Perchevski stared out the window as the airbus banked into its
Geneva approach. Something was happening down by the lake. A
cluster of flashing red lights hugged the shore.
“Ladies and gentlemen, this is your pilot. Air Traffic
Control has asked me to relay a Security Service warning.
There’s trouble on the northbound traffic tube. Terrorists
have occupied Number Three Station. They could try to retreat
through the tubeway or take passenger hostages. The tube is open,
but you’ll have to use it at your own risk.”
Perchevski watched the flashing lights and darting gnat figures
of Zone police till the bus dropped too low. Later, as he crossed
the tarmac to a waiting hovercar, he heard the shooting. An
occasional explosion drowned the titter of light weaponry.
“They’re putting up a fight,” said the rating
leaning against the groundcar. “Sir.”
“Sounds like. What do they want?”
The rating shrugged, opened the passenger side door. “I
don’t think anybody asked, sir. The Zonies don’t bother
anymore. They just shoot them and get ready for the next
bunch.” He closed the door, moved to the pilot’s side.
“Company office, sir?”
“Yes. Who are they? How did they get in?”
“A new mob, sir. Call themselves the Ninth of June. I
don’t know what it means.”
“Neither do I.”
“They broke through at Checkpoint Ahrsen yesterday. Usual
surprise attack. Another mob hit there the day before and the
Zonies didn’t get everything put back together fast enough.
They always find a way. We had a bunch come in by hot air balloon
last year.”
Perchevski left the car for the office where he had helped Greta
Helsung catch her rainbow. He checked in, said he was returning to
Luna Command, and glanced over what they had on the girl. An hour
later he was headed for the lakeside launch pits. He drew the same
driver. This time the rating regaled him with a saga concerning his
conquest of a “pink patch lady.” She had loved him so
much she had almost enlisted.
“Pink patch” people were Old Earthers who worked in
the Zone but lived outside. The uniform patch was their entry
permit. Each was Kirlian keyed to prevent terrorist use.
Perchevski was back in his lunar apartment before bedtime next
evening. He took a pill and put himself out for twelve hours. Old
Earth and his mother had been a miserable mistake.
He did not check his calls right away. He did not want to risk
finding a summons from the Bureau.
There was none. The only messages were from Max and Greta. Max
was missing him. Greta was scared and lonely and amazed by
everything.
Perchevski reacted to Greta’s call first He remembered how
frightened and lonely he had been when he had come to Academy. Even
hating home, he had been dreadfully homesick.
He made a call to Academy Information, learned that Greta had
been assigned to a training battalion, but the battalion had not
begun training. The rigorous discipline of Academy would not
isolate her for weeks. She could have visitors. She would be
allowed a weekly visit from her sponsor after she began
training.
“Things have changed since my day, Lieutenant,” he
told the woman handling his call.
“Since mine, too, Commander. We’re getting
soft.”
“Maybe. Seems like a step in the right direction to me.
I’ll be there this evening. I’d appreciate it if
you’d let me surprise her.”
“Whatever you say, Commander.”
“Thanks for your time, Lieutenant.”
He settled back in his bed, stared at the ceiling, and wondered
why he was sponsoring a kid he hardly knew. Sponsorship was serious
business. His reponsibility under Lunar law equaled that of a
parent.
“Will you sponsor?” the man had asked, and he had
responded without thinking.
How could he do right by Greta? In his line of
work . . . Maybe Beckhart would move him to a
staff post.
“Old buddy, you backed yourself into a corner this time.
How do you get into these things?”
Ah, what was the worry? Greta would be locked up in Academy for
four years. She would have no chance for anything but training and
study. His sponsorship would not amount to anything but quotations
in her files. She would reach the age of responsibility before she
graduated.
Maybe he knew that unconsciously when he agreed.
He called Max. No answer.
He donned his Commander’s uniform and took the
high-velocity tube to Academy Station. The tube passed through the
core of the moon. Academy was Farside.
Though he still used the Perchevski name, he had abandoned the
Missileman’s uniform after High Command had announced von
Drachau’s raid. There seemed little point to the
pretense.
The Bureau apparently agreed. No one had called him on it.
The tubeways were the gossip shops of Luna Command. There
strangers whiled away the long transits by dissecting the latest in
scandal and rumor. It was there that Perchevski first heard the
March of Ulant discussed seriously.
Max had talked about it, of course. But Max was a civ. Max had
been retailing fourth-hand merchandise. The people he overheard
were Planetary Defense Corps general staff officers from worlds far
centerward of Sol. They were in Luna Command for a series of
high-powered defense strategy seminars.
Cold fear breathed down Perchevski’s neck. The what might
be debatable, but he could no longer deny that something spooky was
going on.
He had been seeing the colorful and sometimes odd uniforms of
the local forces everywhere he had gone lately. There were even a
few from worlds not part of Confederation.
No wonder there were rumors of war.
He checked in with the local office when he arrived. He was
wearing the ring, of course, but redundancy of action and mistrust
of technology were Bureau axioms. A staff type told a computer
terminal where he was, then in boredom resumed watching a
holodrama. He caught a bus to Academy’s visitors’
hotel.
Academy was an almost autonomous fortress-State within the
fortress-world of Luna Command. Nearly ten percent of the
moon’s surface and volume had been set aside for the school,
which trained every Service officer and almost half of all enlisted
personnel. Academy contained all the staff colleges, war colleges,
and headquarters of special warfare schools which kept the Service
honed to a fighting edge. At times as many as two million people
taught and studied there.
Perchevski had spent eight years in Academy, glimpsing the
outside universe only rarely. Passes had been few in his day. Going
out usually meant having to take part in some very active training
exercise. There had been no time left over for sightseeing.
