Hoping Marya would make no sense of the data before him, Niven
told her, “I’m checking to see where people go when
they leave The Broken Wings. If a statistically significant number
emigrate to certain worlds, we can begin to infer both their
fantasies under dome conditions and what it is that attracts them
to a particular type world. If it’s environmental, then
we’ve discovered a way to ease the negatives of dome
life.” He hoped he sounded tutorial. He cranked it up a notch
to be sure. “Ubichi specializes in negative environment,
high-yield exploitation operations. Employee turnover has become a
major problem because of the expense of training and transportation
for some of our field operations. It’s in the corporate
interest to reduce those costs by keeping our employees happy and
comfortable.” Pretty glib, he thought. He congratulated himself.
“What’re you doing here?”
“Looking for you. We had a date.”
“Not till . . . Holy Christ! Look at
the time. Hey beautiful lady, I’m sorry. I got on the track
of something. I worked right through lunch. Give me a minute, will
you? I’ll finish up, call my secretary, and we can get
moving.” He grinned. “I have to check in. Education
didn’t wear the Old Earth off of him. You wouldn’t
believe the hell he gave me last night!”
He no longer felt the smile. She was turning him to gelatin
again.
Mouse did not answer his buzz. Niven would have been surprised
had he done so. The call was simply a ploy to get the data out of
Marya’s sight, and to seize time to create a plausible
structure of lies atop those he had just told.
He needed no story. Marya asked no questions except, “What
do you want to do?”
He almost replied with the hard truth.
“I’ve had it with work, but we about covered
everything last night. Angel City isn’t swing-town.”
Gallantly, he added, “I’m content just being with you.
You pick.”
She laughed. “And they say there’s no romance left
on Old Earth. How about we just go for a walk? I feel like a good
long one.”
“Uh . . . ” His hands started
shaking.
He had gotten out young, but the lessons of an Old Earth’s
childhood died hard. People who did not learn them young also died
hard. Not to walk the streets without a gang of friends was one of
the strictest lessons of the motherworld.
This was not Old Earth. Death did not make the streets its home
here. But the sticktights did lurk there, and they might up the
ante in the game at any minute.
“How come you’re grinning?”
“That’s no grin, lady. That’s what they call a
rictus. Of fear. I’m Old Earther. You know how hard it would
be for me to walk down a street without at least fifty guys to back
me up?”
“I forgot. But there’s nothing to worry about here,
Gun.”
“You know it. I know it here in my head. But down here in
my guts there’s a caveman who says we’re both
liars.”
“If it’s really that
hard . . . ”
“No, don’t get upset. I didn’t say I
wouldn’t try. I’ve got to get used to it. Hell, I force
myself to get out as much as I can. I just wanted to warn you so
you won’t think it’s your fault if I get a little jumpy
and quiet.”
“You’ll settle down. You’ll see. This is just
about the dullest, least dangerous city in The Arm.”
A few hours later, shortly after The Broken Wings’ early
night had fallen, Niven snarled, “What did you say back at
the hospital? Something about the safest streets in the
galaxy?”
The darkness of the alley pressed in. His frightened eyes probed
the shadows for movement. The lase-bolt had missed his cheek by a
centimeter. He still felt the heat of it. “Even my toenails
are shaking, lady.”
Marya fingered her hair. A bolt had crisped it while they were
running. Niven’s nostrils twitched as they caught the sharp
burnt hair odor.
Marya’s face was pallid in the glow of a distant
streetlight. She was shaking too. And apparently too angry to
respond.
“You got a jealous boyfriend?”
She shook her head, gasped, “This isn’t Old Earth.
People don’t do things like this out here.”
Niven dropped to all fours and crawled to the alley mouth.
Heavy work was not his province, but he had had the basic
programs given all field agents. He could make a show if he had
to.
He had to do something now. The alley was a cul-de-sac. And the
rifleman might be teamed. A deathtrap could be closing.
A bolt scarred brick above his head. He rolled away, growling,
“Starscope. Damn!” But he had spotted the triggerman.
The bolt had come from atop a warehouse across the street.
“Can’t be much of a shot,” Niven mumbled.
“That isn’t fifty meters.”
If he could survive the sprint across the
street . . .
There was a startled exclamation from the gunman’s
position, then a choked wail of fear and pain. A body plunged
off the warehouse roof and thumped into the street.
Niven was across in an instant, shoving himself into the
warehouse wall while he studied the corpse.
The weak light revealed the limper from the Marcos lobby. His
windpipe had been crushed.
Every man’s signature is unique. And an assassin leaves a
grim sort of signature on his victims. Niven knew this one. He
peered upward.
Why would Mouse be shadowing him?
Not that he objected. Not right now.
Marya arrived. She averted her eyes. “You must have a
guardian angel.”
“One of us does.” He stared at her. Something
clicked. It was nothing he could define, just a tweak of uneasiness
because she had not asked him why anyone would want to kill him. A
civilian would have asked that right away.
He looked for the assassin’s weapon, did not see it.
“I’m going to try to get onto that roof.”
“Why? Shouldn’t we get out of here?”
Another click. Civilians started screaming for the police.
Outworlds civilians, anyway.
“Yeah, I guess. If he had anybody with him we would have
heard from them by now.” But where to go? he wondered. Not
the hotel. Not with the number officially on. Not with the war
rules proclaimed. And not to a safehouse. He did not yet know what
Mouse had arranged. And he could not make the fallbacks to find out
with Marya tagging along.
The death threat had alerted the professional in him. Had raised
barriers that would wall off the whole universe till he had sorted
the friends from enemies and noncombatants.
“We could go to my place,” Marya suggested.
Memories of countless spy and detective dramas battled for
Niven’s attention. Was it all a setup? Three misses at fifty
meters seemed unlikely for even a clumsy assassin. But he did not
want to believe that Marya was involved. She was such a magnetic,
animal woman . . .
Believe it or not, only a cretin would have ignored the
possibility completely. Survival had become the stake on the
board.
He dared not let her know he was suspicious. “All
right.” He looked around fearfully, having no trouble
projecting shakiness and confusion. “But I’ve got to do
a couple of things first.”
Their eyes met. And he knew. He did not want it to be, but it
was true. She was the enemy. Right now she was trying to find an
excuse to stay close to him that would not arouse his
suspicions.
She was not a good actress. Under stress she could not control
the body language signals that betrayed her thoughts.
He felt betrayed and hurt, though he had known her just one
day.
He had always needed to be wanted. Not for whom or what he was,
but just as a human being.
Human. Was she even human? There was no sure way of telling
without complicated tests. Geneticists were certain that humanity
and the Sangaree shared a prehistoric ancestry.
She might even be the new Sangaree Resident. The last one had
been a woman.
“Where do you stay?” he asked.
She chose not to push. She explained how he could get to her
apartment.
“You don’t have to do this,” he told her, then
cursed silently. By saying that, he had tacitly admitted being the
sniper’s target. But sometimes it was necessary to take
chances. He could at least feed her belief in his lack of
suspicion. “It might be dangerous.”
“That’s all right. I’ve never been involved in
anything like this.” Feigned excitement illuminated her face.
“What have I gotten myself into, Gun?”
It was smoke screen time. “Sweetheart, I don’t know.
I really don’t. This is the second time I’ve been
jumped, but nobody bothered to tell me why last time either. They
tried it right in the Marcos before. The day we got here. And we
don’t even know anybody here. But people have been following
me all the time, and . . . If you’re an
Old Earther, you sense things like that.”
“Maybe it’s not you. Maybe it’s your
friend.”
“John? I never thought of that. I guess it’s
possible. I don’t really know anything about him. The
Corporation sent him. Anyway, whatever’s going on, I mean to
find out.”
He had yielded just enough distorted truth, he hoped, to leave
her with doubts. A lot depended on whether or not the opposition
had been able to evade Mouse’s bug-scans.
“Will you be all right, Marya? Should I walk you
home?”
“I’ll manage.”
