was on the negative side.
On the plus side, there was nothing wrong with Mum and Dad, and they hadn't
said to give up all hope. Therefore, she should continue to assume that they
would find a cure.
She cleared her throat. "Hello?"
she said.
As she had thought, there was an AI monitoring
the room.
"Hello," it replied, in the
curiously accent-less voice only an AI could produce. "What is your
need?"
"I'd like to watch a holo.
History," she said, after a moment of thought "There's a holo about
Queen Hatshepsut of Egypt. It's called Phoenix of Ra, I think. Have you got
that?"
That had been on the forbidden list at
home; Tia knew why. There had been some pretty steamy scenes with the Pharaoh
and her architect in there. Tia was fascinated by the only female to declare
herself Pharaoh, however, and had been decidedly annoyed when a little sex kept
her from viewing this one.
"Yes, I have access to that,"
the AI said after a moment. "Would you like to view it now?"
So they hadn't put any restrictions on her
viewing privileges! "Yes," she replied; then, eager to strike while
she had the chance, "And after that, I'd like to see the Aten trilogy,
about Ahnkenaten and the heretics. That's Aten Rising, Aten at Zenith, and Aten
Descending."
Those had more than a few steamy scenes;
she'd overheard her mother saying that some of the theories that had been
dramatized fairly explicitly in the trilogy, while they made comprehensible
some otherwise inexplicable findings, would get the holos banned in some
cultures. And Braddon had chuckled and replied that the costumes alone, or lack
of them, while completely accurate, would do the same. Still, Tia figured she
could handle it. And if it was that bad, it would certainly help keep her mind
off her own troubles!
"Very well," the AI said
agreeably. "Shall I begin?"
"Yes," she told it, with another
caress of her cheek on Ted's soft fur. "Please."
Pota and Braddon watched their daughter
with frozen faces, faces that Tia was convinced covered a complete welter of
emotions that they didn't want her to see. She took a deep breath, enunciated
"Chair forward, five feet," and her Moto-Chair glided forward and
stopped before it touched them.
"Well, now I can get around at
least," she said, with what she hoped sounded like cheer. "I was
getting awfully tired of the same four walls!"
Whatever it was that she had, and now she
heard the words 'proto-virus' and 'dystrophic sclerosis' bandied about more
often than not, the medics had decided it wasn't contagious. They'd let Pota
and Braddon out of isolation, and they'd moved Tia to another room, one that
had a door right onto the corridor. Not that it made much difference, except
that Anna didn't have to use a decontam airlock and pressure-suit anymore. And
now Kenny came to see her in person. But four white walls were still four white
walls, and there wasn't much variation in rooms.
Still, she was afraid to ask for things to
personalize the room. Afraid that if she made it more her own, she'd be stuck
in it. Forever.
Her numbness and paralysis extended to
most of her body now, except for her facial muscles. And there it stopped. Just
as inexplicably as it had begun.
They'd put her in the quadriplegic version
of the Moto-Chair; just like Kenny's except that she controlled hers with a few
commands and series of tongue-switches and eye movements. A command sent it
forward, and the direction she looked would tell it where to go. And hers had
mechanical 'arms' that followed set patterns programmed in to respond to more
commands. Any command had to be prefaced by 'chair' or 'arm'. A clumsy system,
but it was the best they could do without direct synaptic connections from the
brainstem, like those of a shell-person.
Her brainstem was still intact, anyway.
Whatever it was had gotten her spine, but not that. Other than that, Mrs.
Lincoln, she thought with bitter irony, haw was the play?
"What do you think, pumpkin?"
Braddon asked, his voice quivering only a little.
"Hey, this is stellar, Dad," she
replied cheerfully. "It's just like piloting a ship! I think I'll
challenge Doctor Kenny to a race!"
Pota swallowed very hard and managed a
tremulous smile. "It won't be for too long," she said without
conviction. "As soon as they find out what's set up housekeeping in there,
they'll have you better in no time."
She bit her lip to keep from snapping back
and dug up a fatuous grin from somewhere. The likelihood of finding a cure
diminished more with every day, and she knew it Neither Anna nor Kenny made any
attempt to hide that from her.
But there was no point in making her
parents unhappy. They already felt bad enough.
She tried out all the points of the chair
for them, until not even they could stand it anymore. They left, making excuses
and promising to come back, and they were succeeded immediately by a stream of
interns and neurological specialists, each of whom had more variations on the
same basic questions she had answered a thousand times, each of whom had his
own pet theory about what was wrong.
"First my toes felt like they were
asleep when I woke up one morning, but it wore off. Then it didn't wear off.
Then instead of waking up with tingles, I woke up numb. Not sir, it never
actually hurt. No, ma'am, it only went as far as my heel at first. Yes, sir,
then after two days my fingers started. No ma'am, just the fingers not the
whole hand."
Hours of it. But she knew that they
weren't being nasty, they were trying to help her, and being able to help her
depended on how cooperative she was.
But their questions didn't stop the
questions of her own. So far, it was just sensory nerves and voluntary muscles
and nerves. What if it went to the involuntary ones, and she woke up unable to
breathe? What then? What if she lost control of her facial muscles? Every little
tingle made her break out in a sweat of panic, thinking it was going to happen.
Nobody had answers for any questions. Not
hers, and not theirs.
Finally, just before dinner, they went
away. After about a half an hour, she mastered control of the arms enough to
feed herself, saving herself the humiliation of having to call a nurse to do
it. And the chair's own plumbing solved the humiliation of the natural result
of eating and drinking.
After supper, when the tray was taken
away, she was left in the growing darkness of the room, quite alone. She would
have slumped, if she could have. It was just as well that Pota and Braddon
hadn't returned; having them there was a strain. It was harder to be brave in
front of them than it was in front of strangers.
"Chair, turn seventy degrees
right," she ordered. "Left arm, pick up bear."
With a soft whir, the chair obeyed her.
"Left arm. Put bear, cancel. Left
arm, bring bear to left of face." The arm moved a little. "Closer.
Closer. Hold."
Now she cuddled Ted against her cheek, and
she could pretend that it was her own arm holding him there.
With no one there to see, slow, hot tears
formed in her eyes and trickled down her cheeks. She leaned her head to the
left a little, so that they would soak into Ted's soft blue fur and not betray
her.
"It's not fair," she whispered
to Ted, who seemed to nod with sad agreement as she rubbed her cheek against
him. "It's not fair."
"I wanted to find the EsKay
homeworld. I wanted to go out with Mum and Dad and be the one to find the
homeworld. I wanted to write books. I wanted to stand up in front of people and
make them laugh and get excited, and see how history and archeology aren't
dead, they're just asleep. I wanted to do things they make holos out of. I
wanted, I wanted, I wanted to see things! I wanted to drive grav-sleds and swim
in a real lagoon and feel a storm and, and I wanted,"
Some of the scenes from the holos she'd
been watching came back with force now, and memories of Pota and Braddon, when
they thought she was engrossed in a book or a holo, giggling and cuddling like
tweenies. "I wanted to find out about boys. Boys and kisses and, and now
nobody's ever going to look at me and see me. All they're going to see is this
big metal thing. That's all they see now. Even if a boy ever wanted to kiss me,
he'd have to get past a half ton of machinery, and it would probably bleep an
alarm." The tears poured faster now, with the darkness of the room to hide
them.
"They wouldn't have put me in this
thing if they thought I was going to get better. I'm never going to get better.
I'm only going to get worse, f can't feel anything, I'm nothing but a head in a
machine. And if I get worse, will I go deaf? Blind? Teddy, what's going to
happen to me?" she sobbed, "Am I going to spend the rest of my life
in a room?"
Ted didn't know, any more than she did.
"It's not fair, it's not fair, I
never did anything," she wept, as Ted watched her tears with round, sad
eyes, and soaked them up for her. "It's not fair. I wasn't finished. I
hadn't even started yet."
Kenny grabbed a tissue with one hand and
snapped off the camera relay with the other. He scrubbed fiercely at his eyes
and blew his nose with a combination of anger and grief. Anger, at his own
impotence. Grief, for the vulnerable little girl alone in that cold, impersonal
hospital room, a little girl who was doing her damnedest to put a brave face on
everything.
In public. He was the only one to watch
her in private, like this, when she thought there was no one to see that her
whole pose of cheer was nothing more than a facade.
"I wasn't finished. I wasn't even
started yet."
"Damn it," he swore, scrubbing
at his eyes again and pounding the arm of his chair. "Damn it
anyway!" What careless god had caused her to choose the very words he had
used, fifteen years ago?
Fifteen years ago, when a stupid accident
had left him paralyzed from the waist down and put an end, he thought, to his
dreams for med school?
Fifteen years ago, when Doctor Harwat
Kline-Bes was his doctor and had heard him weeping alone into his pillow?
He turned his chair and opened the
viewport out into the stars, staring at them as they moved past in a panorama
of perfect beauty that changed with the rotation of the station. He let the
tears dry on his cheeks, let his mind empty.
Fifteen years ago, another neurologist had
heard those stammered, heartbroken words, and had determined that they would
not become a truth. He had taken a paraplegic young student, bullied the makers
of an experimental Moto-Chair into giving the youngster one, then bullied the
dean of the Meyasor State Medical College into admitting the boy. Then he had
seen to it that once the boy graduated, he got an internship in this very hospital,
a place where a neurologist in a Moto-Chair was no great curiosity, not with
the sentients of a hundred worlds coming in as patients and doctors.
A paraplegic, though. Not a quad. Not a
child with a brilliant, flexible mind, trapped in an inert body.
Brilliant mind. Inert body. Brilliant-
An idea blinded him, it occurred so
suddenly. He was not the only person watching Tia, there was one other. Someone
who watched every patient here, every doctor, every nurse. Someone he didn't
consult too often, because Lars wasn't a medico, or a shrink.
But in this case, Lars' opinion was likely
to be more accurate than anyone else's on this station. Including his own.
He thumbed a control. "Lars," he
said shortly. "Got a minute, buddy?"
He had to wait for a moment. Lars was a
busy guy, though hopefully at this hour there weren't too many demands on his
conversational circuits. "Certainly, Kenny," Lars replied after a few
seconds. "How can I help the neurological wunderkind of Central Worlds
MedStation, Pride of Albion? Hmm?" The voice was rich and ironic; Lars
rather enjoyed teasing everyone onboard. He called it 'therapeutic deflation of
egos'. He particularly liked deflating Kenny's. He had said, more than once,
that everyone else was so afraid of being 'unkind to the poor cripple' that
they danced on eggs to avoid telling him when he was full of it.
"Can the sarcasm, Lars," Kenny
replied. "I've got a serious problem that I want your opinion on."
"My opinion?" Lars sounded
genuinely surprised. "This must be a personal opinion. I'm certainly not
qualified to give you a medical one."
"Most definitely, a very personal
opinion, one that you are the best suited to give. On Hypatia Cade."
"Ah." Kenny thought that Lars'
tone softened considerably. "The little child in the Neuro unit, with the
unchildlike taste in holos. She still thinks I'm the AI. I haven't dissuaded
her."
"Good, I want her to be herself
around you, for the gods of space know she won't be herself around the rest of
us." He realized that his tone had gone savage and carefully regained
control over himself before he continued. "You've got her records and
you've watched the kid herself. I know she's old for it, but how would she do
in the shell program?"
A long pause. Longer than Lars needed
simply to access and analyze records. "Has her condition stabilized?"
he asked, cautiously. "If it hasn't, if she goes brain-inert halfway into
her schooling, it'd not only make problems for anyone else you'd want to bring
in late, it'll traumatize the other shell-kids badly. They don't handle death
well, I wouldn't be a party to frightening them, however inadvertendy."
Kenny massaged his temple with the long,
clever fingers that had worked so many surgical miracles for others and could
do nothing for this little girl. "As far as we can tell anything about
this, disease, yes, she's stable," he said finally. "Take a look in
there and you'll see I ordered a shotgun approach while we were testing her.
She's had a full course of every anti-viral neurological agent we've got a
record of. And noninvasive things like a course of ultra, well, you can see it
there. I think we killed it, whatever it was." Too late to help her. Damn
it.
"She's brilliant," Lars said
cautiously. "She's flexible. She has the ability to multi-thread, to do
several things at once. And she's had good, positive reactions to contact with
shell-persons in the past."
"So?" Kenny asked, impatiently,
as the stars passed by in their courses, indifferent to the fate of one little
girl. "Your opinion."
"I think she can make the
transition," Lars said, with more emphasis than Kenny had ever heard in
his voice before. "I think she'll not only make the transition, She will
be a stellar addition."
He let out the breath he'd been holding in
a sigh.
"Physically, she is certainly no
worse off than many in the shell-person program, including yours truly,"
Lars continued. "Frankly, Kenny, she's got so much potential it would be a
crime to let her rot in a hospital room for the rest of her life."
The careful control Lars normally had over
his voice was gone; there was passion in his words that Kenny had never heard
him display until this moment. "Got to you, too, did she?" he said
dryly.
"Yes," Lars said, biting off the
word. "And I'm not ashamed of it. I don't mind telling you that she had me
in, well, not tears, but certainly the equivalent."
"Good for you." He rubbed his
hands together, warming cold fingers. "Because I'm going to need your
connivance again."
"Going to pull another fast one, are
you?" Lars asked with ironic amusement.
"Just a few strings. What good does
being a stellar intellect do me, if I can't make use of the position?" he
asked rhetorically. He shut the viewport and pivoted his chair to face his
desk, keying on his terminal and linking it directly to Lars and a very
personal database. One called 'Favors'. "All right, my friend, let's get
to work. First, whose strings can you jerk? Then, who on the political side has
influence in the program, of that set, who owes me the most, and of that
subset, who's due here the soonest?"
A Sector Secretary-General did not grovel,
nor did he gush, but to Kenny's immense satisfaction, when Quintan
Waldheim-Querar y Chan came aboard the Pride of Albion, the very first thing he
wanted, after all the official inspections and the like were over, was to meet
with the brilliant neurologist whose work had saved his nephew from the same
fate as Kenny himself He already knew most of what there was to know about
Kenny and his meteoric career.
And Quintan Waldheim-Querar y Chan was not
the sort to avoid an uncomfortable topic.
"A little ironic, isn't it?" the
Secretary-General said, after the firm handshake, with a glance at Kenny's
Moto-Chair. He stood up and did not tug self-consciously at his conservative
dark blue tunic.
Kenny did not smile, but he took a deep
breath of satisfaction. Doubly good. No more talk, we have a winner.
"What, that my injury was virtually
identical to Peregrine's?" he replied immediately. "Not ironic at
all, sir. The fact that I found myself in this position was what prompted me to
go into neurology in the first place. I won't try to claim that if I hadn't
been injured, and hadn't worked so hard to find a remedy for the same injuries,
someone else might not have come up with the same answer that I did. Medical
research is a matter of building on what has come before, after all."
"But without your special interest,
the solution might well have come too late to do Peregrine any good," the
Secretary-General countered. "And it was not only your technique, it was
your skill that pulled him through. There is no duplication of that, not in
this sector, anyway. That's why I arranged for this visit I wanted to thank you."
Kenny shrugged deprecatingly. This was the
most perfect opening he'd ever seen in his life, and he had no intention of
letting it get away from him. Not when he had the answer to Tia's prayers
trapped in his office.
"I can't win them all, sir," he
said flatly. "I'm not a god. Though there are times I wish most profoundly
that I was, and right now is one of them."
The Great Man's expression sobered. The
Secretary-General was not just a Great Man because he was an excellent
administrator; he was one because he had a human side, and that human and
humane side could be touched. "I take it you have a case that is troubling
you?" Then, conscious of the feet that he owed Kenny, he said the magic
words. "Perhaps I can help?"
Kenny sighed, as if he were reluctant to
continue the discussion. Wouldn't do to seem too eager. "Well, would you
care to see some tape of the child?"
Child. Children were one of the Great
Man's weaknesses. He had sponsored more child-oriented programs than any three
of his predecessors combined. "Yes. If it would not be violating the
child's privacy."
"Here, " Kenny flicked a switch,
triggering the holo-record he already had keyed up. A record he and Anna had
put together. Carefully edited, carefully selected, compiled from days of
recordings with Lars' assistance and the psych-profile of the Great Man to
guide them. "I promise I won't take more than fifteen minutes of your
time."
The first seven and a half minutes of this
recording were of Tia at her most attractive; being very brave and cheerful for
the interns and her parents. "This is Hypatia Cade, the daughter of Pota
Andropolous-Cade and Braddon Maartens-Cade," he explained, over the holo.
Quickly he outlined her background and her pathetic little story, stressing her
high intelligence, her flexibility, her responsibility. "The prognosis
isn't very cheerful, I'm afraid," he said, watching his chrono carefully
to time his speech with the end of that section of tape. "No matter what
we do, she's doomed to spend the rest of her life in some institution or other.
The only way she could be at all mobile would be through direct synaptic
connections, well, we don't do that here, they can only link in that way at Lab
Schools, the shell-person project."
He stopped, as the holo flickered and
darkened. Tia was alone.
The arm of her chair reached out and
grasped the sad little blue bear, hidden until now by the tray table and a
pillow. It brought the toy in close to her face, and she gently rubbed her
cheek against its soft fur coat The lightning bolt of the Courier Service on
its shirt stood out clearly in this shot ... one reason why Kenny had chosen it
"They've gone, Ted," she
whispered to her bear. "Mum and Dad, they've gone back to the Institute,
There's nobody left here but you, now,"
A single bright tear formed in one corner
of her eye and slowly rolled down her cheek, catching what little light there
was in the room.
"What? Oh, no, it's not their fault,
Ted, they had to. The Institute said so, I saw the dispatch. It said, it said
since I w-w-wasn't going to get any b-b-b-better there was no p-p-p-point in,
in, wasting v-v-valuable t-t-time."
She sobbed once, and buried her face in
the teddy bear's fur.
After a moment, her voice came again, muffled.
"Anyway, it hurts them so m-much. And it's s-s-so hard to be-b-brave for
them. But if I cried, th-they'd only feel w-worse. I think m-maybe it's
b-better this way, don't you? Easier. F-for every-b-b-b-body."
The holo flickered again; same time,
nearly the same position, but a different day. This time she was crying openly,
tears coursing down her cheeks as she sobbed into the bear's little shirt.
"We've given her the complete run of
the library and the holo collection," Kenny said, very softly.
"Normally, they keep her relatively amused and stimulated, but just before
we filmed this, she picked out an episode of The Stellar Explorers, and, well,
her parents said she had planned to be a pilot, you see, "
She continued to cry, sobbing helplessly,
the only understandable words being "-Teddy, I wanted, to go. I wanted to
see the stars."
The holo flickered out, as Kenny turned
the lights in his office back up. He reached for a tissue and wiped his eyes
without shame. "I'm afraid she affects me rather profoundly," he
said, and smiled weakly. "So much for my professional detachment."
The Great Man blinked rapidly to clear his
own eyes. "Why isn't something being done for that child?" he
demanded, his voice hoarse.
"We've done all we can, here,"
Kenny said. "The only possibility of giving that poor child any kind of a
life is to get her into the shell-person program. But the Psychs at the
Laboratory Schools seem to think she's too old. They wouldn't even send someone
to come evaluate her, even though the parents petitioned them and we added our
own recommendations."
He let the sentence trail off
significantly. The Secretary-General gave him a sharp look. "And you don't
agree with them, I take it?"
Kenny shrugged. "It isn't just my
opinion," he said smoothly. "It's the opinion of the staff Psych
assigned to her, the shell-person running this station, and a brainship friend
of hers in the Courier Service. The one," he added delicately, "who
gave her that little bear."
Mentioning the bear sold the deal; Kenny
could see it in the Great Man's expression. "We'll just see about
that," the Secretary-General said. "The people you talked to don't
have all the answers, and they certainly don't have the final say." He stood
up and offered Kenny his hand again. "I won't promise anything, but don't
be surprised if there's someone from the Laboratory Schools here to see her in
the next few days. How soon can you have her ready for transfer, if they take
her?"
"Within twelve hours, sir," Kenny
replied, secretly congratulating himself for getting her parents to sign a
writ-of-consent before they left. Of course, they thought it was for
experimental procedures.
Then again, Pota and Braddon had been the
ones who'd broached the idea of the shell-person program to the people at the
Laboratory Schools and been turned down because of Tia's age.
"Twelve hours?" The Great Man
raised an eyebrow. Kenny returned him look for look.
"Her parents are under contract to
the Archeological Institute," he explained. "The Institute called
them back out into the field, because their parental emergency leave was up.
They weren't happy, but it was obey or be fired. Hard to find another job in
that field that isn't with the Institute." He coughed. "Well, they
trusted my work, and made me Tia's full guardian before they left."
"So you have right-of-disposition and
guardianship. Very tidy." The Secretary-General's wry smile showed that he
knew he had been maneuvered into this, and that he was not annoyed. "All
right. There'll be someone from the schools here within the week. Unless
there's something you haven't told me about the girl, he should finish his
evaluation in two days. At the end of those two days ..." One eyebrow
raised significantly. "Well, it would be very convenient if he could take
the new recruit back with him, wouldn't it?"
"Yes, sir," Kenny said happily.
"It would indeed, sir."
If it hadn't been for Doctor Uhua-Sorg's
reputation and the pleas of his former pupil, Lars Mendoza, Philip Gryphon bint
Brogen would have been only too happy to tell the committee where to stick the
Secretary-General's request. And what to do with it after they put it there.
One did not pull strings to get an unsuitable candidate into the shell program!
Maybe the Secretary-General thought he could get away with that kind of
politicking with Academy admissions, but he was going to find out differently
here.
Philip was not inclined to be coaxed and
would not give in to bullying. So it was in a decidedly belligerent state of
mind that he disembarked from his shuttle onto the docks of the Pride of
Albion. Like every hospital station, this one affronted him with its sterile
white walls and atmosphere of self-importance.
There was someone waiting, obviously for
him, in the reception area. Someone in a Moto-Chair. A handsome young man with
thick dark hair and a thin, ascetic face.
If they think they can soften me up by
assigning me to someone they think I won't dare be rude to, he thought
savagely, as the young man glided the Chair toward him. Conniving beggars.
"Professor Brogen?" said the
ridiculously young, vulnerable-looking man, holding out his hand. "I'm
Doctor Sorg."
"If you think I'm going to, "
Brogen began, not reaching out to take it. Then the name registered on him and
he did a classic double-take. "Doctor Sorg? Doctor Uhua-Sorg?"
The young man nodded, just the barest
trace of a smile showing on his lips.
"Doctor Kennet Uhua-Sorg?"
Brogen asked, feeling as if he'd been set up, yet knowing he had set up himself
for this particular fall.
"Yes indeed," the young man
replied. "I take it that you weren't, ah, expecting me to meet you in
person."
A chance for an out, not a graceful one,
but an out, and Brogen took it "Hardly," he replied brusquely.
"The Chief of Neurosurgery and Neurological Research usually does not meet
a simple professor on behalf of an ordinary child."
"Tia is far from ordinary,
Professor," Doctor Sorg responded, never once losing that hint of smile.
"Any more than you are a 'simple' professor. But, if you'll follow me,
you'll find out about Tia for yourself"
Well, he's right about one thing, Brogen
thought grudgingly, after an hour spent in Tia's company while hordes of
interns and specialists pestered, poked and prodded her. She's not ordinary.
Any 'ordinary' child would be having a screaming tantrum by now. She was an
extraordinarily attractive child as well as a patient one; her dark hair had
been cropped short to keep it out of the way, but her thin, pixie-like face and
big eyes made her look like the model for a Victorian fairy. A fairy trapped in
a fist of metal ... tormented and teased by a swarm of wasps.
"How much longer is this going to go
on?" he asked Kennet Sorg in an irritated whisper.
Kennet raised one eyebrow. "That's
for you to say," he replied. "You are here to evaluate her. If you
want more time alone with her, you have only to say the word. This is her
second session for the day, by the way," he added, and Brogen could have
sworn there was a hint of, smugness? in his voice. "She played host to
another swarm this morning, between nine and noon."
Now Brogen was outraged, but on the
child's behalf, Kennet Sorg must have read that in his expression, for he
turned his chair towards the cluster of white uniformed interns, cleared his
throat, and got their instant attention.
"That will be all for today," he
said quietly. "If you please, ladies and gentlemen. Professor Brogen would
like to have some time with Tia alone."
There were looks of disappointment and
some even of disgust cast Brogen's way, but he ignored them. The child, at
least, looked relieved.
Before he could say anything to Kennet
Sorg, he realized that the doctor had followed the others out the door, which
was closing behind his chair, leaving Brogen alone with the child. He cleared
his own throat awkwardly.
The little girl looked at him with a most
peculiar expression in her eyes. Not fear, but wariness.
"You're not a Psych, are you?"
she asked.
"Well, no," he said. "Not
exactly. I'll probably ask some of the same questions, though."
She sighed, and closed her soft brown eyes
for a moment. "I'm very tired of having my head shrunk," she replied
forthrightly. "Very, very tired. And it isn't going to make any difference
at all in the way I think, anyway. It isn't that, but this, " she bobbed
her chin at her chair "isn't going to go away because it isn't fair.
Right?"
"Sad, but true, my dear." He
began to relax, and realized why. Kennet Sorg was right This was no ordinary
child; talking with her was not like talking to a child, but it was like
talking to one of the kids in the shell program. "So, how about if we chat
about something else entirely. Do you know any shell-persons?"
She gave him an odd look. "They must
not have told you very much about me," she said. "Either that, or you
didn't pay very much attention. One of my very best friends is a brainship,
Moira Valentine-Maya. She gave me Theodore."
Theodore? Oh, right. The bear. He cast a
quick glance over towards the bed, and there was the somber-looking little bear
in a Courier Service shirt that he'd been told about.
"Did you ever think about what being
in a shell must be like?" he asked, fishing for a way to explain the
program to her without letting her know she was being evaluated.
"Of course I did!" she said, not
bothering to hide her scorn. "I told Moira that I wanted to be just like
her when I grew up, and she laughed at me and told me all about what the
schools were like and everything."
And then, before he could say anything,
the unchildlike child proceeded to tell him about his own program. The
brainship side, at any rate.
Pros and cons. From having to be able to
multi-task, to the thrill of experiencing a singularity and warpspace
firsthand. From being locked forever in a metal skin, to the loneliness of
knowing that you were going to outlive all your partners but the last.
"I told her that I guessed I didn't
want to go in when I figured out that you could never touch anybody
again," she concluded, wearily. "I know you've got sensors to the
skin and everything, but that was what I didn't like. Kind of funny, huh?"
"Why?" he asked without
thinking.
"Because now, I can't touch anybody.
And I won't ever again. So it's kind of funny. I can't touch anyone anymore,
but I can't be a brainship either." The tired resignation in her voice
galvanized him.
"I don't know why you couldn't,"
he said, aware that he had already made up his mind, and both aghast and amused
at himself "There's room in this year's class for another couple of new
candidates; there's even room in the brainship category for one or two
pupils."
She blinked at him, then blurted,
"But they told me I was too old!"
He laughed. "My dear, you wouldn't be
too old if you were your mother's age. You would have been a good shell-program
candidate well past puberty." He still couldn't believe this child;
responsible, articulate, flexible ... Lars and Kennet Sorg had been right. It
made him wonder how many other children had been rejected out of hand, simply
because of age; how many had been lost to a sterile existence in an
institution, just because they had no one as persistent and as influential as
Kennet Sorg to plead their cases.
Well, one thing at a time. Grab this one
now. Put something in place to take care of the others later. "I'm going
to have to go through the motions and file the paperwork, but Tia, if you want,
you can consider yourself recruited this very instant."
"Yes!" she burst out "Oh,
yes! Yes, yes, yes! Oh, please, thank you, thank you so much." Her cheeks
were wet with tears, but the joy on her face was so intense that it was
blinding. Professor Brogen blinked and swallowed a lump in his throat.
"The advantage of recruiting someone
your age," he said, ignoring her tears and his tickling eyes, "is
that you can make your career path decision right away. Shell-persons don't all
go into brainships. For instance, you could opt for a career with the Institute;
they've been asking to hire a shell-person to head their home-base research
section for the last twenty years. You could do original research on the
findings of others, even your parents' discoveries. You could become a
Spaceport Administrator, or a Station Administrator. You could go into law, or
virtually any branch of science. Even medicine. With the synaptic links we
have, there is no career you cannot consider."
"But I want to be a brainship,"
she said firmly.
Brogen took a deep breath. While he agreed
with her emotionally, well, there were some serious drawbacks. "Tia, a lot
of what a brainship does is, well, being a truck driver or a cabby. Ferrying
people or things from one place to another. It isn't very glamorous work. It is
quite dangerous, both physically and psychologically. You would be very
valuable, and yet totally unarmed, unless you went into the military branch,
which I don't think you're suited for, frankly. You would be a target for
thieves and malcontents. And there is one other thing; the ship is very
expensive. In my not-so-humble opinion, brainship service is just one short
step from indentured slavery. You are literally paying for the use and upkeep
of that ship by mortgaging yourself. There is very little chance of buying your
contract out in any reasonable length of time unless you do something truly
spectacular or take on very dangerous duties. The former isn't likely to happen
in ordinary service, and you won't be able to exchange boring service for
whatever your fancy is."
Tia looked stubborn for a moment, then
thoughtful. "All of that is true," she said, finally. "But,
Professor, Dad always said I had his astrogator genes, and I was already
getting into tensor physics, so I have the head for starflight. And it's what I
want."
Brogen turned up his hands. "I can't
argue with that. There's no arguing with preferences, is there?" In a way,
he was rather pleased. As self-possessed as Tia was, she would do very well in
brainship service. And as stable as she seemed to be, there was very little
chance of her having psychological problems, unless something completely
unforeseen came up.
She smiled shyly. "Besides, I talked
this over with Moira, you know, giving her ideas on how she could get some
extra credits to help with all her fines for bouncing her brawns? Since she was
with Archeology and Exploration as a courier, there were lots of chances for
her to see things that the surveyors might not, and I kind of told her what to
look for. I kind of figured that with my background, it wouldn't be too hard to
get assigned to A and E myself, and I could do the same things, only better. I
could get a lot of credits that way. And once I owned my ship, well, I could do
whatever I wanted."
Brogen couldn't help himself; he started
to laugh. "You are quite the young schemer, did you know that?"
She grinned, looking truly happy for the
first time since he had seen her. Now that he had seen the real thing, he
recognized all her earlier 'smiles' for the shams that they had been.
Leaving her here would have been a crime.
A sin.
"Well, you can consider yourself
recruited," he said comfortably. "I'll fill out the paperwork
tonight, databurst it to the schools as soon as I finish, and there should be a
confirmation waiting for us when we wake up. Think you can be ready to ship out
in the morning?"
"Yes, sir," she said happily.
He rose and started to leave, then paused
for a moment. "You know," he said, "you were right. I really
didn't pay too much attention to the file they gave me on you, since I was so
certain that, ... well, never mind. But I am terribly curious about your name.
Why on earth did your parents call you 'Hypatia'?"
Tia laughed out loud, a peal of infectious
joy.
"I think, Professor Brogen," she
said, "that you'd better sit back down!"
CenCom's softperson operator had a
pleasant voice and an equally pleasant habit of not starting a call with a
burst of static or an alert-beep. "XH One-Oh-Three-Three, you have an
incoming transmission. Canned message beam."
Tia tore herself away from the latest
papers on the Salomon-Kildaire Entities with a purely mental sigh of regret.
Oh, she could take in a databurst and scan the papers at the same time,
certainly, but she wanted to do more than simply scan the information. She
wanted to absorb it, so that she could think about it later in detail. There
were nuances to academic papers that simple scanning wouldn't reveal; places
where you had to know the personality of the author in order to read between
the lines. Places where what wasn't written were as important as what was.
"Go ahead, CenCom," she replied,
wondering who on earth, or off it, for that matter, could be calling her.
Strange how we've been out of Terran
subspace for so long, and yet we still use expressions like 'how on earth' ...
there's probably a popular science paper in that.
The central screen directly opposite the
column she was housed in flickered for a moment, then filled with the image of
a thin-faced man in an elaborate MotoChair, No, more than a Moto-Chair; this
one was kind of a platform for something else. She saw what could only be an
APU, and a short-beam broadcast unit of some kind. It looked like his legs and
waist were encased in the bottom half of space armor!
But there was no mistaking who was in the
strange exoskeleton. Doctor Kenny.
"Tia, my darling girl,
congratulations on your graduation!" Kenny said, eyes twinkling. "You
should, given the vagaries of the CenCom postal system, nave gotten your
graduation present from Lars and Anna and me. I hope you liked it, them."
The graduation present had arrived on
time, and Tia had been enthralled. She loved instrumental music, synthcom in
particular, but these recordings had special meaning for any shell-person, for
they had been composed and played by David Weber-Tcherkasky, a shell-person
himself, and they were not meant for the limited ears of softpeople. The
composer had made use of every note of the aural spectrum, with supercomplexes
of overtones and counterpoint that left softpersons squinting in bewilderment.
They weren't for everyone, not even for some shell-persons, but Tia didn't
think she would ever get tired of listening to them. Every time she played
them, she heard something new.
"anyway, I remembered you saying in
your last transmission how much you liked Lanz Manhem's synthcom recordings,
and Lars kept telling me that Tcherkasky's work was to Manhem's what a symphony
was to birdsong." Kenny shrugged and grinned. "We figured that it
would help to while away the in-transit hours for you, anyway. Anna said the
graduation was stellar, I'm sorry I couldn'tbe there, but you're looking at the
reason why."
He made a face and gestured down at the
lower half of his body. "Moto-Prosthetics decided in their infinite wisdom
that since I had benefited from their expertise in the past, I owed them. They
convinced the hospital Admin Head that I was the only possible person to test
this contraption of theirs. This is supposed to be something that will let me
stroll around a room, or more importantly, stand in an operating theater for as
long as I need to. When it's working, that is." He shook his head.
"Buggy as a new software system, let me tell you. Yesterday the fardling
thing locked up on me, with one foot in the air Wasn't I just a charming sight,
posing in the middle of the hall like a dancer in a Greek frieze! Think I'm
going to rely on my old Chair when I really need to do something, at least for
a while."
Tia chuckled at the mental image of Kenny
frozen in place and unable to move.
He shook his head and laughed. "Well,
between this piece of, ah ... hardware, and my patients, I had to send Anna as
our official deputation. Hope you've forgiven Lars and me, sweetheart."
A voice, warm and amused, interrupted
Doctor Kenny. "There was just a wee problem with my getting leave, after
all," Lars said, over the office speakers, as Kenny grinned. "And
they simply wouldn't let me de-orbit the station and take it down to the
schools for the graduation ceremony. Very inconsiderate of them, I say."
Tia had to laugh at that.
"That just means you'll have to come
visit me. Now that you're one of the club, far-traveler, we'll have to exchange
softie-jokes. How many softies does it take to change a lightbulb?"
Kenny made a rude noise. Although he
looked tired, Tia noted that he seemed to be in very good spirits. There was
only one thing that combination meant; he'd pulled off another miracle. "I
resemble that remark," he said. "Anyway, Lars got your relay number,
so you'll be hearing from us, probably more often than you want! We love you,
lady! Big Zen hugs from both of us!"
The screen flickered and went blank; Tia
sighed with contentment. Lars had been the one to come up with 'Zen hugs', 'the
hugs that you would get, if we were there, if we could hug you, but we aren't,
and we can't'.
and he and Kenny began using them in their
weekly transmissions to Tia all through school. Before long her entire class
began using the phrase, so pointedly apt for shell-people, and now it was
spreading across known space. Kenny had been amused, especially after one of
his recovering patients got the phrase in a transmission from his stay-at-home,
techno-phobic wife!
Well, the transmission put the cap on her
day, that was certain. And the perfect climax to the beginning of her new life.
Anna and her parents at the graduation ceremony, Professor Brogen handing out
the special awards she'd gotten in Xenology, Diplomacy, and First Contact
Studies, Moira showing up at the landing field the same day she was installed
in her ship, still with Tbmas, wonder of wonders.
Having Moira there to figuratively hold
her hand during the nasty process of partial anesthesia while the techs hooked
her up in her column had been worth platinum.
She shuddered at the memory. Oh, they
could describe the feelings (or rather, lack of them) to you, they could psych
you up for experience, and you thought you were ready, but the moment of truth,
when you lost everything but primitive com and the few sensors in the shell
itself ... was horrible. Something out of the worst of nightmares.
And she still remembered what it had been
like to live with only softperson senses. She couldn't imagine what it was like
for those who'd been popped into a shell at birth. It had brought back all the
fear and feeling of helplessness of her time in the hospital.
It had been easier with Moira there. But
if the transfer had been a journey through sensory-deprivation hell, waking up
in the ship had been pure heaven.
No amount of simulator training conveyed
what it really felt like, to have a living, breathing ship wrapped around you.
It was a moment that had given her back
everything she had lost. Never mind that her 'skin' was duralloy metal, her
'legs' were engines, her 'arms' the servos she used to maintain herself inside
and out. That her 'lungs' and 'heart' were the life-support systems that would
keep her brawn alive. That all of her senses were ship's sensors linked through
brainstem relays. None of that mattered. She had a body again! That was a
moment of ecstasy no one plugged into a shell at birth would ever understand.
Moira did, though ... and it had been wonderful to be able to share that moment
of elation.
And Tomas understood, as only a
brawn-partner of long-standing could, Tomas had arranged for Theodore Edward
Bear to have his own little case built into the wall of the central cabin as
his graduation present. "And decom anyone who doesn't understand," he
said firmly, putting a newly cleaned Ted behind his plexi panel and closing the
door. "A brawn is only a brawn, but a bear is a friend for life!"
So now the solemn little blue bear in his
Courier Service shirt reigned as silent supervisor over the central cabin, and
to perdition with whatever the brawns made of him. Well, let them think it was
some kind of odd holo-art. Speaking of which, the next set of brawn-candidates
was due shortly. We'll see how they react to Ted.
Tia returned to her papers, keeping a
running statistical analysis and cross-tabulations on anything that seemed
interesting. And there were things that seemed to be showing up, actually.
Pockets of mineral depletions in the area around the EsKay sites; an
astonishing similarity in the periodicity and seasonality of the planets and
planetoids. Insofar as a Mars-type world could have seasons, that is. But the
periodicity, identical to within an hour. Interesting. Had they been that
dependent on natural sunlight? Come to think of it, yes, solar distances were very
similar. And they were all Sol-type stars.
She turned her attention to her parents'
latest papers, letting the EsKay discoveries stew in the back of her mind. Pota
and Braddon were the Schliemanns of modern archeology, but it wasn't the EsKays
that brought them fame, at least, not directly. After Tia's illness, they
couldn't bring themselves to return to their old dig, or even the EsKay
project, and for once, the Institute committees acted like something other than
AIs with chips instead of hearts. Pota and Braddon were reassigned to a normal
atmosphere water-world of high volcanic activity and thousands of tiny islands
with a good population of nomadic sentients, something as utterly unlike the
EsKay planets as possible. And it had been there that they made their
discovery. Tracing the legends of the natives, of a king who first defied the
gods and then challenged them, they replicated Schliemann's famous discovery of
ancient Troy, uncovering an entire city buried by a volcanic eruption.
Perfectly preserved for all time. For this world and these people, it was the
equivalent of an Atlantis and Pompeii combined, for the city was of Bronze Age
technology while the latter-day sentients were still struggling along with
flint, obsidian, and shell, living in villages of no more than two hundred.
While the natives of the present day were amphibious, leaning towards the
aquatic side, these ancients were almost entirely creatures of dry land.
The discovery made Pota and Braddon's
reputation; there was more than enough there to keep fifty archeologists busy
for a hundred years. Ta'hianna became their life-project, and they rarely left
the site anymore. They even established a permanent residence aboard a kind of
glorified houseboat.
Tia enjoyed reading their papers, and the
private speculations they had brought her, with some findings that weren't in
the papers yet, but the Ta'hianna project simply didn't give her the thrill of
mystery that the EsKays did.
And, there was one other thing. Years of
analyzing every little nuance of those dreadful weeks had made her decide that
what had happened to her could just as easily happen to some other unwitting
archeologist Or even, another child.
Only finding the homeworld of the EsKays
would give the Institute and Central World's Medical the information they
needed to prevent another tragedy like Tia's.
If Tia had anything at all to say about
it, that would never happen again. The next person infected might not be so
lucky. The next person, if an adult, or even a child unfortunate enough to be
less flexible and less intelligent than she had been, would likely have no
choice but to spend the remainder of a fairly miserable life in a Moto-Chair
and a room.
"XH One-Oh-Three-Three, your next set
of brawn candidates is ready," CenCom said, interrupting her brooding
thoughts. "You are going to pick one of these, aren't you?" the
operator added wearily.
"I don't know yet," she replied,
levelly. "I haven't interviewed them." She had rejected the first set
of six entirely. CenCom obviously thought she was being a prima donna. She
simply thought she was being appropriately careful. After all, since she was
officially assigned to A and E with special assignment to the Institute, she
had gotten precisely what she expected, a ship without Singularity Drive. Those
were top-of-the-line, expensive, and not the sort of thing that the Institute
could afford to hire. So, like Moira, she would be spending a lot of time in
transit. Unlike Moira, she did not intend to find herself bouncing brawns so
often that her buy-out had doubled because of the fines.
Spending a lot of time in transit meant a
lot of time with only her brawn for company. She wanted someone who was bright,
first of all. At least as bright as Tomas and Charlie. She wanted someone who
would be willing to add her little crusade to the standard agenda and give it
equal weight with what they had officially been assigned. She rather thought
she would like to have a male, although she hadn't rejected any of the brawns
just because they were female.
Most of all, she wanted someone who would
like her; someone who would be a real partner in every sense. Someone who would
willingly spend time with her when he could be doing other things; a friend,
like Kenny and Anna, Moira and Lars.
And someone with some personality. Two of
the last batch, both females, had exhibited all the personality of a cube of
tofu.
That might do for another ship, another
brain that didn't want to be bothered with softpersons outside of duty, but she
wanted someone she could talk to! After all, she had been a softperson once.
"Who's first?" she asked CenCom,
lowering her lift so that he, or she, could come aboard without having to climb
the stairs.
"That'll be Donning Chang y
Narhan," CenCom replied after a moment. "Really high marks in the
Academy."
She scanned the databurst as Donning
crossed the tarmac to the launch pad; he'd gotten high marks all right, though
not stellar. Much like her; in the top tenth of the class, but not the top one
percent. Very handsome, if the holo was to be believed; wavy blond hair, bright
blue eyes, sculptured face with holo-star looks, sculptured body, too. But Tia
was wary of good looks by now. Two of the first lot had been gorgeous; one had
been one of the blocks of tofu, with nothing between the ears but what the
Academy had put there, and the other had only wanted to talk about himself.
Movement outside alerted her to Donning*s
arrival; to her annoyance, he operated the lift manually instead of letting her
handle it.
To her further annoyance, he treated her
like some kind of superior AI; he was obviously annoyed with having to go
through an interview in the first place and wanted to be elsewhere.
"Donning Chang y Narhan, reporting,"
he said in a bored tone of voice. "As ordered." He proceeded to
rattle off everything that had been in the short file, as if she couldn't
access it herself. He did not sit down. He paid no attention to Ted.
"Have you any questions?" he
asked, making it sound as if questions would only mean that she had not been
paying attention.
"Only a few," she replied.
"What is your favorite composer? Do you play chess?"
He answered her questions curtly, as if
they were so completely irrelevant that he couldn't believe she was asking
them.
She obliged him by suggesting that he
could leave after only a handful of questions; he took it with bad grace and
left in a hurry, an aroma of scorched ego in his wake.
"Garrison Lebrel," CenCom said,
as Donning vacated the lift.
Well, Garrison was possible. Good academic
marks, not as high as Donning's but not bad. Interest in archeology ... she
perked up when she saw what he was interested in. Nonhumans, especially
presumed extinct space-going races, including the EsKays!
Garrison let her bring him in and proved
to be talkative, if not precisely congenial. He was very intense.
"We'll be spending a lot of time in
transit," he said. "I wasn't able to keep up with the current
literature in archeology while I was in the Academy, and I planned to be doing
a lot of reading."
Not exactly sociable. "Do you play
chess?" she asked hopefully. He shook his head. "But I do play
sennet. That's an ancient Egyptian game. I have a very interesting software
version I could install; I doubt it would take you long to learn it, though it
takes a lifetime to master."
The last was said a bit smugly. And there
had been no offer from him to learn her game. Still, she did have access to far
more computing power than he did; it wouldn't take her more than an hour to
learn the game, if that.
"I see that your special interest is
in extinct space going races," she ventured. "I have a very strong
background in the Salomon-Kildaire Entities."
He looked skeptical. "I think Doctor
Russell Gaines-Barklen has probably dealt with them as fully as they need to
be, although we'll probably have some chances to catch things survey teams
miss. That's the benefit of being trained to look for specifics."
She finally sent him back with mixed
feelings. He was arrogant, no doubt about it. But he was also competent He
shared her interests, but his pet theories differed wildly from hers. He was
possible, if there were no other choices, but he wasn't what she was looking
for.
"Chria Chance is up next,"
CenCom said when she reported she was ready for the next. "But you won't
like her."
"Why, because she's got a name that's
obviously assumed?" Neither CenCom nor the Academy cared what you called
yourself, provided they knew the identity you had been born with and the record
that went with it. Every so often someone wanted to adopt a pseudonym. Often it
was to cover a famous High Family name, either because the bearer was a black
sheep, or because (rarely) he or she didn't want special treatment But
sometimes a youngster got a notion into his or her head to take on a
holostar-type name.
"No," CenCom replied, not
bothering to hide his amusement. "You won't like her because, well, you'll
see."
Chria's records were good, about like
Garrison's, with one odd note in the personality profile. Nonconformist, it
said.
Well, there was nothing wrong with that.
Pota and Braddon were certainly not conformists in any sense.
But the moment that Chria stepped into the
central room, Tia knew that CenCom was right.
She wore her Academy uniform, all right,
but it was a specially tailored one. Made entirely of leather; real leather,
not synthetic. And she wore it entirely too well for Tia to feel comfortable
around her. For the rest, she was rapier-thin, with a face like a clever fox
and hair cut aggressively short. Tia already felt intimidated, and she hadn't
even said anything yet!
Within a few minutes worth of questions,
Chria shook her head. "You're a nice person, Tia," she said
forthrightly, "and you and I would never partner well. I'd run right over
you, and you'd sit there in your column, fuming and resentful, and you'd never
say a word." She grinned with feral cheer. "I'm a carnivore, a
hunter. I need someone who'll fight back! I enjoy a good fight!"
"You'd probably have us go chasing
right after pirates," Tia said, a little resentful already. "If there
were any in the neighborhood, you'd want us to look for them!"
"You bet I would," Chria
responded without shame.
A few more minutes of exchange proved to
Tia that Chria was right. It would never work. With a shade of regret, Tia bade
her farewell. While she liked a good argument as well as the next person, she
didn't like for arguments to turn into shouting matches, which was precisely
what Chria enjoyed. She claimed it purged tensions.
Well, maybe it did. And maybe that was why
her favorite form of music, to the exclusion of everything else, was opera. She
was a fanatic, to put it simply, And Tia, well, wasn't.