He was supposed to have graduated as a dedicated, unquestioning
Confederation warrior. He supposed even the best systems made
mistakes.
He enjoyed his venture into the old, familiar halls, remembering
incidents, recalling classmates he had not thought of in years. He
was amused by all the bright, freshly scrubbed young faces behind
those snappy salutes.
Greta’s battalion was quartered not far from the barracks
his own had occupied. He spent an hour ambling through school days
memories.
It was late when he located the officer of Greta’s
Training Battalion. The date-letter designation on the door could
be interpreted to tell that Greta’s was the forty-third
officer candidate unit activated in 3047. He whistled softly. They
were taking candidates at a wartime rate.
There must be something to the rumors.
Nothing else would explain why Greta had been assigned to an
officer training unit almost instantaneously.
A rating was closing the office. “You the officer looking
for the Helsung girl?”
“Yes, Chief. Sorry I’m late.”
The petty officer muttered something sarcastic.
“That attitude going to relay itself to the middies,
Chief?”
“Sorry, sir. It’s been a bad day.”
“Where can I find her?”
“Alpha Company. Room Twenty-five. We’re just
starting the battalion, sir. It’s one of your remedials, for
candidates without a Service background.”
“Thanks, Chief. Go ahead and close up. Ill only stay a few
minutes.”
Perchevski entered the barracks block. Generations of midshipmen
had passed through it. The air was heavy with age. And human scent.
He found A Corridor and followed it, glancing at the name tags on
the cubicle doors. He located helsung, greta: hamburg, earth,
paired with james, leslie from someplace on Sierra called Token
Offering. No one answered his knock.
He followed the noise of a holoset on to the company commons.
Some twenty youngsters were watching holo or playing games without
enthusiasm. Homesickness thickened the air.
Greta sat in a vinyl-covered armchair. She had heels pulled up
against her behind. Her arm embraced her knees. She had an air of
infinite sadness, of unspeakable loneliness.
A ten-year-old with a boarding school voice snapped, “
’Ten-shut!”
“As you were, people.”
Greta hurled herself at him. She flung her arms around his neck.
“I didn’t think I’d ever see you
again.”
“Easy, girl. Don’t break anything.” He felt
better about himself suddenly. It was great to have someone glad to
see him.
“How come you’re here? I thought you were going to
see your mother?”
“I did. We were both disappointed.”
“Oh. I’m sorry.”
“It’s all right. I didn’t expect much. Come
on. Sit down. How’s it going? What do you think of the
moon?”
“I haven’t seen anything yet. Everything’s
bigger than I thought it would be. What’s happening back
home?”
“Nothing new. Homesick?”
She shook her head.
“Fibber. I was here too, remember? And I still get
homesick. That’s why I go back sometimes. Of course, I came
up with Neil Armstrong . . . ”
“Don’t tease me.”
“All right. Tell you what. I talked to your company
commander . . . ”
“Old Greasy Hair? I hate him already.”
Perchevski laughed. “You’ll hate him a lot more
before you’re done. He’s going to be your father,
mother, priest, god, and devil. Look, do you want to see the rest
of the moon? You won’t have a chance after classes
start.”
“Don’t you have something better to do? You’ve
got your job, and your own
friends . . . ”
“I’m on vacation. Sort of. And I don’t have
many friends here.”
“I don’t want to put you out.” A skinny little
black girl with pigtailed hair, wearing a ragged woolen smock, was
staring at them. “Oh. Leslie. Come here. This is Leslie
James, Commander. My roommate.”
“Hi, Les. Where is Token Offering? I visited Sierra once,
but I don’t remember it.”
The girl said something into a mouth full of fingers and
retreated.
“She’s shy,” Greta said. “Her parents
must be dead. She came from an orphanage.”
“We’re all orphans, one way or another. Navy is our
family.”
Greta looked at him oddly. Then, “Can we take her with us
if we go?”
“Uhm. You’re starting to understand already. I
don’t know. It might be complicated. I’ll ask if you
want.”
“I think so.”
“Okay. I’d better go. It’s past visiting
hours. I just wanted to see how you were. I’ll be back
tomorrow.”
She squeezed his hand. “Thank you. For everything.”
Her hands were soft and smooth and warm.
He spent the evening entertaining fantasies he would never
pursue.
The inside man never ages. He spends the rest of his life in
love with the soft, smooth, warm girls he knew when he was young
and just becoming aware of what marvelous creatures females
are.
“Where do you want to go, girls?” They were at
Academy Station. Perchevski was watching Greta try to people-watch
without being offensive. Oddly uniformed folks surrounded them.
“I don’t know,” Greta replied.
Luna Command was no sightseer’s paradise. It had no
spectacular ruins or monuments. The real sights were outside, the
mountains and craters of the surface.
He took the girls to Tycho Dome and for a ride on one of the
surface trains. He treated them to the best restaurants and hotels.
Greta’s response was gratifying, Leslie’s remote.
He ran out of ideas after two days. All but the alien digs, and
he had promised those to Max.
Max could take the pressure off. She would have
ideas . . . He took the girls to her shop.
“Hello, Walter,” Max said. Her voice was chilly. She
stared at Greta. Greta did not notice. She was engrossed in the
showcases.
“Hi, Lady. Anything for me?”
“Same old stuff. Is that what you’ve been doing
since you got back?”
“Come on, Max! She’s sixteen. Greta, come here. I
want you to meet Max. Max, Greta Helsung and her friend
Leslie.”
Greta was not imperceptive. “Hi, Max. The Commander is my
sponsor.”
“Your sponsor? You never told me you had a kid,
Walter.”