“Probably be safer without me, anyway. See you in a
while.” He glanced at the dead man, then the streets. Not a
soul was stirring.
It was odd how people sensed a gathering storm, then stayed
inside where they would witness nothing and run no risks. Though
this was a warehouse district, there should have been some traffic.
Hell. Where were the security patrols? Where were the police
cruisers?
He had seen the same thing happen on Old Earth, where the gangs
went to their guns at the slightest provocation. Citizens and
enforcers always kept a low profile till the stink of gunsmoke left
the air.
Mouse was not at the first fallback, nor had he left a message.
Niven did find a hastily scribbled message at the second. It told
him that Marya was the new Sangaree Resident. And, as if in
afterthought, Mouse went on to say that he was on the run from a
dozen men who had gotten onto him after the incident at the
warehouse.
Niven scratched a reply, explaining where he would be. The drop
was large, so he left the notes he had taken at the Med Center.
Those had to be salvaged no matter what. Maybe by Chief Navy
Recruiter for The Broken Wings. He was the Bureau Angel City
station chief.
Niven began drifting, killing time in order to give Marya a
chance to make a move that would illuminate the outfit’s
current thinking. After an hour he picked up a sticktight.
His shadow was a sleepy-faced thug pretending to be a derelict.
A not-too-bright offworlder, Niven decided. Angel City was too
young and thoroughly ordered to sustain even a one-man Bowery.
The man did not move in. They were hoping he would lead them to
Mouse.
He observed his shadow’s tradecraft more out of curiosity
than concern. The man was a professional but unaccustomed to this
kind of work. He was probably a shooter or runner grabbed simply
because he was available. He could be shaken at leisure. Niven
shifted him to the back burner of awareness.
He drifted toward Marya’s apartment. His nerves settled.
He decided what he was going to do.
He did not relax completely. They might catch Mouse. Then his
life would be worthless. But while Mouse remained at large, he was
sure, they would not harm him.
He shook the sticktight, found a public comm, woke the Angel
City station chief, explained where the Med Center information was
hidden. He used a word code the other side would need hours to
unravel—assuming they were tapping at all.
He reached Marya’s apartment as dawn began coloring the
dome. The molecularly stacked plastic glimmered redly. As the
sunlight changed its angle of incidence, the plastic would
alternate between transparency and a progression up an iridescent
spectrum.
He was tired but still alert, and exhilarated because he had
handled himself well.
Marya responded to his knock instantly. “Where have you
been? she demanded. “I’ve been worried sick.” She
peered over his shoulder, along the second floor hallway.
Checking for Mouse? For her backup?
“Somebody started following me around. I didn’t know
what to do, so I just walked around till he gave up. Or I lost
him.”
“Gun, I don’t understand all this.
Why? . . . ”
“Honey, I don’t know. And I’ve been thinking
hard. All I can figure is maybe one of Ubichi’s competitors
thinks I’m after something besides that research
data . . . ” He paused, pretending to
have been startled by a thought. “Hey! They never did tell me
why they want the data. I just
assumed . . . Maybe it’s for a project
that’s stepping on somebody’s toes.”
Had he been what he claimed, the possibility would have been
real. Ubichi maintained its own armed forces. The frontier
corporations played rough.
Uncertainty filled Marya’s eyes for a moment. Bureau miscalculated, he thought. He could have convinced her
had he looked like a social psychologist. His cover could be
checked all the way back to his birth. The Bureau was thorough that
way. Especially Beckhart’s section.
But Niven looked like an Old Earth heavy. And that was the death
of any other credential a man could present.
“Mom? What’s going on?” A dark-haired girl of
seven or eight stumbled into the room. She ground sleepy eyes with
the backs of her fists. She was small for her age, a breastless
miniature of her mother.
“Brandy, this is my friend Dr. Niven. I told you about
him.”
“Oh.”
Less than enthusiastic, Niven thought. In fact, her expression
said he was a threat to her world.
She was a beautiful child. Straight out of a toy ad.
Niven could not frame a compliment that did not sound inane.
“Hi, Brandy. You can call me Gun. It’s short for
Gundaker.”
“Gundaker? What kind of name is that?”
“Old Earth.”
“Oh.” She wrinkled her lip. “Mom called you
Doctor. Michael’s sick.”
He turned to Marya. The woman still stood at the door. “My
son. Brandy’s younger brother. He’s got some kind of
bug. Looks like flu.”
“I’m not that kind of doctor, Brandy. But if
there’s anything I can
do . . . ”
“Do you know any good stories? Michael don’t like
the ones I make up. And Mom’s never here.” She glanced
at her mother accusingly.
She was good, Niven thought. Better than Marya. “What kind
of stories? Pirates? Olden days? War stories? Richard Hawksblood
and Gneaus Julius Storm? Did you know they fought a war right here
on The Broken Wings?”
He mentioned it casually, conversationally, fishing for a
reaction. The war in the Shadowline, the last great mercenary war,
had taken place on Blackworld not long after the encounter on The
Broken Wings.
Sangaree interests had taken a beating because of the
Shadowline. But one or two Families had begun recouping here before
the shock-waves from Blackworld had died.
Getting caught with their hands in there had cost them control
of numerous legitimate corporations and the lives of several Family
chieftains. The disaster had been so huge and widespread that it
had become Sangaree legend.
The girl just shrugged, implying that Blackworld meant nothing
to her. “Pirates, probably.” She seemed to lose
interest.
She left the room. Cooking sounds followed her departure. Must not have heard about the Shadowline, Niven thought. What
Family did Marya represent? A minor one crowding the First Families
because of their loss of face on Blackworld? Surely not one that
had been involved there.
“She’s a doll,” he told Marya. “You
thought about getting her into modeling?”
“No. She wouldn’t. Sit down. Relax. Ill fix you
something to eat. Then I’ll move Michael in here. You can
sleep in the kids’ bed.”
Brandy brought coffee. It was real.
He discovered what Marya had meant about Brandy. He had not
caught it earlier because she had not looked his way.
The girl’s one eye trained wildly walleyed and appeared
blind.
He showed no reaction to her pained, defiant stare. Her
sensitivity screamed at him. He supposed the damage was recent.
Niven indulged in tradecraft during the few seconds when Brandy
had returned to the kitchen and Marya had not yet returned. He
examined his surroundings critically.
The time would come when he would have to report, accurately,
where every speck of dust had lain.
The apartment was cramped. That was typical of dome city living
quarters. It was sparsely populated by ragged second-hand
furniture. That was to be expected of poor folks. And Marya,
clearly, was not an obsessive housekeeper. Cobwebs hung in the
ceiling corners. Junk cluttered the chairs and floors.
Her sloppiness had nothing to do with poverty or lack of time,
only with habit. Sangaree at home had animal servants who picked up
after them.
Marya shared her roof with whole tribes of roaches. Dirt
streaked the plastic walls. The curtains were frayed and
soiled.
It was exactly the sort of place where a busy, impoverished
woman would come to rest. She was crafty, this one. She had
converted her ethnic liabilities into assets.
But would a poor woman serve real coffee? When coffee had to
come all the way from Old or New Earth?
He did not call her on it. He might give something away by
revealing that he recognized the real thing when he tasted it. Most
Old Earthers would not, because every ounce went into export.
They were fencing now, subtly, with rapiers consisting of little
tests.
One of the rules of his profession was never to yield anything
concrete.
She was not giving him anything either. Certainly not enough to
understand her.
Who could comprehend the Sangaree mind? The Admiral had been
trying for decades. He barely got by.
Like Mouse, though, Beckhart did not want to understand. Not
really. He wanted to destroy. Comprehension was just a weapon in
his arsenal.
They sat in silence for several minutes. He watched Marya over
his cup. She considered him. He wondered what strange thoughts
might be running through her alien brain.
“I’d better check on Michael, Gun.”
He followed her as far as the bedroom door.
The room was tiny. It contained two dilapidated beds. One for
Marya, one for her children.
