The Man Who Counts
She was born on the Fourth of July,
coincidentally high summer in the northern hemisphere of Mars, though the
wild slopes of Olympus Mons were still white with seasonless snow. Outside,
I knew, the grounds of Blue Heaven were garden green, crystal palaces in the
shade of terragenic trees, oak and pine, poplar and quaking aspen
promiscuously mingled, walkways winding among lakes, crossing streams, there
for the guests, just as we who came to serve.
High summer in the year 3398, down in the dank sub-basements of Blue
Heaven, somewhere on Mars, where she was born while I stood and watched.
I'd come to the birthing room, with its musty smells of mildew and damp
concrete, to do my job, one of my many jobs, here ahead of the others, as
usual, pulling the pile of body bags into a long row by the far wall, lining
them up neatly, then idly looking at the tags.
All the usual. A twinkie here, a twee there, the occasional snatch or
stud. Mostly ordinaries, though. Too many ordinaries. Ordinaries the worst,
piling up in numbers as the secret courts grow meaner and more conservative,
day by day.
Bastards were easier on me than they knew.
A little smirk.
Too late now.
You could hear them just before they came through the door; hard plastic
boot heels echoing on the carpetless floor, voices arguing, arguing about
something—hers sharp, nasal, bitchy, his deep and gravelly, a froggy voice,
something from a cheap, imitative kiddie drama.
The sort of crap my kids used to watch, back in the Venusberg days.
Pale, hazy yellow skies. Suburban neighborhoods. Home and hearth. Job and
kids. Housewives. Housewives everywhere. Home alone. Waiting and waiting.
Kermanshah was the taller of the two: angular, lean, short, scruffy,
dirt-brown hair, carrying the antique riding crop she liked to use for a
"starter" tucked under one arm, towering over Jethro, with his big, thick
arms and not-quite-shaven, bowling-ball head.
She said, "Ah, there you are, Merry. Let's get this show on the road."
I moved, arbitrarily, to one end of the body-bag row, leaning down to
reach for a zipper.
"Not that one."
Kermanshah snapped, "
Jethro…"
They stood facing one another, pissed off about something. He said, "If
you think I'm going to miss out on
this one, you've got a fucking
screw loose."
Brown eyes bleak, she whipped the riding crop through the air between
them, once, twice, then stood staring. "Dammit, then." A gesture, at the row
of bags.
Jethro squatted and duckwalked along the row, looking at the tags, one
after another. "Here she is." He straightened up. "Merry."
I kicked off my shoes and tossed them in a corner, away from where the
mess would spread toward the drains, slipped off my coverall and hung it on
a hook, damp air cool on my skin. Then I leaned down and tugged the body bag
out of the row, pulling it toward the middle of the floor, stuck my middle
finger through the zipper's D-ring and gave it a hard yank.
Blood-warm amniotic fluid gushed out, rushed over my feet, started
gurgling in the drains, while Jethro and Kermanshah took dainty steps back,
keeping their boots dry. Her eyes were sharp, angry, his bright with joy.
I wrapped the woman's sopping, pale blonde hair around my hand and pulled
her out of the bag, rolling her face-down on the floor, face down in flowing
slime, put my hand in the middle of her back and gave one long, hard push,
flattening her. There was another gush, fluid from her lungs, then, when I
let go, a long, ragged, gagging gasp.
I kneeled in the wet beside her, hand still on her back, stroking bare
wet flesh, and whispered in her ear, "Easy. Easy now. It's all right. You'll
be all right. Just lie still for a minute."
Maybe so. I remembered exactly what this moment was like, and I'd been
just fine. Considering.
"Roll her over, Merry."
When I looked up, Jethro had kicked off his own boots, grinning,
grinning, and was unzipping the front of his coverall. Kermanshah stood back
by the door, arms folded, eyes hard, but not looking away, not for a minute,
and she said, "Look at her. She looks just like some goddam little sparrow.
Cat's gotcha
now, bitch."
The woman, whoever she was, coughed hard when I rolled her on her back,
and whispered, "Sparrow?" Voice raspy from having been under water for so
long.
Utterly bewildered look on her face, eyes deeply puzzled, as if she had
no idea where she was, or why she was here. Knowing why and where made it
easy for me. That and knowing I deserved every bit of it.
Jethro padded over, bare feet splashing in the residual muck, marriage
tackle up and ready.
Kermanshah muttered, "Hurry the fuck up. I've got a lunch date."
She wasn't a beautiful woman, though her innocent face and confused eyes
might have made her pretty. Still, she was female, tits and bush right where
they belonged, and that's enough for most men.
Jethro said, "Hold her still for me, Merry." He started to kneel, then,
"No, wait. Lay on your back and pull her on top of you. That's it. Legs
apart."
I put my arms under hers, pulling her straight, locking her knees with
mine, holding her spread eagled, tiny bird of a girl hardly any weight at
all on top of me, but Jethro was heavy enough when he lay down on top of us
both, squeezing the breath out of her.
I could see her out of the corner of my eye, face wan and drawn, eyes
flooding with fear. In just a moment, I'll see that agony, familiar agony,
the agony of all those housewives, back in midnight Venusberg, housewives
seen one by one by …
I felt him make his first thrust, and her eyes brightened with …
something, mouth dropping open, color rushing into her cheeks. She twisted
slightly and looked at me, astonished.
Oh, kiddo. I didn't get a chance to look at your tag, but you've been
snatched, haven't you? She looked away, face flooded with the realization of
it, starting to shiver as that first quick, involuntary orgasm began to
build.
So which punishment's worse, girlie, yours or mine? I could feel her
coccyx punching rhythmically into my abdomen, just above where my genitals
used to be, once upon a long-gone time ago.
· · · · ·
When I got her down to the barracks, Janet, my favorite ordinary, followed
us into the bathroom, nosy about who the new girl might be, watching as I
sat her up on the counter by the sink, got out towels, a facecloth, and
soap.
She started to reach out a hand, suddenly recoiled, nose wrinkling. Not
disgust. Recognition.
"Jesus! This one's going to bother the hell out of the poor studs!"
I leaned in, taking a deep breath. Nodded. Right. They'd have trouble
sleeping when she was around, and this was the only refuge they had.
Janet said, "It bothers the hell out of me, come to think of it." She
leaned in, sniffing delicately, grimacing. "You?"
I wet the washcloth and soaped it up. "They left my vomeronasal organ
intact for a reason." No pain, no gain.
Janet looked away. "Well."
The woman on the countertop said, "Why are you people smelling me? It's
not my fault that man …" She suddenly blushed and squirmed, nipples popping
erect, as if in a pornographic cartoon.
Janet said, "Gawd!"
I nodded, gently taking her by the wrist, starting her spongebath as far
out as possible. "Yeah. She's about as snatched as anyone I've ever seen."
Put a man this far into stud and he'd have a permanent hard-on, then soon
gangrene.
She was staring at us, mouth open, almost panting, obviously getting more
and more aroused as I washed her. When Janet, eyes bleak now, reached out to
brush the hair from her eyes, the woman seemed to lean into the hand, as if
trying to rub her face against it.
"Lord. What'd you
do to get yourself sent here?"
That puzzled look again. "I don't … What're you talking about?"
Janet looked at me.
I said, "What's your name, kiddo? You look familiar."
"I do?" She was distracted from the washrag now, which was a good thing,
since I'd had to move on to her legs. She said, "I, um … Didn't that woman
call me Sparrow? The one with the stick."
Then she said, "Ah! Do that some more!"
Janet whispered, "God have mercy." My friend Janet was here because, one
fine spring morning, just after breakfast, back on Earth in the merry month
of May, she poisoned her husband and then drowned her children in a bid to
keep her lover from leaving her for a less inconvenient woman.
I said, "Where were you before they put you in the rebirthing bag,
Sparrow?"
Puzzled look. "What do you mean? I wasn't anywhere before you took me
out. Just in the bag." Forever and ever.
Behind me, Janet made something like a hiss.
Then Sparrow said, "Could you put your hand right there, please? For just
a minute."
Long pause. Then, eyes growing desperate, she said, "
Please?"
"Mindwiped," I said. "Mindwiped and then snatched to within an inch of
her life." Sparrow had me by the wrist and was trying to force me to do what
she wanted.
Janet said, "Why the hell would they do that? I mean, what good does it
do to send her here if she don't know why she's being punished?"
Sparrow leaned back against the mirror, and said, "Um. Yeah. Thanks."
Janet stood up, turning her back. "Oh,
man!"
You get used to a lot here. You have to. Especially if you're an ordinary
like Janet, just here to suffer. But still. I said, "It's kind of like
stepping."
Janet said, "But it ain't stepping. Not like that. Not
that far."
No, not that far. Stepping was a light mindwipe and very mild snatching,
something a rich and powerful man will get done to an unsatisfactory wife.
Afterward, she's very sweet and sexy. Though not as sweet as a rich woman's
stepped-on husband, who will forever afterward be so very … uncritical.
Turning to face us again, but looking at herself in the mirror, Janet
said, "That was quick."
"She's going to be very popular with the guests."
Sparrow, aware of the world outside her body again for a little while,
said, "Where am I? What … punishment?"
Drying her with the towel, I said, "This is Blue Heaven on Mars. Where
they send all the bad little boys and girls to pay for their sins. Where all
the very rich little boys and girls come for a little harmless sport."
"Sins?" That bewildered look again. "I …" Sparrow looked right at me with
suddenly penetrating blue eyes, exactly like you'd imagine the eyes of a
telepath would be, and asked, "So, why are
you here, Merry?"
Guileless as a child. Straight question. Straight answer.
Beside us, Janet was suddenly looking away, face in shadow.
So I said, "I'm the Venusberg Strangler."
Her brows knit together, deepening the little furrow between them, and
you could see it didn't mean a thing.
· · · · ·
An eye for an eye.
Let the punishment fit the crime.
Fine. I get that part.
But these other little bits …
Sometimes, it's like I'm here as a decoration. Or maybe an object lesson,
I don't know. Sometimes they'll dress me up in a fringed loincloth, turban
round my head, scimitar strapped across my back, and make me stand by one of
the cafe entrances like some kind of guard.
Guests get curious, ask around, finally someone tells them who I am, and
the women's eyes get big and round. That's when they make me drop the
loincloth, and the men's eyes get big and round.
Every now and again, you'll see a shadow of disappointment in some
woman's eyes, one of her sick little fantasies spoiled.
The Venusberg Strangler.
Jesus.
I try to stand up straight and bland.
Mornings on Mars, especially these summer mornings, you get a fine view
from the Rimshot Cafe, eastward from the lip of the caldera, fine white
slopes of the old shield volcano tumbling gradually away, superimposed
against the gray-green plains below, Jovis Tholis an isolated red pimple in
the midst of all that, then the purple majesty of Ascraeus Mons, trailing
wings of backlit cloud, peeking over the horizon.
The sun was a dim blue disk on the edge of the world, rising out of a
stripe of greenish sky, just a little bit of green under a dome of pink,
shading quickly up to black.
I remember when I was a kid learning about the technology that made all
this. Old technology, primitive compared to what made my home on Venus. Just
a brief flash of that. Yellow sky. Pale brown clouds. The cityscape of
Venusberg, skyscrapers seen from a distance, suburban vista of little
houses, little multicolored houses, embedded in a dark green forest.
Today they had me stark naked, holding a spear, motionless by the door,
female guests tittering as they saw what I was, elbowing the men they were
with, "Hey, better mind your p's and q's, Johnnycakes!"
Rich men smirking. As if. As fucking if.
They had the ordinaries waiting table, breakfasting the guests who cared
for it, and only a little later, parties began splitting up, heading out
into the park, taking what they wanted, doing what they wanted.
It was around that time I saw Sparrow, done up in a short, gauzy black
cocktail dress, barefoot, being led along by a serious-looking little man
who held her by the hand and whispered in her ear, as if in earnest, some
fine fellow trying to talk a reluctant girlfriend into something a little
out of the ordinary.
Come on. You'll like it. I promise. Be a sport. Just this once.
She looked at me over one shoulder, so utterly bewildered, like some
little girl being led away by a child molester.
Except for that high flush of arousal, of course.
I wanted to go with her then, help out any way I could, make it as easy
as possible for her, but I got picked up by a group setting up for a little
rough sport. Not with me, no. You hardly ever meet somebody that's got a
thing for twinkies or twees, but they do need someone big and strong to hold
the ordinaries down.
The ordinaries know they're not supposed to struggle and scream, or maybe
just not struggle, anyway, but sometimes they can't help it.
· · · · ·
I woke up some time in the middle of the night from another dream I didn't
want to have. Not a repetitive dream. My subconscious has too much raw
material to work with for that, but still.
Some kind of dream about my kids, hovering over me as I struggled awake,
heart pounding, Jenny and Davy, when they were around seven and three, I
think. Tow-headed blond kids, with their mother's enormous, damp-looking
blue eyes, looking at me, always looking at me, so serious. As if puzzled by
what they saw.
The dream had somehow mixed them up with a dark Venusberg alley. Not a
city alley, but one of those suburban back streets where the robots came at
night to do what had to be done. Almost as if they'd been there, and
watched.
Never.
I remembered the woman's eyes, huge, full of terror. And puzzled. So
terribly puzzled.
There was a picture of a man on the nightstand by the bed, warm and soft
in the glow of the lamp, a smiling man whose motionless eyes watched us out
of the picture. There, there, he seemed to be saying. Everything will be all
right. It'll be over soon.
He had nice clothes hanging in the closet.
And he was away for the whole week, gone to Luna on business.
Sitting up on the edge of my bunk, damp with warm, dirty-feeling sweat, I
heard rustling in the dormitory, a cough here, a sigh there. Once, briefly,
a head came up over in the corner where the studs bunked together, outlined
against the wall-reflected glow of a baseboard nightlight.
Someone was sniffling softly in the middle of the room, the part usually
filled with ordinaries. A man, I think. Not quite crying.
Self-pity? Or maybe sorry, now that it was too damned late.
I sat up straight and stretched.
Sorry.
Jesus.
I used to think I'd be sorry if I ever got caught.
I was wrong about that.
On the cot next to mine, a few feet away, Sparrow was sleeping, but
restless, moving a little, going still, then moving a little more. Bad
dreams? Or just sore? When she'd come back, late into the evening, after a
long first day as a working girl, she'd had a yellow bruise on one cheekbone
and a bit of a scrape high up on the inside of one thigh. Not much damage.
More like a whisker burn.
I stood up then and stood over her, looking down, dark-adapted eyes just
about able to make out her features in the nightlight. Peaceful in repose,
as if all this wasn't happening, baffled astonishment and involuntary
arousal washed away by sleep.
It made her face even more familiar.
Hard to say. People's faces are made what they are by the animation of
their soul, more than anything else. It's why posed and candid photographs
look so different. Beneath that animation, there's a tribal similarity that
can make one man or woman look eerily like another.
Still.
· · · · ·
Sleep came and went, followed by yet another Martian sol, blue sun yellowing
to a sharp white spark as it passed overhead, Phobos and Deimos quartering
the sky to the south, washed away to all but nothing. I'd been here for
months before I started to notice them. Day came and went, bleeding the sky
blood red with dusk, and I was with a party of bejeweled matrons, serving
them at table, and God knows what they wanted that for.
Ours not to reason why.
Yes, ma'am. Shall I pour the tea now, ma'am?
They all got little smiles, dimples in their fat cheeks when I did that.
There were four men sitting at the next table. Three Earthmen, doughy
with fat, handsome in a saggy-faced sort of way, looking rather a lot like
my four women, men rich enough to smoke cigars under a transparent hood once
they'd finished their meals and the brandy had been brought.
The fourth man I recognized right off—Mr. Gortex, presiding officer of
the Venusian Senate, tall, muscular enough to make his colorless dark suit
look odd, face smooth, hair a burnished brown helmet, young looking—though I
knew he had to be as old as the others.
The hood muffled their voices, but the man opposite Gortex—the one with
the neat white hair—lifted his glass, beckoning to his two old sideboys, who
lifted their glasses also. To you, Mr. Gortex. He seemed to stare back at
them, face displaying its famously impassive scowl, then lifted his glass as
well. The smile, when it came, was a brief rictus.
They drank.
More tea ma'am? Yes, ma'am, I'll send to the kitchen for the desert tray
now. Thank you, ma'am.
I could see some of the other diners were looking at them as well,
covertly watching. Three men with big, successful grins, the fourth dour,
but nodding. Right. I'm not sure who the leering fat guy is, or the
blackhaired devil with all the wrinkles, but the jolly man making the toast,
that would be the Speaker of the Solar Parliament, the famously erudite Mr.
Newton Summerbird.
Well. Wonder what the voters would say?
Probably nothing.
Punishment is punishment, and fun is fun.
Me, I never heard of Blue Heaven 'til they caught my ass one dark night
in Venusberg a few hours after number thirty-seven.
What if I'd gotten away?
I remember Mr. Gortex was running for office then and had given a nice
speech a few weeks earlier, lambasting the police for being unable to catch
me.
A couple of twees, sweet little sexless sad-faced boy-girls, led Sparrow
in, stark naked, chained up like a slave, collar round her neck, manacled at
wrists and ankles, all of it yoked together with silver chains 'til she
could hardly stumble across the floor. Led her right up to the hooded table
where Mr. Gortex and Mr. Summerbird sat in a haze of cigar smoke, smirking
and scowling and drinking their toasts.
The hood slid up, smoke puffing out, quickly dispersing in the
air-conditioned room, and the boys slid back their chairs, all turning to
look at her. Gortex and Summerbird looked at her face, the one
expressionless, the other with a cute little smile. The other two seemed
interested mainly in her bush.
"Well," said Mr. Summerbird, breathing out the last of his smoke, high
voice so soft it was hardly even a whisper. "Well, now."
Mr. Gortex was staring at her face, staring so hard she turned and looked
at him. Their eyes met for just a second, then he turned away. Nothing, not
even a flicker of feeling.
Summerbird said, "Boys …"
Gortex stood suddenly, dabbing a napkin at his lips, and said, "I have
some business to conduct. If you gentlemen will excuse me?"
Summerbird leered. "You're a sissy, Daneel."
Gortex stared down at him, "I dare say, Newt." Then he turned and walked
away, not looking back. Sparrow watched him go, watching his back, face
puzzled as usual, but … as if trying to remember … She glanced at me, and I
felt a hard stab of recognition in my chest.
Summerbird stood up, rattling the chain, smiling at her, and said, "Time
to go, my dear."
Belatedly, I remembered the other two men, not quite so well known as
Summerbird, but known nonetheless. One was Majority Leader Salzburger, the
other Mr. Jekyll, the Solar ethics committee chair. They followed their
master from the room, unable to be quite at his heels because Sparrow was in
the way, more or less licking their lips as they went.
And I thought, So these are the men who count?
The fat lady beside me sniffed, "Men!"
Yes, ma'am. Boys will be boys.
She craned over the desert tray and said, "You know, I believe I'll have
the tiramisu next."
· · · · ·
Returning alone, sans chains but still naked and too late for dinner,
Sparrow came over to our corner and sat on her cot. There was a blood
blister at the corner of her mouth, not quite lined up with her lower lip,
and a spotty crust of dark scab around the rim of her left nostril, bits she
hadn't been able to scrape off with a fingernail.
She looked at me and whispered, "Merry?"
There were little blue bruises everywhere, like fingerprints, her hair
standing up this way and that, in tufts, as if it'd been pulled and pulled,
until it stood up on its own.
By then I was kneeling beside her, trying to see what damage might need
real attention.
Not too bad. Considering.
There was a hard shine in her eyes. The shine of a child who's just been
whipped for nothing.
Nothing.
No matter what happens to me, no matter what they do, I've got those
hard, warm memories. And the dreams. Always the dreams.
Janet came over, stood looking down at her, shaking her head. "Jesus.
Here, lie on your back. Knees up, okay? Lemme check to make sure …"
Even then, you could see her start to respond.
Sparrow looked up at me and said, "Merry, those men seemed to hate me so
much. What do you suppose I could possibly have done to them?"
I shrugged, wondering if I knew anything worth repeating. I said, "Let's
see if we can get the autodoc to give you a sedative. You'll be all right,
Sparrow."
Sun come up tomorrow?
Janet helped her to stand, shaky but still whole.
For now.
After we got her bedded down, eyes shut, breathing softly, maybe asleep,
maybe not, Janet and I went into the break room and poured ourselves coffee,
sat down at one of the little cafe tables and sipped. Not bad as prison
coffee goes, I guess. Over in the corner, one of the studs was asleep, head
down on a tabletop, cradled on his crossed arms, breathing in whispers. It
was the one everybody called Jock. I forget why he's here. Not everyone will
say. Not everyone is famous for what he did, like me and Janet. He'd only
been here a little while, anyway.
She said, "I wonder if they did this to her by mistake. Maybe she was
somebody's pet wife and the docs accidentally stepped on her too hard?"
"So why's she here, instead of in the hospital?"
A quick shrug. "CYA?"
Everything's a lie until proven the truth. Humanity in a nutshell. I
said, "Janet, do you remember Mrs. Valentine?"
Empty look. "Who?"
"Politician."
"Uh …" Confused look at the change of subject. "Oh, right. That Senator
from Titan who was in the news a while back. Um …" Searching her memory. "I
forget. Something to do with an ethics investigation. Why?"
"Nothing. Just … thinking back."
She nodded. We all do that, whether we want to or not. Sometimes, when we
had a little extra time off, Janet liked to sit and talk about kids, mine
mostly, sometimes hers. You miss 'em, Merry?
Not really, but you miss yours, don't you, kiddo?
Someday, in twenty years or forty, whenever they decide she's had enough,
Janet will get out of here, but her kids will still be gone. Somewhere, mine
are still alive, hating my memory, but it doesn't matter. I'm here for good.
She got up, thinking back now, just because I'd said the word, dark
shadows forming around her eyes. "Good night, Merry."
I sat for a long time, looking at nothing, sipping coffee that slowly
grew cold. When I stood at last, Jock the stud's muffled voice said, "Mrs.
Valentine is dead, Merry."
When I turned and looked, he lifted his head from his arms and stared at
me out of red-rimmed eyes. "There was a transport accident here on Mars a
few weeks back. Hundreds of people killed. I guess she was on her way to
chair those hearings. It was in all the news."
I just looked at him.
All the news. Right.
He smiled, "I guess you've been here a while, huh, Merry?"
"One thousand, six-hundred and eighty-two days."
That made him flinch. "Sorry."
I walked out into the dark dorm, heading for my bunk. How long, my dear
Mr. Jock? Twinkies, they say, can live a long, long time. I lay down then,
hands behind my head, staring up at the shadows on the ceiling. After a
while, I heard Jock come out of the break room, go over to his own corner
and lie down among all the other studs, as far from the snatches as they
could get.
Nice, ain't it, Jock? Here you are, living every boy's dream, with a
hard-on that's there whenever it's called on, having it called on all day,
all night when necessary, and …
Sarah MacKay Valentine? Just a politician. Nobody important in the scheme
of things.
I remember number thirty-five quite clearly, a pretty blonde girl, hardly
out of her teens, a working girl of sorts, living small. I had her pinned to
the bed in her own dark bedroom, in her own little apartment, strip of heavy
tape over her mouth, working on the raping part that usually came before the
strangling part. Enjoying myself, savoring every sweet little moment.
The vid was on in the corner, three-dee images dancing in air, tracking
one of the public information nets, and, as I worked on her, I became aware
the blonde girl had her head cocked to one side, eyes rolled hard over,
trying to watch whatever was on.