“I’m a man of mystery, Love.”
“How come she calls you Walter? Your name is
Cornelius.”
“Because he’s a man of mystery, dear,” Max
replied. “Everybody has a different name for him. He’s
some kind of spy. I don’t think he knows his real name
himself.”
“Max . . . ”
“Wow! Really?”
“Yes. Really. Max, you talk too much. I came here to see
if you still wanted to go to the Farside dig.”
Someone entered the shop behind him. Max said hello.
“Hi, tall, blonde, and desirable. Thomas? Is that you?
What the hell are you doing here?”
Perchevski turned.
Mouse had come in. He gave Greta an admiring once-over.
“That’s right. You know Max, don’t you? Max, I
really want that Manchurian collection, but you’re going to
have to come down on it. It’s just not worth twelve
thousand.”
“I can see what you want. Hands off. She’s your
buddy’s kid. And I can get fifteen if I send it out to
Amonhotep.” To Greta she explained, “This is one of
your old man’s buddies. He’s a spy too.”
Perchevski shook his head. “She’s in a Roman candle
mood today, Mouse. I come in to ask her out and she plays mad dog
with me. I didn’t know you were a collector.”
“Lot of things we don’t know about each
other.” That seemed to close the subject.
“Mouse and I were in the same battalion in Academy,”
Perchevski told Greta.
Mouse gave the girl another admiring look. She moved closer to
Perchevski, as if feeling for a protective shadow. Mouse smiled
gently and resumed arguing with Max.
Perchevski wondered how he could demonstrate, to her
satisfaction, that she was not in competition with inconquerable
youth.
“Max, you want to go to the Farside digs or
not?”
“When it’s convenient.”
“Are you really a spy, Commander?”
“I guess you could put it that way, Greta. How about after
work, Max?”
“You sure you won’t be busy?”
Perchevski closed his eyes, took a long, deep breath, released
it. Be patient, he told himself.
“What’s your real name?” Greta asked. Mouse
watched, his expression unreadable.
“Honey, sometimes I’m not sure myself. Don’t
worry about it. It doesn’t matter. If you need to get in
touch, just call the number I gave you. If I can’t get back
to you, one of my friends will.”
“But . . . ”
“Forget it. Subject closed. Max, are you going to the digs
or not?”
“You don’t have to get snappy, Walter. Yes.
I’m coming. What about you, Mouse?”
“Me?”
“Yes. You want to see that new chamber? They think it
might shed some light on the Sangaree. There’re some
primitive murals that might be of human origin. On a Noah’s
ark theme, with spaceships. Or aren’t you the culture
type?”
“Sure. Why not?” He looked at Perchevski as if in
appeal.
“I don’t know, Mouse. Maybe it’s the
change.” Why was Mouse attaching himself? Because of the
Sangaree remark? Or because the Old Man wanted somebody to keep an
eye on him? After what had happened on The Broken Wings, Beckhart
would be wondering about him.
The girls slept during the tube trip. Perchevski and Mouse
played chess on Mouse’s pocket set. Prodded by Max, Mouse
related several anecdotes about Perchevski while saying nothing
about himself. Perchevski let him set the limits.
Max did not seem the least interested in his former partner.
Both men loosened up on sips from a flask Max dug out of her
jumpsuit. “Emergency rations,” she claimed.
“Good thinking,” Perchevski told her.
“What is this? A class reunion?” she demanded toward
trip’s end.
Mouse and Perchevski had begun playing remember when. They were
reliving the Great Sunjammer Race of ’29, in which they had
crewed a ship and had beaten the best starwind yachtsmen in
Confederation. That fluke victory was one of the brightest of
Perchevski’s memories.
He and Mouse had been a team then, almost friends, and for a few
days afterward they had been closer than ever before or since.
“Those were the days,” Mouse said, ignoring Max.
“Wish we could be kids forever. Think we could do it
again?”
“Getting too old.”
“Nah. I think I’ll check it out. Just for the hell
of it. Want to try it? If I can find a ship?”
Perchevski laughed. “Better find the time off, first.
We’re almost there.” The capsule had begun
decelerating. “I’ll wake the girls.”
They reached the digs an hour later.
The one-time alien base was being unearthed, studied, and
explored at a snail’s pace. The xenoarchaeologists had been
working for decades, and might be at it for centuries. They sifted
every grain of lunar dust, and preserved it. They did not want to
miss a thing, even through ignorance.
Thus far the base had revealed more about humanity’s past
than it had about its builders.
The scientists had concluded that the station had served both
scientific and military purposes, and had been occupied
continuously for at least ten millennia. It seemed to have been
abandoned approximately eleven centuries before its discovery, just
as Mankind teetered on the brink of its first tentative step into
space.
Perchevski and his companions began with the museum of recovered
artifacts, most of which were everyday items comparable to human
combs, tableware, worn-out socks, pill bottles, broken furniture,
and the like. The aliens had taken their fancy hardware with
them.
“Ooh!” Greta said as they approached a group of wax
figurines. “They were ugly.”
“Notice anything about them, Greta?” Perchevski
asked.
“Besides ugly?”
“Yes. Look at how they’re dressed. Think. All the
legends about little people. Gnomes, dwarves, elves,
leprechauns . . . The kobolds, where you come
from.” The largest alien figurine stood just a meter
tall.
“Yeah. You’re right. You know there’re still
people that believe in them? One time, I guess I was ten, we went
on a field trip to the Black Forest. There was this old caretaker,
a kind of forest ranger, who told us all these stories about the
kobolds in the woods.”
Max interjected, “I think it’s more interesting that
they resemble the spacemen of the UFO era.”