But there was certainly a lot of
emotion-purging and carrying on in those old operas. She had the feeling that
Chria fancied herself as a kind of latter-day Valkyrie. Hoy-yo to-ho.
She reported her rejection to CenCom, with
the recommendation that she thought Chria Chance had the proper mental
equipment to partner a ship in the Military Courier Service. "Between you,
me, and the airwaves," CenCom replied., "that's my opinion, too.
Bloodthirsty wench. Well, she'll get her chance. Military got your classmate
Pol, and he's just as bloody minded as she is. I'll see the recommendation goes
in; meanwhile, next up is Harkonen Carl-Ulbright."
Carl was a disappointment. Average grades,
and while he was congenial, Tia knew that she would run right over the top of
him. He was shy, hardly ever ventured an opinion, and when he did, he could be
induced to change it in an eye-blink. "However, Carl," she said, just
before he went to the lift, making no effort to hide his discouragement.
"My classmate Raul is the XR One-Oh-Two-Nine. I think you two would get
along splendidly. I'm going to ask CenCom to set up your very next interview
with him, he was just installed today and I know he hasn't got a brawn yet.
Tell him I sent you."
That cheered up the young man
considerably. He would be even more cheered when he learned that Raul had a
Singularity Drive ship. And Tia would bet that his personality profile and
Raul's matched to a hair. They'd make a great team, especially when their job
included carrying VIP passengers. Neither of them would get in the way or
resent it if the VIPs ignored them.
"I got all that, Tia," CenCom
said as soon as the boy was gone. "Consider it logged. They ought to make
you a Psych; a Counselor, at least. It was good of you to think of Raul; none
of us could come up with a match for him, but we were trying to match him with
females."
If she'd had hands, she would have thrown
them up. "Become a Psych? Saints and agents of grace defend us!" she
quipped. "I think not! Who's next?"
"Andrea Polo y De Gras," CenCom
said. "You won't like her, either. She doesn't want you."
"With the Polo y De Gras name, I'm
not surprised," Tia sighed. "Wants something with a little more zing
to it than A and E, hmm? Would she be offended if I agreed with her before she
bothered to come out here?"
"I doubt it," CenCom replied,
"but let me check." A pause, and then he came back. "She's very
pleased, actually. I think that she has something cooking with the Family, and
the strings haven't had time to get pulled yet. Piff. High Families. I don't
know why they send their children to Space Academy in the first place."
Tia felt moved to contradict him.
"Because some of them do very well and become a credit to the
Services," she replied, with just a hint of reproach.
"True, and I stand corrected. Well,
your last brawn candidate is the late Alexander Joli-Chanteu." The cheer
in his voice told her that he was making a bad joke out of the situation.
"Late, hmm? That isn't going to earn
him any gold stars in his Good-Bee Book," Tia said, a bit acidly. Her
parents' fetish for punctuality had set a standard she expected those around
her to match. Especially brawn candidates.
Well, then at least go over his records.
She scanned them quickly and came up, confused. When Alexander was good, he was
very, very, good. And when he was bad, he was abysmal. Often in the same
subject. He would begin a class with the lowest marks possible, then suddenly
catch fire, turn around, and pull a miraculous save at the end of the semester.
Erratic performances, said his personality profile. Tia not only agreed, she
thought that the evaluator was understating the case.
CenCom interrupted her confusion.
"Whoop! He got right by me! Here he comes, Tia, ready or not!"
Alexander didn't bother with the lift, he
ran up the stairs, arriving out of breath, with longish hair mussed and uniform
rumpled.
That didn't earn him any points either,
although it was better than Chria's leather.
He took a quick look around to orient
himself, then turned immediately to face the central column where she was
housed, a nicety that only Carl and Chria had observed. It didn't matter,
really, and a lot of shell-persons didn't care, so long as the softpersons
faced one set of 'eyes' at least, but Tia felt, as Moira did, that it was more
considerate of a brawn to face where you were, rather than empty cabin.
"Hypatia, dear lady, I am most humbly
sorry to be late for this interview," he said, slowly catching his breath.
"My sensei engaged me in a game of Go, and I completely lost all track of
time."
He ran his blunt-fingered hand through his
unruly dark hair and grinned ruefully, little smile-crinkles forming around his
brown eyes. "And here I had a perfectly wonderful speech all memorized,
about how fitting it is that the lady named for the last librarian at
Alexandria and the brawn named for Alexander should become partners, and the
run knocked it right out of my head!"
Well! He knows where my name came from! Or
at least he had the courtesy and foresight to look it up. Hmm. She considered
that for a moment, then put it in the 'plus' column. He was not handsome, but
he had a pleasant, blocky sort of face. He was short, well, so was the original
Alexander, by both modern standards and those of his own time. She decided to
put his general looks in the 'plus' column too, along with his politeness.
While she certainly wasn't going to choose her brawns on the basis of looks, it
would be nice to have someone who provided a nice bit of landscape.
'Minus', of course, were for being late
and very untidy when he finally did arrive.
"I think I can bring myself to
forgive you," she said dryly. "Although I'm not certain just what
exactly detained you."
"Ah, besides a hobby of ancient
history, Terran history, that is, especially military history and strategy, I,
ah, I cultivate certain kinds of martial arts." He ran his hand through
his hair again, in what was plainly a nervous gesture. "Oriental martial
arts. One soft form and one hard form. Tai Chi and Karate. I know most people
don't think that's at all necessary, but, well, A and E Couriers are unarmed,
and I don't like to think of myself as helpless. Anyway, my sensei, that's a
martial arts Master, got me involved in a game of Go, and when you're playing
against a Master, there is nothing simple about Go." He bowed his head a
moment and looked sheepish. "I lost all track of time, and they had to
page me. I really am sorry about making you wait."
Tla wasn't quite sure what to make of
that. "Sit down, will you?" she said absently, wondering why, with
this fascination with things martial and military, he hadn't shown any interest
in the Military Services. "Do you play chess as well?"
He nodded. "Chess, and Othello, and
several computer games. And if you have any favorites that I don't know, I
would be happy to learn them." He sat quietly, calmly, without any of
Garrison's fidgeting. In fact, it was that very contrast with Garrison that
made her decide resolutely against that young man. A few months of fidgeting,
and she would be ready to trank him to keep him quiet.
"Why Terran history?" she asked,
curiously. "That isn't the kind of fascination I'd expect to find in a, a
space-jockey."
He grinned. It was a very engaging,
lopsided grin. "What, haven't you interviewed my classmate Chria yet? Now
there is someone with odd fascinations!" Behind the banter, Tia sensed a
kind of affection, even though the tips of his ears went lightly red. "I
started reading history because I was curious about my name, and got fascinated
by Alexander's time period. One thing led to another, and the next thing I
knew, every present I was getting was either a historical holotape or a
bookdisk about history, and I was actually quite happy about the
situation."
So he did know the origin of her name.
"Then why military strategy?"
"Because all challenging games are
games of strategy," he said. "I, ah, have a friend who's really a big
games buff, my best friend when I was growing up, and I had to have some kind
of edge on him. So I started studying strategy. That got me into The Art of War
and that got me into Zen which got me into martial arts." He shrugged.
"There you have it. One neat package. I think you'd really like Tai Chi,
it's all about stress and energy flow and patterns, and it's a lot like
Singularity mechanics and, "
"I'm sure," she interrupted,
hauling him verbally back by the scruff of his neck. "But why didn't you
opt for Military Service?"
"The same reason I studied martial
arts. I don't like being helpless, but I don't want to hurt anyone," he
replied, looking oddly distressed. "Both Tai Chi and Karate are about
never using a bit more force than you need to, but Tai Chi is the essence of
using greater force against itself, just like in The Art of War, and, "
Once again she had to haul him back to the
question. He tended to go off on verbal tangents, she noticed. She continued to
ask him questions, long after the time she had finished with the other brawns,
and when she finally let him go, it was with a sense of dissatisfaction. He was
the best choice so for, but although he was plainly both sensitive and
intelligent, he showed no signs at all of any interest in her field. In fact,
she had seen and heard nothing that would make her think he would be ready to
help her in any way with her private quest.
As the sky darkened over the landing
field, and the spaceport lights came on, glaring down on her smooth metal skin,
she pondered all of her choices and couldn't come up with a clear winner. Alex
was the best, but the rest were, for the most part, completely unsuitable. He
was obviously absentminded, and his care for his person left a little to be
desired. He wasn't exactly slovenly, but he did not wear his uniform with the
air of distinction that Tia felt was required. In fact, on him it didn't look
much like a uniform at all, more like a suit of comfortable, casual clothes.
For the life of her, she couldn't imagine how he managed that.
His tendency to wander down conversational
byways could be amusing in a social situation, but she could see where it could
also be annoying to, oh, a Vegan, or someone like them. No telling what kind of
trouble that could lead to, if they had to deal with AIs, who could be very literal-minded.
No, he wasn't perfect. In fact, he wasn't
even close.
"XH One-Oh-Three-Three, you have an
incoming transmission," CenCom broke in, disturbing her thoughts.
"Hold onto your bustle, lady, it's the Wicked Witch of the West, and I
think someone just dropped a house on her sister."
Whatever allusions the CenCom operator was
making were lost on Tia, but the sharply impatient tone of her supervisor was
not. "XH One-Oh-Three-Three, have you selected a brawn yet?" the
woman asked, her voice making it sound as if Tia had been taking weeks to
settle on a partner, rather than less than a day.
"Not yet, Supervisor," she
replied, cautiously. "So far, to be honest, I don't think I've found
anyone I can tolerate for truly long stretches of time."
That wasn't exactly the problem, but Beta
Gerold y Caspian wouldn't understand the real problem. She might just as well
be Vegan. She made very few allowances for the human vagaries of brawns and
none at all for shell-persons.
"Hypatia, you're wasting time,"
Beta said crisply. "You're sitting here on the pad, doing nothing, taking
up a launch-cradle, when you could already be out on courier-supply runs."
"I'm doing my best," Tia
responded sharply. "But neither you nor I will be particularly happy if I
toss my brawn out after the first run!"
"You've rejected six brawns that all
our analysis showed were good matches for your personality," Beta
countered. "All you'd have to do is compromise a little."
Six of those were matches for me? she thought,
aghast. Which ones? The tofu-personalities? The Valkyrie warrior? Spirits of
space help me, Garrison ? I thought I was nicer and more interesting than that!
But Beta was continuing, her voice taking
on the tones of a cross between a policeman and a professorial lecturer.
"You know very well that it takes far too long between visits for these
Class One digs. It leaves small parties alone for weeks and months at a time.
Even when there's an emergency, our ships are so few and so scattered that it takes
them days to reach people in trouble, and sometimes an hour can make all the
difference, let alone a day! We needed you out there the moment you were
commissioned!"
Tia winced inwardly. She'd have suspected
that Beta went straight for the sore spot deliberately, except that she knew
that Beta did not have access to her records. So she didn't know Tia's
background. The agency that oversaw the rights of shell-persons saw to that, to
make it difficult for supervisors to use personal knowledge to manipulate the
shell-persons under their control. In the old days, when supervisors had known
everything about their shell-persons, they had sometimes deliberately created
emotional dependencies in order to assure 'loyalty' and fanatic service. It was
far, far too easy to manipulate someone whose only contact to the real world
was through sensors that could be disconnected.
Still, Beta was right. If I'd had help
earlier, I might not be here right now. I might be in college, getting my
double-docs like Mum, thinking about what postgraduate work I wanted to do.
"I'll tell you what," she
temporized. "Let me look over the records and the interviews again and
sleep on it. One of the things that the schools told us over and over was to
never make a choice of brawns feeling rushed or forced." She hardened her
voice just a little. "You don't want another Moira, do you?"
"All right," Beta said
grudgingly. "But I have to warn you that the supply of brawns is not
unlimited. There aren't many more for you to interview in this batch, and if I
have to boot you out of here without one, I will. The Institute can't afford to
have you sitting on the pad for another six months until the next class
graduates."
Go out without a brawn? Alone? The idea
had very little appeal. Very little at all. In fact, the idea of six months
alone in deep space was frightening. She'd never had to do without some human
interaction, even on the digs with Mum and Dad.
So while CenCom signed off, she reran her
tapes of the interviews and re-scanned information on the twelve she had
rejected. And still could not come up with anyone she knew, without a shadow of
a doubt, that she'd like to call 'friend'.
Someone was knocking, quietly, on the
closed lift door. Tia, startled out of her brooding, activated the exterior
sensors. Who could that be? It wasn't even dawn yet!
Her visitor's head jerked up and snapped
around alertly to face the camera when he heard it swivel to center on him. The
lights from the field were enough for her to 'see' by, and she identified him
immediately. "Hypatia, it's Alex," he whispered unnecessarily.
"Can I talk to you?"
Since she couldn't reply to him without
alerting the entire area to his clandestine and highly irregular visit, she
lowered the lift for him, keeping it darkened. He slipped inside, and she
brought him up.
"What are you doing here?" she
demanded, once he was safely in her central cabin. "This is not
appropriate behavior!"
"Hey," he said, "I'm
unconventional. I like getting things done in unconventional ways. The Art of
War says that the best way to win a war is never to do what they expect you to
do."
"I'm sure," she interrupted.
"That may be all very well for someone in Military, but this is not a war,
and I should be reporting you for this." Tia let a note of warning creep
into her voice, wondering why she wasn't doing just that.
He ignored both the threat and the rebuke.
"Your supervisor said you hadn't picked anyone yet," he said instead.
"Why not?"
"Because I haven't," she
retorted. "I don't like being rushed into things. Or pressured, either.
Sit down."
He sat down rather abruptly, and his
expression turned from challenging to wistful. "I didn't think you'd hold
my being late against me," he said plaintively. "I thought we hit it
off pretty well. When your supervisor said you'd spent more time with me than
any of the other brawns, I thought for sure you'd choose me! What's wrong with
me? There must be something! Maybe something I can change!"
"Well, I, " She was taken so
aback by his bluntness, and caught unawares by his direct line of questioning,
that she actually answered him. "I expect my brawns to be punctual,
because they have to be precise, and not being punctual implies
carelessness," she said. "I thought you looked sloppy, and I don't
like sloppiness. You seemed absentminded, and I had to keep bringing you back
to the original subject when we were talking. Both of those imply wavering
attention, and that's not good either. I'll be alone out there with my brawn,
and I need someone I can depend on to do his job."
"You didn't see me at my best,"
he pointed out. "I was distracted, and I was thrown completely off-center
by the fact that I had messed up by being late. But that isn't all, is
it?"
"What do you mean by that?" she
asked, cautiously.
"It wasn't just that I was, less than
perfect. You have a secret ... something you really want to do, that you
haven't even told your supervisor." He eyed the column speculatively, and
she found herself taken completely by surprise by the accuracy of his guess.
"I don't match the profile of someone who might be interested in helping
you with that secret. Right?"
His expression turned coaxing. "Come
on, Hypatia, you can tell me," he said. "I won't tattle on you. And I
might be able to help! You don't know that much about me, just what you got in
an hour of talking and what's in the short-file!"
"I don't know what you're talking
about," she said lamely.
"Oh, sure you do. Come on, every
brainship wants to buy her contract out, no matter what they say. And every
ship has a hobby-horse of her own, too. Barclay secretly wants to chase pirates
all over known space like a holo-star, Leta wants to be the next big synthcom
composer, even quiet old Jerry wants to buy himself a Singularity Drive just so
he can set interstellar records for speed and distance!" He grinned.
"So what's your little hidden secret?"
She only realized that she'd been
manipulated when she found herself blurting out her plans for doing some
amateur archeological sleuthing on the side, and both the fact that she wanted
a bit of archeological glory for herself, and that she expected to eventually
come up with something worth a fair number of credits toward her buy-out. She
at least kept back the other wish; the one about finding the bug that had
bitten her. By now, the three desires were equally strong, for reading of her
parents' success had reawakened all the old dreams of following in Pota's
footsteps, dealing with Beta had given her more than enough of being someone
else's contract servant, and her studies of brainship chronicles had awakened a
new fear, plague. And what would happen if the bug that paralyzed her got loose
on a planetarywide scale?
As she tried to cover herself, she
inadvertently revealed that the plans were a secret held successfully not only
from her CenCom supervisors but from everyone she'd ever worked with except
Moira.
"It was because I thought that they'd
take my determination as something else entirely," she confessed. "I
thought they'd take it as a fixation, and a sign of instability."
All through her confession, Alex stayed
ominously silent. When she finished, she suddenly realized that she had just
put him in a position to blackmail her into taking him. All he had to do was
threaten to reveal her fixation, and she'd be decommissioned and put with a
Counselor for the next six months.
But instead of saying anything, he began
laughing. Howling with laughter, in fact. She waited in confusion for him to
settle down and tell her what was going on.
"You didn't look far enough into my
records, lovely lady," he said, calming down and wiping his eyes.
"Oh, my. Call up my file, why don't you. Not the Academy file; the one
with my application for a scholarship in it"
Puzzled, she linked into the CenCom net
and accessed Alex's public records. "Look under 'hobbies', " he
suggested.
And there it was. Hobbies and other
interests. Archeology and Xenology.
She looked further, without invitation, to
his class records. She soon saw that in lower schools, besides every available
history class, he had taken every archeological course he could cram into a
school day.
She wished that she had hands so that she
could rub her temples; as it was, she had to increase her nutrients a tad, to
rid herself of a beginning headache.
"See?" he said. "I wouldn't
mind my name on a paper or two myself. Provided, of course, that there aren't
any curses attached to our findings! And, well, who couldn't use a pile of
credits? I would very much like to retire from the Service with enough credit
to buy myself, oh, a small planetoid."
"But, why didn't you apply to the
university?" she asked. "Why didn't you go after your degree?"
"Money," he replied succinctly,
leaning back in his seat and steepling his fingers over his chest,
"Dinero. Cash. Filthy lucre. My family didn't have any, or rather, they
had just enough that I didn't qualify for scholarships. Oh, I could have gotten
a Bachelor's degree, but those are hardly worth bothering about in archeology.
Heck, Hypatia, you know that! You know how long it takes to get one Doctorate,
too. Four years to a Bachelor's, two to a Master's, and then years and years
and years of field work before you have enough material to do an original
dissertation. And a working archeologist, one getting to go out on Class One
digs or heading Class Two and Three, can't just have one degree, he has to have
a double-doc or a quad-doc." He shook his head, sadly. "I've been an
armchair hobbyist for as long as I've been a history buff, dear lady, but that
was all that I could afford. Books and papers had to suffice for me."
"Then why the Academy?" she
asked, sorely puzzled.
"Good question. Has a complicated
answer." He licked his lips for a moment, thinking, then continued.
"Say I got a Bachelor's in Archeology and History. I could have gotten a
bottom-of-the-heap clerking job at the Institute with a Bachelor's, but if I
did that, I might as well go clerk anywhere else, too. Clerking jobs are all
the same wherever you go, only the jargon changes, never the job. But I could
have done that, and gotten a work-study program to get a Master's. Then I might
have been able to wangle a research assistant post to someone, but I'd be doing
all of the dull stuff. None of the exploration; certainly none of the puzzle
solving. That would be as far as I could go; an RA job takes too much time to
study for a Doctorate. I'd have been locked inside the Institute walls, even if
my boss went out on digs himself. Because when you need someone to mind the
store at home, you don't hire someone extra, you leave your RA behind."
"Oh, I see why you didn't do
that," she replied. "But why the Academy?"
"Standards for scholarships to the
Academy are, a little different," he told her. "The Scholarship
Committees aren't just looking for poor but brilliant people. They're looking
for competent people with a particular bent, and if they find someone like
that, they do what it takes to get him. And the competition isn't as intense;
there are a lot more scholarships available to the Academy than there are to
any of the university Archeology and History Departments I could reach. All two
of them; I'd have had to go to a local university; I couldn't afford to go
off-planet. Space Academy pays your way to Central; university History
scholarships don't include a travel allowance. I figured if I couldn't go dig
up old bones on faraway worlds, I'd at least see some of those faraway worlds.
If I put in for A and E I'd even get to watch some of the experts at work. And
while I was at it, I might as well put in for brawn training and see what it
got me. Much to my surprise, my personality profile matched what they were
looking for, and I actually found myself in brawn training, and once I was out,
I asked to be assigned to A and E."
"So, why are you insisting on
partnering me?" she asked, deciding that if he had manipulated her, she
was going to be blunt with him, and if he couldn't take it, he wasn't cut out
to partner her. No matter what he thought Hmm, maybe frankness could scare him
away.
He blinked. "You really don't know?
Because you are you," he said. "It's really appallingly simple. You
have a sparkling personality. You don't try to flatten your voice and sound like
an AI, the way some of your classmates have. You aren't at all afraid to have
an opinion. You have a teddy bear walled up in your central cabin like a piece
of artwork, but you don't talk about it. That's a mystery, and I love
mysteries, especially when they imply something as personable as a teddy bear.
When you talk, I can hear you smiling, frowning, whatever. You're a
shell-person, Hypatia, with the emphasis on person. I like you. I had hoped
that you would like me. I figured we could keep each other entertained for a
long, long time."
Well, he'd out-blunted her, and that was a
fact And, startled her. She was surprised, not a little flattered, and getting
to think that Alex might not be a bad choice as a brawn after all. "Well,
I like you," she replied hesitantly, "but ..."
"But what?" he asked, boldly.
"What is it?"
"I
don't like being manipulated," she replied. "And you've been doing
just that: manipulating me, or trying." He made a face. "Guilty as
charged. Part of it is just something I do without thinking about it. I come
from a low-middle-class neighborhood. Where I come from, you either charm your
way out of something or fight your way out of it, and I prefer the former. I'll
try not to do it again,"
"That's not all," she warned.
"I've got, certain plans, that might get in the way, if you don't help
me." She paused for effect. "It's about what I want to hunt down. The
homeworld of the Salomon-Kildaire Entities."
"The EsKays?" he replied,
sitting up, ramrod straight "Oh, my, if this weren't real life I'd think
you were telepathic or something! The EsKays are my favorite archeological
mystery! I'm dying to find out why they'd set up shop, then vanish! And if we
could find the homeworld, Hypatia, we'd be holo-stars! Stellar achievers!"
Her thoughts milled about for a moment.
This was very strange. Very strange indeed.
"I assume that part of our time Out
would be spent checking things out at the EsKay sites?" he said, his eyes
warming. "Looking for things the archeologists may not find? Looking for
more potential sites?"
"Something like that," she told
him. "That's why I need your cooperation. Sometimes I'm going to need a
mobile partner on this one."
He nodded, knowingly. "Lovely lady,
you are looking at him," he replied. "And only too happy to. If
there's one thing I'm a sucker for, it's a quest And this is even better, a
quest at the service of a lady!"
"A quest?" she chuckled a
little. "What, do you want us to swear to find the Holy Grail now?"
"Why not?" he said lightly.
"Here, I'll start." He stood up, faced not her column but Ted E. Bear
in his niche. "I, Alexander Joli-Chanteu, solemnly swear that I shall join
brainship Hypatia One-Oh-Three-Three in a continuing and ongoing search for the
homeworld of the Salomon-Kildaire Entities. I swear that this will be a joint
project for as long as we have a joint career. And I swear that I shall give
her all the support and friendship she needs in this search, so help me. So let
it be witnessed and sealed by yon bear."
Tia would have giggled, except that he
looked so very solemn.
"All right," he said, when he
sat down again. "What about you?"
What about her? She had virtually accepted
him as her brawn, hadn't she? And hadn't he sworn himself into her service,
like some kind of medieval knight?
"All right," she replied.
"I, Hypatia One-Oh-Three-Three, do solemnly swear to take Alexander
Joli-Chanteu into my service, to share with him my search for the EsKay
homeworld, and to share with him those rewards both material and immaterial
that come our way in this search. I pledge to keep him as my brawn unless we
both agree mutually to sever the contract I swear it by, by Theodore Edward
Bear."
He grinned, so wide and infectiously, that
she wished she could return it. "I guess we're a team, then," she
said.
"Then here, "he lifted an
invisible glass, "is to our joint career. May it be as long and fruitful
as the Cades'."
He pretended to drink, then to smash the
invisible glass in an invisible fireplace, little guessing Hypatia's silence
was due entirely to frozen shock. The
Cades? How could he-
But before she vocalized anything, she
suddenly realized that he could not possibly have known who and what she really
was.
The literature on the Cades would never
have mentioned their paralyzed daughter, nor the tragedy that caused her
paralysis. That simply wasn't done in academic circles, a world in which only
facts and speculations existed, and not sordid details of private lives. The
Cades weren't stellar personalities, the kind people made docudramas out of.
There was no way he could have known about Hypatia Cade.
And once someone went into the
shell-person program, their last name was buried in a web of eyes-only and
fail-safes, to ensure that their background remained private. It was better
that way, easier to adjust to being shelled. The unscrupulous supervisor could
take advantage of a shell-person's background for manipulation, and there were
other problems as well. Brainships were, as Professor Brogen had pointed out,
valuable commodities. So were their cargoes. The ugly possibilities of using
familial hostages or family pressures against a brainship were very real. Or
using family ties to lure a ship into ambush.
But there was always the option for the
shell-person to tell trusted friends about who they were. Trusted friends and
brawns.
She hesitated for a moment, as he saluted
Ted. Should she tell him about herself and avoid a painful gaffe in the future?
No. No, I have to learn to live with it,
if we're going to keep chasing the EsKays. If he doesn't say anything, someone
else will. Mum and Dad may have soured on the EsKay project because of me, but
their names are still linked with it. And besides, it doesn't matter. The EsKays
are mine, now. And I'm not a Cade anymore, even if I do find the homeworld. I
won't be listed in the literature as Hypatia Cade, but as Hypatia
One-Oh-Three-Three. A brainship. Part of the AH team.
She realized what their team designation
looked like.
"Do you realize that together our
initials are ..."
"Ah?" he said, pronouncing it
like the word. "Actually, I did, right off. I thought it was a good omen.
Not quite 'eureka', but close enough!"
"Hmm," she replied. "It
sounds like something a professor says when he thinks you're full of lint but
he can't come up with a refutation!"
"You have no romance in your
soul," he chided mockingly. "And speaking of romance, what time is
it?"
"Four thirty-two and twenty-seven
point five nine seconds," she replied instantly. "In the morning, of
course."
"Egads," he said, and shuddered.
"Oh, dark hundred. Let this be the measure of my devotion, my lady. I, who
never see the sun rise if I can help it, actually got up at four in the morning
to talk to you."
"Devotion, indeed," she replied
with a laugh. "All right, Alex. I give in. You are hereby officially my
brawn. I'm Tia, by the way, not Hypatia, not to you. But you'd better sneak
back to your dormitory and pretend to be surprised when they tell you I picked
you, or we'll both be in trouble."
"Your wish, dearest Tia, is my
command," he said, rising and bowing. "Hopefully I can get past the
gate guard going out as easily as I got past going in."
"Don't get caught," she warned
him. "I can't bail you out, not officially, and not yet. Right now, as my
supervisor told me so succinctly, I am an expensive drain on Institute
finances."
He saluted her column and trotted down the
stair, ignoring the lift once again.
Well, at least he'll keep in shape.
She watched him as long as she could, but
other ships and equipment intervened. It occurred to her then that she could
listen in on the spaceport security net for bulletins about an intruder.
She opened the channel, but after a half
an hour passed, and she heard nothing, she concluded that he must have made it
back safely.
The central cabin seemed very lonely
without him. Unlike any of the others, except, perhaps, Chria Chance, he had
filled the entire cabin with the sheer force of his personality. He was
certainly lively enough.
She waited until oh-six-hundred, and then
opened her line to CenCom. There was a new operator on, one who seemed not at
all curious about her or her doings; seemed, in feet, as impersonal as an AI.
He brought up Beta's office without so much as a single comment.
As she halfway expected, Beta was present
And the very first words out of the woman's mouth were, "Well? Have you
picked a brawn, or am I going to have to trot the rest of the Academy past you?"
Hypatia stopped herself from snapping only
by an effort. "I made an all-night effort at considering the twelve
candidates you presented, Supervisor," she said sharply. "I went to
the considerable trouble of accessing records as far back as lower schools."
Only a little fib, she told herself. I did check Alex, after all.
"And?" Beta replied, not at all
impressed.
"I have selected Alexander
Joli-Chanteu. He can come aboard at any time. I completed all my test-flight
sequences yesterday, and I can be ready to lift as soon as CenCom gives me
clearance and you log my itinerary." There, she thought, smugly. One in
your eye, Madame Supervisor, I'll wager you never thought I'd be that
efficient.
"Very good,
AH-One-Oh-Three-Three," Beta replied, showing no signs of being impressed
at all. "I wouldn't have logged Alexander as brawn if I had been in your
shell, though. He isn't as ... professional as I would like. And his record is
rather erratic."
"So are the records of most
genius-class intellects, Supervisor," Tia retorted, feeling moved to
defend her brawn. "As I am sure you are aware." And you aren't in my
shell, lady, she thought, with resentment at Beta's superior tone smoldering in
her, until she altered the chemical feed to damp it. I will make my own
decisions, and I will thank you to keep that firmly in mind.
"So they say,
AH-One-Oh-Three-Three," Beta replied impersonally. "I'll convey your
selection to the Academy and have CenCom log in your flight plan and advise you
when to be ready to lift immediately."
With that, she logged off. But before Tia
could feel slighted or annoyed with her, the CenCom operator came back on.
"AH-One-Oh-Three-Three,
congratulations!" he said, his formerly impersonal voice warming with
friendliness. "I just wanted you to know before we got all tangled up in
official things that the operators here all think you picked a fine brawn. Me,
especially."
Tia was dumbfounded. "Why, thank
you," she managed. "But why ?"
The operator chuckled. "Oh, we handle
all the cadets' training-flights. Some of them are real pains in the orifice,
but Alex always has a good word and he never gripes when we have to put him in
a holding pattern. And, well, that Donning character tried to get me in trouble
over a near-miss when he ignored what I told him and came in anyway. Alex was
in the pattern behind him, he saw and heard it all. He didn't have to log a
report in my defense, but he did, and it kept me from getting demoted."
"Oh," Tia replied. Now, that was
interesting. Witnesses to near misses weren't required to come forward with
logs of the incident, and in fact, no one would have thought badly of Alex if
he hadn't. His action might even have earned him some trouble with Donning.
"Anyway, congratulations again. You
won't regret your choice," the operator said. "And, stand by for
compressed data transmission."
As her orders and flight-plan came over
the comlink, Tia felt oddly pleased and justified. Beta did not like her choice
of brawns. The CenCom operators did.
Good recommendations, both.
She began her pre-flight check with rising
spirits, and it seemed to her that even Ted was smiling. Just a little. All
right Universe, brace yourself. Here we come!
CHAPTER FOUR
"All right, Tia-my-love, explain
what's going on here, in words of one syllable," Alex said plaintively,
when Tia got finished with tracing the maze of orders and counter-orders that
had interrupted their routine round of deliveries to tiny two to four-person
Exploratory digs. "Who's on first?"
"And What's on second," she
replied absentmindedly. Just before leaving she'd gotten a data hedron on old
Terran slang phrases and their derivation; toying with the idea of producing
that popular-science article. If it got published on enough nets, it might well
earn her a tidy little bit of credit, and no amount of credit, however small,
was to be scorned. But one unexpected side-effect of scanning it was that she
tended to respond with the punch lines ofjokes so old they were mummified.
Though now, at least, she knew what the
CenCom operator had meant by "hang onto your bustle" and that
business about the wicked witch who'd had a house dropped on her sister.
"What?" Alex responded,
perplexed. "No, never mind. I don't want to know. Just tell me whose
orders we're supposed to be following. I got lost back there in the fifth or
sixth dispatch."
"I've got it all straight now, and
it's dual-duty," she replied. "Institute, with backup from Central,
although they were countermanding each other in the first four or five sets of
instructions. One of the Excavation digs hasn't been checking in. Went from
their regular schedule to nothing, not even a chirp."
"You don't sound worried," Alex
pointed out.
"Well, I am, and I'm not," she
replied, already calculating the quickest route through hyperspace, and
mentally cursing the fact that they didn't have Singularity Drive. But then
again, there wasn't a Singularity point anywhere near where they wanted to go.
So the drive wasn't the miracle of instantaneous transportation some people
claimed it was. Hmm, and some brainships too, naming no names. All very well if
there were Singularity points littering the stellarscape like stars in the
Core, but out here, at this end of the galactic arm, stars were close, but
points were few and far between. One reason why the Institute hadn't opted for
a more expensive ship. "If it were an Exploratory dig like my, like we've
been trotting supplies and mail to, I would worry a lot. They're horribly
vulnerable. And an Evaluation dig is just as subject to disaster, since the
maximum they can have is twenty people. But a Class Three, Alex, this one had a
complement of two hundred! That's more that enough people to hold off any
trouble!"
"Class Three Excavation sites get a
lot of graduate students, don't they?" Alex said, while she locked things
down in her holds for takeoff with help from the servos. Pity the cargo
handlers hadn't had time to stow things properly.
"Exactly. They provide most of the
coolie labor when there aren't any natives to provide a work force, that's why
the Class Three digs have essentially the same setup as a military base. Most
of the personnel are young, strong, and they get the best of the equipment This
one has, " she quickly checked her briefing "one hundred
seventy-eight people between the ages of twenty-five and thirty-five. That's
plenty to set up perimeter guards."
Alex's fingers raced across the keypads in
front of him, calling up data to her screens. "Hmm. No really nasty native
beasties. Area declared safe. And, my. Fully armed, are we?" He glanced
over at the column. "I had no idea archeologists were such dangerous
beings! They never told me that back in secondary school!"
"Grrr," she responded. She
flashed a close-up of the bared fangs of a dog on one of the screens he wasn't
using. In the past several weeks she and Alex had spent a lot of time talking,
getting to know each other. By virtue of her seven years spent mobile, she was
a great deal more like a softperson than any of her classmates, and Alex was
fun to be around. Neither of them particularly minded the standard issue beiges
of her interior; what he had done, during the time spent in FTL, was to copy
the minimalist style of his sensei's home, taking a large brush and some pure
black and red enamel, and copying one or two Zen ideographs on the walls that
seemed barest. She thought they looked very handsome, and quietly elegant
Of course, his cabin was a mess, but she
didn't have to look in there, and she avoided doing so as much as possible.
In turn, he expressed delight over her
'sparkling personality'. No matter what the counselors said, she had long ago
decided that she had feelings and emotions and had no guilt over showing them
to those she trusted. Alex had risen in estimation from 'partner' to 'trusted'
in the past few weeks; he had a lively sense of humor and enjoyed teasing her.
She enjoyed teasing right back.
"Pull in your fangs, wench," he
said. "I realize that the only reason they get those arms is because there
are no sentients down there. So, what's on the list of Things That Get
Well-Armed Archeologists? I have the sinking feeling there were a lot of things
they didn't tell me about archeology back in secondary school!"
"Seriously? It's a short list, but a
nasty one." She sobered. "Lock yourself in; I'm going to lift, and
fast. Things are likely to rattle around." With drives engaged, she pulled
away from her launch cradle, acknowledged Traffic Control and continued her
conversation, all at once. "Artifact thieves are high on that list. If
you've got a big dig, you can bet that there are things being found that are
going to be worth a lot to collectors. They'll come in, blast the base, land,
kill everyone left over that gets in their way, grab the loot and lift, all
within hours." Which was why the hidey was so far from our dome, and why
Mum and Dad told me to get in it and stay in it if trouble came. "But
normally they work an area, and normally they don't show up anyplace where
Central has a lot of patrols. There haven't been any thieves in that area, and
it is heavily patrolled."
"So, what's next on the list?"
Alex asked, one screen dedicated to the stats on the dig, his own hands busy
with post-lift chores that some brawns would have left to their brains.
Double-checking to make sure all the servos had put themselves away, for
instance. Keeping an eye on the weight-and-balance in the holds. Just another
example, she thought happily, of what a good partner he was.
She was clear of the cradle and about to
clear local airspace. Nearing time to accelerate 'like a scalded cat'. Now
that's a phrase that's still useful. "Next on the list is something we
don't even have to consider, and that's a native uprising."
"Hmm, so I see." His eyes went
from the secondary screen where the data on the dig was posted and back to the
primary. "No living native sophonts on the continent. But I can see how it
could be the Zulu wars all over again."
He nodded, acknowledging her logic, and
she was grateful to his self-education in history.
"Precisely," she replied.
"Throw enough warm bodies at the barricades, and any defense will go down.
In a native uprising, there are generally hordes of fervent fanatics willing to
die in the cause and go straight to Paradise. Accelerating, Alex."
He gave her a thumbs-up, and she threw him
into his seat. He merely raised an eyebrow at her column and kept typing.
"There must be several different variations on that theme. Let's see, you
could have your Desecration of Holy Site Uprising, your Theft of Ancient
Treasures Uprising, your Palace Coup Uprising, your Local Peasant Revolution
Uprising. Uh-huh. I can see it And when you've overrun the base, it's time to
line everyone up as examples of alien exploitation. Five executioners, no
waiting."
"They normally don't kill except by
accident, actually, or in the heat of the moment," she told him.
"Most native sophonts are bright enough to realize that two hundred of
Central Systems' citizens, a whole herd of their finest minds and their
dependents, make a much better bargaining chip as hostages than they do as
casualties."
"Not much comfort to those killed in
the heat of the moment," he countered. "So, what's the next culprit
on the list?"
"The third, last, and most
common," she said, a bit grimly, and making no effort to control her
voice-output "Disease."
"Whoa, wait a minute. I thought that
these sites were declared free of hazard!" He stopped typing and paled a
little, as well he might. Plague was the bane of the Courier Service existence.
More than half the time of every CS ship was spent in ferrying vaccines across
known space, and for every disease that was eradicated, three more sprang up
out of nowhere. Nor were the brawns immune to the local plagues that just might
choose to start at the moment they planeted. "I thought all these sites
were sprayed down to a fare-thee-well before they let anyone move in!"
"Yes, but that's the one I'm
seriously concerned about." And not just because it was a bug that got me.
"That, my dear Alex, is what they don't tell you bright-eyed young
students when you consider a career in archeology. The number one killer of
xeno-archeologists is disease."
"Viruses
and proto-viruses are sneaky sons-of-singularities; they can hibernate in tombs
for centuries, millennia, even in airless conditions." She flashed up some
Institute statistics; the kind they didn't show the general public. There was a
thirty percent chance that a xeno-archeologist would be permanently disabled by
disease during his career; a twenty percent chance that he would die. And a one
hundred percent chance that he would be seriously ill, requiring
hospitalization, from something caught on a dig, at some point in his life.
"So the bug hibernates. Then when the
intrepid explorer pops the top off, " Alex looked as grim as she felt.
"Right Gotcha." She laughed, but it had a very flat sound.
"Well, sometimes it's been known to be fortuitous. The Cades actually met
when they were recovering from Henderson's Chorea, ah, or so their biographies
in Who's Who say. There could be worse things than having the Institute cover
your tropic vacation."
"But mostly it isn't" His voice
was as flat as her laugh had been.
"Ye-es. One of my close friends is
Doctor Kennet on the Pride of Albion. He's gotten to be a specialist in
diseases that get archeologists. He's seen a lot of nasty variations over the
years, including some really odd opportunistic bugs that are not only
short-lived after exposure to air, but require a developing nervous system in
order to set up housekeeping."
"Developing? Oh, I got it. A kid, or
a fetus, provided it could cross the placental barrier." He shivered, and
his expression was very troubled. "Brr, that's a really nasty one."
"Verily, White Knight." She
decided not to elaborate on it. Maybe later. To let him know I'm not only out
for fortune and glory. "I just wanted you to be prepared when we got
there, which we will in, four days, sixteen hours, and thirty-five minutes. Not
bad, for an old-fashioned FTL drive, I'd say." She'd eliminated the
precise measurements that some of the other shell-persons used with their
brawns in the first week, except when she was speaking to another shell-person,
of course. Alex didn't need that kind of precision, most of the time; when he
did, he asked her for it. She had worried at first that she might be getting
sloppy.
No, I'm just accommodating myself to his
world. I don't mind. And when he needs precision, he lets me know in advance.
"Well, let me see if I can think of
some non-lethal reasons for the dig losing communications." He grinned.
"How about, 'the dinosaur ate my transmitter'?"
"Cute." Now that their
acceleration had smoothed and they were out of the atmosphere, she sent servos
snooping into his cabin, as was her habit whenever a week or so went by, and he
was at his station, giving her non-invasive access. "Alex, don't you ever
pick up your clothes?"
"Sometimes. Not when I'm sent hauling
my behind up the stairs with my tail on fire and a directive from CS ordering
me to report back to my ship immediately." He shrugged, completely
unrepentant. "I wouldn't even have changed my clothes if that officious b-
"
"Alex," she warned. "I'm
recording, I have to. Regulations." Ever since the debacle involving the
Nyota Five, all central cabin functions were recorded, whenever there was a
softperson, even if only a brawn, present. That was regulation even on AI
drones. The regs had been written for AI drones, in fact; and CS administration
had decided that there was no reason to rewrite them for brainships, and every
reason why they shouldn't. This way no one could claim 'discrimination', or
worse, 'entrapment'.
"If that officious bully hadn't
insisted I change to uniform before lifting." He shook his head. "As
if wearing a uniform was going to make any difference in how well you handled
the lift. Which was, as always, excellent."
"Thank you." She debated chiding
him on his untidy nature and decided against it. It hadn't made any difference
before, it probably wouldn't now. She just had the servos pick up the tunic and
trousers, wincing at the ultra-neon purple that was currently in vogue, and
deposited them in the laundry receptacle.
And I'll probably have to put them away
when they're clean, too. No wonder they wanted him to change. Hmm. Wonder if I
dare 'lose' them? Or have a dreadful accident that dyes them a nice sober plum?
That was a thought to tuck away for later.
"Getting back to the dinosaur, com equipment breaks, and even a Class
Three dig can end up with old equipment. If the only fellow on the dig
qualified to fix it happens to be laid up with broken bones, in case you hadn't
noticed, archeologists fall down shafts and off cliffs a lot, or double-pneumonia."
"Good point." He finished his
'housekeeping chores' with a flourish and settled back in his chair. "Say,
Tia, they're all professorial types. Do they ever just get so excited they
forget to transmit?"
"Brace yourself for FTL." The
transition to FTL was nowhere near as distressing to softpersons as the dive
into a Singularity, but it required some warning. Alex gripped the arms of the
seat, and closed his eyes, as she made the jump into hyperspace.
She never experienced more than a brief
shiver, like ducking into a freezing-cold shower, but Alex always looked a
little green during transition. Fortunately, he had no trouble in hyper itself.
And if I can ever afford a Singularity
Drive, his records say he takes those transitions pretty well.
Well, right now, that was little more than
a dream. She picked up the conversation where it had left off. "That has
happened on Class One digs and even Class Two, but usually somebody realizes
the report hasn't been made after a while when you're dealing with a big dig.
Besides, logging reports constitutes publication, and grad students need all
the publication they can get. Still, if they just uncovered the equivalent of
Tutankhamen's tomb, they might all be so excited, and busy documenting finds
and putting them into safe storage, that they've forgotten the rest of the
universe exists."
He swallowed hard, controlling his nausea.
It generally seemed to take his stomach a couple of minutes to settle down.
Maybe the reason it doesn't hit me is because there's no sensory nerves to my
stomach anymore.
But that only brought back unpleasant
memories; she ruthlessly shunted the thought aside.
"So." he said finally, as his
color began to return. "Tell me why you aren't in a panic because they
haven't answered."
"Artifact thieves would probably have
been spotted, there aren't any natives to revolt, and disease usually takes
long enough to set in that somebody would have called for help," she said.
"And that's why CS wasn't particularly worried, and why they kept
countermanding the Institute's orders. But either this expedition has been out
of touch for so long that even they think there's something wrong, or they've
got some information they didn't give us. So we're going in."
"And we find out when we get
there," Alex finished; and there wasn't a trace of a smile anywhere on his
face.
Tia brought them out of hyper with a deft
touch that rattled Alex's insides as little as possible. Once in orbit, she
sent down a signal that should activate the team's transmitter if there was
anything there to activate. As she had told Alex several days ago, com systems
broke. She was fully expecting to get no echo back.
Instead, -
You are linked to Excavation Team
Que-Zee-Five-Five-Seven. The beacon's automatic response came instantly, in
electronic mode. Then came the open carrier wave.
"Alex, I think we have a
problem," she said, carefully.
"Echo?" He tensed.
"Full echo." She sent the
recognition signal that would turn on landing assistance beacons and alert the
AI that there was someone Upstairs, the AI was supposed to open the
voice-channel in the absence of humans capable of handling the com. The AI came
online immediately, transmitting a ready to receive instructions signal.
"Worse, they've got full com. I just
got the AI go-signal."
She blipped a compressed several megabytes
of instructions to give her control of all external and internal recording
devices, override any programs installed since the base was established, and
give her control of all sensory devices still working.
"Get the AI to give me some
pictures," he said, all business. "If it can."
"Coming up, ah, external cam three,
this is right outside the mess hall and, oh, shells and back!"
"I'll second that," Alex
replied, just as grimly.
The camera showed them, somewhat fuzzily,
a scene that was anything but a pretty sight.
There were bodies lying in plain view of
the camera; from the lack of movement they could not be live bodies. They seemed
to be lying where they fell, and there was no sign of violence on them. Tia
switched to the next camera the AI offered; a view inside the mess hall. Here,
if anything, things were worse. Equipment and furniture lay toppled. More
bodies were strewn about the room.
A chill that had nothing to do with the
temperature in her shell held her in thrall. Fear, horror, helplessness. Her
own private nightmares.
Tia exerted control over her internal
chemistry with an effort; told herself that this could not be the disease that
had struck her. These people were taken down right where they stood or sat.
She started to switch to another view,
when Alex leaned forward suddenly.
"Tia, wait a minute."
Obediently, she held the screen,
sharpening the focus as well as the equipment, the four-second lag to orbit,
and atmospheric interference would allow. She couldn't look at it herself.
"There's no food," he said,
finally. "Look, there's plates and things all over the place, but there's
not a scrap of food anywhere."
"Scavengers?" she suggested.
"Or whatever, whatever killed them? But there are no signs of an invasion,
an attack from, outside."
He shook his head. "I don't know.
Let's try another camera."
This one was outside the supply building
and this was where they found their first survivors.
If that's what you can call them. Tia
absorbed the incoming signal, too horrified to turn her attention away. There
was a trio of folk within camera range: one adolescent, one young man, and one older
woman. They paid no attention to each other, nor to the bodies at their feet,
nor to their surroundings. The adolescent sat in the dirt of the compound,
stared at a piece of brightly colored scrap paper in front of him, and rocked,
back and forth. There was no sound pickup on these cameras, so there was no
indication that he was doing anything other than rocking in silence, but Tia
had the strange impression that he was humming tunelessly.
The young man stood two feet from a fence
and shifted his weight back and forth from foot to foot, swaying, as if he
wanted to get past the fence and had no idea how. And the older woman paced in
an endless circle.
All three of them were filthy, dressed in
clothes that were dirt-caked and covered with stains. Their faces were
dirt-streaked, eyes vacant; their hair straggled into their eyes in ratty
tangles. Tia was just grateful that the cameras were not equipped to transmit
odor.
"Tia, get me another camera,
please," Alex whispered, after a long moment.