Some politician, giving an interview.
When it was over, I sat on the edge of the bed beside the dead girl and
watched Sarah MacKay Valentine make fools of her opponents, make the
interviewer look like some kind of an idiot. When they brought on Newton
Summerbird to argue the counter-case, he argued so very forcefully, citing
chapter and verse, right down to the footnotes, and only managed to make
himself look like some cheap, fat little bully, the sort of boy who picks on
girls because he knows they'll never fuck him.
All Mrs. Valentine had to do was smile.
Everything she had was right there in her face. She'd look into the vid
pickup, look out of the magic air and right into your eyes, and you'd just
know she was telling the truth.
I waited 'til she finished, then turned off the dead girl's vidset and
went on home to my wife and kids.
Beside me in the darkness, Sparrow started to whisper, things like words,
but garbled, nothing I could make out. When I sat up to listen, I realized
she was trying to cry.
I got up, silent as a ghost, went and stood over her, looking down,
watching her, seeing a shine of tears in the wan glow of the nearest
nightlight. The skin on the palms of my hands started to crawl. That
familiar shortness of breath, just before …
Suddenly, her eyes opened, looking right into mine, that blaze of
awareness, those all-knowing eyes. For just a second.
"Oh, Merry …," she whispered. "Those men … That Mr. Summerbird said
they'd be back from time to time, just to see how I was enjoying life." Her
eyes seemed huge in the darkness, glistening and infinitely deep. "He said
all my old friends would be glad to see me. Maybe come to visit." Another
long look, though her bewilderment was mercifully hidden in darkness. "What
did he mean?"
I got onto the cot with her, wrapped her in my arms, and waited until she
was asleep. Morning will come, but the dreams will continue. As I dozed, I
remembered seeing Mrs. Valentine's husband, a colorless, smiling little fat
man in a gray flannel suit, standing behind her and off to one side, smiling
while she gave some speech or another, seen on vid at home, ignored by my
wife, ignored by the kiddies.
I remember thinking it must not be much of a life for a man.
Now I remembered the strength in her face, remembered from the night I
sat and watched her from a dead girl's bed.
· · · · ·
The next day was sunny and warm, as bright a day as you can have on Mars
with that patch of black sky always directly overhead, horizon bright green,
like a granny smith apple, pastel pink everywhere else. Sparrow looked
better, cleaned up in the shower, and seemed all right, nothing left over
from yesterday, smiling at the rest of us over the barracks' usual
continental breakfast.
Don't want us to be too full for the morning to come. It's a rare client
likes puke as a part of his fun.
Time for work.
Sparrow was picked up from the green room by a compact, oily little man
with a square black mustache under his nose, whose name seemed to be Klu
Barr. He made her get out of her silky work pajamas, lips twitching in
something that was half smile and half sneer as he looked her up and down.
Knew who she was, all right. Knew me, too, though I didn't know him from
Adam.
"What's the matter, girlie? Don't you know your old friend, Klu?"
Sparrow looked at his face, not wanting to be slapped, but kept her
features still. Learning the ropes fast.
"Ah, well. You'll know me again soon enough." Dots of color suddenly
appeared on her cheeks. He leered then, and said, "That's more like it,
girlie. Hey, what they call you here?"
"Sparrow."
A small frown, as if thinking about it, some inner doubt immediately put
aside. "Put your clothes back on. Let's get our gear and be on our way." He
looked at me. "You too, Strangler. This'll be fun."
Sparrow said, "They call him Merry."
Barr said, "Yeah? Who gives a fuck?"
They used me for a beast of burden, three pairs of cross-country skis and
big backpack with a blanket and the makings for a picnic. From the end of
the lift, where the Alpine and Nordic trail systems separated, we skied west
along the caldera rim, above a long slope heading down toward the gray-green
plains below.
The scarp, I knew, was hundreds of kilometers from where we were now. Klu
Barr could ski well, obviously something he did for its own sake, though
Sparrow didn't do so well. I wound up rigging a towline and pulling her
along. She had reflexes for that, interestingly enough. Maybe Mrs. Valentine
had liked to water ski? There's water on Titan nowadays.
That seemed to interest the man as we skied along, following a trail that
gradually descended toward a saddle in the crater wall, one that eventually
went out onto a long glacier rounding the old volcanic slope. "Where'd you
learn that, Strangler?"
"Solar Guard."
Long, level look. "I hadn't heard that about you." Then he said, "Me,
too."
I said, "I was in from '59 to '73. Mercury Insurrection. 61 Cygni Police
Action. California Riot Control."
He said, "I graduated from the Academy in '75."
We skied on a ways. Then I said, "I was enlisted."
A fine little sneer. "Figures." More silence, in which you could hear him
breathing more heavily than I was, though I carried the backpack and was
towing Sparrow. Then he said, "Why'd you get out? Enlisted Guard's a pretty
good life for some men."
I shrugged. "My enlistment was up. Seemed like it was time to move on."
"Why'd you settle on Venus? Most ex-Guardsmen head out for the star
colonies." Every Guardsman who fulfills at least one six-year tour of duty
and gets an honorable discharge is entitled to the property of his choice
outside the solar system. Mainly they pick sites with high mineral wealth
and go into trade.
I said, "Seemed like there was plenty of pussy there, at the time."
That made him laugh, mean glint in his eye. "Hope you got enough,
Strangler!"
Around local noon, he picked a spot out on some far tongue of the
glacier, up on an ice cliff rimmed with snowbanks, looking out over a long,
smooth slope. To our west, a few kilometers off, I could see a dark, shadowy
crevasse, probably sitting over one of those long, intermittent cracks,
rilles I think they're called, associated with old lava tubes.
Sparrow helped him eat his lunch, though there was nothing for me. Just
as well. I can't imagine what would make a man want to eat pickled pigs
feet. He made Sparrow take a little bit of just about everything, from the
tongue sandwiches to hard-boiled eggs that'd been overcooked to the point
the whites had a greenish cast.
Made me wonder what he had in mind.
He'd eaten enough, I thought he'd need a nap after lunch, but he didn't.
He stood, smiling, eyes shining with joy, and said, "Sparrow, my sweet love,
it's time we had a little fun."
Conflict in her face, fear and snatch tumbling over one another to take
control. Klu Barr palpated the front of her pajama bottoms, face flattening
out, sneer making his lips broad under the little mustache. "Ah, nice and
anxious, I see."
She looked at me, just once, hopeless, knowing there was nothing either
of us could do.
He got her out of her clothes and led her barefoot across the snow and
ice to a little hillock, one he seemed to judge just right, made her sit
down in a little hollow, something just the right size for her, then undid
the front of his trousers. "You'll pardon me if I leave the rest on,
Sparrow, dear? It's a little
cool for my taste!"
I could see the skin of her legs and backside was already bright pink.
When he tried to climb on, though, the warmth of her bottom had melted a
little of the ice, and she slid down, hitting her head with a small, hollow
bonk.
"Christ …"
He tried bracing her with his knees under her thighs, and that worked
long enough for one half-thrust. Then his feet went out from under him, and
they both went down in a cold, wet heap.
You have to wonder exactly what he may have had in mind.
"Dammit, Merry, help me hold her in position." He put her back in the
saddle.
I got behind him, reaching around to hang onto her thighs, bracing them
up. When he tried to settle onto her, he continued to slip, sliding down her
belly, so I let go of one side and put my hand in the middle of his back,
helping him get into position. "That's it. Almost …"
I let go the other hand and brought it up to the back of his neck, thumb
under one ear, fingers under the other. Sparrow, released, started to slide
out from under him again.
He said, "Hey!"
I squeezed hard, feeling a pulse of orgasmic energy knife right through
me. There was a wet, muffled pop as his spine pulled free of the formamen
magnum. He seemed to stiffen and clench, then relaxed on top of her.
There was a quiet moment in which I felt my heart beating stiffly in my
chest, then Sparrow, still under him, whispered, "Oh, Merry. What did you
do?"
I lifted him off her and laid him on his back in the snow. You could see
he was still alive, eyes livid with terror, lips twitching, but … Right.
Nothing else. You'll lay there, paralyzed from the face down. Not even feel
the building sense of suffocation. The world will turn blue, then gray, then
gone.
It took less than a minute for his eyes to grow empty and still, fixed on
my face 'til the very end.
I turned to Sparrow and said, "We've got eight, maybe ten hours, before
they start to look for us." Down the bottom of the great cliffs, the desert
floor was still three hundred kilometers away. "It'll be dark by the time
they find him."
She knelt, looking into his empty eyes, and said, "What will they do when
they find us?"
I shrugged, "Nothing worse than they've already done."
No death penalty in the Solar Alliance, dear Sparrow. Not for over a
thousand years. Cruel and unusual punishment, you see. I said, "Maybe
they'll send me to the Procyon mines for a change of scenery. You? Just back
here for more of Mr. Summerbird and his friends. If they catch us."
"If?"
I started digging into a snowbank with my hands, knowing if I hid Mr.
Barr far enough down in the snow, that'd confuse the sensors for a little
while longer. "Start packing up the picnic, Sparrow. Let's see how far we
can get before they do."
This was the first man I'd ever done with my bare hands. I found that I
liked it equally well.
· · · · ·
We skied down the long, gentle slope, following a sinuous hollow a few
kilometers north of the rille, for all the rest of that long, cold day,
while the blue sun of Mars arced away from zenith, slowly down through the
bright pink sky, falling through the horizon's band of green, then gone. For
a while longer, we skied on in darkness, tied together by the towrope so I
wouldn't lose Sparrow down some hole, skied on until I saw the running
lights of helicopters rise from Blue Heaven and begin skimming along the
rim, looking for the lost picnickers.
Line of sight. Might see us by accident.
We got inside the rille and followed it along to the beginnings of a lava
tube segment, crawled across the rubble and went inside, forging on in
absolute darkness, stumbling, falling, rising, going on until we were too
tired to continue. Slept until we awoke, in darkness still.
Finding me awake, Sparrow whispered, "How long …"
I laughed, raising echoes in the tube. "Until the food is gone, kiddo." I
got up and led her on downslope, knowing we'd either come out into the next
rille segment someday or run into a rubble wall.
It took us six days to get down the long slope of Olympus Mons, yet
another to climb down the face of the scarp, living on snow and meltwater,
once the picnic was gone, until we walked free in the warm wind of the
gray-green grassland humanity'd made of the old red planitia.
There were things to eat there, prickly fruit on scrubby bushes, tubers
similar to stuff I'd been taught were edible during those thirty-years-gone
Solar Guard basic training days. Some bugs and small animals we didn't
touch. Remembering the stories my children had loved, I wished, however
briefly, for Ghek and Tara and all the rest.
I grew thin and Sparrow thinner as we walked south, away from the wet
northern lowlands, into the high rock desert of the deep south, toward what
little was left of Old Mars.
There was never any sign of pursuit.
If it'd just been me, I guess there might've been a media uproar. The
Venusberg Strangler Escapes! Women bolting their doors all over the solar
system. But what would they say about the recently deceased Sarah MacKay
Valentine? If I could recognize her, so would others.
But all over Mars, I knew, agents would be watching for me in secret.
Don't want to raise a panic, you know. We'll get him, and the little snatch,
too.
To her credit, it was three days before Sparrow began to beg.
· · · · ·
On toward evening, a hundred days later, we were standing on a bluff in the
weathered foothills of the Nereid Montes, looking out over the ochre
dunefields of Argyre Planitia, when I spotted a Torii camp, nestled in the
shadows below, just where the erg spilled out into the jumbled rock remains
of Crater Galle.
Sparrow had toughened, grown thinner, ever more silent on the long walk,
even now no more than halfway to our destination, but she clutched my arm
when she saw where I was looking, eyes narrow, half alarm, half hope.
We'd followed an old, old roadbed, one laid down in the early days, back
when technically sophisticated people tried to live in the badly terraformed
southern hemisphere of Mars, passing through towns given up to the rock and
wind and sand a half millennium and more ago, their people returning to the
modern cities of the north, clustered round the shores of the Boreal Sea,
the lakes of Coprates, the riverbeds and canal systems that made Mars what
it was to be.
Not many people here now, to my relief, to Sparrow's increasingly secret
sorrow.
I'd done my best to be what I was not, and we'd stumbled over the
occasional startled hermit, but …
Eyes beseeching me now.
That agony of need, though she must surely have guessed what I'd done to
each of the hermits, even the women, after I sent her outside in the
morning. I'll be out in a minute, Sparrow. I want to thank him for his
hospitality.
We walked into the Torii camp just as the sun went down, emerald light
staining half the sky, reaching far up toward black zenith, patch of
darkness merging now with darkness rising out of the east, nameless stars
already freckling the heavens.
They watched us walk in, unbending from their tasks, standing silent,
dressed all alike, men, women, children, in dark blue robes, a color close
to indigo, robes proof, I think, against the light and heat of day, the
stark, icy night, mimicking the desert nomads of all those stories I
remember my children had loved.
Not bedouin, no. Tuaregs, perhaps.
It was a woman who came to stand squarely in front of me, blocking my
path, making me stop. Her eyes were pale blue, staring hard out of weathered
brown skin. Then she opened her veil, and the rest of her face was pale,
almost white, as though the skin there never saw the light of day.
She said, "Are you lost?"
I shook my head, "Just walking."
She stole a quick look at Sparrow, eyes narrowing, lines around them
deepening. "Where to?"
I don't know what made me tell her the truth, "Australia Cosmodrome."
"Coming from where? You've got a long way to go."
I stood silent. Other Torii were gathering now, standing to watch. Some
of them were young men, their attention starting to fix on Sparrow now.
The woman said, "You're both rather badly sunburned. You'll need medical
attention when you get there."
I nodded.
"You're welcome to stay for dinner then. My name is Cyndi."
Cyndi, I thought, like some child of wealth and comfort. Not the Ayesha
of children's fables. I held out my hand to her. "My name is Merry. This is
Sparrow."
· · · · ·
I don't know what made me wake up in the middle of the night, sleeping in
the little tent I'd found among the effects of some dead hermit. I remember
he was sprawled on the floor when I found it, eyes still open, full of
astonishment. That unexpected, wonderful night, maybe making him regret his
decision to live out here all alone with the sand and old red rocks.
Wonderful night, full of Sparrow's joy. Then the monster comes.
I awoke from a dream of jumbled memories and could sense I was alone, no
heat in the tent but my own.
Well.
I remembered dinner in a large Torii tent, Cyndi's home.
Remembered the magic carpets making a floor for the tent, covering up red
hammadi stone. Remembered the silver and brass tea service, the pewter
plates and bowls, the wooden spoons, so lovingly carved from scraps they'd
carried along from wherever they'd been. No wood around here. Hardly
anything for the goats to eat, down here around Argyre land.
Remembered the way they spoke with funny accents, though still in the
common language of Mars, curious about who we were and where we'd been,
though respectful of our silences, our little secrets.
Remembered the women's hospitality wearing thin as the men, young and
old, right down to boys so young you'd think they wouldn't know, paid more
and more attention to Sparrow, who flushed and squirmed and smiled.
Funny thing that there'd be such a people as the Torii wandering about
the southern deserts of Mars, herding things that might once have been
goats, harvesting tubers from genengineered plants that'd once been
instrumental in bringing Mars back to life.
Eight hundred years humanity had been here.
A thousand since the first permanent engineering bases had been set up,
since the decision had been made to create a New Earth. Time enough, I
suppose, for these people to come into being.
I crawled out of my blankets and zipped open the tent's flap, looking out
at the star-spangled night. Dull gray landscape, lit up, after a fashion, by
the shifting light of those famously romantic Martian moons, Fear and
Terror. All around us, the blank, lightless humps of the Torii tents. Beyond
them, the swollen black shadow of the mountains. Softly, the murmur of the
goats, the tinkling of little bells.
Sparrow was nearby, standing on a little rise in the sand, between two
dark tents, dressed only in something like a little white slip, bare from
the tops of her thighs down, lit up by the light of the silvery moons.
One long stretch, arms over her head, face turned up to the sky, made up
entirely of light and shadow, impossibly serene, moonlight shining on damp
skin, thin cloth clinging to her form.
I thought about all those men and boys gathered round her at dinner, and
thought about the anger that would fill the Torii camp come morning. Anger
at us? Or just the Torii women, angry with their men?
Maybe we should go now.
Outside, Sparrow continued looking at the sky.
I wonder what she thinks about?
What dreams does she have, mindwiped and snatched? Any trace of memory?
Shadows from the past, inexplicably haunting? Or does she just dream of her
need, of the things they made her want?
I tried so hard to know her, to see through those magic eyes to the woman
who once had been. Nothing there but that familiar bemusement. This is the
world, and I am in it, you could see her say. Familiar habits, familiar
ways. No past. Nothing but the fact of her being and that frantic sexual
core.
She walked over to the tent, face fully in shadow, stood looking down at
me.
Soft whisper, "I'm sorry, Merry. I had to."
I nodded. "Come in and sleep now, Sparrow. We'll walk on in the morning."
At some moment, I must have felt a spark of anger begin to grow.
Mine.
Surely mine.
· · · · ·
I sat down in the cargo hold of the
Solar Queen and watched Sparrow
pay for our passage, leaning against a cargo container, feeling the soft
vibration of the ship's inertial drive against my back, transmitted from
hull to floor to cargo box, like a soft, soft massage. The captain was on
her now, once again, grunting and thrusting, burnished with sweat under the
dim glow of red engineering lights.
I could see Sparrow's face, red light brightening the high, joyous color
of her cheeks, eyes in shadow, merest glints of light, looking at me.
Smiling, always smiling.
In mid-journey, with so little to do in the void between the worlds, it
seemed as though one or the other of them was on her, filling up the time.
Sparrow whispering, whispering to them as they went on and on. Now,
now,
she'd say.
And her face would twist as the latest paroxysm took her.
Finally. Finally, she had as much as they'd made her want.
Beside me, a most expensive humaniform robot, a rich man's private
toolkit, sitting in a posture that perfectly mimicked mine, said, "What an
unnatural creature."
"Sparrow?"
The robot, who'd refused to give a name or even a model number, shook its
head. "The captain. And his fellows."
I looked at it, trying to penetrate those impossible glass eyes. It was a
thing of silver and gold, burnished steel and plastic, made to look like a
man, but not so much of a man you'd mistake it for a living thing. "What
would you know about it?"
Its face made something like a smile, conveying some exact emotion. "As
much as they made me to know, of course."
"Just like her."
"Well, no. I never had anything more."
The captain, finished, kneeled up between her legs, gasping for breath,
then leaned down and rubbed his face back and forth on her pubic hair, as if
wiping away sweat. "Oh, God." I heard him say, not quite in a moan.
I remember I used to do that, sometimes before I killed them, sometimes
after.
The captain got up, still naked, gathering up his uniform, and fled into
the darkness. Sparrow lay back on her pallet, shining with commingled sweat,
stretching, content. Soon there'd be another one, and another one after
that. Eventually the captain's turn would come again.
The robot said, "Tell me again how it feels to kill a human being."
I said, "Do you think you'd like it yourself?"
It smiled again. "There's no way for me to know."
I thought, for just a moment, about the nature of heuristic machines.
About the way the code could grow and grow, 'til it filled all the space
allotted for it, then begin perfecting itself, new displacing old, accreting
round a deep core of hard-coded rules,
ab initio.
Another crewman appeared, the astrogator this time. Standing here, shirt
buttons already undone, looking down on her.
Sparrow, reaching for a towel, said, "Wait a second. I'll dry myself off
for you."
The astrogator said, "Don't. I like it that way."
The robot said, "Why Venus?"
I said, "It's a world full of people. A place where I know what to do."
"Maybe so. If there were a world full of robots, just like me, I'd go
there."
I looked at it, astonished, and listened to the astrogator groan, softly
to himself, as he mounted the magic woman.
Venusberg is the most beautiful city in the known universe, nestled in the
saddle between lakes Collette and Sacajewa, out on the rolling green grasslands
of Lakshmi Planum, Akna Montes far to the west, Maxwell yet farther to the east.
She's a city of great white towers, mimicking the fairy cities of twenty-first
century America. Fabled New York, Chicago, San Francisco, all rolled into one,
downtown towers reaching up into a lemon-pale sky, creating a matrix of human
canyons round the deep blue waters of Sinus Mulierum, with its magically arched
bridges, the little white wakes of the boaters, as of lovers paddling the canal,
silent under a bright, invisible sun.
individuality. of sign only the shutters pastel roofs, slate gray with houses white houses,
little their communities bedroom endless sprawl, suburban into out reaching another,
after road ring one crossing plains, radiate highways center, city From />
Ishtar Terra they called this landscape.
I'd called it home, in the days after I quit the Solar Guard.
So ordinary. So terribly ordinary. Sparrow and I lived for some months under
the pretense of being husband and wife, living in a little white house with a
gray slate roof and pale yellow shutters, hiding in plain sight, purloined
letters squirreled away in a bedroom community called Summerland, far enough out
that Venusberg was a toy on the horizon, shrouded in a faint pink fog.
Lived and hid, working simple little jobs, a quiet ordinologist tucked away
in a library basement and his quiet wife, the legal-office admin. No skills on
her part, of course. Whatever she'd had were wiped away along with all the rest,
but I'm sure the lawyer only had to take a deep breath during the interview to
know he'd found the right girl. I remembered the little spat we'd had when I
wanted her to stay home and play housewife, but … right. There's an evolving
replacement personality here that would do what it felt it had to, for whatever
reason.
Evening came, a quiet dinner, very nearly a sullen dinner, restless Sparrow
barely picking at her prefab meal. After a while, I retired to the den and sat
in front of the node, not wanting yet another confrontation. Let it be, was all
I could tell myself.
In the node, I watched Newton Summerbird give a speech, then spooled backward
in time, watching him give other speeches, older speeches, noting how similar
they all were.
Carthago delenda est. This shall not stand. A man must be
responsible for what a man has done. If, that is, he's not the man who counts.
That's all.
In some of the older speeches, however similar, there were debates. Ah, there
you are, Mrs. Valentine. Sometimes, in the debates, Summerbird would call her
Sarah, looming over her, smiling his nice little smile. Dear little Sarah, he
would say. In return, she'd only call him Mr. Summerbird. Then she'd make the
audience laugh at something he'd said, some foolish point, some inconsistency
his fine rhetoric had made them all miss, 'til it was pointed out.
Mr. Summerbird's eyes would grow hard and flat.
In the background, there was her small, round, butter-soft, gray-suited
husband, eyes only for her.
I wonder what they talked about, when they were alone?
Sparrow doesn't remember. Doesn't remember him at all.
He looks fat, she'd say. What did she see in him?
I wonder.
Did he ever have to beg her to stay home? Did he ever crouch at her feet and
beg to be allowed to … do whatever she wanted? Give her what she needed?
Sparrow's eyes would soften. I'm sorry Merry, but … That word you taught me,
philanderer? Those are supposed to be bad men, aren't they?
Everyone says so, yes, Sparrow.
She'd smile.
Well, I'm the philander, and I say they're good.
I heard the door slam. Heard the electric car whir to life, back out of the
driveway, and slip away into the Venusberg night.
She'll be back. She always comes back.
I'll wake up in the darkness just as she slides into bed, warm, sweaty,
happy, snuggling up against me, ready for sleep.
I let the node take hold of Mrs. Valentine and her little, fat husband, let
it slide sideways into their event track, then forward in time. There were
scenes of a great, smoking crater down by the south pole of Mars, where the
liner went down, all souls lost, including Mrs. Sarah MacKay Valentine, on her
way to chair the ethics committee hearings.