Marya settled on the edge of the one containing a pale
five-year-old. The boy watched Niven warily.
“Michael, this is my friend Dr. Niven. He’s going to
stay with us for a while.”
“Hi, Mike.”
“Not Mike.” The child’s voice was weak but
angry. “Michael. After my great-grandfather.”
Marya winced.
Michael radiated pride.
Niven controlled his surprise. “Right. Michael it
is.”
He had been wrong. Almost fatally wrong. These Sangaree would
know the Shadowline well.
There had been but one Sangaree with the human name Michael.
Michael Dee. The man who had engineered the war. The man who had
been both the pride and despair of his race.
The man who had paid the ultimate price for failing.
“Brandy says you like pirate stories. I knew a pirate
once. Only he wasn’t a pirate when I met him. That’s
what he is now. I grew up and went to school, and he grew up and
became a pirate.”
“I don’t think he’s ready for that right now,
Gun.” Marya seemed honestly worried. “I’m going
to have to call a doctor, I think.”
Niven was surprised at himself. He was concerned too. “You
want me to call a cabcar?” What was he doing? The kid was
Sangaree. His purpose in life was to help guide that species to a
final solution. Little ones became big ones.
“Oh, no. There’s one from the hospital who lives
right upstairs. I don’t know her very well,
but . . . ”
“Go get her, woman. I’ll manage here.”
She stared. Something within her softened momentarily.’The
hidden woman, the one behind the one behind the one she was trying
to portray, showed through. She kissed his cheek. “Thanks,
Gun.” When he pulled her closer, “Later. I’ll be
back as soon as I can.”
He had not been after a kiss. He had attached a tiny chameleon
transmitter to the back of her collar.
She closed the apartment door behind her. Niven inserted a
receiver into his ear while pretending to scratch.
Smiling wryly, he patted himself where she had touched him. Had
she done the same to him?
There was no reason why she should have to go out for a doctor.
She would have sufficient medical background herself—if there
was any truth to her cover.
He smiled again. Marya was no tactician, either.
“Are you my mom’s new lover?”
He was surprised. Little girls did not ask questions like
that.
“No. Not yet.”
“She needs one. Do you think she’s
pretty?”
“I think she’s gorgeous.” He was
uncomfortable. He did not know how to socialize with children. The
only child he knew was Jupp’s boy, Horst-Johann.
“Maybe she should get married again. Are you
married?”
Marya had reached a public comm. She was briefing someone.
Following her part of a conversation and trying to guess the other
half while carrying on another with Brandy proved impossible. He
did hear Marya ask for a deep trace on his cover. That meant he had
won a round. She had doubts. Or wanted to have them, which came to
the same thing.
“No. I never met the right lady.” This was one bold
child. Did she know she was not human? Probably. From the little he
had heard, Sangaree had no childhood in the human sense. Their
children were shielded from nothing. They were treated as, and
expected to behave as, miniature adults.
“Don’t know if I’d like you,
though.” Honest, too, he thought. He went to check on Michael. The boy
still watched him with wide, wary eyes.
He was bad sick. Marya would not risk a human doctor otherwise.
There were few greater risks the underground Sangaree could take.
Physicians could sometimes spot the subtle differences between
species.
Marya returned with the doctor before Niven’s conversation
with Brandy became impossible.
The doctor, he decided, was “tame.” She worked with
a confidence and quickness that betrayed her.
Niven whispered to Marya, “Brandy’s been
matchmaking.”
She laughed. “Husband-shopping for me again? She never
gives up.”
“I don’t think I passed the exam.”
“Doesn’t matter. I won’t get caught in that
trap again.”
“Why’d you bring them out here?” On Old Earth
parents usually put their children into public care as soon as they
were born. Niven had had an unusual childhood in that he had spent
much of it with his mother. He still kept in touch with her, but
had lost track of his father years ago.
The shedding of children was a common practice on the tamed
outworlds, too. Fewer than a quarter of Confederation’s
children were raised by their biological parents.
Marya was shocked. Her Sangaree sense of Family had been
outraged. But she could not tell him that. “I forgot. You do
things differently where you come from. Yeah, it would be
convenient sometimes. But they’re my kids.”
“Don’t try to explain. Just call it one of the
differences between the Inner Worlds and the frontier. I’m
getting used to them.”
The doctor returned from the bedroom. “I gave him a
broad-spectrum antibiotic, Marya. And an antiviral. It’s
nothing serious. See that he gets plenty of bed rest and lots of
fluids, and keep an eye on his temperature. It’ll go up. Give
him some aspirin if it gets too high. Do you need a
thermometer?”
Marya nodded. She portrayed embarrassment beautifully. You did that well, lady, Niven thought. Too poor to afford a
thermometer. But you serve genuine coffee. He smiled. She was doing
a chemo-psychiatric internship, but had to summon an outside
doctor . . . Was she driven by some secret
death wish?
“Nice to have met you, Doctor Niven,” the doctor
told him.
“You too.” He watched her go to the door. There was
no pride in the way she walked.
“You want to get some sleep now, Gun?” Marya
asked.
“Going to have to.” But would his nerves permit it
here in the heart of enemy territory?
They would. After he had skinned down to his underwear, had
flopped into Marya’s bed, and had told Michael, “Good
night, Captain,” the lights went out.
He wakened once, hazily, when Marya slipped into bed beside him.
He mumbled foggily, then knew nothing for hours.
He wakened slowly. Gradually, he realized that The Broken
Wings’ truncated day had sped by. It was night again. He did
not remember where he was till he rolled against the woman.
That simple movement initiated three tempestuous days.
Marya was insatiable. The only word he found to fit her was
“hungry.” He had never encountered a woman who had such
a need for a man.
Niven astounded himself. Their lovemaking became so savage, so
narrowly scoped, that it was more like combat. As if, “Let he
who first cries ‘Hold! Enough!’ be damned
forever.”
They seemed to do nothing but sleep and copulate, making attack
after attack in some sort of sexual war. The outside world seemed
to have lost all meaning.
Yet there was method. There was rationality. In struggling to
please Marya, who was struggling to distract him, Niven kept
himself motivated by remembering who she was. He kept trying to
convince himself that he was doing this to sabotage the enemy chain
of command.
He knew Marya was not motivated entirely by lust either.
Oh, but they did have one hell of a good time on the rumpled
sheets of that battlefield.
In the interims Niven sometimes wondered what had become of
Mouse. Mouse, he reflected, sure had the free hand he always
wanted.
Brandy, recognizing the way of things, had taken her brother out
the first night. They were staying upstairs with the doctor.
Michael, looking a little better, sometimes wandered in, moped
around without saying much, then wandered out again. Brandy stayed
away all the time.
“What are we doing?” Niven once muttered to himself.
They were enemies to the death. That was the prime rule, the blood
rule, by which he and she were supposed to live and die. Yet they
were denying it, or sublimating it in the form of
love . . .
He began to dread mission’s end.
Debriefing . . . He would have to answer
questions. He would have to explain.
Niven was snoring. He had one arm beneath Marya’s
neck.
The building shuddered like a dog shaking off water. A window
cracked. Tableware clattered onto the kitchen floor. The whole
neighborhood reverberated to the explosion.
Niven jerked upright. “D-14,” he grunted.
“What?”
“What was that?”
“An explosion.”
They dressed, almost racing. Reflections of dancing firelight
colored the cracked window. Marya looked out. “Oh, Holy
Sant!”
“What?”
“The warehouse . . . ”
“Eh?”
“I’ll be right back . . . What’s
that?”
A yell had come from somewhere downstairs. Cries and screams
followed it.
Niven knew that first yell. That was Mouse in assassin’s
mind.
Earlier, he had seen the shape of the needlegun lumping her
underwear in a dresser drawer. He beat her to it.
The door crashed inward. A ragged, battered, bloody Mouse
hurtled through. He was so keyed for action that he looked three
meters tall.
“Easy,” Niven said, gesturing with the needlegun.
“Everything’s under control, Mouse.”