Camera after camera showed the same view;
either of bodies lying in the dust, or of bodies and a few survivors, aimlessly
wandering. Only one showed anyone doing anything different; one young woman had
found an emergency ration pouch and torn it open. She was single-mindedly
stuffing the ration-cubes into her mouth with both hands, like ...
"Like an animal," Alex supplied
in a whisper. "She's eating like an animal."
Tia forced herself to be dispassionate.
"Not like an animal," she corrected. "At least, not a healthy
one." She analyzed the view as if she were dealing with an alien species.
"No, she acts like an animal that's been brain-damaged, or maybe a drug
addict that's been on something so long there isn't much left of his higher functions."
This wasn't 'her' disease. It was
something else. Deadly, but not what had struck her down. What she felt was not
exactly relief, but she was able to detach herself from the situation, to
distance herself a little.
You knew, sooner or later, you'd see a
plague. This one is a horror, but you knew this would happen.
"Zombies," AJex whispered, as
another of the survivors plodded past without so much as a glance at the woman
eating, who had given up eating with her hands and had shoved her face right
down into the torn-open ration pouch.
"You've seen too many bad
holos," she replied absently, sending the AI a high-speed string of
instructions. She had to find out when this happened, and how long these people
had been like this.
It was too bad that the cameras weren't
set to record, because that would have told her a lot. How quickly the disease,
for a plague of some kind would have had an incubation time, had set in, and
what the initial symptoms were. Instead, all she had to go on were the dig's
records, and when they had stopped making them.
"Alex, the last recorded entry into
the AI's database was at about oh-two-hundred, local time, a week and a half
ago," she said. "It was one of the graduate students logging in
pottery shards. Then, nothing. No record of illness, nothing in the med
records, no one even using a voice-activator to ask the AI for help. The mess
hall computer programmed the synthesizer to produce food for a few meals, then
something broke the synthesizer."
"One
of them," Alex hazarded. "Probably."
She
looked for anything else in the database and found nothing. "That's about
all there is. The AI has been keeping things going, but there's been no
interaction with it So forget what I said about diseases taking several days to
set in. It looks like this one infected and affected everyone on the base
between, oh, some time during the night, and dawn." If she'd had a head,
she would have shaken it. "I can't imagine how something like that could
happen to everyone at the same time without someone at least blurting a few
words to a voice pickup!"
"Unless ... Tia, what if they had to
be asleep? I mean, there's things that happen during sleep, neuro transmitters
that initiate dream-sleep." Alex looked up from the screen, with lines of
strain around his eyes. "If they had to be asleep to catch this
thing."
"Or if the first symptom was sleep
..." She couldn't help herself; she wanted to shiver with fear.
"Alex, I have to set down there. You can't do anything for those people
from up here."
"No argument" He strapped
himself in. "Okay, lady. Get us down as fast as you can. There's one thing
I have to do, quick, before we lose any more."
She broke orbit with a sudden acceleration
that threw him into the back of his seat; he didn't bat an eye. His voice got a
little more strained, but that was all.
"I'll have to put on a pressure-suit
and get into the supplies; put out food and pans of water. They're starving and
dehydrated. Spirits of space only know what they've been eating and drinking
all this time. Could be a lot of them died of dysentery, or from eating or
drinking something that wasn't food." He was thinking out loud; waiting
for Tia to put in her own thoughts, or warn him if he was planning to do
something really stupid. "No matter what else we do, I have to do
that"
"Open up emergency ration bags and
leave pans of the cubes all over the compound," she suggested, as her
outer skin heated up to a glowing red as she hit the upper atmosphere. "Do
the same with the water. Like you were feeding animals."
"I am feeding animals," he said,
and his voice and face were bleak. "I have to keep telling myself that. Or
I'll do something really, really stupid. You get a line established to Kleinman
Base, ASAP"
"Already in the works." A
hyperwave comlink that far wasn't the easiest thing to establish and hold.
But that was why she was a brainship, not
an AI drone.
"Hang on," she said, as she hit
the first of the turbulence. "It's going to be a bumpy burn down!"
The camera and external mike on Alex's
helmet gave her a much clearer view of the survivors than Tia really wanted. Of
the complement of two hundred at this base, no more than fifty survived, most
of them between the ages of fifteen and thirty.
They avoided Alex entirely, hiding
whenever they saw him, but they came out to huddle around the pans of food and
water he put out, stuffing food into their faces with both hands. Alex had
gotten three of the bodies he'd found in their beds into die med-center, and
the diagnosis was the same in all three cases; complete systemic collapse,
which might have been stroke. The rest, the ones that had not simply dropped in
their tracks, had died of dysentery and dehydration. Of the casualties, it
looked as if half of the dead had keeled over with this collapse, all of them
the oldest members of the team.
After the third, Alex called a halt to it;
instead he loaded the bodies into the base freezer. Someone else would have to
come get them and deal with them. Tia had recorded his efforts, but could not
bring herself to actually watch the incoming video.
He completed his grisly work and returned
to caring for the living. "Tia, as near as I can guess, this thing hits
people in one of two ways. Either you get a stroke or something and die, or you
turn into, that." She saw whatever
he was looking at by virtue of the fact that the helmet-camera was mounted
right over his forehead. And 'that' was something that had once been a human
boy, scrambling away out of sight.
"That seems like a good enough
assumption for now," she agreed. "Can you tell what happened with the
food situation? Are they so far gone that they can't remember how to get into
basic supplies?"
"That's about it," he agreed,
wearily. "Believe it or not, they can't even remember how to pop ration
packs. They seem to have a vague memory
of where the food was stored, but they never even tried to open the door to the
supply warehouse." He trudged across the compound to one of the pans he
had set out. It was already empty, without even crumbs. He poured ration-cubes
into it from a bag he carried under his arm. She caught furtive movement at the
edge of the camera-view; presumably the survivors were waiting for him to go
away so that they could empty the pan again. "When they found the
emergency pouches they tore them open, like that woman we watched. But a lot of
times, they don't even seem to realize that the pouch has food in it."
"There's two kinds of victims; the
first lot, who got hit and died in their sleep or on the way to
breakfast," he continued, making his way to the next pan. "Then the
rest of them died of dehydration and dysentery because they were eating
half-rotten food."
"Those would go hand-in-hand,
here," she replied. "With nothing to stop the liquid loss through
dysentery, dehydration comes on pretty quickly."
"That's what I figured." He
paused to fill another pan. "There'd be more of them dead, of exposure and
hypothermia, except that the temperature doesn't drop below twenty Celsius at
night, or get above thirty in the daytime. Shirtsleeve weather. Tia, see when
this balmy weather pattern started, would you?"
"Right." He must have had an
idea, and it didn't take her more than a moment to interrogate the Al.
"About a week before the last contact. Does that sound as suspicious to
you as it does to me?"
"Yeah. Maybe something hatched."
Alex scanned the area for her, and she noted that there were a fair number of
insects in the air.
But native insects wouldn't bite humans,
or would they? "Or sprouted. This could be a violent allergic reaction, or
some other kind of interaction with a mold spore or pollen." Farfetched,
but not entirely impossible.
"But why wouldn't the Class One team
have uncovered it?" he countered, filling another pan with ration-cubes.
"Kibble," the brawns called it. The basic foodstuff of the Central
System worlds; the monotonous ration-bars handed out by the PTA to
client-planets cut up into bite-sized pieces. Tia had never eaten it; her
parents had always insisted on real meals, but she had been told that while it
looked, smelled, and tasted reasonable, its very sameness would drive you over
the edge if you had to eat it for very long. But every base had emergency
pouches of the stuff cached all over, and huge bags stockpiled in the
warehouse, in case something happened to the food-synthesizers.
Those pouches must have been what kept the
survivors going, until they ran out of pouches that were easy to find.
The dig records were, fortunately, quite
dear. "Got the answer to your question. Class One dig was here for winter,
only. They found what they needed to upgrade to Class Three within a couple of
days of digging. They really hit a big find in the first test trench, and the
Institute pushed the upgrade through to take advantage of the good weather
coming."
"And initial Survey teams don't live
here, they live on their ships." Alex had a little more life in his voice.
"They were only here in the
fall," she said. "There's never been a human here during spring and
summer."
"Tia, you put that together with an
onset of this thing after dark, and what do you get?"
"An insect vector?" she
hazarded. "Nocturnal? I must admit that the pattern for venomous and
biting insects is to appear after sunset"
"Sounds right to me. As soon as I get
done filling the pans again, I'm going to go grab some bedding from one of the
victims' beds, seal it in a crate, and freeze it Maybe it's something like a
flea. Can you see if there's anything in the AI med records about a rash of
insect bites?"
"Can do," she responded, glad to
finally have something, anything, concrete to do.
The sun was near the horizon when Alex
finished boxing his selection of bedding and sealing it in a freezer container.
He came back out again after loading the container into one of Tia's empty
holds. She saw to the sealing of the hold, while he went back out to try and
catch one of the Zombies, a name he had tagged the survivors with over her
protests.
She finally established the comlink while
he was still out in the compound, fruitlessly chasing one after another of the
survivors and getting nowhere. He was weighted down with his pressure-suit;
they were weighted down by nothing at all and had the impetus of fear. He
seemed to terrify them, and they did not connect the arrival of food in the
pans with him, for some reason.
"They act like I'm some kind of
monster," he panted, leaning over to brace himself on his knees while he
caught his breath. "Since they don't have that reaction to each other, it
has to be this suit that they're afraid of. Maybe I should ... "
"Stay in the suit," she said,
fiercely. "You make one move to take that suit off, and I'll sleepygas
you!"
"Oh, Tia." he protested.
"I'm not joking." She continued
her conversation with the base brain in rapid, highly compressed databursts
with horribly long pauses for the information to transmit across hyperspace.
"You stay in that suit! We don't know what caused all this."
Her tirade was interrupted by a dreadful
howling and the external camera bounced as Alex moved violently. At first she
thought that something awful had happened to Alex, but then she realized that
the sound came from his external suit mike, and that the movement of the camera
had been caused by his own violent start of surprise.
"What the ... "he blurted, then
recovered. "Hang on, Tia. I need to see what this is, but it doesn't sound
like an attack or anything."
"Be careful," she urged
fearfully. "Please."
But he showed no signs of foolhardy
bravery; in fact, as the howling continued under the scarlet light of the
descending sun, he sprinted from one bit of cover to another like a seasoned
guerrilla-fighter.
"Fifty meters," Tia warned,
taking her measurement from the strength of the howls. "They have to be on
the other side of this building."
"Thanks." He literally crept on
all fours to the edge of the building and peeked around the corner.
Tia saw exactly what he did, so she
understood his sharp intake of breath.
She couldn't count them, for they milled
about too much, but she had the impression that every survivor in the compound
had crowded into the corner of the fence nearest the sunset. Those right at the
fence clung to it as they howled their despair to the sun; the rest clung to
the backs of those in front of them and did the same.
Their faces were contorted with the first
emotion Tia had seen them display.
Fear.
"They're scared, Tia," Alex
whispered, his voice thick with emotions that Tia couldn't decipher.
"They're afraid. I think they're afraid that the sun isn't going to come
back."
That might have been the case, but Tia
couldn't help but wonder if their fear was due to something else entirely.
Could they have a dim memory that something terrible had happened to them in
the hours of darkness, something that took away their friends and changed their
lives into a living hell? Was that why they howled and sobbed with fear?
When the last of the light had gone, they
fell suddenly silent, then, like scurrying insects, they dropped to all fours
and scuttled away, into whatever each, in the darkness of his or her mind,
deemed to be shelter. In a moment, they were gone. All of them.
There was a strangled sob from Alex. And Tia
shook within her shell, racked by too many emotions to effectively sort out
"You have two problems."
Tia knew the name to put to the feeling
she got when her next transmission from the base was not from some anonymous CS
doctor but from Doctor Kenny.
Relief. Real, honest, relief.
It flooded her, making her relax, dealing
her mind. Although she could not speak directly with him, if there was anyone
who could help them pull this off, it would be Doctor Kenny. She settled all of
her concentration on the incoming transmission.
"You'll have to catch the survivors
and keep them alive, and you'll have to keep them from contaminating your
brawn. After that, we can deal with symptoms and the rest."
All right, that made sense.
"We went at this analyzing your
subjects' behavior. You were right in saying that they act in a very similar
fashion to brain-damaged simians."
This was an audio-only transmission; the
video portion of the signal was being used to carry a wealth of technical data.
Tia wished she could see Doctor Kenny's face, but she heard the warmth and
encouragement in his voice with no problem.
"We've compiled all the data
available on any experiments where the subjects' behavior matched your
survivors," Doctor Kenny continued. "Scan it and see if anything is
relevant. Tia, I can't stress this enough. No matter what you think caused this
disease, don't let Alex get out of that suit. I can't possibly say this too
many times. Now that he's gone out there, he's got a contaminated surface. I
want you to ask him to stay in the suit, sleep in the suit, eat through the
suit-ports, use the suit-facilities. I would prefer that he stayed out in the
compound or in your airlock even to sleep, every time he goes in and out of the
suit, in and out of your lock, we have a chance for decontamination to fail. I
know you understand me."
Only too well, she thought, grimly,
remembering all that time in isolation.
"Now, we've come up with a general
plan for you," Doctor Kenny continued. "We don't think that you'll be
able to catch the survivors, given the way they're avoiding Alex. So you're
going to have to trap them. My experts think you'll be able to rig drop-traps
for them, using packing crates with field generators across the front and
rations for bait. The technical specs are on the video-track, but I think you
have the general idea. The big thing will be not to frighten the rest each time
you trap one."
Doctor Kenny's voice echoed hollowly in
the empty cabin; she damped the sound so that it didn't sound so lonely.
"We want one, two at most, per crate.
We're afraid that, bunched together, they might hurt each other, fight over
food. They're damaged, and we just don't know how aggressive they might get.
That's why we want you to pack them in the hold in the crates. Once you get
them trapped, we want you to put enough food and water in each crate to last
the four days to base, and Tia, at that point, leave them there. Don't do
anything with them. Leave them alone. I trust you to exercise your good sense
and not give in to any temptation to intervene in their condition."
Doctor Kenny sighed, gustily. "We
bandied around the idea of tranking them, but they have to eat and drink; four
days knocked out might kill them. You don't have the facilities to cold-sleep
fifty people. So, box them, hope the box matches their ideas of a good place to
hide, leave them with food and water and shove them in the hold. That's it for
now, Tia. Transmit everything you have, and we'll have answers for you as soon
as we're able. These double-bounce comlinks aren't as fast as we'd like, but
they beat the alternative. Our thoughts are with you."
The transmission ended, leaving her only
with the carrier-wave.
Now what? Tell Alex the bad news, I guess.
And calculate how many packing crates I can pack into my holds.
"Alex?" she called. "Are
you having any luck tracking down where the survivors are?"
"I've turned on all the exterior
lights," Alex said. "I hoped that I'd be able to lure some of them
out into the open, but it's no good." She activated his helmet-camera and
watched his gloved hand typing override orders into the keyboard of the main AI
console. Override orders had to be put in by hand, with a specific set of
override codes, no matter how minor the change was. That was to keep someone
from taking over an AI with a shout or two. "Right now I'm giving myself
full access to everything. I may not need it, but who knows?"
"I've got our first set of
orders," she told him. "Do you want to hear them?"
"Sure." Typing in a
pressure-suit was no easy task, and Tia did not envy him. It took incredible
patience to manage a normal keyboard in those stiff gloves.
She retransmitted Doctor Kenny's message
and waited patiently for his response when she finished.
"So I have to stay in the suit."
He sighed gustily, "Oh, well. It could be worse, I suppose. It could be
two weeks to base, instead of four days." He typed the last few characters
with a flourish and was rewarded by the 'Full Access, Voice Commands accepted'
legend. "No choice, right? Look, Tia, I know you're going to be lonely,
but if I have to stay in this suit, I might just as well sleep out here."
"But, " she protested,
"what if they decide you're an enemy or something?"
"What, the Zombies?" He
snorted. "Tia, right now they're all crammed into some of the darnedest
nooks and crannies you ever saw in your life. I couldn't pry them out of there
with a forklift. I know where they all are, but I'd have to break bones to get them.
Their bones. They're terrified, even with all the floodlights on. No, they
aren't going to come after me in the dark."
"All right," she agreed
reluctantly. She knew he was right; he'd be much more comfortable out there.
There was certainly more room available to him there.
"I'll be closer to the Zombies,"
he said wearily, "and I can barricade myself in one of the offices, get
enough bedding from stores to make a reasonable nest I'll plug the suit in to
keep everything charged up, and you can monitor the mike and camera. I
snore."
"I know," she said, in a weak
attempt to tease him.
"You would." He turned, and the
camera tracked what he was seeing. "Look, I'm here in the site
supervisor's office. There's even a real nice couch in here and ... " He
leaned down and fiddled with the underside of the piece of furniture. "Ah
hah. As I thought. There's a real bed in the couch. Bet the old man liked to
sneak naps. Look."He panned around the office. "No windows. One door.
A full-access terminal. I'll be fine."
"All right, I believe you." She
thought, quickly. "Ill look over those plans for traps and transmit them
to the AI, and I'11 find out where everything you'll need is stored. You can
start collecting the team tomorrow."
What's left of them, she thought sadly.
What isn't already stored in the freezer.
"See what you can do about adding
some sleepygas to the equation," he suggested, yawning under his breath.
"If we can knock them out once they're in the boxes, rather than trapping
them with field generators, that should solve the problem of frightening the
others."
That was a good suggestion. A much better
one than Doctor Kenny's. If she had enough gas ...
But wait; this was a fully-stocked
station. There might be another option. Crime did exist wherever there were
people, and mental breakdowns. Sometimes it was necessary to immobilize someone
for his protection and the protection of others.
She interrogated the AI and discovered
that, indeed, there were several special low-power needlers in the arms locker.
And with them, full clips of anesthetic needles.
"Alex," she said, slowly,
"how good a shot are you?"
"When this is over, I'm
requisitioning an ethological tagging kit," she said fiercely, as Alex
crouched on the roof of the mess hall and waited for his subject's hunger to
overcome her timidity. She hesitated, just in front of the crate. She smelled
the food, and she wanted it, but she was afraid to go inside after it. She
swayed from side to side, like one of the first three survivors they'd seen;
that swaying seemed to be the outward sign of inner conflict.
"Why?" he asked. The woman
stopped swaying and was creeping, cautiously, into the crate. Alex wanted her
to be all the way inside before he darted her, both to prevent the rest from
seeing her collapse and to avoid having to haul her about and perhaps hurt her.
"Because they have full bio-monitor
contact-buttons in them," she replied. "Skin adhesive ones. They're
normally put inside ears, or on a shaved patch."
After a bit more consultation with
Kleinman Base and Doctor Kenny, darting the survivors had been given full
approval, and since they were going to be out, a modification in the setup had
been arranged for. There would be shredded paper bedding in the crates as well
as food and water, and each victim would wear a contact button glued to the
spine between the shoulder blades with surgical adhesive. With judicious
programming, a minimal amount of medical information could come from that;
heart rate, respiration, skin temperature. Tia had reprogrammed the buttons;
now it was her brawn's turn to live up to his pride.
"I sure never thought my marksmanship
would ever be an asset," he said absently. The woman had only a foot or so
to go.
"I never thought I was going to be
packing my hold with canned archeologists." The packing crates would fit,
but only if they were stacked two deep. Alex had already set up the site
machine shop servos to drill air holes in all of the crates, and there would be
an unbreakable bio-luminescent lightstick in each. They were rated for a week
of use. Hopefully that much light would be enough to keep their captives from
panicking.
"That's a good girl," Alex
crooned to the reluctant Zombie. "Good girl. Smell the nice food? It's
really good food. You're hungry, aren't you?" The woman took the last few
steps in a rush and fell on the dish of ration-cubes. Alex darted her in the
same moment.
The trank took effect within seconds, and
she didn't even seem to realize that she'd been struck. She simply dropped over
on her side, asleep.
Alex left the needler up on the roof where
he'd rigged a sniper-post with a tripod to hold the gun steady. He trotted down
the access steps to the first floor and hurried to get out where he could be
seen before someone else smelled the food and came after it As he burst out
into the dusty courtyard, a hint of movement at the edge of the camera-field
told Tia there was another Zombie lurking out there.
After many protests, she had begun calling
the survivors 'Zombies', too. It helped to think of them as something other
than humans. She admitted to Doctor Kenny that without that distancing it was
hard to keep working without strong feelings getting in the way of efficiency.
"That's all right, Tia," he
soothed on his next transmission. "Even I have to stop thinking of my
patients as people and start thinking of them as 'cases' or 'case studies'
sometimes. That's the nature of this business, and we'll both do what we have to
in order to get as many of these people back alive as we can."
She would have liked to ask him if he'd
ever thought of her as a 'case study', but she knew, in her heart of hearts,
that he probably had. But then, look what he had done for her.
No, calling these poor people 'Zombies'
wasn't going to hurt them, and it would keep her concentrating on what to do
for them, and not on them.
Alex had been boxing Zombies all morning,
and now he had it down to a system. Wheeling out of the warehouse, under the
control of the Al, came a small parade of servos laden with the supplies that
would keep the woman, hopefully, alive and healthy in her crate for the next
five or six days. A bag of finely shredded paper, to make a thick nest on the
bottom of the box. A whole bag of ration-cubes. A big squeeze bottle of water.
A tiny chemical toilet, on the off-chance she would remember how to use it The
bio-luminescent lightstick. Inside of fifteen minutes, Alex had his setup. The
big bottle of water was strapped to one wall, the straps glue-bonded in place,
the bottle bonded to the straps. The toilet was bonded to the floor in the
corner of the six foot by six foot crate. The bag of ration-cubes was opened at
the top, and strapped and bonded into the opposite corner. Paper was laid in a
soft bed over the entire floor, and the unconscious woman rolled onto it, with
the contact-button glued to her back. Lastly, the bio-luminescent tube was
activated and glue-bonded to the roof of the crate, the side brought up and
fastened in place, and the crate was ready for the loader.
That was Tia's job; she brought the
servo-forklift in from the warehouse under her control rather than the AI's.
Alex did not trust the AI to have the same fine control that Tia did. The lift
bore the now-anonymous crate up her ramp, and she stored it with the rest,
piled not two but three high and locked in place. Each crate was precisely
eight inches from the ones next to it, to allow for proper ventilation on four
sides. There were twelve crates in the hold now. They hoped to have twelve more
before nightfall. If all went well.
Thirty minutes for each capture.
They couldn't have done it if not for
Tia's multitasking abilities and all the servos under her control. Right now, a
set of servos were setting up crates all over the compound, near the hiding
places of the Zombies. The Zombies seemed just as frightened of the servos as
they were of Alex in his suit By running the servos all over the compound, they
managed to send every one of the Zombies into hiding. They ran servos around
each hiding place until they were ready to move to that area for darting and
capture. By now, the Zombies were getting hungry, which was all to the good, so
far as Alex and Tia were concerned. One trap was being baited now, and Alex was
on his way to the hidden sniper position above it. Meanwhile, the rest of the
servos were patrolling the compound except in the area of that baited crate,
keeping the Zombies pinned down.
A second hair-raising moment had occurred
at dawn, bringing Alex up out of his bed with a scream of his own. The Zombies
had gathered to greet the rising sun with another chorus of howls, although
this time they seemed more, well, not joyous, but certainly there was no fear
in the Zombie faces.
Once the first servo appeared, and
frightened the Zombies into hiding again, the final key to their capture plan
was in place.
They would catch as many of the Zombies as
possible during the daylight hours. Alex had marked their favorite hiding
places last night, and by now those patrolling servos had those that were not
occupied blocked off. More crates would be left very near those blocked-off
hiding holes. Would they be attractive enough for more of the Zombies to hide
in them? Alex thought so. Tia hoped he was right, for every Zombie cowering in
a crate meant one more they could dart and pack up. One more they would not
have to catch tomorrow.
One less half-hour spent here. If they
could keep up the pace. If the Zombies didn't get harder to catch.
Alex kept up a running dialogue with her,
and she sensed that he was as frightened and lonely as she was, but was
determined not to show it. He revealed a lot, over the course of the day; she
built up a mental picture of a young man who had been just different enough
that while he was mildly popular, or at least, not unpopular, he had few close
friends. The only one who he really spoke about was someone called Jon. The
chess and games player he had mentioned before. He spent a lot of time with
Jon, who had helped him with his lessons when he was younger, so Tia assumed
that Jon must have been older than Alex. Older or not, Jon had been, and still
was, a friend. There was no mistaking the warmth in Alex's voice when he talked
about Jon; no mistaking the pleasure he felt when he talked about the message
of congratulation Jon had sent when he graduated from the academy.
Or the laughter he'd gotten from the set
of 'brawn jokes' Jon had sent when Tia picked Alex as her partner.
Well, Doctor Kenny, Anna, and Lars were my
friends, and still are. Sometimes age doesn't make much of a difference.
"Hey, Alex?" she called. He was
waiting for another of the timid Zombies to give in to hunger. The clock was
running.
"What?"
"What do you call a brawn who can
count past ten?"
"I don't know," he said
good-naturedly. "What?"
"Barefoot'"
He made a rude noise, then sighted and
pulled the trigger. One down, how many more to go?
They had fifty-two Zombies packed in the
hold, and one casualty. One of the Zombies had not survived the darting; Alex
had gone into acute depression over that death, and it had taken Tia more than
an hour to talk him out of it. She didn't dare tell him then what those
contact-buttons revealed; some of their passengers weren't thriving well. The
heart rates were up, probably with fear, and she heard whimpering and wailing
in the hold whenever there was no one else in it but the Zombies. The moment
any of the servos or Alex entered the hold, the captives went utterly silent. Out
of fear, Tia suspected.
The last Zombie was in the hold; the hold
was sealed, and Tia had brought the temperature up to skin-heat The ventilators
were at full-strength. Alex had just entered the main cabin.
And he was reaching for his helmet-release.
"Don't crack your suit," she
snapped. How could she have forgotten to tell him? Had she? Or had she told
him, and he had forgotten?
"What?" he said. Then, "Oh,
decom it. I forgot!"
She restrained herself from saying what
she wanted to. "Doctor Kenny said you have to stay in the suit. Remember?
He thinks that the chance we might have missed something in decontamination is
too much to discount. He doesn't want you to crack your suit until you're at
the base. All right?"
"What if something goes wrong for the
Zombies?" he asked, quietly. "Tia, there isn't enough room in that
hold for me to climb around in the suit."
"We'll worry about that if it
happens," she replied firmly. "Right now, the important thing is for
you to get strapped down, because their best chance is to get to Base as
quickly as possible, and I'm going to leave scorch-marks on the ozone layer
getting there."
He took the unsubtle hint and strapped
himself in; Tia was better than her word, making a tail-standing takeoff and
squirting out of the atmosphere with a blithe disregard for fuel consumption.
The Zombies were going to have to deal with the constant acceleration to hyper
as best they could. At least she knew that they were all sitting or lying down,
because the crates simply weren't big enough for them to stand.
She had been relaying symptoms, observed
and recorded, back to Doctor Kenny and the med staff at Kleinman Base all
along. She had known that they weren't going to get a lot of answers, but every
bit of data was valuable, and getting it there ahead of the victims was a plus.
But now that they were on the way, they
were on their own, without the resources of the abandoned dig or the base they
were en route to. The med staff might have answers, but they likely would not
have the equipment to implement them.
Alex couldn't move while she was
accelerating, but once they made the jump to FTL, he unsnapped his restraints
and headed for the stairs.
"Where are you going?" she
asked, nervously.
"The hold. I'm in my suit. There's
nothing down there that can get me through the suit."
Tia listened to the moans and cries
through her hold pickups; thought about the contact-buttons that showed
fluttering hearts and unsteady breathing. She knew what would happen if he got
down there. "You can't do anything
for them in the crates," she said. "You know that."
He turned toward her column. "What
are you hiding from me?"
"N-nothing," she said. But she
didn't say it firmly enough.
He turned around and flung himself back in
his chair, hands speeding across the keyboard with agility caused by days of
living in the suit. Within seconds he had called up every contact-button and
had them displayed in rows across the screen.
"Tia, what's going on down there?"
he demanded. "They weren't like this before we took off, were they?"
"I think ... " She hesitated.
"Alex, I'm not a doctor!"
"You've got a medical library. You've
been talking to the doctors. What do you think?"
"I think, they aren't taking hyper
well. Some of the data the base sent me on brain-damaged simians suggested that
some kinds of damage did something to the parts of the brain that make you
compensate for, for things that you know should be there, but aren't. Where you
can see a whole letter out of just parts of it, identify things from
split-second glimpses. Kind of like maintaining a mental balance. Anyway, when
that's out of commission, " She felt horribly helpless. "I think for
them it's like being in Singularity."
"For four days?" he shouted,
hurting her sensors. "I'm going down there."
"And do what?" she snapped back.
"What are you going to do for them? They're afraid of you in that
suit!"
"Then I'll, "
"You do, and I'll gas the ship,"
she said instantly. "I mean that, Alex! You put one finger on a release
and I'll gas the whole ship!"
He sat back down, collapsing into his
chair. "What can we do?" he said weakly. "There has to be
something."
"We've got some medical
supplies," she pointed out "A couple of them can be adapted to add to
the air supply down there. Help me, Alex. Help me find something we can do for
them. Without you cracking your suit."
I'll try," he said, unhappily. But
his fingers were already on the keyboard, typing in commands to the med
library, and not sneaking towards his suit-releases. She blanked for a
microsecond with relief.
Then went to work.
Three more times there were signs of
crisis in the hold. Three more times she had to threaten him to keep him from
diving in and trying to save one of the Zombies by risking his own life. They
lost one more, to a combination of anti-viral agent and watered-down sleepygas
that they hoped would act as a tranquilizer rather than an anesthetic. Zombie
number twenty seven might have been allergic to one or the other, although
there was no such indication in his med records; his contact-button gave all
the symptoms of allergic shock before he died.
Alex stopped talking to her for four hours
after that. Twenty-seven had been in the bottom rank, and a shot of adrenaline
would have brought him out, if it had been allergic shock. But his crate was
also buried deep in the stacks, and Alex would have had to peel the whole suit
off to get to him. Which Tia wouldn't permit. They had no way of knowing if
this was really an allergic reaction, or if it was another development of the
Zombie Bug. Twenty-seven had been an older man, showing some of the worst
symptoms.
Although Alex wasn't talking to her, Tia
kept talking, at him, until he finally gave in. Just as well. His silence had
her convinced that he was going to ask for a transfer, and that he hated her,
if a shell-person could be in tears, she was near that state when he finally
answered.
"You're right," was all he said.
"Tia, you were right. There are fifty more people there depending on both
of us, and if I got sick, that's the mobile half of the team out." And he
sighed. But it was enough. Things went back to normal for them. Just in time
for the transition to norm space.
Kleinman Base kept them in orbit, sending
a full decontamination team to fetch Alex as well as the Zombies, leaving Tia
all alone for about an hour. It was a very lonely hour.
But then another decontamination team came
aboard, and when they left again, two days later, there was nothing left of her
original fittings. She had been fogged, gassed, stripped, polished, and
refitted in that time. All that was left, besides the electronic components,
were the ideographs painted on the walls. It still looked the same, however,
because everything was replaced with the same standard-issue, psychologically
approved beige.
Only then was she permitted to de-orbit
and land at Kleinman Base so that the decontamination team could leave.
No sooner had the decontamination team
left, when there was a welcome hail at the airlock.
"Tia! Permission to come aboard,
ma'am!"
She activated her lock so quickly that it
must have flown open in his face, and brought him up in the lift rather than
waiting for him to climb the stairs. He sauntered in sans pressure-suit, gave
her column a jaunty salute, and put down his bags.
"I have good news and better
news," he said, flinging himself into his chair. "Which do you want
to hear first?"
"The
good news," she replied promptly, and did not scold him for putting his
feet up on the console.
"The good news is all personal. I
have been granted a clean bill of health, and so have you. In addition, since
the decontamination team so rudely destroyed my clothing and anything else that
they couldn't be sure of, I have just been having a glorious spending-spree
down there at the Base, using a GS unlimited credit account!"
Tia groaned, picturing more neon-purple,
or worse. "Don't open the bags, or they'll think I've had a radiation
leak."
He mock-pouted. "My dear lady, your
taste is somewhere back in the last decade."
"Never mind my taste," she said.
"What's the better news?"
"Our patients are on their way to
full recovery." At her exclamation, he held up a cautionary hand.
"It's going to take them several months, maybe even a year. Here's the
story, and the reason why they stripped you of everything that could be
considered a fabric. Access your Terran entomology, if you would. Call up
something called a 'dust mite' and another something called a 'sand
flea.'"
Puzzled, she did so, laying the pictures
side by side on the central screen.
"As we guessed, this was indeed a
virus, with an insect vector. The culprit was something like a sand flea,
which, you will note, has a taste for warm-blooded critters. But it was about
the size of a dust mite. The fardling things don't hatch until the temperature
is right, the days are long enough, and there's been a rainstorm. Once they
hatch, the only thing that kills them is really intense insecticide or freezing
cold for several weeks. They live in the dust, like sand fleas. Those
archeologists had been tracking in dust ever since the rainstorm, and since
there'd been no sign of any problems, they hadn't been very careful about their
decontamination protocols. The bugs all hatched within an hour, or so the
entomologists think. They bit everything in sight, since they always wake up
hungry. But, here's the catch, since they were so small, they didn't leave a
bite mark, so there was nothing to show that anyone had been bitten." He
nodded at the screen. "Every one of the little beggars carries the virus.
It's like E. coli, the human bacillus, living in their guts the way it does in
ours."
"I assume that everyone got bitten
about the same time?" she hazarded.
"Exactly," he said. "Which
meant that everyone came down with the virus within hours of each other.
Mostly, purely by coincidence, in their sleep. The virus itself invokes
allergic shock in most people it infects. Which can look a lot like a stroke,
under the right circumstances."
"So we didn't, " She stopped
herself before she went any further, but he finished the statement for her.
"No, we didn't kill anyone. It was
the Zombie Bug. And the best news of all is that the Zombie state is caused by
interference with the production of neurotransmitters. Clean out the virus, and
eventually everyone gets back to normal."
"Oh Alex," she said, and he
interrupted her.
"A little more excellent news. First,
that we get a bonus for this one. And second, my very dear, you saved my
life."
"I did?" she replied,
dumbfounded.
"If I had cracked my suit even once,
the bugs would have gotten in. They were everywhere, in your carpet, the
upholstery; either they got in the first time we cracked the lock, or the
standard decontamination didn't wash them all off the suit or kill them. And I
am one of those seventy-five percent of the population so violently allergic to
them that ... " He let her fill in the rest.
"Alex, I'd rather have you as my
brawn than all the bonuses in the world," she said, after a long pause.
"Good," he said, rising, and
patting her column gently. "I feel the same way."
Before the moment could get maudlin, he
cleared his throat, and continued. "Now the bad news. We're so far behind
on our deliveries that they want us out of here yesterday. So, are you ready to
fly, bright lady?"
She laughed. "Strap on your chair,
hotshot. Let's show 'em how to burn on out of here!"
CHAPTER FIVE
"Well, Tia," Doctor Kenny said
genially, from his vantage point in front of her main screen. "I have to
say that it's a lot more fun talking to you face-to-column than by messages or
double-bounce comlink. Waiting for four hours for the punchline to a joke is a
bit much."
He faced her column, not the screen,
showing the same courtesy Alex always did. Alex was not aboard at the moment;
he was down on the base spending his bonus while Tia was in the refit docks in
orbit But since the Pride of Albion was so close, Doctor Kenny had decided that
he couldn't resist making a visit to his most successful patient.
The new version of his chair had been
perfected, and he was wearing it now. The platform and seat hid the main
power-supply, a shiny exoskeleton covered his legs up to his waist, and Tia
thought he looked like some kind of ancient warrior-king on a throne.
"Most of my classmates don't get the
point of jokes," she said, with a chuckle. "They just don't seem to
have much of a sense of humor. I have to share them with you softies."
"Most of your classmates are as stiff
as AIs," he countered. "Don't worry, they'll loosen up in a decade or
two. That's what Lars tells me, anyway. He says that living around softies will
contaminate even the most rule-bound shell-person. So, how's life with a
partner? As I recall, that was one of your worst worries, that you'd end up
with a double-debt like Moira for playing brawn-basketball."
"I really like Alex, Kenny." she
said slowly. "Especially after the Zombie Bug run. I hate to admit this,
but, I even like him more than you, or Anna, or Lars. And that's what I wanted
to talk to you about when you called the other day. I really trust your
judgment."
He nodded, sagely. "And since I'm not
in the brainbrawn program, I am not bound by regs to report you when you tell
me how much you are attracted to your brawn." He sent an ironic wink
toward her column.
She let herself relax a little.
"Something like that," she admitted. "Kenny, I just don't know
what to think. He's sloppy, he's forgetful, he's a little impulsive. He has the
worst taste in clothes, and I'd rather have him as a partner than anyone else
in the galaxy. I'd rather talk to him than my classmates, and being classmates
is supposed to be the strongest bond a shell-person can have!" Supposed to
be, that was the trick, wasn't it? There was very little in her life that had
happened the way it was supposed to. At this point, she should have been
entering advanced studies under the auspices of the Institute, not working for
it. She should have been a softie, not a shell-person.
But you didn't deal with life by dwelling
on what 'should' have happened. You handled it by making the best out of what
had happened.
"Well, Tia, you spent the first seven
of your most formative years as a softperson," Kenny pointed out gently.
His next words echoed her own earlier thoughts. "You never thought you'd
wind up in a shell, where your classmates never knew anything but their shells
and their teachers. Just like when a chick hatches, what it imprints on is what
it's going to fall in love with."
"I, I didn't say I was in love,"
she stammered, suddenly alarmed.
Kenny held his peace. He simply stared at
her column with a look she remembered all too well. The one that said she
wasn't entirely telling the truth, and he knew it.
"Well, maybe a little," she
admitted, in a very soft voice. "But-it's not like I was another
softie-"
"You can love a friend, you
know," Kenny pointed out. "That's been acknowledged for centuries,
even among stuffy shell-person Counselors. Remember your Greek philosophers.
They felt there were three kinds of love, and only one of them had anything to
do with the body. Eros, filios, and agape."
"Sexual, brotherly, and
religious," she translated, feeling a little better. "Well, okay.
Filios, then."
"Lars translates them as 'love
involving the body', love involving the mind', and 'love involving the soul'.
That's even more apt in your case," Kenny said comfortably. "Both
filios and agape apply here."
"I guess you're right," she
said, feeling sheepish.
"Tia, my dear," Kenny said,
without a hint of patronization, "there is nothing wrong with saying that
you love your brawn, the first words you transmitted to me from your new shell,
in case you've forgotten, were 'Doctor Kenny, I love you.' Frankly, I'm a lot
happier hearing this from you than something 'appropriate'."
"Like what?" she asked
curiously.
"Hmm. Like this." He raised his
voice an octave. "Well, Doctor Kennet," he said primly, "I'm
quite pleased with the performance of my brawn Alexander. I believe we can work
well together. Our teamwork was quite acceptable on this last assignment."
"You sound like Kari, exactly like
Kari." She laughed. "Yes, but imagine trying to have this
conversation with one of my BB Counselors!"
He screwed up his face and flung up his
hands. "Oh, horrors}" he exclaimed, his expression matching the
outrage in his voice. "How could you confess to feeling anything?
AH-One-Oh-Three-Three, I am going to have to report you for instability!"
"Precisely," she replied,
sobering. "Sometimes I think they just want us to be superior sorts of
AIs. Self-aware and self-motivating, but someone get out a scalpel and excise
the feeling part before you pop them in their shells."
"There's a fine line they have to
tread, dear," he told her, just as soberly. "Your classmates lack
something you had, the physical nurturing of a parent. They never touched
anything; they've never known anything but a very artificial environment. They
don't really understand emotions, because they've never been allowed to
experience them or even see them near at hand. I don't think there's any
question in my mind what that means, when they first come out into the real
world of us softies. It means they literally enter a world as foreign and
incomprehensible as any alien culture. In some ways, it would be better if they
all entered professions where they never had to deal with humans
one-on-one."
"Then why?" She picked her words
with care. "Why don't they put adults into shells?"
"Because adults, even children, often
can't adapt to the fact that their bodies don't work anymore, and that, as you
pointed out yourself, they will never have that human touch again." He
sighed. "I've seen plenty of that in my time, too. You are an exception,
my love. But you always have been special. Outstandingly flexible,
adaptable." He sat back in his chair and thought; she didn't interrupt
him. "Tia, there are things that I don't agree with in the way the
shell-person training program is run. But you're out of the training area now
and into the real world. You'll find that even the Counselors can have an
entirely different attitude out here. They're ready to accept what works, not just
what's in the rule books."
She paused a moment before replying.
"Kenny, what do I do if, things creep over into eros? I mean, I'm not
going to crack my column or anything, but ..."
"Helva," Kenny said succinctly.
"Think of Helva. She and her brawn had a romance that still has power over
the rest of known space. If it happens, Tia, let it happen. If it doesn't,
don't mourn over it. Enjoy the fact that your brawn is your very best friend;
that's the way it's supposed to be, after all. I have faith in your sense and
sensibility; I always have. You'll be fine." He coughed a little. "As
it, ah, happens, I have a bit of fellow-feeling for you. Anna and I have gotten
to be something of an item,"
"Really?" She didn't even try to
modulate the glee out of her voice. "It's about time! What did she do, tip
your chair over to slow you down and seduce you on the spot?"
"That's just about word for word what
Lars said," Kenny replied, blushing furiously. "Except that he added
a few other pointed remarks."
"I can imagine." She giggled.
Lars was over two centuries old, and he had seen a great deal in that time.
Every kind of drama a sentient was capable of, in fact, he was the chief
overseer of one of the largest hospital stations in Central Systems. If there
was ever a place for life-and-death drama, a hospital station was it, as
holo-makers across the galaxy knew. From the smallest incident to the gravest,
Lars had witnessed, and sometimes participated in, all of it.
He had been in charge of the Pride of
Albion since it was built. He had been built into it. He would never leave, and
never wanted to. Cynical, brilliant-with an unexpectedly kind heart That was
Lars.
He could be the gentlest person, soft or
shell, that Tia had ever met. Though he never missed an opportunity to jab one
of his softperson colleagues with his sharp wit.
"But Kenny. " She hesitated,
eaten alive with curiosity, but unsure how far she could push, "Kenny, how
nosy can I be about you and Anna?"
"Tia,
I know everything there is to know about you, from your normal heart rate to
the exact composition of the chemicals in your blood when you're under stress.
My doctor knows the same about me. We're both used to being poked and
prodded." he paused "and you are my very dear friend. If there is
something you are really curious about, please, go ahead and ask." His
eyes twinkled. "But don't expect me to tell you about the birds and the
bees."
"You're, when we first met, you
called yourself a 'medico on the half-shell'. You're half machine. How does
Anna feel about that?" If she could have blushed, she would have, she felt
so intrusive.
He didn't seem to feel that she was
intruding, however. "Hmm, good questions. The answer, my dear, is one that
I am afraid can't apply to you. I'm only 'half machine' when I'm strapped in.
When I'm not in my chair, I'm, an imperfect, but entirely human creature.
"He smiled.
"So it's like comparing rocks to
bonbons." That was something she hadn't anticipated. "Or water to
sheet metal."
"Good comparisons. You're not the
first to ask these questions, by the way. So don't think you're unique in being
curious." He stretched and grinned. "Anna and I are doing a lot of,
hmm, personal-relations counseling of my other handicapped patients."
"At least I'm not some kind of,
would-be voyeur." That was nice to know.
"You, however, were and are in an
entirely different boat than my other patients," he warned. "What
applies to them does not apply to you." He shook his head. "I'm going
to give this to you straight and without softening. You have no working nerves,
sensory or motor control, below your neck. And from what I've seen, there was
some further damage to the autonomic system as well before we stabilized you.
What with the mods they made to you when
you went into the shell, you're dependent on life-support now. I don't think
you could survive outside your shell. I know you wouldn't be happy."
"Oh. All right" In a way, she
was both disappointed and relieved. Relieved that it was one more factor she
wouldn't have to consider in her ongoing partnership. Disappointed, well, not
that much. She hadn't really thought there would ever be any way to reverse the
path that had brought her into her column.
"I did bring some records of the things
I've been working on to show you,devices that are helping out some of our
involuntary amputees. I thought you'd be interested, just on an academic
basis." He slipped a datahedron into her reader, and she brought up the
display on her central screen. "This young lady was a professional dancer.
She was trapped under several tons of masonry after an earthquake. By the time
medics got to her, the entire limb had suffered celldeath. There was no saving
it"
The video portion of the clip showed a
lovely young lady in leotards and tights trying out what looked like a normal
leg, except that it moved very stiffly.
"The problem with the artificial
limbs we've been giving amputees is that while we've fixed most of the weight
and movement problems, they're still completely useless for someone like a
dancer, who relies on sensory input to tell her whether or nor her foot is in
the right position." Kenny smiled fondly as he watched the girl on the
screen. "That's Lila within a few minutes of having the leg installed. At
the hip, may I add. The next clip will be three weeks later, then three
months."
The screen flickered as Tia found her
attention absorbed by the girl. Now she was working out in what were obviously
ballet exercises, and doing very well, so for as Tia could tell. Then the
screen flickered a third time.
And the girl was on stage, partnered in
some kind of classic ballet piece, and if Tia had not known her left leg was
cyborged, she would never have guessed it
"Here's a speed-keyer who lost his
hand," Kenny continued, but he turned towards the column. "Between my
work and Moto-Prosthetics, we've beaten the sensory input problem, Tia,"
he said proudly. "Lila tells me she's changed the choreography so that she
can perform some of the more difficult moves on her left foot instead of her
right. The left won't get toe blisters or broken foot-bones, the tendons won't
tear, the knee won't give, and the ankle has no chance of buckling. The only
difference that she can see between the cyborged leg and the natural one is
that the cyborg is a little heavier, not enough to make any difference to her
if she can change the choreography, and it's a lot sturdier."
A few more of Doctor Kenny*s patients came
up on the screen, but neither of them were paying attention,
"There have to be some
problems," Tia said, finally. "I mean, nothing is perfect"
"We don't have full duplication of
sensory input In Lila's case, we have it in the entire foot and the ankle and
knee-joints, and we've pretty much ignored the stretches of leg in between.
Weight is the other problem. The more sensory nerves we duplicate, the higher
the weight A ten-kilo hand is going to give someone a lot of trouble, for
instance." Kenny shifted a little in his chair. "But all of this is
coming straight out of what's going on in the Lab Schools, Tia! And most of it
is from the brainship program. The same thing that gives you sensory input from
the ships' systems are what became the sensory linkups for those artificial
limbs."
"That's wonderful!" Tia said,
very pleased for him. "You're quite something, Doctor Kennet!"
"Oh, there's a lot more to be
done," he said modestly. "I haven't heard any of Lila's fellow
dancers clamoring to have double-amputations and new legs installed. She has
her problems, and there's some pain involved, even after healing is completed.