In a later interview, her bewildered husband mentioned he hadn't known she
was dead for hours, because she wasn't supposed to be on that flight at all, but
one that flew an hour later, leaving Titan City for Marsopolis, before going on
to Atom City on Earth. That one had gotten where it was going, Mrs. Valentine
ticketed but not aboard.
All the dead, who were little more than ash and bone, had closed-casket
funerals.
I found myself wondering. If they could kill all those people, just to hide
what they were about to do, then why not simply kill her?
The ethics hearings were chaired by the next-senior member, later that month.
Nothing ever came of the hearings. Not enough evidence, they said.
So Mr. Gortex got his presidency, and Mr. Summerbird his speakership.
Maybe it was just an accident. Maybe as hirelings laid in wait for her, Mr.
Summerbird watched the crash on his office node and thought,
Perfect.
I blanked the node and went to bed and waited for Sparrow in the dark,
wondering what I could do to save us. To save her.
· · · · ·
I named us Johnson as a joke. Kept those other names as an act of … foolish
bravado? Merry and Sparrow Johnson. Mr. and Mrs.
How's Mr. Johnson today? Said with a soft Venusberg lilt.
Not much, anymore. Said with a smile.
Mrs. Trenchard, one of the neighbors, diagnonal down the way, who said her
name,
Tronksharr, as if married to some important historical figure, came
over one night after dark, calling me from the node, where I was reading the
minutes of the ethics committee hearings, reading Mr. Gortex's pronouncements
and wondering, just wondering.
She was standing in the open doorway, a small woman with short black hair,
thin, looking up at me, not smiling at all, hands half clasped, held before her,
as if protecting her crotch. She said, "May I come in, Mr. Johnson?"
I stood aside, gesturing, and said, "Call me Merry."
Her lips twisted bitterly. "You don't look Merry."
Neither do you, my dear, I thought, walking her toward the parlor, gesturing
for her to sit down in one of the big chairs, or maybe on the sofa, all part of
the neovictoriana that'd come with the house rental. "Can I get you a drink,
Mrs. Trenchard?"
Her mouth made a little pink vee, an attempt at a smile. "My name's Jeanine
…" Pronounced G-9, as if some antique spy, or a very expensive AI
servomechanism. "Scotch?"
"Glenfiddich?"
"That'll do."
Tinkle of ice in a squat cut-crystal tumbler. "Water? Soda?"
"Just ice."
I made mine neat and crossed to where she sat on the couch, sitting beside
her, handing her a glass, lifting mine to my lips. Looked in her eyes, and
waited.
She said, "Your wife's not home, is she, Merry?"
I shook my head, knowing where she was (imagining Mrs. Trenchard knew, too,
both of us perhaps picturing my wife out gleaning whatever men she could, where
she could find them, but only me knowing the terrible why). "No." Took a real
sip, trickle of burn down my throat. (What would you say, Mrs. Trenchard, if you
knew about Blue Heaven, if you knew what they'd done to her there?)
Jeanine drank off half of hers, ice clinking as it slid up the glass and
bounced against her upper lip. Then she said, "Well, my husband's not home,
either."
Julian Trenchard wasn't much of a man, and I wondered if he'd been the very
last to get a turn. I could see the building sparkle of anger in her eyes and
wondered if that were the whole problem, the reason for the sudden visit. Just
pissed off because her husband wasn't worth having?
I shrugged, imagining I'd have to come up with something to say at some
point. Finally, "I'm sorry if …"
She reached out and put her hand, fingers cold from holding a glass of ice,
on my wrist. "Merry, you know all the men in this neighborhood are married. You
can't live here otherwise. The wives …"
I said, "I've tried to talk to her about it. She …"
Her lips made a little pink curl of contempt. Then she finished off her
scotch, banging the glass down on the coffee table so the ice rattled around,
not quite jumping over the rim. She leaned forward and put her hand on my knee.
"A big, good-looking man like you … This isn't a fundamentalist neighborhood,
you know. Some of us … Well. If you can just cut a deal with those wives, and
keep her away from the husbands of the rest, we …"
Maybe, I thought, she's the spokeswoman for a delegation. Wives meeting over
coffee, while the husbands were away at work, or at least gone to one
indiscretion or another. I bet that big son of a bitch is twenty centimeters!
Let's see a show of hands …
She slid her hand up my thigh, smile this time a little pink leer. Me first!
Me first!
I caught her hand, heart suddenly squeezed by memory. Number fourteen had
looked very much like her, had come to me voluntarily, with just the same leer,
hand running up my thigh in just this way, headed for a crotch that'd been … oh,
responsive, I guess, is word enough.
Number fourteen had blinked with slight surprise, maybe wonderment, when I
reached for her throat, smiling a familiar smile of my own.
Sometimes, I would kill them first and fuck them later, just for variety's
sake. Sometimes it was better that way.
I caught Mrs. Trenchard's hand before it got to its destination and
discovered the interesting truth. Held her hand gently in my own and said, "I'm
sorry, Jeanine. I can't. Sorry." Gave her hand a little squeeze. Let it go.
Her cheeks were flushed; she'd been that ready, I guess, so now the flush
turned to one of anger, eyes flinty, dealing with rejection. She said, "I can
see why she wanders, with a pathetic thing like you at home."
I gave her another scotch, apologized a little more, but there wasn't much to
say. On her way out the door, she said, "You better think of some way to keep
her home. Or else move away. Soon."
I went back to the node and resumed my reading of the minutes, wondering how
they'd managed to get away with all those elisions in the evidentiary
documentation. I was asleep by the time Sparrow got home, some time well after
midnight, snuggling me awake, smelling of sweat and semen.
The perfect woman, I thought, as she murmured against my back, apologizing
for waking me up.
"Dear Merry," she whispered, yawning hard, rubbing her damp face against the
hard ridge of my spine, "Dear, sweet Merry."
· · · · ·
A day, a week, a little more, and one night I sat on the foot of our big double
bed, watching Sparrow get ready for a date.
Date. That's what they called
it in Venusberg, like these married men and women slinking to each other in the
night were just crossing adulthood's rim, halfway between being playmates and
lovers, halfway between innocent sandbox and carnal bed.
She was dressed in a short slip, white, with a bit of lace here and there,
reaching from spaghetti straps barely to the tops of her thighs, long, slim legs
bare, doing things to her face, to her hair, looking at herself in the mirror,
not seeing me in the background.
Not smiling.
Looking into her own eyes.
Thinking what?
I said, "Don't go."
It froze her for a second. Then she turned to look at me, standing
flat-footed, still silent.
"Stay home with me tonight."
You could see things change in her eyes, an agony of indecision, marked by a
trace of anger, recalling the things I'd said each night as I begged her not to
go out, told her about Mrs. Trenchard's visit, about the dangers she was making
for us, the things that might happen.
So I'll go farther afield, all right? There are barrooms downtown. Places
where no one will care about what I do, or who I do it with.
Please, Sparrow. We won't be here forever. Just until I …
She said, "We've already talked about this. You know I have to. You know
what's been done to me."
Sure. I said, "Sparrow, you know I'll help you any way I can."
A curl of real anger behind her eyes then. She pulled up the hem of her slip,
lifting the lace to mid-abdomen, and said, "Look at me."
"Sparrow …"
"Not at my face. Down here."
A swatch of curly hair. The shine of moisture up where her legs came
together.
She said, "I
have to go."
"If I …"
Softly, she said, "I know you mean well, Merry. But it's not enough. They
made me want more than you can give."
"Please, Sparrow."
A quick look into my eyes, then pity. "Oh, Merry." She came to the bed and
sat beside me. Put her hand on my wrist, fingers cool, though not so cold as
Mrs. Trenchard's icy hand had been. Momentary tableau, husband and wife
together, then she crawled up onto the bed, pulling me with her, until we had
our heads on the pillows, facing each other.
I could see there were tears in her eyes and could smell her sharp arousal,
pheromones knifing in through the only sex organ the bastards had left me, the
instrument of their torture.
I put my hand on her hip, pulling the soft, delicate cloth of the slip
upward, and whispered, "Shall I …"
She snuggled close to my chest. "No, Merry. Just hold me."
· · · · ·
In my dreams, sometimes bits of old stories are mixed in with the memories. In
this one, I was Tyrone Power, smooth and emotionless, face blank as a dead
man's, telling the little French whore, "I was hurt during the war."
I think she'd said, "What's the matter? Don't you like me?"
More dream. Then, later, Eddie Albert's wisecrack about the life of a steer,
somehow mixed up with scenes from a farmscape, some woman with a peculiar accent
running on about square eggs.
In most of the dream, I was with number six, who had no idea anything was
wrong. May even have missed the actual moment when things went so terribly wrong
for her.
When her life went out like a light.
I remember she was so hot for me, everyman's crude mannequin, like a sexy
gyndroid on overdrive, so hot and wet a smaller man would have found no purchase
within to do for himself. Six times, one right after another, like she was
starving to death, so happy to have found a man like me she'd grunted, rather
fervently, some time in the night. A
real man.
In the middle of orgasm number six, just as her eyes rolled back, just as she
started that little caw of joy, I grabbed the nape of her neck, grabbed her by
the long, curly black hair, pulled and twisted as hard as I could, hearing her
go snap, crackle, pop, and relax, boneless, beneath me.
Inside her, the orgasm continued to completion, followed by my own.
I awoke and opened my eyes on darkness, covered by a fine sheen of sweat,
wondering if I'd thrashed and cried out in my sleep.
The bed was empty and cool beside me.
After a while, I got up and went to the node, where I resumed my search of
documentary chains, knowing they couldn't possibly have destroyed much more than
the superficial evidence required by the antiquated rules of the Solar
Alliance's courts. Any deeper, and they'd start hurting the economy, would have
to start digging into the private information stores of the big corporations,
where accounting rules prevailed.
It was dawn before she came home, yellow light spreading through the sky.
· · · · ·
Something woke me in the middle of another night.
Dark, still, the sheets cool beside me as I lay there naked and alone.
Something.
Pressure waves in the air, as of a distant, rhythmical thudding, just on the
edge of hearing but growing louder, more distinct with each passing moment.
The door slammed, and Sparrow's voice, flooded with alarm, cried out, "
Merry?"
I think I was dreaming, not about the women I'd raped and killed back in that
other life, but about our time at Blue Heaven. And not about the bad things
there, but the good things.
I'd been dreaming about my friend Janet, about letting her crawl into my bunk
and sleep, shivering, in my arms, on nights when she dreamed about her children.
"
Merry!"
I rolled to my knees on the floor, reached under the bed and grabbed the
things I kept there, a small backpack with a bush knife clipped to its chest
strap, a jogging outfit. Shoved my feet in unlaced hiking boots, the ones I wore
on Sunday, when I hiked alone in the Hellish Hills, down by the Southside Scarp.
On my feet, naked but for boots, listening to the thudding noise, listening
to it grow loud, I met Sparrow on the dark stairs, unable to see much more than
the shine of her eyes.
"My God, Merry! A helicopter. It followed me along the highway! Followed me
home!"
I grabbed her by one upper arm, pulled her off her feet, and ran her down the
stairs.
"Merry …" You could hear now there was more than one copter in the sky,
though the one was far closer than the others.
"We have to get out of here." I threw her over one shoulder. High heels.
Shit. In the kitchen, by the back door, were her running shoes, where she always
kept them. I got the door open, grabbed the sneakers, and was out in the dark,
going over our 1.5 meter back fence like it wasn't there, Sparrow over my
shoulder, her shoes in one hand, my backpack in the other.
In the alleyway, I craned around and took one look back. The chopper noise
was loud now, lights starting to go on in our neighbors' houses, but I could see
nothing. The helicopters were painted black.
Run, you silly bastard. Run!
Naked, I knew my dick should bounce back and forth as I ran, flapping against
my thighs, making me look very silly indeed. But I didn't have a dick, and I
could run like the wind.
Behind us, the sky lit up, garish yellow white, spotlights picking out the
house from several directions, and our neighbors were milling all over the
place, outside in their pajamas and nighties, shouting astonished questions back
and forth.
Good. That will confuse the infrared sensors for a minute or two.
Maybe long enough.
· · · · ·
I got dressed down in a culvert by the oily waters of Sinus Mulierum, in the
shadows under a fairy tale bridge, kicking off my boots long enough to pull on
soft cotton running pants and singlet, unrolling the socks I'd bundled with
them, while Sparrow, sitting on a low retaining wall, laced up her sneakers,
high heels perched on the ledge.
She said, "I'm sorry, Merry. I guess I didn't believe you."
I reached out and stroked her soft hair. Too late now. I said, "Best keep
your voice down. We weren't followed, but …"
She whispered, "What're we going to do now?" Misery in her voice. Lost our
home? Or fretful worry about where her next fuck is coming from, like an addict
anticipating her next dopesick night?
I stood erect (so to speak), shouldering the backpack, shrugging it into
place, looking around at the dark, sluggish water, the black, featureless night
sky. That was the one thing I missed, living on Venus. Stars.
I said, "Always have a Plan B."
She said, "Plan …"
There was a little scuffling noise up in the shadows under the bridge ramp,
from between the nearest two pylons. Rats? No. They'd managed to keep them off
Venus, having been far more careful with the initial terraform build than on
Mars. Practice makes perfect.
The shadows unfolded into the figure of a man, a man with long, shaggy hair
and a scruffy beard, dirty clothes. Worn-out clothes. Mostly denim. If they'd
been new, I might've taken them for Sparrow.
He yawned and stretched, walking toward us.
"Jesus," he said in a slurred voice. "You folks could pick someplace better
to sneak off for a fuck. Woke me up, you know?" He was looking at us beady-eyed,
especially at Sparrow, running shoes incongruous with her little black cocktail
dress. "Been to a party, missy?"
Sparrow seemed to shrink back, maybe trying to slide behind me.
Well, you're freshly serviced, little Sparrow. By this time tomorrow, you'd
be dragging him toward the bushes. I reached out a hand and cracked his neck,
folding him up, back into the shadows. Sparrow, looking at me, silent, was all
eyes, big and glistening bright in the darkness.
I remembered killing Klu Barr, remembered hiding him in the snows of Olympus.
Not the same, this time. Harmless old bum. Wrong place, etc. Sorry, man, wish it
could be different, I thought, speaking to his ghost, and said, "We need to get
going. We need to make the trail system in Umstead Forest by morning."
· · · · ·
Rex Sinclair's Hatari Plantation lay just below the Hellish Hills, beyond Ishtar
Terra's continental slope, deep in the outermost layer of lowland Thicket, where
the land slopes away toward Mnemosyne Regio and the steamy Mesozoic swamplands
the terraform builders had made.
You could look back from Sinclair's veranda, look back at the rising green
landscape, and marvel that we'd walked all this way and lived, that we'd only
met two hikers on the way, a pair of goofy, well-equipped fat men, out alone
together on some kind of camping sabbatical, men who'd been surprised to meet
us. And even more surprised to die.
Sinclair remembered me, from long ago and far away, staring at me with that
proverbial wild surmise when his field supervisors led us in from the perimeter
fence. He called me Sergeant, eyes squinted just so, craggy face full of
suspicion, no small amount of unease. No doubt, I'd been a big figure in the
news when I was caught and unmasked as the fabled Venusberg Strangler.
Maybe he would have turned away, told me,
Well, just a moment, I'll be
right with you, but then he turned to look at my companion, face suddenly
going slack. Not recognition, no, she was too … different for that. But you
could see him get an erection, right then and there.
The flush on Sparrow's cheek, spreading down face and neck to suffuse what
was visible of her chest, was very pretty indeed.
So. Clean clothes, dinner, then we were sitting out on the veranda, enjoying
the subtle colors, ocher and tan and brown, of a lowland Venusian sunset.
Sparrow and I sat on his antique swinging divan, facing out across the
plantation lawn, looking out over the pond, where a little family of hesperornis
sailed in stately formation, Sinclair catty-corner in a chair, closer to Sparrow
than me.
"Cigar?"
I smiled. "Used to like them, didn't I?"
"Used to?" He was smiling, face craggy as a romantic, Out-of-Africa hero,
some Great White Hunter or another. "These are real Havana lineage, Sarge.
Descended from the Guatemalan strain of Carl Uppman."
"Somehow," I said, "I gave them up."
"Miss?" Holding the box out to Sparrow.
She shook her head and blushed, looking down at hands folded in her lap. He'd
given me a set of khaki work clothes, even a new pair of boots, but Sparrow was
in something like white silk pajamas, and barefoot.
Sinclair said, "I was surprised to see you, Sarge. I figured you for a
permanent residency on some therapeutic asteroid or another, after what you
did."
"Me, too."
He was looking at Sparrow now, and you could see the front of his chinos
start to hump up again. He had to squirm around in his seat a little bit, trying
to get more comfortable. "Sarge and I were in the Guard together. Best Command
Master Sergeant there ever was, if you ask me. No one else ever got there as
fast, either."
Sparrow glanced at me, but her face was suffused, shiny, not smiling, eyes
only filled with what her body was doing to her. Suddenly, I could smell her
arousal, sharp and metallic, filling the air on the veranda too fast to be swept
away by the slow, sultry breeze. When I glanced down, I saw the crotch of her
pajamas' were showing wet, clinging to her.
Sinclair said, "Christ!" He got to his feet. "I'm sorry, Sarge. I'll talk to
you later. We'll … see what we can figure out tomorrow." Then he held out his
hand to Sparrow, helped her to her feet and led her away.
Watching them, I saw she could barely walk.
· · · · ·
I found Sinclair's office node pretty quickly, in a back room that was mainly a
sitting room. There was a pelt on the floor, the skin of a smilodon from the
Cenozoic hunting reserve on Aphrodite Terra. Lots of pictures on the wall, flats
and solidi both, scenes from his early life, from the Academy, where'd he'd been
a star forward on the mercuryball team, from his service, rising through the
ranks 'til he'd retired as a full bird-colonel.
I was in some of the pictures. A younger me standing slightly behind Major
Sinclair, who'd been in charge of suppressing the California Riots. In the
background of the photo, you could see Los Angeles burning, solidus flames
flickering like real life. In the picture, I was smiling.
A picture of a more recent me, Colonel Sinclair pinning on my Distinguished
Service Award, on the day of my retirement. When he'd shaken my hand, I
remembered, he'd told me he was getting out, too, in another few months,
retiring to that little farm on Venus.
I could hear them in the background now, had been able to for more than an
hour, Sparrow's cries echoing faintly, surrounded by the squeak of hand-hewn
rustic wooden bedroom furniture.
On the node, I looked at a fat man's face, Mrs. Valentine's forlorn husband,
giving his final interview, a couple of months after the fatal crash, a few days
after the close of the abbreviated ethics hearings.
His name was Theodore, affectionately called Teddy by all who knew him, and
he'd spent his adult life looking after his wife's non-political financial
interests.
Disconsolate was the word the newsnode talking heads used to
describe him, on his way back to Titan, alone.
After the election, there'd been another little uproar, a sad, bewildered
Teddy Valentine threatening lawsuits, claiming conspiracy. Then nothing. For
about a month after Gortex and Summerbird took their respective offices, Teddy
Valentine was utterly missing from the public records.
Then, you could see where the Valentine business and residential properties
of Titan were for sale, the beach property they owned on the coast of Earth's
Brazil vacationland. Records of deeds changing hands. Then nothing.
Gone.
There was a slight rustle of movement behind me. Sparrow was standing in the
open doorway, naked, what we'd called spooge when we were young drooling down
the insides of her thighs.
"He wants me to spend the night," she said.
I tried to smile. "He always fancied himself a real he-man."
She said, "He's had something done to himself, Merry. Sort of a light
studding, so he'll be more … capable." She stood there in the doorway, dripping
on the floor, staring at the sad fat man motionless in the node. Then she said,
"I've got to pee. I'll see you in the morning."
· · · · ·
I awoke alone in the morning from the same infinitely varied dream, in some
guest bedroom I'd managed to find, far enough away in the house I could no
longer hear them, yellow light streaming through Rex Sinclair's expensive bamboo
Venetian blinds.
There'd been a widow woman, I remembered, a woman well over a hundred years
old, so old medical treatment wasn't doing her much good. There had been, I
remembered, lines in her face. Who knows. Maybe she would have lived another
twenty years or so?
I remember thinking exactly that as I pressed her down hard against my pubic
bone, jamming myself as far in as I could go, making her eyes widen a bit, then
widen more as I put my thumbs under the angle of her jaw.
I remember thinking later that after she met me, she'd lived another twenty
minutes.
I got out of the bed and pulled on my new clothes, lacing up my comfortable
new boots, thinking about it still. Hell, maybe I was just born under the shadow
of evil. If such a thing is possible.
Probably not. Just a way of saying it was something I was made to do, rather
than something I did. But we know better, don't we?
Sparrow and Sinclair were already at breakfast, Sparrow sipping coffee, with
dark shadows under her eyes, Rex Sinclair stuffing himself with bacon and eggs,
sausage, English muffins and grits, beaming like a man reborn.
"Merry!" He said, gesturing at me. "Try the gooseberry jam! Try the honey! I
have my own terragenic bees!"
I sat, reaching for a mug, reaching for the coffee pot, looking at Sparrow.
When she lifted her eyes to mine, I was startled to see misery, rather than the
satiation I expected.
Sinclair suddenly laughed. "I'm sorry, Merry, I guess I fucked her half to
death! I had no
idea what her pheromones would do to me!"
I took a swallow of the coffee, scalding hot, acidic on my empty stomach,
went to take another, stopped … something. Something in the air. Some distant
sound perhaps.
I put the cup down and started to rise. Suddenly Sinclair was holding a
little gun on me, a needle-nosed paralo-ray pistol, hardly more than a police
stunner.
He said, "Sit down, Merry."
Now I could hear that faraway thudding. I got to my feet anyway, ignoring the
ray gun, Sinclair rising to match me, facing me across the table. "Don't try it,
Sarge. You're a tough bastard, but this'll knock you down." He moved over behind
Sparrow, taking her by one upper arm, forcing her to her feet. "We'll put you
somewhere safe, honey. This'll be over in just a little while."
I started around the table, moving slowly.
Sinclair kept the gun on me, backing toward the door with Sparrow, but
slowly, letting me get a bit closer. "I'm sorry, Sarge. I couldn't take the
chance of helping you. I put in a call before breakfast."
I smiled. "They won't let you keep her, you know."
"They won't find out she's here."
"I'll tell them."
Flicker of anger. "I'm warning you, Sarge. You're not faster than a ray."
"Don't need to be, Colonel."
He smiled. "Maybe not. Just faster than a trigger finger, huh? But I've had
Guard training, too, Sarge."
"Maybe so. But she's not just a toy. That's Senator Valentine you've been
fucking." His eyes flickered toward her, and you could see it took him by
surprise. You could also see the sudden recognition. "Anyway," I said, "you were
just a fucking officer."
He tried to get the gun up, but I was already moving, forward and to the
right. The ray sizzled across my left arm in a fire of pins and needles. I
slapped it out of his hand, ray gun tinkling as it broke against the far wall.
Then I got him by the hair, lifting hard, grabbing his shoulder as I turned his
head to face around over his back.
He actually grunted "
Ow!" in the middle of the noise his neck made
breaking but didn't say anything else as I lowered him to the floor and caught
Sparrow in my arms, rayed left one buzzing like mad. Outside, you could hear the
first helicopter swooping in over the trees, could hear the shouts of the
plantation hands.