Mouse was not hurt. The blood was not his own. “Got
everything,” he croaked through a dry throat. “Message
away. Got to bend the bitch and get out.”
That was their business, but . . . Niven
could not permit the woman’s murder. That she was Sangaree
seemed irrelevant. “No. There’s no need. Not this
time.”
Mouse was coming down. Thought was replacing action. He glanced
at Niven’s weapon, at the woman. “All right.
You’re the boss, Doc. But I’ve got to get something out
of this. Where’re the damned kids?”
“Upstairs. But I won’t let you kill children,
either.”
“Wouldn’t think of it, Doc. Wouldn’t even
drown a puppy. You know old John. So tie her up, will you?
Can’t have her coming after us.” He backed out the
door.
Siren howls tortured the streets. The grumble of a gathering
crowd slipped tentacles into the room. “Sorry it had to end
this way, Marya. But business is business.”
“I almost believed . . . ” She
stared at him. For an instant she looked small and defenseless. He
reminded himself that she was Sangaree, that she would become
instant death if he were careless. “I suppose you’re
soothing your conscience. I wouldn’t if the tables were
turned. You’ve hurt us too much already.” Not a smart thing to say to somebody pointing a gun at you,
Niven thought. He shrugged. “Maybe. It’s not
conscience, though. A different weakness. You’d probably have
to be human to understand.” He left it to her to figure out
what he meant.
Mouse returned with the children and doctor. In the process he
had acquired a weapon. “Tie these three, too, Doc.”
The doctor was more frightened than Brandy or Michael. Humans on
the fringes of the Business generally imagined operations by and
against the organization to be more deadly than they were.
Brandy asked, “What’re you doing, Gun?”
Straight out, emotionlessly. As if she were used to being under the
gun.
“Business, dear.”
“Oh.” She sped her mother a disgusted look.
“He’s the Starduster,” Marya told her.
“And you fell for his story?”
Niven tore sheets into strips, tied the doctor, then the girl,
then Michael. “Told you I knew a pirate, Captain.”
“Good,” Mouse said. “Let me have the gun,
Doc.”
“Eh? Why?”
“Because I need it.”
Puzzled, Niven handed the weapon over. Mouse tossed it into the
hallway.
Niven shook his head, said, “We’d better get moving.
They won’t stay disorganized forever.”
“One thing first.” Mouse shoved his weapon under his
arm. He took a hypo from the doctor’s bag and filled it from
an ampule he carried in his pocket. “This one’s for
your great-grandfather, kids. And all his brothers and sisters,
nieces and nephews.”
“What the hell are you doing?” Niven demanded.
“Just business, Doc. Turnabout’s fair play, right?
We should expand our own markets.” He raised Michael’s
sleeve.
Marya understood instantly. “No! Piao! Not my children.
Kill me if you want, but
don’t . . . ”
Mouse answered her with a tight smile. “Just business,
lady. Gag her, Doc. Hurry. We got to get the stuff out before Navy
pops to we’ve cut out the instel here.”
Niven suddenly understood what Mouse was doing. “Hey! You
can’t . . . ” He wanted to stop it,
to protest, to refuse, got confused by the reference to Navy.
“Stardust?”
Mouse nodded, smiling wickedly. His hand strayed toward his
weapon.
“Oh.” How could the man be so cruel? That was murder
in the worst possible way.
Marya needed gagging desperately. Her screams could attract
attention . . .
Dazed, Niven silenced her. Her flesh seemed icy beneath his
fingertips. He felt the rage and hatred boiling inside her. She
started shaking.
For an instant he thought she was having a seizure.
Mouse injected the children. That wicked little smile kept
playing with his lips. He was blissfully happy in his cruelty.
Why did he hate so much?
“Come on, Doc. They’re on their way down.
Can’t you hear them?”
The crowd noise and sirens were yielding to the rumble of
assault landing craft descending on penetration runs. The Broken
Wings’ atmosphere howled its protest of the violation.
Jupp was on his way.
Someone stuck his head through the doorway. Mouse shot, missed,
jumped into the hallway and shot again. “Doc, will you come
on?”
“I’m sorry, Marya. Really. It’s the way things
had to be.” He snagged the needlegun in passing, skipped a
fresh corpse, and pursued Mouse into the emergency stairwell.
Later, as they waited in the crowd watching the invaders pour
through the main city locks, Niven asked, “What was that crap
about getting off before Navy finds out?”
“We’re supposed to be the Starduster and Piao,
remember?”
“But they’ll know
when . . . ”
“Not yet. Look.” The Marines entering the city wore uniform
gear, but it was not Service issue. It was like nothing Niven had
ever seen.
Mouse had chosen the waiting place with care. A man loaded with
brass headed directly toward them. “Mr. Piao?” He
avoided looking at Niven. His attitude seemed one of mixed awe,
fear, and loathing. “You have the material for my
officers?”
“That I do, Colonel.” Mouse proffered a thick
package. “Congratulations. Your men are as efficient as
ours.”
The Colonel reddened. His mouth snapped open, but he caught
himself. Carefully, he said, “More so, Mr. Piao. As
you’ll someday learn.”
“All things are possible to those who believe.”
The Colonel riffled through a stack of copies. Other officers
gathered behind him. He started passing them papers.
“Let’s drift, Doc. They can handle it.”
Niven did not miss the wariness in all those Marine eyes.
“What was that all about?”
“Oh. They think we’re Piao and the Starduster too.
They think we worked a deal with Luna Command so we could knock
over the Sangaree and take control of their nets.”
“What’s all the smoke screen for?”
“We’ve got to keep the Starduster story alive, at
least till Jupp makes his hit. Otherwise they might evacuate their
production facilities. By the way, I wanted to say you did a job
digging all that info out. The Old Man is going to love
you.”
Niven did not follow it. “It’s too Byzantine for me.
Are the Sangaree supposed to find out that they’re Marines?
And then figure we didn’t say anything about the production
facilities because that would cut off our own supply?”
“Wait till you’re in on one of the Old Man’s
complicated ones.”
“Mr. Piao?” a Marine non-comm asked.
“Yes.”
“If you’ll follow me, sir. Your
transportation.” Marines surrounded them. A precaution
against assassination, Niven supposed. Those bounties still
existed.
Sounds of sporadic fighting came from the city. Believing the
raiders to be Starduster men, the Sangaree minions would battle
hard. The Starduster’s viciousness toward collaborators was
legend.
The Marines guided them into an armored personnel carrier. They
had it to themselves. It rumbled away toward Angel Port.
“Mouse, I get the feeling the Admiral threw in a few
twists just to make it interesting. What happens when the
Starduster finds out that we’ve been using his name in
vain?”
Mouse was in a bright, expansive mood. He had had a beautiful
day. He had carved his initials on the Sangaree soul. He had
vandalized their house of crime. “I’ll tell you a
secret, Doc. If you promise you won’t ever let the Old Man
know you know.” He looked at Niven expectantly.
“All right. I give. What?”
“You really are the Starduster.”
“What?”
“The Starduster. Piao. The Old Man invented the whole
thing. The Starduster is whoever he points at and says,
‘You!’ ”
“Well, shit. Mouse, I really needed that. Here
you’ve had me scared to death that the son of a bitch was
going to crawl out of the woodwork and cut my throat. I got a
year’s vacation coming after debriefing. And, dammit, as soon
as it goes through, I’m going
to . . . ”
“Don’t count on it, Doc. Not when you’re
working for the Old Man.”
October 3047. Captain Jupp von Drachau, commanding Special
Action Task Force IV, with a heavy siege squadron attached,
surprises and commences reduction action against Sangaree
manufacturing facilities hidden in the inner asteroid belt
surrounding Delta Sheol, a white dwarf in the mini-cluster called
the Hell Stars. Destruction is swift, savage, and complete. At the
same time Confederation and local police agencies begin closing
down the drug networks formerly rooted on The Broken Wings. Admiral Beckhart has taken every point in a victorious round
against his oldest and most favored enemy.