Everyone looked at her. “Oh, it’s not my idea. I
just liked it. It was on the educational channel one time. In the
old days people used to see what they called flying saucers.
Sometimes they claimed that space people talked to them. They
described them like this. But nobody ever believed them.”
“Where are they now?” Leslie asked.
“Nobody knows,” Perchevski replied. “They just
disappeared. Nobody’s found any other traces of them, either.
Ulant got into space before we did, and they never ran into
them.”
“What if they’re still watching?” Mouse
asked.
Perchevski gave him a funny look.
“Spooky idea, isn’t it? Let’s look at that new
chamber. Max says they found some stuff there that isn’t just
cafeteria or rec room equipment.”
Maybe not. Perchevski could not guess what it might have been.
The chamber was large and well-preserved, with most of its
furnishings intact and in place. “Parallel function ought to
result in parallel structure,” he said. “Meaning you
ought to be able to figure what this stuff is.” All he
recognized were the faded mural walls, which looked somewhat
Minoan. He would have bet his fortune they had been done by human
artists. Those he could see seemed to tell some sort of quest
story.
“It’s a solarium,” Greta said. “Without
sun.”
“A hydroponics farm?”
“No. That’s not right. Hydroponics is
different.”
“What?”
“What I mean is, it’s almost like the Desert House
at the State Botanical Gardens in Berlin. See how the beds are laid
out? And those racks up there would hold the lights that make
plants think they’re getting sunshine.”
Mouse laughed. “By Jove, I think the lady has
something.” He indicated a small sign which proposed a
similar hypothesis. It also suggested that the painters of the
murals might have been humans who had become proto-Sangaree.
Mouse suddenly gasped and seized his left hand in his right.
Perchevski nearly screamed at the sharp agony surrounding his
call ring.
“What’s the matter?” Max and Greta
demanded.
“Oh, hell,” Perchevski intoned. “Here we go
again.”
“Let up, you bastards,” Mouse snarled. “We got
the message. We’re coming, for Christ’s sake. Business,
Max. We’ve been called in. And I mean in a hurry.
Thomas?”
“I’ll kill him. Just
when . . . Max . . . I’m
sorry.”
“What’s going on?” she asked again.
“We have to report in. Right now. Could you take the girls
back to barracks?”
“Business?” She sounded excited.
“Yeah. The bastards. Mouse, they said no more team
jobs.”
Mouse shrugged.
“I’ll get them home,” Max promised.
Perchevski kissed her, turned to Greta. “I’ve got to
run out on you, Honey. I’m sorry. I really am.”
“Thomas, come on. The Old Man means it.”
“Wait a minute, damn it! I don’t know how long
I’ll be gone, Greta. If you need something, call my number.
Or get ahold of Max. Okay, Max?”
“Sure.” Max did not sound enthusiastic.
“Thomas!”
He waved a hand, kissed Max again, then Greta, and trotted off
after Mouse. Greta called a sad, “Good-bye,
Commander.”
He was angry. He was ready to skin Beckhart with a butter
knife.
The chance never came. He and Mouse were seized by Mission Prep
the instant they hit Bureau territory.
The training was intense and merciless, and the explanations
impossibly far between. It went on around the clock, waking and
sleeping, and after a few weeks Perchevski was so tired and
disoriented that he was no longer sure who he was. Tiny,
unextinguishable sparks of anger were all that kept him going.
Education passed him to Psych. Psych eventually passed him to
Medical. For a week every opening of his eyes meant he was fresh
off another operating table. Then Education took another go at him.
While he recovered he had to read. And when he slept computers
pressure-injected information directly into his brain.
Dragons in the night. Golden chinese dragons.
Starfishers . . . What the hell was it all
about? Who was Moyshe benRabi? What was becoming of Cornelius
Perchevski?
Sometimes he screamed and fought them, but they were as stubborn
as entropy. They kept right on rebuilding their new man.
This was the most intensive, extensive prep he had ever
undergone.
He saw Mouse just twice during the whole prep period. They
shared the intense hypo-teaching sessions briefing them about
Starfishers, but did not intersect again till they met in their
master’s office. Perchevski thought they were prepping for
different missions. Till the Admiral got hold of them
personally.
“Boys,” Beckhart said, “you’ve just gone
through hell. And I did it to you. I’m not proud of it. It
hurt me as much as it hurt you. I don’t like operating this
way. You’ll just have to take my word that it’s
necessary. And I know what you think about that, Tommy. I
don’t blame you. But give me the benefit of the doubt, and
try to trust me when I tell you that it’s imperative that we
bring the Starfishers into Confederation as soon as
possible.”
Such was the opening barrage in a one-way discussion lasting
more than three hours. Beckhart talked endlessly, and never
answered even one of the questions Perchevski thought
pertinent.
He once protested, “You promised no more team
jobs.”
“And I meant it when I said it, Tommy. But this is the
most hurried hurry-up job we’ve ever had. The CNI told me to
put my best men in.
She picked you. My God, Tommy, it’s only for a couple of
weeks. You can’t put up with Mouse that long?”
“It’s the
principle . . . ”
Beckhart ignored him, veering instead into another track.
Almost before he knew what was happening Perchevski found
himself aboard a warship bound for the nether end of The Arm. For a
world that was, galactically, only a stone’s throw from The
Broken Wings.
He did not like that. It seemed to be tempting fate too
much.
There wasn’t a thing he did like about this mission.
They hadn’t even let him say his good-byes. Bureau thugs
had surrounded him from the moment he had departed Beckhart’s
office . . .
“Hey, Moyshe,” Mouse said cheerfully, within an hour
of their going aboard, let’s go up to the wardroom and
play some chess.”