I pulled her after me, heading for the office, heading for Rex Sinclair's gun
cabinets with all their lovely hunting blasters, weapons intended to blow a
diplodocus out of the water or stop a charging tyrannosaur in its tracks.
Certainly suitable for shooting down a black helicopter or two.
Sparrow stood by, shivering, while I broke the cabinet locks and picked out a
couple of heavy weapons, handing her one, keeping one for myself, grabbing a
couple of spare batteries while I was at it.
"Plan C," I said. "Always have a Plan C." Sparrow's eyes searched my face,
full of wonder. Wonder and trust.
· · · · ·
I crouched in the cave, blaster cradled in my arms, facing the tyrannosaur,
whose huge head filled the entrance, all but obscuring the yellow-misted
Venusian swampland beyond. Sparrow crouched behind me, flat against the damp,
dank, algae-slimed rear wall, and whispered in my ear, "If it kills us, Merry,
all is lost, for us, for everyone, forever …"
The tyrannosaur bared grayish-white half-meter fangs, hot breath washing over
me, making a deep, purring snarl, like the throb of a diesel locomotive at idle.
Half its face, only an arm's length away, was gone, nothing but melted,
healed-over scar tissue, like white bone around a crusted, empty eye socket.
The same one, I thought. The one I hunted as a boy, the one I tried to kill.
The one that got away.
It's remaining eye, red as blood, rolled in its socket, looking at me.
Another throbbing snarl. Satisfied. Knowing.
It remembers me.
Remembers what I did to it.
Its jaws opened as far as they could in the structure of the cave mouth,
tongue curling, red throat waiting as it tried to slip forward, ready for a
delicate, fatal bite. I smiled, not even bothering to aim the blaster. Smiled
and pulled the trigger.
Blue-white nuclear fire filled the cave like summer heat lightning, wiping us
away, dinosaur and all.
I sat up, muscles clenched, looking out through green vegetation at more
yellow Venusian sky. In the distance, a trombone howled, and, through the trees,
kilometers away, I saw the snaky, yellow-green necks of three apatosaurs rising
above the fern fronds by the margin of the river. One of them had a mouthful of
reeds, reeds rising and falling, growing smaller as it chewed.
Sparrow sat on the rim of the sleeping nest, watching me.
I sat up, wiping the sweat from my face. "Jesus."
She said, "You seemed upset, Merry. What were you dreaming?"
I looked away, back out through the forest. We'd been moving slowly eastward
around the southern rim of Ishtar, following the base of the scarp, trying to
stay as far away from the dinosaur lowlands as we dared, another weeks-long
journey, though different from the much longer one we'd had on Mars.
"Something … different."
Her eyes were serious, more understanding than they had been. Something
growing in her. A person. Someday she'll be a whole person again, despite what's
been done. A new person. She said, "I wondered. For once, your hands weren't
strangling anything."
Nice of you not to say,
anyone. Sometimes, when I woke up, my forearms
would be sore, knuckles swollen and distended, from strangling all night long.
I said, "It was something from a story I loved when I was a boy. About an
orphan boy, an orphan on Venus who lived by his wits, hunting the jungles with a
beat-up old blaster he'd managed to find. Hunting for tyrannosaur, selling it to
restaurants, so the rich and beautiful tourists from Earth and Mars could go
home and say they'd eaten honest-to-God dinosaur meat." I remembered then how
I'd had to look up the meaning of the phrase "diesel locomotive." I smiled at
her. "It's why I moved to Venus, when the time came."
"Not the plentiful pussy?"
A twinkle in her eye. A hint of a smile. Becoming a person at last. Someone
you had to like, rather than pity. Then she said, "I always dream about men with
big dicks. Men fucking me."
Jesus.
She smiled and said, "Do you suppose Mrs. Valentine's husband had a big
dick?"
Hard to imagine the fiery, political intellectual Senator Valentine and gray,
fat little Teddy … I said, "Well. I hope so." From somewhere, I remembered, in
the end, the orphan boy had gotten an appointment to the Solar Guard Academy on
Earth, had passed the entrance examination, passed his courses, becoming an
officer and a gentleman.
As I recalled, he'd already been a man, had brought that with him to the
table, had taught that one thing to the boys who'd become his comrades.
There was a sudden rustle, above and to my left. I grabbed for the blaster,
spinning, aiming, finger going through the trigger guard, tightening. Stopped
myself in time.
Three men, dressed in some kind of rough, whitish homespun, long hair bound
by strips of cloth, feet in soft moccasins. Crossbows, loaded and cocked but not
aimed at us. The one in the lead lifted a hand, palm out, fingers flat, not
unlike an Indian in some antique drama, and said, "Good day to you."
I lowered the blaster, taking my finger off the trigger, engaging the safety
interlock. "Good morning."
He smiled. "Highlanders call us Bummers," he said.
"I know that. Vidnode dramas about the wild Venusian Bummers are popular all
over the Solar Alliance." Popular because they are what we all wish to be, would
be, but for what? Our lack of courage? Run away. Run away from it all. Turn your
back on job and boss, home, hearth, wife, children, all those bills …
He laughed, showing crooked yellow teeth, the first human I'd ever seen in
need of dental work. In dramas, even Bummers have gleaming white ivory, just
like the rest of us. "I hear they like us, even in the star colonies."
I shrugged. I hadn't had much time for entertainment when I was out there.
"Maybe so."
He said, "Police are not on your trail anymore. After you knocked down that
third helicopter, they fucked up and lost track." It'd gone down in a scream of
fire, and we'd been able to see the column of black smoke for hours afterward as
we fled deeper into the swamp country south of Sinclair's plantation, making me
wonder if we hadn't somehow started a forest fire despite the dampness of the
environment.
He said, "You're headed right into Red Devil territory. We don't want you
here."
"We need to get through to the eastern slopes, down under Maxwell Montes."
A long, doubtful look, as his fingers slowly stroked the smooth, dark wood
butt of his crossbow. "If the police should find you among us …"
Sparrow stood suddenly, catching every eye, and started to get undressed.
· · · · ·
They were taking turns with Sparrow, the smugglers' crew, not even waiting 'til
we were on our way, taking a down payment right here, right now, until the
ship's computers let them know it was time to be leaving. Taking their turns,
one after another, then seconds and thirds, the ones that could, Sparrow on a
ratty old beach blanket under the blue shade of a spreading chestnut tree.
Funny that the crew of a tramp freighter turned to smuggling would have beach
blankets on hand. Well. Plenty of beaches off-Earth, though most of them are
situated on the worlds of other stars. I remembered one. It'd had white sand,
powdery, like confectioner's sugar, and Procyon had been a painful silvery spark
in a deep green sky, quiet ocean lapping nearby, ultramarine, with a little
golden glitter marking each curl of wave.
Beside me, the chief of the Red Devil Bummers said, "I'm sorry we worked her
over, too, Merry."
Looking up from the portanode I'd gotten from the smuggler captain as part of
the deal, I could see he and his buddies were trying unsuccessfully not to
watch. "I wouldn't worry about it, Don. Men were made for what she was made to
be."
He said, "What about you?"
What was I made to be? I laughed. "I'm just being punished. Pheromones in my
nose with nowhere to go."
"Punished," he said, looking at me, questioning. "The Venusberg Strangler.
God, Merry. You seem like such a nice guy."
I snapped the portanode shut, blanking away Teddy's sad, fat face, then said,
"Hey, you're not a woman, are you, Don?" and thought about what it would feel
like to separate the hairy smuggler's skull from his spine. Getting to like that
now, aren't we, Sarge? I wondered if the black helicopters had gotten to
Sinclair in time. Once your neck's broke, you've got a few minutes to get on
life support before your brain turns to soup.
Don said, "You think these guys can get you where you need to be next?"
Plan C? Watching hairy buttocks rise and fall, I shrugged, tapping the
portanode softly. "Maybe so."
The naked smuggler, finished, stood up from her, sweaty face exhausted,
fatigued mouth hanging open, staggering a little, maybe looking like he wanted
to fall right down. Looking up at him, legs still spread, Sparrow laughed and
shouted, "
Next!"
The smuggler looked like he wanted to kick her then.
Careful what you wish for, boys.
· · · · ·
The shell ticketing agent had barely taken his last thrust when I grabbed him by
his long, greasy black hair, wrapping my fingers around the base of his pony
tail, pulling his head back far enough I could cup his chin in my other palm.
Pull. Twist. Crack-o.
He made a startled gurgle, spasmed, relaxed.
Under him, Sparrow stiffened and whispered, "Ooooohhh …" Face suffusing with
pleasure.
I lifted him gently off her, setting him to one side on the floor. Sparrow
stayed where she was, shiny with sweat, eyes shut, slowly running her fingers up
and down her abdomen, shivering lightly, then cupping her hands over her vulva.
"You okay?"
She nodded. "He got real stiff when you did that. Like he was having another
orgasm." Her eyes opened, looking into mine. She said, "I'm glad you let me
finish with him first, Merry."
I nodded, helping her to her feet, drying her off with the ticket agent's
bedding. While she was getting dressed, I balled him up, listening to the soft
whisper of his last breath as I squeezed it from his lungs, binding him up in a
ball, wrapping him in the blanket. His eyes were still open and, somewhere
inside, he was probably still alive, still conscious, growing woozy perhaps,
flooded with horror.
I looked out through the ticket agent's apartment window and said, "It'll be
darktime soon. We can take him outside and stash him somewhere." Not that it
really mattered. Someone will notice he's missing, not doing his job anymore,
but that will be the end of it. A new ticket agent will move in and do the job
and not wonder what became of his predecessor.
Outside, the transit habitat's stemshine was beginning to dull into orange,
would soon turn dull violet, letting the world within dim to a simulacrum of
night. All around us, you could see shadows filling the vegetation, lights
starting to come on in the low buildings, the pseudotown that made this
imitation of a world.
Four kilometers long, by one in diameter. Barely enough space for its
intended passenger compliment of ten thousand to get by on what had once been
the long, long voyage between the stars. The relativistic cyclers had been
obsolete for a hundred years, though they'd made do for another little while
with the installation of a first-generation hyperdrive.
Now, with the new advanced stardrives growing cheaper and cheaper, they'd
become cargo hulls, and a way for the poor to make their way between far-apart
worlds.
Another generation, and they'd be gone.
I dragged the ticket agent to the door, leaving him just inside 'til it got a
little darker. Sparrow was standing by the window, looking up into the pseudosky,
where you could pretend the lights of tiny, inverted apartment buildings were
square yellow stars.
No windows to the universe beyond. Anyway, the one time I'd seen into
hyperspace, it'd looked like an Edvard Munch painting.
I said, "While you were busy, I broke into the ticket agent's node. It's got
better access rights than the one the smugglers sold us."
She kept her back toward me, seeming to hug herself, hands coming up over her
arms.
Then she whispered, "Couldn't we just stay here forever?"
Right. Stay here forever, so you can fuck the men, and I can kill them, and
we all live happily ever after. I put my arms around her, slowly turned her to
face me, took her head between my palms and tipped it back, so she had to look
into my eyes again.
She leaned into me, putting her arms around the barrel of my chest,
straddling my thigh, grinding against me hard, and said, "I'm sorry, Merry."
I held her tight, wishing there was something meaningful I could say or do.
· · · · ·
They call the place 61 Cygni C-16, and I'd been here before. When I was in the
Guard, we'd taken to calling it the Mauve Star's Planet, something from a book,
I think. One of Sinclair's junior officers had apparently majored in late
medieval literature while he was in ROTC and was always yammering about "therms"
and "frigi-plasmic life forms." Stuff like that, but the place didn't really
have a name. Stark realization: Sparrow'd been here before, too. Well, no.
Senator Valentine had.
Sparrow and I were riding through the forested hills above Baidarka 6 Admin
Center in a rented Volvo Planetokhod Jeepster, nothing in our ears but the click
of our rebreather valves, the soft whisper of static in the headphones.
When I'd been here before, during the Police Action, I'd mostly been on the
nighttime part of the farside, and there'd been a dark, starry sky overhead the
whole time. Here and now, B was still up, rising wan and yellow over the
southern horizon, rising into a deep violet sky lit by A's tiny disk, dominated
by the vast, sullen coal of C, the Mauve Star, circling A once every five years
or so.
Darker than a moonlit night. There were a few bright stars here and there,
familiar negative-magnitude giants, familiar as the constellations of night had
been, 3.42 parsecs from Earth. That same junior officer had called the Earth's
sun Sol 357, as if it had a real name, too. I'd been to Wolf 359 once and
figured the storyist who made up the name picked the number for its flavor of
familiarity, so he could go ahead and just call all the other stars suns, when
seen floating in a planetary sky.
I slowed up, going around a curve, and Sparrow suddenly put her hand on my
thigh, high up, not quite reaching into my crotch. I looked over at her briefly,
then put my eyes back on the road, which was barely more than a rutted track.
She said, "I'm scared, Merry."
"Me, too."
The forest around us was bare crystalline stalks, more like big dead glass
bushes than trees. No undergrowth. No nothing. When we stopped the jeep, you
could hear a tiny faraway tinkle, stalks of glass rustling in the gentle breeze.
She said, "You suppose Mrs. Valentine would've been scared?"
"I didn't know Mrs. Valentine."
Silence. Then, "Me, neither."
I wanted to pull the jeep over, get us out of our masks, hold her close,
nuzzle her face, do something, anything, to comfort her. But the air here was
800 millibars of dry nitrogen mixed with a thin leavening of aromatic
hydrocarbons.
The tiny seas here, big lakes really, were chemical salt water with a lot of
dissolved ethanol. I'm told the seawater tastes like a vodka tonic, though if
you take more than a sip you get deathly ill from the metal salts. I knew a few
guys wound up in sick bay that way.
Down by the seas, you can still see some of the residual native life forms,
things like black stromatolites, flatworms the size of your finger squirming in
the sand. I'd seen pictures of life in the seas, mainly stuff like leathery
jellyfish and sheets of black rubber "algae."
Life here had barely started its climb onto the land when we showed up.
Useless. Until we got to Delta Pavonis II and discovered a similar sort of world
with a much richer biosphere. I could picture some scientibureaucrat turning to
his little buddies in a meeting, somewhere, sometime: "Hey, I got a
great
idea! Let's Pavoniform the place!"
So. Animal-like things, plant-like things, the Pavonian surrogates for fungi
and bacteria. Whatever those wonderful "dry-land ecologists" thought was
necessary. Sort of worked, I guess. Here's the forest primeval and...
We rounded a boulder, and there the rutted track was blocked by a pile of
fallen glass vegetation, a couple of dozen "tree trunks" stretching from one
side to the other, touching glass forest on either side. Sparrow's hand on my
thigh squeezed tight as I slowed to a stop, put the jeep transmission in neutral
and set the brake lock.
I patted her hand. "Nobody's after us, Sparrow."
She said, "What if those people you talked to lied to us? What if they turned
us in?"
Big black spiders the size of Airedale terriers started creeping around the
sides of the roadblock, surrounding the jeep as Sparrow's hand froze. I patted
it again, unclipped my seat harness and got out, stretching the kinks in my
back. We'd been driving for hours.
Funny thing about the Pavoniforming of 61 Cygni C-16. Some of the animals
they brought in had had crude tools of a sort, mainly sharpened bits of glass
forest vegetation. Maybe better than the stalks of grass and chewed-leaf sponges
the chimps had had when they still existed, not so impressive as Homo habilis'
broken cobble choppers.
Funny thing. These Pavionians, involuntary colonists, all had little glass
spears, except the one right in front of me, who had a paralo-ray pistol clipped
to a D-ring on the little green plastic harness it wore, the only one of them
not naked. It shifted the gun with the tips of its two front legs, handling it a
little like a rifle, looping a third leg tip through the trigger guard.
Sparrow, frightened, softly said, "Merry?"
I searched the top of the fuzzy black body, looking for things like eyes, but
couldn't find any, noticing the neat way that third leg bent as it pressed
lightly against the trigger button. I guess having ten legs, each with a sliver
of retractile claw on the end, is a pretty good substitute for fingers.
I said, "Get out of the jeep, Sparrow. Come over here."
When she'd done so, the gun-toting spider backed away, keeping the gun on us,
and a lane opened among the others, directing us toward one side of the
roadblock.
She whispered, "Can they talk?"
"I don't think so. Nobody officially knows how they communicate; when I was
here, supposedly they didn't, but I guess the human rebels figured something
out."
I don't know what I was expecting on the other side of that glassy rubbish
pile. A little gray fat man, maybe, with eyes only for Sparrow? It was a tall
skinny guy in worn-out old fatigues, straw-colored hair sticking out from under
his cap, washed-out blue eyes staring through his rebreather mask goggles.
He held out a hand, "Long time no see, Sarge."
"Who …"
"Dempsey."
I searched my memory. Maybe …
"Just a recruit, Sarge. Squad Eight. Missing in action, Month Five."
Vaguely, I remembered a skinny kid with eyes like these, messy hair that kept
getting him on report, though not by me. I took his hand, squeezed it gently.
He squeezed back, said, "This way, please." Looked at Sparrow and said,
"Senator?"
Beyond the roadblock, we heard the jeep start up and begin driving away.
· · · · ·
I stood in the mouth of a cave, looking out over a broad valley, up through a
light gasohol rain at the Mauve Star nailed to its place in the dim, vivid sky.
Funny. I keep waiting for it to move, but it never does.
There was mist in the valley, white tendrils tinted faint pastel by the
violet light curling among the silver glass trees, little turquoise pond down on
the bottom land stained with a purple reflection of the Mauve Star.
I could feel my heart pounding in my chest, feel how terribly frightened I
was. There was the scuff of a footfall behind me, and, when I turned, here was
the little fat man at last.
He said, "Sergeant Atkins?"
I smiled. "They call me Merry now."
His eyes flinched slightly, jerking away from my face, coming back. "She
calls you Merry."
She.
I tried to imagine that terrible reunion scene. Tried to imagine him knowing
what had been done to her, what she'd become, knowing she didn't remember him at
all.
He said, "After the surgery, won't you want your name back?"
I smiled. "The man who was Sergeant Atkins has been gone a long time." What's
it to be, Tommy this an' Tommy that? I said, "He turned into the Venusberg
Strangler, then into …
this." I spread my hands, palms toward him. "Maybe
a new name. Some combination …"
His smile warmed up, and suddenly I could see what Sarah MacKay Valentine
might have wanted with a little gray fat man. "What, Merry Strangler?"
It made me grin, despite the terror strangling my guts. Then I said, "What's
going to happen next?"
His smiled faded. "To you?"
I shook my head. "I know what's going to happen to me. But …" I gestured out
at the red-lit landscape.
He said, "Maybe you don't realize what you've done, Sergeant." His eyes, not
looking at me, grew far, far away. "By this time next year, President Gortex
will be impeached and removed from office. By this time next year, perhaps,
Speaker Summerbird and his little buddies will be sitting on a prison asteroid
somewhere, starting their re-education program." He made a smilelike grimace,
coming back from next year for a moment, glancing at me. "You took care of Mr.
Barr for us, Merry. Guess we won't have to worry about him."
True.
Then he said, "When the word gets out, of what was done to her … Maybe by
this time next year, Mrs. Valentine will be taking the oath of office, and …"
His eyes misted up suddenly, making him turn away to look down into the little
valley again. A soft whisper, "Maybe the common scum will be taking their
government back at last from …"
I put my strangler's hand on his shoulder and squeezed lightly. "She'll be
all right. When the doctors restore her personality, they'll take away all
memory of …"
He twisted out from under my hand, looking up at me, eyes flooded with pain.
"She told them to leave it intact."
"But …" The trauma that would result when they combined Senator Valentine
with the woman Sparrow had become …
Teddy Valentine said, "She wants to remember you, Merry."
My turn to look away, landscape suddenly blurred. After a bit, I said, "What
about the prisoners in Blue Heaven? What about that?"
"It'll be publicized, when the time comes."
When the time comes. "And until then?" Suddenly, the image of Janet, Janet
and her dead children, drowned for the sake of love, rose up out of the inner
darkness.
"Sparrow says they've been punished enough. Mrs. Valentine won't forget that,
either."
There was another scuffing footfall in the cave mouth behind us. It was a
little blue-eyed, blonde woman, dressed in green surgical scrubs. She said,
"We're ready for you now, Sergeant Atkins." No fear in her eyes, only kindness,
though she must know who I am, what they were bringing back into being.
I nodded, heart thundering, and took a step to follow her, wondering what I'd
do with myself when it was all over.
"Merry."
I turned back to face the little gray fat man.
He said, "I want you to remember something. The man who counts isn't the one
who wins. It's the one who does the right thing."
I nodded and turned away, wondering if the one right thing I'd done would
ever be enough.
The End
Author Biography and Bibliography
William Barton was born in Boston in 1950 and currently resides
in Durham, North Carolina. For the first half his adult life, Barton was an
engineering technician specializing in military and industrial technology,
before switching to information technology on the theory that it would be nice
to work indoors, warm and dry in the winter, cool and dry in the summer. He was
at one time employed by the Department of Defense and worked on the nation's
nuclear submarine fleet. He is currently a freelance writer and software
architect.
Novels
When We Were Real, 1999
White Light (with Michael Capobianco), 1998
Alpha Centauri (with Michael Capobianco), 1997
Acts of Conscience, 1997
The Transmigration of Souls, 1996
When Heaven Fell, 1995
Dark Sky Legion, 1992
Fellow Traveler (with Michael Capobianco), 1991
Iris (with Michael Capobianco), 1990
A Plague of All Cowards, 1976
Hunting On Kunderer, 1973
Short Fiction
"The Woman in the Door," Night Terrors, forthcoming
"Off On a Starship," Asimov's Science Fiction, Sep. 2003
"The Man Who Counts," SciFiction/scifi.com, Summer 2003
"The Engine of Desire," Asimov's Science Fiction, Aug. 2002
"Right to Life," Talebones #24, Spring 2002
"At the Instantaneous Center of Rotation," North Carolina Literary Review,
Sep./Oct. 2001
"Home is Where the Heart Is," Drakas, Nov. 2000
"Heart of Glass", Asimov's Science Fiction, Jan. 2000
"Soldiers Home," Asimov's Science Fiction, May 1999
"Down in the Dark," Asimov's Science Fiction, Dec. 1998
"Thematic Torus in Search of a Cusp" (with Michael Capobianco), Amazing
Stories, Oct. 1998
"Changes," Aboriginal Science Fiction, Summer 1996
"Age of Aquarius," Asimov's Science Fiction, May 1996
"When a Man's an Empty Kettle," Full Spectrum 5, Aug. 1995
"In Saturn Time," Amazing Stories: the Anthology, May 1995
"The Adventure of the Russian Grave" (with Michael Capobianco), Sherlock
Holmes in Orbit, Feb. 1995
"Forever," Tomorrow Speculative Fiction #6, Dec. 1993
"Yellow Matter," a signed, limited-edition chapbook, Oct. 1993
"Almost Forever," Tomorrow Speculative Fiction #5, Oct. 1993
"Slowly Comes a Hungry People," Interzone #71, May 1993
Other
"Harvesting the Near-Earthers," (with Michael Capobianco), Ad Astra,
Nov. 1989
"Dr. Zook's Asteroid Detector," (with Michael Capobianco), Final Frontier,
May/Jun. 1989
"The Land of Bulging Files," 80 Micro, Oct. 1987
"The Mad Poet," Commodore Power/play, Aug./Sep. 1986
The Man Who Counts
She was born on the Fourth of July,
coincidentally high summer in the northern hemisphere of Mars, though the
wild slopes of Olympus Mons were still white with seasonless snow. Outside,
I knew, the grounds of Blue Heaven were garden green, crystal palaces in the
shade of terragenic trees, oak and pine, poplar and quaking aspen
promiscuously mingled, walkways winding among lakes, crossing streams, there
for the guests, just as we who came to serve.