Hoping Marya would make no sense of the data before him, Niven
told her, “I’m checking to see where people go when
they leave The Broken Wings. If a statistically significant number
emigrate to certain worlds, we can begin to infer both their
fantasies under dome conditions and what it is that attracts them
to a particular type world. If it’s environmental, then
we’ve discovered a way to ease the negatives of dome
life.” He hoped he sounded tutorial. He cranked it up a notch
to be sure. “Ubichi specializes in negative environment,
high-yield exploitation operations. Employee turnover has become a
major problem because of the expense of training and transportation
for some of our field operations. It’s in the corporate
interest to reduce those costs by keeping our employees happy and
comfortable.” Pretty glib, he thought. He congratulated himself.
“What’re you doing here?”
“Looking for you. We had a date.”
“Not till . . . Holy Christ! Look at
the time. Hey beautiful lady, I’m sorry. I got on the track
of something. I worked right through lunch. Give me a minute, will
you? I’ll finish up, call my secretary, and we can get
moving.” He grinned. “I have to check in. Education
didn’t wear the Old Earth off of him. You wouldn’t
believe the hell he gave me last night!”
He no longer felt the smile. She was turning him to gelatin
again.
Mouse did not answer his buzz. Niven would have been surprised
had he done so. The call was simply a ploy to get the data out of
Marya’s sight, and to seize time to create a plausible
structure of lies atop those he had just told.
He needed no story. Marya asked no questions except, “What
do you want to do?”
He almost replied with the hard truth.
“I’ve had it with work, but we about covered
everything last night. Angel City isn’t swing-town.”
Gallantly, he added, “I’m content just being with you.
You pick.”
She laughed. “And they say there’s no romance left
on Old Earth. How about we just go for a walk? I feel like a good
long one.”
“Uh . . . ” His hands started
shaking.
He had gotten out young, but the lessons of an Old Earth’s
childhood died hard. People who did not learn them young also died
hard. Not to walk the streets without a gang of friends was one of
the strictest lessons of the motherworld.
This was not Old Earth. Death did not make the streets its home
here. But the sticktights did lurk there, and they might up the
ante in the game at any minute.
“How come you’re grinning?”
“That’s no grin, lady. That’s what they call a
rictus. Of fear. I’m Old Earther. You know how hard it would
be for me to walk down a street without at least fifty guys to back
me up?”
“I forgot. But there’s nothing to worry about here,
Gun.”
“You know it. I know it here in my head. But down here in
my guts there’s a caveman who says we’re both
liars.”
“If it’s really that
hard . . . ”
“No, don’t get upset. I didn’t say I
wouldn’t try. I’ve got to get used to it. Hell, I force
myself to get out as much as I can. I just wanted to warn you so
you won’t think it’s your fault if I get a little jumpy
and quiet.”
“You’ll settle down. You’ll see. This is just
about the dullest, least dangerous city in The Arm.”
A few hours later, shortly after The Broken Wings’ early
night had fallen, Niven snarled, “What did you say back at
the hospital? Something about the safest streets in the
galaxy?”
The darkness of the alley pressed in. His frightened eyes probed
the shadows for movement. The lase-bolt had missed his cheek by a
centimeter. He still felt the heat of it. “Even my toenails
are shaking, lady.”
Marya fingered her hair. A bolt had crisped it while they were
running. Niven’s nostrils twitched as they caught the sharp
burnt hair odor.
Marya’s face was pallid in the glow of a distant
streetlight. She was shaking too. And apparently too angry to
respond.
“You got a jealous boyfriend?”
She shook her head, gasped, “This isn’t Old Earth.
People don’t do things like this out here.”
Niven dropped to all fours and crawled to the alley mouth.
Heavy work was not his province, but he had had the basic
programs given all field agents. He could make a show if he had
to.
He had to do something now. The alley was a cul-de-sac. And the
rifleman might be teamed. A deathtrap could be closing.
A bolt scarred brick above his head. He rolled away, growling,
“Starscope. Damn!” But he had spotted the triggerman.
The bolt had come from atop a warehouse across the street.
“Can’t be much of a shot,” Niven mumbled.
“That isn’t fifty meters.”
If he could survive the sprint across the
street . . .
There was a startled exclamation from the gunman’s
position, then a choked wail of fear and pain. A body plunged
off the warehouse roof and thumped into the street.
Niven was across in an instant, shoving himself into the
warehouse wall while he studied the corpse.
The weak light revealed the limper from the Marcos lobby. His
windpipe had been crushed.
Every man’s signature is unique. And an assassin leaves a
grim sort of signature on his victims. Niven knew this one. He
peered upward.
Why would Mouse be shadowing him?
Not that he objected. Not right now.
Marya arrived. She averted her eyes. “You must have a
guardian angel.”
“One of us does.” He stared at her. Something
clicked. It was nothing he could define, just a tweak of uneasiness
because she had not asked him why anyone would want to kill him. A
civilian would have asked that right away.
He looked for the assassin’s weapon, did not see it.
“I’m going to try to get onto that roof.”
“Why? Shouldn’t we get out of here?”
Another click. Civilians started screaming for the police.
Outworlds civilians, anyway.
“Yeah, I guess. If he had anybody with him we would have
heard from them by now.” But where to go? he wondered. Not
the hotel. Not with the number officially on. Not with the war
rules proclaimed. And not to a safehouse. He did not yet know what
Mouse had arranged. And he could not make the fallbacks to find out
with Marya tagging along.
The death threat had alerted the professional in him. Had raised
barriers that would wall off the whole universe till he had sorted
the friends from enemies and noncombatants.
“We could go to my place,” Marya suggested.
Memories of countless spy and detective dramas battled for
Niven’s attention. Was it all a setup? Three misses at fifty
meters seemed unlikely for even a clumsy assassin. But he did not
want to believe that Marya was involved. She was such a magnetic,
animal woman . . .
Believe it or not, only a cretin would have ignored the
possibility completely. Survival had become the stake on the
board.
He dared not let her know he was suspicious. “All
right.” He looked around fearfully, having no trouble
projecting shakiness and confusion. “But I’ve got to do
a couple of things first.”
Their eyes met. And he knew. He did not want it to be, but it
was true. She was the enemy. Right now she was trying to find an
excuse to stay close to him that would not arouse his
suspicions.
She was not a good actress. Under stress she could not control
the body language signals that betrayed her thoughts.
He felt betrayed and hurt, though he had known her just one
day.
He had always needed to be wanted. Not for whom or what he was,
but just as a human being.
Human. Was she even human? There was no sure way of telling
without complicated tests. Geneticists were certain that humanity
and the Sangaree shared a prehistoric ancestry.
She might even be the new Sangaree Resident. The last one had
been a woman.
“Where do you stay?” he asked.
She chose not to push. She explained how he could get to her
apartment.
“You don’t have to do this,” he told her, then
cursed silently. By saying that, he had tacitly admitted being the
sniper’s target. But sometimes it was necessary to take
chances. He could at least feed her belief in his lack of
suspicion. “It might be dangerous.”
“That’s all right. I’ve never been involved in
anything like this.” Feigned excitement illuminated her face.
“What have I gotten myself into, Gun?”
It was smoke screen time. “Sweetheart, I don’t know.
I really don’t. This is the second time I’ve been
jumped, but nobody bothered to tell me why last time either. They
tried it right in the Marcos before. The day we got here. And we
don’t even know anybody here. But people have been following
me all the time, and . . . If you’re an
Old Earther, you sense things like that.”
“Maybe it’s not you. Maybe it’s your
friend.”
“John? I never thought of that. I guess it’s
possible. I don’t really know anything about him. The
Corporation sent him. Anyway, whatever’s going on, I mean to
find out.”
He had yielded just enough distorted truth, he hoped, to leave
her with doubts. A lot depended on whether or not the opposition
had been able to evade Mouse’s bug-scans.
“Will you be all right, Marya? Should I walk you
home?”
“I’ll manage.”