In a way, it's a good thing for us that our first leg installation was for a
dancer, because Lila was used to living with pain, all dancers are. And it's
very expensive; she was lucky, because the insurance company involved judged
that compensating her for a lost, very lucrative, career was more expensive
than an artificial limb. Although, given the life expectancy of you
shell-persons, and compare it to those of us still in our designed-by-genetics
containers, well, I can foresee a day when we'll all have our brains tucked
into minishells when the old envelope starts to decay, and instead of deciding
what clothes we want to wear, we have to decide what body to put on."
"Oh, I don't think it'll come to
that, really," Tla said decisively. "For one thing, if it's expensive
for one limb, a whole body would be impossible."
"It is that," Kenny agreed.
"But to tell you the truth, right now the problem besides expense isn't technical.
We could put the fully-functioning body together, and do it today. It's
actually easier to do that than just one limb. Oh, by that, I mean one with
full sensory inputs."
He didn't say anything, but he winked, and
grinned wickedly. "And by 'full sensory input', I mean exactly what you're
thinking, you naughty young lady."
"Me?" she said, with completely
feigned indignation. "I have no idea what you're talking about! 1 am as
innocent as, as, "
"As I am," Kenny said. "You
were the one who was asking about me and Anna."
She remained silent, pretending dignity.
He continued to grin, and she knew he wasn't fooled in the least.
"Well, anyway, the problem is having
a life-support system for a naked brain." He shrugged. "Can't quite
manage that, putting a whole body into a life-support shell is still the only
way to deal with trauma like yours. And we can't fit that into a human-sized
body."
"Oh, you could make us great big
bodies and create a whole race of giants," she joked. "That should
actually be easier, from what you've told me."
He cast his eyes upwards, surprising her
somewhat with his sudden flare of exasperation. "Believe it or not,
there's a fellow who wants to do something like that, for the holos. He wants
to create giant full-sensory bodies of, oh, dinosaurs, monsters, whatever. Hire
a shell-person actor, and use the whole setup in his epics."
"No!" she exclaimed.
"I swear," he said, placing his
hand over his heart. "True, every word of it. And believe it or not, he
has the money. Holostars make more than you do, my love. I think the next time
some brain wants to retire from active ship-service, especially one that's
bought out his contract, this fellow just might tempt them into the
holos."
"Amazing. Virtual headshaking
here." She thought for a moment. "What would the chances be of
creating a life-sized body with some kind of brainstem link to the shell?"
"Like a radio?" he hazarded.
"Hmm. Good question. A real problem; there is a lot of information carried
by these nerves. You'd need separated channels for everything, but, well, the
effective range would be very, very short, otherwise you run the risk of signal
breakup. That turned out to be the problem with this rig," he finished,
nodding at his armored legs." It has to stay in the same room with me,
otherwise, Greek frieze time."
She laughed.
"Anyway, the whole rig would probably
cost as much as a brainship, so it's not exactly practical," he concluded.
"Not even for me, and they pay me very well."
Not exactly practical for me, either, she
thought, and dismissed the whole idea. Practical, for a brainship, meant buying
out her contract. After all, if she wanted to be free to join the Institute as
an active researcher and go chasing the EsKays on her own, she was going to
have to buy herself out.
"Well, money, that's the other reason
I wanted to talk to you," she said.
"And the bane of the BB program rears
its ugly head," he intoned, and grinned. "Oh, they're going to hate
you. You're just like all the rest of the really good ones. You want to buy
that contract out, don't you?"
"I don't think there are too many CS
ships that don't really plan on doing it someday," she countered.
"We're people, not AI drones. We like to have a choice of where we go. So,
do you have any ideas of how I can start raising my credit balance? Moira has
kind of cornered the market on spotting possible new sites from orbit and
entry."
"Gave her the idea, did you?"
Kenny shook his finger at you. "Don't you know you should never give ideas
away to the competition?"
"She wasn't competition, then,"
Tia pointed out
"Well, you have a modest bonus from
the Zombie Bug run, right?" he said, scratching his eyebrow as he thought
"What about investing it?"
"In what?" she countered.
"I don't know anything about investing money."
"Operating on my own modest success
in putting my own money into Moto-Prosthetics, and not in paper stock, my dear,
but in shares in the company itself, if you use your own knowledge to choose
where to invest, the results can be substantial." He tapped his fingers on
the side of his chair. "It's not insider trading, if you're thinking that
I would consider putting your money where your interest and expertise is."
"Virtual headshaking," she
replied. "I have no idea what you're getting at What do I know?"
"Look, "he said, leaning
forward, his eyes bright with intensity. "The one thing an archeologist is
always cognizant of is the long term, especially long-term patterns. And the
one thing that most often trips up the sophonts of any race is that they are
not thinking in the long term. Look for what a friend of mine called 'disasters
waiting to happen', and invest in the companies that will be helping to recover
from that disaster."
"Well, that sounds good in
theory," she said doubtfully. "But in practice? How am I going to
find situations like that? I'm only one person, and I've already got a
job."
"Tia, you have the computing power of
an entire brainship at your disposal," Kenny told her firmly. "And
you have access to Institute records for every inhabited planet that also holds
ruins. Use both. Look for problems the ancients had, then see if they'll happen
again at current colonies."
Well, nothing sprung immediately to mind,
but it would while away some time. And Kenny had a point
He glanced at his wrist-chrono.
"Well, my shuttle should be hailing you right about-"
"Now," she finished. "It's
about to dock, four slots from me, to your right as you exit the lock. Thanks
for coming, Kenny."
He directed his Chair to the lift.
"Thank you for having me, Tia. As always, it's been a pleasure."
He turned to look back over his shoulder
as he reached the lift, and grinned. "By the way, don't bother to check my
med records. Anna has never complained about my performance yet."
If she could have blushed ...
While Alex spent his time with some of his
old classmates, presumably living up to what he had told her was the class
motto, 'The Party Never Ends', she dove headlong into Institute records. The
Institute gave her free, no-charge access to anything she wanted; perhaps
because they counted her as a kind of member-researcher, perhaps because of her
part in the Zombie Bug rescue, or perhaps because brainship access was one hole
in their access system they'd never plugged because they never thought of it.
Normally they charged for every record downloaded from the main archives. It
didn't matter to her; there was plenty there to look into.
But first, her own peculiar quest She
caught up on everything having to do with the old EsKay investigations in
fairly short order. There wasn't much of anything new from existing digs, so
she checked to see what Pota and Braddon were doing, then went on to postings
on brand new EsKay finds.
It was there that she came across
something quite by accident.
It was actually rather amusing, when it
came down to it. It was the report from a Class Two dig, from the group taking
over a site that had initially gotten a lot of excitement from the Exploration
team. They had reported it as an EsKay site. The First ever to be uncovered on
a non-Marslike world. And an EsKay Evaluation team was sent post-haste.
It turned out to be a case of
misidentification; not EsKays at all, but another race entirely, the Megalt
Tresepts, one of nowhere near as much interest to the Institute. Virtually
everything was known about the Megalts; they had sent out FTL ships in the far
distant past, and some of the colonies they had established still existed. Some
of their artifacts looked like EsKay work, and if there was no notion that the
Megalts had been in the neighborhood, it was fairly easy to make the mistake.
The world was surprisingly Terran. Which
would have made an EsKay site all the more valuable if it really had been
there.
Although it was not an EsKay site after
all, Tia continued reading the report out of curiosity. Largo Draconis was an
odd little planet, with an eccentric orbit that made for one really miserable
decade every century or so. Other than that, it was quite habitable; really
pleasant, in fact, with two growing seasons in every year. The current
settlements were ready for that dismal decade, according to the report, but
also according to the report, the Megalts had been, too.
Yet the Megalt sites had been abandoned,
completely. Not typical of the logical, systematic race.
During the first year of that wretched ten
years, every Megalt settlement on the planet (all two of them) had been
abandoned. And not because they ran out of food, either, which was her first
thought. They had stockpiled more than enough to carry them through, even with
no harvests at all.
No; not because the settlers ran out of
food, but because the native rodents did.
Curious about what had happened, the
Evaluation team had found the settlement records, which outlined the entire
story, inscribed on the thin metal sheets the Megalts used for their permanent
hardcopy storage. The settlements had been abandoned so quickly that no one had
bothered to find and take them.
It was a good thing the Megalts used metal
for their records; nothing else would have survived what had happened to the
settlement The rodents had swarmed both colonies; a trickle at first, hardly
more than a nuisance. But then, out of nowhere, a swarm, a flood, a torrent of
rodents had poured down over the settlement. They overwhelmed the protections
in place, electric fences, and literally ate their way into the buildings.
Nothing had stopped them. Killing them in hordes had done nothing. They merely
ate the bodies and kept moving in.
The evidence all pointed to a periodic
change in the rodents' digestive systems that enabled them to eat anything with
a cellulose or petrochemical base, up to and including plastic.
The report concluded with the Evaluation
team's final words on the attitude of the current government of Largo Draconis,
in a personal note that had been attached to the report.
"Fred: I am just glad we are getting
out of here. We told the Settlement Governor about all this, and they're
ignoring us. They think that just because I'm an archeologist, I have my nose
so firmly in the past that I have no grasp on the present. They told me in the
governor's office that their ward-off fields should be more than enough to hold
off the rats. Not a chance. We're talking about a feeding frenzy here, furry
locusts, and I don't think they're going to give a ward-off field a second
thought I'm telling you, Fred, these people are going to be in trouble in a
year. The Megalts threw in the towel, and they weren't anywhere near as
backward as the governor thinks they were. Maybe this wonder ward-off field of
his will keep the rats off, but I don't think so. And I don't want to find out
that he was wrong by waking up under a blanket of rats. They didn't eat the
Megalts, but they ate their clothes. I don't fancy piling into a shuttle with
my derriere bared to the gentle breezes, which by that time should be, oh,
around fifty kilometers per hour, and minus twenty Celsius. So I may even beat
this report home. Keep the beer cold and die fireplace warm for me."
Well. If ever there was something that
matched what Doctor Kenny had suggested, this was it
Just to be certain, she checked several
other sources, not for the veracity of the report, but to see just how prepared
the colony was for the 'rats' as well as the worsening weather.
Everything she found bore out what the
unknown writer had told 'Fred'. Ward-off generators were standard issue, not
heavy-duty. Warehouses had metal doors, and many had plastic or wooden siding.
Homes were made of native stone and well-insulated against the cold, but had
plastic or wooden doors. Food had been stockpiled, but what would the colonists
do when the 'rats' ate through the warehouse sides to get at the stockpiled
rations? The colony had been depending on food grown on-planet for the past
twenty years. There were no provisions for importing food and no synthesizers
of any real size. They had protein farms, but what if the 'rats' got into them
and ate the yeast-stock along with everything else? What would they do when the
stockpiled food was gone? Or if they managed to save the food, what would they
do when, as Fred had suggested, the 'rats' ate through their doors and made a
meal off their clothing, their blankets, their furniture.
So much for official records. Was there
anyone on-planet that could pull these people out of their disaster?
It took a full day of searching
business-directories before she had her answer. An on-planet manufacturer of
specialized protection equipment, including heavy duty ward-off and
protection-field generators, could provide protection once the planetary
governor admitted there was a problem. Governmental resources might not be able
to pay for all the protection the colonists needed, but over eighty percent of
the inhabitants carried hazard insurance, and the insurance companies should
pay for protection for their clients.
That was half of the answer. The other
half?
Another firm with multi-planet outlets,
and a load of old-fashioned synthesizers in a warehouse within shipping
distance. They didn't produce much in the way of variety, but load them up with
raw materials, carbon from coal or oil, minerals, protein from yeast and fiber
from other vat-grown products, and you had something basic to eat, or wear, or
make into furnishings.
She set her scheme in motion. But not
through Beta, her supervisor, but through Lars and his.
Before Alex returned, she had made all the
arrangements; and she had included carefully worded letters to the two
companies she had chosen, plus all of the publicly available records. She tried
to convey a warning without sounding like some kind of crazed hysteric.
Of course, the fact that she was investing
in their firms should at least convey the idea that she was an hysteric with
money.
If they had any sense, they would be able
to put the story together for themselves from the records, and they would
believe her. Hopefully, they would be ready.
She transmitted the last of the messages,
just as Alex arrived at her airlock.
"Permission to come aboard,
ma'am," he called cheerfully, as she opened the lock for him. He ran up
the stairs two at a time, and when he burst into the main cabin, she told
herself that fashions would surely change, soon. He was dressed in a chrome
yellow tunic with neon-red piping, and neon-red trousers with chrome-yellow
piping. Both bright enough to hurt the eyes and dazzle the pickups, and she was
grateful she could turn down the intensity of her visual receptors.
"How was your reunion?" she
asked, once his clothes weren't blinding her.
"There weren't more than a half dozen
of them," he told her, continuing through the hall and down to his own
cabin. He pitched both his bags on his bed, and returned. "We just missed
Chria by a hair. But we had a good time."
"I'm surprised you didn't come back
with a hangover." He widened his eyes with surprise. "Not me! I'm the
Academy designated driver, or at any rate, I make sure people get on the right
shuttles. Never touch the stuff, myself, or almost never. Clogs the
synapses." Tia felt irrationally pleased to hear that "So, did you
miss me? I missed you. Did you have enough to do?" He flung himself down
in his chair and put his feet up on the console." I hope you didn't spend
all your time reading Institute papers."
"Oh," she replied lightly,
"I found a few other things to occupy my time."
The comlink was live, and Alex was on his
very best behavior, including a fresh, and only marginally rumpled, uniform. He
sat quietly in his chair, the very picture of a sober Academy graduate and
responsible CS brawn.
Tia reflected that it was just as well
she'd bullied him into that uniform. The transmission was shared by Professor Barton
Glasov y Verona-Gras, head of the Institute, and a gray-haired, dark-tunicked
man the professor identified as Central Systems Sector Administrator Joshua
Elliot-Rosen y Sinor. Very high in administration. And just now, very concerned
about something, although he hid his concern well. Alex had snapped to a kind
of seated 'attention' the moment his face appeared on the screen.
"Alexander, Hypatia, we're going to
be sending you a long file of stills and holos," Professor Barton began.
"But for now, the object you see here on my desk is representative of our
problem."
The 'object' in question was a perfectly
lovely little vase. The style was distinctive; skewed, but with a very sensuous
sinuousity, as if someone had fused Art Nouveau with Salvador Dali. It seemed,
as nearly as Tia could tell from the transmission, to be made of multiple
layers of opalescent glass or ceramic.
It also had the patina that only something
that has been buried for a very long time achieves. Or something with a chemically
faked patina. But would the professor himself have called them if all he was
worried about were fake antiquities? Not likely.
The only problem with the vase, if it was
a genuine artifact, was that it did not match the style of any known artifact
in any of Tia's files.
"You know that smuggling and
site-robbing has always been a big problem for us," Professor Barton
continued. "It's very frustrating to come on a site and find it's already
been looted. But this, this is doubly frustrating. Because, as I'm sure Hypatia
has already realized, the style of this piece does not match that of any known
civilization."
"A few weeks ago, hundreds of
artifacts in this style flooded the black market," Sinor said smoothly.
"Analysis showed them to be quite ancient, this piece for instance was
made some time when Ramses the Second was Pharaoh."
The professor was not wringing his hands,
but his distress was fairly obvious. "There are hundreds of these
objects!" he blurted. "Everything from cups to votive offerings, from
jewelry to statuary! We not only don't know where they've come from, but we
don't even know any thing about the people that made them!"
"Most of the objects are not as
well-preserved as this one, of course," Sinor continued, sitting with that
incredible stillness that only a professional politician or actor achieves.
"But besides being incredibly valuable, and not incidentally, funneling
money into the criminal subculture, there is something else rather distressing
associated with these artifacts."
Tia knew what it had to be as soon as the
words were out of the man's mouth. Plague.
"Plague," he said solemnly.
"So far, this has not been a fatal disease, at least, not to the folk who
bought these little trinkets. They have private physicians and iii-house
medicomps, obviously."
High families, Tia surmised. So the High
Families are mixed up in this.
"The objects really aren't dangerous,
once they've been through proper decontam procedures," the professor added
hastily. "But whoever is digging these things up isn't even bothering with
a run under the U V gun. He's just cleaning them up."
Tia winced inwardly, and saw Alex wince.
To tell an archeologist that a smuggler had 'cleaned up' an artifact, was like
telling a coin collector that his nephew Joey had gotten out the wire brush and
shined up his collection for him.
"Cleaning them up, putting them in
cases, and selling them." Professor Barton sighed. "I have no idea
why his helpers aren't coming down with this. Maybe they're immune. Whatever
the reason, the receivers of these pieces are, they are not happy about it, and
they want something done."
His expression told Tia more than his
words did. The High Families who had bought artifacts, they must have known
were smuggled and possibly stolen, and some members of their circle, had gotten
sick. And because the Institute was the official organization in charge of
ancient relics, they expected the Institute to find the smuggler and deal with
him.
Not that any of them would tell us how and
where they found out about these treasures. Nor would they ever admit that they
knew they were gray market, if not black. And if they'd stop buying smuggled
artifacts, they-wouldn't get sick.
But none of that meant anything when it came
to the High Families, of course. They were too wealthy and too powerful to ever
find themselves dealing with such simple concepts as cause and effect.
Hmm. Except once in a great while, like
now, when it rises up and bites them.
"In spite of the threat of disease
associated with these pieces, they are still in very high demand," Sinor
said.
Because someone in the High families
spread the word that you'd better run the thing through decontamination after
you buy it, so you can have your pretty without penalty. But there was
something wrong with this story. Something that didn't quite fit. But she
couldn't figure out what it was.
Meanwhile, the transmission continued.
"But I don't have to tell either of you how dangerous it is to have these
things out there," Professor Barton added. "It's fairly obvious that
the smugglers are not taking even the barest of precautions with the artifacts.
It becomes increasingly likely with every piece sold at a high price that
someone will steal one, or find out where the source is, or take one to a
disadvantaged area to sell it"
A slum, you mean, Professor. Was he
putting too much emphasis on this?
Tia decided to show that both she and her
brawn were paying attention. "I can see what could happen then,
gentlemen," she countered. "Disease spreads very quickly in areas of
that sort, and what might not be particularly dangerous for someone of means
will kill the impoverished."
And then we have a full-scale epidemic and
a panic on our hands. But he had to know how she felt about this. He knew who
she was. There weren't too many 'Hypatias' in the world, and he had been the
immediate boss of Pota and Braddon's superior. He had to know the story. He was
probably trading on it.
"Precisely, Hypatia," said
Sinor, in an eerie 'answer' to her own thoughts.
"I hope you aren't planning on using
us as smuggler hunters," Alex replied, slowly. "I couldn't pass as
High Family in a million years, so I couldn't be in on the purchasing end. And
we aren't allowed to be armed. I know I don't want to take on the smuggling end
without a locker full of artillery! In other words, gentlemen, 'we ain't
stupid, we ain't expendable, and we ain't goin'." But this was all
sounding a little too pat, a little too contrived. If Sinor told them that they
weren't expected to catch the smugglers themselves ...
"No." Sinor said soothingly, and
a little too hastily. "No, we have some teams in the Enforcement Division
going at both ends. However, it is entirely possible that the source for these
artifacts is someone, or rather, several someones, working on Exploration or
Evaluation teams. Since the artifacts showed up in this sector first, it is
logical to assume that they originate here."
Too smooth. Too pat. This is just a story.
But why?
"So you want us to keep our eyes
peeled when we make our deliveries," Alex filled in.
"You two are uniquely suited,"
Professor Barton pointed out "You both have backgrounds in archeology.
Hypatia, you know how digs work, intimately. Once you know how to identify
these artifacts, if you see even a hint of them, shards, perhaps, or broken
bits of jewelry, you'll know what they are and where they came from."
"We can do that," Tia replied,
carefully. "We can be a little snoopy, I think, without arousing any
suspicions."
"Good. That was what we needed,"
Professor Barton sounded very relieved. "I suppose I don't need to add
that there is a bonus in this for you."
"I can live with a bonus," Alex
responded cheerfully.
The two VIPs signed off, and Alex turned
immediately to Tla.
"Did that sound as phony to you as it
did to me?" he demanded.
"Well, the objects they want are
certainly real enough," she replied, playing back her internal recording
of the conversation and analyzing every word. "But whether they really are
artifacts is another question. There's definitely more going on than they're
willing to tell us."
Alex leaned back in his chair and put his
hands behind his head. "Are these things financing espionage or insurrection?"
he hazarded. "Or buying weapons?"
She stopped her recording; there was
something about the artifact that bothered her. She enhanced the picture and
threw it up on the screen.
"What's wrong with this?" she
demanded. Alex leaned forward to have a look.
"Is that a hole bored in the
base?" he said. "Bored in, then patched over?"
"Could be." She enhanced her
picture again. "Does it seem to you that the base is awfully thick?"
"Could be," he replied.
"You know ... we have only their word that these are 'alien artifacts'.
What if they are nothing of the sort?"
"They wouldn't be worth much of
anything then, unless ... "
The answer came to her so quickly that it
brought its own fireworks display with it. "Got it!" she exclaimed,
and quickly accessed the Institute library for a certain old news program.
She remembered this one from her own
childhood; both for the fact that it had been an ingenious way to smuggle and
because Pota had caught her watching it, realized what the story was about, and
shut it off. But not before Tia had gotten the gist of it.
One of the Institute archeologists had
been subverted by a major drug-smuggler who wanted a way to get his supply to
Central. In another case where there were small digs on the same planets as
colonies, the archeologist had himself become addicted to the mood altering
drug called 'Paradise', and had made himself open to blackmail.
The blackmail came from the
supplier-producer himself. Out there in the fringe, it was easy enough to hide
his smuggled supplies in ordinary shipments of agri-goods, but the nearer one
got to civilization, the harder it became. Publicly available transport was out
of the question.
But there were other shipments going
straight to the heart of civilization. Shipments that were so innocent, and so
fragile, they never saw a custom's inspector. Such as ... Institute artifacts.
So the drug-dealer molded his product in
the likeness of pottery shards. And the archeologist on-site made sure they got
packed like any other artifacts and shipped, although they were never
cataloged. Once the shipment arrived at the Institute, a worker inside the
receiving area would set the crates with particular marks aside and leave them
on the loading dock overnight. They would, of course, disappear, but since they
had never been cataloged, they were never missed.
The only reason the archeologist in
question had been caught was because an overzealous graduate student had
cataloged the phony shards, and when they came up missing at the Institute, the
police became involved.
Tia ran the news clip for Alex, who
watched it attentively. "What do you think?" she asked, when it was
over.
"I think our friend in the dull
blue-striped tunic had a strangely fit look about him. The look that says
'police' to yours truly." Alex nodded. "I think you're right. I think
someone is trying the artifact-switch again, except that this time they're
coming in on the black market."
She did a quick access to the nets, and
began searching for a politician named Sinor. She found one, but he did not
match the man she had seen on the transmission.
"The trick is probably that if
someone sees a crate full of smuggled glassware, they don't think of
drugs." Tia felt very smug over her deduction, and her identification of
Sinor as a ringer. Of course, there was no way of knowing if her guess was
right or wrong, but still. "The
worst that is likely to happen to an artifact-smuggler is a fine and a slap on
the wrist. They aren't taken very seriously, even though there's serious money
in it and the smugglers may have killed to get them."
"That's assuming inspectors even find
the artifacts. So where were we supposed to fit in to all this?" Alex ran
his hand through his hair. "Do they think we're going to find this
guy?"
"1 think that they think he's working
with one of the small-dig people again. By the way, you were right about Sinor.
Or rather, the Sinor we saw is not the one of record." Another thought
occurred to her. "You know, their story may very well have been genuine.
There's not a lot of room in jewelry to hide drugs. Whoever is doing this may
have started by smuggling out the artifacts, freelance, got tangled up with
some crime syndicate, and now he's been forced to deal the fake, drug-carrying
artifacts along with the real ones."
"Now that makes sense!" Alex
exclaimed. "That fits all the parameters. Do we still play along?"
"Ye-es," she replied slowly.
"But in a severely limited sense, I'd say. We aren't trained in law
enforcement, and we don't carry weapons. If we see something, we report it, and
get the heck out"
"Sounds good to me, lady," Alex
replied, with patent relief. "I'm not a coward, but I'm not stupid. And I
didn't sign up with the BB program to get ventilated by some low-down punk. If
I wanted to do that, all I have to do is stroll into certain neighborhoods and
flash some glitter. Tia, why all that nonsense about plague?"
"Partially to hook us in, I
think," she said, after a moment. "They know we were the team that
got the Zombie Bug, we'll feel strongly about plague. And partially to keep us
from touching these objects. If we don't mess with them, we won't know about
the drug link."
He made a sound of disgust. "You'd
think they'd have trusted us with the real story. I'm half tempted to blow this
whole thing off, just because they didn't. I won't, " he added hastily,
"but I'm tempted."
He began warming up the boards,
preparatory to taking off. Tia opened a channel to traffic control, but while
she did so, she was silently wondering if there was even more to the story than
she had guessed.
There was something bothering Alex, and as
they continued on their rounds, he tried to put his finger on it. It was only
after he replayed the recorded transmission of Professor Barton and the bogus
'Sinor' that he realized what it was.
Tia had known that Professor Barton was
genuine, without checking. And Barton had said things that indicated he knew
who she was.
Alex had never really wondered about her
background. He'd always assumed that she was just like every other shell-person
he'd ever known; popped into her shell at birth, because of fatal
birth-defects, with parents who rather would forget she had ever been born. Who
were just as pleased that she was someone else's problem.
What was it that the professor had said,
though? 'You both have backgrounds in archeology. Hypatia, you know how digs
work, intimately.'
From everything that Jon Chernov had said,
the shell-person program was so learning-intensive that there was no time for
hobbies. A shell-person only acquired hobbies after he got out in the real
world and had leisure time for them. The Lab Schools' program was so intensive
that even play was scheduled and games were choreographed, planned, and taught
just like classes. There was no room to foster an 'interest' in archeology. And
it was not on the normal course curriculum.
The only way you knew how digs worked
'intimately' was to work on them yourself. Or be the child of archeologists who
kept you on-site with them. That was when it hit him; something Tia had said.
The Cades met while they were recovering from Henderson's Chorea. That kind of
information would not be the sort of thing someone who made a hobby of
archeology would know. Details of archeologists' lives were of interest only to
people who knew them.
Under cover of running a search on EsKay
digs, he pulled up the information on the personnel, backtracking to the last
EsKay dig the Cades had been on.
And there it was. C-121: Active personnel,
Braddon Maartens-Cade, Pota Andropolous-Cade. Dependent, Hypatia Cade, age
seven.
Hypatia Cade; evacuated to
station-hospital Pride of Albion by MedService AI-drone. Victim of some unknown
disease. Braddon and Pota put in isolation. Hypatia never heard from again.
Perhaps she died, but that wasn't likely.
There could not be very many girls named
'Hypatia' in the galaxy. The odds of two of them being evacuated to the same
hospital-ship were tiny; the odds that his Tia's best friend, Doctor Kennet
Uhua-Sorg, who was chief of Neurology and Neurosurgery, would have been the
same doctor in charge of that other Tia's case were so minuscule he wasn't
prepared to try to calculate them.
He replaced the file and logged off the
boards feeling as if he had just been hit in the back of the head with a board.
Oh, spirits of space. When she took me as brawn, I made a toast to our
partnership "may it be as long and fruitful as the Cades'." Oh, decom
it. I'm surprised she didn't bounce me out the airlock right then and there.
"Tia," he said carefully into
the silent cabin. "I, uh, I'd like to apologize-"
"So, you found me out, did you?"
To his surprise and profound relief, she sounded amused. "Yes, I'm Hypatia
Cade. I'd thought about telling you, but then I was afraid you'd feel really
badly about verbally falling over your own feet You do realize that you can't
access any data without my being aware of it, don't you?"
"Well, heck, and I thought I was
being so sneaky." He managed a weak grin. "I thought I'd really been
covering my tracks well enough that you wouldn't notice. I, uh, really am sorry
if I made you feel badly."
"Oh, Alex, it would only have been
tacky and tasteless or stupid and insensitive, if you'd done it on
purpose." She laughed; he'd come to like her laugh, it was a deep, rich
one. He'd often told her BB jokes just so he could hear it. "So it's
neither; it's just one of those things. I assume that you're curious now. What
is it you want to know about me?"
"Everything!" he blurted, and
then flushed with embarrassment. "Unless you'd rather not talk about
it."
"Alex, I don't mind at all! I had a
very happy childhood, and frankly, it will be a lot more comfortable being able
to talk about Mum and Dad, or with Mum and Dad, without trying to hide them
from you." She giggled this time, instead of laughing. "Sometimes I
felt as if I was trying to hide a secret lover, only in reverse!"
"So you still stay in contact with
your parents?" Alex was fascinated; this went against everything he'd been
told about shell-persons, either at the academy or directly from Jon Chernov.
Shell-persons didn't have families; their supervisors and their classmates were
their families.
"Of
course I still stay in contact with them. I'm their biggest fan. If
archeologists can have fans." Her center screen came up; on it was a shot
of Pota and Braddon, proudly displaying an ornate set of body-armor.
"Here's something from their latest letter; they just uncovered the armory,
and what they found is going to set the scholastic world on its collective
ears. That's iron plates you see on Bronze Age armor."
"No." He stared in fascination,
and not just at the armor. At Pota and Braddon, smiling and waving like any
other parents for their child. Pota pointed to something on the armor, while
Braddon's mouth moved, explaining something. Tia had the sound off, and the
definition wasn't good enough for Alex to lip-read.
"That's not my real interest
though," she continued. "I was telling you the truth. I'm after the
EsKay homeworld, but I want it because I want to find the bug that got
me." The two side-screens came up, both with older pictures. "Before
you ask, dear, there I am. The one on the right is my seventh birthday party,
the one on the left, as you can see, is a picture of me with Theodore Bear and
Moira's brawn Tomas. Ted was a present from both of them." She paused for
a moment "just checking. Yes, that's the last good picture that was taken
of me. The rest are all in the hospital, and I wouldn't inflict them on anyone
but a neurologist."
Alex studied the two pictures, each of
which showed the same bright-eyed, elfin child. An incredibly pretty child,
dark-haired, blue-eyed, with a thin, delicate fece and a smile that wouldn't
stop. "How did you get into the shell-person program?" he asked.
"I thought they didn't take anyone after the age of one!"
"They didn't, until me," she
replied. "That was Doctor Kenny's doing, and Lars, the systems manager for
the hospital; they were convinced that I was flexible enough to make the
transition, since I was intelligent enough to understand what had happened to
me, and what it meant Which was," she added,"complete life-support.
No mobility."
He shuddered. "I can see why you
wouldn't want that to happen to anyone else ever again."
"Precisely." She blanked the
screens before he had a chance to study the pictures further. "After I
turned out so well, Lab Schools started considering older children on a
case-by-case basis. They've taken three, so far, but none as old as me."
"Well, my lady, as remarkable as you
are now, you must have been just as remarkable a child," he told her,
meaning every word.
"Flatterer," she said, but she
sounded pleased.
"I mean it," he insisted.
"I interviewed with two other ships, you know. None of them had your
personality. I was looking for someone like Jon Chernov; they were more like AI
drones."
"You've mentioned Jon before,"
she replied, puzzled. "Just what does he have to do with us?"
"Didn't I tell you?" he blurted,
then hit himself in the forehead with his hand. "Decom it, I didn't! Jon's
a shell-person too; he was the supervisor and systems manager on the research
station where my parents worked!"
"Oh!" she exclaimed. "So
that's why, "
"Why what?"
"Why you treat me like you do, facing
my column, asking permission to come aboard, asking me what kind of music I
want in the main cabin."
"Oh, you bet!" he said with a
grin. "Jon made darn sure I had good shell-soft manners before he let me
go off to the Academy. He'd have verbally blistered my hide if I ever forgot
you're here, and that you're the part of the team that can't go off to her own
cabin to be alone."
"Tell me about him," she urged.
He had to think hard to remember the first
time he ever started talking to Jon. "I think 1 first realized that he was
around when I was about three, maybe two. My folks are chemtechs at one of the
Lily-Baer research stations. There weren't a lot of kids around at the time,
because it was a new station and most of the personnel were unattached. There
weren't a lot of facilities for kids, and I guess what must have happened was
that Jon volunteered to sort of baby sit while my parents were at work. Wasn't
that hard. Basically all he had to do was make sure that the door to my room
stayed locked except when he sent in servos to feed me and so forth. But I
guess I kind of fascinated him, and he started talking to me, telling me
stories, then directing the servos in playing with me." He laughed.
"For a while my folks thought I was going through the 'invisible friend'
stage. Then they got worried, because I didn't grow out of it, and were going
to send me to a headshrinker. That was when Jon interrupted while they were
trying to make the appointment and told them that he was the invisible
friend."
Tia laughed. "You already knew that
Moira and I have known each other for a long time, well, she was the CS ship
that always serviced my folks' digs, that was how I got to know her."
"Gets you used to having a friend
that you can't see, but can talk to," he agreed. "Well, once I
started preschool, Jon lost interest for a while, until I started learning to
play chess. He is quite a player himself; when he saw that I was beating the
computer regularly, he remembered who I was and stepped in, right in the middle
of a game. I was winning until he took over," he recalled, still a little
aggrieved.
"What can I say?" she asked
rhetorically.
"I suppose I shouldn't complain. He became
my best friend. He was the one that encouraged my interest in archeology and
when it became obvious my parents weren't going to be able to afford all the
university courses that would take, he helped get me into the Academy. Did you
know that a recommendation from a shell-person counts twice as much as a
recommendation from anyone but a PTA and up?"
"No, I didn't!" She sounded
surprised and amused. "Evidently they trust our judgment."
"Well, you've heard his messages.
He's probably as pleased with how things turned out as I am." He spread
his hands wide. "And that's all there is to know about me."
"Hardly," she retorted dryly.
"But it does clear up a few mysteries."
When Alex hit his bunk that night, he
found he was having a hard time getting to sleep. He'd always thought of Tia as
a person, but now he had a face to put with the name.
Jon Chernov had shown him, once, what Jon
would have looked like if he could have survived outside the shell. Alex had
known that it was going to be hideous, and had managed not to shudder or turn
away, but it had taken a major effort of will. After that it had just been
easier not to put a face with the voice. There were completely nonhuman races
that looked more human than poor Jon.
But Tia had been a captivatingly pretty
child. She would have grown up into a stunning adult Shoot, inside that shell,
she probably looked like a doll. A stimulating, lifeless adult, like a puppet
with no strings; a sex-companion android with no hookups. He had no desire to
crack her column; he was not the sort to be attracted by anything lifeless.
Feelie-porn had given him the creeps, and his one adolescent try with a
sex-droid had sent him away feeling dirty and used.
But it made the tragedy of what had
happened to her all the more poignant Jon's defects were such that it was a
relief for everyone that he was in the shell. Tia, though ...
But she was happy. She was as happy as any
of his classmates in the Academy. So where was the tragedy? Only in his mind.
Only in his mind ...
CHAPTER SIX
Alex would have been perfectly happy if
the past twelve hours had never happened.
He and Tia returned to Diogenes Base after
an uneventful trip expecting to be sent out on another series of message-runs,
only to learn that on this run, they would be carrying passengers. Those
passengers were on the way from Central and the Institute by way of commercial
liner and would not arrive for another couple of days.
That had given him a window of opportunity
for a little shore leave, in a base-town that catered to some fairly heavy
space-going traffic, and he had taken it.
Now he was sorry he had ... oh, not for
any serious reasons. He hadn't gotten drunk, or mugged, or into trouble. No,
he'd only made a fool out of himself.
Only.
He'd gone out looking for company in the
spaceport section, hanging around in the pubs and food-bars. He'd gotten more
than one invitation, too, but the one he had followed up on was from a
dark-haired, blue eyed, elfin little creature with an infectious laugh and a
nonstop smile. 'Bet' was her name, and she was a fourth-generation spacer,
following in her family's footloose tradition.
He hadn't wondered what had prompted his
choice, hadn't even wondered why he had so deviated from his normal 'type' of
brown-haired, brown-eyed and athletic. He and the girl, who it turned out was
the crew chief of an Al-freighter, had a good time together. They hit a show,
had some dinner, and by mutual agreement, wound up in the same hotel room.
He still hadn't thought about his choice
of company; then came the moment of revelation.
When, in the midst of intimacy, he called
her Tia.
He could have died, right then and there.
Fortunately the young lady was understanding; Bet just giggled, called him
'Giorgi' back, and they went on from there. And when they parted, she kissed
him, and told him that his 'Tia' was a lucky wench, and to give her Bet's
regards.
Thank the spirits of space he didn't have
to tell her the truth. All she'd seen was the CS uniform and the spacer habits
and speech patterns; he could have been anything. She certainly wasn't thinking
'brawn' when she had picked him up, and he hadn't told her what he did for the
Courier Service.
Instead of going straight back to the ship,
he dawdled; visited a multi-virtual amusement park, and took five of the
wildest adventures it offered. It took all five to wash the embarrassment of
his slip out of his recent memory, to put it into perspective.
But nothing would erase the meaning of
what he had done. And it was just his good fortune, and Tia's, that his partner
hadn't known who Tia was. Brawns had undergone Counseling for a lot less. CS
had a nasty reputation for dealing with slips like that one. They wouldn't risk
one of their precious shell-persons in the hands of someone who might become so
obsessed with her that he would try to get at the physical body.
He returned to the docks in a decidedly
mixed state of mind, and with no ideas at all about what, if anything, he could
do about it.
Tia greeted her brawn cheerfully as soon
as he came aboard, but she left him alone for a little while he got himself
organized, or as organized as Alex ever got.
"I've got the passenger roster,"
she said, once he'd stowed his gear. "Want to see them, see what we're
getting for the next couple of weeks?"
"Sure," Alex replied, perking up
visibly. He had looked tired when he came in; Tia reckoned shrewdly that he had
been celebrating his shore leave a little too heavily. He wasn't suffering from
a hangover, but it looked to her as if he'd done his two-day pass to the max,
squeezing twenty-two hours of fun into every twenty-four hour period. He
dropped down into his chair and she brought up her screens for him.
"Here's our team leader, Doctor Izak
Hollister-Aspen." The Evaluation team leader was an elderly man; a
quad-doc, as thin as a grass stem, clean-shaven, silver-haired, and so
frail-looking. Tia was half-afraid he might break in the first high wind.
"He's got four doctorates, he's published twelve books and about two
hundred papers, and he's been head of twenty-odd teams already. He also seems
to have a pretty good sense of humor. Listen."
She let the file-fragment run. "I
must admit," Aspen said, in a cracked and quavery voice, "there are
any number of my colleagues who would say that I should sit behind my desk and
let younger bodies take over this dig. Well," he continued, cracking a
smile. "I am going to do something like that. I'm going to sit behind my
desk in my dome, and let the younger bodies of my team members take over the
digging. Seems to me that's close enough to count."
Alex chuckled. "I like him already. I
was afraid this trip was going to be a bore."
"Not likely, with him around. Well,
this is our second-in-command, double-doc Siegfried Haakon-Fritz. And if this
lad had been in charge, I think it might have been a truly dismal trip."
She brought up the image of Fritz, who was a square-jawed, steely-eyed,
stern-faced monument. He could have been used as the model for any
ortho-Communist memorial statue to The Glorious Worker In Service To The State.
Or maybe the Self-Righteous In Search Of A Convert. There was nothing like
humor anywhere in the man's expression. It looked to her as if his head might
crack in half if he ever smiled. "This is all I have, five minutes of
silent watching. He didn't say a word. But maybe he doesn't believe in talking
when it's being recorded."
"Why not?" Alex asked curiously.
"Is he paranoid about being recorded or something?"
"He's a Practical Darwinist,"
she told him.
"Oh, brother," Alex replied with
disgust The Practical Darwinists had their own sort of notoriety, and Tia was
frankly surprised to find one in the Institute at all. They were generally
concentrated in the soft sciences, when they were in the sciences at all.
Personally, Tia did not consider political science to be particularly
scientific.
"His political background is kind of
dubious," she continued, "but since there's nothing anyone can hang
on him, it simply says in the file that his politics have not always been those
of the Institute. That's bureaucratic double-talk for someone they would rather
not trust, but have no reason to keep them out of positions of authority."
"Got you." Alec nodded. "So,
we'll just not mention politics around him, and we'll make sure it's one of the
forbidden subjects in the main cabin. Who's next?"
"These are our post-docs; they have
their hard science doctorates, and now they're working on their archeology
doctorates." She split her center screen and installed them both on it at
once. "On the right, Les Dimand-Taylor, human; on the right, Treel rish-Yr
nalLeert, Rayanthan. Treel is female. Les has a Bio Doc, and Treel
Xenology."
"Hmm, for Treel wouldn't Xenology be
the study of humans?" Alex pointed out. Les was a very intense fellow,
thin, heavily tanned, very fit-looking, but with haunted eyes. Treel's
base-type seemed to be cold-weather mammalian, as she had a pelt of very fine,
dense brown fur that extended down onto her cheekbones. Her round, black eyes
stared directly into the lens, seeing everything, and giving the viewer the
impression that she was cataloging it all.
"No audio on the post-docs, just
static file pictures," she continued. "They're attached to
Aspen."
"Not to Old Stone Face?" Alex
asked. "Never mind, Any grad student or post-doc he'd have would be a
clonal copy of himself. I can't imagine any other type staying with him for
long."
"And here are our grad
students." Again she split the screen. "Still working on the first
doctorate. Both male. Aldon Reese-Tambuto, human; and Fred, from
Dushayne."
"Fred?" Alex spluttered.
Understandably. The Dushaynese could not possibly have looked less human; he
had a square, flat head, literally. Flat on top, flat face, flattened sides. He
was bright green and had no mouth, just a tiny hole below his nostril slits.
Dushaynese were vegetarian to an extreme; on their homeworld they lived on tree
sap and fruit juice. Out in the larger galaxy they did very well on
sucrose-water and other liquids. They had, as a whole, very good senses of
humor.
"Fred?" Alex repeated.
"Fred," she said firmly.
"Very few humans would be able to reproduce his real name. His vocal organ
is a vibrating membrane in the top of his head. He does human speech just fine,
but we can't manage his." She blanked her screens. "I'll spare you
their speeches; they are very eager, very typical young grad students and this
will be their first dig."
"Save me." Alex moaned.
"Be nice," she said
firmly. "Don't disillusion them. Let the next two years take care of
that."
He waved his hands vigorously. "Far
be it from me to let them know what gruesome fate awaits them. What was the
chance of death on a dig? Twenty percent? And there's six of them?"
The chance of catching something non-fatal
is a lot higher," she pointed out "Actually, the honor of being the
fatality usually goes to the post-docs or the second-in-command; they're the
ones doing the major explorations when a dig hits something like a tomb. The
grad students usually are put to sifting sand and cataloging pottery
shards."
Alex didn't get a chance to respond to
that, for the first members of the team arrived at the lock at that moment, and
he went down the lift to welcome them aboard, while Tia directed the servos in
storing most of their baggage in the one remaining empty hold. As they came up
the lift, both the young 'men' were chattering away at high speed, with Alex in
the middle, nodding sagely from time to time and clearly not catching more than
half of what they said. Tia decided to rescue him.
"Welcome aboard, Fred, Aldon,"
she said, cutting through the chatter with her own, higher-pitched voice.
Silence, as both the grad students looked
around for the speaker.
Fred caught on first, and while his face
remained completely without expression, he had already learned the knack of
displaying human-type emotions with his voice. "My word!" he
exclaimed with delight, "you are a brainship, are you not, dear
lady?"
As a final incongruity, he had adopted a
clipped British accent to go along with his voice.
"Precisely, sir," she replied.
"AH One-Oh-Three-Three at your service, so to speak."
"Wow," Aldon responded, dearly
awestruck. "We get to ride in a brainship? They've actually put us on a
brainship? Wow, PTAs don't even get rides from brainships! I've never even seen
a brainship before. Uh, hi, what's your real name?" He turned slowly,
trying to figure out which way to face.
"Hypatia, Tia for short," she
replied, tickled by the young beings' responses. "Don't worry about where
to look, just assume I'm the whole ship. I am, you know. I even have eyes in
your quarters, " she chuckled at Aldon's flush of embarrassment, "but
don't worry, I won't use them. Your complete privacy is important to us."
"I can show you the cabins, and you
can pick the ones you want," Alex offered. "They're all the same; I'm
just reserving the one nearest the main cabin for Doctor Hollister-Aspen."
"Stellar!" Aldon enthused.
"Wow, this is better than the liner coming in! I had to share a cabin with
Fred and two other guys."
"Quite correct," Fred seconded.
"I enjoyed Aldon's company, but the other two were, dare I say, spoiled
young reprobates? High Family affectations without the style, the connections,
or the Family. Deadly bores, I assure you, and a spot of privacy will be
welcome. Shall we, then?"
The two grad students were unpacking their
carryon baggage when the two post-docs arrived, this time singly. Treel arrived
first, accepted the greetings with the calm, intense demeanor of a Zen Master,
and took the first cabin she was offered.
Les Dimand-Taylor was another case
altogether. It was obvious to Tia the moment he came aboard, without the automatic
salute he made to her column, that he was ex-military. He confirmed her
assumption as soon as Alex offered him a cabin.
"Anything will do, old man," he
said, with a kind of nervous cheer. "Better than barracks, that's for
sure. Unless, lady Tia, you don't have anything that makes an unexpected noise
in the middle of the night, do you? I'm, " he laughed a little shakily,
"I'm afraid I'm just a little twitchy about noises when I'm asleep. What
they euphemistically call 'unfortunate experiences'. I'll keep my door locked
so I don't disturb anyone but-"
"Give him the cabin next to Treel,
Alex," she said firmly. "Doctor Dimand-Taylor, "
"Les, my dear," he replied, with
a thin smile. "Les to you and your colleagues, always. Pulled me out of a tight
spot, one of you BB teams did. Besides, when people hear my title they tend to
start telling me about their backs and innards. Hate to have to tell them that
I'd only care about their backs if the too, too solid flesh had been melted off
the bones for the past thousand years or so."
"Les, then," she said. "I
assume you know Treel?"
"Very well. A kind and considerate
lady. If you have her assigned as my neighbor, she's so quiet I never know
she's there." He seemed relieved that Tia didn't press him for details on
the 'tight spot' he'd been in.
"That cabin and hers are buried in
the sound-proofing around the holds," Tia told him. "You shouldn't
hear anything, and I can generate white-noise for you at night, if you'd
like."
He relaxed visibly. "That would be
charming of you, thanks awfully. My superior, Doc Aspen, told the others about
my little eccentricities, so they know not to startle me. So we should be
fine."
He went about his unpacking, and Alex
returned to the main cabin.
"Commando," Tia said succinctly.
"That in his records?" Alex
asked. "I'm surprised they left that there. Not saying where, though, are
they?"
"If you know where to look and what
to look at, the fact that he was a commando is in his records," she told
her brawn. "But where, that's not in the Institute file. It's probably
logged somewhere. Remember not to walk quietly, my dear."
"Since I'd rather not get
karate-chopped across the throat, that sounds like a good idea." He
thought for a moment and went off to his cabin, returning with what looked like
a bracelet with a bell on it. "These things went into fashion a couple of
months ago, and I bought one, but I didn't like it." He bent over to
fasten it around his boot. "There. Now he'll hear me coming, in case I
forget to stamp." The bell was not a loud one, but it was definitely
producing an audible sound.