High summer in the year 3398, down in the dank sub-basements of Blue
Heaven, somewhere on Mars, where she was born while I stood and watched.
I'd come to the birthing room, with its musty smells of mildew and damp
concrete, to do my job, one of my many jobs, here ahead of the others, as
usual, pulling the pile of body bags into a long row by the far wall, lining
them up neatly, then idly looking at the tags.
All the usual. A twinkie here, a twee there, the occasional snatch or
stud. Mostly ordinaries, though. Too many ordinaries. Ordinaries the worst,
piling up in numbers as the secret courts grow meaner and more conservative,
day by day.
Bastards were easier on me than they knew.
A little smirk.
Too late now.
You could hear them just before they came through the door; hard plastic
boot heels echoing on the carpetless floor, voices arguing, arguing about
something—hers sharp, nasal, bitchy, his deep and gravelly, a froggy voice,
something from a cheap, imitative kiddie drama.
The sort of crap my kids used to watch, back in the Venusberg days.
Pale, hazy yellow skies. Suburban neighborhoods. Home and hearth. Job and
kids. Housewives. Housewives everywhere. Home alone. Waiting and waiting.
Kermanshah was the taller of the two: angular, lean, short, scruffy,
dirt-brown hair, carrying the antique riding crop she liked to use for a
"starter" tucked under one arm, towering over Jethro, with his big, thick
arms and not-quite-shaven, bowling-ball head.
She said, "Ah, there you are, Merry. Let's get this show on the road."
I moved, arbitrarily, to one end of the body-bag row, leaning down to
reach for a zipper.
"Not that one."
Kermanshah snapped, "
Jethro…"
They stood facing one another, pissed off about something. He said, "If
you think I'm going to miss out on
this one, you've got a fucking
screw loose."
Brown eyes bleak, she whipped the riding crop through the air between
them, once, twice, then stood staring. "Dammit, then." A gesture, at the row
of bags.
Jethro squatted and duckwalked along the row, looking at the tags, one
after another. "Here she is." He straightened up. "Merry."
I kicked off my shoes and tossed them in a corner, away from where the
mess would spread toward the drains, slipped off my coverall and hung it on
a hook, damp air cool on my skin. Then I leaned down and tugged the body bag
out of the row, pulling it toward the middle of the floor, stuck my middle
finger through the zipper's D-ring and gave it a hard yank.
Blood-warm amniotic fluid gushed out, rushed over my feet, started
gurgling in the drains, while Jethro and Kermanshah took dainty steps back,
keeping their boots dry. Her eyes were sharp, angry, his bright with joy.
I wrapped the woman's sopping, pale blonde hair around my hand and pulled
her out of the bag, rolling her face-down on the floor, face down in flowing
slime, put my hand in the middle of her back and gave one long, hard push,
flattening her. There was another gush, fluid from her lungs, then, when I
let go, a long, ragged, gagging gasp.
I kneeled in the wet beside her, hand still on her back, stroking bare
wet flesh, and whispered in her ear, "Easy. Easy now. It's all right. You'll
be all right. Just lie still for a minute."
Maybe so. I remembered exactly what this moment was like, and I'd been
just fine. Considering.
"Roll her over, Merry."
When I looked up, Jethro had kicked off his own boots, grinning,
grinning, and was unzipping the front of his coverall. Kermanshah stood back
by the door, arms folded, eyes hard, but not looking away, not for a minute,
and she said, "Look at her. She looks just like some goddam little sparrow.
Cat's gotcha
now, bitch."
The woman, whoever she was, coughed hard when I rolled her on her back,
and whispered, "Sparrow?" Voice raspy from having been under water for so
long.
Utterly bewildered look on her face, eyes deeply puzzled, as if she had
no idea where she was, or why she was here. Knowing why and where made it
easy for me. That and knowing I deserved every bit of it.
Jethro padded over, bare feet splashing in the residual muck, marriage
tackle up and ready.
Kermanshah muttered, "Hurry the fuck up. I've got a lunch date."
She wasn't a beautiful woman, though her innocent face and confused eyes
might have made her pretty. Still, she was female, tits and bush right where
they belonged, and that's enough for most men.
Jethro said, "Hold her still for me, Merry." He started to kneel, then,
"No, wait. Lay on your back and pull her on top of you. That's it. Legs
apart."
I put my arms under hers, pulling her straight, locking her knees with
mine, holding her spread eagled, tiny bird of a girl hardly any weight at
all on top of me, but Jethro was heavy enough when he lay down on top of us
both, squeezing the breath out of her.
I could see her out of the corner of my eye, face wan and drawn, eyes
flooding with fear. In just a moment, I'll see that agony, familiar agony,
the agony of all those housewives, back in midnight Venusberg, housewives
seen one by one by …
I felt him make his first thrust, and her eyes brightened with …
something, mouth dropping open, color rushing into her cheeks. She twisted
slightly and looked at me, astonished.
Oh, kiddo. I didn't get a chance to look at your tag, but you've been
snatched, haven't you? She looked away, face flooded with the realization of
it, starting to shiver as that first quick, involuntary orgasm began to
build.
So which punishment's worse, girlie, yours or mine? I could feel her
coccyx punching rhythmically into my abdomen, just above where my genitals
used to be, once upon a long-gone time ago.
· · · · ·
When I got her down to the barracks, Janet, my favorite ordinary, followed
us into the bathroom, nosy about who the new girl might be, watching as I
sat her up on the counter by the sink, got out towels, a facecloth, and
soap.
She started to reach out a hand, suddenly recoiled, nose wrinkling. Not
disgust. Recognition.
"Jesus! This one's going to bother the hell out of the poor studs!"
I leaned in, taking a deep breath. Nodded. Right. They'd have trouble
sleeping when she was around, and this was the only refuge they had.
Janet said, "It bothers the hell out of me, come to think of it." She
leaned in, sniffing delicately, grimacing. "You?"
I wet the washcloth and soaped it up. "They left my vomeronasal organ
intact for a reason." No pain, no gain.
Janet looked away. "Well."
The woman on the countertop said, "Why are you people smelling me? It's
not my fault that man …" She suddenly blushed and squirmed, nipples popping
erect, as if in a pornographic cartoon.
Janet said, "Gawd!"
I nodded, gently taking her by the wrist, starting her spongebath as far
out as possible. "Yeah. She's about as snatched as anyone I've ever seen."
Put a man this far into stud and he'd have a permanent hard-on, then soon
gangrene.
She was staring at us, mouth open, almost panting, obviously getting more
and more aroused as I washed her. When Janet, eyes bleak now, reached out to
brush the hair from her eyes, the woman seemed to lean into the hand, as if
trying to rub her face against it.
"Lord. What'd you
do to get yourself sent here?"
That puzzled look again. "I don't … What're you talking about?"
Janet looked at me.
I said, "What's your name, kiddo? You look familiar."
"I do?" She was distracted from the washrag now, which was a good thing,
since I'd had to move on to her legs. She said, "I, um … Didn't that woman
call me Sparrow? The one with the stick."
Then she said, "Ah! Do that some more!"
Janet whispered, "God have mercy." My friend Janet was here because, one
fine spring morning, just after breakfast, back on Earth in the merry month
of May, she poisoned her husband and then drowned her children in a bid to
keep her lover from leaving her for a less inconvenient woman.
I said, "Where were you before they put you in the rebirthing bag,
Sparrow?"
Puzzled look. "What do you mean? I wasn't anywhere before you took me
out. Just in the bag." Forever and ever.
Behind me, Janet made something like a hiss.
Then Sparrow said, "Could you put your hand right there, please? For just
a minute."
Long pause. Then, eyes growing desperate, she said, "
Please?"
"Mindwiped," I said. "Mindwiped and then snatched to within an inch of
her life." Sparrow had me by the wrist and was trying to force me to do what
she wanted.
Janet said, "Why the hell would they do that? I mean, what good does it
do to send her here if she don't know why she's being punished?"
Sparrow leaned back against the mirror, and said, "Um. Yeah. Thanks."
Janet stood up, turning her back. "Oh,
man!"
You get used to a lot here. You have to. Especially if you're an ordinary
like Janet, just here to suffer. But still. I said, "It's kind of like
stepping."
Janet said, "But it ain't stepping. Not like that. Not
that far."
No, not that far. Stepping was a light mindwipe and very mild snatching,
something a rich and powerful man will get done to an unsatisfactory wife.
Afterward, she's very sweet and sexy. Though not as sweet as a rich woman's
stepped-on husband, who will forever afterward be so very … uncritical.
Turning to face us again, but looking at herself in the mirror, Janet
said, "That was quick."
"She's going to be very popular with the guests."
Sparrow, aware of the world outside her body again for a little while,
said, "Where am I? What … punishment?"
Drying her with the towel, I said, "This is Blue Heaven on Mars. Where
they send all the bad little boys and girls to pay for their sins. Where all
the very rich little boys and girls come for a little harmless sport."
"Sins?" That bewildered look again. "I …" Sparrow looked right at me with
suddenly penetrating blue eyes, exactly like you'd imagine the eyes of a
telepath would be, and asked, "So, why are
you here, Merry?"
Guileless as a child. Straight question. Straight answer.
Beside us, Janet was suddenly looking away, face in shadow.
So I said, "I'm the Venusberg Strangler."
Her brows knit together, deepening the little furrow between them, and
you could see it didn't mean a thing.
· · · · ·
An eye for an eye.
Let the punishment fit the crime.
Fine. I get that part.
But these other little bits …
Sometimes, it's like I'm here as a decoration. Or maybe an object lesson,
I don't know. Sometimes they'll dress me up in a fringed loincloth, turban
round my head, scimitar strapped across my back, and make me stand by one of
the cafe entrances like some kind of guard.
Guests get curious, ask around, finally someone tells them who I am, and
the women's eyes get big and round. That's when they make me drop the
loincloth, and the men's eyes get big and round.
Every now and again, you'll see a shadow of disappointment in some
woman's eyes, one of her sick little fantasies spoiled.
The Venusberg Strangler.
Jesus.
I try to stand up straight and bland.
Mornings on Mars, especially these summer mornings, you get a fine view
from the Rimshot Cafe, eastward from the lip of the caldera, fine white
slopes of the old shield volcano tumbling gradually away, superimposed
against the gray-green plains below, Jovis Tholis an isolated red pimple in
the midst of all that, then the purple majesty of Ascraeus Mons, trailing
wings of backlit cloud, peeking over the horizon.
The sun was a dim blue disk on the edge of the world, rising out of a
stripe of greenish sky, just a little bit of green under a dome of pink,
shading quickly up to black.
I remember when I was a kid learning about the technology that made all
this. Old technology, primitive compared to what made my home on Venus. Just
a brief flash of that. Yellow sky. Pale brown clouds. The cityscape of
Venusberg, skyscrapers seen from a distance, suburban vista of little
houses, little multicolored houses, embedded in a dark green forest.
Today they had me stark naked, holding a spear, motionless by the door,
female guests tittering as they saw what I was, elbowing the men they were
with, "Hey, better mind your p's and q's, Johnnycakes!"
Rich men smirking. As if. As fucking if.
They had the ordinaries waiting table, breakfasting the guests who cared
for it, and only a little later, parties began splitting up, heading out
into the park, taking what they wanted, doing what they wanted.
It was around that time I saw Sparrow, done up in a short, gauzy black
cocktail dress, barefoot, being led along by a serious-looking little man
who held her by the hand and whispered in her ear, as if in earnest, some
fine fellow trying to talk a reluctant girlfriend into something a little
out of the ordinary.
Come on. You'll like it. I promise. Be a sport. Just this once.
She looked at me over one shoulder, so utterly bewildered, like some
little girl being led away by a child molester.
Except for that high flush of arousal, of course.
I wanted to go with her then, help out any way I could, make it as easy
as possible for her, but I got picked up by a group setting up for a little
rough sport. Not with me, no. You hardly ever meet somebody that's got a
thing for twinkies or twees, but they do need someone big and strong to hold
the ordinaries down.
The ordinaries know they're not supposed to struggle and scream, or maybe
just not struggle, anyway, but sometimes they can't help it.
· · · · ·
I woke up some time in the middle of the night from another dream I didn't
want to have. Not a repetitive dream. My subconscious has too much raw
material to work with for that, but still.
Some kind of dream about my kids, hovering over me as I struggled awake,
heart pounding, Jenny and Davy, when they were around seven and three, I
think. Tow-headed blond kids, with their mother's enormous, damp-looking
blue eyes, looking at me, always looking at me, so serious. As if puzzled by
what they saw.
The dream had somehow mixed them up with a dark Venusberg alley. Not a
city alley, but one of those suburban back streets where the robots came at
night to do what had to be done. Almost as if they'd been there, and
watched.
Never.
I remembered the woman's eyes, huge, full of terror. And puzzled. So
terribly puzzled.
There was a picture of a man on the nightstand by the bed, warm and soft
in the glow of the lamp, a smiling man whose motionless eyes watched us out
of the picture. There, there, he seemed to be saying. Everything will be all
right. It'll be over soon.
He had nice clothes hanging in the closet.
And he was away for the whole week, gone to Luna on business.
Sitting up on the edge of my bunk, damp with warm, dirty-feeling sweat, I
heard rustling in the dormitory, a cough here, a sigh there. Once, briefly,
a head came up over in the corner where the studs bunked together, outlined
against the wall-reflected glow of a baseboard nightlight.
Someone was sniffling softly in the middle of the room, the part usually
filled with ordinaries. A man, I think. Not quite crying.
Self-pity? Or maybe sorry, now that it was too damned late.
I sat up straight and stretched.
Sorry.
Jesus.
I used to think I'd be sorry if I ever got caught.
I was wrong about that.
On the cot next to mine, a few feet away, Sparrow was sleeping, but
restless, moving a little, going still, then moving a little more. Bad
dreams? Or just sore? When she'd come back, late into the evening, after a
long first day as a working girl, she'd had a yellow bruise on one cheekbone
and a bit of a scrape high up on the inside of one thigh. Not much damage.
More like a whisker burn.
I stood up then and stood over her, looking down, dark-adapted eyes just
about able to make out her features in the nightlight. Peaceful in repose,
as if all this wasn't happening, baffled astonishment and involuntary
arousal washed away by sleep.
It made her face even more familiar.
Hard to say. People's faces are made what they are by the animation of
their soul, more than anything else. It's why posed and candid photographs
look so different. Beneath that animation, there's a tribal similarity that
can make one man or woman look eerily like another.
Still.
· · · · ·
Sleep came and went, followed by yet another Martian sol, blue sun yellowing
to a sharp white spark as it passed overhead, Phobos and Deimos quartering
the sky to the south, washed away to all but nothing. I'd been here for
months before I started to notice them. Day came and went, bleeding the sky
blood red with dusk, and I was with a party of bejeweled matrons, serving
them at table, and God knows what they wanted that for.
Ours not to reason why.
Yes, ma'am. Shall I pour the tea now, ma'am?
They all got little smiles, dimples in their fat cheeks when I did that.
There were four men sitting at the next table. Three Earthmen, doughy
with fat, handsome in a saggy-faced sort of way, looking rather a lot like
my four women, men rich enough to smoke cigars under a transparent hood once
they'd finished their meals and the brandy had been brought.
The fourth man I recognized right off—Mr. Gortex, presiding officer of
the Venusian Senate, tall, muscular enough to make his colorless dark suit
look odd, face smooth, hair a burnished brown helmet, young looking—though I
knew he had to be as old as the others.
The hood muffled their voices, but the man opposite Gortex—the one with
the neat white hair—lifted his glass, beckoning to his two old sideboys, who
lifted their glasses also. To you, Mr. Gortex. He seemed to stare back at
them, face displaying its famously impassive scowl, then lifted his glass as
well. The smile, when it came, was a brief rictus.
They drank.
More tea ma'am? Yes, ma'am, I'll send to the kitchen for the desert tray
now. Thank you, ma'am.
I could see some of the other diners were looking at them as well,
covertly watching. Three men with big, successful grins, the fourth dour,
but nodding. Right. I'm not sure who the leering fat guy is, or the
blackhaired devil with all the wrinkles, but the jolly man making the toast,
that would be the Speaker of the Solar Parliament, the famously erudite Mr.
Newton Summerbird.
Well. Wonder what the voters would say?
Probably nothing.
Punishment is punishment, and fun is fun.
Me, I never heard of Blue Heaven 'til they caught my ass one dark night
in Venusberg a few hours after number thirty-seven.
What if I'd gotten away?
I remember Mr. Gortex was running for office then and had given a nice
speech a few weeks earlier, lambasting the police for being unable to catch
me.
A couple of twees, sweet little sexless sad-faced boy-girls, led Sparrow
in, stark naked, chained up like a slave, collar round her neck, manacled at
wrists and ankles, all of it yoked together with silver chains 'til she
could hardly stumble across the floor. Led her right up to the hooded table
where Mr. Gortex and Mr. Summerbird sat in a haze of cigar smoke, smirking
and scowling and drinking their toasts.
The hood slid up, smoke puffing out, quickly dispersing in the
air-conditioned room, and the boys slid back their chairs, all turning to
look at her. Gortex and Summerbird looked at her face, the one
expressionless, the other with a cute little smile. The other two seemed
interested mainly in her bush.
"Well," said Mr. Summerbird, breathing out the last of his smoke, high
voice so soft it was hardly even a whisper. "Well, now."
Mr. Gortex was staring at her face, staring so hard she turned and looked
at him. Their eyes met for just a second, then he turned away. Nothing, not
even a flicker of feeling.
Summerbird said, "Boys …"
Gortex stood suddenly, dabbing a napkin at his lips, and said, "I have
some business to conduct. If you gentlemen will excuse me?"
Summerbird leered. "You're a sissy, Daneel."
Gortex stared down at him, "I dare say, Newt." Then he turned and walked
away, not looking back. Sparrow watched him go, watching his back, face
puzzled as usual, but … as if trying to remember … She glanced at me, and I
felt a hard stab of recognition in my chest.
Summerbird stood up, rattling the chain, smiling at her, and said, "Time
to go, my dear."
Belatedly, I remembered the other two men, not quite so well known as
Summerbird, but known nonetheless. One was Majority Leader Salzburger, the
other Mr. Jekyll, the Solar ethics committee chair. They followed their
master from the room, unable to be quite at his heels because Sparrow was in
the way, more or less licking their lips as they went.
And I thought, So these are the men who count?
The fat lady beside me sniffed, "Men!"
Yes, ma'am. Boys will be boys.
She craned over the desert tray and said, "You know, I believe I'll have
the tiramisu next."
· · · · ·
Returning alone, sans chains but still naked and too late for dinner,
Sparrow came over to our corner and sat on her cot. There was a blood
blister at the corner of her mouth, not quite lined up with her lower lip,
and a spotty crust of dark scab around the rim of her left nostril, bits she
hadn't been able to scrape off with a fingernail.
She looked at me and whispered, "Merry?"
There were little blue bruises everywhere, like fingerprints, her hair
standing up this way and that, in tufts, as if it'd been pulled and pulled,
until it stood up on its own.
By then I was kneeling beside her, trying to see what damage might need
real attention.
Not too bad. Considering.
There was a hard shine in her eyes. The shine of a child who's just been
whipped for nothing.
Nothing.
No matter what happens to me, no matter what they do, I've got those
hard, warm memories. And the dreams. Always the dreams.
Janet came over, stood looking down at her, shaking her head. "Jesus.
Here, lie on your back. Knees up, okay? Lemme check to make sure …"
Even then, you could see her start to respond.
Sparrow looked up at me and said, "Merry, those men seemed to hate me so
much. What do you suppose I could possibly have done to them?"
I shrugged, wondering if I knew anything worth repeating. I said, "Let's
see if we can get the autodoc to give you a sedative. You'll be all right,
Sparrow."
Sun come up tomorrow?
Janet helped her to stand, shaky but still whole.
For now.
After we got her bedded down, eyes shut, breathing softly, maybe asleep,
maybe not, Janet and I went into the break room and poured ourselves coffee,
sat down at one of the little cafe tables and sipped. Not bad as prison
coffee goes, I guess. Over in the corner, one of the studs was asleep, head
down on a tabletop, cradled on his crossed arms, breathing in whispers. It
was the one everybody called Jock. I forget why he's here. Not everyone will
say. Not everyone is famous for what he did, like me and Janet. He'd only
been here a little while, anyway.
She said, "I wonder if they did this to her by mistake. Maybe she was
somebody's pet wife and the docs accidentally stepped on her too hard?"
"So why's she here, instead of in the hospital?"
A quick shrug. "CYA?"
Everything's a lie until proven the truth. Humanity in a nutshell. I
said, "Janet, do you remember Mrs. Valentine?"
Empty look. "Who?"
"Politician."
"Uh …" Confused look at the change of subject. "Oh, right. That Senator
from Titan who was in the news a while back. Um …" Searching her memory. "I
forget. Something to do with an ethics investigation. Why?"
"Nothing. Just … thinking back."
She nodded. We all do that, whether we want to or not. Sometimes, when we
had a little extra time off, Janet liked to sit and talk about kids, mine
mostly, sometimes hers. You miss 'em, Merry?
Not really, but you miss yours, don't you, kiddo?
Someday, in twenty years or forty, whenever they decide she's had enough,
Janet will get out of here, but her kids will still be gone. Somewhere, mine
are still alive, hating my memory, but it doesn't matter. I'm here for good.
She got up, thinking back now, just because I'd said the word, dark
shadows forming around her eyes. "Good night, Merry."
I sat for a long time, looking at nothing, sipping coffee that slowly
grew cold. When I stood at last, Jock the stud's muffled voice said, "Mrs.
Valentine is dead, Merry."
When I turned and looked, he lifted his head from his arms and stared at
me out of red-rimmed eyes. "There was a transport accident here on Mars a
few weeks back. Hundreds of people killed. I guess she was on her way to
chair those hearings. It was in all the news."
I just looked at him.
All the news. Right.
He smiled, "I guess you've been here a while, huh, Merry?"
"One thousand, six-hundred and eighty-two days."
That made him flinch. "Sorry."
I walked out into the dark dorm, heading for my bunk. How long, my dear
Mr. Jock? Twinkies, they say, can live a long, long time. I lay down then,
hands behind my head, staring up at the shadows on the ceiling. After a
while, I heard Jock come out of the break room, go over to his own corner
and lie down among all the other studs, as far from the snatches as they
could get.
Nice, ain't it, Jock? Here you are, living every boy's dream, with a
hard-on that's there whenever it's called on, having it called on all day,
all night when necessary, and …
Sarah MacKay Valentine? Just a politician. Nobody important in the scheme
of things.
I remember number thirty-five quite clearly, a pretty blonde girl, hardly
out of her teens, a working girl of sorts, living small. I had her pinned to
the bed in her own dark bedroom, in her own little apartment, strip of heavy
tape over her mouth, working on the raping part that usually came before the
strangling part. Enjoying myself, savoring every sweet little moment.
The vid was on in the corner, three-dee images dancing in air, tracking
one of the public information nets, and, as I worked on her, I became aware
the blonde girl had her head cocked to one side, eyes rolled hard over,
trying to watch whatever was on.