“Probably be safer without me, anyway. See you in a
while.” He glanced at the dead man, then the streets. Not a
soul was stirring.
It was odd how people sensed a gathering storm, then stayed
inside where they would witness nothing and run no risks. Though
this was a warehouse district, there should have been some traffic.
Hell. Where were the security patrols? Where were the police
cruisers?
He had seen the same thing happen on Old Earth, where the gangs
went to their guns at the slightest provocation. Citizens and
enforcers always kept a low profile till the stink of gunsmoke left
the air.
Mouse was not at the first fallback, nor had he left a message.
Niven did find a hastily scribbled message at the second. It told
him that Marya was the new Sangaree Resident. And, as if in
afterthought, Mouse went on to say that he was on the run from a
dozen men who had gotten onto him after the incident at the
warehouse.
Niven scratched a reply, explaining where he would be. The drop
was large, so he left the notes he had taken at the Med Center.
Those had to be salvaged no matter what. Maybe by Chief Navy
Recruiter for The Broken Wings. He was the Bureau Angel City
station chief.
Niven began drifting, killing time in order to give Marya a
chance to make a move that would illuminate the outfit’s
current thinking. After an hour he picked up a sticktight.
His shadow was a sleepy-faced thug pretending to be a derelict.
A not-too-bright offworlder, Niven decided. Angel City was too
young and thoroughly ordered to sustain even a one-man Bowery.
The man did not move in. They were hoping he would lead them to
Mouse.
He observed his shadow’s tradecraft more out of curiosity
than concern. The man was a professional but unaccustomed to this
kind of work. He was probably a shooter or runner grabbed simply
because he was available. He could be shaken at leisure. Niven
shifted him to the back burner of awareness.
He drifted toward Marya’s apartment. His nerves settled.
He decided what he was going to do.
He did not relax completely. They might catch Mouse. Then his
life would be worthless. But while Mouse remained at large, he was
sure, they would not harm him.
He shook the sticktight, found a public comm, woke the Angel
City station chief, explained where the Med Center information was
hidden. He used a word code the other side would need hours to
unravel—assuming they were tapping at all.
He reached Marya’s apartment as dawn began coloring the
dome. The molecularly stacked plastic glimmered redly. As the
sunlight changed its angle of incidence, the plastic would
alternate between transparency and a progression up an iridescent
spectrum.
He was tired but still alert, and exhilarated because he had
handled himself well.
Marya responded to his knock instantly. “Where have you
been? she demanded. “I’ve been worried sick.” She
peered over his shoulder, along the second floor hallway.
Checking for Mouse? For her backup?
“Somebody started following me around. I didn’t know
what to do, so I just walked around till he gave up. Or I lost
him.”
“Gun, I don’t understand all this.
Why? . . . ”
“Honey, I don’t know. And I’ve been thinking
hard. All I can figure is maybe one of Ubichi’s competitors
thinks I’m after something besides that research
data . . . ” He paused, pretending to
have been startled by a thought. “Hey! They never did tell me
why they want the data. I just
assumed . . . Maybe it’s for a project
that’s stepping on somebody’s toes.”
Had he been what he claimed, the possibility would have been
real. Ubichi maintained its own armed forces. The frontier
corporations played rough.
Uncertainty filled Marya’s eyes for a moment. Bureau miscalculated, he thought. He could have convinced her
had he looked like a social psychologist. His cover could be
checked all the way back to his birth. The Bureau was thorough that
way. Especially Beckhart’s section.
But Niven looked like an Old Earth heavy. And that was the death
of any other credential a man could present.
“Mom? What’s going on?” A dark-haired girl of
seven or eight stumbled into the room. She ground sleepy eyes with
the backs of her fists. She was small for her age, a breastless
miniature of her mother.
“Brandy, this is my friend Dr. Niven. I told you about
him.”
“Oh.”
Less than enthusiastic, Niven thought. In fact, her expression
said he was a threat to her world.
She was a beautiful child. Straight out of a toy ad.
Niven could not frame a compliment that did not sound inane.
“Hi, Brandy. You can call me Gun. It’s short for
Gundaker.”
“Gundaker? What kind of name is that?”
“Old Earth.”
“Oh.” She wrinkled her lip. “Mom called you
Doctor. Michael’s sick.”
He turned to Marya. The woman still stood at the door. “My
son. Brandy’s younger brother. He’s got some kind of
bug. Looks like flu.”
“I’m not that kind of doctor, Brandy. But if
there’s anything I can
do . . . ”
“Do you know any good stories? Michael don’t like
the ones I make up. And Mom’s never here.” She glanced
at her mother accusingly.
She was good, Niven thought. Better than Marya. “What kind
of stories? Pirates? Olden days? War stories? Richard Hawksblood
and Gneaus Julius Storm? Did you know they fought a war right here
on The Broken Wings?”
He mentioned it casually, conversationally, fishing for a
reaction. The war in the Shadowline, the last great mercenary war,
had taken place on Blackworld not long after the encounter on The
Broken Wings.
Sangaree interests had taken a beating because of the
Shadowline. But one or two Families had begun recouping here before
the shock-waves from Blackworld had died.
Getting caught with their hands in there had cost them control
of numerous legitimate corporations and the lives of several Family
chieftains. The disaster had been so huge and widespread that it
had become Sangaree legend.
The girl just shrugged, implying that Blackworld meant nothing
to her. “Pirates, probably.” She seemed to lose
interest.
She left the room. Cooking sounds followed her departure. Must not have heard about the Shadowline, Niven thought. What
Family did Marya represent? A minor one crowding the First Families
because of their loss of face on Blackworld? Surely not one that
had been involved there.
“She’s a doll,” he told Marya. “You
thought about getting her into modeling?”
“No. She wouldn’t. Sit down. Relax. Ill fix you
something to eat. Then I’ll move Michael in here. You can
sleep in the kids’ bed.”
Brandy brought coffee. It was real.
He discovered what Marya had meant about Brandy. He had not
caught it earlier because she had not looked his way.
The girl’s one eye trained wildly walleyed and appeared
blind.
He showed no reaction to her pained, defiant stare. Her
sensitivity screamed at him. He supposed the damage was recent.
Niven indulged in tradecraft during the few seconds when Brandy
had returned to the kitchen and Marya had not yet returned. He
examined his surroundings critically.
The time would come when he would have to report, accurately,
where every speck of dust had lain.
The apartment was cramped. That was typical of dome city living
quarters. It was sparsely populated by ragged second-hand
furniture. That was to be expected of poor folks. And Marya,
clearly, was not an obsessive housekeeper. Cobwebs hung in the
ceiling corners. Junk cluttered the chairs and floors.
Her sloppiness had nothing to do with poverty or lack of time,
only with habit. Sangaree at home had animal servants who picked up
after them.
Marya shared her roof with whole tribes of roaches. Dirt
streaked the plastic walls. The curtains were frayed and
soiled.
It was exactly the sort of place where a busy, impoverished
woman would come to rest. She was crafty, this one. She had
converted her ethnic liabilities into assets.
But would a poor woman serve real coffee? When coffee had to
come all the way from Old or New Earth?
He did not call her on it. He might give something away by
revealing that he recognized the real thing when he tasted it. Most
Old Earthers would not, because every ounce went into export.
They were fencing now, subtly, with rapiers consisting of little
tests.
One of the rules of his profession was never to yield anything
concrete.
She was not giving him anything either. Certainly not enough to
understand her.
Who could comprehend the Sangaree mind? The Admiral had been
trying for decades. He barely got by.
Like Mouse, though, Beckhart did not want to understand. Not
really. He wanted to destroy. Comprehension was just a weapon in
his arsenal.
They sat in silence for several minutes. He watched Marya over
his cup. She considered him. He wondered what strange thoughts
might be running through her alien brain.
“I’d better check on Michael, Gun.”
He followed her as far as the bedroom door.
The room was tiny. It contained two dilapidated beds. One for
Marya, one for her children.