"Good idea, ah, here's the Man
himself. Alex, he's going to need some help."
Alex hurried down to the lift area and
gave Doctor Aspen a hand with his luggage. There wasn't much of it, but Doctor
Aspen was not capable of carrying much for long. Tia wondered what could have
possessed the Institute to permit this man to go out into the field again.
She found out, once he was aboard. His
staff immediately clustered around him, fired with enthusiasm, as soon as he
was settled in his cabin. He asked permission of Tia and Alex to move the
convocation into the main cabin and use one of her screens.
"Certainly," Tia answered, when
Alex deferred to her. She was quite charmed by Doctor Aspen, who called her 'my
lady', and accorded to her all the attention and politeness he gave his
students and underlings.
As they moved into main room, Doctor Aspen
turned toward her column. "I am told that you have some interest and
education in archeology, my lady Tia," he said, as he settled into a seat
near one of the side screens. "And you, too, Alex. Please, since you'll be
on-site with us, feel free to participate. And if you know something we should,
or notice something we miss, feel free to contribute."
Alex was obviously surprised; Tia wasn't
She had gleaned some of this from the records. Aspen's students stayed with
him, went to enormous lengths to go on-site with him, went on to careers of
their own full of warm praise for their mentor. Aspen was evidently that rarest
of birds, the exceptional, inspirational teacher who was also a solid
researcher and scientist
Within moments, Aspen had drawn them all
into his charmed circle, calling up the first team's records, drawing his
students, and even Alex, into making observations. Tia kept a sharp eye out for
the missing member of the party, however, for she had the feeling that
Haakon-Fritz had deliberately timed his entrance to coincide with the gathering
of Aspen's students. Tia figured that he wanted an excuse to feel slighted. She
wasn't going to give it to him.
She could, and did, hook herself into the
spaceport surveillance system, and she spotted Haakon-Fritz coming long before
he was in range of her own sensors. Plenty of time to interrupt the animated
discussion with a subtle, "Gentlebeings, Doctar Haakon-Fritz is crossing
the tarmac."
Treel and Les exchanged a wordless look,
but said nothing. Aspen simply smiled, and rose from his chair, as Tia froze
the recording they had been watching. Alex hurried down the stairs to intercept
Haakon-Fritz at the lift.
So instead of being greeted by the backs
of those deep in discussion, the man found himself greeted by the Courier
Service brawn, met at the top of the lift by the rest of his party, and given
an especially hearty greeting by his superior.
His expression did not change so much as a
hair, but Tia had the distinct feeling that he was disgruntled. "Welcome
aboard, Doctor Haakon-Fritz," Tia said, as he shook hands briefly with the
other members of his party. "We have a choice of five cabins for you, if
you'd ..."
"If you have more than one cabin
available," Haakon-Fritz interrupted rudely, speaking not to Tia, who he
ignored, but to Alex, "I would like to see them all before I make a
choice."
Tia knew Alex well enough by now to know
that he was angry, but he covered it beautifully. "Certainty;
Professor," he said, giving Haakon-Fritz the lesser of his titles.
"If you'll follow me." He led the way back into the cabin section,
leaving Haakon-Fritz to carry his own bags.
Treel made a little growl that sounded
like disgust; Fred rolled his eyes, which was the closest he could come to a
facial expression. "My word," Fred said, his voice ripe with
surprise. "That was certainly rude!"
"He ees a Practical
Darweeneest," Treel replied, with a curl to her lip. "Your pardon,
seer," she said to Aspen. I know that you feel he ees a good scienteest,
but I am glad he ees not the one in charge."
Fred was still baffled. "Practical
Darwinist?" he said. "Does someone want to explain to a baffled young
veggie just what that might be and why he was so rude to lady Tia?"
Les took up the gauntlet with a sigh.
"A Practical Darwinist is one who believes that Darwin's Law applies to
everything. If someone is in an accident, they shouldn't be helped, if an
earthquake levels a city, no aid should be sent, if a plague breaks out, only
the currently healthy should be inoculated; the victims should be isolated and
live or die as the case may be."
Fred's uneasy glance toward her column
made Tia decide to spare Les the embarrassment of stating the obvious.
"And as you have doubtless surmised, the fanatical Practical Darwinists
find the existence of shell-persons to be horribly offensive. They won't even
acknowledge that we exist, given the option."
Professor Aspen shook his head sadly.
"A brilliant scientist, but tragically flawed by fanaticism," he
said, as he took his seat again. "Which is why he has gotten as far as he
will ever go. He had a chance, was given a solo Exploration dig, and refused to
consider any evidence that did not support his own peculiar partyline. Now he
is left to be the chief clerk of digs like ours." He looked soberly into
the faces of his four students. "Let this be a lesson to you,
gentlebeings. Never let fanatic devotion blind you to truth."
"Or, in other words," Tia put in
blithely, "the problem with a fanatic is that their brains turn to tofu
and they accept nothing as truth except what conforms to their ideas. What
makes them dangerous is not that they'll die to prove their truth, but that
they'll let you die, or take you with them, to prove it"
"Well put, my lady." Doctor
Aspen turned his attention back to the screen. "Now since I know from past
experience that Haakon-Fritz will spend the time until takeoff sulking in his
cabin, shall we continue with our discussion?"
The Exploration team had left the site in
good shape; equipment stowed, domes inflated but sealed, open trenches covered
to protect them. The Evaluation team erected two new living domes and a second
laboratory dome in short order, and settled down to their work.
Everything seemed to be under control; now
that the team was on-site, even the sulky Haakon-Fritz fell to and took on his
share of the duties. There would seem to have been no need for AH
One-Oh-Three-Three to remain on-planet when they could have been making the
rounds of 'their' established digs.
But that was not what regulations called
for, and both Tia and Alex knew why, even if the members of the team didn't.
Regulations for a CS ship attached to Institute duty hid a carefully concealed
second agenda, when the ship placed a new Exploration or Evaluation team.
Archeological teams were put together with
great care; not only because of the limited number of personnel, but because of
their isolation. They were going to be in danger from any number of things, all
of the hazards that Tia had listed to Alex on their first mission. There was no
point in exposing them to danger from within.
So the prospective members of a given team
were probed, tested, and Psyched to a fair-thee-well, both for individual
stability and for interactive stability with the rest of the team. Still,
mistakes could be made, and had been in the past. Sometimes those mistakes had
led to a murder, or at least, an attempted murder.
When a psychological problem surfaced, it
was usually right at the beginning of the stint, after the initial settling in
period was over, and once a routine had been established and the stresses of
the dig started to take their toll. About that time, if something was going to
go wrong, it did. The team had several weeks in cramped quarters in transit to
establish interpersonal relations; ideal conditions for cabin fever. Ideal
conditions for stress to surface, and that stress could lead to severe
interpersonal problems.
So regulations were that the courier,
whether BB or fully-manned, was to manufacture some excuse to stay for several
days, with the ship personnel staying inside and out of sight, but with the
site being fully monitored from inside the ship. The things they were to look
for were obvious personality conflicts, new behavioral quirks, or old ones
going from 'quirk' to 'psychosis'. Making sure there was nothing that might
give rise to a midnight axe murder. It would not have been the first time that
someone snapped under stress.
Alex was most worried about Les, muttering
things about post-trauma syndrome and the fragility of combat veterans. Tia had
her own picks for trouble, if trouble came. Either Fred or Aldon, for neither
one of them had ever been on-site in a small dig before, and until he went to
the Institute, Aldon had never even been off-planet. Despite his unpleasantness
to her, Haakon-Fritz was brilliant and capable, and he had been on several digs
before without any trouble surfacing. And now that they were all on-site, while
he was distant, he was also completely cooperative, and his behavior in no way
differed from his behavior on previous digs. There was no indication that he
was likely to take his fanatic beliefs into his professional life. Fred and
Aldon had only been part of a crew of hundreds with an Excavation team, where
there were more people to interact with, fewer chances for personality stress,
and no real trials to face but the day to day boredom of repetitive work.
For the first couple of days, everything
seemed to be just fine, not only as far as the personnel were concerned, but as
far as the conditions. Both Tia and Alex breathed a sigh of relief. Too soon by
half.
For that night, the winter rains began.
Tia had been sifting through some of the records she'd copied at the base,
looking for another potential investment prospect like Largo Draconis. It was
late; very late, the site was quiet and dark, and Alex had called it a night.
He was in his cabin, just about at the dreaming stage, and Tia was considering
shutting down for her mandated three hours of DeepSleep, when the storm struck.
'Struck' was the operative word, for a
wall of wind and rain hit her skin hard enough to rattle her for a moment, and
that was followed by a blast of lightning and thunder that shook Alex out of
bed.
"What?" he yelped, coming up out
of sleep with a shout "How? Who?" He shook his head to clear it, as
another peal of thunder made Tia's walls vibrate. "What's going on?"
he asked, as Tia sank landing-spikes from her feet into the ground beneath her,
to stabilize her position. "Are we under attack or something?"
"No, it's a storm, Alex," she
replied absently, making certain that everything was locked down and all her
servos were inside. "One incredible thunderstorm, I've never experienced
anything like it!"
She turned on her external cameras and fed
them to her screens so he could watch, while she made certain that she was
well-insulated against lightning strikes and that all was still well at the
site. Alex wandered out into the main cabin and sat in his chair, awestruck by
the display of raw power going on around them,
Multiple lightning strikes were going on
all around them; not only was the area as bright as day, it was often brighter.
Thunder boomed continuously, the wind howled, and sheets, no, entire linen
closets of rain pounded the ground, not only baffling any attempt at a visual
scan of the site, but destroying any hope of any other kind of check. With this
much lightning in the air, there was no point even in trying a radio call.
"What's happening down at the
site?" Alex asked anxiously.
"No way of telling," she said
reluctantly. "The Exploration team went through these rains once already,
so I guess we can assume that the site itself isn't going to wash away, or
float away. For the rest, the domes are insulated against lightning, but who
knows what's likely to happen to the equipment? Especially in all this
lightning."
Her words proved only too prophetic; for
although the rain lasted less than an hour, the deluge marked a forty-degree
drop in temperature, and the effects of the lightning were permanent.
When the storm cleared, the news from the
site was bad. Lightning had not only struck the ward-off field generator, it
had slagged it There was nothing left but a melted pile of plasteel and
duraloy. Tia didn't see how one strike could have done that much damage; the
generator must have been hit over and over. The backup was corroded beyond any
repair, though Haakon-Fritz and Les labored over it for most of the night Too
many parts had been ruined, probably while it sat in its crate through
who-knew-how-many transfers. Never once uncrated and checked, and now Doctor
Aspen's team paid the price for that neglect.
Tia consulted with Doctor Aspen in person
the next morning. There was little sign of the damage from where they sat, but
the results were undeniable. No ward-off generator. No protection from native
fauna, from insectoids to the big canids. And if the huge grazers, the size of
moose, were to become aggressive, there would be no way to keep them out of the
camp. Ordinary fences would not hold against a herd of determined grazers; the
last team had proved that.
"I don't have a spare in the
holds," Tia told the team leader. "I don't have even half the parts
you need for the corroded generator. There were no storms like the one last
night mentioned in the records of the previous team, but we should assume there
are going to be more. How many of them can you handle? Winter is coming on, and
I can't predict what the native animals are going to do. Do you want to pull
the team out?"
Doctor Aspen pursed his lips thoughtfully.
"I can't think of any reason why we should, my lady," he replied.
"The only exterior equipment that had no protection was the ward-off
generator. The first team stayed here without incident all winter, there's
nothing large enough to be a real threat to us, so far as I can tell. We'll
have a few insects, perhaps, until first hard frost. I imagine those
jackal-like beasts will lurk about and make a nuisance of themselves. But
they're hardly a threat."
Alex, feet up on the console as usual,
agreed with the archeologist. "I don't see any big threat here, either.
Unless lightning takes out something a lot more vital."
Tia didn't like it, but she didn't
challenge them, either. "If that's the way you want it," she agreed.
"But we'll stay until the rains are over, just in case."
Stay they did; but that was the first and
the last of the major storms. After the single, spectacular downpour, the rains
came gently, between midnight and dawn, with hardly a peal of thunder to wake
Alex. She had to conclude that the first storm had been a freak occurrence,
something no one could have predicted, and lost a little of her ire over the
lack of warning from the previous team. But that still didn't excuse the
corroded generator.
Still, the weather stayed cold, and the
rain left coatings of ice on everything. It would be gone by midmorning, but
the difficulty in walking around the site meant that the team changed their
working hours, beginning around ten-hundred and finishing about
twenty-two-hundred. Despite his recorded disclaimer, Doctor Aspen insisted on
working alongside his students, and no one, not even Haakon-Fritz, wanted him
to risk a fell on the ice.
Meanwhile, Tia made note of a disturbing
development. The sudden cold had sent most of the small game and pest animals
into hiding or hibernation. That left the normally solitary jackal-dogs without
their usual prey, and in what appeared to be seasonal behavior, they began to
pack up for the winter, so that they could take down the larger grazers.
The disturbing part was that a very large
pack began lurking around the camp. Now Tia regretted her choice of landing
areas. The site was between her and the camp; that was all very well,
especially for observing the team at work, but the dogs were lurking in the
hills around the camp. And with no ward-off generator to keep them out of it.
She mentioned her worry to Alex, who
pointed out that the beasts always scattered at any sign of aggression on the
part of a human. She mentioned it again to Doctor Aspen, who said the animals
were probably just looking for something to scavenge and would leave them alone
once they realized there was nothing to eat there.
She never had a chance to mention it
again.
With two moons, both in different phases,
the nights were never dark unless it was raining. But the floodlights at the
site made certain that the darkness was driven away. And lately, the nights
were never silent either; the pack of jackal-dogs wailed from the moment the
sun went down to the moment the rains began. Tia quickly became an expert on
what those howls meant; the yipping social-howl, the long, drawn-out rally-cry,
and most ominous, the deep-chested hunting call. She was able to tell, just by
the sounds, where they were, whether they were in pursuit, and when the quarry
had won the chase, or lost it.
Tia wasn't too happy about them; the pack
numbered about sixty now, and they weren't looking too prosperous. Evidently
the activity at the site had driven away the larger grazers they normally
preyed on; that had the effect of making all the smaller packs join up into one
mega-pack, so there was always some food, but none of them got very much of it
They weren't at the bony stage yet, but there was a certain desperate gauntness
about them. The grazers they did chase were escaping five times out of six, and
they weren't getting in more than two hunts in a night
Should I suggest that the team feed them?
Perhaps take a grav-sled and go shoot something and drag it in once every
couple of days? But would that cause problems later? That would be giving the
pack the habit of dependence on humans, and that wouldn't be good. Could they
lure the pack into another territory that way, though? Or would feeding them
make them lose their fear of humans? She couldn't quite make up her mind about
that, but the few glimpses she'd had of the pack before sunset had put her in
mind of certain Russian folktales, troikas in the snow, horses foaming with
panic, and wolves snapping at the runners. Meanwhile, the pack got a little
closer each night before they faded into the darkness.
At least it was just about time for the
team to break off for the night Once they were in their domes, they'd be safe.
As if in answer to her thought, the huge
lights pivoted up and away from the site, as they were programmed to do,
lighting a clear path for the team from the site to the camp. When everyone was
safely in the domes, Les would turn them off remotely. So far, the lights alone
had kept the jackal-dogs at bay. They lurked just outside the path carved by
the lights, but would not venture inside.
As if to answer that thought, the pack
howled just as the First of the team members emerged from the covered
excavation area. It sounded awfully close. Tia ran a quick infrared scan. The
pack was awfully close, right on the top of the hill to the right of the site!
The beasts stared down at the team, and
the leader howled again. There was no mistaking that how], not when all the
rest answered it. It was the hunt-call. Quarry sighted; time to begin the
chase.
And the leader was staring right at the
archeologists. The team stared back, sensing that there was something different
tonight. No one stirred; not archeologists, nor jackal-dogs. The beasts' eyes
glared red in the darkness, reflection from the work lights, but no less
disturbing for having a known scientific explanation.
"Alex," she said tightly.
"Front and center. We have a situation." He emerged from his cabin as
if shot from a gun, took one look at the screen, and pelted for the hold where
they kept the HA grav-sled.
Then the pack poured down the hillside in
a furry avalanche.
Haakon-Fritz took off like a world-class
sprinter, leaving the rest behind. For all the attention that he paid them, the
rest of his team might just as well have not existed.
Shell crack! Aspen can't run.
But Les and Treel were not about to leave
Aspen to become the a la carte special; as if they had rehearsed the move, they
each grabbed one arm and literally picked him up off his feet between them and
started running. Fred and Aldon grabbed shovels to act as some kind of
flank-guard. With the jackal-dogs closing on them with every passing moment,
the entire group pelted off for the shelters.
They were barely a quarter of the way
there, with the jackals halfway down the hill and gaining momentum, when
Haakon-Fritz reached the nearest shelter. He hit the side of the dome with a
crash and pawed the door open. He flung himself inside.
And slammed it shut; the red light coming
on over the frame indicating that he had locked it.
"Alex!" Tia cried in anguish, as
the jackal-dogs bore down upon their prey. "Alex, do something!" She
had never felt so horribly helpless.
Grav-sleds made no noise, but they had
hedraplayers and powerful speakers, meant both to entertain their drivers and
to broadcast prerecorded messages on the fly. A blast of raucous hard-wire
shatter-rock blared out from beneath her, she got her underbelly cameras on
just as Alex peeled out in the sled at top speed, music screaming at top
volume.
The unfamiliar shrieks and howls behind
them startled the pack for a moment, and they hesitated, then came to a dead
halt, peering over their shoulders.
The rock music was so unlike anything they
had ever heard before that they didn't know how to react; Alex plowed straight
through the middle of them and they shied away to either side.
He was never going to be able to make a
pickup on the five still running for their lives without the pack being on all
of them, but while he was on the move with music caterwauling, the jackal-dogs
hesitated to attack him. And while he was harassing them, their attention was
on him, not on their quarry.
That must have been what he had figured in
the first place, that he would startle them enough to give the rest of the team
a chance to get to safety inside that second dome. While the archeologists
ignored what was going on behind them and kept right on to the second shelter,
Alex kept making dives at the pack, scattering them when he could, keeping the
sled between them and the team. It was tricky flying, stunt-flying with a
grav-sled, pulling crazy maneuvers less than a meter from the ground. Not a lot
of margin for error.
He cornered wildly; rocking the sled up on
one side, skewing it over in flat spins, feinting at the pack leader and
gunning away before the beast had a chance to jump into the sled. Over the
sound of the wild music, the warning signals and overrides screamed objection
for what Alex was doing. Alex challenged the jackal-dogs with the only weapon
he had; the sled. Tia longed for her ethological pack; still not approved for
the Institute ships. With a stun-needler, they could have at least knocked some
of the pack out.
The animals assumed that the attack was
meant to drive them off or kill them. They must have been hungrier than any of
them had guessed, for when nothing happened to hurt or kill any of the pack,
they began making attempts to mob the sled, and they seemed to be trying to
think of ways to pull it down.
Tia knew why, then, in a flash of insight
Alex had just gone from 'fellow predator' to 'prey'; the jackal-dogs were used
to grazer-bulls charging them aggressively to try to drive them away. Alex was
imitating the behavior of the bulls, though he did not know it, and in better
times, the pack probably would have responded by moving to easier prey. But
these were lean times, and any imitation of prey behavior meant they would try
to catch and kill what was taunting them.
Alex was now in real danger.
But Alex was a better flyer than Tia had
ever thought; he kept the sled just out of reach of a strong jump, kept it
moving in unpredictable turns and spins.
Then, one of the biggest beasts in the
pack leapt, and landed, feet scrabbling on the back bumper of the sled.
"Alex!" Tla shrieked again. He
glanced back over his shoulder and saw his danger.
He sent the sled into a spin; the sled's
protection overrides objected strenuously, whining as they fought him. The
jackal-dog fought, too, hind-claws skidding against the duraloy of the bumper.
Alex watched desperately over his shoulder as the beast's claws found a hold,
and it began hauling itself over the bumper toward him.
In what was either a burst of inspiration
or insanity, he jammed on the braking motors. The sled stopped dead in
mid-spin, flinging him sideways against his safety-belts.
And flinging the jackal-dog off the back
of the sled entirely, sending it flying into the pack, and tumbling at least a
dozen of them nose-over-tail.
At that moment the team reached the second
dome.
The flash of light as they opened the door
told Alex they were safe, and he no longer had to make a target of himself.
Alex burned air back towards Tia; she dropped open a cargo-bay, activated
restraint-fields and hoped he'd be able to brake in time to keep from hitting
the back wall. At the speed he was coming, the restraint-fields, meant to keep
the sled from banging around too much in rough flight, wouldn't do much.
He didn't even slow down as he hit the bay
door, which she slammed down behind him. Instead, he killed the power and
skidded to a halt on the sled's belly in a shower of sparks. The sled skewed
sideways and crashed into the back wall, but between Alex's own maneuver and
the restraint-fields, the impact wasn't bad enough to do more than dent her
hold-wall. Once again, Alex was hurled sideways against his seat-belts. There
were a half-dozen impacts on the cargo door, indicating the leaders of the pack
hitting it, unable to stop.
He sat there for a moment, then sagged
over the steering wheel, breathing heavily. Nothing on Tia's pickups made her
think he was hurt, so she waited for him to catch his breath.
When his breathing slowed, and he looked
up, she focused on his face. He was flushed, but showed no shock, and no sign
of pain.
"Well," she said, keeping her
voice calm and light, "you certainly know how to make an entrance."
He blinked, then leaned back in his seat,
and began laughing.
It was no laughing matter the next day,
when Haakon-Fritz emerged from his shelter and was confronted by the remainder
of his team. He had no choice; Tia had threatened to hole his dome if he
didn't, giving the beasts a way inside. It was an empty threat, but he didn't
know that; like any other fanatic Practical Darwinist, he had never bothered to
learn the capabilities of brainships.
Les took charge of him before he had a
chance to say anything; using some kind of commando-tactics to get a hold on
the man that immobilized him, then frogmarching him into the ship.
By common consent, everyone else waited
until Les and Tia had secured Haakon-Fritz in one of her cabins, with access to
what was going on in the main cabin, but no way of interrupting the
proceedings. Any time he started in on one of his speeches, she could cut him
off and he'd be preaching to the bare walls.
As the others gathered in the cabin,
Doctor Aspen looking particularly shaken and worn, Tia prepared to give them
the news. It wasn't completely bad ... but they weren't going to like part of
it
"We aren't pulling you out," she
said, "although we've got that authority. We understand your concern about
leaving this dig and losing essentially two years, and we share it."
As she watched four of the five faces
register their mix of relief and anticipation, she wished she could give them
unmixed orders.
"That's the good news," Alex
said, before anyone could respond. "Here's the bad news. In order to stay
here, we're going to order you to stay in your domes until the next courier
shows up with your new generator and parts for the old one. We ordered one for
you when the old one slagged; the courier should arrive in about a month or two
with the new one."
"But-" Doctor Aspen started to
object
"Doctor, it's that, or we pull you
right this moment," Tia said firmly. "We will not leave you with
those canids on the prowl unless you, each of you, pledge us that. You didn't
see how those beasts attacked Alex in his sled. They have no fear of humans
now, and they're hungry. They'll attack you without hesitation, and I wouldn't
bet on them waiting until dark to do it."
"What's better?" Alex asked
shrewdly. "Lose two months of work, or two years?"
With a sigh, Doctor Aspen gave his word,
as did the rest, although Fred and Aldon did so with visible relief.
"If they'd just supply us with damned
guns ..." Les muttered under his breath.
"There are sophonts on the other continent.
I didn't make the rules, Les," Tia replied, and he flushed. "I didn't
make them, but I will enforce them. And by the letter of those rules, I should
be ordering you to pack right now."
"Speaking of packing - " Alex
picked up the cue. "We need you to bundle Haakon-Fritz's things and stow
them in the hold. He's coming back with us."
Now Les made no attempt to hide his
pleasure, but Doctor Aspen looked troubled. "I don't see any reason,
"he began.
"Sorry, Doctor, but we do," Alex
interrupted. "Haakon-Fritz finally broke the rules. It's pretty obvious to
both of us that he attempted to turn his politics into reality."
In his cabin, the subject of discussion
got over his shock and began a shouted tirade. As she had threatened, Tia cut him
off, but she kept the recorders going. At the moment, they couldn't prove what
had been on the man's mind when he locked his colleagues out With any luck, his
own words might condemn him.
"Doctor, no matter what his
motivations were, he abandoned us," Les said firmly. "One more
fighter might have made a difference to the pack, and the fact remains that
when he reached shelter, instead of doing anything helpful, he ran inside and
locked the door. The former might only have been cowardice, but the latter is
criminal."
"That's probably the way the Board of
Inquiry will see it," Tia agreed. "We'll see to it that he has
justice, but he can't be permitted to endanger anyone else's life this way
again."
After a bit more argument, Doctor Aspen
agreed.
The team left the shelter of the ship,
gathered what they could from the dig, and returned to the domes. Well before
sunset, Les and Fred returned with a gravsled laden with Haakon-Fritz'
belongings stowed in crates, and by the rattling they were making, the goods
hadn't been stowed any too carefully.
Tia didn't intend to expend too much
effort in stowing the crates either.
"You'll keep everyone in the domes
for us, won't you?" Tia asked Les anxiously. "You're the one I'm
really counting on. I don't trust Doctor Aspen's common sense to hold his
curiosity at bay for too long."
"You read him right there, dear
lady," Les replied, tossing the last of the crates off the sled for the
servo to pick up, "But the rest of us have already agreed. Treel was the
most likely hold-out, but even she agrees with you on your reading of the way
those jackal-dogs were acting."
"What will happen to the unfortunate
Haakon-Fritz?" Fred asked curiously.
"That's going to depend on the
board," she told him, "I've got a recording of him ranting in his
cabin about survival and obsolescence, and pretty much spouting the extremist
version of the Practical Darwinism party line. That isn't going to help him
any, but how much of it is admissible, I don't know."
"Probably none of it to a
court," Les admitted after thought. "But the board won't like
it."
"All of it's been sent on
ahead," she told him. "Hell probably be met by police, even if,
ultimately, there's nothing he can be charged with."
"At the very least, after this little
debacle, he'll be dropped from the list of possible workers for anything less
than a Class Three dig," Fred observed cheerfully. "They'll take away
his seniority, if they have any sense, and demote him back to general worker.
He'll spend the rest of his life with us undergrads, sorting pot-shards."
"Assuming he can find anyone who is
willing to take a chance on him," Alex responded. "Which I would make
no bets on."
He patted Tia's side. "Just be
grateful you're not having to go back with us," he concluded. "If you
thought the trip out was bad with Haakon-Fritz sulking, imagine what it's going
to be like returning."
CHAPTER SEVEN
There was a message waiting for Tia when
they returned to the main base at Central, with Doctor Haakon-Fritz still
confined to quarters. A completely mysterious message. Just the words,
"Call this number," a voice-line number for somewhere in the L-5
colonies, and an ID-code she recognized as being from Lars.
Now what was Lars up to?
Puzzled, she left the message in storage
until Alex completed the complicated transfer of their not-quite prisoner, and
accompanied him and duplicate copies of the records involving him down to the
surface. Only then, when she was alone, did she make the call.
"Friesner, Sherman, Stirling and
Huff," said a secretary on the first ring. There was no delay, so Tia
assumed that the office was somewhere in one of the half-dozen stations or L-5
colonies nearby. "Investment brokers."
"I was told to call this number,"
Tia said cautiously. "I, my name is Hypatia Cade ... " She hesitated
as she almost gave her ship-numbers instead of her name.
"Ah, Miz Cade, of course," the
secretary said, sounding pleased. "We've been waiting for you to call. Let
me explain the mystery; Friesner, Sherman, Stirling and Huff specialize in
investments for shell-persons like yourself. A Mister Lars Mendoza at Pride of
Albion opened an account for you here to manage the investments you had already
made. If you'll hold, I'll see if one of the partners is free ... "
Tia hated to be put on hold, but it wasn't
for more than a microsecond. "Miz Cade," said a hearty-sounding male
voice, "I'm Lee Stirling; I'm your broker if you want to keep me on, and I
have good news for you. Your investments at Largo Draconis have done very well.
Probably much better than you expected."
"I don't know about that," she
replied, letting a little humor leak through. "My expectations were pretty
high." There was something about that voice that sounded familiar, but she
couldn't identify it Was it an accent, or rather, lack of one?
"But did you expect to triple your
total investment?" Lee Stirling countered. "Your little seed money
grew into quite the mighty oak tree while you were gone!"
"Uh." she said, taken so much by
surprise that she didn't know what to say. "What do you mean by total
investment?"
"Oh, your companies split their bonds
two times while you were gone; you had the option of cash or bonds, and we
judged you wanted the bonds, at least while the value was still
increasing." Stirling was trying to sound matter-of-fact, but couldn't
keep a trace of gloating out of his voice. "Those bonds are now worth
three times what they were after the last split."
"Split?" she said faintly.
"I, uh, really don't know what that means. I'm-new at this."
Patiently Stirling walked her through
exactly what had happened to her investment "Now the question you have in
front of you is whether you want to sell out now, while the value of the bond
is still increasing, or whether you want to wait."
"What's happening on Largo
Draconis?" she asked. After all, her investment had been based on what was
going to happen in the real world, not the strange and unpredictable universe
of the stock market And from the little she had seen, the universe of the stock
market seemed to have very little to do with 'real' reality.
"I thought you'd ask that. Your
companies have pretty much saturated their market," Stirling told her.
"The situation has stabilized, just short of disaster, thanks to them. The
bond prices are going up, but a lot more slowly. I think they're going to
flatten out fairly soon. I'd get out, if I were you."
"Do it," she said flatly.
"I'd like you to put everything I earned into Moto-Prosthetics, preferred
stock, with voting rights. Hold onto the seed money until I contact you.
"Taking care of it now, there. All
logged in, Hypatia. I'm looking forward to seeing what you're going to invest
in next." Stirling sounded quite satisfied. "I hope you'll stay with
us. We're a new firm, but we're solid, we have a lot of experience, and we
intend to service our clients with integrity. Miz Friesner was formerly a
senior partner in Weisskopf, Dixon, Friesner and Jacobs, and the rest of us
were her handpicked proteges. She's our token softie."
"Token, Oh! You're all-"
"Shell-persons, right, all except Miz
Friesner. Oh, we all worked on the stock, bond, and commodity exchanges, but as
systems managers. We couldn't do any investments while we were systems
managers, but Miz Friesner agreed to join us when we bought out our
contracts." Stirling chuckled. "We've been planning this for a long
time. Now we're relying on grapevine communications within the shell-net for
those like us who want to invest, for whatever reasons, and would rather not go
through either their Counselors, their Supervisors, or their Advocates."
He sent her a complicated burst of emoticons conveying a combination of
disgust, weariness, annoyance, and impatience. "We are adults, after all.
We can think for ourselves. Just because we're rooted to one spot or one
structure, it doesn't follow that all of us need keepers."
She sent back a burst that mirrored his,
with the addition of amusement. "Some of us do, but not anyone who's been
out in the world for more than fifty years or so, I wouldn't think. Well, I'11
tell a couple of friends of mine about you, that's for certain."
"Word of mouth, as I said."
Stirling laughed. "I have to tell you, after that phenomenal start, we're
all very interested in your next investment choice."
I'll have it in a couple of days at
most," she promised, and signed off.
Well, now it was certainly time to start
digging for that second choice, and she couldn't hope to happen on it the way
she had the last time.
This time, it was going to take a
combination of stupidity on someone's part, and her own computational power. So
she concentrated on sorting out those colonies that had been in existence for
less than a hundred years. It was probably fair to assume that anything
repetitive that she would be able to take advantage of would have to take place
within that kind of cycle.
That narrowed the field quite a bit, but
it meant that she was going to have to concentrate her search by categories.
Floods were the first things that came to mind, so she called up geological and
climatological records on all of her candidates and ran a search for flood
patterns.
Meanwhile she and Alex were also dealing
with the authorities on the Haakon-Fritz case, which looked likely to put the
Practical Darwinists out of business, at least with the general public, and the
Institute in regards to resupply. Tia was determined not to leave port this
time without that ethological tagging kit. Alex was tired of dealing with each
crisis barehanded.
He demanded a supply of firearms, locked
up until authorized if necessary, but he wanted to have something to enforce
his decisions or to defend himself and others.
"What if Haakon-Fritz had gone
berserk?" he asked. "What if those canids had been more
aggressive?"
Courier Services was agreeable, but the
Institute was fighting him; their long-time policy of absolute pacifism was in
direct conflict with any such demand. The ban was clear; on any site where there
were nearby sophonts with an Iron Age civilization or above, and 'nearby' meant
on the same continent, absolutely no arms were to be permitted in association
with any Institute personnel, not even those under contract. And since the
couriers hit at least one dig on every run that came under the ban, they were
not allowed any weaponry at any time. Tia backed her brawn, and she was
lobbying with CS and the Lab Schools to help. After all, her well-being was
partially dependent on his. The Institute, on the other hand, was balking
because there were those who would take the presence of even small arms on
board the courier in the worst possible interpretation.
Tia could see their point, but Institute
couriers were the only ones not carrying some kind of hand weaponry. They were
likely at any time to run into smugglers, who absolutely would be armed. If CS
made a ruling on the subject, there would be no way the Institute could get
around it
Meanwhile, on the subject of Haakon-Fritz,
things were definitely heating up. The recordings of his Olympic sprint to
shelter had somehow gotten leaked to the media, fortunately, long after Tia had
locked down her copies, along with the following recording of Alex's heroic
dash to the rescue via grav-sled. Alex was a minor celebrity for a day, but he
successfully avoided the media, and they soon grew tired of his
self-deprecating attitude, and his refusal to make himself photogenic.
Haakon-Fritz did not avoid the media, he sought them out, and he became
everyone's favorite villain. The Institute could not keep the incident quiet.
The Practical Darwinists came to their
proponent's rescue, and only made things worse with their public statements of
support and their rhetoric. People did not care to hear that they were
weaklings, failures, and ought to be done away with for the good of the race.
It began to look as if there was going to be a public trial, no matter how hard
the Institute tried to avoid one.
It was on the eve of that trial that Tia
finally found her next investment project. In the Azteca system, the third
planet, predictably Terran, known as Quetzecoatl.
Interstellar Teleson, one of the major
communications firms in their quadrant with cross-contracts and reciprocal
agreements across known space, had just relocated their sector corporate
headquarters on Quetzecoatl. The location had a great deal to be said for it,
central, in the middle of a stable continental plate, good climate. That,
however, was not why they had relocated there.
It was one of those secretly negotiated
High Family contracts, and Tia had no doubt that there was a lot more at stake
than just the area. Someone owed someone else a favor, or else someone wanted
something else kept quiet, and this was the price.
She was doubly sure when the location came
up red flagged on her geological search. According to the survey records, that
lovely, flat plain was a flood basin. Quetzecoatl did not have the kind of
eccentric orbit that Largo Draconis did. Just a little tilt. One that didn't
affect anyone in the major settlements at all. But once every hundred years,
that tilt angled the north pole into the solar plane for a bit longer than
usual. The glaciers would start to melt. The plain below wouldn't exactly
'flood' or at least, not all at once. It would just get very, very soggy,
slowly, then, when the spring rains came, the water would rise over the course
of a week or two. Eventually the entire plain would be under about two inches
of water, and would remain that way for about three years, gradually drying
again for the fourth as the glaciers in the north grew.
But Interstellar Teleson's Corporate
Standards dictated that the most sensitive records and delicate instruments,
and all their computer equipment, be installed permanently in sub-basements no
less than four stories below surface level, to avoid any possibility of damage.
Corporate Standards had been set to guard against human interference, not
nature's. Corporate Standards evidently did not consider nature to be important.
Whoever was in charge of this project
apparently completely disregarded the geological survey. Engineers complained
about seepage and warned of flooding; the reaction was to order extra sump
pumps. Sump pumps were keeping the sub-basements tolerably dry now, but Tia
guessed that they were going constantly just to keep up with ordinary
groundwater. They were not going to handle the flood.
Especially not when flood waters were
seeping in through the ground floor walls and creeping over the doorsills.
According to the meteorological data, the
glaciers were melting, and the spring rains were only a couple of months away.
Meanwhile, half a continent away, there
was a disaster recovery firm that specialized in data and equipment recovery.
They advertised that they could duplicate an existing system in a month, and
recover data from devices that had been immersed in saltwater for over a year,
or through major fires with extensive smoke damage. Interstellar Teleson was
going to need them, and they didn't even know it. Besides, Tia liked the name.
Whoever these people were, they had one heck of a sense of humor.
Chuckling to herself, Tia called Lee
Stirling and made her investment, then sent out another carefully worded letter
to Crash and Burn Data Recovery Limited.
The public trial of Doctor Haakon-Fritz
was a ten day circus, but by then, Tia and Alex had for more serious things on
their minds and no time to waste on trivialities.
Tia's recordings, both at the site and in
the main cabin, were a matter of public record now, and that was the only stake
they had in the trial. The Institute only wanted to keep from looking too
foolish. In return for the supply of small arms Alex demanded, they asked that
he not testify at the trial, since anything he could say would only corroborate
those records. They both knew what the Institute people were thinking: records
were one thing, but a heroic participant, who just might sound impassioned, no,
that was something they didn't want to see. He was willing, he reckoned it was
a small price to pay. Besides, there was little he could add, other than
becoming another source of media attention.
So while the media gathered, the quiet
Institute lawyers and spokesmen tried to downplay the entire incident, Alex got
his arms-locker, and Tia her ethological kit as the price for their
non-participation. And as they prepared to head out on a new round of duties,
there came an urgent message.
The Institute contract was on hold; CS had
another use for them as the only BB ship on base.
And they suddenly found themselves, not
only with a new agenda, but an entirely new employer.
"Kenny, what is all this about?"
Tia asked, when the barrage of orders and follow-up orders concluded, leaving
them with a single destination, an empty flight plan, and a 'wait for briefing'
message. So here they were docked with the Pride of Albion, and the briefing
orders coming from Doctor Kennet Uhua-Sorg.
"This," Doctor Kennet replied,
grimly, sending the iive-cam view of one of the isolation rooms.
Alex gasped. Tia didn't blame him.
The view that Doctor Kennet gave them of
this, the pride of Albion's newest isolation patient, was blessedly brief. It
had been a human at one point. Now it was a humanoid-shaped mass of suffering.
Somewhere in the mass of open sores were eyes, a mouth, a face. Those had been
hands, once, and feet
Tia was the first to recover. "Who is
that," she asked sharply, "and what happened to him?"
"Who, we don't know," Kenny
replied, his face completely without expression. "He was from a tramp
freighter that left him when he didn't get aboard by liftoff time. We don't
know if they expected something like this, or if they were just worried because
one of their bogus crew turned up missing, but they burned out of Yamahatchi
Station with a speed that simply didn't match their rather shabby exterior. He
was under false papers, of course, and there isn't enough of his fingers or
retinas left to identify him. And unless he's ever been a murder or crime-of-violence
suspect, his DNA patterns could take years to match with his birth
records."
Alex nodded. It wouldn't have been too
difficult to deduce his ship; anyone logging into a station hostel or hotel had
to list his ship-of-origin as well as filing his papers. That information was
instantly cross-checked with the ship; the ship had to okay the crewman's ID
before he would be allowed to check in. Passengers, of course, used an entirely
separate set of hotels.
"That kind of speed probably means a
pirate or a smuggler," Alex said.
"I don't think there's much doubt of
that," Kenny replied. "Well, when his logged time at the cheap hostel
he'd checked into ran out, they opened the door to his room, found that, and
very wisely slammed the door and reported him."
"What about the hostel
personnel?" Tia asked.
"We have them all in isolation, but
so far, thank the deity of your choice, none of them are showing any signs of
infection."
"For which favor, much thanks,"
Alex muttered.
*Just what is it that he's got?" Tia
asked, keeping her voice even and level.
Kenny shrugged. "Another plague with
no name. Symptoms are simple enough. Boils which become suppurating sores that
seem to heal only to break open again. A complex of viruses and bacteria,
reinforced with modified immune deficiency syndrome. So far, no cure.
Decontamination sterilized the hostel room completely, and we haven't seen
anyone else come down with this thing. And, thank the spirits of space, once he
checked into the hostel, door records show he never left his room."
"There is no reason for a pirate to
come down with something like that," Tia pointed out, "but an
artifact smuggler."
"Precisely why I asked for you
two," Kenny replied, "and precisely why the Institute loaned you to
us. Oh, Alex, in case you wondered, I'm in this because, despite my specialty,
I seem to have become the expert in diseases associated with archeology."
Alex cast an inquiring glance at her
column. Tia knew what he was asking. Could this be the same disease their
mysterious 'Sinor' had told them about? Could it be that the man had given them
a true story, though not his true name?
She printed her answer under Dr. Kenny's
image. It's a coincidence. Not the same as Sinor's phony plague, he would have
been frantic if he truly had this to contend with.
He signaled his question with his eyes.
Why?
"Immune deficiency. Contact or
airborne. Think about it."
His eyes widened, and he nodded, slowly.
The nightmare that had haunted the human world since the twentieth century; the
specter of an immune deficiency disease communicated by an airborne or simple
contact vector. No one wanted to think about it, yet in the minds of anyone
connected to the medical professions, it was an ever-present threat.
"You two are a unique combination
that I think has the best chance to track this thing to its source," Kenny
said. "Medical Services will have more than one team on this, but you're
the only BB team available. The Institute doesn't want any of their people to
stumble on the plague the hard way, so they subcontracted you to Medical for
the duration. I'm delegating the planning of search patterns to you. Got any
ideas on how to start?"
"Right," Alex replied.
"Then if that's what you want, let's do this the smart way, instead of the
hard way. First off, what's the odds this could have come off a derelict
station or ship, out in hard vacuum?"
"Odds? Not likely. Hard vacuum kills
all of the bugs involved. That does eliminate anything like an asteroid or
EsKay situation though, doesn't it?" Kenny looked fairly surprised, as
well as pleased. "Let me get Lars in on this, he's been monitoring the
poor devil."
It took a few moments for Lars to clear
his boards enough to have attention to devote to a vocal circuit. During that
time, Tia thought of a few questions she'd like to ask.
"Lars, has he said anything?"
she asked, as soon as Lars joined the conference call. "Something that
could give us clues?"
"Ravings mostly, do you think you can
get anything out of that?" Lars sounded fairly dubious. "It's not as
if he was an astrogator or anything. Mostly he's been yammering on about the
weather, besides the usual; either pain and hallucinations, or about treasure
and gold."
"The weather?" Tia responded
immediately. "What about it?"
"Here, I'll give you what I've got,
cleaned up so you can understand it, of course."
A new voice came over the circuit; harsh,
with a guttural accent. "Treasure ... gold ... never saw s'much. Piles'n'piles
... no moon, frag it, how c'n a guy see anythin'... anythin' out there. No
moon. Dark 'sa wormhole. Crazy weather. Nothin' but crazy weather ... snow,
rain, snow, sleet, mud ... how ya s'pposed t' dig this stuff up in this?"
"That's basically it," Lars
said, cutting the recording off. "He talks about treasure, moonless, dark
nights, and crazy weather."
"Why not assume he's complaining
about where he was? Put that together with an atmosphere and ... ?" Tia
prompted. "What do you get?"
"Right. Possible eccentric orbit,
probably extreme tilt, third in Terra-type position, and no satellites."
Lars sounded pleased. "I'll get Survey on it."
"What about the likely range of the
ship that left him?" Tia asked. "Check with CenSec and Military; the
docks at Yamahatchi had to have external specs and so forth on that ship. What
kind of fuel did they take on, if any? Docks should have external pictures.
Military ought to be able to guess at the range, based on that. That should
give us a search area."
"Good." Kenny made notes.
"I've got another range, how long it probably took for our victim to come
down with the disease once he was infected. Combine that one with yours, and we
should have a sphere around Yamahatchi."
"Kenny, he couldn't possibly have
shown any symptoms while he was in space. They'd have pitched him out the
airlock," Tia pointed out. "That means he probably went through
incubation while they were in FTL and only showed symptoms once they hit
port."
"Right. I'll have that calculated for
you and get you the survey records for that sphere, then it'll be up to you and
the other teams." Kenny signed off, and Alex swiveled his chair to face
Tia's column.
"There's an information lag for that
area," Alex pointed out. "Yamahatchi is on the edge of known space.
Survey is still working out there, except for really critical stuff, it's going
to take weeks, months, even years for information to make it here. We need a
search net, not just a couple of search teams."
"So, how about if we have Kenny call
in not just Medical Services, but Decontamination?" she asked. "They
don't have any BB teams either, but they do have the AI drones and the med
teams assigned to them. They can run the net as well as we can, Slower, but that
may not be so bad."
"I'll get on it," Alex replied
instantly. "He can be mobilizing every free ship and team they've got
while we compute the likely targets."
"And Intelligence!" she added,
as Alex got back on the horn with Kenny and his team. "Get Kenny to get in
touch with Intel, and have their people inside that sphere be on the watch for
more victims, rumors of plague or of plague ships, or ships that have
mysteriously lost half their crews!"
That would effectively increase their
available eyes and ears a hundred-thousandfold.
"Or of ships that vanish and don't
come into port," Alex said grimly. "Somewhere along the line that so
called tramp freighter is going to do just that; go into hyper and never come
out again. Or come out and drift with no hand on the helm."
Tia wished she could still shiver; as it
was, she felt rather as if her hull temperature had just dropped to absolute
zero.
No computer could match the trained mind
for being able to identify or discard a prospect with no data other than the
basic survey records. Alex and Tia each took cone-shaped segments of the
calculated sphere and began running their own kind of analysis on the prospects
the computer search came up with.
Some were obvious; geologic instability
that would uncover or completely bury the caches. Unpredictable weather that
did not include snow, weather that did not include rain. Occupied planets with
relatively thick settlements, or planets with no continents, only tiny island
chains.
Some were not so obvious. Terrain with no
real landmarks or landmarks subject to change. Terrain with snow and rain, but
with snow piling up twelve feet thick in the winter; too deep to dig in. The
original trove must have been uncovered by accident, perhaps during the construction
of a rudimentary base, or by someone just outside, kicking around dirt.
Places with freelance mining operations
were on the list; agri-colonies weren't. Places marked by the Institute for
investigation were, places with full Institute teams weren't. While Tia would
not have put it past someone with problems to sell out to smugglers, she didn't
think that they'd care to cover up a contagious disease this hideous.
As soon as they finished mapping a cone,
it went out to a team to cover. They had another plan in mind for themselves:
covering free-trade ports, looking for another victim. They could cover the
ports a lot faster than any of the AI or softperson-piloted ships; the only one
fester would have been someone with a Singularity Drive. Since those were all
fully occupied, and since, as yet, they had only one victim and not a
full-scale plague in progress, there was no chance of getting one reassigned to
this duty. So AH One-Oh-Three-Three would be doing what it could, and trying to
backtrack the 'freighter' to its origin point. They were running against the
clock, and everyone on the project knew it. If this disease got loose in a
large, space-going population, the chances of checking it before millions died
were slender.