Perchevski stared out the window as the airbus banked into its
Geneva approach. Something was happening down by the lake. A
cluster of flashing red lights hugged the shore.
“Ladies and gentlemen, this is your pilot. Air Traffic
Control has asked me to relay a Security Service warning.
There’s trouble on the northbound traffic tube. Terrorists
have occupied Number Three Station. They could try to retreat
through the tubeway or take passenger hostages. The tube is open,
but you’ll have to use it at your own risk.”
Perchevski watched the flashing lights and darting gnat figures
of Zone police till the bus dropped too low. Later, as he crossed
the tarmac to a waiting hovercar, he heard the shooting. An
occasional explosion drowned the titter of light weaponry.
“They’re putting up a fight,” said the rating
leaning against the groundcar. “Sir.”
“Sounds like. What do they want?”
The rating shrugged, opened the passenger side door. “I
don’t think anybody asked, sir. The Zonies don’t bother
anymore. They just shoot them and get ready for the next
bunch.” He closed the door, moved to the pilot’s side.
“Company office, sir?”
“Yes. Who are they? How did they get in?”
“A new mob, sir. Call themselves the Ninth of June. I
don’t know what it means.”
“Neither do I.”
“They broke through at Checkpoint Ahrsen yesterday. Usual
surprise attack. Another mob hit there the day before and the
Zonies didn’t get everything put back together fast enough.
They always find a way. We had a bunch come in by hot air balloon
last year.”
Perchevski left the car for the office where he had helped Greta
Helsung catch her rainbow. He checked in, said he was returning to
Luna Command, and glanced over what they had on the girl. An hour
later he was headed for the lakeside launch pits. He drew the same
driver. This time the rating regaled him with a saga concerning his
conquest of a “pink patch lady.” She had loved him so
much she had almost enlisted.
“Pink patch” people were Old Earthers who worked in
the Zone but lived outside. The uniform patch was their entry
permit. Each was Kirlian keyed to prevent terrorist use.
Perchevski was back in his lunar apartment before bedtime next
evening. He took a pill and put himself out for twelve hours. Old
Earth and his mother had been a miserable mistake.
He did not check his calls right away. He did not want to risk
finding a summons from the Bureau.
There was none. The only messages were from Max and Greta. Max
was missing him. Greta was scared and lonely and amazed by
everything.
Perchevski reacted to Greta’s call first He remembered how
frightened and lonely he had been when he had come to Academy. Even
hating home, he had been dreadfully homesick.
He made a call to Academy Information, learned that Greta had
been assigned to a training battalion, but the battalion had not
begun training. The rigorous discipline of Academy would not
isolate her for weeks. She could have visitors. She would be
allowed a weekly visit from her sponsor after she began
training.
“Things have changed since my day, Lieutenant,” he
told the woman handling his call.
“Since mine, too, Commander. We’re getting
soft.”
“Maybe. Seems like a step in the right direction to me.
I’ll be there this evening. I’d appreciate it if
you’d let me surprise her.”
“Whatever you say, Commander.”
“Thanks for your time, Lieutenant.”
He settled back in his bed, stared at the ceiling, and wondered
why he was sponsoring a kid he hardly knew. Sponsorship was serious
business. His reponsibility under Lunar law equaled that of a
parent.
“Will you sponsor?” the man had asked, and he had
responded without thinking.
How could he do right by Greta? In his line of
work . . . Maybe Beckhart would move him to a
staff post.
“Old buddy, you backed yourself into a corner this time.
How do you get into these things?”
Ah, what was the worry? Greta would be locked up in Academy for
four years. She would have no chance for anything but training and
study. His sponsorship would not amount to anything but quotations
in her files. She would reach the age of responsibility before she
graduated.
Maybe he knew that unconsciously when he agreed.
He called Max. No answer.
He donned his Commander’s uniform and took the
high-velocity tube to Academy Station. The tube passed through the
core of the moon. Academy was Farside.
Though he still used the Perchevski name, he had abandoned the
Missileman’s uniform after High Command had announced von
Drachau’s raid. There seemed little point to the
pretense.
The Bureau apparently agreed. No one had called him on it.
The tubeways were the gossip shops of Luna Command. There
strangers whiled away the long transits by dissecting the latest in
scandal and rumor. It was there that Perchevski first heard the
March of Ulant discussed seriously.
Max had talked about it, of course. But Max was a civ. Max had
been retailing fourth-hand merchandise. The people he overheard
were Planetary Defense Corps general staff officers from worlds far
centerward of Sol. They were in Luna Command for a series of
high-powered defense strategy seminars.
Cold fear breathed down Perchevski’s neck. The what might
be debatable, but he could no longer deny that something spooky was
going on.
He had been seeing the colorful and sometimes odd uniforms of
the local forces everywhere he had gone lately. There were even a
few from worlds not part of Confederation.
No wonder there were rumors of war.
He checked in with the local office when he arrived. He was
wearing the ring, of course, but redundancy of action and mistrust
of technology were Bureau axioms. A staff type told a computer
terminal where he was, then in boredom resumed watching a
holodrama. He caught a bus to Academy’s visitors’
hotel.
Academy was an almost autonomous fortress-State within the
fortress-world of Luna Command. Nearly ten percent of the
moon’s surface and volume had been set aside for the school,
which trained every Service officer and almost half of all enlisted
personnel. Academy contained all the staff colleges, war colleges,
and headquarters of special warfare schools which kept the Service
honed to a fighting edge. At times as many as two million people
taught and studied there.
Perchevski had spent eight years in Academy, glimpsing the
outside universe only rarely. Passes had been few in his day. Going
out usually meant having to take part in some very active training
exercise. There had been no time left over for sightseeing.