Marya settled on the edge of the one containing a pale
five-year-old. The boy watched Niven warily.
“Michael, this is my friend Dr. Niven. He’s going to
stay with us for a while.”
“Hi, Mike.”
“Not Mike.” The child’s voice was weak but
angry. “Michael. After my great-grandfather.”
Marya winced.
Michael radiated pride.
Niven controlled his surprise. “Right. Michael it
is.”
He had been wrong. Almost fatally wrong. These Sangaree would
know the Shadowline well.
There had been but one Sangaree with the human name Michael.
Michael Dee. The man who had engineered the war. The man who had
been both the pride and despair of his race.
The man who had paid the ultimate price for failing.
“Brandy says you like pirate stories. I knew a pirate
once. Only he wasn’t a pirate when I met him. That’s
what he is now. I grew up and went to school, and he grew up and
became a pirate.”
“I don’t think he’s ready for that right now,
Gun.” Marya seemed honestly worried. “I’m going
to have to call a doctor, I think.”
Niven was surprised at himself. He was concerned too. “You
want me to call a cabcar?” What was he doing? The kid was
Sangaree. His purpose in life was to help guide that species to a
final solution. Little ones became big ones.
“Oh, no. There’s one from the hospital who lives
right upstairs. I don’t know her very well,
but . . . ”
“Go get her, woman. I’ll manage here.”
She stared. Something within her softened momentarily.’The
hidden woman, the one behind the one behind the one she was trying
to portray, showed through. She kissed his cheek. “Thanks,
Gun.” When he pulled her closer, “Later. I’ll be
back as soon as I can.”
He had not been after a kiss. He had attached a tiny chameleon
transmitter to the back of her collar.
She closed the apartment door behind her. Niven inserted a
receiver into his ear while pretending to scratch.
Smiling wryly, he patted himself where she had touched him. Had
she done the same to him?
There was no reason why she should have to go out for a doctor.
She would have sufficient medical background herself—if there
was any truth to her cover.
He smiled again. Marya was no tactician, either.
“Are you my mom’s new lover?”
He was surprised. Little girls did not ask questions like
that.
“No. Not yet.”
“She needs one. Do you think she’s
pretty?”
“I think she’s gorgeous.” He was
uncomfortable. He did not know how to socialize with children. The
only child he knew was Jupp’s boy, Horst-Johann.
“Maybe she should get married again. Are you
married?”
Marya had reached a public comm. She was briefing someone.
Following her part of a conversation and trying to guess the other
half while carrying on another with Brandy proved impossible. He
did hear Marya ask for a deep trace on his cover. That meant he had
won a round. She had doubts. Or wanted to have them, which came to
the same thing.
“No. I never met the right lady.” This was one bold
child. Did she know she was not human? Probably. From the little he
had heard, Sangaree had no childhood in the human sense. Their
children were shielded from nothing. They were treated as, and
expected to behave as, miniature adults.
“Don’t know if I’d like you,
though.” Honest, too, he thought. He went to check on Michael. The boy
still watched him with wide, wary eyes.
He was bad sick. Marya would not risk a human doctor otherwise.
There were few greater risks the underground Sangaree could take.
Physicians could sometimes spot the subtle differences between
species.
Marya returned with the doctor before Niven’s conversation
with Brandy became impossible.
The doctor, he decided, was “tame.” She worked with
a confidence and quickness that betrayed her.
Niven whispered to Marya, “Brandy’s been
matchmaking.”
She laughed. “Husband-shopping for me again? She never
gives up.”
“I don’t think I passed the exam.”
“Doesn’t matter. I won’t get caught in that
trap again.”
“Why’d you bring them out here?” On Old Earth
parents usually put their children into public care as soon as they
were born. Niven had had an unusual childhood in that he had spent
much of it with his mother. He still kept in touch with her, but
had lost track of his father years ago.
The shedding of children was a common practice on the tamed
outworlds, too. Fewer than a quarter of Confederation’s
children were raised by their biological parents.
Marya was shocked. Her Sangaree sense of Family had been
outraged. But she could not tell him that. “I forgot. You do
things differently where you come from. Yeah, it would be
convenient sometimes. But they’re my kids.”
“Don’t try to explain. Just call it one of the
differences between the Inner Worlds and the frontier. I’m
getting used to them.”
The doctor returned from the bedroom. “I gave him a
broad-spectrum antibiotic, Marya. And an antiviral. It’s
nothing serious. See that he gets plenty of bed rest and lots of
fluids, and keep an eye on his temperature. It’ll go up. Give
him some aspirin if it gets too high. Do you need a
thermometer?”
Marya nodded. She portrayed embarrassment beautifully. You did that well, lady, Niven thought. Too poor to afford a
thermometer. But you serve genuine coffee. He smiled. She was doing
a chemo-psychiatric internship, but had to summon an outside
doctor . . . Was she driven by some secret
death wish?
“Nice to have met you, Doctor Niven,” the doctor
told him.
“You too.” He watched her go to the door. There was
no pride in the way she walked.
“You want to get some sleep now, Gun?” Marya
asked.
“Going to have to.” But would his nerves permit it
here in the heart of enemy territory?
They would. After he had skinned down to his underwear, had
flopped into Marya’s bed, and had told Michael, “Good
night, Captain,” the lights went out.
He wakened once, hazily, when Marya slipped into bed beside him.
He mumbled foggily, then knew nothing for hours.
He wakened slowly. Gradually, he realized that The Broken
Wings’ truncated day had sped by. It was night again. He did
not remember where he was till he rolled against the woman.
That simple movement initiated three tempestuous days.
Marya was insatiable. The only word he found to fit her was
“hungry.” He had never encountered a woman who had such
a need for a man.
Niven astounded himself. Their lovemaking became so savage, so
narrowly scoped, that it was more like combat. As if, “Let he
who first cries ‘Hold! Enough!’ be damned
forever.”
They seemed to do nothing but sleep and copulate, making attack
after attack in some sort of sexual war. The outside world seemed
to have lost all meaning.
Yet there was method. There was rationality. In struggling to
please Marya, who was struggling to distract him, Niven kept
himself motivated by remembering who she was. He kept trying to
convince himself that he was doing this to sabotage the enemy chain
of command.
He knew Marya was not motivated entirely by lust either.
Oh, but they did have one hell of a good time on the rumpled
sheets of that battlefield.
In the interims Niven sometimes wondered what had become of
Mouse. Mouse, he reflected, sure had the free hand he always
wanted.
Brandy, recognizing the way of things, had taken her brother out
the first night. They were staying upstairs with the doctor.
Michael, looking a little better, sometimes wandered in, moped
around without saying much, then wandered out again. Brandy stayed
away all the time.
“What are we doing?” Niven once muttered to himself.
They were enemies to the death. That was the prime rule, the blood
rule, by which he and she were supposed to live and die. Yet they
were denying it, or sublimating it in the form of
love . . .
He began to dread mission’s end.
Debriefing . . . He would have to answer
questions. He would have to explain.
Niven was snoring. He had one arm beneath Marya’s
neck.
The building shuddered like a dog shaking off water. A window
cracked. Tableware clattered onto the kitchen floor. The whole
neighborhood reverberated to the explosion.
Niven jerked upright. “D-14,” he grunted.
“What?”
“What was that?”
“An explosion.”
They dressed, almost racing. Reflections of dancing firelight
colored the cracked window. Marya looked out. “Oh, Holy
Sant!”
“What?”
“The warehouse . . . ”
“Eh?”
“I’ll be right back . . . What’s
that?”
A yell had come from somewhere downstairs. Cries and screams
followed it.
Niven knew that first yell. That was Mouse in assassin’s
mind.
Earlier, he had seen the shape of the needlegun lumping her
underwear in a dresser drawer. He beat her to it.
The door crashed inward. A ragged, battered, bloody Mouse
hurtled through. He was so keyed for action that he looked three
meters tall.
“Easy,” Niven said, gesturing with the needlegun.
“Everything’s under control, Mouse.”