Some politician, giving an interview.
When it was over, I sat on the edge of the bed beside the dead girl and
watched Sarah MacKay Valentine make fools of her opponents, make the
interviewer look like some kind of an idiot. When they brought on Newton
Summerbird to argue the counter-case, he argued so very forcefully, citing
chapter and verse, right down to the footnotes, and only managed to make
himself look like some cheap, fat little bully, the sort of boy who picks on
girls because he knows they'll never fuck him.
All Mrs. Valentine had to do was smile.
Everything she had was right there in her face. She'd look into the vid
pickup, look out of the magic air and right into your eyes, and you'd just
know she was telling the truth.
I waited 'til she finished, then turned off the dead girl's vidset and
went on home to my wife and kids.
Beside me in the darkness, Sparrow started to whisper, things like words,
but garbled, nothing I could make out. When I sat up to listen, I realized
she was trying to cry.
I got up, silent as a ghost, went and stood over her, looking down,
watching her, seeing a shine of tears in the wan glow of the nearest
nightlight. The skin on the palms of my hands started to crawl. That
familiar shortness of breath, just before …
Suddenly, her eyes opened, looking right into mine, that blaze of
awareness, those all-knowing eyes. For just a second.
"Oh, Merry …," she whispered. "Those men … That Mr. Summerbird said
they'd be back from time to time, just to see how I was enjoying life." Her
eyes seemed huge in the darkness, glistening and infinitely deep. "He said
all my old friends would be glad to see me. Maybe come to visit." Another
long look, though her bewilderment was mercifully hidden in darkness. "What
did he mean?"
I got onto the cot with her, wrapped her in my arms, and waited until she
was asleep. Morning will come, but the dreams will continue. As I dozed, I
remembered seeing Mrs. Valentine's husband, a colorless, smiling little fat
man in a gray flannel suit, standing behind her and off to one side, smiling
while she gave some speech or another, seen on vid at home, ignored by my
wife, ignored by the kiddies.
I remember thinking it must not be much of a life for a man.
Now I remembered the strength in her face, remembered from the night I
sat and watched her from a dead girl's bed.
· · · · ·
The next day was sunny and warm, as bright a day as you can have on Mars
with that patch of black sky always directly overhead, horizon bright green,
like a granny smith apple, pastel pink everywhere else. Sparrow looked
better, cleaned up in the shower, and seemed all right, nothing left over
from yesterday, smiling at the rest of us over the barracks' usual
continental breakfast.
Don't want us to be too full for the morning to come. It's a rare client
likes puke as a part of his fun.
Time for work.
Sparrow was picked up from the green room by a compact, oily little man
with a square black mustache under his nose, whose name seemed to be Klu
Barr. He made her get out of her silky work pajamas, lips twitching in
something that was half smile and half sneer as he looked her up and down.
Knew who she was, all right. Knew me, too, though I didn't know him from
Adam.
"What's the matter, girlie? Don't you know your old friend, Klu?"
Sparrow looked at his face, not wanting to be slapped, but kept her
features still. Learning the ropes fast.
"Ah, well. You'll know me again soon enough." Dots of color suddenly
appeared on her cheeks. He leered then, and said, "That's more like it,
girlie. Hey, what they call you here?"
"Sparrow."
A small frown, as if thinking about it, some inner doubt immediately put
aside. "Put your clothes back on. Let's get our gear and be on our way." He
looked at me. "You too, Strangler. This'll be fun."
Sparrow said, "They call him Merry."
Barr said, "Yeah? Who gives a fuck?"
They used me for a beast of burden, three pairs of cross-country skis and
big backpack with a blanket and the makings for a picnic. From the end of
the lift, where the Alpine and Nordic trail systems separated, we skied west
along the caldera rim, above a long slope heading down toward the gray-green
plains below.
The scarp, I knew, was hundreds of kilometers from where we were now. Klu
Barr could ski well, obviously something he did for its own sake, though
Sparrow didn't do so well. I wound up rigging a towline and pulling her
along. She had reflexes for that, interestingly enough. Maybe Mrs. Valentine
had liked to water ski? There's water on Titan nowadays.
That seemed to interest the man as we skied along, following a trail that
gradually descended toward a saddle in the crater wall, one that eventually
went out onto a long glacier rounding the old volcanic slope. "Where'd you
learn that, Strangler?"
"Solar Guard."
Long, level look. "I hadn't heard that about you." Then he said, "Me,
too."
I said, "I was in from '59 to '73. Mercury Insurrection. 61 Cygni Police
Action. California Riot Control."
He said, "I graduated from the Academy in '75."
We skied on a ways. Then I said, "I was enlisted."
A fine little sneer. "Figures." More silence, in which you could hear him
breathing more heavily than I was, though I carried the backpack and was
towing Sparrow. Then he said, "Why'd you get out? Enlisted Guard's a pretty
good life for some men."
I shrugged. "My enlistment was up. Seemed like it was time to move on."
"Why'd you settle on Venus? Most ex-Guardsmen head out for the star
colonies." Every Guardsman who fulfills at least one six-year tour of duty
and gets an honorable discharge is entitled to the property of his choice
outside the solar system. Mainly they pick sites with high mineral wealth
and go into trade.
I said, "Seemed like there was plenty of pussy there, at the time."
That made him laugh, mean glint in his eye. "Hope you got enough,
Strangler!"
Around local noon, he picked a spot out on some far tongue of the
glacier, up on an ice cliff rimmed with snowbanks, looking out over a long,
smooth slope. To our west, a few kilometers off, I could see a dark, shadowy
crevasse, probably sitting over one of those long, intermittent cracks,
rilles I think they're called, associated with old lava tubes.
Sparrow helped him eat his lunch, though there was nothing for me. Just
as well. I can't imagine what would make a man want to eat pickled pigs
feet. He made Sparrow take a little bit of just about everything, from the
tongue sandwiches to hard-boiled eggs that'd been overcooked to the point
the whites had a greenish cast.
Made me wonder what he had in mind.
He'd eaten enough, I thought he'd need a nap after lunch, but he didn't.
He stood, smiling, eyes shining with joy, and said, "Sparrow, my sweet love,
it's time we had a little fun."
Conflict in her face, fear and snatch tumbling over one another to take
control. Klu Barr palpated the front of her pajama bottoms, face flattening
out, sneer making his lips broad under the little mustache. "Ah, nice and
anxious, I see."
She looked at me, just once, hopeless, knowing there was nothing either
of us could do.
He got her out of her clothes and led her barefoot across the snow and
ice to a little hillock, one he seemed to judge just right, made her sit
down in a little hollow, something just the right size for her, then undid
the front of his trousers. "You'll pardon me if I leave the rest on,
Sparrow, dear? It's a little
cool for my taste!"
I could see the skin of her legs and backside was already bright pink.
When he tried to climb on, though, the warmth of her bottom had melted a
little of the ice, and she slid down, hitting her head with a small, hollow
bonk.
"Christ …"
He tried bracing her with his knees under her thighs, and that worked
long enough for one half-thrust. Then his feet went out from under him, and
they both went down in a cold, wet heap.
You have to wonder exactly what he may have had in mind.
"Dammit, Merry, help me hold her in position." He put her back in the
saddle.
I got behind him, reaching around to hang onto her thighs, bracing them
up. When he tried to settle onto her, he continued to slip, sliding down her
belly, so I let go of one side and put my hand in the middle of his back,
helping him get into position. "That's it. Almost …"
I let go the other hand and brought it up to the back of his neck, thumb
under one ear, fingers under the other. Sparrow, released, started to slide
out from under him again.
He said, "Hey!"
I squeezed hard, feeling a pulse of orgasmic energy knife right through
me. There was a wet, muffled pop as his spine pulled free of the formamen
magnum. He seemed to stiffen and clench, then relaxed on top of her.
There was a quiet moment in which I felt my heart beating stiffly in my
chest, then Sparrow, still under him, whispered, "Oh, Merry. What did you
do?"
I lifted him off her and laid him on his back in the snow. You could see
he was still alive, eyes livid with terror, lips twitching, but … Right.
Nothing else. You'll lay there, paralyzed from the face down. Not even feel
the building sense of suffocation. The world will turn blue, then gray, then
gone.
It took less than a minute for his eyes to grow empty and still, fixed on
my face 'til the very end.
I turned to Sparrow and said, "We've got eight, maybe ten hours, before
they start to look for us." Down the bottom of the great cliffs, the desert
floor was still three hundred kilometers away. "It'll be dark by the time
they find him."
She knelt, looking into his empty eyes, and said, "What will they do when
they find us?"
I shrugged, "Nothing worse than they've already done."
No death penalty in the Solar Alliance, dear Sparrow. Not for over a
thousand years. Cruel and unusual punishment, you see. I said, "Maybe
they'll send me to the Procyon mines for a change of scenery. You? Just back
here for more of Mr. Summerbird and his friends. If they catch us."
"If?"
I started digging into a snowbank with my hands, knowing if I hid Mr.
Barr far enough down in the snow, that'd confuse the sensors for a little
while longer. "Start packing up the picnic, Sparrow. Let's see how far we
can get before they do."
This was the first man I'd ever done with my bare hands. I found that I
liked it equally well.
· · · · ·
We skied down the long, gentle slope, following a sinuous hollow a few
kilometers north of the rille, for all the rest of that long, cold day,
while the blue sun of Mars arced away from zenith, slowly down through the
bright pink sky, falling through the horizon's band of green, then gone. For
a while longer, we skied on in darkness, tied together by the towrope so I
wouldn't lose Sparrow down some hole, skied on until I saw the running
lights of helicopters rise from Blue Heaven and begin skimming along the
rim, looking for the lost picnickers.
Line of sight. Might see us by accident.
We got inside the rille and followed it along to the beginnings of a lava
tube segment, crawled across the rubble and went inside, forging on in
absolute darkness, stumbling, falling, rising, going on until we were too
tired to continue. Slept until we awoke, in darkness still.
Finding me awake, Sparrow whispered, "How long …"
I laughed, raising echoes in the tube. "Until the food is gone, kiddo." I
got up and led her on downslope, knowing we'd either come out into the next
rille segment someday or run into a rubble wall.
It took us six days to get down the long slope of Olympus Mons, yet
another to climb down the face of the scarp, living on snow and meltwater,
once the picnic was gone, until we walked free in the warm wind of the
gray-green grassland humanity'd made of the old red planitia.
There were things to eat there, prickly fruit on scrubby bushes, tubers
similar to stuff I'd been taught were edible during those thirty-years-gone
Solar Guard basic training days. Some bugs and small animals we didn't
touch. Remembering the stories my children had loved, I wished, however
briefly, for Ghek and Tara and all the rest.
I grew thin and Sparrow thinner as we walked south, away from the wet
northern lowlands, into the high rock desert of the deep south, toward what
little was left of Old Mars.
There was never any sign of pursuit.
If it'd just been me, I guess there might've been a media uproar. The
Venusberg Strangler Escapes! Women bolting their doors all over the solar
system. But what would they say about the recently deceased Sarah MacKay
Valentine? If I could recognize her, so would others.
But all over Mars, I knew, agents would be watching for me in secret.
Don't want to raise a panic, you know. We'll get him, and the little snatch,
too.
To her credit, it was three days before Sparrow began to beg.
· · · · ·
On toward evening, a hundred days later, we were standing on a bluff in the
weathered foothills of the Nereid Montes, looking out over the ochre
dunefields of Argyre Planitia, when I spotted a Torii camp, nestled in the
shadows below, just where the erg spilled out into the jumbled rock remains
of Crater Galle.
Sparrow had toughened, grown thinner, ever more silent on the long walk,
even now no more than halfway to our destination, but she clutched my arm
when she saw where I was looking, eyes narrow, half alarm, half hope.
We'd followed an old, old roadbed, one laid down in the early days, back
when technically sophisticated people tried to live in the badly terraformed
southern hemisphere of Mars, passing through towns given up to the rock and
wind and sand a half millennium and more ago, their people returning to the
modern cities of the north, clustered round the shores of the Boreal Sea,
the lakes of Coprates, the riverbeds and canal systems that made Mars what
it was to be.
Not many people here now, to my relief, to Sparrow's increasingly secret
sorrow.
I'd done my best to be what I was not, and we'd stumbled over the
occasional startled hermit, but …
Eyes beseeching me now.
That agony of need, though she must surely have guessed what I'd done to
each of the hermits, even the women, after I sent her outside in the
morning. I'll be out in a minute, Sparrow. I want to thank him for his
hospitality.
We walked into the Torii camp just as the sun went down, emerald light
staining half the sky, reaching far up toward black zenith, patch of
darkness merging now with darkness rising out of the east, nameless stars
already freckling the heavens.
They watched us walk in, unbending from their tasks, standing silent,
dressed all alike, men, women, children, in dark blue robes, a color close
to indigo, robes proof, I think, against the light and heat of day, the
stark, icy night, mimicking the desert nomads of all those stories I
remember my children had loved.
Not bedouin, no. Tuaregs, perhaps.
It was a woman who came to stand squarely in front of me, blocking my
path, making me stop. Her eyes were pale blue, staring hard out of weathered
brown skin. Then she opened her veil, and the rest of her face was pale,
almost white, as though the skin there never saw the light of day.
She said, "Are you lost?"
I shook my head, "Just walking."
She stole a quick look at Sparrow, eyes narrowing, lines around them
deepening. "Where to?"
I don't know what made me tell her the truth, "Australia Cosmodrome."
"Coming from where? You've got a long way to go."
I stood silent. Other Torii were gathering now, standing to watch. Some
of them were young men, their attention starting to fix on Sparrow now.
The woman said, "You're both rather badly sunburned. You'll need medical
attention when you get there."
I nodded.
"You're welcome to stay for dinner then. My name is Cyndi."
Cyndi, I thought, like some child of wealth and comfort. Not the Ayesha
of children's fables. I held out my hand to her. "My name is Merry. This is
Sparrow."
· · · · ·
I don't know what made me wake up in the middle of the night, sleeping in
the little tent I'd found among the effects of some dead hermit. I remember
he was sprawled on the floor when I found it, eyes still open, full of
astonishment. That unexpected, wonderful night, maybe making him regret his
decision to live out here all alone with the sand and old red rocks.
Wonderful night, full of Sparrow's joy. Then the monster comes.
I awoke from a dream of jumbled memories and could sense I was alone, no
heat in the tent but my own.
Well.
I remembered dinner in a large Torii tent, Cyndi's home.
Remembered the magic carpets making a floor for the tent, covering up red
hammadi stone. Remembered the silver and brass tea service, the pewter
plates and bowls, the wooden spoons, so lovingly carved from scraps they'd
carried along from wherever they'd been. No wood around here. Hardly
anything for the goats to eat, down here around Argyre land.
Remembered the way they spoke with funny accents, though still in the
common language of Mars, curious about who we were and where we'd been,
though respectful of our silences, our little secrets.
Remembered the women's hospitality wearing thin as the men, young and
old, right down to boys so young you'd think they wouldn't know, paid more
and more attention to Sparrow, who flushed and squirmed and smiled.
Funny thing that there'd be such a people as the Torii wandering about
the southern deserts of Mars, herding things that might once have been
goats, harvesting tubers from genengineered plants that'd once been
instrumental in bringing Mars back to life.
Eight hundred years humanity had been here.
A thousand since the first permanent engineering bases had been set up,
since the decision had been made to create a New Earth. Time enough, I
suppose, for these people to come into being.
I crawled out of my blankets and zipped open the tent's flap, looking out
at the star-spangled night. Dull gray landscape, lit up, after a fashion, by
the shifting light of those famously romantic Martian moons, Fear and
Terror. All around us, the blank, lightless humps of the Torii tents. Beyond
them, the swollen black shadow of the mountains. Softly, the murmur of the
goats, the tinkling of little bells.
Sparrow was nearby, standing on a little rise in the sand, between two
dark tents, dressed only in something like a little white slip, bare from
the tops of her thighs down, lit up by the light of the silvery moons.
One long stretch, arms over her head, face turned up to the sky, made up
entirely of light and shadow, impossibly serene, moonlight shining on damp
skin, thin cloth clinging to her form.
I thought about all those men and boys gathered round her at dinner, and
thought about the anger that would fill the Torii camp come morning. Anger
at us? Or just the Torii women, angry with their men?
Maybe we should go now.
Outside, Sparrow continued looking at the sky.
I wonder what she thinks about?
What dreams does she have, mindwiped and snatched? Any trace of memory?
Shadows from the past, inexplicably haunting? Or does she just dream of her
need, of the things they made her want?
I tried so hard to know her, to see through those magic eyes to the woman
who once had been. Nothing there but that familiar bemusement. This is the
world, and I am in it, you could see her say. Familiar habits, familiar
ways. No past. Nothing but the fact of her being and that frantic sexual
core.
She walked over to the tent, face fully in shadow, stood looking down at
me.
Soft whisper, "I'm sorry, Merry. I had to."
I nodded. "Come in and sleep now, Sparrow. We'll walk on in the morning."
At some moment, I must have felt a spark of anger begin to grow.
Mine.
Surely mine.
· · · · ·
I sat down in the cargo hold of the
Solar Queen and watched Sparrow
pay for our passage, leaning against a cargo container, feeling the soft
vibration of the ship's inertial drive against my back, transmitted from
hull to floor to cargo box, like a soft, soft massage. The captain was on
her now, once again, grunting and thrusting, burnished with sweat under the
dim glow of red engineering lights.
I could see Sparrow's face, red light brightening the high, joyous color
of her cheeks, eyes in shadow, merest glints of light, looking at me.
Smiling, always smiling.
In mid-journey, with so little to do in the void between the worlds, it
seemed as though one or the other of them was on her, filling up the time.
Sparrow whispering, whispering to them as they went on and on. Now,
now,
she'd say.
And her face would twist as the latest paroxysm took her.
Finally. Finally, she had as much as they'd made her want.
Beside me, a most expensive humaniform robot, a rich man's private
toolkit, sitting in a posture that perfectly mimicked mine, said, "What an
unnatural creature."
"Sparrow?"
The robot, who'd refused to give a name or even a model number, shook its
head. "The captain. And his fellows."
I looked at it, trying to penetrate those impossible glass eyes. It was a
thing of silver and gold, burnished steel and plastic, made to look like a
man, but not so much of a man you'd mistake it for a living thing. "What
would you know about it?"
Its face made something like a smile, conveying some exact emotion. "As
much as they made me to know, of course."
"Just like her."
"Well, no. I never had anything more."
The captain, finished, kneeled up between her legs, gasping for breath,
then leaned down and rubbed his face back and forth on her pubic hair, as if
wiping away sweat. "Oh, God." I heard him say, not quite in a moan.
I remember I used to do that, sometimes before I killed them, sometimes
after.
The captain got up, still naked, gathering up his uniform, and fled into
the darkness. Sparrow lay back on her pallet, shining with commingled sweat,
stretching, content. Soon there'd be another one, and another one after
that. Eventually the captain's turn would come again.
The robot said, "Tell me again how it feels to kill a human being."
I said, "Do you think you'd like it yourself?"
It smiled again. "There's no way for me to know."
I thought, for just a moment, about the nature of heuristic machines.
About the way the code could grow and grow, 'til it filled all the space
allotted for it, then begin perfecting itself, new displacing old, accreting
round a deep core of hard-coded rules,
ab initio.
Another crewman appeared, the astrogator this time. Standing here, shirt
buttons already undone, looking down on her.
Sparrow, reaching for a towel, said, "Wait a second. I'll dry myself off
for you."
The astrogator said, "Don't. I like it that way."
The robot said, "Why Venus?"
I said, "It's a world full of people. A place where I know what to do."
"Maybe so. If there were a world full of robots, just like me, I'd go
there."
I looked at it, astonished, and listened to the astrogator groan, softly
to himself, as he mounted the magic woman.
Venusberg is the most beautiful city in the known universe, nestled in the
saddle between lakes Collette and Sacajewa, out on the rolling green grasslands
of Lakshmi Planum, Akna Montes far to the west, Maxwell yet farther to the east.
She's a city of great white towers, mimicking the fairy cities of twenty-first
century America. Fabled New York, Chicago, San Francisco, all rolled into one,
downtown towers reaching up into a lemon-pale sky, creating a matrix of human
canyons round the deep blue waters of Sinus Mulierum, with its magically arched
bridges, the little white wakes of the boaters, as of lovers paddling the canal,
silent under a bright, invisible sun.
individuality. of sign only the shutters pastel roofs, slate gray with houses white houses,
little their communities bedroom endless sprawl, suburban into out reaching another,
after road ring one crossing plains, radiate highways center, city From />
Ishtar Terra they called this landscape.
I'd called it home, in the days after I quit the Solar Guard.
So ordinary. So terribly ordinary. Sparrow and I lived for some months under
the pretense of being husband and wife, living in a little white house with a
gray slate roof and pale yellow shutters, hiding in plain sight, purloined
letters squirreled away in a bedroom community called Summerland, far enough out
that Venusberg was a toy on the horizon, shrouded in a faint pink fog.
Lived and hid, working simple little jobs, a quiet ordinologist tucked away
in a library basement and his quiet wife, the legal-office admin. No skills on
her part, of course. Whatever she'd had were wiped away along with all the rest,
but I'm sure the lawyer only had to take a deep breath during the interview to
know he'd found the right girl. I remembered the little spat we'd had when I
wanted her to stay home and play housewife, but … right. There's an evolving
replacement personality here that would do what it felt it had to, for whatever
reason.
Evening came, a quiet dinner, very nearly a sullen dinner, restless Sparrow
barely picking at her prefab meal. After a while, I retired to the den and sat
in front of the node, not wanting yet another confrontation. Let it be, was all
I could tell myself.
In the node, I watched Newton Summerbird give a speech, then spooled backward
in time, watching him give other speeches, older speeches, noting how similar
they all were.
Carthago delenda est. This shall not stand. A man must be
responsible for what a man has done. If, that is, he's not the man who counts.
That's all.
In some of the older speeches, however similar, there were debates. Ah, there
you are, Mrs. Valentine. Sometimes, in the debates, Summerbird would call her
Sarah, looming over her, smiling his nice little smile. Dear little Sarah, he
would say. In return, she'd only call him Mr. Summerbird. Then she'd make the
audience laugh at something he'd said, some foolish point, some inconsistency
his fine rhetoric had made them all miss, 'til it was pointed out.
Mr. Summerbird's eyes would grow hard and flat.
In the background, there was her small, round, butter-soft, gray-suited
husband, eyes only for her.
I wonder what they talked about, when they were alone?
Sparrow doesn't remember. Doesn't remember him at all.
He looks fat, she'd say. What did she see in him?
I wonder.
Did he ever have to beg her to stay home? Did he ever crouch at her feet and
beg to be allowed to … do whatever she wanted? Give her what she needed?
Sparrow's eyes would soften. I'm sorry Merry, but … That word you taught me,
philanderer? Those are supposed to be bad men, aren't they?
Everyone says so, yes, Sparrow.
She'd smile.
Well, I'm the philander, and I say they're good.
I heard the door slam. Heard the electric car whir to life, back out of the
driveway, and slip away into the Venusberg night.
She'll be back. She always comes back.
I'll wake up in the darkness just as she slides into bed, warm, sweaty,
happy, snuggling up against me, ready for sleep.
I let the node take hold of Mrs. Valentine and her little, fat husband, let
it slide sideways into their event track, then forward in time. There were
scenes of a great, smoking crater down by the south pole of Mars, where the
liner went down, all souls lost, including Mrs. Sarah MacKay Valentine, on her
way to chair the ethics committee hearings.