He was supposed to have graduated as a dedicated, unquestioning
Confederation warrior. He supposed even the best systems made
mistakes.
He enjoyed his venture into the old, familiar halls, remembering
incidents, recalling classmates he had not thought of in years. He
was amused by all the bright, freshly scrubbed young faces behind
those snappy salutes.
Greta’s battalion was quartered not far from the barracks
his own had occupied. He spent an hour ambling through school days
memories.
It was late when he located the officer of Greta’s
Training Battalion. The date-letter designation on the door could
be interpreted to tell that Greta’s was the forty-third
officer candidate unit activated in 3047. He whistled softly. They
were taking candidates at a wartime rate.
There must be something to the rumors.
Nothing else would explain why Greta had been assigned to an
officer training unit almost instantaneously.
A rating was closing the office. “You the officer looking
for the Helsung girl?”
“Yes, Chief. Sorry I’m late.”
The petty officer muttered something sarcastic.
“That attitude going to relay itself to the middies,
Chief?”
“Sorry, sir. It’s been a bad day.”
“Where can I find her?”
“Alpha Company. Room Twenty-five. We’re just
starting the battalion, sir. It’s one of your remedials, for
candidates without a Service background.”
“Thanks, Chief. Go ahead and close up. Ill only stay a few
minutes.”
Perchevski entered the barracks block. Generations of midshipmen
had passed through it. The air was heavy with age. And human scent.
He found A Corridor and followed it, glancing at the name tags on
the cubicle doors. He located helsung, greta: hamburg, earth,
paired with james, leslie from someplace on Sierra called Token
Offering. No one answered his knock.
He followed the noise of a holoset on to the company commons.
Some twenty youngsters were watching holo or playing games without
enthusiasm. Homesickness thickened the air.
Greta sat in a vinyl-covered armchair. She had heels pulled up
against her behind. Her arm embraced her knees. She had an air of
infinite sadness, of unspeakable loneliness.
A ten-year-old with a boarding school voice snapped, “
’Ten-shut!”
“As you were, people.”
Greta hurled herself at him. She flung her arms around his neck.
“I didn’t think I’d ever see you
again.”
“Easy, girl. Don’t break anything.” He felt
better about himself suddenly. It was great to have someone glad to
see him.
“How come you’re here? I thought you were going to
see your mother?”
“I did. We were both disappointed.”
“Oh. I’m sorry.”
“It’s all right. I didn’t expect much. Come
on. Sit down. How’s it going? What do you think of the
moon?”
“I haven’t seen anything yet. Everything’s
bigger than I thought it would be. What’s happening back
home?”
“Nothing new. Homesick?”
She shook her head.
“Fibber. I was here too, remember? And I still get
homesick. That’s why I go back sometimes. Of course, I came
up with Neil Armstrong . . . ”
“Don’t tease me.”
“All right. Tell you what. I talked to your company
commander . . . ”
“Old Greasy Hair? I hate him already.”
Perchevski laughed. “You’ll hate him a lot more
before you’re done. He’s going to be your father,
mother, priest, god, and devil. Look, do you want to see the rest
of the moon? You won’t have a chance after classes
start.”
“Don’t you have something better to do? You’ve
got your job, and your own
friends . . . ”
“I’m on vacation. Sort of. And I don’t have
many friends here.”
“I don’t want to put you out.” A skinny little
black girl with pigtailed hair, wearing a ragged woolen smock, was
staring at them. “Oh. Leslie. Come here. This is Leslie
James, Commander. My roommate.”
“Hi, Les. Where is Token Offering? I visited Sierra once,
but I don’t remember it.”
The girl said something into a mouth full of fingers and
retreated.
“She’s shy,” Greta said. “Her parents
must be dead. She came from an orphanage.”
“We’re all orphans, one way or another. Navy is our
family.”
Greta looked at him oddly. Then, “Can we take her with us
if we go?”
“Uhm. You’re starting to understand already. I
don’t know. It might be complicated. I’ll ask if you
want.”
“I think so.”
“Okay. I’d better go. It’s past visiting
hours. I just wanted to see how you were. I’ll be back
tomorrow.”
She squeezed his hand. “Thank you. For everything.”
Her hands were soft and smooth and warm.
He spent the evening entertaining fantasies he would never
pursue.
The inside man never ages. He spends the rest of his life in
love with the soft, smooth, warm girls he knew when he was young
and just becoming aware of what marvelous creatures females
are.
“Where do you want to go, girls?” They were at
Academy Station. Perchevski was watching Greta try to people-watch
without being offensive. Oddly uniformed folks surrounded them.
“I don’t know,” Greta replied.
Luna Command was no sightseer’s paradise. It had no
spectacular ruins or monuments. The real sights were outside, the
mountains and craters of the surface.
He took the girls to Tycho Dome and for a ride on one of the
surface trains. He treated them to the best restaurants and hotels.
Greta’s response was gratifying, Leslie’s remote.
He ran out of ideas after two days. All but the alien digs, and
he had promised those to Max.
Max could take the pressure off. She would have
ideas . . . He took the girls to her shop.
“Hello, Walter,” Max said. Her voice was chilly. She
stared at Greta. Greta did not notice. She was engrossed in the
showcases.
“Hi, Lady. Anything for me?”
“Same old stuff. Is that what you’ve been doing
since you got back?”
“Come on, Max! She’s sixteen. Greta, come here. I
want you to meet Max. Max, Greta Helsung and her friend
Leslie.”
Greta was not imperceptive. “Hi, Max. The Commander is my
sponsor.”
“Your sponsor? You never told me you had a kid,
Walter.”