"Alex," Tia called for the third
time, raising the volume of her voice a little more. This time he answered,
even though he didn't turn his dark-circled eyes away from his work.
"What, m'love?" he said
absently, his gaze glued to a topographical map on the screen before him,
despite the fact that he could hardly keep his eyes open.
She overrode the screen controls, blanking
the one in front of him. He blinked and turned to stare at her with weary
accusation.
"Why did you do that?" he asked.
"I was right in the middle of studying the geography."
"Alex!" she said with
exasperation. "You hadn't changed the screen in half an hour; you probably
hadn't really looked at it in all that time. Alex, you haven't eaten anything
in over six hours, you haven't slept in twenty, and you haven't bathed or
changed your clothes in forty-eight!"
He rubbed his eyes and peered up at the
blank screen. "I'm fine," he protested feebly.
"You're not," she countered.
"You can hardly hold your head up. Look at your hand shake! Coffee is no
substitute for sleep!"
He clenched his fist to stop the trembling
of his hand. "I'm fine," he repeated, stubbornly.
She made a rude noise and flashed her
screens at him, so that he winced. "There, see? You can't even control
your reactions. If you don't eat, you'll get sick, if you don't sleep, you'll
miss something vital, and if you don't bathe and change your clothes I'm
turning you over to Decontam."
"All right, love, all right," he
sighed, reaching over and patting her column. "Heat me up something; I'll
be in the galley shortly."
"How shortly?" she asked
sharply.
"As long as it takes for a shower and
fresh clothes." He pried himself up out of his chair and stumbled for his
room. A moment later, she heard the shower running and when she surreptitiously
checked, she discovered that as she had suspected, he was running it on cold.
Trying to wake up, hmm? Not when I want
you to relax, She overrode the controls, not bringing it all the way up to
blood-heat, but enough that he wasn't standing in something one degree above
sleet. It must have worked; when he stumbled out into the galley, freshly
clothed, he was yawning.
She fed him food laden with tryptophane;
he was too tired to notice. And even though he punched for it, he got no
coffee, only relaxing herbal teas.
He patted her auxiliary console, this time
as if he were patting someone's hand to get her attention. He'd been doing that
a lot, lately, that and touching her column like the arm of an old and dear
friend. "Tia, love, don't you realize we're almost through with this? Two
cones to go, three if you count the one I'm working on now."
"Which I can finish," she said
firmly. "I don't need to eat, and I only need three hours of DeepSleep in
twenty-four. Yes, I knew. But you aren't going to get teams out there any
faster by killing yourself, and if you work yourself until you're exhausted,
you are going to miss what might be the important clue."
"But, " he protested, and was
stopped by a yawn.
"No objections," she replied.
"I can withhold the data, and I will. No more data for another eight
hours. Consider the boards locked, brawn. I'm overriding you, and if I have to,
I'll get Medical to second me."
He was too tired to be angry, too tired
even to object.
In the past several days he had averaged
about four hours in each sleep period, with nervous energy waking him long
before he should have reawakened. But the strain was taking its toll. She had
the feeling he was going to get that eight solid hours this time, whether or
not he intended to.
"You aren't going to accomplish
anything halfconscious," she reminded him. "You know what they say in
the Academy; do it right, or don't do it."
"I give up." He threw his hands
up in the air and shook his head. "You're too much for me, lover."
And with that, he wandered back into his
cabin and fell onto his bunk, still fully clothed. He was asleep the moment he
was prone.
She did something she had never done
before; she continued to watch him through her eye in his cabin, brooding over
him, trying to understand what had been happening over the past several days.
She had forgotten that she was encased in
a column, not once, but for hours at a time. They had talked and acted like,
like ordinary people, not like brain and brawn. Somehow, during that time, the
unspoken, unconscious barriers between them had disappeared.
And he had called her 'love' or 'lover' no
less than three times in the past ten minutes. He'd been calling her by that
particular pet name quite a bit.
He had been patting her console or column
quite a bit, these past few days, as if he were touching someone's hand to gain
attention, soothe, or emphasize a point.
She didn't think he realized that he was
doing either of those things. It seemed very absentminded, and very natural. So
she wasn't certain what to make or think of it all. It could simply be healthy
affection; some people used pet names very casually. Up until now, Alex hadn't,
but perhaps until now he hadn't felt comfortable enough with her to do so. How
long had they known each other anyway? Certainly not more than a few months,
even though it felt like a lifetime.
No, she told herself firmly. It doesn't
mean a thing. He's just finally gotten to know me well enough to bring all his
barriers down.
But the sooner they completed their
searches and got out into space again, the sooner things would go back to
normal.
Let's see if I can't do two of those three
cones before he wakes up.
Predictably, the port that the mysterious
tramp freighter had filed as its next port of call did not have any record of
it showing up. Tia hadn't really expected it to; these tramps were subject to
extreme changes of flight plan, and if it had been a smuggler, it certainly wouldn't
log where it expected to go next.
She just hoped that it had failed to show
up because the captain had lied, and not because they were drifting out in
space somewhere. She let Alex do all the talking; he was developing a
remarkable facility for playing a part and very cleverly managed to tell the
absolute truth while conveying an impression that was entirely different from
the whole truth.
In this case, he left the station manager
with the impression that he was an agent for a collection agency, one that
meant to collect the entire ship, once he caught up with it.
Alex shut down the com to the station
manager, and turned his chair to face her screen and the plots of available
destinations.
"How do you do that?" she asked,
finally. "How do you make them think something entirely different from the
real truth?"
He laughed, while she pulled up the local
map and projected it as a holographic image. "I've been in theater groups
for as long as I can remember, once I got into school. My other hobby, the one
I never took too seriously, even though they said I was pretty good. I just try
to imagine myself as the person I want to be, and figure out what of the truth
fits that image."
"Well," she said, as they
studied the ship's possible destinations, "if I were a smuggler, where
would I go?"
"Lermontov Station, Presley Station,
Korngold Station, Tung Station," he said, ticking them off on his fingers.
"They might turn up elsewhere, but the rest all have Intel people on them;
we'll know if they hit there."
"Provided whoever Intel has posted
there is worth his paycheck. Why Presley Station?" she asked. "That's
just an asteroid-mining company headquarters."
"High Family in residence," he
replied, leaning back in his chair, and lacing his fingers behind his head.
"Money for valuable artifacts. Miners with money, and not all of them are
rock-rats."
"I thought miners were all, well,
fairly crude," she replied.
He shook his head. "Miners are
people, and there are all kinds out there. There are plenty of miners looking
to make a stake, and some of them outfit their little tugs in ways that make a
High Family yacht look plain. They have money for pretties, and they don't much
care where the pretty came from. And one more thing; the Presley Lee y Black
consortium will buy ore hauls from anyone, including tramp prospectors, so we
have a chance that someone may actually stumble on the trove itself. We can
post a reward notice there, and it'll be seen."
"Along with a danger warning,"
she told him. I only hope these people believe it. Lermontov first, then Tung,
then Presley?"
"Your call, love," he replied
comfortably, sending a carefully worded notice to the station newsgrid. They
didn't want to cause a panic, but they did want people to turn in any due to
the whereabouts of the freighter And they didn't want anyone infected along the
way. So the news notice said that the ship in question might have been
contaminated with Anthrax Three, a serious, but not fatal, variant of old Terran
anthrax.
He finished posting his notice, and turned
back to her. "You're the pilot I'm just along for the ride."
"It's the most efficient
vector," she replied, logging her flight plan with Traffic Control.
"Three days to Lermontov, one to Tung, a day and a half to Presley."
Despite Alex's disclaimer that he was only
along for the ride, the two of them did not spend the three days to Lermontov
idle. Instead, they sifted through all the reports they'd gotten so far from
the other teams, looking for clues or hints that their mystery ship could have
made port anywhere else. Then, when they hit Lermontov, Alex went hunting
on-station.
This time his cover was as a shady
artifact dealer; looking for entire consignments on the cheap. There were plenty
of people like him, traders with negotiable ethics, who would buy up a lot of
inexpensive artifacts and forge papers for them, selling them on the open
market to middle-class collectors who wanted to have something to impress their
friends and bosses with their taste and education. Major pirates wouldn't deal
with them, at least, not for like really valuable things. But crewmen, who
might pick up a load of pottery or something else not worth the bigger men's
time, would be only too happy to see him. In this case, it was fortunate that
Tia's hull was that of an older model without a Singularity Drive; she looked
completely nondescript and a little shabby, just the sort of thing such a man
would lease for a trip to the Fringe.
Lermontov was a typical station for tramp
freighters and ships of dubious registration. Not precisely a pirate station,
since it was near a Singularity, it still had station managers who looked the
other way when certain ships made port, docks that accepted cash in advance and
didn't inquire too closely into papers, and a series of bars and restaurants
where deals could be made with no fear of recording devices.
That was where Alex went, wearing one of
his neon outfits. Tia was terrified that he would be recognized for what he was,
but there was nothing she could do about it. He couldn't even wear a
contact-button; the anti-surveillance equipment in every one of those dives
would short it out as soon as he crossed the threshold. She could only monitor
the station newsgrids, look for more clues about 'their' ship, and hope his
acting ability was as good as he thought it was.
Alex had learned the trick of drinking
with someone when you wanted to stay sober a long time ago. All it took was a
little sleight of hand. You let the quarry drain his drink, switch his with
yours, and let him drain the second, then call for another round. After three
rounds, he wouldn't even notice you weren't drinking, particularly not when you
were buying the drinks.
Thank the spirits of space for a MedService
credit account.
He started out in the 'Pink Comet', whose
neon decorations more than outmatched his jumpsuit He learned quickly enough
there that the commodities he wanted weren't being offered, although the rebuff
was friendly enough, coming from the bartender after he had already stood the
whole house a round. In fact, the commodities being offered were more in the
line of quasi-legal services, rather than goods. The bartender didn't know who
might have what he wanted, but he knew who would know and sent Alex on to the
'Rimrunners'.
Several rounds later, he suffered through
a comical interlude where he encountered someone who thought he was buying
feelie-porn and sex-droids, and another with an old rock-rat who insisted that
what he wanted was not artifacts but primitive art "There's no money in
them arty-facts no more," the old boy insisted, banging the table with a
gnarled fist. "Them accountants don't want arty-facts, the damn market's
glutted with 'em! I'm tellin' ya, primitive art is the next thing!"
It took Alex getting the old sot drunk to
extract himself from the man, which might have been what the rock-rat intended
in the first place. By then he discovered that the place he really wanted to be
was the 'Rockwall'. In the 'Rockwall', he hit paydirt, all right, but not
precisely what he had been looking for.
The bar had an odd sort of quiet ambience;
a no-nonsense non-human bartender, an unobtrusive bouncer who outweighed Alex
by half again his own weight, and a series of little enclosed table-nooks where
the acoustics were such that no sound escaped the table area. Lighting was
subdued, the place was immaculately clean, the prices not outrageously
inflated. Whatever deals went on here, they were discrete.
Alex made it known to the bartender what
he was looking for and took a seat at one of the tables. In short order, his
credit account had paid for a gross of Betari funeral urns, twenty soapstone
figurines of Ruykedan snake-goddesses, three exquisite Utde crystal Kanathi skulls
that were probably worth enough that the Institute and Medical would forgive
him anything else he bought, and, of all bizarre things to see out here, a Hopi
kachina figure of Owl Dancer from old Terra herself. The latter was probably
stolen from another crewman. Alex made a promise to himself to find the owner
and get it back to him, or her. It was not an artifact as such, but it might
well represent a precious bit of tribal heritage to someone who was so far from
home and tribe that the loss of this kachina could be a devastating blow.
His credit account had paid for these
things, but those he did business with were paid in cash. Simply enough done,
as he discovered at the first transaction, The seller ordered a 'Rock'n'Run',
the bartender came to the table with a cashbox. Alex signed a credit chit for
the amount of sale plus ten percent to the bar; the bartender paid the seller.
Everyone was happy.
He'd spoken with several more crewmen of
various odd ships, prompting, without seeming to, replies concerning rumors of
disease or of plague ships. He got old stories he'd heard before, the Betan
Dutchman, the Homecoming, the Alice Bee. All ships and tales from previous
decades; nothing new.
He stayed until closing, making the
bartender stretch his 'lips' in a cheerful 'smile' at the size of the bills he
was paying, and making the wait-beings argue over who got to serve him next
with the size of his tips. He had remembered what Jon Chernov had told him once
about Intel people. They have to account for every half-credit they spend, so
they're as tightfisted as a corporate accountant at tax time. If you're ever
doing Intel work, be a big spender. They'll never suspect you. And better a
docked paycheck for overspending than a last look at the business end of a
needier.
Just before closing was when the Quiet Man
came in, As unobtrusive as they came, Alex didn't realize the man was in the
bar until he caught a glimpse of him talking with the bartender. And he didn't
realize that he was coming towards Alex's table until he was standing there,
"I understand you're buying
things," the Quiet Man breathed. "I have some, ... things."
He opened his hand, briefly, to display a
miniature vase or bottle, a lovely thing with a rainbow sheen and a style that
seemed oddly familiar, although Alex couldn't place it As if one had fused Art
Nouveau with Salvadore Dali, it had a skewed but fascinating sinuousity.
"That's the sort of merchandise I'm
interested in, all right," Alex said agreeably, as he racked his brain,
trying to place where he had seen a piece like it before. "The trouble is,
it looks a little expensive for my pocket."
The Quiet Man slid in opposite Alex at a
nod. "Not as expensive as you think," the Quiet Man replied.
"The local market's glutted with this stuff." The Quiet Man's
exterior matched his speech; gray jumpsuit, pale skin, colorless eyes and hair,
features that were utterly average. "I have about a hundred little pieces
like this and I haven't been able to unload them, and that's a fact"
"I appreciate your honesty,"
Alex told him, allowing his surprise to show through.
The Quiet Man shrugged. "You'd find
it out sooner or later. The bosses only wanted the big stuff. Some of the other
guys took jewelry; I thought they were crazy, since it was only titanium, and
the pieces weren't comfortable to wear and a little flimsy. But some of the
earlier crews must have brought back these perfume bottles, because I haven't
been able to dump even one. I was hoping if you were buying for another sector,
you'd be interested. I can give you a good deal on the lot."
"What land of a good deal?" Alex
asked.
The Quiet Man told him, and they began
their bargaining. They ended it a good half hour after the bar was officially
closed, but since Alex was willingly paying liquor prices for fruit juice, all
that was legal after hours, the bartender was happy to have him there. The
staff cleaned up around them, until he and the Quiet Man shook hands on the
deal.
"These aren't exactly ancient artifacts,"
the Quiet Man had admitted under pressure from Alex, "They can be doctored
to look like 'em with a little acid-bath, though. They're, oh, maybe eight,
nine hundred years old. Come from a place colonized by one of the real early
human slowships; colony did all right for a while, then got religion and had
themselves a religious brawl, wiped each other out until there wasn't enough to
be self-sustaining. We figured the last of them died out maybe two hundred
years ago. Religion. Go figure."
Alex eyed his new acquisition with some
surprise. "This's human-made? Doesn't look it."
The Quiet Man shrugged. "Beats me.
Bosses said the colonists were some kind of artsy-craftsy back-to-nature types.
Had this kind of offshoot of an earth-religion with sacramental hallucinogenics
thrown in to make it interesting, until somebody decided he was the next great
prophet and half the colony didn't see it that way. I mean, who knows with that
kind? Crazies."
"Well, I can make something up that
sounds pretty exotic," Alex said cheerfully. "My clients won't give a
damn. So, what do you want to do about delivery?"
"You hire a lifter and a kid from
SpaceCaps," the Quiet Man said instantly. "I'll do the same. They
meet here, tomorrow, at twelve-hundred. Your kid gives mine the credit slip,
mine gives yours the box. Make the slip out to the bar, the usual."
Since that was exactly the kind of
arrangement Alex had made for the gross of funeral urns, with only the time of
delivery differing, he agreed, and he and the Quiet Man left the bar and went
their separate ways.
When he returned to the ship, he took the
stairs instead of the lift, still trying to remember where he had seen the
style of the tiny vase.
"You look cheerful!" Tia said,
relief at his safe return quite evident in her voice.
"I feel cheerful. I picked up some
artifacts on the black market that I'm sure the Institute will be happy to
have." He emptied his pockets of everything but the 'perfume bottle' and
laid out his 'loot' where Tia could use her close-up cameras on the objects.
"And this, I suspect, is stolen, " He unwrapped the kachina.
"See if you can find the owner, will you?"
"No problem," she replied
absently. "I've been following your credit chit all over the station;
that's how I figured out how to keep track of you. Alex, the two end skulls are
forgeries, but the middle one is real, and worth as much as everything you
spent tonight"
"Glad to hear it" He chuckled.
"I wasn't sure what I was going to say to the Institute and Medical if
they found out I'd been overtipping and buying rounds for the house. All right,
here's my final find, and I have a load of them coming over tomorrow. Do you
remember what the devil this is?"
He placed the warped little vase carefully
on the console. Tia made a strange little inarticulate gargle.
"Alex!" she exclaimed.
"That's one of 'Sinor's' artifacts!"
He slapped his forehead with the heel of
his hand. "Of course! That's why I couldn't remember what book I'd seen it
in! Spirits of space, Tia, I just made a deal with the crewman of the ship
that's running these things in for a whole load of them! He said, and I quote,
'the bosses only wanted the bigger stuff. They're not really artifacts, they're
from some failed human art-religious colony'."
"I'm calling the contact number Sinor
gave us," she said firmly. "Keep your explanations until I get
someone on the line."
Tia had been ready to start sending her
servos to pick lint out of the carpet with sheer nerves until she figured out
that she could trace Alex's whereabouts by watching for his credit number in
the station database. She followed him to three different bars that way,
winding up in one called 'Rockwall', where he settled down and began spending
steadily. She called up the drink prices there, and soon knew when he had made
an actual artifact purchase by the simple expedient of which numbers didn't
match some combination of the drink prices. A couple of times the buys were
obvious; no amount of drinking was going to run up numbers like he'd just
logged to his expense account.
She had worried a little when he didn't
start back as soon as the bar closed, but drinks kept getting logged in, and
she figured then, with a little shiver of anticipation, that he must have gotten
onto a hot deal.
When he returned, humming a little under
his breath, she knew he'd hit paydirt of some kind.
The artifacts he'd bought were enough to
pacify the Institute, but when he brought out the little vase, she thought her
circuits were going to fry.
The thing's identification was so obvious
to her that she couldn't believe at first that he hadn't made the connection
himself. But then she remembered how fallible softperson memory was ...
Well, it didn't matter. That was one of
the things she was here for, after all. She grabbed a com circuit and coded out
the contact number Sinor had given her, hoping it was something without too
much of a lag time.
She could not be certain where her message
went to, but she got an answer so quickly that she suspected it had to come
from someone in the same real-space as Lermontov. No visual coming through to
them, of course, which, if she still had been entertaining the notion that this
was really an Institute directive they were following, would have severely
shaken her convictions. But knowing it was probably the Drug Enforcement Arm,
she played along with the polite fiction that the visual circuit on their end
was malfunctioning, and let Alex repeat the details of the deal he had cut, as
she offered only a close-up of the little vase.
"Go through with it," their
contact said, when Alex was done. "You've done excellent work, and you'll
be getting that bonus. Go ahead and receive the consignment; we'll take care of
the rest and clear out the debits on that account for you. And don't worry;
they'll never know you weren't an ordinary buyer."
There was no mention of plague or any
suggestions that they should take precautions against contamination. Alex gave
her a significant look. "Very well, sir," he only said, with
carefully formality. "I hope we've accomplished something here for
you."
"You have," the unknown said,
and then signed off.
Alex picked up the little vase and turned
it around and around in his hands as he sat down in his chair and put his feet
up on the console. Tia made the arrangements for the two messengers to come to
the ship for the credit chits and then to the bar for the pickups, fortunately,
not at the same time. That didn't take more than a moment or two, and she
turned her attention back to Alex as soon as she was done.
"Was that stupid, dumb luck,
coincidence, or were we set up?" she asked suspiciously. "And where
was that agent? It sounded like he was in our back pocket!"
"I'm going to make some guesses,"
Alex said, carefully. "The first guess is that we did run into some plain
good luck. The Quiet Man had tried all the approved outlets for his trinkets,
outlets that the Arm doesn't know about, and found them glutted. He was
desperate enough to try someone like me. I suspect his ship pulls out tomorrow
or the next day."
"Fine, but why go ahead and sell to
you if he didn't know you?" Tia asked.
"Because I was in the right bar,
making all the right moves, and I didn't act like the Arm or Intel." Alex
rubbed his thumb against the sides of the vase. "I was willing to go
through the barkeep to pay, which I don't think Intel would do. I had the right
'feel,' and I suspect he was watching to see if any of his buddies got picked
up after they sold to me. And lastly, once again, we were lucky. Because he
doesn't know what his bosses are using the phony artifacts for. He thought the
worst that could happen is a wrist-slap and fine, for importing art objects
without paying customs duty on them."
"Maybe his bosses aren't using the
artifacts for smuggling," she pointed out, thinking out all the
possibilities. "Maybe they are just passing them on to a second
party."
"In this station, that's very
possible." Alex put the vase down carefully. "At any rate, I think
the Arm suspected this cluster of stations all along, and they've got a ship
out here somewhere, which is why we got an answer so quickly. I thought that
was a ship-contact number when I saw it, but I didn't say anything."
"Hmm." Tia ran through all the
things she would have done next and came up with a possible answer. "So
now they just find the messenger that goes to 'Rockwall' at noon from a ship
that isn't ours, and tags the ship for watching? Or is that too simple?"
Alex yawned and stretched.
"Probably," he said, plainly bored with the whole game now. "He
probably won't send the messenger from his ship. They'll do their spy-work
somehow; we just gave them what they didn't have in the first place, a contact
point. It's out of our hands, which is just as well, since I'd rather not get
involved in a smuggler versus Intel shoot-out. I'm tired"
"Then you should get some rest,"
she said immediately. "And get that jumpsuit out of my cabin before it
burns out my optics."
He laughed, but he also headed straight
for his bed.
Tia didn't even bother to wake her brawn
as she approached Presley Station and hailed their traffic control. She
expected the usual automated AI most mining stations had; she got a human.
Although it was audio-only, there was no doubt that this was a real human being
and not an Al-augmented recording. Because, from the strain in the voice, it
was a very nervous and unhappy human.
"AH-One-Oh-Three-Three, be advised we
are under a Code Five quarantine," the com officer said, with the kind of
hesitation that made her think he wasn't on a microphone very often. "We
can let you dock, and we can refuel you with servos, but we can't permit you to
open your airlock. And we'd like you to move on to some other station if you have
the reserves."
He can't deny us docking under a Code
Five, but he's frightened. And he really wants us to go away.
Tia made a quick command decision.
"Presley Station, be advised that we are on assignment from CenCom
Medical. References coming now." She sent over her credentials in a
databurst. "We're coming in, and we'd appreciate Presley Station's
cooperation. We'd like to be connected to your Chief Medical Officer while we
maneuver for docking, please."
"Uh, I, " There was a brief
muttering, as if he was speaking to someone else, then he came back on the
mike. "We can do that. Stand by for docking instructions."
At that point the human left the com, and
the AI took over; she woke up Alex and briefed him, then gave him a chance to
get dressed and gulp some coffee while she dealt with the no longer routine
business of docking. As she followed the AI's fairly simple instructions, she
wondered just what, exactly, was going on at Presley Station. Was this the
start of the plague, or a false alarm? Or, was this just one outbreak among
many?
She waited, impatiently, for the com
officer to return online, while Alex gulped down three cups of coffee and shook
himself out of the fog of interrupted sleep. It took forever, or at least it
seemed that way.
Finally the com came alive again.
"AH-One-Oh-Three-Three, we have the Chief Medical Officer online for you
now." It was a different voice; one with more authority. Before Tia could
respond, both voice and visual channels came alive, and she and Alex found
themselves looking into the face of a seriously frightened man, a man wearing
medical whites and the insignia of a private physician.
"Hello?" the man said,
tentatively. "You, you're from MedServices? You don't look like a
doctor."
"I'm not a doctor," Alex said
promptly. "I've been authorized by CenCom MedServices to investigate a
possible outbreak of a new infectious disease that involves immune deficiency
syndrome. We had reason to believe that there's an infectious site somewhere in
this sphere, and we've been trying to track the path of the last known
victim."
There was no doubt about it; the doctor
paled. "Let me show you our patient," he whispered, and reached for
something below the screen. A second signal came in, which Tia routed to her
side screen.
The patient displayed suppurating boils
virtually identical to Kenny's victim; the only difference was that this man
was not nearly so far gone as the first one.
"Well, he matches the symptoms of the
victim we've been tracking," Alex said, calmly, while Tia made frantic
adjustments to her blood-chemistry levels to get her heart calmed down, "I
trust you have him in full isolation and quarantine."
"Him and his ship," the doctor
replied, visibly shaking. "We haven't had any new cases, but decom it, we
don't know what this is or what the vector is or, "
"I've got a contact number coming
over to you right now," Alex interrupted, typing quickly. "As soon as
you get off the line with me, get onto this line; it's a doublebounce link up
to MedServices and a Doctor Kennet Uhua-Sorg. He's the man in charge of this;
he has the first case in his custody, and he'll know whatever there is to know.
What we'd like is this; we're the team in charge of tracking this thing to its
source. Do you know anything about where this patient came from, what he was
doing, "
"Not much," the doctor said,
already looking relieved at the idea that someone at CenCom was 'in charge' of
this outbreak. Tia didn't have the heart to let him know how little Kenny knew;
she only hoped that since they'd left, he'd come up with something more in the
way of a treatment. "He's a tramp prospector; he came in here with a load
we sealed off, and sick as a dog, crawled into port under his own power, but he
collapsed on the dock as soon as he was out of the ship, yelling for a medic.
We didn't know he was sick when we let him dock, of course."
The man was babbling, or he wouldn't have
let that slip. Interstellar law decreed that victims of disease be given safe harborage
within quarantine, but Tia had no doubt that if traffic control hadn't been an
AI, the prospector would have never gotten a berth. At best, they would have
denied him docking privileges; at worst, they'd have sent a fighter out to
blast him into noninfectious atoms. She made a mental note to send that
information on to Kenny with their initial report
"When he collapsed and one of the
dockworkers saw the sores, he hit the alarm and we sealed the dock off, sent in
a crew in decontam suits to get him and put him into isolation. I sent off a
Priority One to our PTA, but it takes so long to get an answer from them."
"Did he say where he thought he
caught this?" Alex said, interrupting him again.
The doctor shook his head. "He just
said he was out looking for a good stake when he stumbled across something that
looked like an interstellar rummage sale, and he figures that was where he got
hit. What he meant by 'interstellar rummage sale' he won't say. Just that it
was a lot of 'stuff', he didn't recognize."
Well, that matched their guess as to the
last victim. "Can we talk to him?" Tia asked.
The doctor shrugged. "You can try.
I'll give you audiovisual access to the room. He's conscious and coherent, but
whether or not he'll be willing to tell you anything, I can't say. He sure
won't tell us much."
It was fairly obvious that he was itching
to get to a comset and get in contact with MedServices, thus, symbolically at
least, passing the problem up the line. If his bosses cared about where the
miner had picked up the infection, they hadn't told him about it.
Not too surprising. He was a company
doctor. He was supposed to be treating execs for indigestion, while his
underlings patched up miners after bar fights and set broken bones after
industrial accidents. The worst he was ever supposed to see was an epidemic of
whatever new influenza was going around. He was not supposed to have to be
dealing with a plague, at least, not by his way of thinking. Traffic control
was supposed to be keeping plague ships from ever coming near the station.
"Thanks for your cooperation,
Doctor," Alex said genially. "Get that link set up for us, if you
would, and we'll leave you to your work."
The doctor signed off, still without
identifying himself, not that Tia was worried. Her recordings were enough for
any legal purposes, and at this point, now that he had passed authority on to
them, he was a nonentity. They didn't need to talk to him anymore. What they
needed was currently incarcerated in an isolation room on that station, and
they were going to have to figure out how to get him to talk to them.
"Okay, Alex," she said when the
screen was safely blank. "You're a lot closer to being an expert on this
than I am. How do we get a rock-rat to tell us what we want to know?"
"Hank, my name's Alex," the
brawn said, watching the screen and all the patient-status readouts alongside.
"I'm a brawn from CS, on loan to MedServices; you'll hear another voice in
a moment, and that's my brainship, Tia."
"Hello, Hank," she said, very
glad that she was safely encased in her column with no reactions for Hank to
read. Alex was doing a good job of acting; one she knew she would never be able
to match. Just looking at Hank made her feel twitchy, shivery, and quite
uncomfortable; sensations she hadn't known she could still have. "I don't
know if anyone bothered to tell you, but we were sent out here because there's
someone else with what you've got; it's very contagious, and we're trying to
keep it from turning into a plague. Will you help us?"
"Give him the straight story,"
Alex had said; Kenny had agreed to that when they got hold of him, right after
the company doctor had called him. "There's no point in trying to trick
him. If he knows how bad off he is, he just might be willing to
cooperate."
The sores only grew worse when you
bandaged them, so Hank was lying in a gel-bed, a big pan full of goo, really,
with a waterbed mattress beneath the goo. Right now only the opaque green gel
covering him was keeping him from outraging modesty. The gel was a
burn-treatment, and something Kenny had come up with for the other man. He was
still alive, but no better than when they had left. They still had no idea who
or what he was, besides horribly unlucky.
Hank peered up at the screen in the corner
of his room, through a face grotesquely swollen and broken out. "These
company goons won't give me any kind of a straight story," he said
hoarsely. "All they do is try an brush me off. How bad off am I?"
"There's no cure," Alex said,
flatly. "There's one other known victim. The other man is worse than you,
and they haven't found anything to reverse his condition. That's the
truth."
Hank cursed helplessly for about four or
five minutes straight before he ran out of breath and words. Then he lay back
in the gel-bed for another couple of minutes with his eyes closed.
Tia decided to break the silence. "I
don't know how you feel about the rest of the universe, Hank, but, we need to
know where you came down with this. If this got loose in any kind of
population, "
"'S'all right, lady," he
interrupted, eyes still closed. "You're preachin' to the choir. Ain't no
percentage in keeping my mouth shut now." He sighed, a sound that sounded
perilously close to a sob. "I run across this place by accident, and I
ain't sure how I'd find it again, but you guys might be able to. I give you
what data I got. I'd surely hate t' see a kid in the shape I'm in right
now."
"Thanks, Hank," Alex said, with
quiet gratitude. "I wish there was something we could do for you. Can you
think of anything you'd like?"
Hank shook his head just a little.
"Tell you what; I got some serious hurt here, an' what they're given me
ain't doin' much, 'cause they're 'fraid I'm gonna get hooked. You make these
bozos give me all the pain meds I ask for, if I ever get cured up, I'll dry out
then. You think you can do that for me?"
"I'll authorize it," Tia said
firmly. At Alex's raised eyebrow, she printed: Kenny's authorizations include
patient treatments. We've got that power, and it seems cruel not to give him
that much relief.
Alex nodded. "Okay, Hank, my partner
says she can boss the docs here. So, fire away; we're recording. Unless you
want something now."
"Naw. I wanta stay on this planet
long enough t' give you what little info I got." Hank coughed. "First
off, my boat's an old wreck; falls outa hyper all the time, and the recorder
don't always work when she takes a dive. Basically, what happened was she fell
out, and there was a Terra-type planet not too far from where she dropped. My
holds was pretty empty, so I figured I'd see if there was anything around.
Registered somethin' that looked like wrecked buildings in one spot, went down
t' take a look-see."
"That was where you caught this
thing?" Alex asked.
"I'm gettin' to that. Weren't no
signs of life, okay. But there was some buildings there, old and kinda' busted
up, round, like them flyin' saucers people used to see. I figgered maybe I'd
hit some place where the archies hadn't got to, mebbe I could pick up something
I could peddle. I went ahead an' landed, okay? Only I found somethin' that
looked like somebody else had been there first. Looked like, I dunno, like
somebody'd been collectin' and hoardin' for a long long time, buryin' the stuff
in caves by the building, stashin' it in the buildings that wasn't busted up.
Some of it was dug up already, some of it somebody'd just started t'dig
up."
"How do you mean?" Alex asked.
"Like, somebody's kid's idea of a
treasure place. Caves, lots of 'em, some of'em dug up, all of 'em still prob'ly
had stuff in 'em." Hank's voice started to slur with fatigue, but he
seemed willing to continue, so Tia let him.
"Anyway, I got down there, grabbed
some of the good stuff, took lots of holos so if I ever figured out where it
was, I could stake a legal claim on it." He sighed. "I was keepin' my
mouth shut, partly 'cause I don't trust these company goons, partly 'cause I
figured on goin' back as soon as I got cured." He coughed, unhappily.
"Well, it don't much look like I'm gonna get cured up any time soon, does
it?"
"I can't promise anything but the
pain meds, Hank," Tia said softly.
"Yeah." He licked cracked and
swollen lips with a pale tongue. "Look, you get into my ship. See if the
damn recorder was workin' at all. Get them holos, see if you can figure out
where the devil I was, from 'em. You guys are CS, ev'body knows you can trust
CS. If there's anything I can get outa this, see what you can do, okay?"
The last was more of a pathetic plea than anything else.
"Hank, I can guarantee you this much,
since you've cooperated, there's some kind of reward system with MedService for
people who cooperate in closing down plagues," Alex said, after a few
moments of checking with regs. "It includes all medical covered, including
prosthetics and restorations, and full value of personal possessions
confiscated or destroyed. That should include your ship and cargo. We'll
itemize the real value of your cargo if we can."
Hank just sighed, but it sounded relieved.
"Good," he replied, his voice fading with exhaustion. "Knew I
could ... trust CS. Lissen, can I get some'f that pain med now?"
Tia logged the authorization and activated
the servonurse. "Coming up, Hank," she said. The man turned his head
slightly as he heard the whine of the motor, and his eyes followed the
hypospray until it touched his arm. "From now on, you just voice-activate
the servo, tell it 'DM-Tia' and it will know what to give you." There was
a hiss, then for one moment, what was left of his swollen lips curved in
something like a smile. Tia closed down the link, after locking in the
'on-demand' authorization. It would take someone from CenCom MedServices to
override it now.
Meanwhile, Alex had been arguing with Dock
Services, and finally had to pull rank on them to get access to the controls
for the dock servos and remotes. Once that was established, however, it was a
matter of moments for Tia to tie herself in and pick out a servo with a camera
still inside the quarantined area to send into the ship.
She selected the most versatile she could
find; one with a crawler base, several waldos of various size and strength, and
a reasonable optical pickup. "We aren't going to tell them that hard
vacuum kills the bugs yet, are we?" she asked, as she activated the servo
and sent it crawling towards the abandoned dock.
"Are you kidding?" Alex snorted.
"Given the pass the credit attitude around here, I may never tell them.
Let Kenny do it, if he wants, but I'd be willing to bet that the moment we tell
them, they'll seal off the section and blow it, then go in and help themselves
to whatever's on Hank's ship before we get a chance to make a record of
it."
"I won't take that bet," she
replied, steering the crawler up the ramp and into the still-gaping airlock.
Hank hadn't exaggerated when he'd said his
ship was a wreck; it had more patches and make-dos on it than she had dreamed
possible on a ship still in space and operating. Half the wall-plates were gone
on the inside of the lock; the floor-plates were of three different colors. And
when she brought the crawler into the control cabin, it was obvious that the
patchworking probably extended to the entire ship.
Exposed wiring was everywhere; the
original control panels had long ago been replaced by panels salvaged from at
least a dozen other places. Small wonder the ship had a tendency to fall out of
hyper; she was surprised it ever managed to stay in hyper, with all the false
signals that should be coming off those boards.
"You think the recorder caught where
he went?" Alex asked doubtfully, peering at the view in the screen. The
lighting was in just as poor shape as everything else, but Tia had some pretty
sophisticated enhancement abilities, and the picture wasn't too bad. The ship's
'black box' recorder, that should have registered everything this poor old
wreck had done, was in no better shape than the rest of the ship.
"Either it did, or it didn't,"
she said philosophically. "We have a pattern of where he was supposed to
be going though, and where he thought he was heading when he left our little
plague-spot We should be able to deduce the general area from that."
"Ah, and since we know the planetary
type, if Survey ever found it, we'll know where it is." Alex nodded as his
hands raced across the keyboards, helping Tia with the complex servo.
"Look, there's the com, I think. Get the servo a little closer, and I'll
punch up a link to us."
"Right." She maneuvered the
crawler in between two seats with stuffing oozing out of cracks in the
upholstery, and got the servo close enough to the panel that Alex could reach
it with one of the waldos. While he punched in their access com-code, she
activated the black box, plugged the servo into it, and put it on com uplink
mode with another waldo. She would have shaken her head, if she could have. Not
only was all of this incredibly jury-rigged, it actually looked as if many of
the operations that should have been automatic had deliberately been made
manual.
"I can't believe this stuff,"
she said, finally. "It must have taken both hands and feet to fly this
wreck!"
"It probably did," Alex
observed. "A lot of the old boys are like that. They don't trust AIs, and
they'll tell you long stories about how it's because someone who was a friend
of a friend had trouble with one and it nearly killed him or wrecked his ship.
The longer they stay out here, the odder they get that way."
"And CenCom worries about us going
loonie," she replied, making a snorting sound. "Seems to me there's a
lot more to worry about with one of these old rock-rats."
"Except that there's never been a
case of one of them going around the bend in a way that endangered more than a
couple of people," Alex replied. Just about then, one of Tia's incoming
lines activated. "There. Have I got you live, lover?"
"Yes, and I'm downlinking now."
The black box burped its contents at her in a way that made her suspect more
than one gap in its memory-train. Oh well. Maybe we'll get lucky. "Should
we go check out the holds now?"
"Not the holds, the cabins,"
Alex corrected. "The holds will probably be half-full of primary-processed
metals, or salvage junk. He'll have put his loot from the site in the cabins,
if it was anything good."
"Good enough." She backed the
servo out, carefully, hoping to avoid tangling it in anything. Somehow she
actually succeeded; she wasn't quite sure how. She had no real 'feeling' from
this servo; no sense of where its limbs were, no feedback from the crawler treads.
It made her appreciate her shipbody all that much more. With the kinesthetic
input from her skin sensors and the internals, she knew where everything was at
all times, exactly as if she had grown this body herself.
There were two cabins off the main one;
the first was clearly Hank's own sleeping quarters, and Tia was amazed at how
neat and clean they were. Somehow she had expected a rat's nest But she
recalled the pictures of the control room as she turned the servo to the other
door, and realized that the control room had been just as neat and clean.
It was only the myriad of jury-rigs and
quick-fix repairs that had given the impression of a mess. There wasn't
actually any garbage in there, the floor and walls were squeaky-clean. Hank ran
as clean a ship as he could, given his circumstances.
The second door was locked; Alex didn't
even bother with any kind of finesse. Hank's ship would be destroyed at this
point, no matter what they did or didn't do. One of the waldos was a small
welding torch; Alex used it to burn out the lock.
The door swung open on its own, when the
lock was no longer holding it. Tia suddenly knew how Lord Carnavon felt, when
he peeked through the hole bored into the burial chamber of Tutankhamen.
" 'Wonderful things!'" she
breathed, quoting him half-unconsciously.
Hank must have worked like a madman to get
everything into that cabin. This was treasure, in every sense of the word.
There was nothing in that cabin that did not gleam with precious metal or the sleekness
of consummate artistry. Or both. The largest piece was a statue about a meter
tall, of some kind of stylized winged creature. The smallest was probably one
of the rings in the heaps of jewelry piled into the carved stone boxes on the
floor, which were themselves works of high art If Hank could claim even a
fraction of this legally, he could buy a new ship and still be a wealthy man.
If he lived to enjoy his wealth, that is.
He had stowed his loot very carefully, Tia
saw, with the same kind of neat, methodical care that showed in his own cabin.
Every box of jewelry was carefully strapped to the floor; every vase was netted
in place. Every statue was lying on the bunk and held down by restraints. The
cabin had been crammed as full as possible and still permit the door to open,
but every single piece had been neatly stowed and then secured, so that no
matter what the ship did, none of it would break loose. And so that none of it
would damage anything else.
"Have we got enough pictures?"
Alex asked faintly. "I'm being overcome by gold-fever. I'd like to look
for those holos before my avarice gets the better of my common sense, and I go
running down there to dive into that stuff myself."
"Right!" Tia said hastily, and
backed the servo out again. The door swung shut after it, and Alex heaved a
very real sigh of relief.
"Sorry, love," he said
apologetically. "I never thought I'd ever react like that."
"You've never been confronted with
several million credits' worth of gold alone," she replied soothingly.
"I don't even want to think what the real value of all of that is. Do you
think he'd keep the holos in his cabin?"
"There's no place to stash them out
in the control room," Alex pointed out.
Once again, Hank's neat and methodical
nature saved the day for them, and Tia knew why he hadn't bothered to tell them
where he'd put his records. Once they entered his cabin, there next to a small
terminal was a drawer marked 'Records,' and in the drawer were the hardcopy
claim papers he'd intended to file and the holos he'd taken in a section marked
'Possible Claims'.
"Luck's on our side today," Alex
marveled. Tia agreed. It would have been far more likely that they'd have
gotten some victim who'd refuse to divulge anything, or one who'd been
half-crazed, or one who simply hadn't kept any kind of a record at all.
Luck was further on their side; he'd made
datahedron copies of everything, including the holos, and those could be
uplinked to AH-One-Oh-Three-Three. There would be no need to bring anything out
of the quarantined dock area.
It took them several hours to find a way
to bring up the reader in the control cabin, then link the reader into the com
system, but once they got a good link established, it was a matter of
nanoseconds and the precious recordings were theirs.
She guided the servo towards the lock and
swiveled the optic back for a last look, and realized that she still had
control over a number of the ship's functions via the servo.
"Alex," she said slowly,
"it would be a terrible thing if the airlock closed and locked, wouldn't
it? That would mean even if station ops blew the section to decontaminate it,
they wouldn't be able to get into the ship, or even get it undocked. They'd
never know exactly what was on board."
Alex blinked in bewilderment for a moment,
then slowly grinned. "That would be terrible, wouldn't it?" he
agreed. "Well, goodness, Tia, I imagine that they'd probably dither around
about it until somebody from CenCom showed up, somebody with authority to
confiscate it and hold it for decontamination and evaluation."
"Of course," she continued
smoothly, sending a databurst to the servo, programming it to get the airlock
to shut and lock up. "And you know, these old ships are so unreliable,
what if something happened to the ship's systems that made it vent to vacuum?
Why then, even if the station managers decided to try and short-circuit the
lock, they couldn't get it open against a hard vacuum. They'd have to bring in
vacuumwelders and cut the locks open, and that would damage their own dock
area. That would just be such an inconvenience."
"It certainly would. " Alex
said, stifling a laugh.
She sent further instructions to the ship
and noted with glee the ship proceeding to vent out the spaceward side. The
servo noted hard vacuum on one of its sensors in a fairly reasonable length of
time.
Satisfied that no one was going to be able
to break into Hank's ship and pilfer his treasure, she sent a last set of
instructions to the servo, shutting it down until she sent it an activation
key. No one was going to get into that ship without her cooperation.
Hank would get a finder's fee, if nothing
else, based on the value of the artifacts he had found. But now it would be
based on the true value of what he had found, and not just what was left after
the owners of Presley Station took their pick of the loot. Assuming they left
anything at all.
"Well," she said, when she had
finished. "We'd better get to work. Are you any good at deciphering black
box recordings?"
"Tolerably," Alex replied.
"Tell you what; you analyze the holos while I diddle the black box data,
then we'll switch."
"Provided you don't get gold-fever
again," she warned him, opening the data on his screens.
The holos showed exactly what Hank had
reported. A series of caves. Caves that looked to have been actually cut into
the bluffs beside the ruined building. The nearest were completely dug up, and
plainly emptied, but beyond them, there was another series of caves that were
open to the air and still held treasure. But this wasn't like anything Tia had
ever seen before. Each one of those caves, rather than being some kind of grave
or other archeological entity, was clearly nothing more than a cache, and each
one held precious objects from an entirely different culture than the one next
to it. The two nearest the camera in the first holo held sacred objects from
two cultures that were lightyears apart, and from ages when neither
civilization had attained even interplanetary flight, much less starflight.
Furthermore, the more Tia studied the
holos, the more she came to the conclusion that the original caches were old;
never mind who was digging them up now. The kind of weathering of the surface
and layering of detritus she saw in the holos took hundreds, perhaps thousands
of years to build up. And the buildings in one of the other holos were very
old.
Nor did she recognize who could have
constructed them.
So who could have been responsible for
collecting all these treasures in the first place? Why had they buried them?
Where did they get it all, and above all, why didn't they come back after it?
There was some evidence around the caves
that the current looters had attempted to rebury their finds. But had they done
so in an attempt to hide it again, or had they done it to try and kill the
disease? How many of the looters were exposed? From the number of caves that
had been broken into, it looked as if there had been quite a few people at work
there.
>>
Tia wished she could sit back and chew a
nail or something. All she had now were questions and no answers. And the lives
of other people might hang in the balance.
There was only one way to answer all those
questions. They were going to have to find Hank's mystery planet and find out
for themselves.
• CHAPTER EIGHT
Tia didn't entirely trust the integrity of
the Presley Station comcenter. She certainly expected that whatever she sent
out would be monitored by the owners and their underlings. Unfortunately, there
had been no provision for the need for secrecy in this mission; she had no
codes and no scramblers. There had been no real reason to think that they would
ever need such secrecy, so she was forced to send in the clear. Just to be on
the safe side, she uplinked on her own and double-sent everything, but she knew
that whatever she sent off that way would be subject to delays as it bounced
from remote hyperwave relay-station to relay station, taking the long way
'home'.
As she had expected, the owners of the
station were quick to move on the information that Hank's ship contained
treasure, despite the fact that no one should have read her messages back to
Kenny and the rest She was just grateful that the owners' first thought was to
grab what they could from the nearby trove, and not to try and figure out where
Hank came from, or attempt to force him to tell them.
The first intimation that the
communications had been leaked was when the station ops tried to claim the ship
and all its contents for themselves; filing confiscation papers in the Central
Systems Courts. When they discovered that Tia had already tied the ship and its
contents up legally on Hank's behalf, they moved on the principle that
'possession is nine-tenths of the law, and the fellow arguing the other tenth
has to prove it with a lawyer'.
They sent crews into the docks, to try and
get into the ship to strip it of as much as they could. Tia's cleverness
thwarted them, as they worked their way, slowly, through every step she'd
expected.
She figured that by the time they were in
a position to actually threaten Hank's possessions, the CS authorities would be
on the scene in person. Meanwhile, she and Alex had some figuring to do. Where
was Hank's cache-world? Same problem as before, except that this time the
possible search area was smaller, and cone-shaped rather than spherical.
Unfortunately, there were some other
people who wanted to get their hands on that same information.
And unknown to either of them, those people
had decided that Alex and Tia were already privy to it.