In a later interview, her bewildered husband mentioned he hadn't known she
was dead for hours, because she wasn't supposed to be on that flight at all, but
one that flew an hour later, leaving Titan City for Marsopolis, before going on
to Atom City on Earth. That one had gotten where it was going, Mrs. Valentine
ticketed but not aboard.
All the dead, who were little more than ash and bone, had closed-casket
funerals.
I found myself wondering. If they could kill all those people, just to hide
what they were about to do, then why not simply kill her?
The ethics hearings were chaired by the next-senior member, later that month.
Nothing ever came of the hearings. Not enough evidence, they said.
So Mr. Gortex got his presidency, and Mr. Summerbird his speakership.
Maybe it was just an accident. Maybe as hirelings laid in wait for her, Mr.
Summerbird watched the crash on his office node and thought,
Perfect.
I blanked the node and went to bed and waited for Sparrow in the dark,
wondering what I could do to save us. To save her.
· · · · ·
I named us Johnson as a joke. Kept those other names as an act of … foolish
bravado? Merry and Sparrow Johnson. Mr. and Mrs.
How's Mr. Johnson today? Said with a soft Venusberg lilt.
Not much, anymore. Said with a smile.
Mrs. Trenchard, one of the neighbors, diagnonal down the way, who said her
name,
Tronksharr, as if married to some important historical figure, came
over one night after dark, calling me from the node, where I was reading the
minutes of the ethics committee hearings, reading Mr. Gortex's pronouncements
and wondering, just wondering.
She was standing in the open doorway, a small woman with short black hair,
thin, looking up at me, not smiling at all, hands half clasped, held before her,
as if protecting her crotch. She said, "May I come in, Mr. Johnson?"
I stood aside, gesturing, and said, "Call me Merry."
Her lips twisted bitterly. "You don't look Merry."
Neither do you, my dear, I thought, walking her toward the parlor, gesturing
for her to sit down in one of the big chairs, or maybe on the sofa, all part of
the neovictoriana that'd come with the house rental. "Can I get you a drink,
Mrs. Trenchard?"
Her mouth made a little pink vee, an attempt at a smile. "My name's Jeanine
…" Pronounced G-9, as if some antique spy, or a very expensive AI
servomechanism. "Scotch?"
"Glenfiddich?"
"That'll do."
Tinkle of ice in a squat cut-crystal tumbler. "Water? Soda?"
"Just ice."
I made mine neat and crossed to where she sat on the couch, sitting beside
her, handing her a glass, lifting mine to my lips. Looked in her eyes, and
waited.
She said, "Your wife's not home, is she, Merry?"
I shook my head, knowing where she was (imagining Mrs. Trenchard knew, too,
both of us perhaps picturing my wife out gleaning whatever men she could, where
she could find them, but only me knowing the terrible why). "No." Took a real
sip, trickle of burn down my throat. (What would you say, Mrs. Trenchard, if you
knew about Blue Heaven, if you knew what they'd done to her there?)
Jeanine drank off half of hers, ice clinking as it slid up the glass and
bounced against her upper lip. Then she said, "Well, my husband's not home,
either."
Julian Trenchard wasn't much of a man, and I wondered if he'd been the very
last to get a turn. I could see the building sparkle of anger in her eyes and
wondered if that were the whole problem, the reason for the sudden visit. Just
pissed off because her husband wasn't worth having?
I shrugged, imagining I'd have to come up with something to say at some
point. Finally, "I'm sorry if …"
She reached out and put her hand, fingers cold from holding a glass of ice,
on my wrist. "Merry, you know all the men in this neighborhood are married. You
can't live here otherwise. The wives …"
I said, "I've tried to talk to her about it. She …"
Her lips made a little pink curl of contempt. Then she finished off her
scotch, banging the glass down on the coffee table so the ice rattled around,
not quite jumping over the rim. She leaned forward and put her hand on my knee.
"A big, good-looking man like you … This isn't a fundamentalist neighborhood,
you know. Some of us … Well. If you can just cut a deal with those wives, and
keep her away from the husbands of the rest, we …"
Maybe, I thought, she's the spokeswoman for a delegation. Wives meeting over
coffee, while the husbands were away at work, or at least gone to one
indiscretion or another. I bet that big son of a bitch is twenty centimeters!
Let's see a show of hands …
She slid her hand up my thigh, smile this time a little pink leer. Me first!
Me first!
I caught her hand, heart suddenly squeezed by memory. Number fourteen had
looked very much like her, had come to me voluntarily, with just the same leer,
hand running up my thigh in just this way, headed for a crotch that'd been … oh,
responsive, I guess, is word enough.
Number fourteen had blinked with slight surprise, maybe wonderment, when I
reached for her throat, smiling a familiar smile of my own.
Sometimes, I would kill them first and fuck them later, just for variety's
sake. Sometimes it was better that way.
I caught Mrs. Trenchard's hand before it got to its destination and
discovered the interesting truth. Held her hand gently in my own and said, "I'm
sorry, Jeanine. I can't. Sorry." Gave her hand a little squeeze. Let it go.
Her cheeks were flushed; she'd been that ready, I guess, so now the flush
turned to one of anger, eyes flinty, dealing with rejection. She said, "I can
see why she wanders, with a pathetic thing like you at home."
I gave her another scotch, apologized a little more, but there wasn't much to
say. On her way out the door, she said, "You better think of some way to keep
her home. Or else move away. Soon."
I went back to the node and resumed my reading of the minutes, wondering how
they'd managed to get away with all those elisions in the evidentiary
documentation. I was asleep by the time Sparrow got home, some time well after
midnight, snuggling me awake, smelling of sweat and semen.
The perfect woman, I thought, as she murmured against my back, apologizing
for waking me up.
"Dear Merry," she whispered, yawning hard, rubbing her damp face against the
hard ridge of my spine, "Dear, sweet Merry."
· · · · ·
A day, a week, a little more, and one night I sat on the foot of our big double
bed, watching Sparrow get ready for a date.
Date. That's what they called
it in Venusberg, like these married men and women slinking to each other in the
night were just crossing adulthood's rim, halfway between being playmates and
lovers, halfway between innocent sandbox and carnal bed.
She was dressed in a short slip, white, with a bit of lace here and there,
reaching from spaghetti straps barely to the tops of her thighs, long, slim legs
bare, doing things to her face, to her hair, looking at herself in the mirror,
not seeing me in the background.
Not smiling.
Looking into her own eyes.
Thinking what?
I said, "Don't go."
It froze her for a second. Then she turned to look at me, standing
flat-footed, still silent.
"Stay home with me tonight."
You could see things change in her eyes, an agony of indecision, marked by a
trace of anger, recalling the things I'd said each night as I begged her not to
go out, told her about Mrs. Trenchard's visit, about the dangers she was making
for us, the things that might happen.
So I'll go farther afield, all right? There are barrooms downtown. Places
where no one will care about what I do, or who I do it with.
Please, Sparrow. We won't be here forever. Just until I …
She said, "We've already talked about this. You know I have to. You know
what's been done to me."
Sure. I said, "Sparrow, you know I'll help you any way I can."
A curl of real anger behind her eyes then. She pulled up the hem of her slip,
lifting the lace to mid-abdomen, and said, "Look at me."
"Sparrow …"
"Not at my face. Down here."
A swatch of curly hair. The shine of moisture up where her legs came
together.
She said, "I
have to go."
"If I …"
Softly, she said, "I know you mean well, Merry. But it's not enough. They
made me want more than you can give."
"Please, Sparrow."
A quick look into my eyes, then pity. "Oh, Merry." She came to the bed and
sat beside me. Put her hand on my wrist, fingers cool, though not so cold as
Mrs. Trenchard's icy hand had been. Momentary tableau, husband and wife
together, then she crawled up onto the bed, pulling me with her, until we had
our heads on the pillows, facing each other.
I could see there were tears in her eyes and could smell her sharp arousal,
pheromones knifing in through the only sex organ the bastards had left me, the
instrument of their torture.
I put my hand on her hip, pulling the soft, delicate cloth of the slip
upward, and whispered, "Shall I …"
She snuggled close to my chest. "No, Merry. Just hold me."
· · · · ·
In my dreams, sometimes bits of old stories are mixed in with the memories. In
this one, I was Tyrone Power, smooth and emotionless, face blank as a dead
man's, telling the little French whore, "I was hurt during the war."
I think she'd said, "What's the matter? Don't you like me?"
More dream. Then, later, Eddie Albert's wisecrack about the life of a steer,
somehow mixed up with scenes from a farmscape, some woman with a peculiar accent
running on about square eggs.
In most of the dream, I was with number six, who had no idea anything was
wrong. May even have missed the actual moment when things went so terribly wrong
for her.
When her life went out like a light.
I remember she was so hot for me, everyman's crude mannequin, like a sexy
gyndroid on overdrive, so hot and wet a smaller man would have found no purchase
within to do for himself. Six times, one right after another, like she was
starving to death, so happy to have found a man like me she'd grunted, rather
fervently, some time in the night. A
real man.
In the middle of orgasm number six, just as her eyes rolled back, just as she
started that little caw of joy, I grabbed the nape of her neck, grabbed her by
the long, curly black hair, pulled and twisted as hard as I could, hearing her
go snap, crackle, pop, and relax, boneless, beneath me.
Inside her, the orgasm continued to completion, followed by my own.
I awoke and opened my eyes on darkness, covered by a fine sheen of sweat,
wondering if I'd thrashed and cried out in my sleep.
The bed was empty and cool beside me.
After a while, I got up and went to the node, where I resumed my search of
documentary chains, knowing they couldn't possibly have destroyed much more than
the superficial evidence required by the antiquated rules of the Solar
Alliance's courts. Any deeper, and they'd start hurting the economy, would have
to start digging into the private information stores of the big corporations,
where accounting rules prevailed.
It was dawn before she came home, yellow light spreading through the sky.
· · · · ·
Something woke me in the middle of another night.
Dark, still, the sheets cool beside me as I lay there naked and alone.
Something.
Pressure waves in the air, as of a distant, rhythmical thudding, just on the
edge of hearing but growing louder, more distinct with each passing moment.
The door slammed, and Sparrow's voice, flooded with alarm, cried out, "
Merry?"
I think I was dreaming, not about the women I'd raped and killed back in that
other life, but about our time at Blue Heaven. And not about the bad things
there, but the good things.
I'd been dreaming about my friend Janet, about letting her crawl into my bunk
and sleep, shivering, in my arms, on nights when she dreamed about her children.
"
Merry!"
I rolled to my knees on the floor, reached under the bed and grabbed the
things I kept there, a small backpack with a bush knife clipped to its chest
strap, a jogging outfit. Shoved my feet in unlaced hiking boots, the ones I wore
on Sunday, when I hiked alone in the Hellish Hills, down by the Southside Scarp.
On my feet, naked but for boots, listening to the thudding noise, listening
to it grow loud, I met Sparrow on the dark stairs, unable to see much more than
the shine of her eyes.
"My God, Merry! A helicopter. It followed me along the highway! Followed me
home!"
I grabbed her by one upper arm, pulled her off her feet, and ran her down the
stairs.
"Merry …" You could hear now there was more than one copter in the sky,
though the one was far closer than the others.
"We have to get out of here." I threw her over one shoulder. High heels.
Shit. In the kitchen, by the back door, were her running shoes, where she always
kept them. I got the door open, grabbed the sneakers, and was out in the dark,
going over our 1.5 meter back fence like it wasn't there, Sparrow over my
shoulder, her shoes in one hand, my backpack in the other.
In the alleyway, I craned around and took one look back. The chopper noise
was loud now, lights starting to go on in our neighbors' houses, but I could see
nothing. The helicopters were painted black.
Run, you silly bastard. Run!
Naked, I knew my dick should bounce back and forth as I ran, flapping against
my thighs, making me look very silly indeed. But I didn't have a dick, and I
could run like the wind.
Behind us, the sky lit up, garish yellow white, spotlights picking out the
house from several directions, and our neighbors were milling all over the
place, outside in their pajamas and nighties, shouting astonished questions back
and forth.
Good. That will confuse the infrared sensors for a minute or two.
Maybe long enough.
· · · · ·
I got dressed down in a culvert by the oily waters of Sinus Mulierum, in the
shadows under a fairy tale bridge, kicking off my boots long enough to pull on
soft cotton running pants and singlet, unrolling the socks I'd bundled with
them, while Sparrow, sitting on a low retaining wall, laced up her sneakers,
high heels perched on the ledge.
She said, "I'm sorry, Merry. I guess I didn't believe you."
I reached out and stroked her soft hair. Too late now. I said, "Best keep
your voice down. We weren't followed, but …"
She whispered, "What're we going to do now?" Misery in her voice. Lost our
home? Or fretful worry about where her next fuck is coming from, like an addict
anticipating her next dopesick night?
I stood erect (so to speak), shouldering the backpack, shrugging it into
place, looking around at the dark, sluggish water, the black, featureless night
sky. That was the one thing I missed, living on Venus. Stars.
I said, "Always have a Plan B."
She said, "Plan …"
There was a little scuffling noise up in the shadows under the bridge ramp,
from between the nearest two pylons. Rats? No. They'd managed to keep them off
Venus, having been far more careful with the initial terraform build than on
Mars. Practice makes perfect.
The shadows unfolded into the figure of a man, a man with long, shaggy hair
and a scruffy beard, dirty clothes. Worn-out clothes. Mostly denim. If they'd
been new, I might've taken them for Sparrow.
He yawned and stretched, walking toward us.
"Jesus," he said in a slurred voice. "You folks could pick someplace better
to sneak off for a fuck. Woke me up, you know?" He was looking at us beady-eyed,
especially at Sparrow, running shoes incongruous with her little black cocktail
dress. "Been to a party, missy?"
Sparrow seemed to shrink back, maybe trying to slide behind me.
Well, you're freshly serviced, little Sparrow. By this time tomorrow, you'd
be dragging him toward the bushes. I reached out a hand and cracked his neck,
folding him up, back into the shadows. Sparrow, looking at me, silent, was all
eyes, big and glistening bright in the darkness.
I remembered killing Klu Barr, remembered hiding him in the snows of Olympus.
Not the same, this time. Harmless old bum. Wrong place, etc. Sorry, man, wish it
could be different, I thought, speaking to his ghost, and said, "We need to get
going. We need to make the trail system in Umstead Forest by morning."
· · · · ·
Rex Sinclair's Hatari Plantation lay just below the Hellish Hills, beyond Ishtar
Terra's continental slope, deep in the outermost layer of lowland Thicket, where
the land slopes away toward Mnemosyne Regio and the steamy Mesozoic swamplands
the terraform builders had made.
You could look back from Sinclair's veranda, look back at the rising green
landscape, and marvel that we'd walked all this way and lived, that we'd only
met two hikers on the way, a pair of goofy, well-equipped fat men, out alone
together on some kind of camping sabbatical, men who'd been surprised to meet
us. And even more surprised to die.
Sinclair remembered me, from long ago and far away, staring at me with that
proverbial wild surmise when his field supervisors led us in from the perimeter
fence. He called me Sergeant, eyes squinted just so, craggy face full of
suspicion, no small amount of unease. No doubt, I'd been a big figure in the
news when I was caught and unmasked as the fabled Venusberg Strangler.
Maybe he would have turned away, told me,
Well, just a moment, I'll be
right with you, but then he turned to look at my companion, face suddenly
going slack. Not recognition, no, she was too … different for that. But you
could see him get an erection, right then and there.
The flush on Sparrow's cheek, spreading down face and neck to suffuse what
was visible of her chest, was very pretty indeed.
So. Clean clothes, dinner, then we were sitting out on the veranda, enjoying
the subtle colors, ocher and tan and brown, of a lowland Venusian sunset.
Sparrow and I sat on his antique swinging divan, facing out across the
plantation lawn, looking out over the pond, where a little family of hesperornis
sailed in stately formation, Sinclair catty-corner in a chair, closer to Sparrow
than me.
"Cigar?"
I smiled. "Used to like them, didn't I?"
"Used to?" He was smiling, face craggy as a romantic, Out-of-Africa hero,
some Great White Hunter or another. "These are real Havana lineage, Sarge.
Descended from the Guatemalan strain of Carl Uppman."
"Somehow," I said, "I gave them up."
"Miss?" Holding the box out to Sparrow.
She shook her head and blushed, looking down at hands folded in her lap. He'd
given me a set of khaki work clothes, even a new pair of boots, but Sparrow was
in something like white silk pajamas, and barefoot.
Sinclair said, "I was surprised to see you, Sarge. I figured you for a
permanent residency on some therapeutic asteroid or another, after what you
did."
"Me, too."
He was looking at Sparrow now, and you could see the front of his chinos
start to hump up again. He had to squirm around in his seat a little bit, trying
to get more comfortable. "Sarge and I were in the Guard together. Best Command
Master Sergeant there ever was, if you ask me. No one else ever got there as
fast, either."
Sparrow glanced at me, but her face was suffused, shiny, not smiling, eyes
only filled with what her body was doing to her. Suddenly, I could smell her
arousal, sharp and metallic, filling the air on the veranda too fast to be swept
away by the slow, sultry breeze. When I glanced down, I saw the crotch of her
pajamas' were showing wet, clinging to her.
Sinclair said, "Christ!" He got to his feet. "I'm sorry, Sarge. I'll talk to
you later. We'll … see what we can figure out tomorrow." Then he held out his
hand to Sparrow, helped her to her feet and led her away.
Watching them, I saw she could barely walk.
· · · · ·
I found Sinclair's office node pretty quickly, in a back room that was mainly a
sitting room. There was a pelt on the floor, the skin of a smilodon from the
Cenozoic hunting reserve on Aphrodite Terra. Lots of pictures on the wall, flats
and solidi both, scenes from his early life, from the Academy, where'd he'd been
a star forward on the mercuryball team, from his service, rising through the
ranks 'til he'd retired as a full bird-colonel.
I was in some of the pictures. A younger me standing slightly behind Major
Sinclair, who'd been in charge of suppressing the California Riots. In the
background of the photo, you could see Los Angeles burning, solidus flames
flickering like real life. In the picture, I was smiling.
A picture of a more recent me, Colonel Sinclair pinning on my Distinguished
Service Award, on the day of my retirement. When he'd shaken my hand, I
remembered, he'd told me he was getting out, too, in another few months,
retiring to that little farm on Venus.
I could hear them in the background now, had been able to for more than an
hour, Sparrow's cries echoing faintly, surrounded by the squeak of hand-hewn
rustic wooden bedroom furniture.
On the node, I looked at a fat man's face, Mrs. Valentine's forlorn husband,
giving his final interview, a couple of months after the fatal crash, a few days
after the close of the abbreviated ethics hearings.
His name was Theodore, affectionately called Teddy by all who knew him, and
he'd spent his adult life looking after his wife's non-political financial
interests.
Disconsolate was the word the newsnode talking heads used to
describe him, on his way back to Titan, alone.
After the election, there'd been another little uproar, a sad, bewildered
Teddy Valentine threatening lawsuits, claiming conspiracy. Then nothing. For
about a month after Gortex and Summerbird took their respective offices, Teddy
Valentine was utterly missing from the public records.
Then, you could see where the Valentine business and residential properties
of Titan were for sale, the beach property they owned on the coast of Earth's
Brazil vacationland. Records of deeds changing hands. Then nothing.
Gone.
There was a slight rustle of movement behind me. Sparrow was standing in the
open doorway, naked, what we'd called spooge when we were young drooling down
the insides of her thighs.
"He wants me to spend the night," she said.
I tried to smile. "He always fancied himself a real he-man."
She said, "He's had something done to himself, Merry. Sort of a light
studding, so he'll be more … capable." She stood there in the doorway, dripping
on the floor, staring at the sad fat man motionless in the node. Then she said,
"I've got to pee. I'll see you in the morning."
· · · · ·
I awoke alone in the morning from the same infinitely varied dream, in some
guest bedroom I'd managed to find, far enough away in the house I could no
longer hear them, yellow light streaming through Rex Sinclair's expensive bamboo
Venetian blinds.
There'd been a widow woman, I remembered, a woman well over a hundred years
old, so old medical treatment wasn't doing her much good. There had been, I
remembered, lines in her face. Who knows. Maybe she would have lived another
twenty years or so?
I remember thinking exactly that as I pressed her down hard against my pubic
bone, jamming myself as far in as I could go, making her eyes widen a bit, then
widen more as I put my thumbs under the angle of her jaw.
I remember thinking later that after she met me, she'd lived another twenty
minutes.
I got out of the bed and pulled on my new clothes, lacing up my comfortable
new boots, thinking about it still. Hell, maybe I was just born under the shadow
of evil. If such a thing is possible.
Probably not. Just a way of saying it was something I was made to do, rather
than something I did. But we know better, don't we?
Sparrow and Sinclair were already at breakfast, Sparrow sipping coffee, with
dark shadows under her eyes, Rex Sinclair stuffing himself with bacon and eggs,
sausage, English muffins and grits, beaming like a man reborn.
"Merry!" He said, gesturing at me. "Try the gooseberry jam! Try the honey! I
have my own terragenic bees!"
I sat, reaching for a mug, reaching for the coffee pot, looking at Sparrow.
When she lifted her eyes to mine, I was startled to see misery, rather than the
satiation I expected.
Sinclair suddenly laughed. "I'm sorry, Merry, I guess I fucked her half to
death! I had no
idea what her pheromones would do to me!"
I took a swallow of the coffee, scalding hot, acidic on my empty stomach,
went to take another, stopped … something. Something in the air. Some distant
sound perhaps.
I put the cup down and started to rise. Suddenly Sinclair was holding a
little gun on me, a needle-nosed paralo-ray pistol, hardly more than a police
stunner.
He said, "Sit down, Merry."
Now I could hear that faraway thudding. I got to my feet anyway, ignoring the
ray gun, Sinclair rising to match me, facing me across the table. "Don't try it,
Sarge. You're a tough bastard, but this'll knock you down." He moved over behind
Sparrow, taking her by one upper arm, forcing her to her feet. "We'll put you
somewhere safe, honey. This'll be over in just a little while."
I started around the table, moving slowly.
Sinclair kept the gun on me, backing toward the door with Sparrow, but
slowly, letting me get a bit closer. "I'm sorry, Sarge. I couldn't take the
chance of helping you. I put in a call before breakfast."
I smiled. "They won't let you keep her, you know."
"They won't find out she's here."
"I'll tell them."
Flicker of anger. "I'm warning you, Sarge. You're not faster than a ray."
"Don't need to be, Colonel."
He smiled. "Maybe not. Just faster than a trigger finger, huh? But I've had
Guard training, too, Sarge."
"Maybe so. But she's not just a toy. That's Senator Valentine you've been
fucking." His eyes flickered toward her, and you could see it took him by
surprise. You could also see the sudden recognition. "Anyway," I said, "you were
just a fucking officer."
He tried to get the gun up, but I was already moving, forward and to the
right. The ray sizzled across my left arm in a fire of pins and needles. I
slapped it out of his hand, ray gun tinkling as it broke against the far wall.
Then I got him by the hair, lifting hard, grabbing his shoulder as I turned his
head to face around over his back.
He actually grunted "
Ow!" in the middle of the noise his neck made
breaking but didn't say anything else as I lowered him to the floor and caught
Sparrow in my arms, rayed left one buzzing like mad. Outside, you could hear the
first helicopter swooping in over the trees, could hear the shouts of the
plantation hands.