“I’m a man of mystery, Love.”
“How come she calls you Walter? Your name is
Cornelius.”
“Because he’s a man of mystery, dear,” Max
replied. “Everybody has a different name for him. He’s
some kind of spy. I don’t think he knows his real name
himself.”
“Max . . . ”
“Wow! Really?”
“Yes. Really. Max, you talk too much. I came here to see
if you still wanted to go to the Farside dig.”
Someone entered the shop behind him. Max said hello.
“Hi, tall, blonde, and desirable. Thomas? Is that you?
What the hell are you doing here?”
Perchevski turned.
Mouse had come in. He gave Greta an admiring once-over.
“That’s right. You know Max, don’t you? Max, I
really want that Manchurian collection, but you’re going to
have to come down on it. It’s just not worth twelve
thousand.”
“I can see what you want. Hands off. She’s your
buddy’s kid. And I can get fifteen if I send it out to
Amonhotep.” To Greta she explained, “This is one of
your old man’s buddies. He’s a spy too.”
Perchevski shook his head. “She’s in a Roman candle
mood today, Mouse. I come in to ask her out and she plays mad dog
with me. I didn’t know you were a collector.”
“Lot of things we don’t know about each
other.” That seemed to close the subject.
“Mouse and I were in the same battalion in Academy,”
Perchevski told Greta.
Mouse gave the girl another admiring look. She moved closer to
Perchevski, as if feeling for a protective shadow. Mouse smiled
gently and resumed arguing with Max.
Perchevski wondered how he could demonstrate, to her
satisfaction, that she was not in competition with inconquerable
youth.
“Max, you want to go to the Farside digs or
not?”
“When it’s convenient.”
“Are you really a spy, Commander?”
“I guess you could put it that way, Greta. How about after
work, Max?”
“You sure you won’t be busy?”
Perchevski closed his eyes, took a long, deep breath, released
it. Be patient, he told himself.
“What’s your real name?” Greta asked. Mouse
watched, his expression unreadable.
“Honey, sometimes I’m not sure myself. Don’t
worry about it. It doesn’t matter. If you need to get in
touch, just call the number I gave you. If I can’t get back
to you, one of my friends will.”
“But . . . ”
“Forget it. Subject closed. Max, are you going to the digs
or not?”
“You don’t have to get snappy, Walter. Yes.
I’m coming. What about you, Mouse?”
“Me?”
“Yes. You want to see that new chamber? They think it
might shed some light on the Sangaree. There’re some
primitive murals that might be of human origin. On a Noah’s
ark theme, with spaceships. Or aren’t you the culture
type?”
“Sure. Why not?” He looked at Perchevski as if in
appeal.
“I don’t know, Mouse. Maybe it’s the
change.” Why was Mouse attaching himself? Because of the
Sangaree remark? Or because the Old Man wanted somebody to keep an
eye on him? After what had happened on The Broken Wings, Beckhart
would be wondering about him.
The girls slept during the tube trip. Perchevski and Mouse
played chess on Mouse’s pocket set. Prodded by Max, Mouse
related several anecdotes about Perchevski while saying nothing
about himself. Perchevski let him set the limits.
Max did not seem the least interested in his former partner.
Both men loosened up on sips from a flask Max dug out of her
jumpsuit. “Emergency rations,” she claimed.
“Good thinking,” Perchevski told her.
“What is this? A class reunion?” she demanded toward
trip’s end.
Mouse and Perchevski had begun playing remember when. They were
reliving the Great Sunjammer Race of ’29, in which they had
crewed a ship and had beaten the best starwind yachtsmen in
Confederation. That fluke victory was one of the brightest of
Perchevski’s memories.
He and Mouse had been a team then, almost friends, and for a few
days afterward they had been closer than ever before or since.
“Those were the days,” Mouse said, ignoring Max.
“Wish we could be kids forever. Think we could do it
again?”
“Getting too old.”
“Nah. I think I’ll check it out. Just for the hell
of it. Want to try it? If I can find a ship?”
Perchevski laughed. “Better find the time off, first.
We’re almost there.” The capsule had begun
decelerating. “I’ll wake the girls.”
They reached the digs an hour later.
The one-time alien base was being unearthed, studied, and
explored at a snail’s pace. The xenoarchaeologists had been
working for decades, and might be at it for centuries. They sifted
every grain of lunar dust, and preserved it. They did not want to
miss a thing, even through ignorance.
Thus far the base had revealed more about humanity’s past
than it had about its builders.
The scientists had concluded that the station had served both
scientific and military purposes, and had been occupied
continuously for at least ten millennia. It seemed to have been
abandoned approximately eleven centuries before its discovery, just
as Mankind teetered on the brink of its first tentative step into
space.
Perchevski and his companions began with the museum of recovered
artifacts, most of which were everyday items comparable to human
combs, tableware, worn-out socks, pill bottles, broken furniture,
and the like. The aliens had taken their fancy hardware with
them.
“Ooh!” Greta said as they approached a group of wax
figurines. “They were ugly.”
“Notice anything about them, Greta?” Perchevski
asked.
“Besides ugly?”
“Yes. Look at how they’re dressed. Think. All the
legends about little people. Gnomes, dwarves, elves,
leprechauns . . . The kobolds, where you come
from.” The largest alien figurine stood just a meter
tall.
“Yeah. You’re right. You know there’re still
people that believe in them? One time, I guess I was ten, we went
on a field trip to the Black Forest. There was this old caretaker,
a kind of forest ranger, who told us all these stories about the
kobolds in the woods.”
Max interjected, “I think it’s more interesting that
they resemble the spacemen of the UFO era.”