Tia kept a careful eye on the activity
around her slip just on general principles, even when she wasn't feeling
nervous, but given their current circumstances, and the fact that they were the
only Central Systems ship out here at the moment, she couldn't help but feel a
bit, well, paranoid. At the moment, only three people knew for certain that she
was a brainship; Hank, the traffic control officer who brought them in, and
that doctor. She was pretty certain that the doctor hadn't mentioned it to his
superiors; she knew Hank hadn't told anyone, and as jittery as the other man
had been, he'd probably forgotten it.
No one addressed her when they called, at
any rate, and she took pains to make callers think that she was an Al. So far,
they seemed to be falling in with the deception. This wasn't a bad state of
affairs; no one expected an AI to recognize dangers the way a real sentient
could. She could tap into the optical scanners in the dock area around the ship
and no one would have any notion that she was keeping watch. She made sure to
schedule her three or four hours of DeepSleep while Alex was awake; normally
taking them during his 'morning', while he was still rather grumpy and uncommunicative
and she'd rather not talk to him anyway. And she scanned the recordings she
made while she was under, just to be sure she didn't miss anything.
That was why, a few days after their
interview with Hank, she noticed the man in the dock-crew uniform coverall who
seemed to be working double shifts. Except that no one else was working double
shifts ... and what was more, there was currently a company prohibition against
overtime as a cost-cutting measure.
Something wasn't right, and he never left
the immediate area of her slip. What was he doing there? It wasn't as if she
was either a freighter with goods to load or unload, or a passenger liner. She
didn't need servicing either. He never got close enough that she could see
exactly what he was up to, but it seemed to her that he was doing an awful lot
of make-work.
She kept a close eye on him as he wandered
around the dock area, purposefully, but accomplishing nothing that she could
see. Gradually though, he worked his way in closer and closer to her slip, and
little mental alarms began going off as she watched him and the way he kept
glancing at her lock out of the corner of his eye.
Around sixteen-hundred she watched him
removing control-panel plates and cleaning in behind them, work too delicate to
trust to a servo.
Except that he'd just cleaned that same
area two hours ago.
That was senseless; regs stated that the
panels only had to be cleaned once every two weeks, not every two hours.
Furthermore, there was something not quite
right with his uniform. It wasn't exactly the same color of gray as everyone
else's; it looked crisply new, and the patches were just a little too bright
There were plenty of dockworkers' uniforms in Presley storage, there was no
reason for someone to have had a new one made up unless he was an odd size. And
this man was as average as anyone could possibly be. He was so very
unremarkable that she noticed his uniform long before she noticed him.
That was bad enough, but just as
seventeen-hundred passed and everyone else in the dock-crew went on supper
break, another man in that too-new uniform showed up, while the first man kept
on puttering about.
"Alex?" she said, unhappily.
"There's something going on out there I don't like."
He looked up from his perusal of Hank's
holos; he had prints made from them spread out all over the floor and was
sitting on his heels beside them. "What's up?" She filled him in quickly, as a third and a
fourth person in that same uniform ambled into the dock.
There were now four crewman in the docks
during break. All four of them in a dock area where there were no ships loading
or unloading and no new ships expected to dock in the next twenty-four hours.
"Tia, I don't like this either,"
he said, much to her relief, standing up and heading for the main console.
"I want you to get the station manager online and see what-"
Abruptly, as if someone had given the four
men a signal, they dropped everything they were pretending to do and headed for
her docking slip.
Tia made a split-second decision, for
within a few seconds they were going to be in her airlock.
She slammed her airlock shut, but one of
the men now running for her lock had some kind of black box in his hands; she
couldn't trust that he might not be able to override her own lock controls.
"Alex!" she cried, as she frantically hot-keyed her engines from
cold-start. "They're going to board!"
As Alex flung himself at his acceleration
couch, she sent off a databurst to the station manager and hit the emergency
override on her side of the dock.
The dockside airlock doors slammed shut,
literally in the faces of the four men approaching. Another databurst to the
docking-slip controls gave her an emergency uncouple, there weren't too many
pilots who knew about that kind of override, still in place from the bad old
days when captains had to worry about pirates and station-raiders. She gave her
insystem attitude thrusters a kick and shoved free of the dock altogether,
frantically switching to external optics and looking for a clear path out to
deep space.
As her adrenaline level kicked up, her
reactions went into overdrive, and what had been real-time became slow motion.
Alex sailed ungracefully through the air, lurching for his chair; to her, the
high-speed chatter of comlinks between AIs slowed to a drawl. Calculations were
going on in her subsystems that she was only minimally aware of; a kind of
background murmur as she switched from camera to camera, looking for the
trouble she knew must be out there.
"The chair Alex, " she got out,
just in time to spot a bee-craft, the kind made for outside construction work
on the station, heading straight for her. Behind it were two men in
self-propelled welder-suits. Someone had stolen or requisitioned station
equipment, and they were going to get inside her no matter what the
consequences were. Accidents in space were so easy to arrange.
Alex wasn't strapped down yet She couldn't
wait.
She spun around as Alex leapt for his
couch, throwing him off-balance, and blasted herself out of station-space with
a fine disregard for right of way and inertia as he grabbed and caught the arm
of the chair.
Alex slammed face-first into the couch,
yelped in pain at the impact, and clung with both hands.
Another small craft heading for her with
the purposeful acceleration of someone who intended to ram. She poured on the
speed, all alarms and SOS signals blaring, while Alex squirmed around and
fastened himself in, moaning. His nose dripped blood down the side of his face,
and his lip poured scarlet where he'd bitten or cut it.
She dove under the bow of a tug, delaying
her pursuer. Who was in on this? Was this something the High Families were
behind? Surely not. Please, not.
She continued to accelerate, throwing off
distress signals even onto the relays, dumping real-time replays into message
bursts every few seconds. Another tug loomed up in front of her; she
sideslipped at the last moment, skimming by the Al-driven ship so close that it
shot attitude thrusters out in all directions, the AI driven into confusion by
her wild flying.
The ship behind was still coming on; no
longer gaining, but not losing any ground either.
But with all the fuss that Tia was putting
up, even Presley Station couldn't ignore the feet that someone was trying to
jack her. Especially not with Central Systems investigators due any day, and
with the way she was dumping her records onto the relays. If 'they' were allied
with the station, 'they' wouldn't be able to catch everything and wipe it. If
AH One-Oh-Three-Three disappeared, she was making it very hard for the claim of
'accident' to hold any water. I hope.
As Tia continued to head for deep space, a
patrol craft finally put in an appearance, cutting in between her and her
pursuer, who belatedly turned to make a run for it.
Tia slowed, and stopped, and held her
position, as the adrenaline in her blood slacked off. I remember panting, I
remember shivering. I'd do both even now, if I could. As it was, errant
impulses danced along her sensors, ghost-feelings of the might-have-been of
weapon fire, tractor beams.
Slow heart. It's all right. Gradually her
perception slowed back down to real-time, and the outside world 'sped up'. That
was when the station manager himself hailed her.
"Of course I'm sure they were trying
to break in," she snapped in reply to his query, re-sending him her
recordings, with close-ups on suspicious bulges under the coveralls that were
the right size and placement for needlers and other weapons. She followed that
with the bee-craft and the two men in the welding-suits ... headed straight for
her. "And those pursuit-craft certainly were not my imagination!" She
raised her voice, both in volume and pitch. "I happen to be a fully
trained graduate of Lab Schools, you know! I'm not in the habit of imagining
things!"
Now her adrenaline kicked in again, but
this time from anger. They'd been in real danger, they could have been killed!
And this idiot was talking to her as if she was some kind of, of joy-riding
tweenie!
"I never said they were, ma'am,"
the station manager replied, taken somewhat aback. "I, "
*Just what kind of station are you running
where a CS craft can be subject to this kind of security breach?" she
continued wrathfully, running right over the top of him, now that she had the
upper hand and some verbal momentum. "I'm reporting this to the Central
Worlds Sector Coordinator on my own comlink."
"You don't need to do that ma-"
"And furthermore, I am standing
off-station until you can give me a high-security slip!" she continued,
really getting warmed up and ready to demand all the considerations due a PTA.
"My poor brawn is black and blue from head to toe from the knocking around
he took and lucky it wasn't worse! I want you to question these people, "
"We're taking care of that, ma-"
"And I want to know everything you
learn from them before I dock again!" she finished, with a blast of
feedback that punctuated her words and made him swear under his breath as the squeal
pierced his ears. "Until then, I am going to sit out here and clog your
approach lanes, and I don't particularly care whether or not you like it!"
And with that, she put him on 'record' and
let him splutter into a datahedron while she turned her attention to Alex.
He had a wad of tissues at his face,
trying to staunch the blood from nose and lip, and his eyes above the tissues
were starting to puff and turn dark. He was going to look like a raccoon before
too long, with a double set of black eyes.
Obviously the first thing that had
impacted with the couch was his face.
"Alex?" she said timidly.
"Oh, Alex, I'm so sorry. I didn't mean, there wasn't time, "
"Ith awright," he replied
thickly. "You did okay. Din hab mush shoice. Hanneled ev'thing great,
hanneled him great. You arn gon moof for wile?"
She correctly interpreted that as praise
for her handling of the situation and a query as to whether or not she planned
on moving.
"No, I don't plan on it," she
replied, dryly. "But I had'nt planned on any of this in the first
place."
He simply grunted, pried himself up
painfully out of the acceleration couch and headed for their tiny sickbay to
patch himself up.
She sent in a servo, discreetly, to clean
up the blood in the sickbay and a second to take care of the mess in the main
cabin, thanking her lucky stars that it hadn't been worse. If Alex had been
standing when she pulled that spin and acceleration instead of heading in the
direction of the couch. She didn't want to think about it. Instead, she ordered
the kitchen to make iced gel-packs. Lots of them. And something soft for
dinner.
They left as soon as the CS contingent
arrived and spent a little time debriefing them. The CS folk showed up in a
much fuller force than even Tia had expected. Not only Central Systems Medical
and Administrative personnel, but a CenSec Military brainship, the
CP-One-Oh-Four-One. Bristling with weaponry.
And with the latest and greatest version
of the Singularity Drive, no doubt, she thought, a little bitterly. Heaven only
knows what their version can do. Bring its own Singularity point with it,
maybe.
Whatever the administrators of Presley
Station had thought they were going to get away with, they were soon dissuaded.
The first person off the CenSec ship was a Sector Vice-Admiral; right behind
him was an armed escort. He proclaimed the station to be under martial law,
marched straight into the station manager's office, and within moments had the
entire station swiftly and efficiently secured.
Tia had never been so happy to see anyone
in her life. Within the hour all the witnesses and guilty parties had been
taken into military custody, and Tia confidently expected someone to call them
and take their depositions at any time.
Alex still looked like someone had been
interrogating him with rubber hoses, so when the brainship hailed them, she
took the call, and let him continue nursing his aching head and bruises.
The ship-number was awfully close to hers,
although the military might not use standard CS brainship nomenclature. Still
... One-Oh-Four-One. That's close
enough for the brain to have been in my class.
"That is you, isn't it?" were
the first words over the comlink. The 'voice', along with the sharp overtones
and aggressive punch behind them, was very familiar.
"Pol?" she replied, wondering
wildly what the odds were on this little meeting.
"In the shell and ready to kick some
tail!" Pol responded cheerfully. "How the heck are you? Heard you had
some trouble out here, and the Higher Ups said 'go', so we came
a-running."
"Trouble, you could say so." She
sent him over her records of the short, but hair-raising, at least by her
standards, flight, in a quick burst. He scanned them just as quickly, and sent
a wordless blip of color and sound conveying mingled admiration and surprise.
If he had been a softie, he would have whistled.
"Not bad flying, if I do say so
myself!" he said. "Like the way you cut right under that tug, maybe
you should have opted for CenSec or Military."
"I don't think so," she replied.
"That was more than enough excitement for the next decade for me."
"Suit yourself." Pol laughed, as
if he didn't believe her. "My brawn wants to talk to your brawn. It's
debriefing time."
She called Alex, who had been flat on his
back in his bunk with an ice-gel pack on his black eyes. He staggered out to
his chair and plopped down into it For once, she thought, no one was going to
notice his rumpled uniform, not with the black-blue-purple and green glory of
his bruised face staring out of a screen.
"Line's open," she told Pol,
activating the visual circuit.
As she had half-expected, given her
impressions of the candidates when she had been picking a brawn, it was Chria
Chance who stared out of the screen, with surprise written all over her
handsome features. She was still wearing her leather uniforms, Tia noticed,
which argued powerfully for 'Chria' being High Family. Little eccentricities
like custom-tailored uniforms could be overlooked in someone who was both a
High Family scion and had an excellent record of performance. Tia had no doubt
that Chria's record was outstanding.
Tia noted also one difference between the
Courier Service ships and the CenSec Couriers besides the armament. Directly
behind Chria was another console and another comchair; this one held a thin,
sharp-featured man in a uniform identical to Chria's, with an ornamental
leather band or choker circling his long throat. He looked just as barbaric as
she did. More, actually. He had the rangy, take-no-prisoners look of someone
from one of the outer systems.
In short, he and Chria probably got along
as if they had been made for each other.
"Frigging novas!" Chria
exclaimed, after the first few seconds of staring. "Alex, what in blazes
happened to you"? Your dispatches never said anything about, did they,
"
"Nobody worked me over,
Brunhilde," Alex said tiredly, but with a hint of his customary humor.
"So don't get your tights in a knot This is all my own fault or maybe just
the fault of bad timing. It's the result of my face hitting my chair at, what
was that acceleration, Tia?"
"About two gees," she said
apologetically.
Chria shook her head in disbelief.
"Huh. Well, shoot, here I was getting all ready to go on-station and dent
some heads to teach these perps some manners." She sat back in her chair
and grinned at him. "Sorry about that, flyboy. Next time, strap in."
"Next time, maybe I'll have some
warning," he replied. "Those clowns tried to 'jack us with no advance
notice. New regs should require at least twenty-four hours warning before a
hijacking. And forms filed in quad."
Chria laughed. "Right. You two have
been making my people very happy, did you know that? Their nickname for you is
'Bird-dog', because you've been flushing so much game out for us."
"No doubt." Alex copied her
stance, except that where she steepled her hands in front of her chin, he
rubbed his temple. "Do I assume that this is not a social call? As in,
'debriefing time'?"
"Oh, yes and no." She shrugged,
but her eyes gleamed. "We don't really need to debrief you, but there's a
couple of orders I have to pass. First of all, I've been ordered to tell you
that if you've figured out where your rock-rat's treasure trove is, transmit
the coordinates to us so we know where you're going, but get on out there as
soon as you can move your tail. We'll send a follow-up, but right now we've got
some high-level butts to bust here."
"Generous of you," Alex said
dryly. "Letting us go in first and catch whatever flack is waiting. Are we
still a 'Bird-dog', or have we been elevated to 'self-propelled trouble
magnet'?"
Chria only laughed.
"Come on, flyboy, get with the team.
There's still a Plague-spot out there, and you're the ones most likely to find
it; we don't know what in Tibet we're looking for." She raised an eyebrow
at him, and he nodded in grudging agreement. "Then when you find it, you
know how to handle it. I kind of gather that your people want the plague
stopped, but they also want their statues and what-all kept safe, too. What're
Neil and I going to do, shoot the bug down? He's hot on the trigger, but he's
not up to potting microbes just yet!" Behind her, the sharp-faced man
shrugged in self-deprecation and grinned.
"So, if you've got a probable, let us
know so we can keep an eye on you. Otherwise, " she spread her hands,
"there's nothing we need you for. Fly free, little birds. The records you
so thoughtfully bounced all over the sector are all we need to convict these
perps, wrap them up, and stick them where they have to pump in daylight"
"Here's what we have," Tia said
before Alex could respond. She sent Pol duplicates of their best guesses.
"As you can see, we have narrowed it down to three really good prospects.
Only one of those has a record of sentient ruins, so that's the one we think is
the most likely. I wish they'd logged something besides just 'presence of
structures,' but there it is."
"Survey," Pol said succinctly.
"Get lots of burnout cases in Survey. Well, what can you expect, going
planet-hopping for months on end, dropping satellites, with nothing but an AI
to keep you company? Sometimes surprised they don't go buggy, all things
considered. I would."
Pol seemed much more convivial than Tia
recalled him ever being, and completely happy with his brawn, and Chria had
that relaxed look of a brawn with the perfect partner. But still, Chria had
been an odd one, and Military and Central Security didn't let their brainships
swap brawns without overwhelming reasons. Was Pol happy?
"Pol," Tia sent only to him,
"did you get a good one?"
Pol laughed, replying the same way.
"The best! I wouldn't trade off Chria or Neil for any combo in the
Service. We three-up over here, you know, it's a double-brawn and brain setup;
it's a fail-safe because we're armed. Chria's the senior officer, and Neil's
the gunnery-mate, but Neil's been studying, and now he can double her on
anything, fully qualified. That's not usually the case, from what I hear."
"Why didn't he get his own brainship,
then ?" she asked, puzzled. "If he's fully qualified, shouldn't he
get a promotion?"
"Who can figure softies?" Pol
said dismissively. "He and Chria share a cabin. Maybe it's hormonal. How
about you? You were saying you planned to be pretty picky about your brawns.
Did they rush you, or did you get a good one?"
There were a hundred things she could have
said. Many of which could have gotten her in a world of trouble if she answered
as enthusiastically as she would have liked. "Oh, Alex will do, when he's
not shoving his face into chairs." she replied as lightly as she could.
Pol laughed and made a few softie jokes while Alex and Chria tied up all the
loose ends that needed to be dealt with.
They were the only ship permitted to leave
Presley space. Chria hadn't been joking when she'd said that there was going to
be a thorough examination of everything going on out here. On the other hand,
not having to contend with other traffic was rather nice, all things considered.
Now if only they had a Singularity Drive.
Nevermind, she told herself, as she
accelerated to hyper, we can manage without it. I just hope we don't have any
more 'help' from the opposition.
This place didn't even have a name yet,
just a chart designation. Epsilon Delta 177.3.3. Pol had called it right on the
nose. Whoever had charted this place must have been a burnout case, or he would
have at least tried to name it. That was one of the few perks of a Survey
mission; most people took advantage of it.
It certainly had all the earmarks of the
kind of place they were looking for; eccentric tilt, heavy cloud cover that
spoke of rain or snow or both. But as Tia decelerated into the inner system,
she suddenly knew that they had hit paydirt without ever coming close enough to
do a surface scan.
There should have been a Survey satellite
in orbit around their hot little prospect This was a Terra-type planet; even
with an eccentric tilt, eventually someone was going to want to claim it. The satellite
should have been up there collecting data on planet three, on the entire
system, and on random comings and goings within the system, if any. It should
have been broadcasting warnings to incoming ships about the system's status,
charted but unexplored, under bio-quarantine until checked out, possibly
dangerous, native sentients unknown, landing prohibited.
The satellite was either missing or
silent.
"Accidents do happen," Alex said
cautiously, as Tia came in closer, decelerating steadily, and prepared to make
orbit. "Sometimes those babies break."
She made a sound of disbelief. "Not
often. And what are the odds? It should at least be giving us the navigational
bleep, and there's nothing, nothing at all." She scanned for the satellite
as she picked her orbital path, hoping to pick something up.
"Oh, Tia. Look at that rotation, that
orbit! It could have gotten knocked out of the sky by something." he
began.
"Could have, but wasn't. I've got it,
Alex," she said with glee. "I found it! And it's deader than a burned
out glow-tube."
She matched orbits with the errant
satellite, coming alongside for a closer look. It was about half her size, so
there was no question of bringing it inside, but as she circled it like a
curious fish, there was one thing quite obvious.
Nothing was externally wrong with it.
"No sign of collision, and it wasn't
shot at," Alex observed, and sighed. "No signs of a fire or explosion
inside, either. You've tried reactivating it, I suppose?"
"It's not answering," she said
firmly. "Guess what? You get to take a walk."
He muttered something under his breath and
went after his pressure-suit. After the past few days in transition, his face
had begun to heal, turning from black, blue and purple to a kind of dirty green
and yellow.
She presumed that the rest of him was in
about the same shape, but he was obviously feeling rather sorry for himself.
Do I snap at him, or do I kind of tease
him along? she wondered. He hadn't been in a particularly good mood since the
call from Chria. Was it that he was still in pain? Or was it something else
entirely? There were so many signals of softperson body language that she'd
never had a chance to learn, but there had been something going on during that
interview, not precisely between Alex and Chria, though. More like, going on
with Alex, because of Chria.
Before she had a chance to make up her
mind, he was at the airlock, suited up and tethered, and waiting for her to
close the inner lock for him.
She berated herself for wool-gathering and
cycled the lock, keeping an anxious eye on him while she scanned the rest of
the area for unexpected, and probably unwelcome, visitors. It would be just our
luck for the looters to show up right about now.
He jetted over to the access-hatch of the
satellite and popped it without difficulty. Wait a moment, shouldn't he have
had to unlock it ?
"Tia, the access hatch was
jimmied," he said, his breath rasping in the suit-mike as he worked,
heaving the massive door over and locking it down. "You were right, green
all the way. The satellite's been sabotaged. Pretty crude work; they just
disconnected the solar cells from the instrument pack. It'll still make orbital
corrections, but that's all. Don't know why they didn't just knock it out of
the sky, unless they figured Survey has some kind of telltale on it, and they'd
show up if it went down."
"What should we do?" she asked,
uncertainly. "I know you can repair it, but should you? We need some of
the information it can give us, but if you repair it, wouldn't they figure that
Survey had been through? Or would they just not notice?"
"I don't want to reconnect the
warn-off until we're ready to leave, or they'll definitely know someone's been
eating their porridge," he replied slowly, as he floated half-in, half-out
of the hatch. "If the satellite's telling them to take a hike as soon as
they enter orbit, there won't be much doubt that someone from the authorities
has been here. But you're right, and I not only want to know if someone shows
up in orbit while we're down on the ground, I want the near-space scans it took
before they shut it down, and I want it to keep scanning and recording. The
question is, am I smart enough to make it do all that?"
"I want the planetary records,"
she told him. "With luck, the ruins may show up on the scans. We might
even see signs of activity where the looters have been digging. As for, are you
smart enough, if you can get the solar arrays reconnected, I can reprogram every
function it has. I'm CS, remember? We do work for Survey sometimes, so I have
the access codes for Survey satellites. Trust me, they're going to work; Survey
never seems to think someone might actually want to sabotage one of their
satellites, so they never change the codes."
"Good point" He writhed for a
moment, upside down, the huge blue-white globe behind him making an impressive
backdrop. "Okay, give me a minute or two to splice some cable."
Silence for a moment, except for grunts and fast breathing. "Good; it
wasn't as awful as I thought. There. Solar array plugged back in. Ah, I have
the link to the memory established. And, yes, everything is powering up, or at
least that's what it looks like in here."
She triggered memory-dump, and everything
came over in compressed mode, loud and clear. All the nearspace scans and all
the geophysical records that had been made before the satellite was disabled.
Surface scans in all weathers, made on many passes across the face of the
planet.
But then, nothing. Whoever had disabled
the satellite had known what he was doing. The memory that should have
contained records of visitors was empty. She tried a number of ways of
accessing it, only to conclude that the data storage device had been completely
reformatted, nonsense had been written over all the memory, and it had been
reformatted again. Not even an expert would have been able to get anything out
of it now.
"Can you hook in the proximity-alert
with our com system?" she asked.
"I think so." He braced himself
against the hatch and shoved himself a little farther inside. "Yes, it's
all modular. I can leave just that up and powered, and if they aren't listening
on this band, they won't know that there's been anyone up here diddling with
it."
A few moments more, and she caught a live
signal on one of the high-range in-system comlinks, showing a nearby presence
in the same orbit as the satellite. She felt her heart jump and started to
panic, then she scolded herself for being so jumpy. It was the satellite, registering
her presence, of course.
Alex closed the hatch and wedged it shut
as it had been before, reeling himself back in on the tether. A moment later,
her lock cycled, and he came back into the main cabin, pulling off his helmet
and peeling off his suit.
Tia spent some time reprogramming the
satellite, killing the warn-off broadcast, turning all the near-space scanners
on and recording. Then she turned her attention to the recordings it had
already made.
"So, what have we got?" he
asked, wriggling to get the suit down over his hips. "Had any luck?"
"There's quite a few of those
ruins," she said, carefully, noting with a bit of jealousy that the survey
satellite array was actually capable of producing sharper and more detailed
images than her own. Then again, what it produced was rather limited.
"Well, that's actually kind of
promising." He slid out of the suit and into the chair, leaving the
pressure-suit in a crumpled heap on the floor. She waited a moment until he was
engrossed in the screen, then discretely sent a servo to pick it and the
abandoned helmet up.
"I'd say here or here," he said
at last, pointing out two of the ruins in or near one of the mountain ranges.
"That would give us the rain-snow pattern the first victim raved about.
Look, even in the same day you'd get snow in the morning, rain in the
afternoon, and snow after dark during some seasons."
She highlighted those, but spotted three
more possibilities, all three in areas where the tilt would have had the same effect
on the climate. She marked them as well, and was rewarded by his nod of
agreement.
"All right. This has to be the
planet. There's no reason for anyone to have disabled the satellite otherwise.
Even if Survey or the Institute were sending someone here for a more detailed
look, they'd simply have changed the warn-off message; they wouldn't have taken
the satellite off-line." He took a deep breath and some of the tension
went out of his shoulders. "Now it's just going to be finding the right
place."
This was work the computers could do while
Tia slept, comparing their marked areas and looking for changes that were not
due to the seasons or the presence or absence of snow. Highest on the priority
list was to look for changes that indicated disturbance while there was snow on
the ground. Digging and tramping about in the snow would darken it, no matter
how carefully the looters tried to hide the signs of their presence. That was a
sign that only the work of sentients or herd-beasts would produce, and
herd-beasts were not likely to search ruins for food.
Within the hour, they had their site.
There was no doubt whatsoever that it was being visited and disturbed
regularly. Some of the buildings had even been meddled with.
"Now why would they do that?"
Tia wondered out loud, as she increased the magnification to show that one of
the larger buildings had mysteriously grown a repaired roof. "They can't
need that much space, and how did they fix the roof within twenty-four
hours?"
"They didn't," Alex said flatly.
"That's plastic stretched over the hole. As to why, the hole is just about
big enough to let a twenty-man ship land inside. Hangar and hiding place all in
one."
They changed their position to put them in
geo-synchronous orbit over their prize, and detailed scans of the spot seemed
to indicate that no one had visited it very recently. The snow was still
pristine and white, and the building she had noted had a major portion of its
roof missing again.
"That's it," Alex said with
finality.
Tia groaned. "We know, and we can't
prove it. We know for a fact that someone is meddling with the site, but we
can't prove the site is the one with the plague. Not without going down."
"Oh, come on, Tia, where's your sense
of adventure?" Alex asked, feebly. "We knew we were probably going to
have to go down on the surface. All we have to do is go down and get some holos
of the area just like the ones Hank took. Then we have our proof."
"My sense of adventure got left back
when I was nearly hijacked," she replied firmly. "I can do without
adventure, thank you."
And she couldn't help herself; she kept
figuratively glancing over her shoulder, watching for a ship. Would it be
armed? She couldn't help but think of Pol, bristling with weaponry, and
picturing those weapons aimed at her. Unarmed. Unarmored. Not even particularly
fast.
On the other hand, she was a brainship,
wasn't she? The product of extensive training. Surely if she couldn't outrun or
outshoot these people, she could out-think them. Surely.
Well, if she was going to out-think them,
the first thing she should do would be to find a way to keep them from spotting
her. So it was time to use those enhanced systems on the satellite to their
advantage.
"What are you doing?" Alex
asked, when she remained silent for several minutes, sending the
manual-override signal to the satellite so that she could use the scanners.
"I'm looking for a place to
hide," she told him. "Two can play that game. And I'm smaller than
their ship; I shouldn't need a building to hide me. I'll warn you, though, I
may have to park a fair hike away from the cache sites."
It took a while; several hours of intense
searching, while Alex did what he could to get himself prepared for the trip
below. That amounted mostly to readying his pressure-suit for a long stay;
stocking it with condensed food and water, making certain the suit systems were
up to a week-long tour, if it came to that. Recharging the power-cells,
triple-checking the seals, putting tape on places that tended to rub and a bit
of padding on places that didn't quite fit, everything that could be done to
his suit, Alex was doing. They both knew that from the time he left her airlock
to the time he returned and she could purge him and the lock with hard vacuum,
he was going to have to stay in it.
Finally, in mid-afternoon by the 'local'
time at the site below them, she found what she was looking for. "I found
my hiding place," she said into the silence, startling him into jumping.
"Are you ready?"
"As ready as I'll ever be," he
said, a little too jauntily. Was it her imagination, or did he turn a little
pale? Well, if she had been capable of it, she'd have done the same. As it was,
she was so jittery that she finally had to alter her blood-chemistry a little
to deal with it.
"Then strap down," she told him
soberly. "We're heading right into a major weather system and there's no
getting around it. This is going to be tricky, and the ride is likely to be
pretty rough."
Alex took the time to strap down more than
himself; he made a circuit of the interior, ensuring that anything loose had
been properly stowed before he took his place in the com chair. Only then, when
he was double-strapped in, did Tia make the burn that began their descent.
Their entry was fairly smooth until they
were on final approach and hit thick atmosphere and the weather that rode the
mid-levels. The wild storm winds of a blizzard buffeted her with heavy blows;
gusts that came out of nowhere and flung her up, down, in any direction but the
one she wanted. She fought her way through them with grim determination,
wondering how on earth the looters had gotten this far. Surely with winds like
this, the controls would be torn right out of the grip of a softperson's hands!
Of course, they could be coming down under
the control of an AI. Once the course had been programmed in, the AI would hold
to it. And within limits, it would deal with unexpected conditions all the way
to the surface.
Within limits. That was the catch. Throw
it too for off the programmed course, and it wouldn't know what to do. Never
mind, she told herself. You need to get down there yourself!
A
little lower, and it wasn't just wind she was dealing with, it was snow. A
howling blizzard, to be precise. One that chilled her skin and caked snow on
every surface, throwing off her balance by tiny increments, forcing her to
recalculate her descent all the way to the ground. A strange irony, she who had
never seen weather as a child was now having to deal with weather at its
wildest.
Then suddenly, as she approached the
valley she had chosen, the wind died to a mere zephyr. Snow drifted down in
picture perfect curtains, totally obscuring visuals, of course, but that was
why she was on instruments anyway. She killed forward thrusters and went into
null-grav; terribly draining of power, but the only way she could have the
control she needed at this point. She inched her way into her chosen valley,
using the utmost of care. The spot where she wanted to set down was just big
enough to hold her, and right above it, if the readings she'd gotten from above
were holding true, there was a big buildup of snow. Just enough to avalanche
down and cover her, if she was very careful not to set it off prematurely.
She eased her way into place with the
walls of the valley less than a hand-span away from her skin; a brief look at
Alex showed him clenching teeth and holding armrests with hands that were
white-knuckled. He could read the instruments as well as she could. Well, she'd
never set down into a place that was quite this narrow before. And certainly
she had never set down under conditions that might change in the next moment.
If that blizzard behind them came howling
up this valley, it could catch her and send her right into the valley wall.
There. She tucked herself into the bottom of the valley and felt her 'feet'
sink through the snow to the rock beneath. Nice, solid rock. Snow-covered rocks
on either side. And above, the snowcrest. Waiting. Here goes.
She activated an external speaker and
blasted the landscape with shatter-rock, bass turned to max, And the world fell
in.
"Are you going to be able to blast
free of this?" Alex asked for the tenth time, as another servo came in
from the airlock to recharge.
"It's not that bad," she said
confidently. She was much happier with four meters of snow between her and the
naked sky. Avalanches happened all the time; there was nothing about this
valley to signal to the looters that they'd been discovered, and that a ship
was hiding here. Not only that, but the looters could prance around on top of
her and never guess she was there unless they found the tunnel her servos were
cutting to the surface. And she didn't think any of them would have the temerity
to crawl down what might be the den tunnel of a large predator.
"If it's not that bad," Alex
said fretfully, "then why is it taking forever to melt a tunnel up and
out?"
"Because no one ever intended these
little servos to have to do something like that," she replied, as
patiently as she could. "They're welders, not snow clearers. And they have
to reinforce the tunnel with plastic shoring-posts so it doesn't fall in and
trap you." He shook his head; she gave up trying to explain it.
"They're almost through, anyway," she told him. "It's about time
to get into your suit." That would keep him occupied.
"This thing is getting depressingly
familiar," he complained. "I see more of the inside of this suit than
I do my cabin."
"No one promised you first-class
accommodations on this ride," she teased, trying to keep from showing her
own nervousness. "I'll tell you what; how about if I have one of the
servos make a nice set of curtains for your helmet?"
"Thanks. I think." He made a
face at her. "Well, I'll tell you this much; if I have to keep spending
this much time in the blasted thing, I'm going to have some comforts built into
it, or demand they get me a better model." He twisted and turned, making
sure he still had full mobility. "The sanitary facilities leave a lot to
be desired."
"I'll report your complaints to the
ship's steward," she told him. "Meanwhile, we have breakout."
"Sounds like my cue." Alex
sighed. "I hope this isn't going to be as cold as it looks."
Alex crawled up the long, slanting tunnel
to the surface, lighting his way with the work-lamp on the front of his helmet.
Not that there was much to see, just a white, shiny tunnel that seemed to go on
forever, reaching into the cold darkness ... as if, with no warning, he would
find himself entombed in ice forever. The plastic reinforcements were as white
as the snow; invisible unless you were looking for them. Which was the point,
he supposed. But he was glad they were there. Without them, tons of snow and
ice could come crashing down on him at any moment ... Stop that, he told
himself sharply. Now is not the time to get claustrophobia.
Still, there didn't seem to be any end to
the tunnel, and he was cold, chilled right down to the soul. Not physically
cold, or so his readouts claimed. Just chilled by the emptiness, the sterility.
The loneliness ... You're doing it again. Stop it.
Was the surrounding snow getting lighter?
He turned off his helmet light, and it was true, there was a kind of cool, blue
light filtering down through the ice and snow! And up ahead, yes, there was the
mouth of the tunnel, as promised, a round, white 'eye' staring down at him!
He picked up his pace, eager to get out of
there. The return trip would be nothing compared to this long, tedious crawl,
just sit down and push away, and he would be able to slide all the way down to
the airlock!
He emerged into thickly falling snow and
saw that the servos had wrought better than he and Tia had guessed, for the
mouth of the tunnel was outside the area of avalanche, just under an
overhanging ridge of stone. That must have been what the snow had built up
upon; small wonder it buried Tia four meters under when she triggered it!
Fortunately, snow could be melted; when they needed to leave, she could fire up
her thrusters and increase the surface temperature of her skin, and turn it all
to water and steam. Well, that was the theory, anyway.
That was assuming it didn't rain and melt
away her cover before then.
By Tia's best guess, it was late
afternoon, and he should be able to get to the site and look around a little
before dark fell. At that point, the best thing he could do would be to get
under cover somewhere and curl up for the night. This time he had padded all
the uncomfortable spots in the suit, and he'd worn soft, old, exercise
clothing. It shouldn't be any less comfortable than some of his bunks as a
cadet. He took a bearing from the heads-up display inside his helmet and headed
for the site.
"Tia," he called. "Tia,
come in."
"Reading you loud and dear,
Alex," she responded immediately. Funny how easy it was to think of her as
a person sitting back in that ship, eyes glued to the screens that showed his
location, hands steady on the com controls.
Stop that. Maybe it's a nice picture, but
it's one that can get you in more trouble than you already have. "Tia, we
have the right place, all right." He toggled his external suit-camera and
gave her a panoramic sweep from his vantage point above the valley holding the
site. It was fairly obvious that this place was subject to some pretty
heavy-duty windstorms; the buildings were all built into the lee of the hills,
and the hills themselves had been sculpted by the prevailing winds until they
looked like cresting waves. No doubt either why the entities who built this
place used rounded forms; less for the winds to catch on.
"Does this look like any architecture
in your banks?" he asked, panning across the buildings. "I sure as
heck don't recognize it."
"Nothing here," she replied,
fascination evident in her voice. "This is amazing! That's not metal, I
don't think, could it be ceramic?"
"Maybe some kind of synthetic,"
Alex hazarded. "Plague or not, there are going to be murders done over the
right to excavate this place. How in the name of the spirits of space did that
Survey tech just dismiss this with 'presence of structures'?"
"We'll never know," Tia
responded. "Well, since there can't be two sites like this in this area,
and since these buildings match the ones in Hank's holos, we can at least
assume that we have the right planet. Now, about the caches."
"I'm going down," he said,
feeling for footholds in the snow. It crunched under his feet as he eased down
sideways, one careful step at a time. Now that he was out of Tia's valley,
there were signs everywhere of freeze-thaw cycles. Under the most recent layer
of snow, the stuff was dirty and covered with a crust of granular ice. It made
for perilous walking. "The wind is picking up, by the way. I think that blizzard
followed us in."
"That certainly figures," she
said with resignation.
As he eased over the lip of the valley, he
saw the caves, or rather, storage areas, cut into the protected side of the
face of a lower level canyon cutting through the middle of the valley. There
were more buildings down there, too, and some kind of strange pylons, but it
was the 'caves' that interested him most. Regular, ovoid holes cut into the
earth and rock that were then plugged with something rather like cement, a
substance slightly different in color from the surrounding earth and stone.
Those nearest him were still sealed; those nearest the building with the
appearing/disappearing roof were open.
He worked his way down the valley to the
buildings and found to his relief that there was actually a kind of staircase
cut into the rock, going down to the second level. Protected from the worst of
the weather by the building in front of it, while it was a bit slippery, it
wasn't as hazardous as his descent into the valley had been. It was a good thing that the contents of
Hank's cabin and the holos the man had taken had prepared him for what he saw.
The wall of the valley where the storage
caves had been opened looked like the inside of Ali Baba's cave. The storage
caches proved to be much smaller than Alex had thought; the 'window' slits in
the nearby building were tiny, as might have been expected in a place with the
kind of punishing weather this planet had. That had made the caches themselves
appear much larger in the holos. In reality, they were about as tall as his
waist and no deeper than two or three meters. That was more than enough to hold
a king's ransom in treasure.
Much hadn't even been taken. In one of the
nearest, ceramic statuary and pottery had been left behind as worthless, some
had been broken by careless handling, and Alex winced.
There were dozens of caches that had been
opened and cleaned out; perhaps a dozen more with less-desirable objects still
inside. There were dozens more, still sealed, running down the length of the
canyon wall.
And one whose entrance had been sealed
with some kind of a heat-weapon, a weapon that had been turned on the entrance
until the rock slagged and melted metal ran with it, mingling and forming a
new, permanent plug.
"Do you think that's where the plague
bug came from?" Tia asked in his ear.
"I think it's a good bet,
anyway," he said absently. "I sure hope so, anyway."
Suddenly, with the prospect of
contamination looming large in his mind, the shine of metal and sheen of
priceless ceramic lost its allure. Whether it is or isn't, there is no way I am
going to crack this suit, I don't care what is out there. Hank and the other
man drifted in his memory like grisly ghosts. The suit, no longer a prison, had
just become the most desirable place in the universe. Oh, I just love this
suit.
Nevertheless, he moved forward towards the
already-opened caches, augmenting the fading light with his suit-lamp. The
caches themselves were very old; that much was evident from the weathering and
buildup of debris and dirt along the side of the canyon wall. The looters must
have opened up one of the caches out of sheer curiosity or by accident while
looking for something else. Perhaps they had been exploring the area with an
eye to a safe haven. Whatever had led them to uncover the first, they had then
cleared away the buildup all along the wall, exposing the rest. And it looked
as if the loot of a thousand worlds had been tucked away here.
He began taking careful holos of every
thing that had been left behind, Tia recording the tiniest details as he
covered every angle, every millimeter. At least this way, if anything more was
smashed there would be a record of it Some things he picked up and stashed in
his pack to bring back with him, a curious metal book, for instance.
Alex moved forward again, reaching out for
a discarded ceramic statue of some kind of winged biped.
"Alec!" Tia exclaimed urgently.
He started back, his hand closing on empty air.
"What?" he snapped. "I,
"
"Alex, you have to get back here
now," she interrupted. "The alarms just went off. They're back, and
they're heading in to land right now!"
"Alex!" Tia cried, as her
readouts showed the pirates making their descent burn and Alex moving away from
her, not back in. "Alex, what are you doing?"
Dusk was already making it hard to see out
there, even for her. She couldn't imagine what it was like for him.
"I'm going to hide out in the upper
level of one of these buildings and watch these clowns," Alex replied
calmly. "There's a place up on this one where I can get in at about the
second-story level, see?"
He was right; the structure of the
building gave him easy hand and foot holds up to the window-slits on the second
floor. Once there, since the building had fallen in at that point, he would be
able to hide himself up above eye-level. And with the way that the blizzard was
kicking up, his tracks would be hidden in a matter of moments.
"But, " she protested.
"You're all alone out there!" She tried to keep her mind clear, but a
thousand horrible possibilities ran around and around inside her thoughts,
making her frantic. "There's no way I can help you if you're caught!"
"I won't be caught," he said
confidently, finding handholds and beginning his climb.
It was already too late anyway; the
pirates had begun entry. Even if he left now, he'd never make it back to the
safety of the tunnel before they landed. If they had heat-sensors, they
couldn't help but notice him, scrambling across the snow.
She poured relaxants into her blood and
tried to stay as calm as he obviously felt, but it wasn't working. As the
looters passed behind the planet's opposite side, he reached the top of the
first tier of window-slits, moving slowly and deliberately, so deliberately
that she wanted to scream at him to hurry.
As they hit the edge of the blizzard, Alex
reached the broken place in the second story. And just as he tumbled over the
edge into the relatively safe darkness behind the, wall, they slowed for
descent, playing searchlights all over the entire valley, cutting pathways of
brightness across the gloom and thickly felling snow.
Alex took advantage of the lights, moving
only after they had passed so that he had a chance to see exactly what lay in
the room he had fallen into.
Nothing, actually; it was an empty section
with a curved inner and outer wall, one door in the inner wall, and a wall at
either end. Roughly half of the curving roof had fallen in; not much, really.
Dirt and snow mounded under the break, near the join of end wall and outer
wall. The windows were still intact, and the floor was relatively clean. That
was where Alex went.
From there he had a superb view of both
the caches and the building that the looters were slowly lowering their ship
into. Tia watched carefully and decided that her guess about an AI in-system
pilot was probably correct; the movements of the ship had the jerkiness she
associated with AIs. She kept expecting the looters to pick up Alex's signal,
but evidently they were not expecting anyone to find this place, they seemed to
be taking no precautions whatsoever. They didn't set any telltales or any
alerts, and once they landed the ship and began disembarking from it, they made
no effort to maintain silence.
On the other hand, given the truly
appalling weather, perhaps they had no reason to be cautious. The worst of the
blizzard was moving in, and not even the best of AIs could have landed in that
kind of buffeting wind. She was just glad that Alex was under cover.
The storm didn't stop the looters from
sending out crews to open up a new cache, however.
She could hardly believe her sensors when
she saw, via Alex's camera, a half-dozen lights bobbing down the canyon floor
coming towards his hiding place. She switched to IR scan and saw that there
were three times that many men, three to a light. None of them were wearing
pressure-suits, although they were bundled up in cold weather survival gear.
"I don't believe they're doing that,"
Alex muttered.
"Neither do I," she replied
softly. "That storm is going to be a killing blizzard in a moment. They're
out of their minds."
She scanned up and down the radio
wavelengths, looking for the one the looters were using. She found it soon
enough; unmistakable by the paint-peeling language being used. While Alex
huddled in his shelter, the men below him broke open yet another cache and
began shoveling what were probably priceless artifacts into sacks as if they
were so many rocks. Tia winced, and thought it likely that Alex was doing the
same.
The looters were obviously aware that they
were working against time; their haste alone showed the fact that they knew the
worst of the storm was yet to come. Whoever was manning the radio back at the
ship kept them appraised of their situation, and before long, he began warning
them that it was time to start back, before the blizzard got so bad they would
never be able to make it the few hundred meters back to their ship.
They would not be able to take the full
fury of the storm, but Alex, in his pressure-suit, would be able to handle just
about anything. With his heads-up helmet displays, he didn't need to be able to
see where he was going. Was it possible that he would be able to sneak back to
her under the cover of the blizzard? It was certainly worth a try.
The leader of the looters finally growled
an acknowledgement to the radio operator. "We're comin' in, keep yer boots
on," he snarled, as the lights turned away from the cache and moved slowly
back up the canyon. The operator shut up; a moment later a signal beacon shone
wanly through the thickening snow at the other end of the tiny valley. Soon the
lights of the looters had been swallowed up by darkness and heavy snowfall,
then the beacon faded as the snow and wind picked up still more.
"Alex," she said urgently,
"do you think you can make it back to me?"
"Did you record me corning in?"
he asked.
"Yes," she assured him.
"Every step. I ought to be able to guide you pretty well. You won't get a
better chance. Without the storm to cover you, they'll spot you before you've
gone a meter."
He peered out his window again, her camera
'seeing' what he saw, there was nothing out there. Wind and snow made a solid
wall just outside the building. Even Tia's IR scan couldn't penetrate it.
I'll try it," he said. "You're
right. There won't ever be a better chance."
Alex ignored the darkness outside his
helmet and concentrated on the HUD projected on the inner surface. This was a
lot like fly-by-wire training, or virtual reality. Ignore what your eyes and
senses wanted you to do and concentrate on what the instruments are telling
you. Right now, they said he was near the entrance to the valley hiding Tia.
It had been a long, frightening walk. The
pressure-suit was protection against anything that the blizzard flung at him,
but if he made a wrong step, well, it wouldn't save him from a long fell. And
it wouldn't save him from being crushed by an avalanche if something triggered
another one. Snow built up quickly under conditions like this.
It helped to think of Tia as he imagined
her; made him feel warm inside. She kept a cheerful monologue going in his left
ear, telling him what she had identified from the holos they'd made before the
looters arrived. Sometimes he answered her, mostly he just listened. She was
warmth and life in a world of darkness and cold, and as long as he could think
of her sitting in the pilot's seat, with her sparkling eyes and puckish smile,
he could muster the strength to keep his feet moving against the increasingly
heavy weight of the snow.
Tired, he was getting so tired. It was
tempting to lie down and let the snow cover him for a while as he took a little
rest.
"Alex, you're here." she said
suddenly, breaking off in the middle of the sentence.
"I'm where?" he said stupidly.
He was so tired.
"You're here, the entrance to the
tunnel is somewhere around there." The urgency in her voice woke him out
of the kind of stupor he had been in. "Feel around for the rock face. The
tunnel may be covered with snow, but you should be able to find it."
That was something he hadn't even thought
of! What if the entrance to the tunnel had filled in? He'd be stuck out here in
the blizzard, nowhere to go, out alone in the cold!
Stop that! He told himself sternly. Just
stop that! You'll be all right. The suit heaters won't give out in this.
They're made for space, a little cold blizzard isn't going to balk them!
Unless the cold snow clogged them somehow
... or the wind was too much for them to compensate for ... or they just plain
gave up and died ...
He stumbled to his right, hands out,
feeling frantically in the darkness for the rock face. He stumbled into it,
cracking his faceplate against the stone. Fortunately the plate was made of
sterner stuff than simple polyglas; although his head rang, the plate was fine.