Mouse was not hurt. The blood was not his own. “Got
everything,” he croaked through a dry throat. “Message
away. Got to bend the bitch and get out.”
That was their business, but . . . Niven
could not permit the woman’s murder. That she was Sangaree
seemed irrelevant. “No. There’s no need. Not this
time.”
Mouse was coming down. Thought was replacing action. He glanced
at Niven’s weapon, at the woman. “All right.
You’re the boss, Doc. But I’ve got to get something out
of this. Where’re the damned kids?”
“Upstairs. But I won’t let you kill children,
either.”
“Wouldn’t think of it, Doc. Wouldn’t even
drown a puppy. You know old John. So tie her up, will you?
Can’t have her coming after us.” He backed out the
door.
Siren howls tortured the streets. The grumble of a gathering
crowd slipped tentacles into the room. “Sorry it had to end
this way, Marya. But business is business.”
“I almost believed . . . ” She
stared at him. For an instant she looked small and defenseless. He
reminded himself that she was Sangaree, that she would become
instant death if he were careless. “I suppose you’re
soothing your conscience. I wouldn’t if the tables were
turned. You’ve hurt us too much already.” Not a smart thing to say to somebody pointing a gun at you,
Niven thought. He shrugged. “Maybe. It’s not
conscience, though. A different weakness. You’d probably have
to be human to understand.” He left it to her to figure out
what he meant.
Mouse returned with the children and doctor. In the process he
had acquired a weapon. “Tie these three, too, Doc.”
The doctor was more frightened than Brandy or Michael. Humans on
the fringes of the Business generally imagined operations by and
against the organization to be more deadly than they were.
Brandy asked, “What’re you doing, Gun?”
Straight out, emotionlessly. As if she were used to being under the
gun.
“Business, dear.”
“Oh.” She sped her mother a disgusted look.
“He’s the Starduster,” Marya told her.
“And you fell for his story?”
Niven tore sheets into strips, tied the doctor, then the girl,
then Michael. “Told you I knew a pirate, Captain.”
“Good,” Mouse said. “Let me have the gun,
Doc.”
“Eh? Why?”
“Because I need it.”
Puzzled, Niven handed the weapon over. Mouse tossed it into the
hallway.
Niven shook his head, said, “We’d better get moving.
They won’t stay disorganized forever.”
“One thing first.” Mouse shoved his weapon under his
arm. He took a hypo from the doctor’s bag and filled it from
an ampule he carried in his pocket. “This one’s for
your great-grandfather, kids. And all his brothers and sisters,
nieces and nephews.”
“What the hell are you doing?” Niven demanded.
“Just business, Doc. Turnabout’s fair play, right?
We should expand our own markets.” He raised Michael’s
sleeve.
Marya understood instantly. “No! Piao! Not my children.
Kill me if you want, but
don’t . . . ”
Mouse answered her with a tight smile. “Just business,
lady. Gag her, Doc. Hurry. We got to get the stuff out before Navy
pops to we’ve cut out the instel here.”
Niven suddenly understood what Mouse was doing. “Hey! You
can’t . . . ” He wanted to stop it,
to protest, to refuse, got confused by the reference to Navy.
“Stardust?”
Mouse nodded, smiling wickedly. His hand strayed toward his
weapon.
“Oh.” How could the man be so cruel? That was murder
in the worst possible way.
Marya needed gagging desperately. Her screams could attract
attention . . .
Dazed, Niven silenced her. Her flesh seemed icy beneath his
fingertips. He felt the rage and hatred boiling inside her. She
started shaking.
For an instant he thought she was having a seizure.
Mouse injected the children. That wicked little smile kept
playing with his lips. He was blissfully happy in his cruelty.
Why did he hate so much?
“Come on, Doc. They’re on their way down.
Can’t you hear them?”
The crowd noise and sirens were yielding to the rumble of
assault landing craft descending on penetration runs. The Broken
Wings’ atmosphere howled its protest of the violation.
Jupp was on his way.
Someone stuck his head through the doorway. Mouse shot, missed,
jumped into the hallway and shot again. “Doc, will you come
on?”
“I’m sorry, Marya. Really. It’s the way things
had to be.” He snagged the needlegun in passing, skipped a
fresh corpse, and pursued Mouse into the emergency stairwell.
Later, as they waited in the crowd watching the invaders pour
through the main city locks, Niven asked, “What was that crap
about getting off before Navy finds out?”
“We’re supposed to be the Starduster and Piao,
remember?”
“But they’ll know
when . . . ”
“Not yet. Look.” The Marines entering the city wore uniform
gear, but it was not Service issue. It was like nothing Niven had
ever seen.
Mouse had chosen the waiting place with care. A man loaded with
brass headed directly toward them. “Mr. Piao?” He
avoided looking at Niven. His attitude seemed one of mixed awe,
fear, and loathing. “You have the material for my
officers?”
“That I do, Colonel.” Mouse proffered a thick
package. “Congratulations. Your men are as efficient as
ours.”
The Colonel reddened. His mouth snapped open, but he caught
himself. Carefully, he said, “More so, Mr. Piao. As
you’ll someday learn.”
“All things are possible to those who believe.”
The Colonel riffled through a stack of copies. Other officers
gathered behind him. He started passing them papers.
“Let’s drift, Doc. They can handle it.”
Niven did not miss the wariness in all those Marine eyes.
“What was that all about?”
“Oh. They think we’re Piao and the Starduster too.
They think we worked a deal with Luna Command so we could knock
over the Sangaree and take control of their nets.”
“What’s all the smoke screen for?”
“We’ve got to keep the Starduster story alive, at
least till Jupp makes his hit. Otherwise they might evacuate their
production facilities. By the way, I wanted to say you did a job
digging all that info out. The Old Man is going to love
you.”
Niven did not follow it. “It’s too Byzantine for me.
Are the Sangaree supposed to find out that they’re Marines?
And then figure we didn’t say anything about the production
facilities because that would cut off our own supply?”
“Wait till you’re in on one of the Old Man’s
complicated ones.”
“Mr. Piao?” a Marine non-comm asked.
“Yes.”
“If you’ll follow me, sir. Your
transportation.” Marines surrounded them. A precaution
against assassination, Niven supposed. Those bounties still
existed.
Sounds of sporadic fighting came from the city. Believing the
raiders to be Starduster men, the Sangaree minions would battle
hard. The Starduster’s viciousness toward collaborators was
legend.
The Marines guided them into an armored personnel carrier. They
had it to themselves. It rumbled away toward Angel Port.
“Mouse, I get the feeling the Admiral threw in a few
twists just to make it interesting. What happens when the
Starduster finds out that we’ve been using his name in
vain?”
Mouse was in a bright, expansive mood. He had had a beautiful
day. He had carved his initials on the Sangaree soul. He had
vandalized their house of crime. “I’ll tell you a
secret, Doc. If you promise you won’t ever let the Old Man
know you know.” He looked at Niven expectantly.
“All right. I give. What?”
“You really are the Starduster.”
“What?”
“The Starduster. Piao. The Old Man invented the whole
thing. The Starduster is whoever he points at and says,
‘You!’ ”
“Well, shit. Mouse, I really needed that. Here
you’ve had me scared to death that the son of a bitch was
going to crawl out of the woodwork and cut my throat. I got a
year’s vacation coming after debriefing. And, dammit, as soon
as it goes through, I’m going
to . . . ”
“Don’t count on it, Doc. Not when you’re
working for the Old Man.”
October 3047. Captain Jupp von Drachau, commanding Special
Action Task Force IV, with a heavy siege squadron attached,
surprises and commences reduction action against Sangaree
manufacturing facilities hidden in the inner asteroid belt
surrounding Delta Sheol, a white dwarf in the mini-cluster called
the Hell Stars. Destruction is swift, savage, and complete. At the
same time Confederation and local police agencies begin closing
down the drug networks formerly rooted on The Broken Wings. Admiral Beckhart has taken every point in a victorious round
against his oldest and most favored enemy.