Everyone looked at her. “Oh, it’s not my idea. I
just liked it. It was on the educational channel one time. In the
old days people used to see what they called flying saucers.
Sometimes they claimed that space people talked to them. They
described them like this. But nobody ever believed them.”
“Where are they now?” Leslie asked.
“Nobody knows,” Perchevski replied. “They just
disappeared. Nobody’s found any other traces of them, either.
Ulant got into space before we did, and they never ran into
them.”
“What if they’re still watching?” Mouse
asked.
Perchevski gave him a funny look.
“Spooky idea, isn’t it? Let’s look at that new
chamber. Max says they found some stuff there that isn’t just
cafeteria or rec room equipment.”
Maybe not. Perchevski could not guess what it might have been.
The chamber was large and well-preserved, with most of its
furnishings intact and in place. “Parallel function ought to
result in parallel structure,” he said. “Meaning you
ought to be able to figure what this stuff is.” All he
recognized were the faded mural walls, which looked somewhat
Minoan. He would have bet his fortune they had been done by human
artists. Those he could see seemed to tell some sort of quest
story.
“It’s a solarium,” Greta said. “Without
sun.”
“A hydroponics farm?”
“No. That’s not right. Hydroponics is
different.”
“What?”
“What I mean is, it’s almost like the Desert House
at the State Botanical Gardens in Berlin. See how the beds are laid
out? And those racks up there would hold the lights that make
plants think they’re getting sunshine.”
Mouse laughed. “By Jove, I think the lady has
something.” He indicated a small sign which proposed a
similar hypothesis. It also suggested that the painters of the
murals might have been humans who had become proto-Sangaree.
Mouse suddenly gasped and seized his left hand in his right.
Perchevski nearly screamed at the sharp agony surrounding his
call ring.
“What’s the matter?” Max and Greta
demanded.
“Oh, hell,” Perchevski intoned. “Here we go
again.”
“Let up, you bastards,” Mouse snarled. “We got
the message. We’re coming, for Christ’s sake. Business,
Max. We’ve been called in. And I mean in a hurry.
Thomas?”
“I’ll kill him. Just
when . . . Max . . . I’m
sorry.”
“What’s going on?” she asked again.
“We have to report in. Right now. Could you take the girls
back to barracks?”
“Business?” She sounded excited.
“Yeah. The bastards. Mouse, they said no more team
jobs.”
Mouse shrugged.
“I’ll get them home,” Max promised.
Perchevski kissed her, turned to Greta. “I’ve got to
run out on you, Honey. I’m sorry. I really am.”
“Thomas, come on. The Old Man means it.”
“Wait a minute, damn it! I don’t know how long
I’ll be gone, Greta. If you need something, call my number.
Or get ahold of Max. Okay, Max?”
“Sure.” Max did not sound enthusiastic.
“Thomas!”
He waved a hand, kissed Max again, then Greta, and trotted off
after Mouse. Greta called a sad, “Good-bye,
Commander.”
He was angry. He was ready to skin Beckhart with a butter
knife.
The chance never came. He and Mouse were seized by Mission Prep
the instant they hit Bureau territory.
The training was intense and merciless, and the explanations
impossibly far between. It went on around the clock, waking and
sleeping, and after a few weeks Perchevski was so tired and
disoriented that he was no longer sure who he was. Tiny,
unextinguishable sparks of anger were all that kept him going.
Education passed him to Psych. Psych eventually passed him to
Medical. For a week every opening of his eyes meant he was fresh
off another operating table. Then Education took another go at him.
While he recovered he had to read. And when he slept computers
pressure-injected information directly into his brain.
Dragons in the night. Golden chinese dragons.
Starfishers . . . What the hell was it all
about? Who was Moyshe benRabi? What was becoming of Cornelius
Perchevski?
Sometimes he screamed and fought them, but they were as stubborn
as entropy. They kept right on rebuilding their new man.
This was the most intensive, extensive prep he had ever
undergone.
He saw Mouse just twice during the whole prep period. They
shared the intense hypo-teaching sessions briefing them about
Starfishers, but did not intersect again till they met in their
master’s office. Perchevski thought they were prepping for
different missions. Till the Admiral got hold of them
personally.
“Boys,” Beckhart said, “you’ve just gone
through hell. And I did it to you. I’m not proud of it. It
hurt me as much as it hurt you. I don’t like operating this
way. You’ll just have to take my word that it’s
necessary. And I know what you think about that, Tommy. I
don’t blame you. But give me the benefit of the doubt, and
try to trust me when I tell you that it’s imperative that we
bring the Starfishers into Confederation as soon as
possible.”
Such was the opening barrage in a one-way discussion lasting
more than three hours. Beckhart talked endlessly, and never
answered even one of the questions Perchevski thought
pertinent.
He once protested, “You promised no more team
jobs.”
“And I meant it when I said it, Tommy. But this is the
most hurried hurry-up job we’ve ever had. The CNI told me to
put my best men in.
She picked you. My God, Tommy, it’s only for a couple of
weeks. You can’t put up with Mouse that long?”
“It’s the
principle . . . ”
Beckhart ignored him, veering instead into another track.
Almost before he knew what was happening Perchevski found
himself aboard a warship bound for the nether end of The Arm. For a
world that was, galactically, only a stone’s throw from The
Broken Wings.
He did not like that. It seemed to be tempting fate too
much.
There wasn’t a thing he did like about this mission.
They hadn’t even let him say his good-byes. Bureau thugs
had surrounded him from the moment he had departed Beckhart’s
office . . .
“Hey, Moyshe,” Mouse said cheerfully, within an hour
of their going aboard, let’s go up to the wardroom and
play some chess.”