I pulled her after me, heading for the office, heading for Rex Sinclair's gun
cabinets with all their lovely hunting blasters, weapons intended to blow a
diplodocus out of the water or stop a charging tyrannosaur in its tracks.
Certainly suitable for shooting down a black helicopter or two.
Sparrow stood by, shivering, while I broke the cabinet locks and picked out a
couple of heavy weapons, handing her one, keeping one for myself, grabbing a
couple of spare batteries while I was at it.
"Plan C," I said. "Always have a Plan C." Sparrow's eyes searched my face,
full of wonder. Wonder and trust.
· · · · ·
I crouched in the cave, blaster cradled in my arms, facing the tyrannosaur,
whose huge head filled the entrance, all but obscuring the yellow-misted
Venusian swampland beyond. Sparrow crouched behind me, flat against the damp,
dank, algae-slimed rear wall, and whispered in my ear, "If it kills us, Merry,
all is lost, for us, for everyone, forever …"
The tyrannosaur bared grayish-white half-meter fangs, hot breath washing over
me, making a deep, purring snarl, like the throb of a diesel locomotive at idle.
Half its face, only an arm's length away, was gone, nothing but melted,
healed-over scar tissue, like white bone around a crusted, empty eye socket.
The same one, I thought. The one I hunted as a boy, the one I tried to kill.
The one that got away.
It's remaining eye, red as blood, rolled in its socket, looking at me.
Another throbbing snarl. Satisfied. Knowing.
It remembers me.
Remembers what I did to it.
Its jaws opened as far as they could in the structure of the cave mouth,
tongue curling, red throat waiting as it tried to slip forward, ready for a
delicate, fatal bite. I smiled, not even bothering to aim the blaster. Smiled
and pulled the trigger.
Blue-white nuclear fire filled the cave like summer heat lightning, wiping us
away, dinosaur and all.
I sat up, muscles clenched, looking out through green vegetation at more
yellow Venusian sky. In the distance, a trombone howled, and, through the trees,
kilometers away, I saw the snaky, yellow-green necks of three apatosaurs rising
above the fern fronds by the margin of the river. One of them had a mouthful of
reeds, reeds rising and falling, growing smaller as it chewed.
Sparrow sat on the rim of the sleeping nest, watching me.
I sat up, wiping the sweat from my face. "Jesus."
She said, "You seemed upset, Merry. What were you dreaming?"
I looked away, back out through the forest. We'd been moving slowly eastward
around the southern rim of Ishtar, following the base of the scarp, trying to
stay as far away from the dinosaur lowlands as we dared, another weeks-long
journey, though different from the much longer one we'd had on Mars.
"Something … different."
Her eyes were serious, more understanding than they had been. Something
growing in her. A person. Someday she'll be a whole person again, despite what's
been done. A new person. She said, "I wondered. For once, your hands weren't
strangling anything."
Nice of you not to say,
anyone. Sometimes, when I woke up, my forearms
would be sore, knuckles swollen and distended, from strangling all night long.
I said, "It was something from a story I loved when I was a boy. About an
orphan boy, an orphan on Venus who lived by his wits, hunting the jungles with a
beat-up old blaster he'd managed to find. Hunting for tyrannosaur, selling it to
restaurants, so the rich and beautiful tourists from Earth and Mars could go
home and say they'd eaten honest-to-God dinosaur meat." I remembered then how
I'd had to look up the meaning of the phrase "diesel locomotive." I smiled at
her. "It's why I moved to Venus, when the time came."
"Not the plentiful pussy?"
A twinkle in her eye. A hint of a smile. Becoming a person at last. Someone
you had to like, rather than pity. Then she said, "I always dream about men with
big dicks. Men fucking me."
Jesus.
She smiled and said, "Do you suppose Mrs. Valentine's husband had a big
dick?"
Hard to imagine the fiery, political intellectual Senator Valentine and gray,
fat little Teddy … I said, "Well. I hope so." From somewhere, I remembered, in
the end, the orphan boy had gotten an appointment to the Solar Guard Academy on
Earth, had passed the entrance examination, passed his courses, becoming an
officer and a gentleman.
As I recalled, he'd already been a man, had brought that with him to the
table, had taught that one thing to the boys who'd become his comrades.
There was a sudden rustle, above and to my left. I grabbed for the blaster,
spinning, aiming, finger going through the trigger guard, tightening. Stopped
myself in time.
Three men, dressed in some kind of rough, whitish homespun, long hair bound
by strips of cloth, feet in soft moccasins. Crossbows, loaded and cocked but not
aimed at us. The one in the lead lifted a hand, palm out, fingers flat, not
unlike an Indian in some antique drama, and said, "Good day to you."
I lowered the blaster, taking my finger off the trigger, engaging the safety
interlock. "Good morning."
He smiled. "Highlanders call us Bummers," he said.
"I know that. Vidnode dramas about the wild Venusian Bummers are popular all
over the Solar Alliance." Popular because they are what we all wish to be, would
be, but for what? Our lack of courage? Run away. Run away from it all. Turn your
back on job and boss, home, hearth, wife, children, all those bills …
He laughed, showing crooked yellow teeth, the first human I'd ever seen in
need of dental work. In dramas, even Bummers have gleaming white ivory, just
like the rest of us. "I hear they like us, even in the star colonies."
I shrugged. I hadn't had much time for entertainment when I was out there.
"Maybe so."
He said, "Police are not on your trail anymore. After you knocked down that
third helicopter, they fucked up and lost track." It'd gone down in a scream of
fire, and we'd been able to see the column of black smoke for hours afterward as
we fled deeper into the swamp country south of Sinclair's plantation, making me
wonder if we hadn't somehow started a forest fire despite the dampness of the
environment.
He said, "You're headed right into Red Devil territory. We don't want you
here."
"We need to get through to the eastern slopes, down under Maxwell Montes."
A long, doubtful look, as his fingers slowly stroked the smooth, dark wood
butt of his crossbow. "If the police should find you among us …"
Sparrow stood suddenly, catching every eye, and started to get undressed.
· · · · ·
They were taking turns with Sparrow, the smugglers' crew, not even waiting 'til
we were on our way, taking a down payment right here, right now, until the
ship's computers let them know it was time to be leaving. Taking their turns,
one after another, then seconds and thirds, the ones that could, Sparrow on a
ratty old beach blanket under the blue shade of a spreading chestnut tree.
Funny that the crew of a tramp freighter turned to smuggling would have beach
blankets on hand. Well. Plenty of beaches off-Earth, though most of them are
situated on the worlds of other stars. I remembered one. It'd had white sand,
powdery, like confectioner's sugar, and Procyon had been a painful silvery spark
in a deep green sky, quiet ocean lapping nearby, ultramarine, with a little
golden glitter marking each curl of wave.
Beside me, the chief of the Red Devil Bummers said, "I'm sorry we worked her
over, too, Merry."
Looking up from the portanode I'd gotten from the smuggler captain as part of
the deal, I could see he and his buddies were trying unsuccessfully not to
watch. "I wouldn't worry about it, Don. Men were made for what she was made to
be."
He said, "What about you?"
What was I made to be? I laughed. "I'm just being punished. Pheromones in my
nose with nowhere to go."
"Punished," he said, looking at me, questioning. "The Venusberg Strangler.
God, Merry. You seem like such a nice guy."
I snapped the portanode shut, blanking away Teddy's sad, fat face, then said,
"Hey, you're not a woman, are you, Don?" and thought about what it would feel
like to separate the hairy smuggler's skull from his spine. Getting to like that
now, aren't we, Sarge? I wondered if the black helicopters had gotten to
Sinclair in time. Once your neck's broke, you've got a few minutes to get on
life support before your brain turns to soup.
Don said, "You think these guys can get you where you need to be next?"
Plan C? Watching hairy buttocks rise and fall, I shrugged, tapping the
portanode softly. "Maybe so."
The naked smuggler, finished, stood up from her, sweaty face exhausted,
fatigued mouth hanging open, staggering a little, maybe looking like he wanted
to fall right down. Looking up at him, legs still spread, Sparrow laughed and
shouted, "
Next!"
The smuggler looked like he wanted to kick her then.
Careful what you wish for, boys.
· · · · ·
The shell ticketing agent had barely taken his last thrust when I grabbed him by
his long, greasy black hair, wrapping my fingers around the base of his pony
tail, pulling his head back far enough I could cup his chin in my other palm.
Pull. Twist. Crack-o.
He made a startled gurgle, spasmed, relaxed.
Under him, Sparrow stiffened and whispered, "Ooooohhh …" Face suffusing with
pleasure.
I lifted him gently off her, setting him to one side on the floor. Sparrow
stayed where she was, shiny with sweat, eyes shut, slowly running her fingers up
and down her abdomen, shivering lightly, then cupping her hands over her vulva.
"You okay?"
She nodded. "He got real stiff when you did that. Like he was having another
orgasm." Her eyes opened, looking into mine. She said, "I'm glad you let me
finish with him first, Merry."
I nodded, helping her to her feet, drying her off with the ticket agent's
bedding. While she was getting dressed, I balled him up, listening to the soft
whisper of his last breath as I squeezed it from his lungs, binding him up in a
ball, wrapping him in the blanket. His eyes were still open and, somewhere
inside, he was probably still alive, still conscious, growing woozy perhaps,
flooded with horror.
I looked out through the ticket agent's apartment window and said, "It'll be
darktime soon. We can take him outside and stash him somewhere." Not that it
really mattered. Someone will notice he's missing, not doing his job anymore,
but that will be the end of it. A new ticket agent will move in and do the job
and not wonder what became of his predecessor.
Outside, the transit habitat's stemshine was beginning to dull into orange,
would soon turn dull violet, letting the world within dim to a simulacrum of
night. All around us, you could see shadows filling the vegetation, lights
starting to come on in the low buildings, the pseudotown that made this
imitation of a world.
Four kilometers long, by one in diameter. Barely enough space for its
intended passenger compliment of ten thousand to get by on what had once been
the long, long voyage between the stars. The relativistic cyclers had been
obsolete for a hundred years, though they'd made do for another little while
with the installation of a first-generation hyperdrive.
Now, with the new advanced stardrives growing cheaper and cheaper, they'd
become cargo hulls, and a way for the poor to make their way between far-apart
worlds.
Another generation, and they'd be gone.
I dragged the ticket agent to the door, leaving him just inside 'til it got a
little darker. Sparrow was standing by the window, looking up into the pseudosky,
where you could pretend the lights of tiny, inverted apartment buildings were
square yellow stars.
No windows to the universe beyond. Anyway, the one time I'd seen into
hyperspace, it'd looked like an Edvard Munch painting.
I said, "While you were busy, I broke into the ticket agent's node. It's got
better access rights than the one the smugglers sold us."
She kept her back toward me, seeming to hug herself, hands coming up over her
arms.
Then she whispered, "Couldn't we just stay here forever?"
Right. Stay here forever, so you can fuck the men, and I can kill them, and
we all live happily ever after. I put my arms around her, slowly turned her to
face me, took her head between my palms and tipped it back, so she had to look
into my eyes again.
She leaned into me, putting her arms around the barrel of my chest,
straddling my thigh, grinding against me hard, and said, "I'm sorry, Merry."
I held her tight, wishing there was something meaningful I could say or do.
· · · · ·
They call the place 61 Cygni C-16, and I'd been here before. When I was in the
Guard, we'd taken to calling it the Mauve Star's Planet, something from a book,
I think. One of Sinclair's junior officers had apparently majored in late
medieval literature while he was in ROTC and was always yammering about "therms"
and "frigi-plasmic life forms." Stuff like that, but the place didn't really
have a name. Stark realization: Sparrow'd been here before, too. Well, no.
Senator Valentine had.
Sparrow and I were riding through the forested hills above Baidarka 6 Admin
Center in a rented Volvo Planetokhod Jeepster, nothing in our ears but the click
of our rebreather valves, the soft whisper of static in the headphones.
When I'd been here before, during the Police Action, I'd mostly been on the
nighttime part of the farside, and there'd been a dark, starry sky overhead the
whole time. Here and now, B was still up, rising wan and yellow over the
southern horizon, rising into a deep violet sky lit by A's tiny disk, dominated
by the vast, sullen coal of C, the Mauve Star, circling A once every five years
or so.
Darker than a moonlit night. There were a few bright stars here and there,
familiar negative-magnitude giants, familiar as the constellations of night had
been, 3.42 parsecs from Earth. That same junior officer had called the Earth's
sun Sol 357, as if it had a real name, too. I'd been to Wolf 359 once and
figured the storyist who made up the name picked the number for its flavor of
familiarity, so he could go ahead and just call all the other stars suns, when
seen floating in a planetary sky.
I slowed up, going around a curve, and Sparrow suddenly put her hand on my
thigh, high up, not quite reaching into my crotch. I looked over at her briefly,
then put my eyes back on the road, which was barely more than a rutted track.
She said, "I'm scared, Merry."
"Me, too."
The forest around us was bare crystalline stalks, more like big dead glass
bushes than trees. No undergrowth. No nothing. When we stopped the jeep, you
could hear a tiny faraway tinkle, stalks of glass rustling in the gentle breeze.
She said, "You suppose Mrs. Valentine would've been scared?"
"I didn't know Mrs. Valentine."
Silence. Then, "Me, neither."
I wanted to pull the jeep over, get us out of our masks, hold her close,
nuzzle her face, do something, anything, to comfort her. But the air here was
800 millibars of dry nitrogen mixed with a thin leavening of aromatic
hydrocarbons.
The tiny seas here, big lakes really, were chemical salt water with a lot of
dissolved ethanol. I'm told the seawater tastes like a vodka tonic, though if
you take more than a sip you get deathly ill from the metal salts. I knew a few
guys wound up in sick bay that way.
Down by the seas, you can still see some of the residual native life forms,
things like black stromatolites, flatworms the size of your finger squirming in
the sand. I'd seen pictures of life in the seas, mainly stuff like leathery
jellyfish and sheets of black rubber "algae."
Life here had barely started its climb onto the land when we showed up.
Useless. Until we got to Delta Pavonis II and discovered a similar sort of world
with a much richer biosphere. I could picture some scientibureaucrat turning to
his little buddies in a meeting, somewhere, sometime: "Hey, I got a
great
idea! Let's Pavoniform the place!"
So. Animal-like things, plant-like things, the Pavonian surrogates for fungi
and bacteria. Whatever those wonderful "dry-land ecologists" thought was
necessary. Sort of worked, I guess. Here's the forest primeval and...
We rounded a boulder, and there the rutted track was blocked by a pile of
fallen glass vegetation, a couple of dozen "tree trunks" stretching from one
side to the other, touching glass forest on either side. Sparrow's hand on my
thigh squeezed tight as I slowed to a stop, put the jeep transmission in neutral
and set the brake lock.
I patted her hand. "Nobody's after us, Sparrow."
She said, "What if those people you talked to lied to us? What if they turned
us in?"
Big black spiders the size of Airedale terriers started creeping around the
sides of the roadblock, surrounding the jeep as Sparrow's hand froze. I patted
it again, unclipped my seat harness and got out, stretching the kinks in my
back. We'd been driving for hours.
Funny thing about the Pavoniforming of 61 Cygni C-16. Some of the animals
they brought in had had crude tools of a sort, mainly sharpened bits of glass
forest vegetation. Maybe better than the stalks of grass and chewed-leaf sponges
the chimps had had when they still existed, not so impressive as Homo habilis'
broken cobble choppers.
Funny thing. These Pavionians, involuntary colonists, all had little glass
spears, except the one right in front of me, who had a paralo-ray pistol clipped
to a D-ring on the little green plastic harness it wore, the only one of them
not naked. It shifted the gun with the tips of its two front legs, handling it a
little like a rifle, looping a third leg tip through the trigger guard.
Sparrow, frightened, softly said, "Merry?"
I searched the top of the fuzzy black body, looking for things like eyes, but
couldn't find any, noticing the neat way that third leg bent as it pressed
lightly against the trigger button. I guess having ten legs, each with a sliver
of retractile claw on the end, is a pretty good substitute for fingers.
I said, "Get out of the jeep, Sparrow. Come over here."
When she'd done so, the gun-toting spider backed away, keeping the gun on us,
and a lane opened among the others, directing us toward one side of the
roadblock.
She whispered, "Can they talk?"
"I don't think so. Nobody officially knows how they communicate; when I was
here, supposedly they didn't, but I guess the human rebels figured something
out."
I don't know what I was expecting on the other side of that glassy rubbish
pile. A little gray fat man, maybe, with eyes only for Sparrow? It was a tall
skinny guy in worn-out old fatigues, straw-colored hair sticking out from under
his cap, washed-out blue eyes staring through his rebreather mask goggles.
He held out a hand, "Long time no see, Sarge."
"Who …"
"Dempsey."
I searched my memory. Maybe …
"Just a recruit, Sarge. Squad Eight. Missing in action, Month Five."
Vaguely, I remembered a skinny kid with eyes like these, messy hair that kept
getting him on report, though not by me. I took his hand, squeezed it gently.
He squeezed back, said, "This way, please." Looked at Sparrow and said,
"Senator?"
Beyond the roadblock, we heard the jeep start up and begin driving away.
· · · · ·
I stood in the mouth of a cave, looking out over a broad valley, up through a
light gasohol rain at the Mauve Star nailed to its place in the dim, vivid sky.
Funny. I keep waiting for it to move, but it never does.
There was mist in the valley, white tendrils tinted faint pastel by the
violet light curling among the silver glass trees, little turquoise pond down on
the bottom land stained with a purple reflection of the Mauve Star.
I could feel my heart pounding in my chest, feel how terribly frightened I
was. There was the scuff of a footfall behind me, and, when I turned, here was
the little fat man at last.
He said, "Sergeant Atkins?"
I smiled. "They call me Merry now."
His eyes flinched slightly, jerking away from my face, coming back. "She
calls you Merry."
She.
I tried to imagine that terrible reunion scene. Tried to imagine him knowing
what had been done to her, what she'd become, knowing she didn't remember him at
all.
He said, "After the surgery, won't you want your name back?"
I smiled. "The man who was Sergeant Atkins has been gone a long time." What's
it to be, Tommy this an' Tommy that? I said, "He turned into the Venusberg
Strangler, then into …
this." I spread my hands, palms toward him. "Maybe
a new name. Some combination …"
His smile warmed up, and suddenly I could see what Sarah MacKay Valentine
might have wanted with a little gray fat man. "What, Merry Strangler?"
It made me grin, despite the terror strangling my guts. Then I said, "What's
going to happen next?"
His smiled faded. "To you?"
I shook my head. "I know what's going to happen to me. But …" I gestured out
at the red-lit landscape.
He said, "Maybe you don't realize what you've done, Sergeant." His eyes, not
looking at me, grew far, far away. "By this time next year, President Gortex
will be impeached and removed from office. By this time next year, perhaps,
Speaker Summerbird and his little buddies will be sitting on a prison asteroid
somewhere, starting their re-education program." He made a smilelike grimace,
coming back from next year for a moment, glancing at me. "You took care of Mr.
Barr for us, Merry. Guess we won't have to worry about him."
True.
Then he said, "When the word gets out, of what was done to her … Maybe by
this time next year, Mrs. Valentine will be taking the oath of office, and …"
His eyes misted up suddenly, making him turn away to look down into the little
valley again. A soft whisper, "Maybe the common scum will be taking their
government back at last from …"
I put my strangler's hand on his shoulder and squeezed lightly. "She'll be
all right. When the doctors restore her personality, they'll take away all
memory of …"
He twisted out from under my hand, looking up at me, eyes flooded with pain.
"She told them to leave it intact."
"But …" The trauma that would result when they combined Senator Valentine
with the woman Sparrow had become …
Teddy Valentine said, "She wants to remember you, Merry."
My turn to look away, landscape suddenly blurred. After a bit, I said, "What
about the prisoners in Blue Heaven? What about that?"
"It'll be publicized, when the time comes."
When the time comes. "And until then?" Suddenly, the image of Janet, Janet
and her dead children, drowned for the sake of love, rose up out of the inner
darkness.
"Sparrow says they've been punished enough. Mrs. Valentine won't forget that,
either."
There was another scuffing footfall in the cave mouth behind us. It was a
little blue-eyed, blonde woman, dressed in green surgical scrubs. She said,
"We're ready for you now, Sergeant Atkins." No fear in her eyes, only kindness,
though she must know who I am, what they were bringing back into being.
I nodded, heart thundering, and took a step to follow her, wondering what I'd
do with myself when it was all over.
"Merry."
I turned back to face the little gray fat man.
He said, "I want you to remember something. The man who counts isn't the one
who wins. It's the one who does the right thing."
I nodded and turned away, wondering if the one right thing I'd done would
ever be enough.
The End
Author Biography and Bibliography
William Barton was born in Boston in 1950 and currently resides
in Durham, North Carolina. For the first half his adult life, Barton was an
engineering technician specializing in military and industrial technology,
before switching to information technology on the theory that it would be nice
to work indoors, warm and dry in the winter, cool and dry in the summer. He was
at one time employed by the Department of Defense and worked on the nation's
nuclear submarine fleet. He is currently a freelance writer and software
architect.
Novels
When We Were Real, 1999
White Light (with Michael Capobianco), 1998
Alpha Centauri (with Michael Capobianco), 1997
Acts of Conscience, 1997
The Transmigration of Souls, 1996
When Heaven Fell, 1995
Dark Sky Legion, 1992
Fellow Traveler (with Michael Capobianco), 1991
Iris (with Michael Capobianco), 1990
A Plague of All Cowards, 1976
Hunting On Kunderer, 1973
Short Fiction
"The Woman in the Door," Night Terrors, forthcoming
"Off On a Starship," Asimov's Science Fiction, Sep. 2003
"The Man Who Counts," SciFiction/scifi.com, Summer 2003
"The Engine of Desire," Asimov's Science Fiction, Aug. 2002
"Right to Life," Talebones #24, Spring 2002
"At the Instantaneous Center of Rotation," North Carolina Literary Review,
Sep./Oct. 2001
"Home is Where the Heart Is," Drakas, Nov. 2000
"Heart of Glass", Asimov's Science Fiction, Jan. 2000
"Soldiers Home," Asimov's Science Fiction, May 1999
"Down in the Dark," Asimov's Science Fiction, Dec. 1998
"Thematic Torus in Search of a Cusp" (with Michael Capobianco), Amazing
Stories, Oct. 1998
"Changes," Aboriginal Science Fiction, Summer 1996
"Age of Aquarius," Asimov's Science Fiction, May 1996
"When a Man's an Empty Kettle," Full Spectrum 5, Aug. 1995
"In Saturn Time," Amazing Stories: the Anthology, May 1995
"The Adventure of the Russian Grave" (with Michael Capobianco), Sherlock
Holmes in Orbit, Feb. 1995
"Forever," Tomorrow Speculative Fiction #6, Dec. 1993
"Yellow Matter," a signed, limited-edition chapbook, Oct. 1993
"Almost Forever," Tomorrow Speculative Fiction #5, Oct. 1993
"Slowly Comes a Hungry People," Interzone #71, May 1993
Other
"Harvesting the Near-Earthers," (with Michael Capobianco), Ad Astra,
Nov. 1989
"Dr. Zook's Asteroid Detector," (with Michael Capobianco), Final Frontier,
May/Jun. 1989
"The Land of Bulging Files," 80 Micro, Oct. 1987
"The Mad Poet," Commodore Power/play, Aug./Sep. 1986