Well, there was the rock. Now where-
The ground gave away beneath his feet, and
he yelled with fear as he fell, the back of his head smacked against something
and he kept falling-
No. No, he wasn't falling, he was sliding.
He'd fallen into the tunnel!
Quickly he spread hands and feet against
the wall of the tunnel to slow himself and toggled his headlamp on; it had been
useless in the blizzard. Now it was still pretty useless, but the light
reflecting from the white ice above his face made him want to laugh with
pleasure. Light! At last!
Light, and more of it down below his feet.
The opposite end of the tunnel glowed with warm, white light as Tia opened the
airlock and turned on the light inside it. He shot down the long dark tunnel
and into the brightness, no longer caring if he hit hard when he landed. Caring
only that he was coming home. Coming home ...
CHAPTER NINE
The whisper of a sensor-sweep across the
landscape, like the brush of silk across Tia's skin, when she'd had skin. Like
something not-quite-heard in the distance.
Tia stayed quiet and concentrated on
keeping all of her outputs as low as possible. We aren't here. You can't find
us. Why don't you just fill your holds and go away?
What had been a good hiding place was now
a trap. Tia had shut down every system she could; Alex moved as little as
possible. She had no way of knowing how sophisticated the pirates' systems
were, so they were both operating on the assumption that anything out of the
ordinary would alert the enemy to their presence, if not their location.
Whether or not the looters' initial
carelessness had been because of the storm or because of greed, or whether they
had been alerted by something she or Alex had done, now they were displaying
all the caution Tia had expected of them. Telltales and alarms were in place;
irregular sensor sweeps made it impossible for Alex to make a second trip to
the ruins without being caught.
And now there were two more ships in orbit
that had arrived while the blizzard still raged. One of those two ships had
checked the satellite. Had they found Alex's handiwork, or were they simply
following a procedure they had always followed? She had no way of knowing.
Whatever the case, those two ships kept
her from taking off, and she wasn't going to transmit anything to the
satellite. It was still broadcasting, and they only hoped it was because the
pirates hadn't checked that closely. But it could have been because the pirates
wanted them lulled into thinking they were safe.
So Tia had shut off all nonessential
systems, and they used no active sensors, relying entirely on passive
receptors. Knowing that sound could carry even past her blanket of snow,
especially percussive sounds, Alex padded about in stocking feet when he walked
at all. Three days of this now, and no sign that the looters were ready to
leave yet.
Mostly he and Tia studied holos and the
few artifacts that he had brought out of the cache area, once Tia had
vacuum-purged them and sterilized them to a fair thee-well.
After all, she kept telling herself, the
pirates couldn't stay up there forever. Could they?
Unless they had some idea that Tia was
already here. Someone had leaked what they knew about Hank and his cargo when
they were on Presley Station. The leak could have gone beyond the station.
She was frightened and could not tell him;
strung as tightly as piano strings with anxiety, with no way to work off the
tension.
She knew that the same thoughts troubled
Alex, although he never voiced them. Instead, he concentrated his attention
completely on the enigmatic book of metal plates he had brought out of the cache.
There were glyphs of some kind etched into
it, along the right edge of each plate, and a peculiarly matte finished strip
along the left edge of each. But most importantly, the middle of each page was
covered with the pinprick patterns of what could only be stellar
configurations. Having spent so much time studying stellar maps, both of them
had recognized that they were nav-guides immediately. But to what, and far more
importantly, what was the reference point. There was no way of knowing that she
could see.
And who had made the book in the first
place? The glyphs had an odd sort of familiarity about them, but nothing she
was able to put a figurative finger on.
It was enough of a puzzle to keep Alex
busy, but not enough to occupy her. It was very easy to spend a lot of time
brooding over her brawn. Slumped in his chair, peculiarly handsome face intent,
with a single light shining down on his head and the artifact, with the rest of
the room in darkness, or staring into a screen full of data.
Like a scene out of a thriller-holo. The
hero, biding his time, ready to crack under the strain but not going to show
his vulnerability; the enemies waiting above. Priceless data in their hands,
data that they dared not allow the enemy to have. The hero, thinking about the
lover he had left behind, wondering if he will ever see her again.
Shellcrack. This was getting her nowhere.
She couldn't pace, she couldn't bite her
nails, she couldn't even read to distract herself. Finally she activated a single
servo and sent it discretely into his cabin to clean it. It hadn't been cleaned
since they'd left the base; mostly Alex had just shoved things into drawers and
closets and locked the doors down. She couldn't clean his clothing now, but as
soon as they shook the hounds off their trail.
If they shook the hounds off their trail,
if the second avalanche and the blizzard hadn't piled too much snow on top of
them to clear away. There were eight meters of snow up there now, not four.
Much more, and she might not be able to blast free. Stop that. We'll get out of
this.
Carefully she cleaned each drawer and
closet, replacing what wasn't dirty and having the servo kidnap what was.
Carefully, because there were lots of loose objects shoved in with the clothing.
But she never expected the one she found
tumbled in among the bed coverings.
A holocube, of her.
She turned the cube over and over in the
servo's pinchers, changing the pictures, finding all of them familiar. Scenes
of her from before her illness; the birthday party, posing with Theodore Bear.
Standing in her brand new pressure-suit in
front of a fragment of wall covered with EsKay glyphs, that was a funny one;
Mum had teased Dad about it because he'd focused on the glyphs out of habit
She'd come out half out of the picture, but the glyphs had been nice and sharp.
It hit her like a jolt of current. The
glyphs. That was where she had seen them before! Oh, these were carved rather
than inscribed, and time and sandstorms had worn them down to mere suggestions.
They were formed in a kind of cursive style, where the ones on the book were
angular, but,
She ran a quick comparison and got another
jolt, this time of elation. "Alex!" she whispered excitedly.
"Look!"
She popped the glyphs from the old holo up
on her screen as he looked up, took the graphic of the third page of the book,
and superimposed the one over the other. Aside from the differences in style,
they were a perfect match.
"EsKays," he murmured, his tone
awestruck. "Spirits of space, this book was made by the EsKays!"
"I think these caches and buildings
must have been made by some race that knew the EsKays," she replied.
"But even if they weren't, Alex, how much will you wager that this little
set of charts shows the EsKay homeworld, once you figure out how to decipher
it?"
"It would make sense," he said,
after a moment. "Look at this smooth area on every page, always in the
same place along the edge. I bet this is some kind of recording medium, like a
datahedron, maybe optical."
"Let me look at it," she
demanded. "Put it in the lab." Now she had something to keep her
attention. And something to keep her mind off him.
Alex had nothing more to do but read and
brood. While Tia bent all the resources at her disposal on the artifact, he was
left staring at screens and hoping the pirates didn't think to scan for large
masses of metal under the snow.
Reading palled after too long; music was
out because it could be detected, even if he were wearing headphones, and he
hated headphones. He'd never been much of a one for entertainment holos, and
they made at least as much noise as music.
That left him alone in the dark with his
thoughts, which kept turning back towards Tia. He knew her childhood very well
now, accessing the data available publicly and then doing the unthinkable, at
least for anyone in the BB program: contacting Doctor Kennet and Doctor Anna
and pumping them for information. Not with any great subtlety, he feared, but
they hadn't taken it amiss. Of course, if anyone in CS found out what he'd been
doing, he would be in major trouble. There was an ugly name for his feeling
about Tia.
Fixation.
After that single attempt at finding a
temporary companion in port, Alex had left the women alone, because he kept
picking ones who looked like Tia. He had thought it would all wear off after a
while; that sooner or later, since nothing could be done about it, the
fascination would fade away.
And meanwhile, or so he'd told himself, it
only made sense to learn as much about Tia as he could. She was unique; the
oldest child ever to have been put into a shell. He had to be very careful with
someone like that; the normal parameters of a brain-brawn relationship simply
would not apply.
So now he knew what she had looked like,
and thanks to computer-projection, what she would have looked like if she had
never caught that hideous disease and had grown up normally. Why, she might
even have wound up at the Academy, if she hadn't chosen to follow in her famous
parents' footsteps. He knew most of the details, not only of her pre-shell
life, but of her life at Lab Schools. He knew as much about her as he would
have if she had been his own sibling, except that his feelings about her had
been anything but brotherly.
But he had told himself that they were
brotherly, that he was not falling in love with a kind of ghost, that
everything would be fine. He'd believed it, too.
That is, up until he ran into Chria Chance
and her gunner.
There was no doubt in his mind from the
moment the screen lit up that Chria and Neil were an item. The signs were there
for anyone who knew how to read body language, especially for someone who knew
Chria as well as Alex did. And his initial reaction to the relationship caught
him completely by surprise.
Envy. Sheer, raw, uncomplicated envy. Not
jealousy, for he wasn't at all interested in Chria and never had been. In some
ways, he was very happy for her; she had been truly the poor little rich girl.
High Family with four very proper brothers and sisters who were making the
Family even more prestige and money. She alone had been the rebel; she of all
of them had wanted something more than a proper position, a place on a board of
directors, and a bloodless, loveless, high-status spouse. After she threatened
to bring disgrace on all of them, blackmailing them by swearing she would join
a shatter-rock synthocom band under her real name, they had permitted her the
Academy under an assumed one.
No, he was happy for Chria; she had found
exactly the life and partners that she had longed for.
But he wanted what she had, only he wanted
it to be Tia sitting back there in the second seat. Or Tia in the front and
himself in the back; it didn't much matter who was the one in command, if he
could have had her there.
The strength of his feelings had been so
unexpected that he had not known what to do with them, so he had attempted,
clumsily, to cover them. Fortunately, everyone involved seemed to put his
surliness down to a combination of pain from his injuries and wooziness due to
the pain-pills he'd gulped.
If only it had been ...
I'm in love with someone I can't touch,
can't hold, can't even tell that I love her, he thought with despair, clenching
his hand tightly on the armrest of his chair.
"Alex?" Tia whispered, her voice
sounding unnaturally loud in the silence of the ship, for she had turned even
the ventilation system down to a minimum. "Alex, I've decoded the
storage-mode. It's old-fashioned hard-etched binary storage and I think that
it's nav directions that relate to the stellar map on the page. Once I find a
reference point I recognize, I'm pretty sure I can decode it all eventually. I
got some ideas, though, since I was able to match some place name glyphs, and
we were right. I'm positive that these are directions to all the EsKay bases
from the homeworld! So if we could just find a base."
"And trace it back!" This was
what she'd been looking for from the beginning, and excitement for her shoved
aside all other feelings for the moment. "What's the deal? Why the
primitive navcharts? Not that it isn't a break for us, but if they were
space-going, why limit yourself to a crawl?"
"Well, the storage medium is pretty
hard to damage; you wouldn't believe how strong it is. So I can see why they
chose it over something like a datahedron that a strong magnetic field can
wipe. As for why the charts themselves are so primitive, near as I can make
out, they didn't have Singularity Drive and they could or would only warp
between stars, using them as navigational stepping-stones. I don't know why;
there may be something there that would give the reason, but I can't decode
it." There was something odd and subdued about her voice.
"What, hopping like a Survey ship?"
he asked incredulously. "You could spend years getting across space that
way!"
"Maybe they didn't care. Maybe hyper
made them sick." Now he recognized what the odd tone in her voice was; she
didn't seem terribly excited, now that she had what she was looking for.
"Well, we don't have to do
that," he pointed out. "Once we get out of here, we can backtrack to
the EsKay homeworld! Make a couple of jumps, and we'll be stellar celebs! All
we have to do is, "
"Is forget about our responsibilities,"
she said, sharply. "Or else 'forget' to turn in this book with the rest of
the loot until we get a long leave. Or turn it in and hope no one else beats us
to the punch."
Keeping the book was out of the question,
and he dismissed it out of hand. "They won't," he replied positively.
"No one else has spent as much time staring at star-charts as we have.
You've said as much yourself; the archeologists at the Institute get very
specialized and see things in a very narrow way. I don't think that there's the
slightest chance that anyone will figure out what this book means within the
next four or five years. But you're right about having responsibilities; we are
under a hard contract to the Institute. We'll have to wait until we can buy or
earn a long leave."
"That's not what's bothering
me," she interrupted, in a very soft voice. "It's, the ethics of it.
If we hold back this information, how are we any better than those pirates out
there?"
"How do you mean?" he asked,
startled.
"Withholding information, that's like
data piracy, in a way. We're holding back, not only the data, but the career of
whoever is the EsKay specialist right now. Lana Courtney-Rai, I think. In fact,
if we keep this to ourselves, we'll be stealing her career advancement. I mean,
we aren't even real archeologists!" There was no mistaking the distress in
her voice.
"I think I see what you mean."
And he did; he could understand it all too well. He'd seen both his parents
passed over for promotions, in favor of someone who hadn't earned the
advancement but who 'knew the right people'. He'd seen the same thing happen at
the Academy. It wasn't fair or right. "We can't do everything, can
we?" he said slowly. "Not like in the holos, the heroes can fight off
pirates while performing brain surgery."
Tia made a sad little chuckle. "I'm
beginning to think that's all we can do, just to get our real job done
right."
He leaned back in his chair and stared at
the ceiling. "Funny. When this quest of ours was all theoretical, it was one
thing, but we really can't go shooting off by ourselves and still do our duty,
the duty that people are expecting us to do."
She didn't sigh, but her voice was heavy
with regret. "It's not only a question of ethics, but of priorities. We
must simply go on doing what we do best - and Chria Chance really put her
finger on it, when she pointed out that she and Neil and Pol wouldn't know how
to recognize our plague spot, and we would. She knows when she should let the
experts take over. I hate to give up on the dream, but in this case, that dream
was the kind of thing a kid could have, but-"
"But it's time to grow up, and let
someone else play," Alex said firmly.
"Maybe we could go pretend to be
archeologists," Tia added, "but we'd steal someone else's career in
the process. Become second-rate, but very, very lucky amateur
pot-hunters."
He sighed for both of them. "They'd
hate us, you know. Everyone we respected would hate us. And we'd be
celebrities, but we wouldn't be real archeologists."
"Alex?" she said, after a long
silence. "I think we should just seal that book up with our findings and
what we've deduced about it. Then we should lock it up with the rest of the
loot and go on being a stellar CS team. Even if it does get awfully boring running
mail and supplies, sometimes."
"It's not boring now," he said
ruefully, without thinking. "I kind of wish it was."
Silence for a long time, then she made a
tiny sound that he would have identified as a whimper in a softperson. "I
wish you hadn't reminded me," she said.
"Why?"
"Because, because it seems as if
we're never going to get out of here, that they're going to find us
eventually."
"Stop that," he replied sharply,
reacting to the note of panic in her voice. "They can't hover up there
forever. They'll run out of supplies, for one thing."
"So will we," she countered.
"And they'll run out of patience!
Tia, think, these are pirates, and they don't even know there's anyone else
here, not for certain, anyway! When they don't find anything, they'll give up
and take their loot off to sell!" He wanted, badly, to pace, but that
would make noise. "We can leave when they're gone!"
"If,
we can get out"
"What?"
he said, startled.
"I didn't want you to worry, but
there's been two avalanches since you got back, and all the snow the blizzard
dropped."
He stared at her column in numbed shock,
but she wasn't finished.
"There's about eleven meters of snow
above us. I don't know if I can get out. And even if CenSec shows up, I don't
know if they'll hear a hail under all this ice. I lost the signals from the
surface right after that last avalanche, and the satellite signals are getting
too faint to read clearly."
He said the first thing that came into his
head, trying to lighten the mood, but without running it past his internal
censor first "Well, at least if I'm going to be frozen into a glacier for
all eternity, I've got my love to keep me warm."
He stopped himself, but not in time. Oh,
brilliant. Now she thinks she's locked in an iceberg with a fixated madman!
"Do, " Her voice sounded choked,
probably with shock. "Do you mean that?"
He could have shot himself.
"Tia," he began babbling, "it's all right, really, I mean I'm
not going to go crazy and try to crack your column or anything, I really am all
right, I, "
"Did you mean that?" she
persisted.
"I, " Oh well. It's on the
record. You can't make it worse. "Yes. I don't know, it just sort of,
happened." He shrugged helplessly. "It's not anything crazy, like a
fixation. But, well, I just don't want any partner of any kind but you. If
that's love, then I guess I love you. And I really, really love you a
lot." He sighed and rubbed his temples. "So there it is, out in the
open at last. I hope I don't offend or frighten you, but you're the best thing
that ever happened to me, and that's a fact. I'd rather be with you than anyone
else I know, or know of." He managed a faint grin. "Holostars and
stellar celebs included."
The plexy cover to Ted Bear's little
'shrine' popped open, and he jumped.
"I can't touch you, and you can't
touch me, but, would you like to hug Theodore?" she replied softly.
"I love you, too, Alex. I think I have ever since you went out to face the
Zombie Bug. You're the bravest, cleverest, most wonderful brawn I could ever
imagine, and I wouldn't want to be anyone's partner but yours,"
The offer of her childhood friend was the
closest she could come to intimacy, and he knew it
He got up, carefully, and took the little
fellow down out of his wall-home, hugging the soft little bear once, hard,
before he restored him again and closed the door.
"You have a magnificent lady,
Theodore Bear," he told the solemn-faced little toy. "And I'm going
to do my best to make her happy."
He turned back to her column and cleared
his throat, carefully. Time, and more than time, to change the subject.
"Right," he said. "Now that we've both established why we've
been touchy, let's see if we can figure out what our options are."
"Options?" she replied,
confused.
"Certainly." He raised his chin
defiantly. "I intend to spend the rest of my life with you, and I don't
intend that to be restricted to how long it takes before the pirates find us or
we freeze to death! So let's figure out some options, hang it all!"
To his great joy and relief, she actually
laughed. And if there was an edge of hysteria in it, he chose to ignore that
little nuance.
"Right," she said.
"Options. Well, we can start with the servos, I guess ..."
Tia snuggled down into his arms, and
turned into a big blue toy bear. The bear looked at him reproachfully. He
started to get up, but the bedcoverings had turned to snowdrifts, and he was
frozen in place. The bear tried to chip him out, but its blunt arms were too
soft to make an impression on the ice-covered drifts. Then he heard rumbling,
and looked up, to see an avalanche poised to crash down on him like some kind
of slow-motion wave. The avalanche rumbled, and Tia-the-bear growled back,
interposing herself between him and the tumbling snow.
"Alex, wake up!"
He floundered awake, flailing at the
bedclothes, hitting the light button more by accident than anything else. He
blinked as the light came up full, blinding him, his legs trapped in a tangle
of sheets and blankets. "What?" he said, his tongue too thick for his
mouth. "Who? Where?"
"Alex," Tia said, her voice
strained, but excited. "Alex, I have been trying to get you to wake up for
fifteen minutes! There's a CenSec ship Upstairs, and it's beating the tail off
those two pirates!"
CenSec? Spirits of space-
"What happened?" he asked,
grabbing for clothing and pulling it on. "From the beginning, "
"The first I knew of it was when one
of the pirates sent a warning down to the ship here to stay under cover and
quiet. I got the impression that they thought it was just an ordinary Survey
ship, until it locked onto one of them and started blasting." Tia had
brought up all of her systems again; fresher air was moving briskly through the
ventilator, all the lights and boards were up and active in the main cabin.
"That was when all the scans stopped, and I started breaking loose. I ran
that freeze-thaw cycle you suggested, and a couple of minutes ago, I fired the
engines. I can definitely move, and I'm pretty sure I can pull out of here
without too much trouble. I might lose some paint and some bits of things on my
surface, but nothing that can'tbe repaired."
"What about Upstairs?" he asked,
running for his chair without stopping for shoes or even socks, and strapping
himself down.
"Good news and bad news. The CenSec
ship looks like its going to take both the pirates," she replied.
"The bad news is that while I can receive, I can't seem to broadcast. The
ice might have jammed something, I can't tell."
"All right; we can move, and the
ambush Upstairs is being taken care of." Alex clipped the last of his
restraint belts in place; when Tia moved, it could be abruptly, and with little
warning. "But if we can't broadcast, we can't warn CenSec that there's
another ship down here. We can't even identify ourselves as a friend. And we'll
be a sitting duck for the pirates if we try to rise. They can just hide in
their blinds and ambush the CenSec ship, then wait to see if we come out of
hiding, as soon as we clear their horizon they can pot us."
Alex considered the problem as
dispassionately as he could. "Can we stay below their horizon until we're
out of range?"
Tia threw up a map as an answer. If the
pirate chose to pursue them, there was no way that she could stay out of range
of medium guns, and they had to assume that was what the pirate had.
"There has to be a way to keep them
on the ground, somehow," Alex muttered, chewing a hangnail, aware that
with every second that passed their window of opportunity was closing.
"What's going on Upstairs?"
"The first ship is heavily damaged.
If I'm reading the tactics right, the CenSec ship is going to move in for the
kill, provided the other pirate gives him a chance."
Alex turned his attention back to their
own problem. "If we could just cripple them, throw enough rocks down on
them or, wait a minute. Bring up the views of the building they're hiding in,
the ones you got from my camera."
Tia obeyed, and Alex studied the situation
carefully, matching pictures with memory. "Interesting thing about those
hills. See how some of them look broken off, as if those tips get too heavy to
support after a while? I bet that's because the winds come in from different
directions and scour out under the crests once in a while. Can you give me a
better shot of the hills overhanging those buildings?"
"No problem." The viewpoint
pulled back, displaying one of those wave-crest hills overshadowing the
building with the partial roof. "Alex!" she exclaimed.
"You see it too," he said with
satisfaction. "All right girl, think we can pull this off?"
For answer, she revved her engines.
"Be a nice change to hit back, for once!"
"Then let's lift!"
The engines built from a quiet purr to a
bone-deep, bass rumble, more felt than heard. Tia pulled in her landing gear,
then began rocking herself by engaging null-grav, first on the starboard, then
on the port side, each time rolling a little more. Alex did what he could,
playing with the attitude jets, trying to undercut some of the ice.
Her nose rose, until Alex tilted back in
his chair at about a forty-five degree angle. That was when Tia cut loose with
the full power of her rear thrusters.
"We're moving!" she shouted over
the roar of her own engines, engines normally reserved only for in-atmosphere
flight. There was no sensation of movement, but Alex clearly heard the scrape
of ice along her hull, and winced, knowing that without a long stint in dry
dock, Tia would look worse than Hank's old trampfreighter.
Suddenly, they were free.
Tia killed the engines and engaged full
null-gee drive, hovering just above the surface of the snow in eerie silence.
"CenSec got the first ship; the other
one jumped them. It looks pretty even," Tia said shortly, as Alex heard
the whine of the landing gear being dropped again. "So far, no one has
noticed us. Are you braced?"
"Go for it," he replied.
"Is there anything I can do?"
"Hold on," she said shortly.
She shot skyward, going for altitude. She
knew the capabilities of her hull better than Alex did; he was going to leave
this in her hands. The hill they wanted was less than a kilometer away, when
they'd gotten high enough, Tia nosed over and dove for it. She aimed straight
for the crest, as if it were a target and she a projectile.
Sudden fear clutched at his throat, his
heart going a million beats per second. She can't mean to ram. Alex froze, his
hands clutching the armrests.
At the last minute, Tia rolled her nose
up, hitting the crest of the hill with her landing gear instead of her nose.
The shriek and crunch of agonized metal
told Alex that they were not going to make port anywhere but a space station
now. The impact rammed him back into his chair, the lights flickered and went
out, and crash systems deployed, cushioning him from worse shock. Even so, he
blacked out for a moment.
When he came to again, the lights were
back on, and Tia hovered, tilted slightly askew, above the alien city.
Below and to their right was what was left
of the roofless building, now buried beneath a pile of ice, earth, and rock.
"Are you all right?" he managed,
though it hurt to move his jaw.
"Space-worthy," she said, and
there was no mistaking the shakiness in her voice. "Barely. I'll be as
leaky as a sieve in anything but the main cabin and the passenger section,
though. And I don't know about my drives, hang on, we're being hailed."
The screen flickered and filled with the
image of Neil, with Chria Chance in the background. "AH
One-Oh-Three-Three, is that you? I assume you had a good reason for playing
'chicken' with a mountain?"
"It's us," Alex replied, feeling
all of his energy drain out as his adrenaline level dropped. "There's
another one of your playmates under that rockpile."
"Ah."
Neil said nothing more, simply nodded. "All's well then. Can you come up
to us?"
"We
aren't going to be making any landings," Tia pointed out. "But I
don't know about the state of our drives."
Chria leaned over her partner's shoulder.
"I wouldn't trust them if I were you," she said. "But if you get
up here, we can take you in tow and hold you in orbit until one of the
transports shows up. Then you ride home in their bay."
"It's a deal," Alex told her,
then, with a lift of an eyebrow, "I didn't know you could do that"
"There's
a lot you don't know," she told him. "Is that all right with you,
Tia?"
"At this point, just about anything
would be all right with me," she replied. "We're on the way."
Tia was still a little dizzy from the call
she'd gotten from the Institute. When you're refitted, we'd like you to take
the first Team into what we think is the EsKay homeworld. You and Alexander
have the most experience, in situations where plague is a possibility, of any
other courier on contract to us. It had only made sense; to this day no one
knew what had paralyzed her. She had a vested interest in making sure the team
stayed healthy, and an even bigger one in helping to find the bug.
Of course, they knew that And they knew
she would never buy out her contract until this assignment was over. Blackmail?
Assuredly. But it was a form of blackmail she could live with.
Besides, if her plan worked, she would
soon be digging with the Prime Team, not just watching them. It might take a
while, but sooner or later, she'd have enough money made from her investments.
Once she paid for the repairs, that is.
From the remarks of the techs working on her hull, they would not be cheap.
Then Stirling stunned her again, presenting
her with the figures in her account.
"So, my dear lady," said
Stirling, "between an unspecified reward from the Drug Enforcement Arm,
the bonus for decoding the purpose of the EsKay navbook, the fine return from
your last investment, and the finders' fee for that impressive treasure trove,
you are quite a wealthy shell-person."
"So I see," Tia replied, more
than a little dazed. "But what about the bill for repairs?"
"Covered by CenSec." Stirling
wasn't precisely gloating, but he was certainly enjoying himself. "And if
you don't mind my saying so, that was my work. I merely repeated what you had
told me about the situation, pointed out that your damages were due entirely to
a civilian aiding in the apprehension of dangerous criminals, and CenSec seemed
positively eager to have the bills transferred over. When I mentioned how you
had kept their ship from ambush from the ground, they decided you needed that
Singularity Drive you've always wanted."
She suspected he had done more than merely
mention it ... perhaps she ought to see if she could get Lee Stirling as her
Advocate, instead of the softperson she had, who had done nothing about the
repairs or the drive! So, she would not have to spend a single penny of all
those bonuses on her own repairs! "What about my investments in the
prosthetics firm? And what if I take my bonus money and plow it back into
Moto-Prosthetics?"
"Doing brilliantly. And if you do
that, hmm, do you realize you'll have a controlling interest?" Stirling
sounded quite amazed. "Is this something you wanted? You could buy out
your contract with all this. Or get yourself an entire new refit internally and
externally."
"Yes," she replied firmly. She
was glad that Alex wasn't aboard at the moment, even though she felt achingly
lonely without the sounds of his footsteps or his tuneless whistling. This was
something she needed absolute privacy for." In fact, I am going to need a
softperson proxy to go to the Board of Directors for me."
"Now?" Stirling asked.
"As soon as I have controlling
interest," she replied. "The sooner the better." And it can't be
soon enough to suit me.
Alex looked deeply into the bottom of his
glass and decided that this one was going to be his last. He had achieved the
state of floating that passed for euphoria; any more and he would pass it, and
become disgustingly drunk. Probably a weepy drunk, too, all things considered.
That would be a bad thing; despite his civilian clothing, someone might
recognize him as a CS brawn, and that would be trouble. Besides, this was a
high-class bar as spaceport bars went; human bartender, subdued, restful
lighting, comfortable booths and stools, good music that was not too loud. They
didn't need a maudlin drunk; they really didn't need any drunk. No point in
ruining other people's evening just because his life was a mess.
He felt the lump in his throat and knew
one more drink would make it spill over into an outpouring of emotion. The
bartender leaned over and said, confidingly, "Buddy, if I were you, I'd
cut off about now."
Alex nodded, a little surprised, and
swallowed back the lump. Had liability laws gotten to the point where
bartenders were watching their customers for risky behavior? "Yeah. What I
figured." He sniffed a bit and told himself to straighten up before he
became an annoyance.
The bartender, a human, which was why Alex
had chosen to drink away his troubles here, if such a thing was possible, did
not leave. Instead, he polished the slick pseudo-wooden bar beside Alex with a
spotless cloth, and said, casually, "If you don't mind my saying so,
buddy, you look like a man with a problem or two."
Alex laughed, mirthlessly. The man had no
idea. "Yeah. Guess so."
"You want to talk about it?" the
bartender persisted. "That's what they hire me for. That's why you're
paying so much for the drinks."
Alex squinted up at the man, who was
perfectly ordinary in a way that seemed very familiar. Conservative haircut,
conservative, casual clothing. Nothing about the face or the expression to mark
him except a certain air of friendly concern. It was that 'air' that tipped him
off. It was very polished, very professional. "Counselor?" he asked,
finally.
The bartender nodded to a framed
certificate over the three shelves of antique and exotic bottles behind the
bar. "Licensed. Confidential. Freelance. Been in the business for five
years. You probably can't tell me anything I haven't heard a hundred times
before."
Freelance and confidential meant that
whatever Alex told him would stay with him, and would not be reported back to
his superiors. Alex was both surprised and unsurprised. The Counselor-attended
bars had been gaining in popularity when he had graduated. He just hadn't known
they'd gotten that popular. He certainly hadn't expected to find one out here,
at a refit station. People tended to pour out their problems when they'd been
drinking; someone back on old Terra had figured out that it might be a good
idea to give them someone to talk to who might be able to tender some reasonable
advice. Now, so he'd heard, there were more Counselors behind bars than there
were in offices, and a large number of bartenders were (going back to school to
get Counselor's licenses.
Suddenly the need to unburden himself to
someone was too much to withstand. "Ever been in love?" he asked,
staring back down at the empty glass and shoving it back and forth a little
between his index fingers.
The bartender took the glass away and
replaced it with a cup of coffee. "Not personally, but I've seen a lot of
people who are, or think they are."
"Ah." Alex transferred his gaze
to the cup, which steamed very nicely. "I wouldn't advise it."
"Yeah. A lot of them say that.
Personal troubles with your significant?" the bartender-cum-Counselor
prompted. "Maybe it's something I can help out with."
Alex sighed. "Only that I'm in love
with someone that, isn't exactly reachable." He scratched his head for a
moment, trying to think of a way to phrase it without giving too much away.
"Our, uh, professions are going to keep us apart, no matter what, and
there's some physical problems, too."
The habit of caution was ingrained too
deeply. Freelance Counselor or no, he couldn't bring himself to tell the whole
truth to this man. Not when telling it could lose him access to Tia altogether,
if the wrong people heard all this.
"Can't you change jobs?" the
Counselor asked, reasonably. "Surely a job isn't worth putting yourself
through misery. From everything I've ever seen or heard, it's better to have a
low-paying job that makes you happy than a high-paying one that's driving you
into bars."
Alex shook his head, sorrowfully.
"That won't help," he sighed hopelessly. "It's not just the job,
and changing it will only make things worse. Think of us as as a Delphin and an
Avithran. She can't swim, I can't fly. Completely incompatible lives." And
that puts it mildly.
The Counselor shook his head, "That
doesn't sound promising, my friend. Romeo and Juliet romances are all very well
for the holos, but they're hell on your insides. I'd see if I couldn't shake my
emotional attachment, if I was you. No matter how much you think you love
someone, you can always turn the heat down if you decide that's what you want
to do about it"
"I'm trying," Alex told him,
moving the focus of his concentration from the coffee cup to the bartender's
face. "Believe me, I'm trying. I've got a couple of weeks extended leave
coming, and I'm going to use every minute of it in trying. I've got dates lined
up; I've got parties I'm hitting, and a friend from CenSec is planning on
taking me on an extended shore leave crawl."
The bartender nodded, slowly. "I
understand, and seeing a lot of attractive new people is one way to try and
shake an emotional attachment. But friend, you are not going to find your
answer in the bottom of a bottle."
"Maybe not," Alex replied sadly.
"But at least I can find a little forgetfulness there."
And as the bartender shook his head, he
pushed away from his seat, turned, took a tight grip on his dubious
equilibrium, and walked out the door, looking for a little more of that
forgetfulness.
Angelica Guon-Stirling bint Chad slid into
her leather-upholstered seat and smiled politely at the man seated next to her
at the foot of the huge, black marble table. He nodded back and returned his
attention to the stock market report he was reading on the screen of his
datalink. Other men and women, dressed in conservative suits and the subdued
hues of management, filed in and took the remaining places around the table.
She refrained from chuckling. In a few more moments, he might well be more
interested in her than in anything that datalink could supply. She'd gotten
entry to the meeting on the pretext of representing her uncle's firm on some
unspecified business. They represented enough fluid wealth that the secretary
had added her to the agenda and granted her entry to the sacred boardroom. It
was a very well-appointed sacred boardroom; rich with the scent of expensive
leather and hushed as only a room ringed with high-priced anti-surveillance
equipment could be. The lights were set at exactly the perfect psychological
hue and intensity for the maximum amount of alertness, the chair cradled her
with unobtrusive comfort. The colors of warm white, cool black, and gray
created an air of efficiency and importance, without being sterile.
None of this intimidated Angelica in the
least. She had seen a hundred such boardrooms in the past, and would probably
see a thousand more before her career had advanced to the point that she was
too busy to be sent out on such missions. Her uncle had not only chosen her to
be Ms. Cade's proxy because they were related; he had chosen her because she
was the best proxy in the firm. And this particular venture was going to need a
very delicate touch, for what Ms. Cade wanted was not anything the board of
directors of Moto-Prosthetics was going to be ready for. They thought in terms
of hostile takeovers, poison pills, golden parachutes. Ms. Cade had an entirely
different agenda. If this were not handled well and professionally, the board
might well fight, and that would waste precious time.
Though it might seem archaic, board
meetings still took place in person. It was too easy to fake holos, to create a
computer-generated simulacrum of someone who was dead or in cold sleep. That
was why she was here now, with proxy papers in order and properly filed with
all the appropriate authorities. Not that she minded. This was exciting work,
and every once in a while there was a client like Hypatia Cade, who wanted
something so different that it made everything else she had done up to now seem
like a training exercise.
The meeting was called to order, and
Angelica stood up before the chairman of the board could bring up normal
business. Now was the time. If she waited until her scheduled turn, she could
be lost or buried in nonsense, and as of this moment, the board's business was
no longer what had been scheduled anyway. It was hers, Angelica's, to dictate.
It was a heady brew, power, and Angelica drank it to the dregs as all eyes
centered on her, most affronted that she had 'barged in' on their business.
"Gentlemen," she said smoothly,
catching all their attentions. "Ladies. I believe you should all check
your datalinks. If you do, you will see that my client, a Miz Hypatia Cade, has
just this moment purchased a controlling interest in your preferred stock. As
of this moment, Hypatia Cade is Moto-Prosthetics. As her proxy, she directs me
to put the normal business before the board on hold for a moment."
There was a sudden, shocked moment of
silence, then a rustle as cuffs were pushed back, followed by another moment of
silence as the members of the board took in the reality of her statement,
verified that it was true, wondered how it had happened without them noticing,
then waited for the axe to fall. All eyes were on Angelica; some of them
desperate. Most of the desperate were those who backed risky ventures within
the company, and were wondering if their risk-taking had made them into
liabilities for the new majority owner.
Ah, power. I could disband the entire
board and bring in my own people, and you all know it. These were the moments
that she lived for; the feeling of having the steel hand within the velvet
glove, knowing that she held immense power, and choosing not to exercise it.
Angelica slid back down into her seat and
smiled, smoothly, coolly, but encouragingly. "Be at ease, ladies and
gentlemen. The very first thing that my client wishes to assure you of is that
she intends no shakeups. She is satisfied with the way this company is
performing, and she does not intend to interfere in the way you are running
it."
Once again, the faces around the table
changed. Disbelief in some eyes, calculation in others. Then understanding. It
would be business as usual. Nothing would change. These men and women still had
their lives, their power, undisturbed.
She waited for the relief to set in, then
pounced, leaning forward, putting her elbows down in the table, and steepling her
hands before her. "But I must tell you that this will be the case only so
long as Miz Cade is satisfied. And Miz Cade does have a private agenda for this
company."
Another pause, to let the words sink in.
She saw the questions behind the eyes, what kind of private agenda? Was it
something that this Cade person wanted them to do, or to make? Or was it
something else altogether?
"It's something that she wants you to
construct; nothing you are not already capable of carrying off," Angelica
continued, relishing every moment "In fact, I would venture to say that it
is something you could be doing now, if you had the inclination. It's just a
little personal project, shall we say."
Alex's mouth tasted like an old rug; his
eyes were scratchy and puffed, and his head pounded. Every joint ached, his
stomach churned unhappily, and he was not at all enjoying the way the room had
a tendency to roll whenever he moved. The wages of sin were counted out in
hangovers, and this one was one of monumental proportions. Well, that's what
happens when you go on a two-week drunk.
He closed his eyes, but that didn't help.
It hadn't exactly been a two-week drunk, but he had never once in the entire
span been precisely sober. He had chosen, quite successfully, to glaze his
problems over with the fuzz and blurring of alcohol.
It was all that had happened. He had not
shaken his fixation with Tia. He was just as hopelessly in love with her as he
had been before he started his binge. And he had tried everything short of
brain-wipe to get rid of the emotion; he'd made contact with some of his old
classmates, he'd gone along with Neil and Chria on a celebratory spree, he'd
talked to more bartender Counselors, he'd picked up girl after girl ... To no
avail whatsoever.
Tia Cade it was who was lodged so
completely in his mind and heart, and Tia Cade it would remain.
So, besides being hung over, he was still
torn up inside. And without that blur of alcohol to take the edge off it, his
pain was just as bad as before.
There was only one thing for it. He and
Tia would have to work it all out, somehow. One way or another. He opened his
eyes again; his tiny rented cubicle spun slowly around, and he groaned as has
stomach protested. First things first; deal with the hangover ...
It was just past the end of the second
shift when he made his way down the docks to the refit berth where CenSec had
installed Tia for her repair work. It had taken that long before he felt like a
human being again. One thing was certain; that was not something he intended to
indulge in ever again. One long binge in his life was enough. I just hope I
haven't fried too many brain cells with stupidity. I don't have any to spare.
He found the lock closed, but there were
no more workers swarming about, either inside the bay or out That was a good
sign, since it probably meant all the repairs were over. He'd used the
day-and-night noise as an excuse to get away, assuming Tia would contact him if
she needed to.
As he hit the lock controls and gave them
his palm to read, it suddenly occurred to him that she hadn't made any attempt
at all to contact him in all the time he'd been gone.
Had he frightened her? Had she reported
him? The lock cycled quickly, and he stepped onto a ship that was uncannily
silent. The lights had been dimmed down; the only sounds were of the
ventilation system. Tia did not greet him; nothing did. He might as well have
been on an empty, untenanted ship, without even an AI. Something was wrong.
His heart pounding, his mouth dry with
apprehension, he went to the main cabin. The boards were all dark, with no
signs of activity. Tia wasn't sulking; Tia didn't sulk. There was nothing
functioning that could not be handled by the stand-alone redundant micros.
He dropped his bag on the deck, from
fingers that had gone suddenly nerveless. There could be only one cause for
this silence, this absence of activity. Tia was gone. Either the BB authorities
had found out about how he felt, or Tia herself had complained. They had come
and taken her away, and he would never see or talk to her again.
As if to confirm his worst fears, a glint
of light on an open plexy window caught his eye. Theodore Edward Bear was gone,
his tiny shrine empty.
No. But the evidence was inescapable.
Numb with shock, he found himself walking
towards his own cabin. Perhaps there would be a note there, in his personal
database. Perhaps there would be a message waiting from CS, ordering him to
report for official Counseling.
Perhaps both. It didn't matter. Tia was
gone, and very little mattered anymore. Black despair washed into him, a
despair so deep that not even tears would relieve it. Tia was gone ...
He opened the door to his cabin, and the
light from the corridor shone inside, making the person sitting on his bunk
blink.
Someone sifting on my -
Female. It was definitely female. And she
wasn't wearing anything like a CS uniform, Counselor, Advocate, or anything
else. In fact, she wasn't wearing very much at all, a little neon-red Spandex
unitard that left nothing to imagine.
He turned on the light, an automatic
reflex. His visitor stared up at him, lips creasing in a shy smile. She was
tiny, smaller than he had first thought; dark and elfin, with big blue eyes,
the image of a Victorian fairy and oddly familiar.
In her hands, she gently cradled the
missing Ted Bear. It was the bear that suddenly shook his brain out of inactive
and into overdrive.
He stared; he gripped the side of the
door. "T-T-Tia?" he stammered.
She smiled again, with less shyness.
"Hi," she said and it was Tia's voice, sounding a bit, odd, coming
from a mouth and not a speaker. "I'm sorry I had to shut so much down, I
can't run this and the ship, too."
It was Tia, Tia! sitting there in a body,
a human body, like the realization of his dream!
"This?" he replied cleverly.
"I hope you don't mind if I don't get
up," she continued, a little ruefully. "I'm not very good at walking
yet. They just delivered this today, and I haven't had much practice in it
yet."
"It?" he said, sitting heavily
down on his bunk and staring at her. "How-what-"
"Do you like it?" she asked,
pathetically eager for his approval. He wasn't sure what he was supposed to
approve of, the body?
"How could I not like it, you, "
His head was spinning as badly as it had a few hours ago. "Tia, what on
earth is this?"
She blinked, and giggled. "I keep
forgetting. You know all that bonus money we've been getting? I kept investing
it, then reinvesting the profits in Moto-Prosthetics. But when we got back
here, I was thinking about something Doctor Kenny told me, that they had the
capability to make a body like this, but that there was no way to put a naked
brain in it, and there was so much data-transfer needed to run it that the link
could only be done at very short distances."
"Oh." He couldn't help but stare
at her; this was his dream, his daydream-his,
Nevermind.
"Anyway," she continued,
blithely unaware that she had stunned him into complete silence, "it
seemed to me that the body would be perfect for a brainship, I mean, we've got
all the links already, and it wouldn't be any harder to control a body from
inside than a servo. But he was already an investor, and he told me it wasn't
likely they'd ever build a body like that, since there was no market for it,
because it would cost as much as a brainship contract buy-out."
"But how, "
She laughed aloud. "That was why I
took all my share of the bonuses and bought more stock! I bought a controlling interest,
then I told them to build me a body! I don't need a buy-out. I don't really
want a buy-out, not since the Institute decided to give us the EsKay homeworld
assignment."
He shook his head. "That simple? It
hardly seems possible ... didn't they argue?"
"They were too happy that I was
letting them keep their old jobs," she told him cynically. "After
all, as controlling stockholder, I had the right to fire them all and set up my
own Board of Directors. But I have to tell you the funniest thing!"
"What's
that?" he asked.
Her hands caressed Theodore's soft fur.
"Word of what I was doing leaked out, and now there is a market! Did you
have any idea how many shell-persons there are who've earned a buy-out, but
didn't have any place to go with it, because they were happy with their current
jobs?" He shook his head, dumbly.
"Not too many ships," she told
him, "but a lot of shell-persons running installations. Lots of them. And
there were a lot of inquiries from brainships, too, some of them saying that
they'd be willing to skip a buy-out to have a body! Moto-Prosthetics even got a
letter of protest from some of the Advocates!"
"Why?" he asked, bewildered.
"Why on earth would they care?"
"They said that we were the tools of
the BB program, that we had purposely put this 'mechanical monster' together to
tempt brainships out of their buy-out money." She tilted her head to one
side, charmingly, and frowned. "1 must admit that angle had never occurred
to me. I hope that really isn't a problem. Maybe I should have Lars and Lee
Stirling look into it for me."
"Tia," he managed, around the
daze surrounding his thoughts, "what is this 'mechanical monster' of
yours?"
"It's a cybernetic body, with a
wide-band comlink in the extreme shortwave area up here." She tapped her
forehead. "What's different about it is that it's using shell-person tech
to give me full sensory input from the skin as well as output to the rest. My
range isn't much outside the ship, but my techs at Moto are working on that.
After all, when we take the Prime Team out to the EsKay homeworld, I'm going to
want to join the dig, if they'll let me. What with alloys and silicates and
carbonfibers and all, it's not much heavier than you are, even though it
outmasses a softperson female of this type by a few kilos. Everything works,
though, full sensory and well, everything. Like a softperson again, except that
I don't get muscle fatigue and I can shut off the painsensors if I'm damaged.
That was why I took Ted out; I wanted to feel him, to hug him again."
She just sat there and beamed at him, and
he shook his head. "But why?" he asked, finally.
She blinked, and then dropped her eyes to
the bear. "I, probably would have gone for a buy-out, if it hadn't been
for you," she said shyly. "Or maybe a Singularity Drive, except that
CenSec decided that maybe they'd better give me one and threw it in with the
repairs. But, I told you, Alex. You're the most special person in my life. How
could I know this was possible, and not do it for, for both of us?"
He dared to touch her then, just one
finger along her cheek, then under her chin, raising her eyes to meet his.
There was nothing about those lucent eyes that looked mechanical or cold;
nothing about the warmth and resiliency of the skin under his hand that said
'cybernetic'.
"You gave up your chance of a buy-out
for me, for us?" he asked.
She shrugged. "Someone very wise once
said that the chance for happiness was worth giving up a little freedom for.
And really, between the Advocates and everybody, they really can't make us do
anything we don't want to."
"I guess not." He smiled, and
she smiled back. "You do realize that you've actually done the BB program
two favors, don't you?"
"I have?" She blinked again,
clearly bewildered.
"You've given shell-persons something
else to do with their buy-out money. If they don't have Singularity Drives,
they'll want those first, and then they'll want one of these." He let go
of her chin and tapped her cheek playfully. "Maybe more than one. Maybe
one of each sex, or in different body types. Some brainships may never buy out.
But the other problem, you've solved fixation, my clever lady."
She nodded after a moment. "I never
thought of that. But you're right! If you have a body, someone to be with and,
ah, everything, you won't endanger the shell-person. And if it's just an
infatuation based on the dream instead of the reality, well, "
"Well, after a few rounds with the
body, it will cool off to something manageable." He chuckled. "Watch
out, or they'll give you a bonus for that one, too!"
She laughed. "Well, I won't take it
as a buy-out! Maybe I'll just build myself a second body! After all, if we
aren't going to be exploring the universe like a couple of holoheroes, we have
the time to explore things a little closer to hand. Right?"
She posed, coyly, looking at him
flirtatiously over her shoulder. He wondered how many of her entertainment
holos she'd watched to find that pose. "So, what would you like, Alex? A
big, blond Valkyrie? An Egyptian queen? A Nubian warrior-maid? How about a
Chinese princess or ..."
"Let's learn about what we have at
hand, shall we?" he interrupted, sliding closer to her and taking her in
his arms. Her head tilted up towards his, her eyes shining with anticipation.
Carefully, gently, he took the bear out of her hands and placed him on the
shelf above the foot of the bed, as her arms slid around his waist, cautiously,
but eagerly.
"Now," he breathed, "about
that exploration ..."
End